[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 81 (Friday, April 28, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 19796-20231]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-07800]
[[Page 19795]]
Vol. 82
Friday,
No. 81
April 28, 2017
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 405, 412, 413, et al.
Medicare Program; Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems for
Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and Proposed Policy Changes and Fiscal Year 2018 Rates;
Quality Reporting Requirements for Specific Providers; Medicare and
Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program Requirements
for Eligible Hospitals, Critical Access Hospitals, and Eligible
Professionals; Provider-Based Status of Indian Health Service and
Tribal Facilities and Organizations; Costs Reporting and Provider
Requirements; Agreement Termination Notices; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 82 , No. 81 / Friday, April 28, 2017 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 19796]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 412, 413, 414, 416, 486, 488, 489, and 495
[CMS-1677-P]
RIN 0938-AS98
Medicare Program; Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems
for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and Proposed Policy Changes and Fiscal Year 2018 Rates;
Quality Reporting Requirements for Specific Providers; Medicare and
Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program Requirements
for Eligible Hospitals, Critical Access Hospitals, and Eligible
Professionals; Provider-Based Status of Indian Health Service and
Tribal Facilities and Organizations; Costs Reporting and Provider
Requirements; Agreement Termination Notices
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are proposing to revise the Medicare hospital inpatient
prospective payment systems (IPPS) for operating and capital-related
costs of acute care hospitals to implement changes arising from our
continuing experience with these systems for FY 2018. Some of these
proposed changes would implement certain statutory provisions contained
in the Pathway for Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) Reform Act of 2013,
the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014, the
Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015, the 21st Century
Cures Act, and other legislation. We also are making proposals relating
to the provider-based status of Indian Health Service (IHS) and Tribal
facilities and organizations and to the low-volume hospital payment
adjustment for hospitals operated by the IHS or a Tribe. In addition,
we are providing the proposed estimated market basket update that would
apply to the rate-of-increase limits for certain hospitals excluded
from the IPPS that are paid on a reasonable cost basis subject to these
limits for FY 2018. We are proposing to update the payment policies and
the annual payment rates for the Medicare prospective payment system
(PPS) for inpatient hospital services provided by long-term care
hospitals (LTCHs) for FY 2018.
In addition, we are proposing to establish new requirements or
revise existing requirements for quality reporting by specific Medicare
providers (acute care hospitals, PPS-exempt cancer hospitals, LTCHs,
and inpatient psychiatric facilities). We also are proposing to
establish new requirements or revise existing requirements for eligible
professionals (EPs), eligible hospitals, and critical access hospitals
(CAHs) participating in the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health
Record (EHR) Incentive Programs. We are proposing to update policies
relating to the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program, the
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, and the Hospital-Acquired
Condition (HAC) Reduction Program.
We also are proposing changes relating to transparency of
accrediting organization survey reports and plans of correction of
providers and suppliers; electronic signature and electronic submission
of the Certification and Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost
reports; and clarification of provider disposal of assets.
DATES: Comment Period: To be assured consideration, comments must be
received at one of the addresses provided in the ADDRESSES section, no
later than 5 p.m. EDT on June 13, 2017.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1677-P. Because
of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
You may submit comments in one of four ways (no duplicates,
please):
1. Electronically. You may (and we encourage you to) submit
electronic comments on this regulation to //www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions under the ``submit a comment'' tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1677-P, P.O. Box 8011,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments via
express or overnight mail to the following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: CMS-1677-P, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
4. By hand or courier. If you prefer, you may deliver (by hand or
courier) your written comments before the close of the comment period
to either of the following addresses:
a. For delivery in Washington, DC--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert
H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC
20201.
(Because access to the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey Building
is not readily available to persons without Federal Government
identification, commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in
the CMS drop slots located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-
in clock is available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing
by stamping in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being
filed.)
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address,
please call the telephone number (410) 786-7195 in advance to schedule
your arrival with one of our staff members.
Comments mailed to the addresses indicated as appropriate for hand
or courier delivery may be delayed and received after the comment
period.
For information on viewing public comments, we refer readers to the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald Thompson, (410) 786-4487, and Michele Hudson, (410) 786-
4487, Operating Prospective Payment, MS-DRGs, Wage Index, New Medical
Service and Technology Add-On Payments, Hospital Geographic
Reclassifications, Graduate Medical Education, Capital Prospective
Payment, Excluded Hospitals, Sole Community Hospitals, Medicare
Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Payment Adjustment, Medicare-
Dependent Small Rural Hospital (MDH) Program, and Low-Volume Hospital
Payment Adjustment Issues.
Michele Hudson, (410) 786-4487, Mark Luxton, (410) 786-4530, and
Emily Lipkin, (410) 786-3633, Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System and MS-LTC-DRG Relative Weights Issues.
Mollie Knight, (410) 786-7948, and Bridget Dickensheets, (410) 786-
8670, Rebasing and Revising the Hospital Market Basket Issues.
Siddhartha Mazumdar, (410) 786-6673, Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program Issues.
[[Page 19797]]
Jeris Smith, (410) 786-0110, Frontier Community Health Integration
Project Demonstration Issues.
Lein Han, (617) 879-0129, Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program--
Readmission Measures for Hospitals Issues.
Delia Houseal, (410) 786-2724, Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program--Administration Issues.
Elizabeth Bainger, (410) 786-0529, Hospital-Acquired Condition
Reduction Program Issues.
Joseph Clift, (410) 786-4165, Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction
Program--Measures Issues.
Grace Im, (410) 786-0700 and James Poyer, (410) 786-2261, Hospital
Inpatient Quality Reporting and Hospital Value-Based Purchasing--
Program Administration, Validation, and Reconsideration Issues.
Reena Duseja, (410) 786-1999 and Cindy Tourison, (410) 786-1093,
Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting--Measures Issues Except Hospital
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Issues; and
Readmission Measures for Hospitals Issues.
Kim Spaulding Bush, (410) 786-3232, Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
Efficiency Measures Issues.
Elizabeth Goldstein, (410) 786-6665, Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting--Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems Measures Issues.
James Poyer, (410) 786-2261, PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality
Reporting Issues.
Mary Pratt, (410) 786-6867, Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Data
Reporting Issues.
Jeffrey Buck, (410) 786-0407 and Cindy Tourison (410) 786-1093,
Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities Quality Data Reporting Issues.
Lisa Marie Gomez, (410) 786-1175, EHR Incentive Program Clinical
Quality Measure Related Issues.
Kathleen Johnson, (410) 786-3295 and Steven Johnson (410) 786-3332,
EHR Incentive Program Nonclinical Quality Measure Related Issues.
Caecilia Blondiaux, (410), 786-2190, and Ariadne Saklas, (410) 786-
3322, Changes in Notice of Termination of Medicare Providers and
Suppliers Issues.
Monda Shaver, (410) 786-3410, and Patricia Chmielewski, (410) 786-
6899, Accrediting Organizations Survey Reporting Transparency Issues.
Kellie Shannon, (410) 786-0416, Medicare Cost Reporting and
Valuation of Assets Issues.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following Web
site as soon as possible after they have been received: //www.regulations.gov. Follow the search instructions on that Web site to
view public comments.
Comments received timely will also be available for public
inspection, generally beginning approximately 3 weeks after publication
of the rule, at the headquarters of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244, on Monday
through Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. EST. To
schedule an appointment to view public comments, phone 1-800-743-3951.
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is available from the Federal
Register online database through Federal Digital System (FDsys), a
service of the U.S. Government Printing Office. This database can be
accessed via the Internet at: //www.gpo.gov/fdsys.
Tables Available Only Through the Internet on the CMS Web Site
In the past, a majority of the tables referred to throughout this
preamble and in the Addendum to the proposed rule and the final rule
were published in the Federal Register as part of the annual proposed
and final rules. However, beginning in FY 2012, some of the IPPS tables
and LTCH PPS tables are no longer published in the Federal Register.
Instead, these tables generally will be available only through the
Internet. The IPPS tables for this proposed rule are available through
the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html. Click on
the link on the left side of the screen titled, ``FY 2018 IPPS Proposed
Rule Home Page'' or ``Acute Inpatient--Files for Download''. The LTCH
PPS tables for this FY 2018 proposed rule are available through the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/LongTermCareHospitalPPS/index.html under the
list item for Regulation Number CMS-1677-P. For further details on the
contents of the tables referenced in this proposed rule, we refer
readers to section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.
Readers who experience any problems accessing any of the tables
that are posted on the CMS Web sites identified above should contact
Michael Treitel at (410) 786-4552.
Acronyms
3M 3M Health Information System
AAMC Association of American Medical Colleges
ACGME Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
ACoS American College of Surgeons
AHA American Hospital Association
AHIC American Health Information Community
AHIMA American Health Information Management Association
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
AJCC American Joint Committee on Cancer
ALOS Average length of stay
ALTHA Acute Long-Term Hospital Association
AMA American Medical Association
AMGA American Medical Group Association
AMI Acute myocardial infarction
AO Accrediting Organizations
AOA American Osteopathic Association
APR DRG All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group System
APRN Advanced practice registered nurse
ARRA American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law 111-
5
ASCA Administrative Simplification Compliance Act of 2002, Public
Law 107-105
ASITN American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic
Neuroradiology
ASPE Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (DHHS)
ATRA American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, Public Law 112-240
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Public Law 105-33
BBRA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health
Insurance Program] Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999, Public
Law 106-113
BIPA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP [State Children's Health
Insurance Program] Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000,
Public Law 106-554
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CABG Coronary artery bypass graft [surgery]
CAH Critical access hospital
CARE [Medicare] Continuity Assessment Record & Evaluation
[Instrument]
CART CMS Abstraction & Reporting Tool
CAUTI Catheter-associated urinary tract infection
CBSAs Core-based statistical areas
CC Complication or comorbidity
CCN CMS Certification Number
CCR Cost-to-charge ratio
CDAC [Medicare] Clinical Data Abstraction Center
CDAD Clostridium difficile-associated disease
CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
[[Page 19798]]
CERT Comprehensive error rate testing
CDI Clostridium difficile [C. difficile] infection
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CLABSI Central line-associated bloodstream infection
CIPI Capital input price index
CMI Case-mix index
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CMSA Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area
COBRA Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1985, Public Law
99-272
COLA Cost-of-living adjustment
CoP [Hospital] condition of participation
COPD Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
CPI Consumer price index
CQL Clinical quality language
CQM Clinical quality measure
CY Calendar year
DACA Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement
DPP Disproportionate patient percentage
DRA Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Public Law 109-171
DRG Diagnosis-related group
DSH Disproportionate share hospital
EBRT External beam radiotherapy
ECE Extraordinary circumstances exemption
ECI Employment cost index
eCQM Electronic clinical quality measure
EDB [Medicare] Enrollment Database
EHR Electronic health record
EMR Electronic medical record
EMTALA Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act of 1986, Public Law
99-272
EP Eligible professional
FAH Federation of American Hospitals
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FFY Federal fiscal year
FPL Federal poverty line
FQHC Federally qualified health center
FR Federal Register
FTE Full-time equivalent
FY Fiscal year
GAF Geographic Adjustment Factor
GME Graduate medical education
HAC Hospital-acquired condition
HAI Healthcare-associated infection
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems
HCFA Health Care Financing Administration
HCO High-cost outlier
HCP Healthcare personnel
HCRIS Hospital Cost Report Information System
HF Heart failure
HHA Home health agency
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
HICAN Health Insurance Claims Account Number
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996,
Public Law 104-191
HIPC Health Information Policy Council
HIS Health information system
HIT Health information technology
HMO Health maintenance organization
HPMP Hospital Payment Monitoring Program
HSA Health savings account
HSCRC [Maryland] Health Services Cost Review Commission
HSRV Hospital-specific relative value
HSRVcc Hospital-specific relative value cost center
HQA Hospital Quality Alliance
HQI Hospital Quality Initiative
HwH Hospital-within-hospital
HWR Hospital-wide readmission
ICD-9-CM International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-CM International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision,
Clinical Modification
ICD-10-PCS International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision,
Procedure Coding System
ICR Information collection requirement
ICU Intensive care unit
IGI IHS Global Insight, Inc.
IHS Indian Health Service
IME Indirect medical education
IMPACT Act Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of
2014, Public Law 113-185
I-O Input-Output
IOM Institute of Medicine
IPF Inpatient psychiatric facility
IPFQR Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting [Program]
IPPS [Acute care hospital] inpatient prospective payment system
IRF Inpatient rehabilitation facility
IQR [Hospital] Inpatient Quality Reporting
LAMCs Large area metropolitan counties
LDS Limited Data Set
LOS Length of stay
LTC-DRG Long-term care diagnosis-related group
LTCH Long-term care hospital
LTCH QRP Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program
MA Medicare Advantage
MAC Medicare Administrative Contractor
MACRA Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015, Public
Law 114-10
MAP Measure Application Partnership
MCC Major complication or comorbidity
MCE Medicare Code Editor
MCO Managed care organization
MDC Major diagnostic category
MDH Medicare-dependent, small rural hospital
MedPAC Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
MedPAR Medicare Provider Analysis and Review File
MEI Medicare Economic Index
MGCRB Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board
MIEA-TRHCA Medicare Improvements and Extension Act, Division B of
the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, Public Law 109-432
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008,
Public Law 110-275
MMA Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003, Public Law 108-173
MMEA Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of 2010, Public Law 111-309
MMSEA Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, Public
Law 110-173
MOON Medicare Outpatient Observation Notice
MRHFP Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program
MRSA Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
MSA Metropolitan Statistical Area
MS-DRG Medicare severity diagnosis-related group
MS-LTC-DRG Medicare severity long-term care diagnosis-related group
MU Meaningful Use [EHR Incentive Program]
MUC Measure under consideration
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NALTH National Association of Long Term Hospitals
NCD National coverage determination
NCHS National Center for Health Statistics
NCQA National Committee for Quality Assurance
NCVHS National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics
NECMA New England County Metropolitan Areas
NHSN National Healthcare Safety Network
NOP Notice of Participation
NOTICE Act Notice of Observation Treatment and Implication for Care
Eligibility Act, Public Law 114-42
NQF National Quality Forum
NQS National Quality Strategy
NTIS National Technical Information Service
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1991,
Public Law 104-113
NUBC National Uniform Billing Code
NVHRI National Voluntary Hospital Reporting Initiative
OACT [CMS'] Office of the Actuary
OBRA 86 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986, Public Law 99-509
OES Occupational employment statistics
OIG Office of the Inspector General
OMB [Executive] Office of Management and Budget
ONC Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology
OPM [U.S.] Office of Personnel Management
OQR [Hospital] Outpatient Quality Reporting
O.R. Operating room
OSCAR Online Survey Certification and Reporting [System]
PAC Post-acute care
PAMA Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014, Public Law 113-93
PCH PPS-exempt cancer hospital
PCHQR PPS-exempt cancer hospital quality reporting
PMSAs Primary metropolitan statistical areas
POA Present on admission
PPI Producer price index
PPR Potentially Preventable Readmissions
PPS Prospective payment system
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
PRM Provider Reimbursement Manual
ProPAC Prospective Payment Assessment Commission
PRRB Provider Reimbursement Review Board
PRTFs Psychiatric residential treatment facilities
[[Page 19799]]
PSF Provider-Specific File
PSI Patient safety indicator
PS&R Provider Statistical and Reimbursement [System]
PQRS Physician Quality Reporting System
PUF Public use file
QDM Quality data model
QIES ASAP Quality Improvement Evaluation System Assessment
Submission and Processing
QIG Quality Improvement Group [CMS]
QIO Quality Improvement Organization
QM Quality measure
QPP Quality Payment Program
QRDA Quality Reporting Document Architecture
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act, Public Law 96-354
RHC Rural health clinic
RHQDAPU Reporting hospital quality data for annual payment update
RIM Reference information model
RNHCI Religious nonmedical health care institution
RPL Rehabilitation psychiatric long-term care (hospital)
RRC Rural referral center
RSMR Risk-standard mortality rate
RSP Risk-standardized payment
RSSR Risk-standard readmission rate
RTI Research Triangle Institute, International
RUCAs Rural-urban commuting area codes
RY Rate year
SAF Standard Analytic File
SCH Sole community hospital
SCHIP State Child Health Insurance Program
SCIP Surgical Care Improvement Project
SFY State fiscal year
SGR Sustainable Growth Rate
SIC Standard Industrial Classification
SIR Standardized infection ratio
SNF Skilled nursing facility
SNF QRP Skilled Nursing Facility Quality Reporting Program
SNF VBP Skilled Nursing Facility Value-Based Purchasing
SOCs Standard occupational classifications
SOM State Operations Manual
SRR Standardized risk ratio
SSI Surgical site infection
SSI Supplemental Security Income
SSO Short-stay outlier
SUD Substance use disorder
TEFRA Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, Public Law
97-248
TEP Technical expert panel
THA/TKA Total hip arthroplasty/total knee arthroplasty
TMA TMA [Transitional Medical Assistance], Abstinence Education, and
QI [Qualifying Individuals] Programs Extension Act of 2007, Public
Law 110-90
TPS Total Performance Score
UHDDS Uniform hospital discharge data set
UR Utilization review
VBP [Hospital] Value Based Purchasing [Program]
VTE Venous thromboembolism
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
3. Summary of Costs and Benefits
B. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS)
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System (LTCH PPS)
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
5. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
C. Summary of Provisions of Recent Legislation Proposed To Be
Implemented in This Proposed Rule
1. The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) (Pub. L. 112-
240), the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of
2015 (Pub. L. 114-10), and the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-
255)
2. Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67)
3. Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014
(IMPACT Act) (Pub. L. 113-185)
4. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of
2015 (Pub. L. 114-10)
5. The 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
D. Summary of the Provisions of This Proposed Rule
II. Proposed Changes to Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Group
(MS-DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
B. MS-DRG Reclassifications
C. Adoption of the MS-DRGs in FY 2008
D. Proposed FY 2018 MS-DRG Documentation and Coding Adjustment
1. Background on the Prospective MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009 Authorized by Public Law 110-90
2. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustment Authorized by Section 631
of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA)
3. Proposed Adjustment for FY 2018 Required Under Section 414 of
Public Law 114-10 (MACRA) and Section 15005 of Public Law 114-255
E. Refinement of the MS-DRG Relative Weight Calculation
1. Background
2. Discussion of Policy for FY 2018
F. Proposed Changes to Specific MS-DRG Classifications
1. Discussion of Changes to Coding System and Basis for Proposed
FY 2018 MS-DRG Updates
a. Conversion of MS-DRGs to the International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10)
b. Basis for FY 2018 Proposed MS-DRG Updates
2. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System)
a. Functional Quadriplegia
b. Responsive Neurostimulator (RNS(copyright)) System
c. Precerebral Occlusion or Transient Ischemic Attack With
Thrombolytic
3. MDC 2 (Diseases and Disorders of the Eye: Swallowing Eye
Drops (Tetrahydrozoline)
4. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System)
a. Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedures and Insertion of a
Radioactive Element
b. Proposed Modification of the Titles for MS-DRG 246
(Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedures With Drug-eluting Stent With
MCC or 4+ Vessels or Stents) and MS-DRG 248 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures With Non-Drug-Eluting Stent With MCC or 4+
Vessels or Stents)
c. Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) and Left Atrial
Appendage Closure (LAAC)
d. Percutaneous Mitral Valve Replacement Procedures
e. Percutaneous Tricuspid Valve Repair
5. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System
and Connective Tissue)
a. Total Ankle Replacement (TAR) Procedures
b. Revision of Total Ankle Replacement (TAR) Procedures
c. Magnetic Controlled Growth Rods (MAGEC[supreg] System)
d. Combined Anterior/Posterior Spinal Fusion
6. MDC 14 (Pregnancy, Childbirth and the Puerperium)
a. Vaginal Delivery and Complicating Diagnoses
b. MS-DRG 998 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as Discharge
Diagnosis)
c. MS-DRG 782 (Other Antepartum Diagnoses Without Medical
Complications)
d. Shock During or Following Labor and Delivery
7. MDC 15 (Newborns and Other Neonates With Conditions
Originating in Perinatal Period): Observation and Evaluation of
Newborn
8. MDC 21 (Injuries, Poisonings and Toxic Effects of Drugs):
Complication Codes
9. MDC 23 (Factors Influencing Health Status and Other Contacts
With Health Services): Updates to MS-DRGs 945 and 946
(Rehabilitation With CC/MCC and Without CC/MCC, Respectively)
10. Proposed Changes to the Medicare Code Editor (MCE)
a. Age Conflict Edit
b. Sex Conflict Edit
c. Non-Covered Procedure Edit
d. Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis Edit
e. Future Enhancement
11. Proposed Changes to Surgical Hierarchies
12. Proposed Changes to the MS-DRG Diagnosis Codes for FY 2018
a. Background of the CC List and the CC Exclusions List
b. Proposed Additions and Deletions to the Diagnosis Code
Severity Levels for FY 2018
c. Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own CC or MCC
d. Proposed CC Exclusions List for FY 2018
13. Comprehensive Review of CC List for FY 2019
14. Review of Procedure Codes in MS DRGs 981 Through 983; 984
Through 986; and 987 Through 989
[[Page 19800]]
a. Moving Procedure Codes From MS-DRGs 981 Through 983 or MS-
DRGs 987 Through 989 Into MDCs
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among MS-DRGs 981 Through 983, 984
Through 986, and 987 Through 989
15. Proposed Changes to the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Coding
Systems
16. Proposed Replaced Devices Offered Without Cost or With a
Credit
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes for FY 2018
17. Other Proposed Policy Changes: Other Operating Room (O.R.)
and Non-O.R. Issues
a. O.R. Procedures to Non-O.R. Procedures
b. Revision of Neurostimulator Generator
c. External Repair of Hymen
d. Non-O.R. Procedures in MDC 17 (Myeloproliferative Diseases
and Disorders Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms)
G. Recalibration of the Proposed FY 2018 MS-DRG Relative Weights
1. Data Sources for Developing the Relative Weights
2. Methodology for Calculation of the Relative Weights
3. Development of National Average CCRs
H. Proposed Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
for FY 2018
1. Background
2. Public Input Before Publication of a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on Add-On Payments
3. ICD-10-PCS Section ``X'' Codes for Certain New Medical
Services and Technologies
4. Proposal To Revise Reference to an ICD-9-CM Code in Sec.
412.87(b)(2) of the Regulations
5. Proposed FY 2018 Status of Technologies Approved for FY 2017
Add-On Payments
a. CardioMEMSTM HF (Heart Failure) Monitoring System
b. Defitelio[supreg] (Defibrotide)
c. GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] Iliac Branch Endoprosthesis
(IBE)
d. Idarucizumab
e. Lutonix[supreg] Drug Coated Balloon PTA Catheter and
In.PACTTM AdmiralTM Paclitaxel Coated
Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA) Balloon Catheter
f. MAGEC[supreg] Spinal Bracing and Distraction System
(MAGEC[supreg] Spine)
g. VistogardTM (Uridine Triacetate)
h. Blinatumomab (BLINCYTOTM Trade Brand)
6. FY 2018 Applications for New Technology Add-On Payments
a. Bezlotoxumab (ZINPLAVATM)
b. EDWARDS INTUITY EliteTM Valve System (INTUITY) and
Liva Nova Perceval Valve (Perceval)
c. Ustekinumab (Stelara[supreg])
d. KTE-C19 (Axicabtagene Ciloleucel)
e. VYXEOSTM (Cytarabine and Daunorubicin Liposome for
Injection)
f. GammaTileTM
III. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care
Hospitals
A. Background
1. Legislative Authority
2. Core-Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) for the Proposed FY 2018
Hospital Wage Index
3. Codes for Constituent Counties in CBSAs
B. Worksheet S-3 Wage Data for the Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index
1. Included Categories of Costs
2. Excluded Categories of Costs
3. Use of Wage Index Data by Suppliers and Providers Other Than
Acute Care Hospitals Under the IPPS
C. Verification of Worksheet S-3 Wage Data
D. Method for Computing the Proposed FY 2018 Unadjusted Wage
Index
1. Proposed Methodology for FY 2018
2. Clarification of Other Wage Related Costs in the Wage Index
E. Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY 2018 Wage
Index
1. Use of 2013 Occupational Mix Survey for the FY 2018 Wage
Index
2. Use of the 2016 Medicare Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey
for the FY 2019 Wage Index
3. Calculation of the Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment for
FY 2018
F. Analysis and Implementation of the Proposed Occupational Mix
Adjustment and the Proposed FY 2018 Occupational Mix Adjusted Wage
Index
G. Proposed Application of the Rural, Imputed, and Frontier
Floors
1. Proposed Rural Floor
2. Proposed Expiration of the Imputed Floor Policy
3. Proposed State Frontier Floor for FY 2018
H. Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index Tables
I. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on Hospital Redesignations
and Reclassifications
1. General Policies and Effects of Reclassification and
Redesignation
2. MGCRB Reclassification and Redesignation Issues for FY 2018
a. FY 2018 Reclassification Requirements and Approvals
b. Extension of PRA Information Collection Requirement Approval
for MGCRB Applications
c. Proposed Deadline for Submittal of Documentation of Sole
Community Hospital (SCH) and Rural Referral Center (RRC)
Classification Status to the MGCRB
d. Clarification of Special Rules for SCHs and RRCs
Reclassifying to Geographic Home Area
3. Redesignations Under Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
4. Proposed Changes to the 45-Day Notification Rules
J. Proposed Out-Migration Adjustment Based on Commuting Patterns
of Hospital Employees
K. Reclassification From Urban to Rural Under Section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act Implemented at 42 CFR 412.103
L. Clarification of Application Deadline for Rural Referral
Center (RRC) Classification
M. Proposed Process for Requests for Wage Index Data Corrections
1. Process for Hospitals To Accept Wage Index Data Corrections
2. Process for Wage Index Data Corrections by CMS After the
January Public Use File (PUF)
N. Proposed Labor Market Share for the Proposed FY 2018 Wage
Index
IV. Proposed Rebasing and Revising of the Hospital Market Baskets
for Acute Care Hospitals
A. Background
B. Rebasing and Revising the IPPS Market Basket
1. Development of Cost Categories and Weights
a. Use of Medicare Cost Report Data
b. Final Major Cost Category Computation
c. Derivation of the Detailed Cost Weights
2. Selection of Proposed Price Proxies
3. Labor-Related Share
C. Market Basket for Certain Hospitals Presently Excluded From
the IPPS
D. Rebasing and Revising the Capital Input Price Index (CIPI)
V. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating
System
A. Proposed Changes to MS-DRGs Subject to Postacute Care
Transfer and MS-DRG Special Payment Policies
B. Proposed Changes in the Inpatient Hospital Updates for FY
2018 (Sec. 412.64(d))
1. Proposed FY 2018 Inpatient Hospital Update
2. Proposed FY 2018 Puerto Rico Hospital Update
C. Proposed Change to Volume Decrease Adjustment for Sole
Community Hospitals (SCHs) and Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural
Hospitals (MDHs) (Sec. 412.92)
1. Background
2. Proposed Changes to the Volume Decrease Adjustment
Calculation Methodology for SCHs
D. Rural Referral Centers (RRCs): Proposed Annual Updates to
Case-Mix Index (CMI) and Discharge Criteria (Sec. 412.96)
1. Case-Mix Index (CMI)
2. Discharges
E. Proposed Payment Adjustment for Low-Volume Hospitals (Sec.
412.101)
1. Expiration of Temporary Changes to Low-Volume Hospital
Payment Policy
2. Background
3. Proposed Payment Adjustment for FY 2018 and Subsequent Fiscal
Years
4. Proposed Parallel Low-Volume Hospital Payment Adjustment
Regarding Hospitals Operated by the Indian Health Service (IHS) or a
Tribe
F. Indirect Medical Education (IME) Payment Adjustment (Sec.
412.105)
G. Proposed Payment Adjustment for Medicare Disproportionate
Share Hospitals (DSHs) for FY 2018 (Sec. 412.106)
1. General Discussion
2. Eligibility for Empirically Justified Medicare DSH Payments
and Uncompensated Care Payments
3. Empirically Justified Medicare DSH Payments
4. Uncompensated Care Payments
a. Proposed Calculation of Factor 1 for FY 2018
b. Proposed Calculation of Factor 2 for FY 2018
(1) Background
[[Page 19801]]
(2) Proposed Methodology for Calculation of Factor 2 for FY 2018
c. Calculation of Proposed Factor 3 for FY 2018
(1) Background
(2) Proposed Data Source for FY 2018
(3) Proposed Time Period for Calculating Factor 3 for FY 2018,
Including Methodology for Incorporating Worksheet S-10 Data
(4) Methodological Considerations for Calculating Factor 3
(5) Methodological Considerations for Incorporating Worksheet S-
10 Data
H. Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospital (MDH) Program (Sec.
412.108)
1. Background for the MDH Program
a. Expiration of the MDH Program
I. Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program: Proposed Updates and
Changes (Sec. Sec. 412.150 Through 412.154)
1. Statutory Basis for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program
2. Regulatory Background
3. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
4. Proposed Policies for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program
5. Proposed Applicable Period for FY 2018
6. Proposed Calculation of Aggregate Payments for Excess
Readmissions for FY 2018
7. Background and Current Payment Adjustment Methodology
a. Background
b. Current Payment Adjustment Methodology
8. Provisions for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology
for FY 2019: Proposed Methodology for Calculating the Proportion of
Dual Eligible Patients
a. Background
b. Proposed Data Sources Used To Determine Dual Eligibility
c. Proposed Data Period Used To Define Dual Eligibility
9. Provision for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology for
FY 2019: Proposed Methodology for Assigning Hospitals to Peer Groups
10. Provisions for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology
for FY 2019: Proposed Payment Adjustment Formula Calculation
Methodology
a. Background
b. Proposals
c. Analysis
11. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program
12. Extraordinary Circumstance Exception (ECE) Policy
13. Timeline for Public Reporting of Excess Readmission Ratios
on Hospital Compare for the FY 2018 Payment Determination
J. Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program: Proposed
Policy Changes
1. Background
a. Statutory Background and Overview of Past Program Years
b. FY 2018 Program Year Payment Details
2. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital VBP
Program
3. Retention and Removal of Quality Measures for the FY 2019
Program Year
a. Retention of Previously Adopted Hospital VBP Program Measures
b. Proposed Removal of the PSI 90 Measure
c. Summary of Previously Adopted Measures and Proposed Measure
for Removal for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 Program Years
4. Proposed New Measures for the FY 2022 Program Year, FY 2023
Program Year, and Subsequent Years
a. Proposed New Measure for the FY 2022 Program Year and
Subsequent Years: Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
Associated With a 30-Day Episode-of-Care for Pneumonia (PN Payment)
b. Proposed New Measure for the FY 2023 Program Year and
Subsequent Years: Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) (NQF
#0531)
5. Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and Performance
Periods
a. Background
b. Person and Community Engagement Domain
c. Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
d. Safety Domain
e. Clinical Care Domain
f. Summary of Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and
Performance Periods for the FY 2019 Through FY 2023 Program Years
6. Proposed Performance Standards for the Hospital VBP Program
a. Background
b. Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for the
FY 2020 Program Year
c. Previously Adopted Performance Standards for Certain Measures
for the FY 2021 Program Year
d. Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for
Certain Measures for the FY 2022 Program Year
e. Proposed Performance Standards for Certain Measures for the
FY 2023 Program Year
7. Scoring Methodology and Data Requirements for the FY 2019
Program Year and Subsequent Years
a. Proposed Domain Weighting for the FY 2020 Program Year and
Subsequent Years for Hospitals That Receive a Score on All Domains
b. Proposed Domain Weighting for the FY 2019 Program Year and
Subsequent Years for Hospitals Receiving Scores on Fewer Than Four
Domains
c. Minimum Numbers of Cases for Hospital VBP Program Measures
for the FY 2019 Program Year and Subsequent Years
d. Weighting Measures Within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction
Domain
K. Proposed Changes to the Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC)
Reduction Program
1. Background
2. Implementation of the HAC Reduction Program for FY 2018
3. Proposed Data Collection Time Periods for the FY 2020 HAC
Reduction Program
4. Request for Comments on Additional Measures for Potential
Future Adoption
5. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the HAC Reduction
Program
6. Request for Comments on Inclusion on Disability and Medical
Complexity for CDC NHSN Measures
7. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
8. Extraordinary Circumstances Exception (ECE) Policy for the
HAC Reduction Program
L. Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
and Proposals for Implementation
a. Statutory Provisions
b. Proposed Terms of Continuation for Previously Participating
Hospitals
c. Solicitation for Additional Participants
4. Budget Neutrality
a. Statutory Budget Neutrality Requirement
b. Methodology Used in Previous Final Rules
c. Proposed Budget Neutrality Methodology for Extension Period
Authorized by the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
d. Alternative Budget Neutrality Approach
e. Reconciling Actual and Estimated Costs of the Demonstration
for Previous Years (2011, 2012, and 2013)
M. Payments for Services in Inpatient and Outpatient Settings
1. Adjustment to IPPS Rates Resulting From the 2-Midnight Policy
for FY 2018
2. Eliminating Inappropriate Medicare Payment Differentials for
Similar Services in the Inpatient and Outpatient Settings
N. Provider-Based Status of Indian Health Service and Tribal
Facilities and Organizations
O. Request for Information Regarding Physician-Owned Hospitals
VI. Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
A. Overview
B. Additional Provisions
1. Exception Payments
2. New Hospitals
3. Payments for Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico
C. Proposed Annual Update for FY 2018
VII. Proposed Changes for Hospitals Excluded From the IPPS
A. Proposed Rate-of-Increase in Payments To Excluded Hospitals
for FY 2018
B. Proposed Revisions to Hospital-Within-Hospital Regulations
C. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
2. Frontier Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP)
Demonstration
3. Physician Certification Requirement for Payment of Inpatient
CAH Services Under Medicare Part A
a. Background
b. Notice Regarding Changes to Instructions for the Review of
the CAH 96-Hour Certification Requirement
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS) for FY 2018
A. Background of the LTCH PPS
1. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
2. Criteria for Classification as an LTCH
[[Page 19802]]
a. Classification as an LTCH
b. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
3. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
4. Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) and
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Compliance
B. Proposed Medicare Severity Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related
Group (MS-LTC-DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights for FY 2018
1. Background
2. Patient Classifications Into MS-LTC-DRGs
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes to the MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018
3. Development of the Proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG Relative
Weights
a. General Overview of the Development of the MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
b. Development of the Proposed MS-LTC-DRG Relative Weights for
FY 2018
c. Data
d. Hospital-Specific Relative Value (HSRV) Methodology
e. Treatment of Severity Levels in Developing the MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
f. Proposed Low-Volume MS-LTC-DRGs
g. Steps for Determining the Proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
C. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS Payment Rates and Other
Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
1. Overview of Development of the LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Payment Rates
2. Proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
Annual Market Basket Update
a. Overview
b. Proposed Annual Update to the LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Payment Rate for FY 2018
c. Proposed Adjustment to the LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment
Rate Under the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program
(LTCH QRP)
d. Proposed Annual Update Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
D. Proposed Changes to the Short-Stay Outlier Adjustment Policy
(Sec. 412.529)
E. Temporary Exception to the Site Neutral Payment Rate for
Certain Spinal Cord Specialty Hospitals
F. Temporary Exception to the Site Neutral Payment Rate for
Certain Discharges With Severe Wounds Form Certain LTCHs
G. Moratorium and Proposed Regulatory Delay of the Full
Implementation of the ``25-Percent'' Threshold Policy'' Adjustment
(Sec. 412.538)
H. Revision to Moratorium on Increasing Beds in Existing LTCH or
LTCH Satellite Locations Under the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L.
114-255) (Sec. 412.23)
I. Proposed Changes to the Average Length of Stay Criterion
Under the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
J. Change in Medicare Classification for Certain Hospitals
(Sec. 412.23)
IX. Quality Data Reporting Requirements for Specific Providers and
Suppliers
A. Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
1. Background
a. History of the Hospital IQR Program
b. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
c. Public Display of Quality Measures
d. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital IQR
Program
2. Retention of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures
for Subsequent Payment Determinations
3. Removal and Suspension of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR
Program Measures
4. Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures for the FY
2019 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
5. Considerations in Expanding and Updating of Quality Measures
6. Refinements to Existing Measures in the Hospital IQR Program
for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
a. Refining Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers
and Systems (HCAHPS) Survey (NQF #0166) for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
b. Refinement of the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-
Standardized Mortality Rate (RSMR) Following Acute Ischemic Stroke
Hospitalization Measure for the FY 2023 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
c. Summary of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures
for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
7. Proposed Voluntary Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure
With Claims and Electronic Health Record Data (NQF #2879)
a. Background
b. Proposal for Voluntary Reporting of Electronic Health Record
Data for the Hybrid HWR Measure (NQF #2879)
c. Data Sources
d. Outcome
e. Cohort
f. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
g. Risk-Adjustment
h. Calculating the Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate (RSRR)
i. Data Submission and Reporting Requirements
j. Confidential Hospital-Specific Reports
8. Proposed Changes to Policies on Reporting of eCQMs
a. Background
b. Proposed Modifications to the eCQM Reporting Requirements for
the Hospital IQR Program for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019
Payment Determination
c. Proposed Modifications to the eCQM Reporting Requirements for
the Hospital IQR Program for the CY 2018 Reporting Period/FY 2020
Payment Determination
9. Possible New Quality Measures and Measure Topics for Future
Years
a. Potential Inclusion of the Quality of Informed Consent
Documents for Hospital-Performed, Elective Procedures Measure
b. Potential Inclusion of Four End-of-Life (EOL) Measures for
Cancer Patients
c. Potential Inclusion of Two Nurse Staffing Measures
d. Potential Inclusion of Additional Electronic Clinical Quality
Measures (eCQMs) in the Hospital IQR and Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs
10. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Background
b. Procedural Requirements for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
c. Data Submission Requirements for Chart-Abstracted Measures
d. Proposed Changes to the Reporting and Submission Requirements
for eCQMs
e. Proposed Submission Form and Method for the Proposed
Voluntary Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure With Claims and
Electronic Health Record Data (NQF #2879)
f. Sampling and Case Thresholds for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
g. HCAHPS Administration and Submission Requirements for the FY
2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
h. Data Submission Requirements for Structural Measures for the
FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
i. Data Submission and Reporting Requirements for HAI Measures
Reported via NHSN
11. Proposed Modifications to the Validation of Hospital IQR
Program Data
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes to the Existing Processes for Validation of
Hospital IQR Program eCQM Data for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
c. Proposed Modifications to the Educational Review Process for
Chart-Abstracted Measures Validation
12. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement (DACA)
Requirements for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
13. Public Display Requirements for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
a. Background
b. Potential Options for Confidential and Public Reporting of
Hospital IQR Measures Stratified by Patient Dual Eligibility Status
14. Reconsideration and Appeal Procedures for the FY 2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
15. Proposed Change to the Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary
Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy
a. Background
b. Proposals To Align the Hospital IQR Program ECE Policy With
Other CMS Quality Programs
B. PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program
1. Background
2. Criteria for Removal and Retention of PCHQR Program Measures
3. Retention and Proposed Removal of Previously Finalized
Quality Measures for PCHs Beginning With the FY 2020 Program Year
[[Page 19803]]
a. Background
b. Proposed Removal of Measures From the PCHQR Program Beginning
With the FY 2020 Program Year
4. Proposed New Quality Measures Beginning With the FY 2020
Program Year
a. Considerations in the Selection of Quality Measures
b. Proposed New Quality Measures Beginning With the FY 2020
Program Year
c. Summary of Previously Finalized and Newly Proposed PCHQR
Program Measures for the FY 2020 Program Year and Subsequent Years
5. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the PCHQR Program
6. Possible New Quality Measure Topics for Future Years
a. Background
b. Localized Prostate Cancer: Vitality; Localized Prostate
Cancer: Urinary Incontinence; Localized Prostate Cancer: Urinary
Frequency; Obstruction, and/or Irritation; Localized Prostate
Cancer: Sexual Function; and Localized Prostate Cancer: Bowel
Function
c. 30-Day Unplanned Readmission for Cancer Patients
7. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
8. Public Display Requirements
a. Background
b. Deferment of Public Display of Two Measures
9. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submission
a. Background
b. Proposed Reporting Requirements for the Proposed New Measures
10. Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy Under
the PCHQR Program
a. Background
b. Proposed Modification to the Exception Policy
C. Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
1. Background and Statutory Authority
2. General Considerations Used for Selection of Quality Measures
for the LTCH QRP
a. Background
b. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the LTCH QRP
3. Proposed Collection of Standardized Patient Assessment Data
Under the LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Definition of Standardized Patient Assessment Data
b. General Considerations Used for the Selection of Proposed
Standardized Patient Assessment Data
4. Policy for Retaining LTCH QRP Measures and Proposal to Apply
That Policy to Standardized Patient Assessment Data
5. Policy for Adopting Changes to LTCH QRP Measures and Proposal
To Apply That Policy to Standardized Patient Assessment Data
6. Quality Measures Previously Finalized for the LTCH QRP
7. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Proposed Beginning With the FY 2020
LTCH QRP
a. Proposal To Replace the Current Pressure Ulcer Quality
Measure, Entitled Percent of Residents or Patients With Pressure
Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), With a
Modified Pressure Ulcer Measure, Entitled Changes in Skin Integrity
Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury
b. Proposed Mechanical Ventilation Process Quality Measure:
Compliance With Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT) by Day 2 of the
LTCH Stay
c. Proposed Mechanical Ventilation Outcome Quality Measure:
Ventilator Liberation Rate
8. Proposed Removal of the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission
Measure for 30 Days Post-Discharge From LTCHs From the LTCH QRP
9. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Under Consideration for Future
Years
a. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Under Consideration for Future
Years
b. IMPACT Act Measure--Possible Future Update to Measure
Specifications
c. IMPACT Act Implementation Update
10. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting for
the LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting for
the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
b. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting
Beginning With the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
11. Proposals Relating to the Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submission Under the LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Start Date for Standardized Patient Assessment Data
Reporting by New LTCHs
b. Proposed Mechanism for Reporting Standardized Patient
Assessment Data Beginning With the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
c. Proposed Schedule for Reporting Standardized Patient
Assessment Data Beginning With the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
d. Proposed Schedule for Reporting the Proposed Quality Measures
Beginning With the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
e. Proposed Removal of Interrupted Stay Items From the LTCH CARE
Data Set
12. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Participation
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
13. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Data Submission
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
14. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Exception and
Extension Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
15. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Reconsiderations
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
16. Proposal To Apply the LTCH QRP Data Completion Thresholds to
the Submission of Standardized Patient Assessment Data Beginning
With the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
17. Proposals and Policies Regarding Public Display of Measure
Data for the LTCH QRP
18. Mechanism for Providing Feedback Reports to LTCHs
D. Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR)
Program
1. Background
a. Statutory Authority
b. Covered Entities
c. Considerations in Selecting Quality Measures
2. Factors for Removal or Retention of IPFQR Program Measures
a. Background
b. Proposed Considerations in Removing or Retaining Measures
3. Proposed New Quality Measure for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years--Medication Continuation
Following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge
a. Background
b. Appropriateness for the IPFQR Program
c. Measure Calculation
d. Data Sources
e. Public Comment
4. Summary of Proposed and Previously Finalized Measures for the
FY 2020 Payment Determinations and Subsequent Years
5. Possible IPFQR Program Measures and Topics for Future
Consideration
6. Public Display and Review Requirements
7. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission for the
FY 2019 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
a. Procedural Requirements for FY 2019 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
b. Data Submission Requirements for the FY 2019 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
c. Reporting Requirements for the FY 2019 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
d. Population and Sampling
e. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement (DACA)
Requirements
8. Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures
9. Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) for the IPFQR
Program
a. Background
b. Proposed ECE Policy Modifications
E. Clinical Quality Measurement for Eligible Hospitals and
Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) Participating in the EHR Incentive
Programs
1. Background
2. Proposed Modifications to the CQM Reporting Requirements for
the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs for CY 2017
a. Background
b. Proposed Changes to Policies Regarding Electronic Reporting
of CQMs for CY 2017
3. CQM Reporting for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs in 2018
a. Background
b. CQM Reporting Period for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs in CY 2018
c. CQM Reporting Form and Method for the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program in 2018
F. Clinical Quality Measurement for Eligible Professionals (EPs)
Participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program in 2017
[[Page 19804]]
1. Proposed Modifications to the CQM Reporting Period for EPs in
2017
2. Proposed Modifications to CQM Reporting Requirements for
Medicaid EPs Under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program
G. Changes to the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs
1. Proposed Revisions to the EHR Reporting Period in 2018
2. Significant Hardship Exception for Decertified Certified EHR
Technology (CEHRT) for EPs, Eligible Hospitals, and CAHs Seeking To
Avoid the Medicare Payment Adjustment
3. Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC)-Based Eligible Professionals
(EPs)
4. Certification Requirements for 2018 X. Proposed Revisions of
Medicare Cost Reporting and Provider Requirements
A. Electronic Signature and Submission of the Certification and
Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost Report
1. Background
2. Proposed Changes Relating to Electronic Signature on the
Certification and Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost
Report
3. Proposed Changes Relating to Electronic Submission of the
Certification and Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost
Report
4. Clarifications Relating to the Items Required To Be Submitted
by Providers With the Medicare Cost Report
a. Settlement Summary and Certification Statement
b. Removal of the Transition Period Language
5. Proposed Revisions to 42 CFR 413.24(f)(4)(iv)
B. Clarification of Limitations on the Valuation of Depreciable
Assets Disposed of On or After December 1, 1997
XI. Proposed Changes Relating to Survey and Certification
Requirements
A. Proposed Revisions to the Application and Re-Application
Procedures for National Accrediting Organizations (AOs), Provider
and Supplier Conditions, and Posting of Survey Reports and
Acceptable Plans of Corrections (PoCs)
1. Background
2. Proposed Regulation Changes
B. Proposed Changes to Termination Public Notice Requirements
for Certain Providers and Suppliers
1. Background
2. Basis for Proposed Changes
3. Proposed Changes to Regulations
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
XIII. Other Required Information
A. Publicly Available Data
1. CMS Wage Data Public Use File
2. CMS Occupational Mix Data Public Use File
3. Provider Occupational Mix Adjustment Factors for Each
Occupational Category Public Use File
4. Other Wage Index Files
5. FY 2018 IPPS SSA/FIPS CBSA State and County Crosswalk
6. HCRIS Cost Report Data
7. Provider-Specific File
8. CMS Medicare Case-Mix Index File
9. MS-DRG Relative Weights (Also Table 5--MS-DRGs)
10. IPPS Payment Impact File
11. AOR/BOR Table
12. Prospective Payment System (PPS) Standardized File
13. Hospital Readmissions Reductions Program Supplemental File
14. Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Supplemental
File
B. Collection of Information Requirements
1. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
2. ICRs for Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
3. ICRs for the Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Proposed FY
2018 Wage Index (Hospital Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey)
4. Hospital Applications for Geographic Reclassifications by the
MGCRB
5. ICRs for Temporary Exception to the LTCH PPS Site Neutral
Payment Rate for Certain Spinal Cord Specialty Hospitals
6. ICRs for the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR)
Program
7. ICRs for PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR)
Program
8. ICRs for Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program
9. ICRs for the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting
Program (LTCH QRP)
10. ICRs for the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality
Reporting (IPFQR) Program
11. ICRs for the Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive
Programs and Meaningful Use
12. ICRs Relating to Proposed Electronic Signature and
Electronic Submission of the Certification and Settlement Summary
Page of Medicare Cost Reports
13. ICRs Relating to Survey and Certification Requirements
C. Request for Information on CMS Flexibilities and Efficiencies
D. Response to Public Comments
Regulation Text
Addendum--Proposed Schedule of Standardized Amounts, Update Factors,
and Rate-of-Increase Percentages Effective With Cost Reporting
Periods Beginning on or After October 1, 2017 and Payment Rates for
LTCHs Effective With Discharges Occurring on or After October 1,
2017
I. Summary and Background
II. Proposed Changes to the Prospective Payment Rates for Hospital
Inpatient Operating Costs for Acute Care Hospitals for FY 2018
A. Calculation of the Adjusted Standardized Amount
B. Adjustments for Area Wage Levels and Cost-of-Living
C. Calculation of the Prospective Payment Rates
III. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Acute Care Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Costs for FY 2018
A. Determination of Federal Hospital Inpatient Capital-Related
Prospective Payment Rate Update
B. Calculation of the Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payments for FY 2018
C. Capital Input Price Index
IV. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Excluded Hospitals:
Proposed Rate-of-Increase Percentages for FY 2018
V. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for the LTCH PPS for FY
2018
A. Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate for FY 2018
B. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage Levels Under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2018
1. Background
2. Geographic Classifications (Labor Market Areas) for the LTCH
PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
3. Proposed Labor-Related Share for the LTCH PPS Standard
Federal Payment Rate
4. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2018 for the LTCH PPS Standard
Federal Payment Rate
5. Proposed Budget Neutrality Adjustment for Changes to the LTCH
PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate Area Wage Level Adjustment
C. Proposed LTCH PPS Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) for LTCHs
Located in Alaska and Hawaii
D. Proposed Adjustment for LTCH PPS High-Cost Outlier (HCO)
Cases
E. Update to the IPPS Comparable/Equivalent Amounts to Reflect
the Statutory Changes to the IPPS DSH Payment Adjustment Methodology
F. Computing the Proposed Adjusted LTCH PPS Federal Prospective
Payments for FY 2018
VI. Tables Referenced in This Proposed Rule and Available Only
Through the Internet on the CMS Web Site
Appendix A--Economic Analyses
I. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Need
C. Objectives of the IPPS
D. Limitations of Our Analysis
E. Hospitals Included in and Excluded From the IPPS
F. Effects on Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the
IPPS
G. Quantitative Effects of the Proposed Policy Changes Under the
IPPS for Operating Costs
1. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
2. Analysis of Table I
3. Impact Analysis of Table II
H. Effects of Other Proposed Policy Changes
1. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to New Medical Service
and Technology Add-On Payments
2. Effects of Proposed Changes to MS-DRGs Subject to the
Postacute Care Transfer Policy and the MS-DRG Special Payment Policy
3. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the Volume Decrease
Adjustment for Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs)
4. Effects of Proposed Changes to Low-Volume Hospital Payment
Adjustment Policy
5. Effects of the Proposed Changes to Medicare DSH and
Uncompensated Care Payments for FY 2018
[[Page 19805]]
6. Effects of Proposed Reduction Under the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program
7. Effects of Proposed Changes Under the FY 2018 Hospital Value-
Based Purchasing (VBP) Program
8. Effects of Proposed Changes to the HAC Reduction Program for
FY 2018
9. Effects of Implementation of the Additional 5-Year Expansion
of the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
10. Effects of the Proposed Changes Relating to Provider-Based
Status of Indian Health Service and Tribal Facilities and
Organizations
11. Effects of the Proposed Changes Relating to Hospital-Within-
Hospital Policy
12. Effects of Continued Implementation of the Frontier
Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP) Demonstration
I. Effects of Proposed Changes in the Capital IPPS
1. General Considerations
2. Results
J. Effects of Proposed Payment Rate Changes and Policy Changes
Under the LTCH PPS
1. Introduction and General Considerations
2. Impact on Rural Hospitals
3. Anticipated Effects of Proposed LTCH PPS Payment Rate Changes
and Policy Changes
4. Effect on the Medicare Program
5. Effect on Medicare Beneficiaries
K. Effects of Proposed Requirements for Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
L. Effects of Proposed Requirements for the PPS-Exempt Cancer
Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program
M. Effects of Proposed Requirements for the Long-Term Care
Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
N. Effects of Proposed Updates to the Inpatient Psychiatric
Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program
O. Effects of Proposed Requirements Regarding the Electronic
Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs and Meaningful Use
P. Effects of Proposed Electronic Signature and Electronic
Submission of the Certification and Settlement Summary Page of
Medicare Cost Reports
Q. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to Survey and
Certification Requirements
R. Effects of Clarification of Limitations on the Valuation of
Depreciable Assets Disposed of on or After December 1, 1997
S. Alternatives Considered
T. Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs
U. Overall Conclusion
1. Acute Care Hospitals
2. LTCHs
V. Regulatory Review Costs
II. Accounting Statements and Tables
A. Acute Care Hospitals
B. LTCHs
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) Analysis
IV. Impact on Small Rural Hospitals
V. Unfunded Mandate Reform Act (UMRA) Analysis
VI. Executive Order 13175
VII. Executive Order 12866
Appendix B: Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost
Rates of Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
II. Inpatient Hospital Update for FY 2018
A. Proposed FY 2018 Inpatient Hospital Update
B. Proposed Update for SCHs for FY 2018
C. Proposed FY 2018 Puerto Rico Hospital Update
D. Proposed Update for Hospitals Excluded From the IPPS
E. Proposed Update for LTCHs for FY 2018
III. Secretary's Recommendation
IV. MedPAC Recommendation for Assessing Payment Adequacy and
Updating Payments in Traditional Medicare
I. Executive Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary
1. Purpose and Legal Authority
This proposed rule would make payment and policy changes under the
Medicare inpatient prospective payment systems (IPPS) for operating and
capital-related costs of acute care hospitals as well as for certain
hospitals and hospital units excluded from the IPPS. We also are making
proposals relating to the provider-based status of Indian Health
Service (IHS) and Tribal facilities and organizations and to the IPPS
low-volume hospital payment adjustment for hospitals operated by the
IHS or a Tribe. In addition, it would make payment and policy changes
for inpatient hospital services provided by long-term care hospitals
(LTCHs) under the long-term care hospital prospective payment system
(LTCH PPS). It also would make policy changes to programs associated
with Medicare IPPS hospitals, IPPS-excluded hospitals, and LTCHs.
We are proposing to establish new requirements or revising
requirements for quality reporting by specific providers (acute care
hospitals, PPS-exempt hospitals, LTCHs, and inpatient psychiatric
facilities) that are participating in Medicare. We also are proposing
to establish new requirements or revise existing requirements for
eligible professionals (EPs), eligible hospitals, and CAHs
participating in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. We
are proposing to update policies relating to the Hospital Value-Based
Purchasing (VBP) Program, the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program,
and the Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program. We also
are proposing changes related to the transparency of accrediting
organization survey reports and plans of correction; to allow
electronic signature and electronic submission of the Certification and
Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost reports; and to clarify
provider reimbursement regulations relative to the sale or scrapping of
depreciable assets on or after December 1, 1997.
Under various statutory authorities, we are proposing to make
changes to the Medicare IPPS, to the LTCH PPS, and to other related
payment methodologies and programs for FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal
years. These statutory authorities include, but are not limited to, the
following:
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security Act (the Act),
which sets forth a system of payment for the operating costs of acute
care hospital inpatient stays under Medicare Part A (Hospital
Insurance) based on prospectively set rates. Section 1886(g) of the Act
requires that, instead of paying for capital-related costs of inpatient
hospital services on a reasonable cost basis, the Secretary use a
prospective payment system (PPS).
Section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, which specifies that
certain hospitals and hospital units are excluded from the IPPS. These
hospitals and units are: Rehabilitation hospitals and units; LTCHs;
psychiatric hospitals and units; children's hospitals; cancer
hospitals; long-term care neoplastic disease hospitals, and hospitals
located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico (that is, hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa). Religious nonmedical
health care institutions (RNHCIs) are also excluded from the IPPS.
Sections 123(a) and (c) of the BBRA (Pub. L. 106-113) and
section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA (Pub. L. 106-554) (as codified under
section 1886(m)(1) of the Act), which provide for the development and
implementation of a prospective payment system for payment for
inpatient hospital services of long-term care hospitals (LTCHs)
described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act.
Sections 1814(l), 1820, and 1834(g) of the Act, which
specify that payments are made to critical access hospitals (CAHs)
(that is, rural hospitals or facilities that meet certain statutory
requirements) for inpatient and outpatient services and that these
payments are generally based on 101 percent of reasonable cost.
Section 1866(k) of the Act, as added by section 3005 of
the Affordable Care Act, which establishes a quality reporting program
for hospitals described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act,
referred to as ``PPS-exempt cancer hospitals.''
Section 1886(a)(4) of the Act, which specifies that costs
of approved
[[Page 19806]]
educational activities are excluded from the operating costs of
inpatient hospital services. Hospitals with approved graduate medical
education (GME) programs are paid for the direct costs of GME in
accordance with section 1886(h) of the Act.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, which requires the
Secretary to reduce the applicable percentage increase that would
otherwise apply to the standardized amount applicable to a subsection
(d) hospital for discharges occurring in a fiscal year if the hospital
does not submit data on measures in a form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary.
Section 1886(o) of the Act, which requires the Secretary
to establish a Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program under
which value-based incentive payments are made in a fiscal year to
hospitals meeting performance standards established for a performance
period for such fiscal year.
Section 1886(p) of the Act, as added by section 3008 of
the Affordable Care Act, which establishes a Hospital-Acquired
Condition (HAC) Reduction Program, under which payments to applicable
hospitals are adjusted to provide an incentive to reduce hospital-
acquired conditions.
Section 1886(q) of the Act, as added by section 3025 of
the Affordable Care Act and amended by section 10309 of the Affordable
Care Act and section 15002 of the 21st Century Cures Act, which
establishes the ``Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program.'' Under the
program, payments for discharges from an ``applicable hospital'' under
section 1886(d) of the Act will be reduced to account for certain
excess readmissions. Section 15002 of the 21st Century Cures Act
requires the Secretary to compare cohorts of hospitals to each other in
determining the extent of excess readmissions.
Section 1886(r) of the Act, as added by section 3133 of
the Affordable Care Act, which provides for a reduction to
disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments under section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act and for a new uncompensated care payment to
eligible hospitals. Specifically, section 1886(r) of the Act requires
that, for fiscal year 2014 and each subsequent fiscal year, subsection
(d) hospitals that would otherwise receive a DSH payment made under
section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act will receive two separate payments:
(1) 25 percent of the amount they previously would have received under
section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act for DSH (``the empirically justified
amount''), and (2) an additional payment for the DSH hospital's
proportion of uncompensated care, determined as the product of three
factors. These three factors are: (1) 75 percent of the payments that
would otherwise be made under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act; (2) 1
minus the percent change in the percent of individuals who are
uninsured (minus 0.2 percentage points for FY 2018 through FY 2019);
and (3) a hospital's uncompensated care amount relative to the
uncompensated care amount of all DSH hospitals expressed as a
percentage.
Section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, as added by section
1206(a)(1) of the Pathway for Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) Reform Act
of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67), which provided for the establishment of site
neutral payment rate criteria under the LTCH PPS with implementation
beginning in FY 2016.
Section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, as amended by section 15009
of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), which provides for a
temporary exception to the application of the site neutral payment rate
under the LTCH PPS for certain spinal cord specialty hospitals for
discharges in cost reporting periods beginning during FYs 2018 and
2019.
Section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, as amended by section 15010
of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), which provides for a
temporary exception to the application of the site neutral payment rate
under the LTCH PPS for certain LTCHs with certain discharges with
severe wounds occurring in cost reporting periods beginning during FY
2018.
Section 1886(m)(5)(D)(iv) of the Act, as added by section
1206 (c) of the Pathway for Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) Reform Act of
2013 (Pub. L. 113-67), which provides for the establishment of a
functional status quality measure under the LTCH QRP for change in
mobility among inpatients requiring ventilator support.
Section 1899B of the Act, as added by the Improving
Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014 (the IMPACT Act,
Pub. L. 113-185), which imposes data reporting requirements for certain
post-acute care providers, including LTCHs.
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
a. MS-DRG Documentation and Coding Adjustment
Section 631 of the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA, Pub. L. 112-
240) amended section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90 to require the
Secretary to make a recoupment adjustment to the standardized amount of
Medicare payments to acute care hospitals to account for changes in MS-
DRG documentation and coding that do not reflect real changes in case-
mix, totaling $11 billion over a 4-year period of FYs 2014, 2015, 2016,
and 2017. The FY 2014 through FY 2017 adjustments represented the
amount of the increase in aggregate payments as a result of not
completing the prospective adjustment authorized under section
7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110-90 until FY 2013. Prior to the ATRA, this
amount could not have been recovered under Public Law 110-90. Section
414 of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015
(Pub. L. 114-10) replaced the single positive adjustment we intended to
make in FY 2018 with a 0.5 percent positive adjustment to the
standardized amount of Medicare payments to acute care hospitals for
FYs 2018 through 2023. The FY 2018 adjustment was subsequently adjusted
to 0.4588 percent by section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act.
For FY 2018, we are proposing to make the 0.4588 percent positive
adjustment to the standardized amount as required by section 414 of
Public Law 114-10, as amended by section 15005 of the 21st Century
Cures Act.
b. Adjustment to IPPS Rates Resulting From 2-Midnight Policy
In FY 2017, we made a permanent adjustment to the standardized
amount, the hospital-specific payment rates, and the national capital
Federal rate to prospectively remove the 0.2 percent reduction to the
rates put in place in FY 2014 to offset the estimated increase in IPPS
expenditures as a result of the 2-midnight policy. In addition, we made
a temporary one-time prospective increase to the FY 2017 standardized
amount, the hospital-specific payment rates, and the national capital
Federal rate of 0.6 percent by including a temporary one-time factor of
1.006 in the calculation of the standardized amount, the hospital-
specific payment rates, and the national capital Federal rate to
address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction to the rate for the 2-
midnight policy in effect for FYs 2014, 2015, and 2016.
For FY 2018, we are including a factor of (1/1.006) in the
calculation of the FY 2018 standardized amount, the hospital-specific
payment rates, and the national capital Federal rate to remove the
temporary one-time factor of 1.006, as established in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule.
[[Page 19807]]
c. Reduction of Hospital Payments for Excess Readmissions
We are proposing to make changes to policies for the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program, which is established under section
1886(q) of the Act, as added by section 3025 of the Affordable Care
Act, as amended by section 10309 of the Affordable Care Act. The
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program requires a reduction to a
hospital's base operating DRG payment to account for excess
readmissions of selected applicable conditions. For FY 2018 and
subsequent years, the reduction is based on a hospital's risk-adjusted
readmission rate during a 3-year period for acute myocardial infarction
(AMI), heart failure (HF), pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD), total hip arthroplasty/total knee arthroplasty (THA/
TKA), and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). In this proposed rule,
we are proposing the following policies: (1) Specify applicable time
period for FY 2018; (2) specify the calculation of aggregate payments
for excess readmissions for FY 2018; (3) propose changes to the payment
adjustment factor in accordance with the 21st Century Cures Act for FY
2019; and (4) update the Extraordinary Circumstances Exception policy.
d. Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program
Section 1886(o) of the Act requires the Secretary to establish a
Hospital VBP Program under which value-based incentive payments are
made in a fiscal year to hospitals based on their performance on
measures established for a performance period for such fiscal year. In
this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove one previously adopted
measure, the PSI 90: Patient Safety for Selected Indicators measure,
from the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY 2019 program year.
We also are proposing to adopt one new measure, Hospital-Level, Risk-
Standardized Payment Associated with a 30-Day Episode of Care for
Pneumonia, beginning with the FY 2022 program year, and to adopt a
modified version of a previously adopted measure, Patient Safety and
Adverse Events Composite (NQF #0531), beginning with the FY 2023
program year. In addition, we are proposing two modifications to our
domain scoring policies beginning with the FY 2019 program year, and
further proposing a new weighting methodology for the Efficiency and
Cost Reduction domain. We also are inviting public comment on the
appropriateness of accounting for social risk factors in the Hospital
VBP Program, including which social risk factors should be included;
and how to account for these social risk factors in the Hospital VBP
Program.
e. Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program
Section 1886(p) of the Act, as added under section 3008(a) of the
Affordable Care Act, establishes an incentive to hospitals to reduce
the incidence of hospital-acquired conditions by requiring the
Secretary to make an adjustment to payments to applicable hospitals
effective for discharges beginning on October 1, 2014. This 1-percent
payment reduction applies to a hospital whose ranking is in the top
quartile (25 percent) of all applicable hospitals, relative to the
national average, of conditions acquired during the applicable period
and on all of the hospital's discharges for the specified fiscal year.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing the following policies: (1)
Specifying the dates of the time period used to calculate hospital
performance for the FY 2020 HAC Reduction Program; (2) requesting
comments on additional measures for potential future adoption; (3)
requesting comments on social risk factors; (4) requesting comments on
accounting for disability and medical complexity in the CDC NHSN
measures in Domain 2; and (5) updating the HAC Reduction Program's
Extraordinary Circumstances Exception policy.
f. DSH Payment Adjustment and Additional Payment for Uncompensated Care
Section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act modified the Medicare
disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payment methodology beginning in
FY 2014. Under section 1886(r) of the Act, which was added by section
3133 of the Affordable Care Act, starting in FY 2014, DSHs receive 25
percent of the amount they previously would have received under the
statutory formula for Medicare DSH payments in section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act. The remaining amount, equal to 75 percent of the amount that
otherwise would have been paid as Medicare DSH payments, is paid as
additional payments after the amount is reduced for changes in the
percentage of individuals that are uninsured. Each Medicare DSH will
receive an additional payment based on its share of the total amount of
uncompensated care for all Medicare DSHs for a given time period.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to update our estimates of
the three factors used to determine uncompensated care payments for FY
2018. The statute permits the use of a data source other than the CBO
estimates to determine the percent change in the rate of uninsurance as
part of the calculation of Factor 2 beginning in FY 2018. We are
proposing to use uninsured estimates produced by CMS' Office of the
Actuary (OACT) as part of the development of the National Health
Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) in the calculation of Factor 2. We also are
proposing to begin incorporating data from Worksheet S-10 in the
calculation of hospitals' share of uncompensated care by combining data
on uncompensated care costs from the Worksheet S-10 for FY 2014 with
proxy data regarding a hospital's share of low-income insured days for
FYs 2012 and 2013 to determine Factor 3 for FY 2018. The proposal to
continue to use data from three cost reporting periods to calculate
Factor 3 would have the effect of transitioning from the use of the
proxy data on low-income insured days toward use of uncompensated care
data from Worksheet S-10. As part of this proposal, we are proposing a
definition of uncompensated care costs consisting of the sum of charity
care and bad debt and a trim methodology to address anomalous charges.
We also are proposing that, for Puerto Rico hospitals and Indian Health
Service and Tribal hospitals, we would substitute data regarding low-
income insured days for FY 2013 for the Worksheet S-10 data from FY
2014 cost reports.
We are proposing to continue the policies that were finalized in FY
2015 to address several specific issues concerning the process and data
to be employed in determining hospitals' share of uncompensated care in
the case of hospital mergers. We also are proposing to continue the
policies finalized in FY 2017 concerning the methodology for
calculating each hospital's relative share of uncompensated care, such
as combining data from multiple cost reports beginning in the same
fiscal year and averaging the sum of three individual Factor 3s by the
number of cost reporting periods with data. In addition, we are
proposing to annualize hospital cost reports that do not span 12
months. We also are proposing to apply a scaling factor to each
hospital's uncompensated care amount so that total uncompensated care
payments will be consistent with the estimated amount available to make
uncompensated care payments for FY 2018.
[[Page 19808]]
g. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
In this proposed rule, we set forth proposed changes to the LTCH
PPS Federal payment rates, factors, and other payment rate policies
under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018; proposed changes to the payment
methodology under the short-stay outlier (SSO) policy; proposals to
implement several provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act; and a
proposal to adopt a 1-year regulatory delay on the full implementation
of the 25-percent threshold policy for discharges occurring in FY 2018
(that is, for the fiscal year after expiration of the current statutory
moratoria under the 21st Century Cures Act, which is set to expire
September 30, 2017).
h. Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
Under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, subsection (d)
hospitals are required to report data on measures selected by the
Secretary for a fiscal year in order to receive the full annual
percentage increase that would otherwise apply to the standardized
amount applicable to discharges occurring in that fiscal year. In past
years, we have established measures on which hospitals must report data
and the process for submittal and validation of the data.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to make several changes.
First, we are proposing to refine two previously adopted measures.
Specifically, we are proposing to update the Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) Survey measure
by replacing the three existing questions about Pain Management with
three new questions that address Communication About Pain During the
Hospital Stay, beginning with the FY 2020 payment determination. In
addition, we are proposing to update the stroke mortality measure to
include the use of NIH Stroke Scale claims data for risk adjustment,
beginning with the FY 2023 payment determination.
Second, we are proposing to adopt the Hospital-Wide All-Cause
Unplanned Readmission Hybrid Measure as a voluntary measure for the CY
2018 reporting period and note that we are considering proposing this
measure as a required measure as early as the CY 2021 reporting period/
FY 2023 payment determination and requiring hospitals to submit the
core clinical data elements and linking variables used in the measure
as early as CY 2020 to support a dry run of the measure during which
hospitals would receive a confidential preview of their results in
2021.
Third, we are proposing modifications of our previously finalized
eCQM reporting requirements. For the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019
payment determination, we are proposing that hospitals would be
required to select and submit six of the available eCQMs included in
the Hospital IQR Program measure set and provide two, self-selected,
calendar year quarters of data. For the CY 2018 reporting period/FY
2020 payment determination, we are proposing that hospitals would be
required to select and submit six of the available eCQMs, and provide
data for the first three calendar quarters (Q1-Q3). These modifications
are being proposed in alignment with proposals for the Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, and would decrease the required number
of eCQMs and quarters of reporting as compared with the previously
finalized requirements in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Fourth, we are proposing modifications to the eCQM validation
process if our proposals to modify the eCQM reporting requirements for
the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination and CY 2018
reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination are finalized as
proposed, whereby hospitals would be required to submit a reduced
number of cases for eCQM data validation for the FY 2020 and FY 2021
payment determinations. In addition, we are proposing policies related
to the exclusion criteria for hospital selection and the data
submission requirements for participating hospitals.
Fifth, we are proposing to modify our educational review process
for chart-abstracted measures for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years, such that educational reviews would be offered
quarterly for the first three quarters of validation. Hospitals would
be allowed 30 calendar days following the date the results of
validation are posted to request an educational review. Also, we are
proposing that if an educational review demonstrates that the
abstraction score calculated by CMS is incorrect, we would use the
corrected quarterly score to compute the final confidence interval.
Sixth, we are making proposals related to our Hospital IQR Program
Extraordinary Circumstances Extension or Exemptions (ECE) policy,
including a change to the name of the policy to Extraordinary
Circumstances Exceptions policy.
Finally, we are inviting public comment on accounting for social
risk factors in the Hospital IQR Program, the confidential and
potential future public reporting of clinical quality measure data
stratified by patients' dual-eligible status, and the following
clinical quality measures that we are considering for future inclusion
in the Hospital IQR Program: (1) Quality of Informed Consent Documents
for Hospital-Performed, Elective Procedures measure; (2) four End-of-
Life process and outcome measures for cancer patients; (3) two nurse
staffing measures; and (4) eleven newly specified electronic clinical
quality measures (eCQMs).
i. Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
Section 1886(m)(5) of the Act requires LTCHs to report certain
quality data to CMS in order to receive their full annual update under
the LTCH PPS. In this proposed rule, we are proposing to adopt one new
outcome measure related to pressure ulcers and two new measures (one
process and one outcome) related to ventilator weaning. We also are
proposing to define the standardized patient assessment data that LTCHs
must report to comply with section 1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act, as
well as the requirements for the reporting of these data. Finally, we
are proposing to publicly report data on four assessment-based measures
and three claims-based measures.
j. Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program
For the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR)
Program, we are making several proposals. First, beginning with the FY
2020 payment determination, we are proposing the Medication
Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge measure. Second,
beginning with the FY 2019 payment determination (that is, for
extraordinary circumstances occurring during CY 2018), we are proposing
to update the IPFQR Program's extraordinary circumstances exception
(ECE) policy by: (1) Allowing designated personnel to provide their
contact information and sign the ECE request in lieu of the Chief
Executive Officer (CEO); (2) allowing up to 90 days after the
extraordinary circumstance to submit the request; and (3) stating that
we will strive to respond to requests for ECEs within 90 days of
receiving these requests. Third, we are proposing to change the annual
data submission period from a specific date range to a 45-day period
that begins at least 30 days following the end of the collection
period. Fourth, we are proposing to align our deadline for submission
of a Notice of Participation (NOP) or
[[Page 19809]]
program withdrawal with this proposed data submission timeframe.
Finally, we are proposing factors by which we will evaluate measures
for removal from the IPFQR Program. These factors align with those in
use in other quality reporting programs.
3. Summary of Costs and Benefits
Adjustment for MS-DRG Documentation and Coding Changes.
Section 414 of the MACRA replaced the single positive adjustment we
intended to make in FY 2018 once the recoupment required by section 631
of the ATRA was complete with a 0.5 percent positive adjustment to the
standardized amount of Medicare payments to acute care hospitals for
FYs 2018 through 2023. The FY 2018 adjustment was subsequently adjusted
to 0.4588 percent by section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub.
L. 114-255). For FY 2018, we are proposing to make the 0.4588 percent
positive adjustment to the standardized amount as required by these
provisions.
Adjustment to IPPS Payment Rates as a Result of the 2-
Midnight Policy. The removal of the adjustment to IPPS rates resulting
from the 2-midnight policy will decrease IPPS payment rates by (1/
1.006) for FY 2018. The (1/1.006) is a one-time factor that will be
applied to the standardized amount, the hospital-specific rates, and
the national capital Federal rate for FY 2018 only.
Medicare DSH Payment Adjustment and Additional Payment for
Uncompensated Care. Under section 1886(r) of the Act (as added by
section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act), DSH payments to hospitals
under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act are reduced and an additional
payment for uncompensated care is made to eligible hospitals beginning
in FY 2014. Hospitals that receive Medicare DSH payments receive 25
percent of the amount they previously would have received under the
statutory formula for Medicare DSH payments in section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act. The remainder, equal to an estimate of 75 percent of what
otherwise would have been paid as Medicare DSH payments, is the basis
for determining the additional payments for uncompensated care after
the amount is reduced for changes in the percentage of individuals that
are uninsured and additional statutory adjustments. Each hospital that
receives Medicare DSH payments will receive an additional payment for
uncompensated care based on its share of the total uncompensated care
amount reported by Medicare DSHs. The reduction to Medicare DSH
payments is not budget neutral.
For FY 2018, we are proposing that the 75 percent of what otherwise
would have been paid for Medicare DSH will be adjusted to approximately
58.01 percent of the amount to reflect changes in the percentage of
individuals that are uninsured and additional statutory adjustments. In
other words, approximately 43.51 percent (the product of 75 percent and
58.01 percent) of our estimate of Medicare DSH payments, prior to the
application of section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act, would be
available to make additional payments to hospitals for their relative
share of the total amount of uncompensated care.
We project that estimated Medicare DSH payments, and additional
payments for uncompensated care made for FY 2018, will increase
payments overall by approximately 0.8 percent as compared to the
estimate of overall payments, including Medicare DSH payments and
uncompensated care payments, that will be distributed in FY 2017. The
additional payments have redistributive effects based on a hospital's
uncompensated care amount relative to the uncompensated care amount for
all hospitals that are estimated to receive Medicare DSH payments, and
the calculated payment amount is not directly tied to a hospital's
number of discharges.
Proposed Changes to the Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program. For FY 2018 and subsequent years, the reduction is based on a
hospital's risk-adjusted readmission rate during a 3-year period for
acute myocardial infarction (AMI), heart failure (HF), pneumonia,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), total hip arthroplasty/
total knee arthroplasty (THA/TKA), and coronary artery bypass graft
(CABG). Overall, in this proposed rule, we estimate that 2,591
hospitals would have their base operating DRG payments reduced by their
determined proxy FY 2018 hospital-specific readmission adjustment. As a
result, we estimate that the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
would save approximately $564 million in FY 2018, an increase of
approximately $27 million over the estimated FY 2017 savings.
Value-Based Incentive Payments Under the Hospital VBP
Program. We estimate that there would be no net financial impact to the
Hospital VBP Program for the FY 2018 program year in the aggregate
because, by law, the amount available for value-based incentive
payments under the program in a given year must be equal to the total
amount of base operating MS-DRG payment amount reductions for that
year, as estimated by the Secretary. The estimated amount of base
operating MS-DRG payment amount reductions for the FY 2018 program year
and, therefore, the estimated amount available for value-based
incentive payments for FY 2018 discharges is approximately $1.9
billion.
Proposed Changes to the HAC Reduction Program. A
hospital's Total HAC score and its ranking in comparison to other
hospitals in any given year depends on several different factors. Any
significant impact due to the proposed HAC Reduction Program changes
for FY 2018, including which hospitals will receive the adjustment,
will depend on actual experience.
Update to the LTCH PPS Payment Rates and Other Payment
Factors. Based on the best available data for the 415 LTCHs in our
database, we estimate that the proposed changes to the payment rates
and factors that we are presenting in the preamble and Addendum of this
proposed rule, which reflects the rolling end to the transition of the
statutory application of the site neutral payment rate required by
section 1886(m)(6)(A) of the Act, the proposed update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018, and estimated changes to the
site neutral payment rate and high-cost outlier (HCO) payments would
result in an estimated decrease in payments from FY 2017 of
approximately $238 million.
Proposed Changes to the 25-Percent Threshold Policy. In
this proposed rule, we estimate our proposal to adopt a 1-year
regulatory delay of the full implementation of the 25-percent threshold
policy for discharges occurring in FY 2018 would increase payments to
LTCHs in FY 2018 by $50 million.
Proposed Changes to the Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting (IQR) Program. Across 3,300 IPPS hospitals, we estimate that
our policy proposals would result in the following changes to costs and
benefits in the Hospital IQR Program compared to previously finalized
requirements: (1) A cost reduction of $361,240 for the FY 2019 payment
determination due to the proposed updates to the eCQM reporting
requirements; (2) a total net cost reduction of $392,963 for the FY
2020 payment determination due to the proposed updates to the eCQM
reporting requirements, the proposed updates to the eCQM validation
procedures, and the proposed voluntary reporting of the new Hybrid
Hospital-Wide Readmission measure; and (3) a total cost reduction of
$70,048 for the FY 2021 payment determination due to
[[Page 19810]]
the proposed updates to the eCQM validation procedures.
Proposed Changes Related to the LTCH QRP. In this proposed
rule, we are proposing one outcome measure related to pressure ulcers
and two new measures (one process and one outcome) related to
ventilator weaning. We also are proposing to specify the use of the
standardized patient assessment data as required under section
1899B(b)(1)(B) of the Act and policies regarding public display of
measure data. Overall, the cost associated with the proposed changes to
the LTCH QRP is estimated at an additional $3,187.15 per LTCH annually,
or $1,357,726 for all LTCHs annually.
Proposed Changes to the IPFQR Program. In this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt one claims based measure, update our
ECE process, change the specification of the data submission period,
align the timeframe for submission of the NOP or program withdrawal
with the data submission period, and establish criteria to evaluate
measures for retention or removal. We do not believe that these
policies will have any impact on the IPFQR program burden.
B. Summary
1. Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS)
Section 1886(d) of the Social Security Act (the Act) sets forth a
system of payment for the operating costs of acute care hospital
inpatient stays under Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) based on
prospectively set rates. Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the
Secretary to use a prospective payment system (PPS) to pay for the
capital-related costs of inpatient hospital services for these
``subsection (d) hospitals.'' Under these PPSs, Medicare payment for
hospital inpatient operating and capital-related costs is made at
predetermined, specific rates for each hospital discharge. Discharges
are classified according to a list of diagnosis-related groups (DRGs).
The base payment rate is comprised of a standardized amount that is
divided into a labor-related share and a nonlabor-related share. The
labor-related share is adjusted by the wage index applicable to the
area where the hospital is located. If the hospital is located in
Alaska or Hawaii, the nonlabor-related share is adjusted by a cost-of-
living adjustment factor. This base payment rate is multiplied by the
DRG relative weight.
If the hospital treats a high percentage of certain low-income
patients, it receives a percentage add-on payment applied to the DRG-
adjusted base payment rate. This add-on payment, known as the
disproportionate share hospital (DSH) adjustment, provides for a
percentage increase in Medicare payments to hospitals that qualify
under either of two statutory formulas designed to identify hospitals
that serve a disproportionate share of low-income patients. For
qualifying hospitals, the amount of this adjustment varies based on the
outcome of the statutory calculations. The Affordable Care Act revised
the Medicare DSH payment methodology and provides for a new additional
Medicare payment that considers the amount of uncompensated care
beginning on October 1, 2013.
If the hospital is training residents in an approved residency
program(s), it receives a percentage add-on payment for each case paid
under the IPPS, known as the indirect medical education (IME)
adjustment. This percentage varies, depending on the ratio of residents
to beds.
Additional payments may be made for cases that involve new
technologies or medical services that have been approved for special
add-on payments. To qualify, a new technology or medical service must
demonstrate that it is a substantial clinical improvement over
technologies or services otherwise available, and that, absent an add-
on payment, it would be inadequately paid under the regular DRG
payment.
The costs incurred by the hospital for a case are evaluated to
determine whether the hospital is eligible for an additional payment as
an outlier case. This additional payment is designed to protect the
hospital from large financial losses due to unusually expensive cases.
Any eligible outlier payment is added to the DRG-adjusted base payment
rate, plus any DSH, IME, and new technology or medical service add-on
adjustments.
Although payments to most hospitals under the IPPS are made on the
basis of the standardized amounts, some categories of hospitals are
paid in whole or in part based on their hospital-specific rate, which
is determined from their costs in a base year. For example, sole
community hospitals (SCHs) receive the higher of a hospital-specific
rate based on their costs in a base year (the highest of FY 1982, FY
1987, FY 1996, or FY 2006) or the IPPS Federal rate based on the
standardized amount. SCHs are the sole source of care in their areas.
Specifically, section 1886(d)(5)(D)(iii) of the Act defines an SCH as a
hospital that is located more than 35 road miles from another hospital
or that, by reason of factors such as isolated location, weather
conditions, travel conditions, or absence of other like hospitals (as
determined by the Secretary), is the sole source of hospital inpatient
services reasonably available to Medicare beneficiaries. In addition,
certain rural hospitals previously designated by the Secretary as
essential access community hospitals are considered SCHs.
Under current law, the Medicare-dependent, small rural hospital
(MDH) program is effective through FY 2017. Through and including FY
2006, an MDH received the higher of the Federal rate or the Federal
rate plus 50 percent of the amount by which the Federal rate was
exceeded by the higher of its FY 1982 or FY 1987 hospital-specific
rate. For discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2007, but before
October 1, 2017, an MDH receives the higher of the Federal rate or the
Federal rate plus 75 percent of the amount by which the Federal rate is
exceeded by the highest of its FY 1982, FY 1987, or FY 2002 hospital-
specific rate. MDHs are a major source of care for Medicare
beneficiaries in their areas. Section 1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act
defines an MDH as a hospital that is located in a rural area, has not
more than 100 beds, is not an SCH, and has a high percentage of
Medicare discharges (not less than 60 percent of its inpatient days or
discharges in its cost reporting year beginning in FY 1987 or in two of
its three most recently settled Medicare cost reporting years).
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary to pay for the
capital-related costs of inpatient hospital services in accordance with
a prospective payment system established by the Secretary. The basic
methodology for determining capital prospective payments is set forth
in our regulations at 42 CFR 412.308 and 412.312. Under the capital
IPPS, payments are adjusted by the same DRG for the case as they are
under the operating IPPS. Capital IPPS payments are also adjusted for
IME and DSH, similar to the adjustments made under the operating IPPS.
In addition, hospitals may receive outlier payments for those cases
that have unusually high costs.
The existing regulations governing payments to hospitals under the
IPPS are located in 42 CFR part 412, subparts A through M.
2. Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
Under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, as amended, certain
hospitals and hospital units are excluded from the IPPS. These
hospitals and units are: Inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF)
hospitals and units; long-term care hospitals (LTCHs); psychiatric
hospitals and units; children's hospitals; cancer hospitals; long-term
care neoplastic
[[Page 19811]]
disease hospitals (formerly LTCHs classified under section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act and redesignated by section 15008 of
Pub. L. 114-255) and hospitals located outside the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (that is, hospitals located in
the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and
American Samoa). Religious nonmedical health care institutions (RNHCIs)
are also excluded from the IPPS. Various sections of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA, Pub. L. 105-33), the Medicare, Medicaid and
SCHIP [State Children's Health Insurance Program] Balanced Budget
Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA, Pub. L. 106-113), and the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000
(BIPA, Pub. L. 106-554) provide for the implementation of PPSs for IRF
hospitals and units, LTCHs, and psychiatric hospitals and units
(referred to as inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs)). (We note that
the annual updates to the LTCH PPS are now included as part of the IPPS
annual update document. Updates to the IRF PPS and IPF PPS are issued
as separate documents.) Children's hospitals, cancer hospitals,
hospitals located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico (that is, hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands,
Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa), and RNHCIs
continue to be paid solely under a reasonable cost-based system subject
to a rate-of-increase ceiling on inpatient operating costs.
The existing regulations governing payments to excluded hospitals
and hospital units are located in 42 CFR parts 412 and 413.
3. Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System (LTCH PPS)
The Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for LTCHs applies to
hospitals described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act effective
for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2002. The
LTCH PPS was established under the authority of sections 123 of the
BBRA and section 307(b) of the BIPA (as codified under section
1886(m)(1) of the Act). During the 5-year (optional) transition period,
a LTCH's payment under the PPS was based on an increasing proportion of
the LTCH Federal rate with a corresponding decreasing proportion based
on reasonable cost principles. Effective for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, all LTCHs are paid 100 percent
of the Federal rate. Section 1206(a) of the Pathway for SGR Reform Act
of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67) established the site neutral payment rate
under the LTCH PPS, which made the LTCH PPS a dual rate payment system
beginning in FY 2016. Under this statute, based on a rolling effective
date that is linked to the date on which a given LTCH's Federal FY 2016
cost reporting period begins, LTCHs are paid for LTCH discharges at the
site neutral payment rate unless the discharge meets the patient
criteria for payment at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate. The
existing regulations governing payment under the LTCH PPS are located
in 42 CFR part 412, subpart O. Beginning October 1, 2009, we issue the
annual updates to the LTCH PPS in the same documents that update the
IPPS (73 FR 26797 through 26798).
4. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
Under sections 1814(l), 1820, and 1834(g) of the Act, payments made
to critical access hospitals (CAHs) (that is, rural hospitals or
facilities that meet certain statutory requirements) for inpatient and
outpatient services are generally based on 101 percent of reasonable
cost. Reasonable cost is determined under the provisions of section
1861(v) of the Act and existing regulations under 42 CFR part 413.
5. Payments for Graduate Medical Education (GME)
Under section 1886(a)(4) of the Act, costs of approved educational
activities are excluded from the operating costs of inpatient hospital
services. Hospitals with approved graduate medical education (GME)
programs are paid for the direct costs of GME in accordance with
section 1886(h) of the Act. The amount of payment for direct GME costs
for a cost reporting period is based on the hospital's number of
residents in that period and the hospital's costs per resident in a
base year. The existing regulations governing payments to the various
types of hospitals are located in 42 CFR part 413.
C. Summary of Provisions of Recent Legislation Proposed To Be
Implemented in This Proposed Rule
1. The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) (Pub. L. 112-240),
the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015 (Pub.
L. 114-10), and the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
Section 631 of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA)
(Pub. L. 112-240) amended section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90 to
require CMS to make a recoupment adjustment to the standardized amounts
under section 1886(d) of the Act based upon the Secretary's estimates
for discharges occurring from FYs 2014 through FY 2017 to fully offset
$11 billion. Once the recoupment required under section 631 of the ATRA
was completed, CMS had anticipated making a single positive adjustment
in FY 2018 to offset the reductions required to recoup the $11 billion
under section 631 of the ATRA. However, section 414 of the MACRA
(enacted on April 16, 2015) replaced the single positive adjustment CMS
intended to make in FY 2018 with a 0.5 percent positive adjustment for
each of FYs 2018 through 2023. Section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures
Act (Pub. L. 114-255, enacted December 13, 2016) further amended Public
Law 110-90 to reduce the adjustment for FY 2018 from 0.5 percent point
to 0.4588 percentage point.
2. Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67)
The Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67) introduced
new payment rules in the LTCH PPS. Under section 1206 of this law,
discharges in cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2015 under the LTCH PPS will receive payment under a site neutral rate
unless the discharge meets certain patient-specific criteria. In this
proposed rule, we are continuing to provide clarifications to prior
policy changes that implemented provisions under section 1206 of the
Pathway for SGR Reform Act.
3. Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014
(IMPACT Act) (Pub. L. 113-185)
The Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014
(IMPACT Act (Pub. L. 113-185), enacted on October 6, 2014, made a
number of changes that affect the Long-Term Care Quality Reporting
Program (LTCH QRP). In this proposed rule, we are proposing to continue
to implement portions of section 1899B of the Act, as added by section
2 of the IMPACT Act, which, in part, requires LTCHs, among other
postacute care providers, to report standardized patient assessment
data, data on quality measures, and data on resource use and other
measures.
4. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (Pub. L.
114-10)
Section 411(g) of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act
of 2015 (MACRA, Pub. L. 114-10) sets the annual update under the LTCH
PPS to 1.0 percent for FY 2018. In this proposed rule, consistent with
this requirement, we are proposing to update
[[Page 19812]]
the LTCH standard Federal payment rate by 1.0 percent for FY 2018.
The MACRA also extended the MDH program and changes to the payment
adjustment for low-volume hospitals through FY 2017. In this proposed
rule, we discuss the expiration of the MDH program and the expiration
of the temporary changes to the low-volume hospital payment adjustment
under current law.
5. The 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
The 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), enacted on December
13, 2016, contains a number of provisions affecting payments under the
LTCH PPS and the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and the
Medicare EHR Incentive Program, which we are proposing to implement in
this proposed rule:
Section 4002(b)(1)(A) amended section 1848(a)(7)(B) of the
Act to provide that the Secretary shall exempt an eligible professional
from the application of the payment adjustment under section
1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act with respect to a year, subject to annual
renewal, if the Secretary determines that compliance with the
requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not possible because the
certified EHR technology used by such eligible professional has been
decertified under the Office of the National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology's (ONC) Health IT Certification Program.
Section 4002(b)(2) amended section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(II)
of the Act to provide that the Secretary shall exempt a hospital from
the application of the payment adjustment under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(I) with respect to a fiscal year, subject to annual
renewal, if the Secretary determines that compliance with the
requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not possible because the
certified EHR technology used by the hospital is decertified under
ONC's Health IT Certification Program.
Section 15002, which amended section 1886(q)(3) of the Act
by adding subparagraphs (D) and (E), which requires the Secretary to
develop a methodology for the calculating the excess readmissions
adjustment factor for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program based
on cohorts defined by the percentage of dual eligible patients (that
is, patients who are eligible for both Medicare and full-benefit
Medicaid coverage) cared for by a hospital. In this proposed rule, we
are proposing to implement changes to the payment adjustment factor to
assess penalties based on a hospital's performance relative to other
hospitals treating a similar proportion of dual eligible patients.
Section 15004(a), which further amended section 114(d)(7)
of the MMSEA (as amended) by striking ``The moratorium under paragraph
(1)(A)'' and inserting ``[a]ny moratorium under paragraph (1)'' and
specified that such amendment shall take effect as if included in the
enactment of section 112 of the PAMA. We are proposing to implement the
exceptions to the current statutory moratorium, which is in effect
through September 30, 2017, on increasing beds in an existing LTCH or
an existing LTCH satellite as provided by Section 15004(a).
Section 15004(b), which modifies high cost outlier
payments to LTCH standard Federal rate cases beginning in FY 2018.
Section 15006, which further amended section 114(c)(1)(A)
of the MMSEA (as amended) by extending the moratorium on the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy through June 30,
2016, and for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2016 and
before October 1, 2017. In this proposed rule, we are implementing the
moratorium on the full implementation of the 25-percent threshold
policy for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2016, through
September 30, 2017, as provided by section 15006.
Section 15007, which amended section 1206(a)(3) of the
Pathway for SGR Reform Act by extending the exclusion of Medicare
Advantage plans' and site neutral payment rate discharges from the
calculation of the average length-of-stay to all LTCHs, for discharges
occurring in cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2015.
Section 15008, which provided for a change in Medicare
classification for ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs by redesignating such
hospitals from section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) to section
1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act. In this proposed rule, we are proposing
to implement the reclassification of hospitals which had previously
been classified as ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs as their own category of
IPPS-excluded hospitals as provided by the provisions of section 15008.
Section 15009 of Public Law 114-255, which added new
subparagraph (F) to section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, providing for a
temporary exception to the site neutral payment rate for certain spinal
cord specialty hospitals for all discharges occurring during FYs 2018
and 2019.
Section 15010, which added a new subparagraph (G) to
section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, to create a temporary exception to the
site neutral payment rate for certain severe wound discharges from
certain LTCHs during such LTCH's cost reporting period beginning during
FY 2018.
Public Law 114-255 also amended section 1886(q)(3) of the Act by
adding subparagraphs (D) and (E), which requires the Secretary to
develop a methodology for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
that accounts for the percentage of dual-eligible patients (that is,
patients who are eligible for both Medicare and full-benefit Medicaid
coverage) cared for by a hospital. In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to implement changes to the payment adjustment factor to
assess penalties based on a hospital's performance relative to other
hospitals treating a similar proportion of dual-eligible patients.
Section 16003 amended section 1848(a)(7)(D) of the Act to
provide that no payment adjustment may be made under section
1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act for 2017 and 2018 in the case of an eligible
professional who furnishes substantially all of his or her covered
professional services in an ambulatory surgical center (ASC). Section
1848(a)(7)(D)(iii) of the Act provides that determinations of whether
an eligible professional is ASC-based may be made based on the site of
service as defined by the Secretary or an attestation, but shall be
made without regard to any employment or billing arrangement between
the eligible professional and any other supplier or provider of
services. Section 1848(a)(7)(D)(iv) of the Act provides that the ASC-
based exception shall no longer apply as of the first year that begins
more than 3 years after the date on which the Secretary determines,
through notice-and-comment rulemaking, that certified EHR technology
applicable to the ASC setting is available.
D. Summary of Provisions of This Proposed Rule
In this proposed rule, we are setting forth proposed payment and
policy changes to the Medicare IPPS for FY 2018 operating costs and for
capital-related costs of acute care hospitals and certain hospitals and
hospital units that are excluded from IPPS. In addition, we are setting
forth proposed changes to the payment rates, factors, and other payment
and policy-related changes to programs associated with payment rate
policies under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018.
[[Page 19813]]
Below is a summary of the major changes that we are proposing to
make:
1. Proposed Changes to MS-DRG Classifications and Recalibrations of
Relative Weights
In section II. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we include--
Proposed changes to MS-DRG classifications based on our
yearly review for FY 2018.
Proposed adjustment to the standardized amounts under
section 1886(d) of the Act for FY 2018 in accordance with the
amendments made to section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90 by section
414 of the MACRA and section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act.
Proposed recalibrations of the MS-DRG relative weights.
A discussion of the FY 2018 status of new technologies
approved for add-on payments for FY 2017 and a presentation of our
evaluation and analysis of the FY 2018 applicants for add-on payments
for high-cost new medical services and technologies (including public
input, as directed by Pub. L. 108-173, obtained in a town hall
meeting).
2. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care Hospitals
In section III. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we are
proposing to make revisions to the wage index for acute care hospitals
and the annual update of the wage data. Specific issues addressed
include, but are not limited to, the following:
The proposed FY 2018 wage index update using wage data
from cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2014.
Clarification of other wage-related costs in the wage
index.
Calculation of the proposed occupational mix adjustment
for FY 2018 based on the 2013 Occupational Mix Survey.
Analysis and implementation of the proposed FY 2018
occupational mix adjustment to the wage index for acute care hospitals.
Proposed application of the rural floor and the frontier
State floor and the proposed expiration of the imputed floor.
Proposed revisions to the wage index for acute care
hospitals based on hospital redesignations and reclassifications under
sections 1886(d)(8)(B), (d)(8)(E), and (d)(10) of the Act.
Proposal to require documentation of SCH and RRC
classification status approvals to be submitted to the MGCRB by the
first business day after January 1.
Clarification of special rules for SCHs and RRCs
reclassifying to geographic home areas.
Proposed changes to the 45-day notification rule.
The proposed adjustment to the wage index for acute care
hospitals for FY 2018 based on commuting patterns of hospital employees
who reside in a county and work in a different area with a higher wage
index.
Determination of the labor-related share for the proposed
FY 2018 wage index.
3. Proposed Revising and Rebasing of Hospital Market Basket
In section IV. of this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise
and rebase the hospital market baskets for acute care hospitals and
update the labor-related share.
4. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs
In section V. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss
proposed changes or clarifications of a number of the provisions of the
regulations in 42 CFR parts 412 and 413, including the following:
Proposed changes to MS-DRGs subject to the postacute care
transfer policy.
Proposed changes to the inpatient hospital update for FY
2018.
Proposed changes to the volume decrease adjustment for
SCHs.
Proposed updated national and regional case-mix values and
discharges for purposes of determining RRC status.
Expiration of the MDH program and the temporary changes to
the payment adjustment for low-volume hospitals at the end of FY 2017.
Proposed parallel low-volume hospital payment adjustment
concerning hospitals operated by the Indian Health Service (IHS) or a
Tribe.
The statutorily required IME adjustment factor for FY
2018.
Proposed changes to the methodologies for determining
Medicare DSH payments and the additional payments for uncompensated
care.
Discussion of expiration of the MDH program at the end of
FY 2017 and our policy to allow MDHs to apply for SCH status in advance
of the expiration of the MDH program and be paid as such under certain
conditions.
Proposed changes to the rules for payment adjustments
under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program based on hospital
readmission measures and the process for hospital review and correction
of those rates for FY 2018.
Proposed changes to the requirements and provision of
value-based incentive payments under the Hospital Value-Based
Purchasing Program.
Proposed requirements for payment adjustments to hospitals
under the HAC Reduction Program for FY 2018.
Discussion of and proposals relating to the additional 5-
year extension of the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program.
Proposals related to the provider-based status of IHS and
Tribal facilities and organizations that would remove the regulatory
date limitation that restricted the grandfathering provision to IHS or
Tribal facilities and organizations furnishing services on or before
April 7, 2000. We also are proposing to make a technical change to make
the regulation text more consistent with our current rules that require
these facilities to comply with all applicable Medicare conditions of
participation that apply to the main provider.
5. Proposed FY 2018 Policy Governing the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
In section VI. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we discuss
the proposed payment policy requirements for capital-related costs and
capital payments to hospitals for FY 2018.
6. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for Certain Excluded
Hospitals: Rate-of-Increase Percentages
In section VII. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss--
Proposed changes to payments to certain excluded hospitals
for FY 2018.
Proposed policy changes relating to payments to hospitals-
within-hospitals.
Proposed continued implementation of the Frontier
Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP) Demonstration.
7. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS
In section VIII. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we set
forth--
Proposed changes to the LTCH PPS Federal payment rates,
factors, and other payment rate policies under the LTCH PPS for FY
2018.
Proposed changes to the short-stay outlier (SSO) policy.
Proposed 1-year regulatory delay of the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for discharges
occurring in FY 2018.
Proposed changes to implement the temporary exception to
the site neutral payment rate for certain spinal cord specialty
hospitals and for certain discharges with severe wounds from certain
LTCHs, as provided under sections 15009 and 15010 of Public Law 114-
255, respectively.
[[Page 19814]]
Proposed change to the average length of stay criterion to
implement section 15007 of Public Law 114-255.
Proposed change in Medicare classification for certain
hospitals to implement section 15008 of Public Law 114-255.
8. Proposed Changes Relating to Quality Data Reporting for Specific
Providers and Suppliers
In section IX. of the preamble of the proposed rule, we address--
Proposed requirements for the Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting (IQR) Program.
Proposed changes to the requirements for the quality
reporting program for PPS-exempt cancer hospitals (PCHQR Program).
Proposed changes to the requirements under the LTCH
Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP).
Proposed changes to the requirements under the Inpatient
Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program.
Proposed changes to requirements pertaining to the
clinical quality measurement of eligible hospitals and CAHs as well as
EPs participating in the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record
(EHR) Incentive Programs.
9. Proposed Changes Relating to Medicare Cost Reporting and Provider
Requirements
In section X. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we present our
proposals to revise the regulations to allow providers to use an
electronic signature to sign the Certification and Settlement Summary
page of the Medicare cost report and submit this page electronically,
and clarify the rules relating to the sale or scrapping of depreciable
assets disposed of on or after December 1, 1997.
10. Proposed Changes Relating to Survey and Certification Requirements
In section XI. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we present
our proposals for allowing transparency in accrediting organization
survey reports and plans of correction and for changing the requirement
for providers to publish self-termination notices in newspapers.
11. Determining Prospective Payment Operating and Capital Rates and
Rate-of-Increase Limits for Acute Care Hospitals
In section V. of the Addendum to this proposed rule, we set forth
proposed changes to the amounts and factors for determining the
proposed FY 2018 prospective payment rates for operating costs and
capital-related costs for acute care hospitals. We are proposing to
establish the threshold amounts for outlier cases. In addition, we are
addressing the update factors for determining the rate-of-increase
limits for cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2018 for certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS.
12. Determining Prospective Payment Rates for LTCHs
In the Addendum to this proposed rule, we set forth proposed
changes to the amounts and factors for determining the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate and other factors used to
determine LTCH PPS payments under both the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate and the site neutral payment rate in FY 2018. We are
proposing to establish the adjustments for wage levels, the labor-
related share, the cost-of-living adjustment, and high-cost outliers,
including the applicable fixed-loss amounts and the LTCH cost-to-charge
ratios (CCRs) for both payment rates.
13. Impact Analysis
In Appendix A of this proposed rule, we set forth an analysis of
the impact that the proposed changes would have on affected acute care
hospitals, CAHs, LTCHs, PCHs, and IPFs.
14. Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates of
Payment for Hospital Inpatient Services
In Appendix B of this proposed rule, as required by sections
1886(e)(4) and (e)(5) of the Act, we are providing our recommendations
of the appropriate percentage changes for FY 2018 for the following:
A single average standardized amount for all areas for
hospital inpatient services paid under the IPPS for operating costs of
acute care hospitals (and hospital-specific rates applicable to SCHs).
Target rate-of-increase limits to the allowable operating
costs of hospital inpatient services furnished by certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS.
The LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate and the site
neutral payment rate for hospital inpatient services provided for LTCH
PPS discharges.
15. Discussion of Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Recommendations
Under section 1805(b) of the Act, MedPAC is required to submit a
report to Congress, no later than March 15 of each year, in which
MedPAC reviews and makes recommendations on Medicare payment policies.
MedPAC's March 2017 recommendations concerning hospital inpatient
payment policies address the update factor for hospital inpatient
operating costs and capital-related costs for hospitals under the IPPS.
We address these recommendations in Appendix B of this proposed rule.
For further information relating specifically to the MedPAC March 2017
report or to obtain a copy of the report, contact MedPAC at (202) 220-
3700 or visit MedPAC's Web site at: //www.medpac.gov.
II. Proposed Changes to Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Group (MS-
DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights
A. Background
Section 1886(d) of the Act specifies that the Secretary shall
establish a classification system (referred to as diagnosis-related
groups (DRGs)) for inpatient discharges and adjust payments under the
IPPS based on appropriate weighting factors assigned to each DRG.
Therefore, under the IPPS, Medicare pays for inpatient hospital
services on a rate per discharge basis that varies according to the DRG
to which a beneficiary's stay is assigned. The formula used to
calculate payment for a specific case multiplies an individual
hospital's payment rate per case by the weight of the DRG to which the
case is assigned. Each DRG weight represents the average resources
required to care for cases in that particular DRG, relative to the
average resources used to treat cases in all DRGs.
Section 1886(d)(4)(C) of the Act requires that the Secretary adjust
the DRG classifications and relative weights at least annually to
account for changes in resource consumption. These adjustments are made
to reflect changes in treatment patterns, technology, and any other
factors that may change the relative use of hospital resources.
B. MS-DRG Reclassifications
For general information about the MS-DRG system, including yearly
reviews and changes to the MS-DRGs, we refer readers to the previous
discussions in the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43764 through 43766) and the FYs 2011 through 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rules (75 FR 50053 through 50055; 76 FR 51485 through 51487; 77 FR
53273; 78 FR 50512; 79 FR 49871; 80 FR 49342; and 81 FR 56787 through
56872, respectively).
[[Page 19815]]
C. Adoption of the MS-DRGs in FY 2008
For information on the adoption of the MS-DRGs in FY 2008, we refer
readers to the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47140
through 47189).
D. Proposed FY 2018 MS-DRG Documentation and Coding Adjustment
1. Background on the Prospective MS-DRG Documentation and Coding
Adjustments for FY 2008 and FY 2009 Authorized by Public Law 110-90
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47140
through 47189), we adopted the MS-DRG patient classification system for
the IPPS, effective October 1, 2007, to better recognize severity of
illness in Medicare payment rates for acute care hospitals. The
adoption of the MS-DRG system resulted in the expansion of the number
of DRGs from 538 in FY 2007 to 745 in FY 2008. By increasing the number
of MS-DRGs and more fully taking into account patient severity of
illness in Medicare payment rates for acute care hospitals, MS-DRGs
encourage hospitals to improve their documentation and coding of
patient diagnoses.
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47175
through 47186), we indicated that the adoption of the MS-DRGs had the
potential to lead to increases in aggregate payments without a
corresponding increase in actual patient severity of illness due to the
incentives for additional documentation and coding. In that final rule
with comment period, we exercised our authority under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(vi) of the Act, which authorizes us to maintain budget
neutrality by adjusting the national standardized amount, to eliminate
the estimated effect of changes in coding or classification that do not
reflect real changes in case-mix. Our actuaries estimated that
maintaining budget neutrality required an adjustment of -4.8 percentage
points to the national standardized amount. We provided for phasing in
this -4.8 percentage point adjustment over 3 years. Specifically, we
established prospective documentation and coding adjustments of -1.2
percentage points for FY 2008, -1.8 percentage points for FY 2009, and
-1.8 percentage points for FY 2010.
On September 29, 2007, Congress enacted the TMA [Transitional
Medical Assistance], Abstinence Education, and QI [Qualifying
Individuals] Programs Extension Act of 2007 (Pub. L. 110-90). Section
7(a) of Public Law 110-90 reduced the documentation and coding
adjustment made as a result of the MS-DRG system that we adopted in the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period to -0.6 percentage point
for FY 2008 and -0.9 percentage point for FY 2009.
As discussed in prior year rulemaking, and most recently in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56780 through 56782), we
implemented a series of adjustments required under sections 7(b)(1)(A)
and 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90, based on a retrospective review of
FY 2008 and FY 2009 claims data. We completed these adjustments in FY
2013, but indicated in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53274 through 53275) that delaying full implementation of the
adjustment required under section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110-90 until
FY 2013 resulted in payments in FY 2010 through FY 2012 being
overstated, and that these overpayments could not be recovered.
2. Recoupment or Repayment Adjustment Authorized by Section 631 of the
American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA)
Section 631 of the ATRA amended section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law
110-90 to require the Secretary to make a recoupment adjustment or
adjustments totaling $11 billion by FY 2017. This adjustment
represented the amount of the increase in aggregate payments as a
result of not completing the prospective adjustment authorized under
section 7(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 110-90 until FY 2013. As discussed
earlier, this delay in implementation resulted in overstated payment
rates in FYs 2010, 2011, and 2012. The resulting overpayments could not
have been recovered under Public Law 110-90.
Similar to the adjustments authorized under section 7(b)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110-90, the adjustment required under section 631 of the
ATRA was a one-time recoupment of a prior overpayment, not a permanent
reduction to payment rates. Therefore, we anticipated that any
adjustment made to reduce payment rates in one year would eventually be
offset by a positive adjustment in 2018, once the necessary amount of
overpayment was recovered. However, section 414 of the Medicare Access
and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015, Public Law 114-10,
enacted on April 16, 2015, replaced the single positive adjustment we
intended to make in FY 2018 with a 0.5 percentage point positive
adjustment for each of FYs 2018 through 2023. We stated in the FY 2016
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49345) that we would address this MACRA
provision in future rulemaking. However, section 15005 of the 21st
Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), enacted on December 13, 2016,
reduced the adjustment for FY 2018 from 0.5 percentage points to 0.4588
percentage points. We are addressing these provisions of MACRA and the
21st Century Cures Act in section II.D.3. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
As we stated in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50515
through 50517), our actuaries estimated that a -9.3 percentage point
adjustment to the standardized amount would be necessary if CMS were to
fully recover the $11 billion recoupment required by section 631 of the
ATRA in FY 2014. It is often our practice to phase in payment rate
adjustments over more than one year, in order to moderate the effect on
payment rates in any one year. Therefore, consistent with the policies
that we have adopted in many similar cases, and after consideration of
the public comments we received, in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50515 through 50517), we implemented a -0.8 percentage
point recoupment adjustment to the standardized amount in FY 2014. We
estimated that if adjustments of approximately -0.8 percentage point
were implemented in FYs 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017, using standard
inflation factors, the entire $11 billion would be accounted for by the
end of the statutory 4-year timeline. As estimates of any future
adjustments are subject to variations in total savings, we did not
provide for specific adjustments for FYs 2015, 2016, or 2017 at that
time.
Consistent with the approach discussed in the FY 2014 rulemaking
for recouping the $11 billion required by section 631 of the ATRA, in
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49874) and the FY 2016
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49345), we implemented additional -0.8
percentage point recoupment adjustments to the standardized amount in
FY 2015 and FY 2016, respectively. We estimated that these adjustments,
combined with leaving the prior -0.8 percentage point adjustments in
place, would recover up to $2 billion in FY 2015 and another $3 billion
in FY 2016. When combined with the approximately $1 billion adjustment
made in FY 2014, we estimated that approximately $5 to $6 billion would
be left to recover under section 631 of the ATRA by the end of FY 2016.
As indicated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR
24966), due to lower than previously estimated inpatient spending, we
determined that an adjustment of -0.8 percentage point in FY 2017 would
not recoup the $11 billion under section 631 of the ATRA.
[[Page 19816]]
For the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56785), based on the
Midsession Review of the President's FY 2017 Budget, our actuaries
estimated that, to the nearest tenth of a percentage point, the FY 2017
documentation and coding adjustment factor that will recoup as closely
as possible $11 billion from FY 2014 through FY 2017 without exceeding
this amount is -1.5 percentage points. Based on those updated estimates
by the Office of the Actuary using the Midsession Review of the
President's FY 2017 Budget, we made a -1.5 percentage point adjustment
for FY 2017 as the final adjustment required under section 631 of the
ATRA. The estimates by our actuaries related to this finalized
adjustment were included in a memorandum that we made publicly
available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-OACT.html.
3. Proposed Adjustment for FY 2018 Required Under Section 414 of Public
Law 114-10 (MACRA) and Section 15005 of Public Law 114-255
As stated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56785),
once the recoupment required under section 631 of the ATRA was
complete, we had anticipated making a single positive adjustment in FY
2018 to offset the reductions required to recoup the $11 billion under
section 631 of the ATRA. However, section 414 of the MACRA (which was
enacted on April 16, 2015) replaced the single positive adjustment we
intended to make in FY 2018 with a 0.5 percentage point positive
adjustment for each of FYs 2018 through 2023. In the FY 2017
rulemaking, we indicated that we would address the adjustments for FY
2018 and later fiscal years in future rulemaking. As noted previously,
section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), which
was enacted on December 13, 2016, amended section 7(b)(1)(B) of the
TMA, as amended by section 631 of the ATRA and section 414 of the
MACRA, to reduce the adjustment for FY 2018 from a 0.5 percentage point
to a 0.4588 percentage point. We believe the directive under section
15005 of Public Law 114-255 is clear. Therefore, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to implement the required +0.4588 percentage point adjustment
to the standardized amount. This is a permanent adjustment to payment
rates. While we are not proposing future adjustments required under
section 414 of the MACRA and section 15005 of Public Law 114-255 at
this time, we expect to propose positive 0.5 percentage point
adjustments to the standardized amounts for FYs 2019 through 2023.
E. Refinement of the MS-DRG Relative Weight Calculation
1. Background
Beginning in FY 2007, we implemented relative weights for DRGs
based on cost report data instead of charge information. We refer
readers to the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 47882) for a detailed
discussion of our final policy for calculating the cost-based DRG
relative weights and to the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period
(72 FR 47199) for information on how we blended relative weights based
on the CMS DRGs and MS-DRGs. We also refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56785 through 56787) for a detailed
discussion of the history of changes to the number of cost centers used
in calculating the DRG relative weights. Since FY 2014, we calculate
the IPPS MS-DRG relative weights using 19 CCRs, which now include
distinct CCRs for implantable devices, MRIs, CT scans, and cardiac
catheterization.
2. Discussion of Policy for FY 2018
Consistent with our established policy, we calculated the proposed
MS-DRG relative weights for FY 2018 using two data sources: The MedPAR
file as the claims data source and the HCRIS as the cost report data
source. We adjusted the charges from the claims to costs by applying
the 19 national average CCRs developed from the cost reports. The
description of the calculation of the proposed 19 CCRs and the proposed
MS-DRG relative weights for FY 2018 is included in section II.G. of the
preamble to this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule. As we did with
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, for this proposed rule, we are
providing the version of the HCRIS from which we calculated these
proposed 19 CCRs on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html. Click on
the link on the left side of the screen titled, ``FY 2018 IPPS Proposed
Rule Home Page'' or ``Acute Inpatient Files for Download.''
F. Proposed Changes to Specific MS-DRG Classifications
1. Discussion of Changes to Coding System and Basis for Proposed FY
2018 MS-DRG Updates
a. Conversion of MS-DRGs to the International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10)
As of October 1, 2015, providers use the International
Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) coding system to
report diagnoses and procedures for Medicare hospital inpatient
services under the MS-DRG system instead of the ICD-9-CM coding system,
which was used through September 30, 2015. The ICD-10 coding system
includes the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision,
Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) for diagnosis coding and the
International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Procedure
Coding System (ICD-10-PCS) for inpatient hospital procedure coding, as
well as the Official ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Guidelines for Coding and
Reporting. For a detailed discussion of the conversion of the MS-DRGs
to ICD-10, we refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 56787 through 56789).
b. Basis for FY 2018 Proposed MS-DRG Updates
CMS has previously encouraged input from our stakeholders
concerning the annual IPPS updates when that input is made available to
us by December 7 of the year prior to the next annual proposed rule
update. For example, to be considered for any updates or changes in FY
2018, comments and suggestions should have been submitted by December
7, 2016. The comments that were submitted in a timely manner for FY
2018 are discussed in this section of the preamble of this proposed
rule. As CMS works with the public to examine the ICD-10 claims data
used for updates to the ICD-10 MS-DRGs, we would like to examine areas
where the MS-DRGs can be improved. This will require additional time
for us to review requests from the public to make specific updates,
analyze claims data, and consider any proposed updates. Given the need
for more time to carefully evaluate requests and propose updates, we
are changing the deadline to request updates to MS-DRGs to November 1
of each year. This will provide an additional 5 weeks for the data
analysis and review process. Interested parties should submit any
comments and suggestions for FY 2019 by November 1, 2017, via the CMS
MS-
[[Page 19817]]
DRG Classification Change Requests Mailbox located at:
[email protected].
Following are the changes that we are proposing to the MS-DRGs for
FY 2018 in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule. We are inviting
public comments on each of the MS-DRG classification proposed changes
as well as our proposals to maintain certain existing MS-DRG
classifications discussed in this proposed rule. In some cases, we are
proposing changes to the MS-DRG classifications based on our analysis
of claims data. In other cases, we are proposing to maintain the
existing MS-DRG classification based on our analysis of claims data.
For this FY 2018 proposed rule, our MS-DRG analysis was based on ICD-10
claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file,
which contains hospital bills received through September 30, 2016, for
discharges occurring through September 30, 2016. In our discussion of
the proposed MS-DRG reclassification changes, we referred to our
analysis of claims data from the ``December 2016 update of the FY 2016
MedPAR file''.
As explained in previous rulemaking (76 FR 51487), in deciding
whether to propose to make further modification to the MS-DRGs for
particular circumstances brought to our attention, we consider whether
the resource consumption and clinical characteristics of the patients
with a given set of conditions are significantly different than the
remaining patients represented in the MS-DRG. We evaluate patient care
costs using average costs and lengths-of-stay and rely on the judgment
of our clinical advisors to determine whether patients are clinically
distinct or similar to other patients represented in the MS-DRG. In
evaluating resource costs, we consider both the absolute and percentage
differences in average costs between the cases we select for review and
the remainder of cases in the MS-DRG. We also consider variation in
costs within these groups; that is, whether observed average
differences are consistent across patients or attributable to cases
that are extreme in terms of costs or length of stay, or both. Further,
we consider the number of patients who will have a given set of
characteristics and generally prefer not to create a new MS-DRG unless
it would include a substantial number of cases.
In our examination of the claims data, we apply the following
criteria established in FY 2008 (72 FR 47169) to determine if the
creation of a new complication or comorbidity (CC) or major
complication or comorbidity (MCC) subgroup within a base MS-DRG is
warranted:
A reduction in variance of costs of at least 3 percent.
At least 5 percent of the patients in the MS-DRG fall
within the CC or MCC subgroup.
At least 500 cases are in the CC or MCC subgroup.
There is at least a 20-percent difference in average costs
between subgroups.
There is a $2,000 difference in average costs between
subgroups.
In order to warrant creation of a CC or MCC subgroup within a base
MS-DRG, the subgroup must meet all five of the criteria.
2. MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the Nervous System)
a. Functional Quadriplegia
We received a request to reassign cases identified by diagnosis
code R53.2 (Functional quadriplegia) from MS-DRGs 052 and 053 (Spinal
Disorders and Injuries with and without CC/MCC, respectively). The
requestor stated that because functional quadriplegia does not involve
any spinal injury or pathology, cases identified by the diagnosis code
should not be assigned to MS-DRGs 052 and 053. However, the requestor
did not suggest an alternative MS-DRG assignment.
Section I.C.18.f. of the FY 2017 ICD-10-CM Official Coding
Guidelines addresses the coding for the diagnosis of functional
quadriplegia. Section I.C.18.f. states that functional quadriplegia
(described by diagnosis code R53.2) is the lack of ability to use one's
limbs or to ambulate due to extreme debility. The condition is not
associated with neurologic deficit or injury, and diagnosis code R53.2
should not be used to identify cases of neurologic quadriplegia. In
addition, the Guidelines state that the diagnosis code should only be
assigned if functional quadriplegia is specifically documented by a
physician in the medical record, and the diagnosis of functional
quadriplegia is not associated with a neurologic deficit or injury. A
physician may document the diagnosis of functional quadriplegia as
occurring with a variety of conditions.
We examined claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file on cases reporting diagnosis code R53.2 in MS-DRGs 052
and 053. Our findings are shown in the table below.
Cases Reporting Functional Quadriplegia in MS-DRGs 052 and 053
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 052--All cases........................................... 865 5.4 $10,247
MS-DRG 052--Cases reporting diagnosis code R53.2................ 63 4.9 6,420
MS-DRG 053--All cases........................................... 239 3.3 6,326
MS-DRG 053--Cases reporting diagnosis code R53.2................ 16 3.3 2,318
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the table above, for MS-DRG 052, there were a total of
865 cases with an average length of stay of 5.4 days and average costs
of $10,247. Of the 865 cases in MS-DRG 052, there were 63 cases that
reported a principal diagnosis of functional quadriplegia, with an
average length of stay of 4.9 days and average costs of $6,420. For MS-
DRG 053, there were a total of 239 cases, with an average length of
stay of 3.3 days and average costs of $6,326. Of the 239 cases in MS-
DRG 053, there were 16 cases that reported a principal diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia, with an average length of stay of 3.3 days and
average costs of $2,318.
To address the request to reassign cases reporting a diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia to a different MS-DRG, we reviewed the data for
a total of 79 cases (63 cases in MS-DRG 052 and 16 cases in MS-DRG 053)
that reported a principal diagnosis of functional quadriplegia in MS-
DRGs 052 and 053. As shown in the table above, our data analysis
demonstrates that the average costs for these 79 cases are lower than
the average costs of all cases in MS-DRGs 052 and 053 ($6,420 compared
to $10,247 for all cases in MS-DRG 052, and $2,318 compared to $6,326
for all cases in MS-DRG 053), and the average
[[Page 19818]]
lengths of stay are shorter for cases reporting a diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia in MS-DRG 052 (4.9 days compared to 5.4 days
for all cases in MS-DRG 052), but equal for cases in MS-DRG 053 (3.3
days for cases reporting a diagnosis of functional quadriplegia and for
all cases).
Our clinical advisors reviewed this issue and agreed that a
diagnosis of functional quadriplegia does not involve a spinal disorder
or injury, and may be associated with, or the result of, a variety of
underlying conditions. Our clinical advisors also agreed that it is not
clinically appropriate to include cases reporting a diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia within MS-DRGs 052 and 053 because these cases
do not involve a spinal disorder or injury. Therefore, given the fact
that functional quadriplegia can be the result of a variety of other
conditions, we reviewed the MS-DRGs in order to identify a more
appropriate placement for cases reporting this diagnosis. Our clinical
advisors recommended assigning cases representing a diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia from MS-DRGs 052 and 053 to MS-DRGs 091, 092,
and 093 (Other Disorders of Nervous System with MCC, with CC, and
without CC/MCC, respectively). Within each MDC, there are MS-DRGs that
describe a variety of other conditions that do not have the clinical
characteristics of the more specific MS-DRGs. In this case, MS-DRGs
091, 092, and 093 describe a variety of other disorders of the nervous
system that are not clinically similar in characteristics to the
disorders described by MS-DRGs 052 and 053. Our clinical advisors
believe that MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093 are more appropriate MS-DRG
assignments for cases representing a diagnosis of functional
quadriplegia.
We examined claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file on cases in MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093. Our findings
are shown in the table below.
Cases in MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 091--All cases........................................... 12,607 5.6 $10,815
MS-DRG 092--All cases........................................... 19,392 3.9 6,706
MS-DRG 093--All cases........................................... 8,120 2.7 5,253
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the table above, for MS-DRG 091, there were a total of
12,607 cases, with an average length of stay of 5.6 days and average
costs of $10,815. For MS-DRG 092, there were a total of 19,392 cases,
with an average length of stay of 3.9 days and average costs of $6,706.
For MS-DRG 093, there were a total of 8,120 cases, with an average
length of stay of 2.7 days and average costs of $5,253. As stated
earlier, of the 865 total cases in MS-DRG 052, there were 63 cases that
reported a principal diagnosis of functional quadriplegia, with an
average length of stay of 4.9 days and average costs of $6,420. Of the
239 total cases in MS-DRG 053, there were 16 cases that reported a
principal diagnosis of functional quadriplegia, with an average length
of stay of 3.3 days and average costs of $2,318. The average lengths-
of-stay for cases reporting a diagnosis of functional quadriplegia in
MS-DRGs 052 and 053 are similar to the average lengths of stay for
cases found in MS-DRGs 091, 092 and 093 (4.9 days and 3.3 days for
cases in MS-DRGs 052 and 053, respectively, compared to 5.6 days, 3.9
days, and 2.7 days, respectively, for cases in MS-DRGs 091, 092, and
093). The average costs for cases reporting a diagnosis of functional
quadriplegia in MS-DRGs 052 and 053 are $6,420 and $2,318,
respectively, compared to $10,815, $6,706, and $5,253 for all cases in
MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093. The average costs for cases reporting a
diagnosis of functional quadriplegia in MS-DRG 053 are lower than the
average costs for all cases in MS-DRG 093 without a CC or MCC ($2,318
compared to $5,253, respectively). The average costs for cases
reporting a diagnosis of functional quadriplegia in MS-DRG 052 are
$6,420, which is lower than the average costs of $10,815 for all cases
in MS-DRG 091, but close to the average costs of $6,706 for all cases
in MS-DRG 092. While we acknowledge that the average costs for cases
reporting a diagnosis of functional quadriplegia are lower than those
cases within MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093, as stated earlier, the average
costs of cases reporting a diagnosis of functional quadriplegia also
are lower than the average costs of all cases in MS-DRGs 052 and 053
where these cases are currently assigned.
Our clinical advisors reviewed the clinical issues as well as the
claims data for MS-DRGs 052, 053, 091, 092, and 093. As a result of
this review, they recommended that cases reporting a diagnosis of
functional quadriplegia be reassigned from MS-DRGs 052 and 053 to MS-
DRGs 091, 092, and 093 because the current MS-DRG assignment is not
clinically appropriate. Our clinical advisors stated that reassigning
these cases to MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093 is more appropriate because
this set of MS-DRGs includes a variety of nervous system disorders that
are not appropriately classified to more specific MS-DRGs within MDC 1.
Therefore, we are proposing to reassign cases identified by diagnosis
code R53.2 from MS-DRGs 052 and 053 to MS-DRGs 091, 092, and 093 for FY
2018.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
b. Responsive Neurostimulator (RNS(copyright)) System
We received a request to modify the MS-DRG assignment for cases
involving the use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator, a
cranially implanted neurostimulator that is a treatment option for
persons diagnosed with medically intractable epilepsy. Cases involving
the use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator are assigned
to MS-DRG 023 (Craniotomy with Major Device Implant or Acute Complex
Central Nervous System (CNS) Principal Diagnosis (PDX) with MCC or
Chemo Implant) and MS-DRG 024 (Craniotomy with Major Device Implant or
Acute Complex Central Nervous System (CNS) Principal Diagnosis (PDX)
without MCC).
Cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator generator and leads are captured within the
descriptions of four ICD-10-PCS codes. ICD-10-PCS code 0NH00NZ
(Insertion of neurostimulator generator into skull, open approach)
captures the use of the neurostimulator generator, and the other three
ICD-10-PCS codes, 00H00MZ (Insertion of neurostimulator lead into
brain, open approach), 00H03MZ (Insertion of neurostimulator lead into
brain, percutaneous approach), and 00H04MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, percutaneous endoscopic approach)
describe the insertions of the leads, depending on the approach used.
The combination of an ICD-10-PCS
[[Page 19819]]
code capturing the use of the generator and another ICD-10-PCS code
describing the specific approach used to insert the leads would capture
the performance of the entire procedure.
The requestor stated that the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator received FDA pre-market approval on November 14, 2013,
and is the first and only FDA-approved device used to provide
responsive stimulation directly to the seizure onset zone in the brain.
The RNS(copyright) neurostimulator includes a cranially
implanted programmable neurostimulator connected to one or two depth
and/or subdural cortical strip leads that are surgically placed in or
on the brain at the seizure focus. The neurostimulator and leads are
typically implanted during a single acute inpatient hospital procedure
at a Comprehensive Epilepsy Center (CEC). The implanted neurostimulator
continuously monitors brain electrical activity and is programmed by a
physician to detect abnormal patterns of electrical activity that the
physician believes may lead to seizures (epileptiform activity). In
response to the detection of epileptiform activity, the device delivers
brief, mild electrical pulses (responsive stimulation) to one or two
epileptic foci. Detection and stimulation parameters are adjusted
noninvasively by the physician to optimize control of epileptic
seizures for each patient.
As the neurostimulator monitors brain activity, electrocorticograms
(ECoGs) recorded immediately before and after certain events are stored
for later review by the physician. The physician reviews the stored
recordings to see the detections and the effects of stimulation. The
physician can reprogram the neurostimulator at an in-person office
appointment to change detection and stimulation settings based on this
information, as well as review the patient's seizures.
The RNS(copyright) neurostimulator was approved for new
technology add-on payments for FY 2015 and FY 2016, and new technology
add-on payments were discontinued for FY 2017. The new technology add-
on payment application was discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules (79 FR 28051 through 28054 and 79 FR 49946
through 49950, respectively), the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and
final rules (80 FR 24427 through 24448 and 80 FR 49442 through 49443,
respectively), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final rules
(81 FR 25036 through 25037 and 81 FR 56882 through 56884,
respectively).
The requestor suggested the following three options for MS-DRG
assignment updates for cases involving the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator:
Create new MS-DRGs for cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator. The requestor suggested MS-
DRG XXX (Cranially Implanted Neurostimulators with MCC) and MS-DRG XXX
(Cranially Implanted Neurostimulators without MCC) as possible MS-DRG
titles. The requestor acknowledged that the number of cases assigned to
this MS-DRG would be low, but anticipated that the number of cases
would increase in the future.
Reassign cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator to MS-DRGs 020 and 021
(Intracranial Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of
Hemorrhage with MCC, with CC, respectively) and update the MS-DRG logic
and titles. The requestor asked CMS to reassign all cases involving the
use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator that currently map
to MS-DRG 023 (Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute Complex CNS
Principal Diagnosis with MCC or Chemo Implant) to MS-DRG 20, and change
the title of MS-DRG 20 to ``Intracranial Vascular Procedures with
Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage or Cranially Implanted
Neurostimulator with MCC.'' In addition, the requestor asked CMS to
reassign all cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator that currently map to MS-DRG 024 (Craniotomy with Major
Device Implant/Acute Complex CNS Principal Diagnosis without MCC) to
MS-DRG 021, and change the title of MS-DRG 021 to ``Intracranial
Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage with CC or
Cranially Implanted Neurostimulator without MCC''. The requestor
believed that the majority of cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator that map to MS-DRG 024 do not
include a secondary diagnosis that is classified as a CC, and the
average cost of cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator without a CC is significantly
higher than the average cost of all cases in MS-DRG 022 (Intracranial
Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage without CC/
MCC). Therefore, the requestor stated that it would not be adequate to
assign cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator without a CC to MS-DRG 022.
Reassign cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator to other higher paying MS-
DRGs that would provide adequate payment.
The requestor stated that it had analyzed data from two sources,
which demonstrated that the average cost of cases involving the use of
the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator was higher than the
average cost of all cases in MS-DRGs 023 and 024 (the current MS-DRGs
for cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator). The requestor indicated that the data used for its
analysis was obtained from hospitals performing the procedure, as well
as from the FY 2015 MedPAR file.
The requestor also asked that CMS examine the cases representing
cranially implanted neurostimulators and leads that were inserted for
the treatment of epilepsy. The requestor pointed out that
neurostimulators also are used in the treatment of movement disorders
such as Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, or dystonia. The
requestor asked that CMS identify those cases with a principal
diagnosis of epilepsy, and identified the following ICD-10-CM codes
that it believed were representative of potential epilepsy cases.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code ICD-10-CM code title
------------------------------------------------------------------------
G40.001................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
idiopathic epilepsy and epileptic syndromes
with seizures of localized onset, not
intractable, with status epilepticus.
G40.009................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
idiopathic epilepsy and epileptic syndromes
with seizures of localized onset, not
intractable, without status epilepticus.
G40.011................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
idiopathic epilepsy and epileptic syndromes
with seizures of localized onset,
intractable, with status epilepticus.
G40.019................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
idiopathic epilepsy and epileptic syndromes
with seizures of localized onset,
intractable, without status epilepticus.
G40.101................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with simple partial seizures, not
intractable, with status epilepticus.
G40.119................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with simple partial seizures,
intractable, without status epilepticus.
[[Page 19820]]
G40.201................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with complex partial seizures,
not intractable, with status epilepticus.
G40.209................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with complex partial seizures,
not intractable, without status
epilepticus.
G40.211................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with complex partial seizures,
intractable, with status epilepticus.
G40.219................... Localization-related (focal) (partial)
symptomatic epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes with complex partial seizures,
intractable, without status epilepticus.
G40.301................... Generalized idiopathic epilepsy and
epileptic syndromes, not intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.309................... Generalized idiopathic epilepsy and
epileptic syndromes, not intractable,
without status epilepticus.
G40.311................... Generalized idiopathic epilepsy and
epileptic syndromes, intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.319................... Generalized idiopathic epilepsy and
epileptic syndromes, intractable, without
status epilepticus.
G40.401................... Other generalized epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes, not intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.409................... Other generalized epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes, not intractable, without status
epilepticus.
G40.411................... Other generalized epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes, intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.419................... Other generalized epilepsy and epileptic
syndromes, intractable, without status
epilepticus.
G40.501................... Epileptic seizures related to external
causes, not intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.509................... Epileptic seizures related to external
causes, not intractable, without status
epilepticus.
G40.801................... Other epilepsy, not intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.802................... Other epilepsy, not intractable, without
status epilepticus.
G40.803................... Other epilepsy, intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.804................... Other epilepsy, intractable, without status
epilepticus.
G40.811................... Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, not intractable,
with status epilepticus.
G40.812................... Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, not intractable,
without status epilepticus.
G40.813................... Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.814................... Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, intractable,
without status epilepticus.
G40.821................... Epileptic spasms, not intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.822................... Epileptic spasms, not intractable, without
status epilepticus.
G40.823................... Epileptic spasms, intractable, with status
epilepticus.
G40.824................... Epileptic spasms, intractable, without
status epilepticus.
G40.89.................... Other seizures.
G40.901................... Epilepsy, unspecified, not intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.909................... Epilepsy, unspecified, not intractable,
without status epilepticus.
G40.911................... Epilepsy, unspecified, intractable, with
status epilepticus.
G40.919................... Epilepsy, unspecified, intractable, without
status epilepticus.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRGs 023 and 024 contain a number of cases representing
neurostimulator generator and lead code combinations that are captured
under a list referred to as ``Major Device Implant.'' The
neurostimulator generators on this list are inserted into the skull, as
well as into the subcutaneous areas of the chest, back, or abdomen. The
leads are all inserted into the brain. The RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator generators are inserted into the skull and the leads
are inserted into the brain. The following three ICD-10-PCS code
combinations capture the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator and leads that would determine an assignment of a case
to MS-DRGs 023 and 024, as shown in the ``Major Device Implant'' list:
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H00MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, open approach);
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H03MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, percutaneous approach); and
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H04MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, percutaneous endoscopic approach).
We examined claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file for all cases representing the use of a
neurostimulator in MS-DRGs 023 and 024 listed under the ``Major Device
Implant'' list. As requested, we also examined the cases represented by
the three neurostimulator code combinations, which capture the use of
the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator that are a subset of the
cases listed on the ``Major Device Implant'' list using the code
combinations listed above, and that had a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy from the list supplied by the requestor. The following tables
show our findings for those cases in MS-DRGs 023 and 024 as well as
findings for cases in MS-DRGs 020 and 021.
MS-DRGs 023 and 024
[Neurostimulator Cases]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 023--All cases........................................... 6,723 10.9 $39,014
MS-DRG 023--Cases with neurostimulators (Major Device Implant 21 6.7 48,821
list cases)....................................................
MS-DRG 023--Cases with neurostimulator generators inserted into 7 8.0 63,365
skull (includes cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator) and cases with a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy.......................................................
MS-DRG 024--All cases........................................... 2,275 5.5 27,574
[[Page 19821]]
MS-DRG 024--Cases with neurostimulators (Major Device Implant 394 2.1 31,669
list cases)....................................................
MS-DRG 024--Cases with neurostimulator generators inserted into 54 4.3 51,041
skull (includes cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator) and cases with a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy.......................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cases in MS-DRGs 020 and 021
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 020--All cases........................................... 1,372 16.7 $72,926
MS-DRG 021--All cases........................................... 336 13.5 54,385
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown by the table above, for MS-DRG 023, we identified a total
of 6,723 cases, with an average length of stay of 10.9 days and average
costs of $39,014. Of the 6,723 cases in MS-DRG 023, there were 21 cases
representing the implantation of any type of neurostimulator generator
with an average length of stay of 6.7 days, and average costs of
$48,821. Of the 21 neurostimulator generator cases, there were 7 cases
with the neurostimulator generators inserted into skull (including
cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of epilepsy with an average
length of stay of 8.0 days and average costs of $63,365. For MS-DRG
024, we identified a total of 2,275 cases, with an average length of
stay of 5.5 days and average costs of $27,574. Of the 2,275 cases in
MS-DRG 024, there were 394 cases representing the implantation of any
type of neurostimulator generator with an average length of stay of 2.1
days and average costs of $31,669. Of the 394 neurostimulator generator
cases, there were 54 cases with the neurostimulator generators inserted
into skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy with an average length of stay of 4.3 days and average costs
of $51,041.
There were only 61 cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator with a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy in MS-DRGs 023 and 024 (7 and 54, respectively). Our clinical
advisors reviewed this issue, and agreed that this number of cases is
too small on which to base a rationale for creating a new MS-DRG.
Basing a new MS-DRG on such a small number of cases (61) could lead to
distortion in the relative payment weights for the MS-DRG because
several expensive cases could impact the overall relative payment
weight. Having larger clinical cohesive groups within an MS-DRG
provides greater stability for annual updates to the relative payment
weights.
We also examined the possibility of reassigning cases involving the
use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator to MS-DRGs 020 and
021. As the table above shows, for MS-DRG 020, there were a total of
1,372 cases with an average length of stay of 16.7 days and average
costs of $72,926. For MS-DRG 021, there were a total of 336 cases with
an average length of stay of 13.5 days and average costs of $54,385.
The cases in MS-DRG 023 with neurostimulator generators inserted into
skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy have average costs that are $9,561 lower than that for all
cases in MS-DRG 020 ($63,365 compared to $72,926), and the average
length of stay is 8.7 days shorter (8.0 days compared to 16.7 days). We
do not believe these data support reassigning the cases in MS-DRG 023
with neurostimulator generators inserted into the skull (including
cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of epilepsy to MS-DRG 020.
While the cases in MS-DRG 024 with neurostimulator generators inserted
into the skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy have average costs that are similar to the average costs of
cases in MS-DRG 021 ($51,041 compared to $54,385), they have an average
length of stay that is 9.2 days shorter (4.3 days compared to 13.5
days). Our clinical advisors reviewed the clinical issues and the
claims data, and did not support reassigning the cases with
neurostimulator generators inserted into skull (including cases
involving the use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and
a principal diagnosis of epilepsy from MS-DRGs 023 and 024 to MS-DRGs
020 and 021. Our clinical advisors pointed out that the cases in MS-
DRGs 020 and 021 have a principal diagnosis of a hemorrhage. The
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator generators are not used to
treat patients with diagnosis of a hemorrhage. Therefore, our clinical
advisors stated that it was inappropriate to reassign cases
representing a principal diagnosis of epilepsy to an MS-DRG that
contains cases that represent the treatment of intracranial hemorrhage.
They also stated that the differences in average length of stay and
average costs support this recommendation.
We then explored alternative MS-DRG assignments, as was requested.
We noted that the 7 cases with the neurostimulator generators inserted
into the skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy had an average length of stay of 8.0 days and average costs of
$63,365, as compared to the 6,723 cases in MS-DRG 023 that had an
average length of stay of 10.9 days and average costs of $39,014. While
these neurostimulator cases had average costs that were $24,351 higher
than the average costs of all cases in MS-DRG 023, there were only a
total of 7 cases. There may have been other factors contributing to the
higher costs. We noted that the 54 cases with the neurostimulator
generators inserted into skull (including cases involving the use of
the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal
diagnosis of epilepsy in MS-DRG 024 had average costs of $51,041 and an
average length of stay of 4.3 days, compared to average costs of
$27,574 and average length of stay of 5.5 days for all cases in MS-DRG
024. By reassigning all cases with the neurostimulator generators
inserted into the skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of
epilepsy to MS DRG 023, even if there is not a MCC
[[Page 19822]]
present, the cases would receive higher payment. The average costs of
MS-DRG 023 were $39,014, compared to the average costs of $51,041 for
the cases with the neurostimulator generators inserted into skull
(including cases involving the use of the RNS(copyright)
neurostimulator) and a principal diagnosis of epilepsy in MS-DRG 024.
Our clinical advisors reviewed the clinical issues and the claims data,
and supported the recommendation to reassign the cases with the
neurostimulator generators inserted into skull (including cases
involving the use of the RNS(copyright) neurostimulator) and
a principal diagnosis of epilepsy to MS-DRG 023, even if there is not a
MCC reported. Therefore, we are proposing to reassign all cases with a
principal diagnosis of epilepsy from the epilepsy diagnosis list
provided earlier, and one of the following ICD-10-PCS code combinations
capturing cases with the neurostimulator generators inserted into the
skull (including cases involving the use of the
RNS(copyright) neurostimulator), to MS-DRG 023, even if
there is no MCC reported:
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H00MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, open approach);
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H03MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, percutaneous approach); and
0NH00NZ (Insertion of neurostimulator generator into
skull, open approach), in combination with 00H04MZ (Insertion of
neurostimulator lead into brain, percutaneous endoscopic approach).
We also are proposing to change the title of MS-DRG 023 from
``Craniotomy with Major Device Implant or Acute Complex Central Nervous
System (CNS) Principal Diagnosis (PDX) with MCC or Chemo Implant'' to
``Craniotomy with Major Device Implant or Acute Complex Central Nervous
System (CNS) Principal Diagnosis (PDX) with MCC or Chemotherapy Implant
or Epilepsy with Neurostimulator'' to reflect the proposed
modifications to MS-DRG assignments.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
c. Precerebral Occlusion or Transient Ischemic Attack With Thrombolytic
We received a request to add the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes
currently assigned to MS-DRGs 067 and 068 (Nonspecific CVA and
Precerebral Occlusion without Infarction with MCC and without MCC,
respectively) and the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes currently assigned to
MS-DRG 069 (Transient Ischemia) to the GROUPER logic for MS-DRGs 061,
062, and 063 (Acute Ischemic Stroke with Use of Thrombolytic Agent with
MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively) when those conditions
are sequenced as the principal diagnosis and reported with an ICD-10-
PCS procedure code describing use of a thrombolytic agent (for example,
tPA).
The ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes displayed in the table below identify
the conditions that are assigned to MS-DRGs 067 and 068 when reported
as a principal diagnosis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I65.01.................... Occlusion and stenosis of right vertebral
artery.
I65.02.................... Occlusion and stenosis of left vertebral
artery.
I65.03.................... Occlusion and stenosis of bilateral
vertebral arteries.
I65.09.................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
vertebral artery.
I65.1..................... Occlusion and stenosis of basilar artery.
I65.21.................... Occlusion and stenosis of right carotid
artery.
I65.22.................... Occlusion and stenosis of left carotid
artery.
I65.23.................... Occlusion and stenosis of bilateral carotid
arteries.
I65.29.................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
carotid artery.
I65.8..................... Occlusion and stenosis of other precerebral
arteries.
I65.9..................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
precerebral artery.
I66.01.................... Occlusion and stenosis of right middle
cerebral artery.
I66.02.................... Occlusion and stenosis of left middle
cerebral artery.
I66.03.................... Occlusion and stenosis of bilateral middle
cerebral arteries.
I66.09.................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified middle
cerebral artery.
I66.11.................... Occlusion and stenosis of right anterior
cerebral artery.
I66.12.................... Occlusion and stenosis of left anterior
cerebral artery.
I66.13.................... Occlusion and stenosis of bilateral anterior
cerebral arteries.
I66.19.................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
anterior cerebral artery.
I66.21.................... Occlusion and stenosis of right posterior
cerebral artery.
I66.22.................... Occlusion and stenosis of left posterior
cerebral artery.
I66.23.................... Occlusion and stenosis of bilateral
posterior cerebral arteries.
I66.29.................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
posterior cerebral artery.
I66.3..................... Occlusion and stenosis of cerebellar
arteries.
I66.8..................... Occlusion and stenosis of other cerebral
arteries.
I66.9..................... Occlusion and stenosis of unspecified
cerebral artery.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes displayed in the table below identify
the conditions that are assigned to MS-DRG 069 when reported as a
principal diagnosis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
G45.0..................... Vertebro-basilar artery syndrome.
G45.1..................... Carotid artery syndrome (hemispheric).
G45.2..................... Multiple and bilateral precerebral artery
syndromes.
G45.8..................... Other transient cerebral ischemic attacks
and related syndromes.
G45.9..................... Transient cerebral ischemic attack,
unspecified.
[[Page 19823]]
G46.0..................... Middle cerebral artery syndrome.
G46.1..................... Anterior cerebral artery syndrome.
G46.2..................... Posterior cerebral artery syndrome.
I67.81.................... Acute cerebrovascular insufficiency.
I67.82.................... Cerebral ischemia.
I67.841................... Reversible cerebrovascular vasoconstriction
syndrome.
I67.848................... Other cerebrovascular vasospasm and
vasoconstriction.
I67.89.................... Other cerebrovascular disease.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ICD-10-PCS procedure codes displayed in the table below
describe use of a thrombolytic agent. These procedure codes are
designated as non-O.R. procedure codes affecting the MS-DRG assignment
for MS-DRGs 061, 062, and 063.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3E03017................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
peripheral vein, open approach.
3E03317................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
peripheral vein, percutaneous approach.
3E04017................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
central vein, open approach.
3E04317................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
central vein, percutaneous approach.
3E05017................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
peripheral artery, open approach.
3E05317................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
peripheral artery, percutaneous approach.
3E06017................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
central artery, open approach.
3E06317................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
central artery, percutaneous approach.
3E08017................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
heart, open approach.
3E08317................... Introduction of other thrombolytic into
heart, percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the onset of stroke symptoms, tPA must be given within 3 hours
(or up to 4.5 hours for certain eligible patients) in an attempt to
dissolve a clot and improve blood flow to the specific area affected in
the brain. If, upon receiving the tPA, the stroke symptoms completely
resolve within 24 hours and imaging studies (if performed) are
negative, the patient has suffered what is clinically defined as a
transient ischemic attack, not a stroke. According to the requestor,
the current MS-DRG assignments do not account for this subset of
patients who were successfully treated with tPA to prevent a stroke.
In addition, the requestor expressed concerns regarding
documentation and quality of the data. For example, the requestor noted
that the terms ``stroke-in-evolution'' and ``aborted stroke'' may be
documented as a ``workaround'' for a patient exhibiting symptoms of a
stroke who receives tPA and, regardless of the outcome, would result in
assignment to MS-DRG 061, 062, or 063. Therefore, in cases where the
patient's stroke symptoms completely resolved upon receiving tPA and
the patient clinically suffered a precerebral occlusion or transient
ischemia, this documentation practice is incorrectly labeling these
patients as having had a stroke and ultimately leading to inaccurate
data.
We analyzed claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file for MS-DRGs 061, 062, and 063. Our findings are shown
in the tables below.
MS-DRGs for Acute Ischemic Stroke With Use of Thrombolytic Agent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 061--All cases........................................... 4,528 6.4 $20,270
MS-DRG 062--All cases........................................... 8,600 4.2 14,124
MS-DRG 063--All cases........................................... 1,859 3.0 11,898
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our analysis also consisted of claims data for MS-DRGs 067 and 068
when reported with a procedure code describing the use of tPA. As shown
in the table below, the total number of cases reported in MS-DRG 067
was 811, with an average length of stay of 4.8 days and average costs
of $10,248. There were 9 cases in MS-DRG 067 with a precerebral
occlusion receiving tPA, with an average length of stay of 5.2 days and
average costs of $20,156. The total number of cases reported in MS-DRG
068 was 3,809, with an average length of stay of 2.8 days and average
costs of $6,555. There were 33 cases in MS-DRG 068 with a precerebral
occlusion receiving tPA, with an average length of stay of 4.3 days and
average costs of $13,814.
MS-DRGs for Precerebral Occlusion With Use of Thrombolytic Agent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 067--All cases........................................... 811 4.8 $10,248
MS-DRG 067--Cases with tPA...................................... 9 5.2 20,156
MS-DRG 068--All cases........................................... 3,809 2.8 6,555
[[Page 19824]]
MS-DRG 068--Cases with tPA...................................... 33 4.3 13,814
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We recognize that while the volume of cases for patients with a
diagnosis of precerebral occlusion receiving tPA in MS-DRGs 067 and 068
is relatively low, the average length of stay is longer, and the
average costs for this subset of patients is approximately twice the
amount of the average costs in comparison to all cases in MS-DRGs 067
and 068.
We then analyzed claims data for cases in MS-DRG 069 when reported
with a procedure code describing the use of tPA. As shown in the table
below, the total number of cases reported in MS-DRG 069 was 50,633,
with an average length of stay of 2.5 days and average costs of $5,518.
There were 554 cases of transient ischemia receiving tPA, with an
average length of stay of 3.2 days and average costs of $12,481.
MS-DRG for Transient Ischemia With Use of Thrombolytic Agent
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 069--All cases........................................... 50,633 2.5 $5,518
MS-DRG 069--Cases with tPA...................................... 554 3.2 12,481
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similar to the findings for MS-DRGs 067 and 068, the number of
cases for transient ischemia receiving tPA in MS-DRG 069 was relatively
low in comparison to all the cases in the MS-DRG, with a longer average
length of stay and approximately twice the amount of average costs in
comparison to all cases in MS-DRG 069.
The results of analysis of the data and the advice of our clinical
advisors support adding the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in MS-DRGs 067,
068, and 069 to the list of principal diagnoses in MS-DRGs 061, 062,
and 063 to better account for this subset of patients who were
successfully treated with tPA to prevent a stroke, to identify the
increasing use of thrombolytics at the onset of symptoms of a stroke,
to further encourage appropriate physician documentation for a
precerebral occlusion or transient ischemic attack when patients are
treated with tPA, and to reflect more appropriate payment for the
resources involved in evaluating and treating these patients. We
believe this approach will improve accuracy of the data and assist in
addressing the concern that facilities may be reporting incorrect
diagnoses for this subset of patients.
Therefore, for FY 2018, we are proposing to add the ICD-10-CM
diagnosis codes listed earlier in this section that are currently
assigned to MS-DRGs 067 and 068 and the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes
currently assigned to MS-DRG 069 to the GROUPER logic for MS-DRGs 061,
062, and 063 when those conditions are sequenced as the principal
diagnosis and reported with an ICD-10-PCS procedure code describing use
of a thrombolytic agent (for example, tPA). We are inviting public
comments on our proposal.
We also are proposing to retitle MS-DRGs 061, 062, and 063 as
``Ischemic Stroke, Precerebral Occlusion or Transient Ischemia with
Thrombolytic Agent with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC'',
respectively, and to retitle MS-DRG 069 as ``Transient Ischemia without
Thrombolytic''. We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
3. MDC 2 (Diseases and Disorders of the Eye: Swallowing Eye Drops
(Tetrahydrozoline)
We received a request to reassign the following ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes that capture swallowing eye drops from MS-DRGs 124 and 125 (Other
Disorders of the Eye with and without MCC, respectively) to MS-DRGs 917
and 918 (Poisoning and Toxic Effects of Drugs with and without MCC,
respectively). The requestor described a case where a patient was
treated following swallowing eye drops, specifically Tetrahydrozoline,
which the provider considers to be a poisoning, not a disorder of the
eye.
T49.5X1A (Poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations, accidental (unintentional), initial encounter);
T49.5X2A (Poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations, intentional self-harm, initial encounter);
T49.5X3A (Poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations, assault, initial encounter); and
T49.5X4A (Poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations, undetermined, initial encounter).
We agree with the requestor that the four diagnosis codes describe
a poisoning, not a disorder of the eye. We examined claims data for
cases in MS-DRGs 124 and 125 from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file. Our findings are shown in the table below.
MS-DRG 124 and 125 Cases
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 124--All cases........................................... 874 4.8 $8,826
MS-DRG 124--Cases reporting poisoning by ophthalmological drugs 1 2.0 3,007
and preparations code..........................................
MS-DRG 125--All cases........................................... 3,205 3.3 5,565
MS-DRG 125--Cases reporting poisoning by ophthalmological drugs 1 2.0 1,446
and preparations code..........................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19825]]
As shown in the table above, there were only 2 cases of poisoning
by ophthalmological drugs and preparations--1 case in MS-DRG 124 with
an average length of stay of 2 days and average costs of $3,007 and 1
case in MS-DRG 125 with an average length of stay of 2 days and average
costs of $1,446. The case of poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations in MS-DRG 124 had a shorter average length of stay than
the average length of stay for all cases in MS-DRG 124 (2.0 days
compared to 4.8 days) and lower average costs than the average costs
for all cases in MS-DRG 124 ($3,007 compared to $8,826). The case of
poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and preparations in MS-DRG 125 also
had a shorter average length of stay than the average length of stay
for all cases in MS-DRG 125 (2.0 days compared to 3.3 days) and lower
average costs than the average costs for all cases in MS-DRG 125
($1,446 compared to $5,565).
We also examined claims data on cases reported in MS-DRGs 917 and
918 from the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file. Our
findings are shown in the table below.
MS-DRGs 917 and 918 Cases
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 917--All cases........................................... 32,381 4.8 $9,882
MS-DRG 918--All cases........................................... 24,061 3.0 5,326
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the table above, the 2 cases of poisoning by
ophthalmological drugs and preparations also had shorter average
lengths of stay than the average length of stay for all cases in MS-
DRGs 917 and 918 (2.0 days compared to 4.8 days in MS-DRG 917 and 2.0
days compared to 3.0 days in MS-DRG 918). The average costs also were
lower for the 2 cases of poisoning by ophthalmological drugs and
preparations than the average costs for all cases in MS-DRGs 917 and
918 ($3,007 compared to $9,882 for all cases in MS-DRG 917 and $1,446
compared to $5,326 for all cases in MS-DRG 918). Therefore, cases with
this type of poisoning had lower average lengths of stay and lower
average costs than all other cases assigned to MS-DRGs 124 and 125 and
cases in MS-DRGs 917 and 918 where poisonings are assigned.
Because the codes clearly capture a poisoning and not an eye
disorder, we believe that these codes are more appropriately assigned
to MS-DRGs 917 and 918 where other poisonings are assigned. Our
clinical advisors also reviewed this issue and agreed that the codes
should be moved from MS-DRGs 124 and 125 to MS-DRGs 917 and 918 because
they clearly capture a poisoning and not a disorder of the eye. Because
MS-DRGs 917 and 918 contain cases with multiple types of poisonings, it
is expected that some types of poisoning cases will have longer lengths
of stay and greater average costs than other types of poisoning cases.
Therefore, we are proposing to reassign the following ICD-10-CM
diagnosis codes from MS-DRGs 124 and 125 to MS-DRGs 917 and 918 for FY
2018: T49.5X1A; T49.5X2A; T49.5X3A; and T49.5X4A.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
4. MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System)
a. Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedures and Insertion of a
Radioactive Element
Currently, under ICD-10-PCS, the logic for MS-DRG 246 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+
Vessels or Stents), MS-DRG 247 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedures
with Drug-Eluting Stent without MCC), MS-DRG 248 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+
Vessels or Stents), and MS-DRG 249 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting Stent without MCC) includes six
procedure codes that describe the insertion of a radioactive element.
When any of these six procedure codes are reported without the
reporting of a percutaneous cardiovascular procedure code, they are
assigned to MS-DRG 264 (Other Circulatory System O.R. Procedures). The
six specific procedure codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0WHC01Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
mediastinum, open approach.
0WHC31Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
mediastinum, percutaneous approach.
0WHC41Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
mediastinum, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
0WHD01Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
pericardial cavity, open approach.
0WHD31Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
pericardial cavity, percutaneous approach.
0WHD41Z................... Insertion of radioactive element into
pericardial cavity, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unlike procedures involving the insertion of stents, none of the
procedures described by the procedure codes listed above are performed
in conjunction with a percutaneous cardiovascular procedure, and two of
the six procedures described by these procedure codes (ICD-10-PCS codes
0WHC01Z and 0WHD01Z) are not performed using a percutaneous approach,
but rather describe an open approach to performing the specific
procedure. Our clinical advisors agreed that these procedures should
not be used to classify cases within MS-DRGs 246 through 249 because
they are not performed in conjunction with a percutaneous
cardiovascular procedure. Furthermore, the indications for the
insertion of a radioactive element typically involve a diagnosis of
cancer, whereas the indications for the insertion of a coronary artery
stent typically involve a diagnosis of coronary artery disease.
We conducted an analysis for the six procedures described by these
procedure codes by reviewing the claims data for MS-DRGs 246 through
249 from the December 2016 update of
[[Page 19826]]
the FY 2016 MedPAR file. We did not find any cases where any one of the
six procedure codes listed above was reported. As noted earlier, when
any of these six procedure codes are reported without the reporting of
a percutaneous cardiovascular procedure code, the case is assigned to
MS-DRG 264. Therefore, our clinical advisors also agreed that it would
be more appropriate to remove these six procedure codes from MS-DRGs
246 through 249, but maintain their current assignment in MS-DRG 264.
Based on our analysis and the advice from our clinical advisors, for FY
2018, we are proposing to remove ICD-10-PCS procedure codes 0WHC01Z,
0WHC31Z, 0WHC41Z, 0WHD01Z, 0WHD31Z, and 0WHD41Z from MS-DRGs 246
through 249, but maintain their current assignment in MS-DRG 264.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to remove the six
procedure codes listed above from MS-DRGs 246 through 249. We also are
inviting public comments on our proposal to maintain their current
assignment in MS-DRG 264.
b. Proposed Modification of the Titles for MS-DRG 246 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures With Drug-Eluting Stent With MCC or 4+
Vessels or Stents) and MS-DRG 248 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures With Non-Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+ Vessels or
Stents)
We are proposing to revise the titles for MS-DRGs 246 (Percutaneous
Cardiovascular Procedures with Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+
Vessels or Stents) and MS-DRG 248 (Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+ Vessels or
Stents) to better reflect the ICD-10-PCS terminology of ``arteries''
versus ``vessels'' as used in the procedure code titles within the
classification. Specifically, we are proposing to revise the title of
MS-DRG 246 to ``Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedures with Drug-
Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+ Arteries or Stents''. We are proposing to
revise the title of MS-DRG 248 to ``Percutaneous Cardiovascular
Procedures with Non-Drug-Eluting Stent with MCC or 4+ Arteries or
Stents''. We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
c. Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) and Left Atrial
Appendage Closure (LAAC)
We received a request to create new MS-DRGs for cases involving
transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and left atrial appendage
closure (LAAC) procedures when performed in combination in the same
operative episode. The requestor stated that there are both clinical
and financial advantages for the patient when performing concomitant
procedures. For example, the requestor indicated that the clinical
advantages for the patient may include single exposure to anesthesia
and a reduction in overall procedure time, while the financial
advantages may include lower cost-sharing. The requestor further
believed that a single hospitalization for these concomitant procedures
could be cost-effective for various providers and payers.
TAVR is indicated and approved as a treatment option for patients
diagnosed with symptomatic aortic stenosis who are not surgical
candidates for traditional open surgical techniques. Cases involving
TAVR procedures are assigned to MS-DRGs 266 and 267 (Endovascular
Cardiac Valve Replacement with MCC and without MCC, respectively), and
are identified by the following ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the
table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
02RF37Z................... Replacement of aortic valve with autologous
tissue substitute, percutaneous approach.
02RF38Z................... Replacement of aortic valve with zooplastic
tissue, percutaneous approach.
02RF3JZ................... Replacement of aortic valve with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
02RF3KZ................... Replacement of aortic valve with
nonautologous tissue substitute,
percutaneous approach.
02RF37H................... Replacement of aortic valve with autologous
tissue substitute, transapical,
percutaneous approach.
02RF38H................... Replacement of aortic valve with zooplastic
tissue, transapical, percutaneous approach.
02RF3JH................... Replacement of aortic valve with synthetic
substitute, transapical, percutaneous
approach.
02RF3KH................... Replacement of aortic valve with
nonautologous tissue substitute,
transapical, percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAC is indicated and approved as a treatment option for patients
diagnosed with atrial fibrillation. Cases involving LAAC procedures are
assigned to MS-DRGs 273 and 274 (Percutaneous Intracardiac Procedures
with MCC and without MCC, respectively), and are identified by ICD-10-
PCS procedure code 02L73DK (Occlusion of left atrial appendage with
intraluminal device, percutaneous approach).
The requestor suggested that the structure of the possible new MS-
DRGs for TAVR procedures performed in combination with LAAC procedures
could be modeled similar to the structure of MS-DRGs 266 and 267. While
contemplating creation of the new MS-DRGs, the requestor asked CMS to
also consider subdividing the possible new MS-DRGs into two severity
levels and title them as follows:
Suggested MS-DRG 26x (Endovascular Cardiac Valve
Replacement with LAAC with MCC); and
Suggested MS-DRG 26x (Endovascular Cardiac Valve
Replacement with LAAC without MCC).
We analyzed claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file for MS-DRGs 266 and 267 and identified the cases
reporting TAVR procedures with and without an LAAC procedure. As shown
in the table below, the data findings show that the total number of
cases reported in MS-DRG 266 was 9,949, with an average length of stay
of 7.2 days and average costs of $56,762. There were 9,872 cases
involving a TAVR procedure, with an average length of stay of 7.2 days
and average costs of $56,628. There was only one case identified in MS-
DRG 266 where both a TAVR and an LAAC procedure were reported. This
case had an average length of stay of 21.0 days and average costs of
$60,226. For MS-DRG 267, the total number of cases found was 13,290,
with an average length of stay of 3.5 days and average costs of
$45,297. There were 13,245 cases involving a TAVR procedure, with an
average length of stay of 3.5 days and average costs of $45,302. There
were no cases identified in MS-DRG 267 where both a TAVR and an LAAC
procedure were reported.
[[Page 19827]]
MS-DRGs for TAVR Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 266--All cases........................................... 9,949 7.2 $56,762
MS-DRG 266--Cases with TAVR..................................... 9,872 7.2 56,628
MS-DRG 266--Cases TAVR and LAAC................................. 1 21.0 60,226
MS-DRG 267--All cases........................................... 13,290 3.5 45,297
MS-DRG 267--Cases with TAVR..................................... 13,245 3.5 45,302
MS-DRG 267--Cases TAVR and LAAC................................. 0 0 0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We then analyzed claims data in MS-DRGs 273 and 274 for cases
reporting an LAAC procedure. As shown in the table below, the data
findings show that the total number of cases reported in MS-DRG 273 was
6,541, with an average length of stay of 7.7 days and average costs of
$26,042. There were 179 cases involving an LAAC procedure, with an
average length of stay of 3.6 days and average costs of $30,131. For
MS-DRG 274, the total number of cases found was 14,441, with an average
length of stay of 3.0 days and average costs of $20,267. There were
2,428 cases involving an LAAC procedure, with an average length of stay
of 1.2 days and average costs of $26,213.
MS-DRGs for LAAC Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 273--All cases........................................... 6,541 7.7 $26,042
MS-DRG 273--Cases with LAAC..................................... 179 3.6 30,131
MS-DRG 274--All cases........................................... 14,441 3.0 20,267
MS-DRG 274--Cases with LAAC..................................... 2,428 1.2 26,213
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The analysis of claims data for MS-DRGs 266, 267, 273, and 274 and
input from our clinical advisors do not support creating new MS-DRGs
for TAVR and LAAC procedures when performed in combination in the same
operative episode. We found only one case in MS-DRG 266 where both a
TAVR and an LAAC procedure were reported and the claims data for cases
reporting an LAAC procedure in MS-DRGs 273 and 274 support their
current assignment. Our clinical advisors agreed the current MS-DRG
assignments are appropriate for each respective procedure.
Therefore, we are not proposing to create new MS-DRGs for cases
involving TAVR and LAAC procedures when performed in combination in the
same operative episode. We are inviting public comments on our proposal
to maintain the current MS-DRG structure for TAVR procedures in MS-DRGs
266 and 267, as well as the current MS-DRG structure for LAAC
procedures in MS-DRGs 273 and 274.
d. Percutaneous Mitral Valve Replacement Procedures
We received a request to reassign four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
that describe percutaneous mitral valve replacement procedures from MS-
DRGs 216 through 221 (Cardiac Valve and Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedures with and without Cardiac Catheterization with MCC, with CC
and without CC/MCC, respectively) to MS-DRGs 266 and 267 (Endovascular
Cardiac Valve Replacement with MCC and without MCC, respectively). The
requestor indicated that there are inconsistencies in the current
GROUPER logic for endovascular cardiac valve replacement procedures.
Specifically, the requestor stated that the procedure codes that
describe both the percutaneous approach and the transapical,
percutaneous approach for the aortic and pulmonary valves are included
in MS-DRGs 266 and 267. However, for the mitral valve, the GROUPER
logic only includes the procedure codes that describe the transapical,
percutaneous approach.
The requestor also stated that when MS-DRGs 266 and 267 were
created, the intent was to include percutaneous replacement procedures
for all cardiac valves. Therefore, the requestor recommended that CMS
reassign the four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table below
that describe mitral valve replacement procedures, performed with the
percutaneous approach from MS-DRGs 216 through 221 to MS-DRGs 266 and
267 to more appropriately group these procedures within the MS-DRG
structure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS procedure code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
02RG37Z................... Replacement of mitral valve with autologous
tissue substitute, percutaneous approach.
02RG38Z................... Replacement of mitral valve with zooplastic
tissue, percutaneous approach.
02RG3JZ................... Replacement of mitral valve with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
02RG3KZ................... Replacement of mitral valve with
nonautologous tissue substitute,
percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the requestor regarding the intent of the creation of
MS-DRGs 266 and 267. As discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 49890 through 49893), MS-DRGs 266 and 267 were created to
uniquely classify the subset of high-risk cases representing patients
who undergo a cardiac valve replacement procedure
[[Page 19828]]
performed by a percutaneous (endovascular) approach. As such, we agree
that all cardiac valve replacement procedures should be grouped within
the same MS-DRG. In FY 2015, under the ICD-9-CM classification, there
was not a specific procedure code for a percutaneous mitral valve
replacement procedure. Therefore, when we converted from the ICD-9
based MS-DRGs to the ICD-10 MS-DRGs, there was not a code available
from which to replicate. We refer the reader to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (79 FR 49890 through 49893) for a detailed discussion on
the initial request to create new MS-DRGs for endovascular cardiac
valve replacement procedures, as well as the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (80 FR 49354 through 49358) and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 56787 through 56790) for a detailed discussion of the
conversion to ICD-10 MS-DRGs, including our analysis of claims data and
the need to accurately replicate the ICD-9-CM based MS-DRGs.
The requestor also noted that a proposal was discussed at the
September 13-14, 2016 ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee
meeting involving the creation of procedure codes that describe
percutaneous tricuspid valve replacement procedures and, if finalized,
these new procedure codes would also be assigned to MS-DRGs 266 and
267.
As shown in the table below and in Table 6B.--New Procedure Codes,
which is associated with this proposed rule and available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html, there are eight
new procedure codes that describe tricuspid valve replacement
procedures performed with percutaneous and transapical types of
percutaneous approaches that will be effective October 1, 2017.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS procedure code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
02RJ37H................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
autologous tissue substitute, transapical,
percutaneous approach.
02RJ37Z................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
autologous tissue substitute, percutaneous
approach.
02RJ38H................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
zooplastic tissue, transapical,
percutaneous approach.
02RJ38Z................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
zooplastic tissue, percutaneous approach.
02RJ3JH................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
synthetic substitute, transapical,
percutaneous approach.
02RJ3JZ................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
synthetic substitute, percutaneous
approach.
02RJ3KH................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
nonautologous tissue substitute,
transapical, percutaneous approach.
02RJ3KZ................... Replacement of tricuspid valve with
nonautologous tissue substitute,
percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the requestor and believe that, in addition to the
four procedure codes that describe the percutaneous mitral valve
replacement procedures listed earlier in this section, the eight codes
that describe percutaneous and transapical types of percutaneous
tricuspid valve replacement procedures also should be grouped with the
other endovascular cardiac valve replacement procedures. Therefore, we
are proposing to reassign the four percutaneous mitral valve
replacement procedures described by the procedure codes listed in the
table above from MS-DRGs 216 through 221 to MS-DRGs 266 and 267. In
addition, we are proposing to assign the eight new procedure codes
(also listed in a separate table above) that describe percutaneous and
transapical, percutaneous tricuspid valve replacement procedures to MS-
DRGs 266 and 267.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
e. Percutaneous Tricuspid Valve Repair
We received a request to reassign cases reporting ICD-10-PCS
procedure code 02UJ3JZ (Supplement tricuspid valve with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach) from MS-DRGs 216 through 221
(Cardiac Valve and Other Major Cardiothoracic Procedures with and
without Cardiac Catheterization with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC,
respectively) to MS-DRGs 228 and 229 (Other Cardiothoracic Procedures
with MCC and without MCC, respectively). According to the requestor,
reassigning cases involving these procedures would more appropriately
align the cohesiveness with other clinically similar procedures, such
as percutaneous mitral valve repair (for example, procedures involving
the Mitraclip) described by procedure code 02UG3JZ (Supplement mitral
valve with synthetic substitute, percutaneous approach), which are
assigned to MS-DRGs 228 and 229.
The requestor noted that the FORMA Tricuspid Transcatheter Repair
System (herein after referred to as the FORMA system) is currently in
clinical trials in the United States, Europe, and Canada, but has not
received FDA approval. However, the FORMA system is presently available
for compassionate use purposes. The FORMA system technology is
indicated for use in the treatment of patients diagnosed with tricuspid
regurgitation and occupies the regurgitant area of the affected valve,
providing a surface for native leaflet coaptation. The requestor stated
that the technology offers a viable alternative treatment using
traditional tricuspid valve surgery. According to the requestor, the
technology consists of a rail and a spacer, and the procedure to insert
the device involves fluoroscopic imaging guidance.
We analyzed claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file for MS-DRGs 216 through 221 for cases reporting
procedure code 02UJ3JZ (Supplement tricuspid valve with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach). Our findings are shown in the
following table.
MS-DRGs for Cardiac Valve and Other Major Cardiothoracic Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 216--All cases........................................... 9,139 14.4 $68,304
MS-DRG 216--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 1 5.0 14,954
MS-DRG 217--All cases........................................... 3,536 8.9 45,857
MS-DRG 217--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 1 3.0 16,234
[[Page 19829]]
MS-DRG 218--All cases........................................... 498 5.9 41,274
MS-DRG 218--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 0 0 0
MS-DRG 219--All cases........................................... 16,011 11.1 54,519
MS-DRG 219--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 6 9.0 58,075
MS-DRG 220--All cases........................................... 18,476 6.8 37,506
MS-DRG 220--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 1 5.0 90,155
MS-DRG 221--All cases........................................... 3,547 5.0 33,606
MS-DRG 221--Cases with percutaneous tricuspid valve repair...... 0 0 0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also analyzed claims data for MS-DRGs 228 and 229. Our findings
are shown in the following table below.
MS-DRGs for Other Cardiothoracic Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 228--All cases........................................... 3,466 9.8 $47,435
MS-DRG 229--All cases........................................... 4,553 4.9 33,347
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The claims data show that there were very few cases reported for
performing a percutaneous tricuspid valve repair procedure in MS-DRGs
216 through 221. Of the 6 cases found in MS-DRG 219, with average costs
of $58,075, the average cost of these cases aligned with the average
cost of all cases in the MS-DRG assignment ($54,519). The data analysis
and our clinical advisors do not support reassigning cases reporting
procedure code 02UJ3JZ to MS-DRGs 228 and 229. The current MS-DRG
assignment for percutaneous tricuspid valve repair procedures to MS-
DRGs 216 through 221 is clinically coherent with the other percutaneous
procedures performed on the heart valves that are currently assigned to
these MS-DRGs. Percutaneous repair of the aortic, pulmonary and
tricuspid valves utilizing various tissue substitutes (autologous,
nonautologous, zooplastic, and synthetic) are assigned to MS-DRGs 216
through 221. The exception is the percutaneous mitral valve repair,
which, as the requestor pointed out, is assigned to MS-DRGs 228 and 229
as discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56809
through 56813). Our clinical advisors also agreed that the limited
number of cases reported in MS-DRGs 216 through 221 does not warrant
reassignment.
As a result of our review and the input from our clinical advisors,
we are not proposing to reassign cases reporting procedure code 02UJ3JZ
from MS-DRGs 216 through 221 to MS-DRGs 228 and 229.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to maintain the
current MS-DRG assignment for cases reporting procedure code 02UJ3JZ.
5. MDC 8 (Diseases and Disorders of the Musculoskeletal System and
Connective Tissue)
a. Total Ankle Replacement (TAR) Procedures
For FY 2018, we again received two requests for the reassignment of
total ankle replacement (TAR) procedures to a different MS-DRG. TAR
procedures are currently assigned to MS-DRGs 469 and 470 (Major Joint
Replacement or Reattachment of Lower Extremity with and without MCC,
respectively). This topic was discussed previously in the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed and final rules (79 FR 28013 through 28015 and 79 FR
49896 through 49899, respectively) and in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules (81 FR 24989 through 24990 and 81 FR 56814
through 56816, respectively). For FY 2015 and FY 2017, we did not
change the MS-DRG assignment for TAR procedures. The requestors
indicated that TAR procedures are currently assigned to MS-DRGs 469 and
470, to which total hip replacement and total knee replacement
procedures also are assigned. The requestors stated that there are
significant clinical and cost differences among these procedures, which
results in underpayment for TAR procedures. The requestors asked CMS to
examine claims data for the following six ICD-10-PCS codes within MS-
DRGs 469 and 470:
0SRF0J9 (Replacement of right ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, cemented, open approach);
0SRF0JA (Replacement of right ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, uncemented, open approach);
0SRF0JZ (Replacement of right ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, open approach);
0SRG0J9 (Replacement of left ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, cemented, open approach);
0SRG0JA (Replacement of left ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, uncemented, open approach); and
0SRG0JZ (Replacement of left ankle joint with synthetic
substitute, open approach).
The requestors recommended that, if the claims data show a
disparity in costs between TAR procedures and total hip and knee
replacement procedures, the TAR procedures be reassigned to a more
appropriate MS-DRG.
The requestors also stated that total ankle replacement is a
complicated surgery that involves the replacement of the damaged parts
of the three bones that comprise the ankle joint, as compared to the
two bones in hip and knee replacement procedures. Furthermore, as the
smallest weight-bearing large joint in the body, the requestors stated
that TAR procedures demand a complexity of implant device design,
engineering, and manufacture to exacting functional specifications that
is vastly different from that of total hip and knee replacement
devices. One of the requestors stated that the ankle region typically
has poorer circulation and thinner soft tissue coverage than the
[[Page 19830]]
hip and knee, leading to a higher risk of wound complications and
infection that may be more challenging and expensive to treat. In
addition, this requestor stated that the unique anatomical
characteristics and function of the ankle joint require a specialized
surgical skill set, operative technique, and level of operating room
resource utilization that is vastly dissimilar from that of total hip
and knee replacement procedures.
We examined claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file on reported cases of TAR procedures in MS-DRGs 469 and
470. Our findings are shown in the table below.
Total Ankle Replacements Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 469--All cases........................................... 25,778 6.7 $22,139
MS-DRG 469--Cases reporting TAR procedure codes................. 31 4.6 23,828
MS-DRG 470--All cases........................................... 461,553 2.7 14,751
MS-DRG 470--Cases reporting TAR procedure codes................. 2,114 1.9 20,862
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the table above, for MS-DRG 469, there were a total of
25,778 cases, with an average length of stay of 6.7 days and average
costs of $22,139. Of the 25,778 cases in MS-DRG 469, there were 31
cases reporting a TAR procedure, with an average length of stay of 4.6
days and average costs of $23,828. For MS-DRG 470, there were a total
of 461,553 cases, with an average length of stay of 2.7 days and
average costs of $14,751. Of the 461,553 cases in MS-DRG 470, there
were 2,114 cases reporting a TAR procedure, with an average length of
stay of 1.9 days and average costs of $20,862. As mentioned earlier,
there were only 31 TAR procedure cases in MS-DRG 469, and these cases
had average costs of $1,689 higher than the average costs of all cases
within MS-DRG 469. The relatively small number of cases may have been
impacted by other factors. Several expensive cases could impact the
average costs for a very small number of patients. We also note that
the average length of stay for the TAR procedure cases was 4.6 days, as
compared to 6.7 days for all cases within MS-DRG 469. The 2,114 TAR
procedure cases in MS-DRG 470 had average costs that were $6,111 higher
than the average costs of all cases in MS-DRG 470 ($20,862 compared to
$14,751 for all cases). The data support reassigning all of the TAR
procedures to MS-DRG 469, even when there is no MCC reported. While the
average costs of the TAR procedures in MS-DRG 470 are lower than the
average costs for all cases in MS-DRG 469 ($20,862 compared to
$22,139), the average costs are much closer to the average costs of TAR
procedure cases in MS-DRG 470.
Our clinical advisors reviewed this clinical issue and the claims
data, and agreed that it is clinically appropriate to reassign all of
the TAR procedure cases from MS-DRG 470 to MS-DRG 469, even when there
is no MCC reported. The claims data support the fact that these cases
require more resources than other cases assigned to MS-DRG 470.
Therefore, we are proposing to reassign the following TAR procedure
codes from MS-DRG 470 to MS-DRG 469, even if there is no MCC reported:
0SRF0J9; 0SRF0JA; 0SRF0JZ; 0SRG0J9; 0SRG0JA; and 0SRG0JZ for FY 2018.
We are proposing to change the titles of MS-DRGs 469 and 470 to the
following to reflect these proposed MS-DRG reassignments:
Proposed retitle of MS-DRG 469: ``Major Hip and Knee Joint
Replacement or Reattachment of Lower Extremity with MCC or Total Ankle
Replacement''; and
Proposed retitle of MS-DRG 470: ``Major Hip and Knee Joint
Replacement or Reattachment of Lower Extremity without MCC.''
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
b. Revision of Total Ankle Replacement (TAR) Procedures
We received two requests to modify the MS-DRG assignment for
revision of total ankle replacement (TAR) procedures, which are
assigned to MS-DRGs 515, 516, and 517 (Other Musculoskeletal System and
Connective Tissue O.R. Procedures with MCC, with CC, and without CC/
MCC, respectively). This topic was discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed and final rules (79 FR 28013 through 28015 and 79 FR 49896
through 49899, respectively) and in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
and final rules (81 FR 24992 through 24993 and 81 FR 56819 through
56820, respectively). For FY 2015 and FY 2017, we did not change the
MS-DRG assignment for revision of TAR procedures.
The requestors asked that CMS examine the following eight ICD-10-
PCS codes for revision of TAR procedures, which are assigned to MS-DRGs
515, 516, and 517:
0SWF0JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in right ankle
joint, open approach);
0SWF3JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in right ankle
joint, percutaneous approach);
0SWF4JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in right ankle
joint, percutaneous endoscopic approach);
0SWFXJZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in right ankle
joint, external approach);
0SWG0JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in left ankle
joint, open approach);
0SWG3JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in left ankle
joint, percutaneous approach);
0SWG4JZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in left ankle
joint, percutaneous endoscopic approach); and
0SWGXJZ (Revision of synthetic substitute in left ankle
joint, external approach).
One requestor stated that these ICD-10-PCS codes more specifically
identify the revision of TAR procedures than the prior ICD-9-CM codes.
Specifically, ICD-9-CM code 81.59 (Revision of joint replacement of
lower extremity, not elsewhere classified) was an unspecified code,
which included toe and foot joint revision procedures in addition to
revision of TAR procedures. The requestor stated that claims data
reporting these ICD-10-PCS codes would allow CMS to better identify
revisions of TAR procedures, and determine if the procedures are
assigned to the appropriate MS-DRGs.
One requestor suggested the following three options for MS-DRG
assignments:
Assign the ICD-10-PCS ankle revision procedure codes to
MS-DRGs 466, 467, and 468 (Revision of Hip or Knee Replacement with
MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively), and rename MS-DRGs
466, 467, and 468 as ``Revision of Hip, Knee or Ankle with MCC, with
CC, and without CC/MCC'', respectively);
[[Page 19831]]
Assign the ICD-10-PCS ankle revision procedure codes to
MS-DRG 469 (Major Joint Replacement or Reattachment of Lower Extremity
with MCC) to more appropriately recognize higher hospital procedure
costs associated with revision of TAR procedures; or
Establish a new MS-DRG for the assignment of revision of
TAR procedures.
The other requestor asked that CMS consider reassigning revision of
TAR procedures to MS-DRGs that better address the cost-to-payment
differential, such as MS-DRGs 466, 467, and 468.
We examined claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file on reported cases of revision of TAR procedures, as
well as cases assigned to MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, and MS-DRG 469. Our
findings are shown in the tables below.
Revisions of Joint Replacements Procedures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 515--All cases........................................... 5,038 8.0 $20,562
MS-DRG 515--Cases reporting revision of total ankle replacement 0 0 0
procedure codes................................................
MS-DRG 516--All cases........................................... 13,276 4.8 13,524
MS-DRG 516--Cases reporting revision of total ankle replacement 2 2.5 11,400
procedure codes................................................
MS-DRG 517--All cases........................................... 13,330 2.8 10,003
MS-DRG 517--Cases reporting revision of total ankle replacement 4 1.5 7,423
procedure codes................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cases in MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, and 469
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 466--All cases........................................... 3,886 8.4 $33,720
MS-DRG 467--All cases........................................... 19,145 4.2 24,609
MS-DRG 468--All cases........................................... 16,529 2.7 20,208
MS-DRG 469--All cases........................................... 25,778 6.7 22,139
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the tables above, there were only 6 cases representing
revisions of TAR procedures with no cases in MS-DRG 515, two cases in
MS-DRG 516, and four cases in MS-DRG 517. The limited number of six
cases does not justify the creation of a new MS-DRG for the assignment
of revision of TAR procedures. Our data analysis demonstrates that the
average length of stay for the revision of TAR procedures was lower
than that for all cases in MS-DRG 516 (2.5 days compared to 4.8 days),
and the average costs were lower ($11,400 compared to $13,524). The
average length of stay for the revision of TAR procedures also was
lower than that for all cases in MS-DRG 517 (1.5 days compared to 2.8
days), and the average costs were lower ($7,423 compared to $10,003).
The data do not support reassigning the cases from MS-DRGs 515, 516,
and 517.
Furthermore, the average length of stay and average costs of cases
in MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, and 469 are significantly higher than those
for the revision of TAR procedures in MS-DRG 516 and 517. The average
length of stay for all cases in MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, and 469 is 8.4,
4.2, 2.7, and 6.7 days, respectively, compared to the average length of
stay of 2.5 and 1.5 days for cases representing revision of TAR
procedures in MS-DRGs 516 and 517, respectively. The average costs for
all cases in MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, and 469 are $33,720, $24,609,
$20,208, and $22,139, respectively, compared to the average costs of
$11,400 and $7,423 for cases representing revision of TAR procedures in
MS-DRGs 516 and 517, respectively. Therefore, the data do not support
reassigning the cases to MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, or 469.
Our clinical advisors reviewed the clinical issue and the claims
data and agreed that the revision of TAR procedures are appropriately
assigned to MS-DRGs 515, 516, and 517, along with other procedures that
describe revisions of joint replacements of the lower extremities,
including the foot and toe. Our clinical advisors did not support
reassigning these cases to MS-DRGs 466, 467, 468, or 469, or creating a
new MS-DRG. Therefore, based on the findings of our analysis of claims
data and the advice of our clinical advisors, we are proposing to
maintain the current MS-DRG assignment for revision of TAR procedures
within MS-DRGs 515, 516, and 517 for FY 2018.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
c. Magnetic Controlled Growth Rods (MAGEC[supreg] System)
We received a request to add six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe the use of magnetically controlled growth rods for the
treatment of early onset scoliosis (MAGEC[supreg] System) to MS-DRGs
456, 457, and 458 (Spinal Fusion Except Cervical with Spinal Curvature
or Malignancy or Infection or Extensive Fusions with MCC, with CC or
without CC/MCC, respectively). The MAGEC[supreg] System was discussed
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR 25040 through 25042)
and final rule (81 FR 56888 through 56891) as a new technology add-on
payment application. The application was approved for FY 2017 new
technology add-on payments, effective with discharges occurring on and
after October 1, 2016. The request for new procedure codes to identify
the MAGEC[supreg] System technology was discussed at the March 9-10,
2016 ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee meeting. Six new
procedure codes were approved, effective October 1, 2016, and were
displayed in Table 6B.--New Procedure Codes associated with the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (which is available via the Internet on the
CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page.html. These
six procedure codes are currently assigned to MS-DRGs 518, 519, and 520
(Back and Neck Procedure Except Spinal Fusion with MCC or Disc Device/
Neurostimulator, with CC, or without CC/MCC, respectively) and are
shown in the table below.
[[Page 19832]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
XNS0032................... Reposition of lumbar vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s), open
approach, new technology group 2.
XNS0432................... Reposition of lumbar vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s),
percutaneous endoscopic approach, new
technology group 2.
XNS3032................... Reposition of cervical vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s), open
approach, new technology group 2.
XNS3432................... Reposition of cervical vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s),
percutaneous endoscopic approach, new
technology group 2.
XNS4032................... Reposition of thoracic vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s), open
approach, new technology group 2.
XNS4432................... Reposition of thoracic vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s),
percutaneous endoscopic approach, new
technology group 2.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the requestor, adding these six procedure codes will
allow these cases to group to MS-DRGs that more accurately reflect the
diagnosis of early onset scoliosis for which the MAGEC[supreg] System
is indicated. In addition, the requestor stated that because this
technology is utilized on a small subset of patients with approximately
2,500 cases per year, adding these procedure codes to MS-DRGs 456, 457,
and 458 would have little impact.
Because these six procedure codes shown in the table above were
effective as of October 1, 2016, there are no MedPAR claims data
available to analyze. More importantly, we note that cases are assigned
to MS-DRGs 456, 457, and 458 when an actual spinal fusion procedure is
performed. Our clinical advisors agree that use of the MAGEC[supreg]
System's magnetically controlled growth rods technology alone does not
constitute a spinal fusion. Therefore, because there are no claims data
available at this time and based on the advice of our clinical
advisors, we are not proposing to add the six procedure codes to MS-
DRGs 456, 457, or 458. If a spinal fusion procedure is performed along
with the procedure to insert the MAGEC[supreg] System's magnetically
controlled growth rods, it would be appropriate to report that a spinal
fusion was performed and the case would be assigned to one of the
spinal fusion MS-DRGs.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to maintain the
current GROUPER logic for cases assigned to MS-DRGs 456, 457, and 458
and not add the six procedure codes describing the use of the
MAGEC[supreg] System magnetically controlled growth rods. We also are
inviting public comments on our proposal to maintain the assignment of
the six procedure codes in MS-DRGs 518, 519, and 520.
d. Combined Anterior/Posterior Spinal Fusion
It was brought to our attention that 7 of the 10 new ICD-10-PCS
procedure codes describing fusion using a nanotextured surface
interbody fusion device were not added to the appropriate GROUPER logic
list for MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455 (Combined Anterior/Posterior Spinal
Fusion with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC, respectively), effective
October 1, 2016. The logic for MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455 is comprised
of two lists: An anterior spinal fusion list and a posterior spinal
fusion list. Assignment to one of the combined spinal fusion MS-DRGs
requires that a code from each list be reported.
The seven new ICD-10-PCS procedure codes currently included in the
posterior spinal fusion list for MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455 are shown in
the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
XRG6092................... Fusion of thoracic vertebral joint using
nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
XRG7092................... Fusion of 2 to 7 thoracic vertebral joints
using nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
XRG8092................... Fusion of 8 or more thoracic vertebral
joints using nanotextured surface interbody
fusion device, open approach, new
technology group 2.
XRGA092................... Fusion of thoracolumbar vertebral joint
using nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
XRGB092................... Fusion of lumbar vertebral joint using
nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
XRGC092................... Fusion of 2 or more lumbar vertebral joints
using nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
XRGD092................... Fusion of lumbosacral joint using
nanotextured surface interbody fusion
device, open approach, new technology group
2.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that the remaining three new procedure codes are accurately
reflected in the anterior spinal fusion list; that is, ICD-10-PCS code
XRG1092 (Fusion of cervical vertebral joint using nanotextured surface
interbody fusion device, open approach, new technology group 2); ICD-
10-PCS code XRG2092 (Fusion of 2 or more cervical vertebral joints
using nanotextured surface interbody fusion device, open approach, new
technology group 2); and ICD-10-PCS code XRG4092 (Fusion of
cervicothoracic vertebral joint using nanotextured surface interbody
fusion device, open approach, new technology group 2).
The seven procedure codes currently included in the posterior
spinal fusion list describe an anterior spinal fusion by use of the
interbody fusion device. In an interbody fusion, the anterior column of
the spine is being fused. The results of our review of these procedure
codes discussed below and the advice of our clinical advisors support
moving the seven procedure codes from the posterior spinal fusion list
to the anterior spinal fusion list in the GROUPER logic for MS-DRGs
453, 454, and 455. This will improve clinical accuracy and allow
appropriate assignment to these MS-DRGs when both an anterior and
posterior spinal fusion is performed.
During our review of the spinal fusion codes using a nanotextured
surface interbody fusion device in MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455, we
identified 149 additional procedure codes that should be moved from the
posterior spinal fusion list to the anterior spinal fusion
[[Page 19833]]
list. These codes describe spinal fusion of the anterior column with a
posterior approach. As mentioned earlier, the logic for MS-DRGs 453,
454, and 455 is dependent upon a code from the anterior spinal fusion
list and a code from the posterior spinal fusion list. Spinal fusion
codes involving the anterior column should be included on the anterior
spinal fusion list only. We are proposing to move the 149 ICD-10-PCS
procedure codes listed in Table 6P.3a. associated with this proposed
rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) from the posterior spinal fusion list to
the anterior spinal fusion list in MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455.
In addition, we also identified 33 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes in
the posterior spinal fusion list in MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455 that
describe an interbody fusion device in the posterior column and,
therefore, are not considered clinically valid spinal fusion
procedures. These procedure codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0RG00A1................... Fusion of occipital-cervical joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RG03A1................... Fusion of occipital-cervical joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RG04A1................... Fusion of occipital-cervical joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0RG10A1................... Fusion of cervical vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RG13A1................... Fusion of cervical vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RG14A1................... Fusion of cervical vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0RG20A1................... Fusion of 2 or more cervical vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column, open
approach.
0RG23A1................... Fusion of 2 or more cervical vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column,
percutaneous approach.
0RG24A1................... Fusion of 2 or more cervical vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column,
percutaneous endoscopic approach.
0RG40A1................... Fusion of cervicothoracic vertebral joint
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RG43A1................... Fusion of cervicothoracic vertebral joint
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RG44A1................... Fusion of cervicothoracic vertebral joint
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0RG60A1................... Fusion of thoracic vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RG63A1................... Fusion of thoracic vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RG64A1................... Fusion of thoracic vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0RG70A1................... Fusion of 2 to 7 thoracic vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RG73A1................... Fusion of 2 to 7 thoracic vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RG74A1................... Fusion of 2 to 7 thoracic vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0RG80A1................... Fusion of 8 or more thoracic vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column, open
approach.
0RG83A1................... Fusion of 8 or more thoracic vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column,
percutaneous approach.
0RG84A1................... Fusion of 8 or more thoracic vertebral
joints with interbody fusion device,
posterior approach, posterior column,
percutaneous endoscopic approach.
0RGA0A1................... Fusion of thoracolumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0RGA3A1................... Fusion of thoracolumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0RGA4A1................... Fusion of thoracolumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0SG00A1................... Fusion of lumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0SG03A1................... Fusion of lumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0SG04A1................... Fusion of lumbar vertebral joint with
interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0SG10A1................... Fusion of 2 or more lumbar vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, open approach.
0SG13A1................... Fusion of 2 or more lumbar vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
approach.
0SG14A1................... Fusion of 2 or more lumbar vertebral joints
with interbody fusion device, posterior
approach, posterior column, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
0SG30A1................... Fusion of lumbosacral joint with interbody
fusion device, posterior approach,
posterior column, open approach.
0SG33A1................... Fusion of lumbosacral joint with interbody
fusion device, posterior approach,
posterior column, percutaneous approach.
0SG34A1................... Fusion of lumbosacral joint with interbody
fusion device, posterior approach,
posterior column, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to delete these 33 procedure codes from MS-DRGs
453, 454, and 455 for FY 2018. We also note that some of the above
listed codes also may be included in the logic for MS-DRGs 456, 457,
and 458 (Spinal Fusion Except Cervical with Spinal Curvature or
Malignancy or Infection or Extensive Fusions with MCC, with CC or
without
[[Page 19834]]
CC/MCC, respectively), MS-DRGs 459 and 460 (Spinal Fusion Except
Cervical with MCC and without MCC, respectively), and MS-DRGs 471, 472,
and 473 (Cervical Spinal Fusion with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC,
respectively). Therefore, we are proposing to delete the 33 procedure
codes from the logic for those spinal fusion MS-DRGs as well. In
addition, we are proposing to delete the 33 procedure codes from the
ICD-10-PCS classification as shown in Table 6D.--Invalid Procedure
Codes associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html).
In summary, we are inviting public comments on our proposal to move
the seven procedure codes describing spinal fusion using a nanotextured
surface interbody fusion device from the posterior spinal fusion list
to the anterior spinal fusion list in the GROUPER logic for MS-DRGs
453, 454, and 455. We also are inviting public comments on our proposal
to move the 149 procedure codes describing spinal fusion of the
anterior column with a posterior approach from the posterior spinal
fusion list to the anterior spinal fusion list in the GROUPER logic for
MS-DRGs 453, 454, and 455. In addition, we are inviting public comments
on our proposal to delete the 33 procedure codes describing spinal
fusion of the posterior column with an interbody fusion device from MS-
DRGs 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 471, 472, and 473, as well
as from the ICD-10-PCS classification.
6. MDC 14 (Pregnancy, Childbirth and the Puerperium)
a. Vaginal Delivery and Complicating Diagnoses
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56854), we noted
that the code list as displayed in the ICD-10 MS-DRG Version 33
Definitions Manual for MS-DRG 774 (Vaginal Delivery with Complicating
Diagnoses) required further analysis to clarify what constitutes a
vaginal delivery to satisfy the ICD-10 MS-DRG logic. We stated our
plans to conduct further analysis of the diagnosis code lists in MS-DRG
774 for FY 2018.
We believe that the Version 34 Definitions Manual and GROUPER logic
for MS-DRG 774 continue to require additional analysis to determine how
best to classify a vaginal delivery. For example, under MS-DRG 774, the
Definitions Manual currently states that three conditions must be met,
the first of which is a vaginal delivery. To satisfy this first
condition, codes that describe conditions or circumstances from among
three lists of codes must be reported. The first list is comprised of
ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that may be reported as a principal diagnosis
or a secondary diagnosis. These diagnosis codes describe conditions in
which it is assumed that a vaginal delivery has occurred. The second
list of codes is a list of ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that also
describe circumstances in which it is assumed that a vaginal delivery
occurred. The third list of codes identifies diagnoses describing the
outcome of the delivery. Therefore, if any code from one of those three
lists is reported, the first condition (vaginal delivery) is considered
to be met for assignment to MS-DRG 774.
Our continued concern with the first list of ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes as currently displayed in the Definitions Manual under the first
condition is that not all of the conditions necessarily reflect that a
vaginal delivery occurred. Several of the diagnosis codes listed could
also reflect that a cesarean delivery occurred. For example, ICD-10-CM
diagnosis code O10.02 (Pre-existing essential hypertension complicating
childbirth) does not specify that a vaginal delivery took place; yet it
is included in the list of conditions that may be reported as a
principal diagnosis or a secondary diagnosis in the GROUPER logic for a
vaginal delivery. The reporting of this code also could be appropriate
for a delivery that occurred by cesarean section.
As noted earlier, the second list of codes for the first condition
are comprised of ICD-10-PCS procedure codes. While we agree that the
current list of procedure codes in MS-DRG 774 may appropriately
describe that a vaginal delivery occurred, we also believe this list
could be improved and warrants closer review.
The third list of codes for the first condition in MS-DRG 774
includes conditions describing the outcome of the delivery that would
be reported as secondary diagnoses. Similar to concerns with the first
list of codes, we believe the conditions do not necessarily reflect
that a vaginal delivery occurred because they also can be reported on
claims where a cesarean delivery occurred.
For the second condition in MS-DRG 774 to be met, diagnosis codes
that are identified as a complicating diagnosis from among two lists
may be reported. The first list is comprised of ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes that may be reported as a principal or secondary diagnosis. The
second list is comprised of ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that may be
reported as a secondary diagnosis. Currently, there is only one code
listed under the secondary diagnosis list. We have concerns with these
lists and what is classified as a complicating diagnosis when reviewing
the code lists for this and other MS-DRGs that use that logic in MDC
14.
For the third condition in MS-DRG 774 to be met, a limited set of
O.R. procedures, including both extensive and nonextensive procedures,
are listed. We have concerns with this third condition as being needed
to satisfy the logic for a vaginal delivery MS-DRG.
In summary, the MS-DRG logic involving a vaginal delivery under MDC
14 is technically complex as a result of the requirements that must be
met to satisfy assignment to the affected MS-DRGs. Upon review and
discussion, our clinical advisors recommended, and we agree, that we
should solicit public comments on further refinement to the following
four MS-DRGs related to vaginal delivery: MS-DRG 767 (Vaginal Delivery
with Sterilization and/or D&C); MS-DRG 768 (Vaginal Delivery with O.R.
Procedure Except Sterilization and/or D&C); MS-DRG 774 (Vaginal
Delivery with Complicating Diagnosis); and MS-DRG 775 (Vaginal Delivery
without Complicating Diagnosis).
In addition, our clinical advisors agreed that we should solicit
public comments on further refinement to the conditions defined as a
complicating diagnosis in MS-DRG 774 and MS-DRG 781 (Other Antepartum
Diagnoses with Medical Complications).
Therefore, we are soliciting public comments on which diagnosis or
procedure codes, or both, should be considered in the logic to identify
a vaginal delivery and which diagnosis codes should be considered in
the logic to identify a complicating diagnosis. As MS-DRGs 767, 768,
774, 775, and 781 incorporate one or both aspects (vaginal delivery or
complicating diagnosis), public comments that we receive from this
solicitation will be helpful in determining what proposed revisions to
the current logic should be made. We will review public comments
received in response to this solicitation as we continue to evaluate
these areas under MDC 14 and, if warranted, we would propose
refinements for FY 2019. We are requesting that all comments be
directed to the CMS MS-DRG Classification Change Request Mailbox
located at:
[email protected] by November 1, 2017.
[[Page 19835]]
b. MS-DRG 998 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as Discharge Diagnosis)
The logic for MS-DRG 998 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as Discharge
Diagnosis) currently includes a list of diagnoses that are considered
inappropriate for reporting as a principal diagnosis on an inpatient
hospital claim. In other words, these conditions would reasonably be
expected not to necessitate an inpatient admission. Examples of these
diagnosis codes include what are referred to as the ``Supervision of
pregnancy'' codes, as well as pregnancy, maternal care and fetal
related codes with an ``unspecified trimester''. We refer the reader to
the ICD-10 Version 34 Definitions Manual which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Data-Files.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending for the
complete list of diagnosis codes in MS-DRG 998 under MDC 14.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56840 through
56841), there was discussion regarding the supervision of ``high-risk''
pregnancy codes, including elderly primigravida and multigravida
specifically, with regard to removing them from the Unacceptable
principal diagnosis edit code list in the Medicare Code Editor (MCE).
After consultation with the staff at the CDC's NCHS, we learned that
the FY 2017 ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting were
updated to explain appropriate coding for this set of codes. As a
result, the codes describing supervision of high-risk pregnancy (and
other supervision of pregnancy codes) remained on the Unacceptable
principal diagnosis edit code list in the MCE. Therefore, the MCE code
edit is consistent with the logic of MS-DRG 998 (Principal Diagnosis
Invalid as Discharge Diagnosis) for these supervision of pregnancy
codes.
However, as a result of our review and consultation with our
clinical advisors regarding the ``unspecified trimester'' codes in MS-
DRG 998, we have determined that there are more appropriate MS-DRG
assignments for this set of codes. Although it may seem unlikely that a
patient would be admitted and ultimately discharged or transferred
without the caregiver or medical personnel having any further knowledge
of the exact trimester, it is conceivable that a situation may present
itself. For example, the pregnant patient may be from out of town or
unable to communicate effectively. The fact that the specific trimester
is not known or documented does not preclude the resources required to
care for the patient with the particular diagnosis.
Therefore, as shown in Table 6P.3b. associated with this proposed
rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html), we are proposing to remove the 314 ICD-
10-CM diagnosis codes identified with ``unspecified trimester'' from
MS-DRG 998 and reassign them to the MS-DRGs in which their counterparts
(first trimester, second trimester, or third trimester) are currently
assigned as specified in Column C. This would enable more appropriate
MS-DRG assignments and payment for these cases. We are inviting public
comments on our proposal.
c. MS-DRG 782 (Other Antepartum Diagnoses Without Medical
Complications)
The following three ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes are currently on the
principal diagnosis list for the MS-DRG 782 (Other Antepartum Diagnoses
without Medical Complications) logic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
O09.41.................... Supervision of pregnancy with grand
multiparity, first trimester.
O09.42.................... Supervision of pregnancy with grand
multiparity, second trimester.
O09.43.................... Supervision of pregnancy with grand
multiparity, third trimester.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
It was brought to our attention that these codes also are included
in the MCE Unacceptable principal diagnosis code edit list. As
discussed earlier in section II.F.6.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, the supervision of pregnancy codes are accurately reflected in
the MCE code edit list for Unacceptable principal diagnosis. Therefore,
it is not appropriate to include the three above listed codes in MS-DRG
782.
We are proposing to remove the three codes describing supervision
of pregnancy from MS-DRG 782 and reassign them to MS-DRG 998 (Principal
Diagnosis Invalid as Discharge Diagnosis) to reflect a more appropriate
MS-DRG assignment. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
d. Shock During or Following Labor and Delivery
We received a request to review ICD-10-CM diagnosis code O75.1
(Shock during or following labor and delivery), which is currently
assigned to MS-DRG 774 (Vaginal Delivery with Complicating Diagnosis),
MS-DRG 767 (Vaginal Delivery with Sterilization and/or D&C), and MS-DRG
768 (Vaginal Delivery with O.R. Procedure Except Sterilization and/or
D&C).
The requestor provided an example of a patient that delivered at
Hospital A and was transferred to Hospital B for specialized care
related to the diagnosis of shock. The claim for Hospital B resulted in
assignment to a delivery MS-DRG, despite the fact that a delivery did
not occur during that hospitalization. The requestor noted that, by not
reporting the diagnosis code for shock, the claim grouped to a
postpartum MS-DRG and recommended that we evaluate the issue further.
Our analysis initially involved reviewing the GROUPER logic for MS-
DRGs 774, 767 and 768. As discussed earlier in section II.F.14.a. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, the GROUPER logic for
classification and assignment to MS-DRG 774 requires that three
conditions must be met, the first of which is a vaginal delivery.
Similar GROUPER logic applies for assignment to MS-DRGs 767 and 768,
except that only two conditions must be met, with the first condition
being a vaginal delivery. For each of these three MS-DRGs, to satisfy
the first condition, one code that describes a condition or
circumstance from among the three separate lists of codes must be
reported. The first list is comprised of ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that
may be reported as a principal or secondary diagnosis. These diagnosis
codes describe conditions in which it is assumed that a vaginal
delivery has occurred. Among this first list is ICD-10-CM diagnosis
code O75.1, which is included in the GROUPER logic for MS-DRGs 774, 767
and 768 (under the first condition--vaginal delivery). We refer readers
to the ICD-10 MS-DRG Version 34 Definitions Manual located via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-
Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatient
[[Page 19836]]
PPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Data-
Files.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending for
documentation of the GROUPER logic associated with these MS-DRGs.
In addition, in MS-DRG 774, to satisfy the second condition,
diagnosis codes that are identified as a complicating diagnosis from
among two lists may be reported. The first list is comprised of ICD-10-
CM diagnosis codes that may be reported as a principal or secondary
diagnosis. The second list is comprised of ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes
that may be reported as a secondary diagnosis. Currently, there is only
one code listed under the secondary diagnosis list.
Next, our analysis involved reviewing the GROUPER logic for
assignment to post-partum MS-DRG 769 (Postpartum and Post Abortion
Diagnoses with Major Procedure) and MS-DRG 776 (Postpartum and Post
Abortion Diagnoses without O.R. Procedure). The GROUPER logic for these
postpartum MS-DRGs requires that a principal diagnosis be reported from
a list of several conditions, such as those following pregnancy, those
complicating the puerperium, conditions that occurred during or
following delivery and conditions associated with lactation disorders.
For assignment to MS-DRG 769, the GROUPER logic also requires that a
major procedure be reported in addition to a principal diagnosis from
the list of conditions.
As a result of our analysis, we agree with the requestor that ICD-
10-CM diagnosis code O75.1 should be added to the GROUPER logic for
assignment to the postpartum MS-DRGs. This diagnosis code is consistent
with other diagnosis codes structured within the GROUPER logic for
assignment to MS-DRGs 769 and 776, and clearly represents a post-partum
diagnosis with the terminology ``during or following labor and
delivery'' in the title. We believe that adding this diagnosis code to
the postpartum MS-DRGs will enable more appropriate MS-DRG assignment
for cases where a delivery did not occur.
Therefore, we are proposing the following:
Removing ICD-10-CM diagnosis code O75.1 from the list of
principal or secondary diagnosis under the first condition--vaginal
delivery GROUPER logic in MS-DRGs 774, 767, and 768;
Moving ICD-10-CM diagnosis code O75.1 from the list of
principal or secondary diagnosis under the second condition--
complicating diagnosis for MS-DRG 774 to the secondary diagnosis list
only; and
Adding ICD-10-CM diagnosis code O75.1 to the principal
diagnosis list GROUPER logic in MS-DRGs 769 and 776.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
7. MDC 15 (Newborns and Other Neonates With Conditions Originating in
Perinatal Period): Observation and Evaluation of Newborn
We received a request to add the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes
describing observation and evaluation of newborns for suspected
conditions that are ruled out to MS-DRG 795 (Normal Newborn). The 14
diagnosis codes describing observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected conditions ruled out are displayed in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Z05.0..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected cardiac condition ruled out.
Z05.1..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected infectious condition ruled out.
Z05.2..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected neurological condition ruled out.
Z05.3..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected respiratory condition ruled out.
Z05.41.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected genetic condition ruled out.
Z05.42.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected metabolic condition ruled out.
Z05.43.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected immunologic condition ruled out.
Z05.5..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected gastrointestinal condition ruled
out.
Z05.6..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected genitourinary condition ruled
out.
Z05.71.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected skin and subcutaneous tissue
condition ruled out.
Z05.72.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected musculoskeletal condition ruled
out.
Z05.73.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected connective tissue condition ruled
out.
Z05.8..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
other specified suspected condition ruled
out.
Z05.9..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
unspecified suspected condition ruled out.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requestor expressed concern that currently when one of these
ruled out codes is added to a newborn encounter with a principal
diagnosis described by ICD-10-CM code Z38.00 (Single liveborn infant,
delivered vaginally), the case is assigned to MS-DRG 794 (Neonate with
Other Significant Problems). The requestor stated that this assignment
appears to be in error and that the assignment should instead be to MS-
DRG 795 (Normal Newborn).
We reviewed Section I.C.16.b. of the 2017 ICD-10-CM Official
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting which includes the following
instructions for the diagnosis codes listed in the table above:
Assign a code from category Z05 (Observation and
evaluation of newborns and infants for suspected conditions ruled out)
to identify those instances when a healthy newborn is evaluated for a
suspected condition that is determined after study not to be present.
Do not use a code from category Z05 when the patient has identified
signs or symptoms of a suspected problem; in such cases code the sign
or symptom.
A code from category Z05 may also be assigned as a
principal or first-listed code for readmissions or encounters when the
code from category Z38 code no longer applies. Codes from category Z05
are for use only for healthy newborns and infants for which no
condition after study is found to be present.
A code from category Z05 is to be used as a secondary code
after the code from category Z38, Liveborn infants according to place
of birth and type of delivery.
After review of the guidelines and discussion with our clinical
advisors, we agree with the requestor that the assignment of these
codes to MS-DRG 794 is not accurate because the assignment incorrectly
labels the newborns as having a significant problem when the condition
does not truly exist. We and our clinical advisors also agree that the
above list of diagnosis codes should be added to MS-DRG 795. Therefore,
we are proposing to add the 14 diagnosis codes describing observation
and evaluation of newborns for suspected conditions that are ruled out
listed in the table above to the GROUPER logic for MS-DRG 795. We are
inviting public comments on our proposals.
[[Page 19837]]
8. MDC 21 (Injuries, Poisonings and Toxic Effects of Drugs):
Complication Codes
We received a request to examine the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in
the T85.8-series of codes that describe other specified complications
of internal prosthetic devices, implants and grafts, not elsewhere
classified and their respective MS-DRG assignments. According to the
requestor, the 7th character values in this series of codes impact the
MS-DRG assignment under MDC 21 (Injuries, Poisonings and Toxic Effects
of Drugs) and MDC 23 (Factors Influencing Health Status & Other
Contacts with Health Services) that have resulted in inconsistencies
(that is, shifts) between the MS-DRG assignments under Version 33 and
Version 34 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs.
Under ICD-10-CM, diagnosis codes in the range of S00 through T88
require a 7th character value of ``A-'' initial encounter, ``D-''
subsequent encounter, or ``S-'' sequela to identify if the patient is
undergoing active treatment for a condition. For complication codes,
active treatment refers to treatment for the condition described by the
code, even though it may be related to an earlier precipitating
problem.
The requestor suggested that the following list of diagnosis codes
with the 7th character ``A'' (initial encounter) may have been
inadvertently assigned to the GROUPER logic in the list of diagnoses
(Assignment of Diagnosis Codes) under MDC 23 because when one of these
diagnosis codes was reported with an O.R. procedure, the requestor
found claims grouping to MS-DRG 939, 940, or 941 (O.R. Procedures with
Diagnoses of Other Contact with Health Services with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively) that had previously grouped to MDC 21
under Version 33 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs. The requestor also suggested
these codes may have been inadvertently assigned to the GROUPER logic
list of principal diagnoses for MS-DRGs 949 and 950 (Aftercare with CC/
MCC and without CC/MCC, respectively) under MDC 23 because it found
claims that grouped to these MS-DRGs (949 and 950) when one of the
following diagnosis codes was reported as a principal diagnosis that
had previously grouped to MDC 21 under Version 33 of the ICD-10 MS-
DRGs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
T85.818A.................. Embolism due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.828A.................. Fibrosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.838A.................. Hemorrhage due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.848A.................. Pain due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.858A.................. Stenosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.868A.................. Thrombosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, initial
encounter.
T85.898A.................. Other specified complication of other
internal prosthetic devices, implants and
grafts, initial encounter.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requestor believed that the above list of diagnosis codes with
the 7th character ``A'' (initial encounter) would be more appropriately
assigned under MDC 21 to MS-DRGs 919, 920, and 921 (Complications of
Treatment with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC, respectively),
according to its review of the 2017 Official Coding Guidelines for use
of the 7th character and assignment of other diagnoses of associated
complications of care. The requestor also noted that these codes were
new, effective October 1, 2016 (FY 2017), and the predecessor codes
grouped to MS-DRGs 919, 920, and 921 in MDC 21 under Version 33 of the
ICD-10 MS-DRGs in FY 2016.
In addition, the requestor suggested that the following list of
diagnosis codes with the 7th character ``D'' (subsequent encounter) may
have been inadvertently assigned to the GROUPER logic list of principal
diagnoses for MS-DRG 919, 920, or 921 in MDC 21. The requestor noted
that these codes were new, effective October 1, 2016 (FY 2017), and the
predecessor codes grouped to MS-DRGs 949 and 950 (Aftercare with CC/MCC
and without CC/MCC, respectively) in MDC 23 under Version 33 of the
ICD-10 MS-DRGs in FY 2016.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
T85.810D.................. Embolism due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.820D.................. Fibrosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.830D.................. Hemorrhage due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.840D.................. Pain due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.850D.................. Stenosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.860D.................. Thrombosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.890D.................. Other specified complication of nervous
system prosthetic devices, implants and
grafts, subsequent encounter.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requestor also suggested that the following list of additional
diagnosis codes with the 7th character ``D'' (subsequent encounter) may
have been inadvertently assigned to the GROUPER logic list of principal
diagnoses for MS-DRGs 922 and 923 (Other Injury, Poisoning and Toxic
Effect with MCC and without MCC, respectively) also under MDC 21. The
requestor noted these codes were also new, effective October 1, 2016
(FY 2017) and that the predecessor codes grouped to MS-DRGs 949 and 950
in MDC 23 under Version 33 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs in FY 2016.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
T85.818D.................. Embolism due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.828D.................. Fibrosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.838D.................. Hemorrhage due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
[[Page 19838]]
T85.848D.................. Pain due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.858D.................. Stenosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.868D.................. Thrombosis due to other internal prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, subsequent
encounter.
T85.898D.................. Other specified complication of other
internal prosthetic devices, implants and
grafts, subsequent encounter.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requestor believed that the lists of diagnosis codes above with
7th character ``D'' (subsequent encounter) would be more appropriately
assigned to MS-DRGs 949 and 950 under MDC 23, according to its review
of the 2017 Official Coding Guidelines for use of the 7th character and
assignment of other diagnoses of associated complications of care.
We ran test cases to determine if we could duplicate the
requestor's findings with regard to the shifts in MS-DRG assignment
between Version 33 and Version 34 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs. Results of our
review were consistent with the requestor's findings. We found that the
T85.8-series of diagnosis codes with the 7th character of ``A''
(initial encounter) and 7th character of ``D'' (subsequent encounter)
were inadvertently assigned to the incorrect MDC for Version 34 of the
ICD-10 MS-DRGs, which led to inconsistencies (MS-DRG shifts) when
compared to Version 33 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs. Our analysis also
included review of all of the diagnosis codes in the T85.8- series and
their current MDC and MS-DRG assignments, as well as review of the 2017
Official Coding Guidelines for use of the 7th character and assignment
of other diagnoses of associated complications of care. Based on the
results of our review, we agree with the requestor's findings.
In addition, we identified the following list of diagnosis codes
with the 7th character ``S'' (sequela) that appear to have been
inadvertently assigned to MS-DRGs 949 and 950 in MDC 23 rather than MDC
21 in MS-DRGs 922 and 923 (Other Injury, Poisoning and Toxic Effect
with MCC and without MCC, respectively).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
T85.810S.................. Embolism due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.820S.................. Fibrosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.830S.................. Hemorrhage due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.840S.................. Pain due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.850S.................. Stenosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.860S.................. Thrombosis due to nervous system prosthetic
devices, implants and grafts, sequela.
T85.890S.................. Other specified complication of nervous
system prosthetic devices, implants and
grafts, sequela.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to (1) reassign the
ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes with the 7th character ``A'' (initial
encounter) from MS-DRGs 949 and 950 in MDC 23 to MS-DRGs 919, 920 and
921 in MDC 21; (2) reassign the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes with the 7th
character ``D'' (subsequent encounter) from MS-DRGs 919, 920, 921, 922,
and 923 in MDC 21 to MS-DRGs 949 and 950 in MDC 23; and (3) reassign
the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes with the 7th character ``S'' (sequela)
from MS-DRGs 949 and 950 in MDC 23 to MS-DRGs 922 and 923 in MDC 21 for
FY 2018. The table below displays the current Version 34 MDC and MS-DRG
assignments and the proposed Version 35 MDC and MS-DRG assignments that
we are seeking public comment on for the respective ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current V34 Current V34 MS- Proposed V35 Proposed V35
ICD-10-CM code Code description MDC DRG MDC MS-DRG
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
T85.810D................... Embolism due to 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.810S................... Embolism due to 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.818A................... Embolism due to 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.818D................... Embolism due to 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.820D................... Fibrosis due to 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.820S................... Fibrosis due to 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.828A................... Fibrosis due to 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.828D................... Fibrosis due to 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.830D................... Hemorrhage due to 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.830S................... Hemorrhage due to 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.838A................... Hemorrhage due to 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
[[Page 19839]]
T85.838D................... Hemorrhage due to 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.840D................... Pain due to nervous 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
system prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.840S................... Pain due to nervous 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
system prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.848A................... Pain due to other 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.848D................... Pain due to other 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.850D................... Stenosis due to 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.850S................... Stenosis due to 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.858A................... Stenosis due to 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.858D................... Stenosis due to 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.860D................... Thrombosis due to 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.860S................... Thrombosis due to 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.868A................... Thrombosis due to 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.868D................... Thrombosis due to 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.890D................... Other specified 21 919, 920, 921 23 949, 950
complication of
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
T85.890S................... Other specified 23 949, 950 21 922, 923
complication of
nervous system
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
sequela.
T85.898A................... Other specified 23 949, 950 21 919, 920, 921
complication of
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
initial encounter.
T85.898D................... Other specified 21 922, 923 23 949, 950
complication of
other internal
prosthetic
devices, implants
and grafts,
subsequent
encounter.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. MDC 23 (Factors Influencing Health Status and Other Contacts With
Health Services): Updates to MS-DRGs 945 and 946 (Rehabilitation With
CC/MCC and Without CC/MCC, Respectively)
In FY 2016, we received requests to modify the MS-DRG assignment
for MS-DRGs 945 and 946 (Rehabilitation with CC/MCC and without CC/MCC,
respectively). This issue was addressed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules (81 FR 24998 through 25000 and 81 FR 56826
through 56831). For FY 2017, we did not change the MS-DRG assignments
for MS-DRGs 945 and 946.
We did not receive a request to address this issue as part of this
FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule or suggestions on how to update the
MS-DRGs 945 and 946 logic. However, we did refer the FY 2016 requests
for a new ICD-10-CM diagnosis code to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) for consideration at a future meeting of the ICD-
10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee. CDC has the lead on updating
and maintaining ICD-10-CM codes. CDC did not address the issue at the
September 13-14, 2016 ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee
meeting. When the topic was not addressed at the September 13-14, 2016
ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee meeting, we asked CDC to
address the code request at the March 7-8, 2017 meeting of the ICD-10
Coordination and Maintenance Committee. The topic was on the agenda for
the March 7-8, 2017 ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee
meeting. The deadline for providing comments on proposals considered at
this meeting was April 7, 2017. Any new codes approved after this
meeting which will be implemented on October 1, 2017 will be posted on
the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html and on the CDC Web site at: //www.cdc.gov/nchs/icd/icd10.html in June 2017. New codes also will be included in the FY 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
As addressed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the ICD-9-CM
MS-DRGs used ICD-9-CM codes reported as the principal diagnosis that
clearly identified an encounter for rehabilitation services, such as
diagnosis codes V57.89 (Care involving other specified rehabilitation
procedure) and V57.9 (Care involving unspecified rehabilitation
procedure), and these codes were not included in ICD-10-CM. Given this
lack of ICD-10-CM codes to indicate that the reason for the encounter
was for rehabilitation, the ICD-10 MS-DRG logic could not reflect the
logic of the ICD-9-CM MS-DRGs. Commenters on the final rule recommended
that CDC create new diagnosis codes for these concepts in ICD-10-CM so
that the MS-DRG logic could be updated to more closely reflect that of
the ICD-9-CM MS-DRGs.
If new ICD-10-CM codes are created for encounter for rehabilitation
services, we would address any updates to MS-DRGs 945 and 946 utilizing
these new codes in future rulemaking. In the meantime, we welcome other
specific recommendations on how to update MS-DRGs 945 and 946. We are
sharing the following data on these MS-DRGs from the MedPAR file.
[[Page 19840]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
FY 2015 MS-DRGs with ICD-9-CM codes cases of stay Average cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 945...................................................... 3,991 10.3 $8,242
MS-DRG 946...................................................... 1,184 8.0 7,322
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
FY 2016 MS-DRGs with ICD-10-CM codes cases of stay Average cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 945...................................................... 671 10.8 $7,814
MS-DRG 946...................................................... 157 7.3 7,672
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown by the tables above, there was a decrease of 3,320 MS-DRG
945 cases (from 3,991 to 671) from FY 2015, when claims were submitted
with ICD-9-CM codes, to FY 2016 when ICD-10 codes were submitted. There
was a decrease of 1,027 MS-DRG 946 cases (from 1,184 to 157) from FY
2015 to FY 2016. The average length of stay increased 0.5 days (from
10.3 to 10.8 days) for MS-DRG 945 and decreased 0.7 days (from 8.0 to
7.3 days) for MS-DRG 946. The average costs decreased by $428 (from
$8,242 to $7,814) for MS-DRG 945 cases and increased by $350 (from
$7,322 to $7,672) for MS-DRG 946 cases. The number of cases was
significantly lower in FY 2016 compared to FY 2015. However, the
difference in average length of stay and average costs did not show
large changes.
We also examined possible MS-DRGs where these cases may have been
assigned in FY 2016 based on increases in the number of claims. Because
there is not a diagnosis code that could be reported as a principal
diagnosis, which would indicate if the admissions were for
rehabilitation services, we are unable to determine if these were cases
admitted for rehabilitation that moved from MS-DRGs 945 and 946 because
of the lack of a code for encounter for rehabilitation, or if there was
simply a change in the number of cases. The following tables show our
findings for MS-DRG 056 (Degenerative Nervous System Disorders with
MCC); MS-DRG 057 (Degenerative Nervous System Disorders without MCC);
MS-DRG 079 (Hypertensive Encephalopathy without CC/MCC); MS DRG 083
(Traumatic Stupor & Coma, Coma >1 Hour with CC); MS-DRG 084 (Traumatic
Stupor & Coma, Coma >1 Hour without CC/MCC); MS-DRG 092 (Other
Disorders of Nervous System with MCC); and MS-DRG 093 (Other Disorders
of Nervous System without CC/MCC).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
FY 2015 MS-DRGs with ICD-9-CM codes cases of stay Average cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 056...................................................... 9,548 7.3 $12,606
MS-DRG 057...................................................... 25,652 5.1 7,918
MS-DRG 079...................................................... 618 2.7 5,212
MS-DRG 083...................................................... 2,516 4.3 9,446
MS-DRG 084...................................................... 1,955 2.8 6,824
MS-DRG 092...................................................... 12,643 5.7 11,158
MS-DRG 093...................................................... 7,928 2.8 5,182
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
FY 2016 MS-DRGs with ICD-10-CM codes cases of stay Average cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 056...................................................... 10,817 7.6 $12,930
MS-DRG 057...................................................... 28,336 5.3 7,902
MS-DRG 079...................................................... 1,233 2.7 5,579
MS-DRG 083...................................................... 4,058 6.2 9,134
MS-DRG 084...................................................... 3,016 2.7 6,508
MS-DRG 092...................................................... 19,392 3.9 6,706
MS-DRG 093...................................................... 8,120 2.7 5,253
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown by the tables above, some of the MS-DRGs that show the
largest increase in number of cases do not show significant changes in
the average length of stay or average costs. For instance, MS-DRG 079
cases doubled from FY 2015 to FY 2016 (from 618 to 1,233). However, the
average length of stay did not change from 2.7 days and the average
costs increased only $367 (from $5,212 to $5,579). MS-DRG 083 cases
increased by 1,542 (from 2,516 to 4,058) with a 1.9 day increase in the
average length of stay (from 4.3 to 6.2 days); however, the average
costs decreased only $312 (from $9,446 to $9,134). There were large
changes for MS-DRG 092 with cases increasing by 6,749 (from 12,643 to
19,392), the average length of stay decreasing by 1.8 days (from 5.7 to
3.9) and the average costs decreasing by $4,452 (from $11,158 to
$6,706). Once again, it is not possible to determine if any changes are
a result of the impact of not having a code for the encounter for
rehabilitation services to report as a principal diagnosis, or if other
factors such as changes in types of patient admissions were involved.
Given the lack of a diagnosis code to capture the principal
diagnosis of encounter for rehabilitation, we are unable to update MS-
DRG 945 or MS-DRG 946 to better identify those cases in which patients
are admitted for rehabilitation services. If the CDC creates a new
code, we will consider proposing updates to MS-DRGs 945 and 946 in the
future.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal not to update MS-
DRGs 945 and 946 for FY 2018.
10. Proposed Changes to the Medicare Code Editor (MCE)
The Medicare Code Editor (MCE) is a software program that detects
and reports errors in the coding of Medicare
[[Page 19841]]
claims data. Patient diagnoses, procedure(s), and demographic
information are entered into the Medicare claims processing systems and
are subjected to a series of automated screens. The MCE screens are
designed to identify cases that require further review before
classification into an MS-DRG.
As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56831
through 56844), we made available the FY 2017 ICD-10 MCE Version 34
manual file and an ICD-9-CM MCE Version 34.0A manual file (for analysis
purposes only). The links to these MCE manual files, along with the
links to purchase the mainframe and computer software for the MCE
Version 34 (and ICD-10 MS-DRGs) are posted on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html through the FY 2017 IPPS Final Rule Home
Page.
For this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, below we address the
MCE requests we received by the December 7, 2016 deadline. We also
discuss the proposals we are making based on our internal review and
analysis.
a. Age Conflict Edit
In the MCE, the Age Conflict edit exists to detect inconsistencies
between a patient's age and any diagnosis on the patient's record; for
example, a 5-year-old patient with benign prostatic hypertrophy or a
78-year-old patient coded with a delivery. In these cases, the
diagnosis is clinically and virtually impossible for a patient of the
stated age. Therefore, either the diagnosis or the age is presumed to
be incorrect. Currently, in the MCE, the following four age diagnosis
categories appear under the Age Conflict edit and are listed in the
manual and written in the software program:
Perinatal/Newborn--Age of 0 years only; a subset of
diagnoses which will only occur during the perinatal or newborn period
of age 0 (for example, tetanus neonatorum, health examination for
newborn under 8 days old).
Pediatric--Age is 0 to 17 years inclusive (for example,
Reye's syndrome, routine child health examination).
Maternity--Age range is 12 to 55 years inclusive (for
example, diabetes in pregnancy, antepartum pulmonary complication).
Adult--Age range is 15 to 124 years inclusive (for
example, senile delirium, mature cataract).
We received a request to provide clarification regarding the
overlapping age ranges (0 to 17 years and 15 to 124 years) in the
Pediatric and Adult categories under the Age Conflict edit. The
requestor questioned which diagnosis code would be most appropriate to
identify when a general or routine health examination is performed on
patients who are within the age range of 15 to 17 years. The specific
ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that the requestor inquired about related to
a child or to an adult encounter for a health examination are displayed
in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Z00.00.................... Encounter for general adult medical
examination without abnormal findings.
Z00.01.................... Encounter for general adult medical
examination with abnormal findings.
Z00.121................... Encounter for routine child health
examination with abnormal findings.
Z00.129................... Encounter for routine child health
examination without abnormal findings.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The age ranges defined within the Age Conflict edits were
established with the implementation of the IPPS. The adult age range
includes the minimum age of 15 years for those patients who are
declared emancipated minors. We note that, historically, we have not
provided coding advice in rulemaking with respect to policy. We
collaborate with the American Hospital Association (AHA) through the
Coding Clinic for ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS to promote proper coding. We
recommend that the requestor and other interested parties submit any
questions pertaining to correct coding practices for this specific
issue to the AHA.
(1) Perinatal/Newborn Diagnosis Category
Under the ICD-10 MCE, the Perinatal/Newborn Diagnosis category
under the Age Conflict edit considers the age of 0 years only; a subset
of diagnoses which will only occur during the perinatal or newborn
period of age 0 to be inclusive. This includes conditions that have
their origin in the fetal or perinatal period (before birth through the
first 28 days after birth) even if morbidity occurs later. For that
reason, the diagnosis codes on this Age Conflict edit list would be
expected to apply to conditions or disorders specific to that age group
only.
In the ICD-10-CM classification, there are two diagnosis codes that
describe conditions as occurring during infancy and the neonatal period
that are currently not on the Perinatal/Newborn Diagnosis category edit
code list. We consulted with staff at the Centers for Disease Control's
(CDC's) National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) because NCHS has
the lead responsibility for the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes. The NCHS'
staff confirmed that, although diagnosis codes D80.7 (Transient
hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy) and diagnosis code E71.511 (Neonatal
adrenoleukodystrophy) do occur during infancy and the neonatal period,
both conditions can last beyond the 28-day timeframe which is used to
define the perinatal/newborn period. These diagnosis codes are not
intended to be restricted for assignment to newborn patients.
Therefore, we are proposing to not add these two diagnosis codes to the
Perinatal/Newborn Diagnosis category under the Age Conflict edit. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(2) Pediatric Diagnosis Category
Under the ICD-10 MCE, the Pediatric diagnosis category under the
Age Conflict edit considers the age range of 0 to 17 years inclusive.
For that reason, the diagnosis codes on this Age Conflict edit list
would be expected to apply to conditions or disorders specific to that
age group only.
The ICD-10-CM diagnosis code list for the Pediatric diagnosis
category under the Age Conflict edit currently includes a diagnosis
code pertaining to dandruff that is not intended to apply to pediatric
patients only. We consulted with staff at the Centers for Disease
Control's (CDC's) National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) because
NCHS has the lead responsibility for the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes. The
NCHS' staff confirmed that, although diagnosis code L21.0 (Seborrhea
capitis) has an inclusion term of ``Cradle cap,'' the description of
the diagnosis code is not intended to be restricted for assignment of
pediatric patients. Therefore, we are proposing to remove diagnosis
code L21.0 from the list of diagnosis codes for the Pediatric diagnosis
category under the Age Conflict edit. We are inviting public comments
on our proposal.
[[Page 19842]]
(3) Maternity Diagnoses
Under the ICD-10 MCE, the Maternity diagnosis category under the
Age Conflict edit considers the age range of 12 to 55 years inclusive.
For that reason, the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes on this Age Conflict
edit list would be expected to apply to conditions or disorders
specific to that age group only.
As discussed in section II.F.12. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, Table 6A.--New Diagnosis Codes lists the new ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes that have been approved to date, which will become effective with
discharges occurring on and after October 1, 2017. Included on this
list are a number of diagnosis codes associated with pregnancy and
maternal care that we believe are appropriate to add to the list of
diagnosis codes for the Maternity diagnoses category under the Age
Conflict edit. We refer readers to Table 6P.1a. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) for a review of the ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes that we are proposing to add to the Age Conflict edit list. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
b. Sex Conflict Edit
In the MCE, the Sex Conflict edit detects inconsistencies between a
patient's sex and any diagnosis or procedure on the patient's record;
for example, a male patient with cervical cancer (diagnosis) or a
female patient with a prostatectomy (procedure). In both instances, the
indicated diagnosis or the procedure conflicts with the stated sex of
the patient. Therefore, the patient's diagnosis, procedure, or sex is
presumed to be incorrect.
(1) Diagnoses for Males Only Edit
We received a request to review the following ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes pertaining to conditions associated with males for possible
inclusion on the list of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for Males
Only edit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B37.42.................... Candidal balanitis.
N35.011................... Post-traumatic bulbous urethral stricture.
N35.012................... Post-traumatic membranous urethral
stricture.
N35.013................... Post-traumatic anterior urethral stricture.
N35.112................... Postinfective bulbous urethral stricture,
not elsewhere classified.
N35.113................... Postinfective membranous urethral stricture,
not elsewhere classified.
N35.114................... Postinfective anterior urethral stricture,
not elsewhere classified.
N99.115................... Postprocedural fossa navicularis urethral
stricture.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the requestor that diagnosis code B37.42 describes a
condition that is applicable only to males. Balanitis is the
inflammation of the glans (rounded head) of the penis. We also agree
that the diagnosis codes listed above that align under subcategory
N35.01 (Post-traumatic urethral stricture, male) and subcategory N35.11
(Postinfection urethral stricture, not elsewhere classified, male) are
appropriate to add to the list of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for
Males Only edit because these diagnosis codes include specific
terminology that is applicable only to males. Further, we agree that
diagnosis code N99.115 is appropriate to add to the list of diagnosis
codes for the Diagnoses for Males Only edit because subcategory N99.11
(Postprocedural urethral stricture, male) includes specific terminology
that is applicable to males only as well. Therefore, we are proposing
to add the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes listed in the table above to the
list of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for Males Only edit.
We also are proposing to remove ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Q64.0
(Epispadias) from the list of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for
Males Only edit because this rare, congenital condition involving the
opening of the urethra can occur in both males and females.
In addition, as discussed in section II.F.12. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, Table 6A.--New Diagnosis Codes lists the new ICD-
10-CM diagnosis codes that have been approved to date, which will
become effective with discharges occurring on and after October 1,
2017. Included on this list are a number of diagnosis codes associated
with male body parts that we believe are appropriate to add to the list
of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for Males Only category under the
Sex Conflict edit. We refer readers to Table 6P.1b. associated with
this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) for a review of the ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes that we are proposing to add to the list of diagnosis codes for
the Diagnoses for Males Only category.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
(2) Diagnoses for Females Only
We received a request to review the following ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes for possible removal from the list of diagnosis codes for the
Diagnoses for Females Only edit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
F52.6..................... Dyspareunia not due to a substance or known
physiological condition.
J84.81.................... Lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
R97.1..................... Elevated cancer antigen 125 [CA 125].
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requestor noted that, in the ICD-10-CM classification, the term
``Dyspareunia'' (painful sexual intercourse) has specified codes for
males and females located in the Alphabetic Index to Diseases for
Reporting Physiological Dyspareunia. However, the indexing for
diagnosis code F52.6 (Dyspareunia not due to a substance or known
physiological condition) specifies that it is not due to a
physiological condition and the entry is not gender specific. According
to the requestor, while the condition is most often associated with
female sexual dysfunction, there is a subset of males who also suffer
from this condition.
[[Page 19843]]
In addition, the requestor stated that diagnosis code J84.81
(Lymphangioleiomyomatosis) describes a rare form of lung disease
believed to occur more often in patients with tuberous sclerosis
complex (TSC), a disorder due to genetic mutation. Although the
condition is described as being exclusive to women, unique cases for
men with TSC have also been reported.
Lastly, the requestor indicated that diagnosis code R97.1 (Elevated
cancer antigen 125 [CA 125]) describes the tumor marker that commonly
identifies ovarian cancer cells in women. However, the requestor stated
that high levels have also been demonstrated in men (and women) with
lung cancer as well.
We reviewed ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes F52.6, J84.81, and R97.1, and
we agree with the requestor that Dyspareunia, not due to a
physiological condition, can also occur in males. We also agree that
the condition of Lymphangioleiomyomatosis and Elevated CA 125 levels
can be found in males. Therefore, we are proposing to remove these
three diagnosis codes from the list of diagnosis codes for the
Diagnoses for Females Only edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposals.
In addition, we are proposing to add new diagnosis code Z40.03
(Encounter for prophylactic removal of fallopian tube(s)) to the list
of diagnosis codes for the Diagnoses for Females Only edit. Currently,
diagnosis code Z40.02 (Encounter for prophylactic removal of ovary) is
on the edit's code list; therefore, inclusion of new diagnosis code
Z40.03 would be consistent. We refer readers to Table 6A.--New
Diagnosis Codes associated with this proposed rule (which is available
via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) for the
list of new ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes finalized to date. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal.
c. Non-Covered Procedure Edit: Gender Reassignment Surgery
In the MCE, the Non-Covered Procedure edit identifies procedures
for which Medicare does not provide payment. Payment is not provided
due to specific criteria that are established in the National Coverage
Determination (NCD) process. We refer readers to the Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/DeterminationProcess/howtorequestanNCD.html for additional information on this process. In
addition, there are procedures that would normally not be paid by
Medicare but, due to the presence of certain diagnoses, are paid.
We issued instructions on June 27, 2014, as a one-time
notification, Pub. 100-03, Transmittal 169, Change Request 8825,
effective May 30, 2014, announcing to MACs the invalidation of National
Coverage Determination (NCD) 140.3 for Transsexual Surgery. As a
result, MACs determined coverage on a case-by-case basis. The
transmittal is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/2014-Transmittals-Items/R169NCD.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&DLFilter=Transsexual&DLSort=1&DLSortDir=ascending.
It was brought to our attention that the ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
shown in the table below are currently included on the list of
procedure codes for the Non-Covered Procedure edit. As a result, when
one of these procedure codes is reported on a claim, the edit for Non-
Covered Procedure is triggered and claims are not able to process
correctly.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0W4M070................... Creation of vagina in male perineum with
autologous tissue substitute, open
approach.
0W4M0J0................... Creation of vagina in male perineum with
synthetic substitute, open approach.
0W4M0K0................... Creation of vagina in male perineum with
nonautologous tissue substitute, open
approach.
0W4M0Z0................... Creation of vagina in male perineum, open
approach.
0W4N071................... Creation of penis in female perineum with
autologous tissue substitute, open
approach.
0W4N0J1................... Creation of penis in female perineum with
synthetic substitute, open approach.
0W4N0K1................... Creation of penis in female perineum with
nonautologous tissue substitute, open
approach.
0W4N0Z1................... Creation of penis in female perineum, open
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, we are proposing to remove the ICD-10-PCS procedure
codes included in the table above from the list of procedure codes for
the Non-Covered Procedure edit to help resolve claims processing issues
associated with the reporting of these procedure codes. We are inviting
public comments on our proposal.
d. Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis Edit
In the MCE, there are select codes that describe a circumstance
that influences an individual's health status, but does not actually
describe a current illness or injury. There also are codes that are not
specific manifestations but may be due to an underlying cause. These
codes are considered unacceptable as a principal diagnosis. In limited
situations, there are a few codes on the MCE Unacceptable Principal
Diagnosis edit code list that are considered ``acceptable'' when a
specified secondary diagnosis is also coded and reported on the claim.
(1) Bacterial and Viral Infectious Agents (B95 Through B97)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 1 (Certain
Infectious and Parasitic Diseases) of the Classification Manual that
fall within the range of three code categories for ``Bacterial and
Viral Infectious Agents'' (B95 through B97). The instructional note
provided at this section states that these categories are provided for
use as supplementary or additional codes to identify the infectious
agent(s) in diseases classified elsewhere.
We identified 45 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes within the range of
these code categories for ``Bacterial and Viral Infectious Agents''
(B95 through B97) that, as a result of the instructional note, are not
appropriate to report as a principal diagnosis. We are proposing to add
the 45 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes shown in Table 6P.1c. associated with
this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(2) Mental Disorders Due to Known Physiological Conditions (F01 Through
F09)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 5 (Mental and
Behavioral Disorders) of the Classification Manual that fall within the
range of nine code categories for ``Mental Disorders Due to Known
[[Page 19844]]
Physiological Conditions'' (F01 through F09). The instructional note
provided at this section states that this block comprises a range of
mental disorders grouped together on the basis of their having in
common a demonstrable etiology in cerebral disease, brain injury, or
other insult leading to cerebral dysfunction. The dysfunction may be
primary, as in diseases, injuries, and insults that affect the brain
directly and selectively; or secondary, as in systemic diseases and
disorders that attack the brain only as one of the multiple organs or
systems of the body that are involved.
We identified 21 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that fall within the
range of these code categories for ``Mental Disorders Due to Known
Physiological Conditions'' (F01 through F09). Of these nine code
categories, seven have a ``Code first the underlying physiological
condition'' note. For example, at code category F01-Vascular dementia,
the note reads, ``Code first the underlying physiological condition or
sequelae of cerebrovascular disease.'' There are a total of 19
diagnosis codes that fall under these 7 code categories with a ``Code
first'' note and, therefore, are not appropriate to report as a
principal diagnosis. Therefore, we are proposing to add the 19 ICD-10-
CM diagnosis codes shown in Table 6P.1d. associated with this proposed
rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(3) Other Obstetric Conditions, Not Elsewhere Classified (O94 Through
O9A)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 15 (Pregnancy,
Childbirth and the Puerperium) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of four code categories for ``Other Obstetric
Conditions, Not Elsewhere Classified'' (O94 through O9A). The
instructional note provided at this section under category O94 states
that ``this category is to be used to indicate conditions in O00
through O77, O85 through O94 and O98 through O9A as the cause of late
effects. The sequelae include conditions specified as such, or as late
effects, which may occur at any time after the puerperium. Code first
condition resulting from (sequela) of complication of pregnancy,
childbirth, and the puerperium.''
We identified one ICD-10-CM diagnosis code within the range of
these code categories for ``Other Obstetric Conditions, Not Elsewhere
Classified'' (O94 through O9A) that, as a result of the instructional
note, is not appropriate to report as a principal diagnosis because
that code identifies the cause of the late effect. This ICD-10-CM
diagnosis code is O94 (Sequelae of complication of pregnancy,
childbirth, and the puerperium). We are proposing to add ICD-10-CM
diagnosis code O94 to the list of codes for the Unacceptable Principal
Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(4) Symptoms and Signs Involving Cognition, Perception, Emotional State
and Behavior (R40 Through R46)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 18 (Symptoms,
Signs and Abnormal Findings) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``Symptoms and Signs Involving
Cognition, Perception, Emotional State and Behavior'' (R40 through
R46), specifically under code category R40--Somnolence, stupor and
coma. At subcategory R40.2--Coma, there is an instructional note, which
states ``Code first any associated: Fracture of skull (S02.-);
Intracranial injury (S06.-).''
We identified 96 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes under this subcategory
that, as a result of the instructional note, are not appropriate to
report as a principal diagnosis. We are proposing to add the 96 ICD-10-
CM diagnosis codes shown in Table 6P.1e. associated with this proposed
rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(5) General Symptoms and Signs (R50 Through R69)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 18 (Symptoms,
Signs and Abnormal Findings) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``General Symptoms and Signs''
(R50 through R69), specifically, at code category R65--Symptoms and
signs associated with systemic inflammation and infection. There is an
instructional note at subcategory R65.1--Systemic inflammatory response
syndrome (SIRS) of non-infectious origin, which states ``Code first
underlying condition, such as: Heatstroke (T67.0); Injury and trauma
(S00-T88).'' There is also an instructional note at subcategory R65.2--
Severe sepsis, which states ``Code first underlying infection, such
as:'' and provides a list of examples.
We identified four ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in these subcategories
that, as a result of the instructional notes described above, are not
appropriate to report as a principal diagnosis. These four ICD-10-CM
codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
R65.10.................... Systemic inflammatory response syndrome
(SIRS) of non-infectious origin without
acute organ dysfunction.
R65.11.................... Systemic inflammatory response syndrome
(SIRS) of non-infectious origin with acute
organ dysfunction.
R65.20.................... Severe sepsis without septic shock.
R65.21.................... Severe sepsis with septic shock.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to add the four ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes shown in
the table above to the list of codes for the Unacceptable Principal
Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(6) Poisoning by, Adverse Effects of, and Underdosing of Drugs,
Medicaments and Biological Substances (T36 Through T50)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 19 (Injury and
Poisoning) of the Classification Manual that fall within the range of
code categories for ``Poisoning by, Adverse Effects of and Underdosing
of Drugs, Medicaments and Biological Substances'' (T36 through T50).
The instructional note provided at this section states ``Code first,
for adverse effects, the nature of the adverse effect, such as:'' and
provides a list of examples. In addition, the FY 2017 ICD-10-CM
Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting at Section I.C.19.e.5.c.,
state that ``Codes for underdosing should never be assigned as
principal or first-listed codes.''
[[Page 19845]]
We identified 996 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes that, as a result of
the instructional note for adverse effects and the guideline for
reporting diagnosis codes for underdosing, are not appropriate to
report as a principal diagnosis. We are proposing to add the 996 ICD-
10-CM diagnosis codes shown in Table 6P.1f. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(7) Complications of Surgical and Medical Care, Not Elsewhere
Classified (T80 Through T88)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 19 (Injury and
Poisoning) of the Classification Manual that fall within the range of
code categories for ``Complications of Surgical and Medical Care, Not
Elsewhere Classified'' (T80 through T88), specifically, at code
category T81--Complications of procedures, not elsewhere classified.
There is an instructional note at subcategory T81.12x--Postprocedural
septic shock, which states, ``Code first underlying infection.''
We identified two ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in this subcategory
that, as a result of the instructional note, are not appropriate to
report as a principal diagnosis. These two ICD-10-CM codes are shown in
the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
T81.12XD.................. Postprocedural septic shock, subsequent
encounter.
T81.12XS.................. Postprocedural septic shock, sequela.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to add the two ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes shown in
the table above to the list of codes for the Unacceptable Principal
Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(8) Persons Encountering Health Services for Examinations (Z00 Through
Z13)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 21 (Factors
Influencing Health Status) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``Persons Encountering Health
Services for Examinations'' (Z00 through Z13), specifically, at code
category Z00--Encounter for general examination without complaint,
suspected or reported diagnosis. The FY 2017 ICD-10-CM Official
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting at Section I.C.21.c.16., state that
the following ICD-10-CM Z-codes/categories may only be reported as the
principal/first-listed diagnosis, except when there are multiple
encounters on the same day and the medical records for the encounters
are combined:
Z00 (Encounter for general examination without complaint,
suspected or reported diagnosis); except Z00.6 (Encounter for
examination for normal comparison and control in clinical research
program).
Therefore, diagnosis code Z00.6 should not be reported as a
principal/first-listed diagnosis. We are proposing to add ICD-10-CM
diagnosis code Z00.6 to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
To address a separate issue, we are proposing to remove the
diagnosis codes under category Z05 (Encounter for observation and
examination of newborn for suspected diseases and conditions ruled out)
from the list of codes for the Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis edit.
The FY 2017 ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting at
Section I.C.16.b. state the following:
Assign a code from category Z05, Observation and
evaluation of newborns and infants for suspected conditions ruled out,
to identify those instances when a healthy newborn is evaluated for a
suspected condition that is determined after study not to be present.
Do not use a code from category Z05 when the patient has identified
signs or symptoms of a suspected problem; in such cases code the sign
or symptom.
A code from category Z05 may also be assigned as a
principal or first-listed code for readmissions or encounters when the
code from category Z38 no longer applies. Codes from category Z05 are
for use only for healthy newborns and infants for which no condition
after study is found to be present.
A code from category Z05 is to be used as a secondary code
after the code from category Z38, Liveborn infants according to place
of birth and type of delivery.
Therefore, the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes under category Z05 are
allowed to be reported as a principal diagnosis. We are proposing to
remove the 14 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes shown in the table below from
the list of codes for the Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis edit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Z05.0..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected cardiac condition ruled out.
Z05.1..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected infectious condition ruled out.
Z05.2..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected neurological condition ruled out.
Z05.3..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected respiratory condition ruled out.
Z05.41.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected genetic condition ruled out.
Z05.42.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected metabolic condition ruled out.
Z05.43.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected immunologic condition ruled out.
Z05.5..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected gastrointestinal condition ruled
out.
Z05.6..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected genitourinary condition ruled
out.
Z05.71.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected skin and subcutaneous tissue
condition ruled out.
Z05.72.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected musculoskeletal condition ruled
out.
Z05.73.................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
suspected connective tissue condition ruled
out.
Z05.8..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
other specified suspected condition ruled
out.
Z05.9..................... Observation and evaluation of newborn for
unspecified suspected condition ruled out.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19846]]
We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(9) Encounters for Other Specific Health Care (Z40 Through Z53)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 21 (Factors
Influencing Health Status) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``Encounters for Other Specific
Health Care'' (Z40 through Z53), specifically, at code category Z52--
Donors of organs and tissues. The FY 2017 ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines
for Coding and Reporting at Section I.C.21.c.16. state that the
following Z-codes/categories may only be reported as the principal/
first-listed diagnosis, except when there are multiple encounters on
the same day and the medical records for the encounters are combined:
Z52 (Donors of organs and tissues); except Z52.9 (Donor of
unspecified organ or tissue).
Therefore, ICD-10-CM diagnosis code Z52.9 should not be reported as
a principal/first-listed diagnosis. We are proposing to add ICD-10-CM
diagnosis code Z52.9 to the list of codes for the Unacceptable
Principal Diagnosis edit. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(10) Persons Encountering Health Services in Other Circumstances (Z69
Through Z76)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 21 (Factors
Influencing Health Status) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``Persons Encountering Health
Services in Other Circumstances'' (Z69 through Z76), specifically, at
subcategory Z71.8--Other specified counseling. Consistent with ICD-10-
CM diagnosis codes Z71.81 (Spiritual or religious counseling) and
Z71.89 (Other specified counseling), we are proposing to add new
diagnosis code Z71.82 (Exercise counseling) to the list of codes for
the Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis edit. We refer readers to Table
6A.--New Diagnosis Codes associated with this proposed rule (which is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html)
for the list of new ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes finalized to date. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal.
(11) Persons With Potential Health Hazards Related to Family and
Personal History and Certain Conditions Influencing Health Status (Z77
Through Z99)
We examined ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes in Chapter 21 (Factors
Influencing Health Status) of the Classification Manual that fall
within the range of code categories for ``Persons with Potential Health
Hazards Related to Family and Personal History and Certain Conditions
Influencing Health Status'' (Z77 through Z99), specifically, at code
category Z91.8--Other specified personal risk factors, not elsewhere
classified. Consistent with ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes Z91.81 (History
of falling), Z91.82 (Personal history of military deployment), and
Z91.89 (Other specified personal risk factors, not elsewhere
classified), we are proposing to add new ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes
Z91.841 (Risk for dental caries, low), Z91.842 (Risk for dental caries,
moderate), Z91.843 (Risk for dental caries, high), and Z91.849
(Unspecified risk for dental caries) to the list of codes for the
Unacceptable Principal Diagnosis edit. We refer readers to Table 6A.--
New Diagnosis Codes associated with this proposed rule (which is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html)
for the list of new ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes finalized to date. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal.
e. Future Enhancement
Similar to our discussion in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(81 FR 56843 through 56844), with the implementation of ICD-10, it is
clear that there are several new concepts in the classification.
Looking ahead to the needs and uses of coded data as the data continue
to evolve from the reporting, collection, processing, coverage, payment
and analysis aspects, we believe the need to ensure the accuracy of the
coded data becomes increasingly significant.
The purpose of the MCE is to ensure that errors and inconsistencies
in the coded data are recognized during Medicare claims processing. As
we continue to evaluate the purpose and function of the MCE with
respect to ICD-10, we encourage public input for future discussion. As
we discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we recognize a
need to further examine the current list of edits and the definitions
of those edits. We encourage public comments on whether there are
additional concerns with the current edits, including specific edits or
language that should be removed or revised, edits that should be
combined, or new edits that should be added to assist in detecting
errors or inaccuracies in the coded data.
11. Proposed Changes to Surgical Hierarchies
Some inpatient stays entail multiple surgical procedures, each one
of which, occurring by itself, could result in assignment of the case
to a different MS-DRG within the MDC to which the principal diagnosis
is assigned. Therefore, it is necessary to have a decision rule within
the GROUPER by which these cases are assigned to a single MS-DRG. The
surgical hierarchy, an ordering of surgical classes from most resource-
intensive to least resource-intensive, performs that function.
Application of this hierarchy ensures that cases involving multiple
surgical procedures are assigned to the MS-DRG associated with the most
resource-intensive surgical class.
Because the relative resource intensity of surgical classes can
shift as a function of MS-DRG reclassification and recalibrations, for
FY 2018, we reviewed the surgical hierarchy of each MDC, as we have for
previous reclassifications and recalibrations, to determine if the
ordering of classes coincides with the intensity of resource
utilization.
A surgical class can be composed of one or more MS-DRGs. For
example, in MDC 11, the surgical class ``kidney transplant'' consists
of a single MS-DRG (MS-DRG 652) and the class ``major bladder
procedures'' consists of three MS-DRGs (MS-DRGs 653, 654, and 655).
Consequently, in many cases, the surgical hierarchy has an impact on
more than one MS-DRG. The methodology for determining the most
resource-intensive surgical class involves weighting the average
resources for each MS-DRG by frequency to determine the weighted
average resources for each surgical class. For example, assume surgical
class A includes MS-DRGs 001 and 002 and surgical class B includes MS-
DRGs 003, 004, and 005. Assume also that the average costs of MS-DRG
001 are higher than that of MS-DRG 003, but the average costs of MS-
DRGs 004 and 005 are higher than the average costs of MS-DRG 002. To
determine whether surgical class A should be higher or lower than
surgical class B in the surgical hierarchy, we would weigh the average
costs of each MS-DRG in the class by frequency (that is, by the number
of cases in the MS-DRG) to determine average resource
[[Page 19847]]
consumption for the surgical class. The surgical classes would then be
ordered from the class with the highest average resource utilization to
that with the lowest, with the exception of ``other O.R. procedures''
as discussed in this rule.
This methodology may occasionally result in assignment of a case
involving multiple procedures to the lower-weighted MS-DRG (in the
highest, most resource-intensive surgical class) of the available
alternatives. However, given that the logic underlying the surgical
hierarchy provides that the GROUPER search for the procedure in the
most resource-intensive surgical class, in cases involving multiple
procedures, this result is sometimes unavoidable.
We note that, notwithstanding the foregoing discussion, there are a
few instances when a surgical class with a lower average cost is
ordered above a surgical class with a higher average cost. For example,
the ``other O.R. procedures'' surgical class is uniformly ordered last
in the surgical hierarchy of each MDC in which it occurs, regardless of
the fact that the average costs for the MS-DRG or MS-DRGs in that
surgical class may be higher than those for other surgical classes in
the MDC. The ``other O.R. procedures'' class is a group of procedures
that are only infrequently related to the diagnoses in the MDC, but are
still occasionally performed on patients with cases assigned to the MDC
with these diagnoses. Therefore, assignment to these surgical classes
should only occur if no other surgical class more closely related to
the diagnoses in the MDC is appropriate.
A second example occurs when the difference between the average
costs for two surgical classes is very small. We have found that small
differences generally do not warrant reordering of the hierarchy
because, as a result of reassigning cases on the basis of the hierarchy
change, the average costs are likely to shift such that the higher-
ordered surgical class has lower average costs than the class ordered
below it.
We received a request to examine a case involving the principal
procedure for excision of pituitary gland (ICD-10-PCS code 0GB00ZZ
Excision of pituitary gland, open approach) with a secondary procedure
for harvesting of a fat graft (ICD-10-PCS code 0JB80ZZ Excision of
abdomen subcutaneous tissue and fascia, open approach) to treat a
condition of pituitary adenoma (ICD-10-CM diagnosis code D35.2 (Benign
neoplasm of pituitary gland)) and the resulting sella turcica defect.
The requestor noted that when the procedure code for harvesting of the
fat graft is reported on the claim, the case currently groups to MS-
DRGs 622, 623, and 624 (Skin Grafts and Wound Debridement for
Endocrine, Nutritional, and Metabolic Disorders with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively). However, when the procedure code for
harvesting of the fat graft is not reported on the claim, the case
groups to MS-DRGs 614 and 615 (Adrenal and Pituitary Procedures with
CC/MCC and without CC/MCC, respectively), which appears to be a more
appropriate assignment. The requester expressed concern regarding the
procedure code for harvesting of the fat graft in the secondary
position driving the MS-DRG assignment versus the principal procedure
of the excision of pituitary gland.
We analyzed the codes provided by the requestor in the GROUPER to
determine if we could duplicate the requestor's findings. The findings
from our analysis were consistent with the requestor's findings. Our
clinical advisors reviewed this issue and agreed that it should be the
procedure code for excision of the pituitary gland that is used to
determine the MS-DRG assignment in this scenario and not the harvesting
of the fat graft procedure code.
Therefore, in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are
proposing to move MS-DRGs 614 and 615 above MS-DRGs 622, 623, and 624
in the surgical hierarchy to enable more appropriate MS-DRG assignment
for these types of cases.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
12. Proposed Changes to the MS-DRG Diagnosis Codes for FY 2018
a. Background of the CC List and the CC Exclusions List
Under the IPPS MS-DRG classification system, we have developed a
standard list of diagnoses that are considered CCs. Historically, we
developed this list using physician panels that classified each
diagnosis code based on whether the diagnosis, when present as a
secondary condition, would be considered a substantial complication or
comorbidity. A substantial complication or comorbidity was defined as a
condition that, because of its presence with a specific principal
diagnosis, would cause an increase in the length-of-stay by at least 1
day in at least 75 percent of the patients. However, depending on the
principal diagnosis of the patient, some diagnoses on the basic list of
complications and comorbidities may be excluded if they are closely
related to the principal diagnosis. In FY 2008, we evaluated each
diagnosis code to determine its impact on resource use and to determine
the most appropriate CC subclassification (non-CC, CC, or MCC)
assignment. We refer readers to sections II.D.2. and 3. of the preamble
of the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period for a discussion of
the refinement of CCs in relation to the MS-DRGs we adopted for FY 2008
(72 FR 47152 through 47171).
b. Proposed Additions and Deletions to the Diagnosis Code Severity
Levels for FY 2018
The following tables identifying the proposed additions and
deletions to the MCC severity levels list and the proposed additions
and deletions to the CC severity levels list for FY 2018 are available
via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html.
Table 6I.1--Proposed Additions to the MCC List--FY 2018;
Table 6I.2--Proposed Deletions to the MCC List--FY 2018;
Table 6J.1--Proposed Additions to the CC List--FY 2018; and
Table 6J.2--Proposed Deletions to the CC List--FY 2018.
We are inviting public comments on our proposed severity level
designations for the diagnosis codes listed in Table 6I.1. and Table
6J.1. We note that, for Table 6I.2. and Table 6J.2., the proposed
deletions are a result of code expansions. Therefore, the diagnosis
codes on these lists are no longer valid codes, effective FY 2018. For
example, diagnosis code O00.10 (Tubal pregnancy without intrauterine
pregnancy) is a current CC for FY 2017 under Version 34 of the ICD-10
MS-DRGs. Effective FY 2018, under Version 35 of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs,
this single code has been expanded into three diagnosis codes to
include laterality (left/right) and an unspecified option with the
addition of a sixth character. Therefore, diagnosis code O00.10 is
included in Table 6J.2. for deletion from the CC list because it is no
longer a valid code in FY 2018.
c. Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own CC or MCC
CMS' initial goal in developing the ICD-10 MS-DRGs was to ensure
that a patient case was assigned to the same MS-DRG, regardless of
whether the patient record was to be coded in ICD-9-CM or ICD-10. When
certain ICD-10-CM combination codes are reported as a principal
diagnosis, it implies that a CC or MCC is present. This occurs as a
result of evaluating the cluster of ICD-
[[Page 19848]]
9-CM codes that would have been coded on an ICD-9-CM record. If one of
the ICD-9-CM codes in the cluster was a CC or an MCC, the single ICD-
10-CM combination code used as a principal diagnosis also must imply
that the CC or MCC is present.
The ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes to which this logic applies are
included in Appendix J of the ICD-10 MS-DRG Version 34 Definitions
Manual (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Data-Files.html?DLPage=1&DLfxsp0;Entries=10&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending).
Appendix J includes two lists: Part 1 is the list of principal
diagnosis codes where the ICD-10-CM code is its own MCC. Part 2 is the
list of principal diagnosis codes where the ICD-10-CM code is its own
CC. Part 1 of Appendix J corresponds to Table 6L.--Principal Diagnosis
Is Its Own MCC List, and Part 2 of Appendix J corresponds to Table
6M.--Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own CC List.
We received a request to add the ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes for
acute myocardial infarction, decompensated heart failure and specified
forms of shock, which are currently designated as a CC or an MCC when
reported as a secondary diagnosis, to Table 6L.--Principal Diagnosis Is
Its Own MCC List. According to the requestor, the addition of these
codes to the list is necessary for bundled payment initiatives and so
that facilities that accept these patients in transfer have resources
to care for them.
The purpose of the Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own CC or MCC Lists
was to ensure consistent MS-DRG assignment between the ICD-9-CM and
ICD-10 MS-DRGs due to the clusters and combination codes. There are a
number of other ICD-10-CM combination codes that, due to their prior
designation as a CC or an MCC when reported as a secondary diagnosis,
are not on either of these lists. Having multiple lists for CC and MCC
diagnoses when reported as a principal and/or secondary diagnosis may
not provide an accurate representation of resource utilization for the
MS-DRGs. As discussed in further detail below, we have plans to conduct
a comprehensive review of the CC and MCC lists for FY 2019. We believe
the results of that review will help to inform the future of these
lists.
Therefore, we are not proposing to add the ICD-10-CM diagnosis
codes for acute myocardial infarction, decompensated heart failure and
specified forms of shock to Table 6L.--Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own
MCC List. In addition, we are not proposing any changes to Table 6L.--
Principal Diagnosis Is Its Own MCC List and Table 6M.--Principal
Diagnosis Is Its Own CC List. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal to maintain the existing lists of principal diagnosis codes in
Tables 6L. and 6M for FY 2018.
d. Proposed CC Exclusions List for FY 2018
In the September 1, 1987 final notice (52 FR 33143) concerning
changes to the DRG classification system, we modified the GROUPER logic
so that certain diagnoses included on the standard list of CCs would
not be considered valid CCs in combination with a particular principal
diagnosis. We created the CC Exclusions List for the following reasons:
(1) To preclude coding of CCs for closely related conditions; (2) to
preclude duplicative or inconsistent coding from being treated as CCs;
and (3) to ensure that cases are appropriately classified between the
complicated and uncomplicated DRGs in a pair. As previously indicated,
we developed a list of diagnoses, using physician panels, to include
those diagnoses that, when present as a secondary condition, would be
considered a substantial complication or comorbidity.
In previous years, we made changes to the list of CCs, either by
adding new CCs or deleting CCs already on the list.
In the May 19, 1987 proposed notice (52 FR 18877) and the September
1, 1987 final notice (52 FR 33154), we explained that the excluded
secondary diagnoses were established using the following five
principles:
Chronic and acute manifestations of the same condition
should not be considered CCs for one another;
Specific and nonspecific (that is, not otherwise specified
(NOS)) diagnosis codes for the same condition should not be considered
CCs for one another;
Codes for the same condition that cannot coexist, such as
partial/total, unilateral/bilateral, obstructed/unobstructed, and
benign/malignant, should not be considered CCs for one another;
Codes for the same condition in anatomically proximal
sites should not be considered CCs for one another; and
Closely related conditions should not be considered CCs
for one another.
The creation of the CC Exclusions List was a major project
involving hundreds of codes. We have continued to review the remaining
CCs to identify additional exclusions and to remove diagnoses from the
master list that have been shown not to meet the definition of a CC. We
refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50541
through 50544) for detailed information regarding revisions that were
made to the CC and CC Exclusion Lists under the ICD-9-CM MS-DRGs.
For FY 2018, we are proposing changes to the ICD-10 MS-DRGs Version
35 CC Exclusion List. Therefore, we have developed Table 6G.1.--
Proposed Secondary Diagnosis Order Additions to the CC Exclusions
List--FY 2018; Table 6G.2.--Proposed Principal Diagnosis Order
Additions to the CC Exclusions List--FY 2018; Table 6H.1.--Proposed
Secondary Diagnosis Order Deletions to the CC Exclusions List--FY 2018;
and Table 6H.2.--Proposed Principal Diagnosis Order Deletions to the CC
Exclusions List--FY 2018. Each of these principal diagnosis codes for
which there is a CC exclusion is shown in Table 6G.2. with an asterisk
and the conditions that will not count as a CC are provided in an
indented column immediately following the affected principal diagnosis.
Beginning with discharges on or after October 1 of each year, the
indented diagnoses are not recognized by the GROUPER as valid CCs for
the asterisked principal diagnoses. Tables 6G. and 6H. associated with
this proposed rule are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html.
To identify new, revised and deleted diagnosis and procedure codes,
for FY 2018, we have developed Table 6A.--New Diagnosis Codes, Table
6B.--New Procedure Codes, Table 6C.--Invalid Diagnosis Codes, Table
6D.--Invalid Procedure Codes, Table 6E.--Revised Diagnosis Code Titles,
and Table 6F.--Revised Procedure Code Titles for this proposed rule.
These tables are not published in the Addendum to this proposed
rule but are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
(//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html as described in section VI. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule. As discussed in section II.F.15. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, the code titles are adopted as part of
the ICD-10 (previously ICD-9-CM) Coordination and Maintenance Committee
process. Therefore, although we publish the code titles in the IPPS
proposed and final rules, they are not subject to comment in the
proposed or final rules. We are inviting public comments on the MDC and
MS-DRG assignments for the new
[[Page 19849]]
diagnosis and procedure codes as set forth in Table 6A.--New Diagnosis
Codes and Table 6B.--New Procedure Codes. In addition, we are inviting
public comments on the proposed severity level designations for the new
diagnosis codes as set forth in Table 6A. and the proposed O.R. status
for the new procedure codes as set forth in Table 6B.
13. Comprehensive Review of CC List for FY 2019
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule (72 FR 47153 through 47175), we
discussed our efforts to better recognize severity of illness which
began with a comprehensive review of the CC list and, ultimately, the
implementation of the MS-DRGs. Similar to the analysis that was
performed at that time, we are providing the public with notice of our
plans to conduct a comprehensive review of the CC and MCC lists for FY
2019.
As a result of the time that has elapsed since that review and
changes to how inpatient care is currently delivered, we plan to
analyze if further refinements to these lists are warranted. For
example, over the past several years, there has been a steady increase
in the proportion of cases grouping to the MS-DRGs with an MCC severity
level than had previously occurred. Our evaluation will assist in
determining if the conditions designated as an MCC continue to
represent significant increases in resource utilization that support
the MCC designation.
We currently utilize a statistical algorithm to determine the
impact on resource use of each secondary diagnosis. Each diagnosis for
which Medicare data are available is evaluated to determine its impact
on resource use and to determine the most appropriate CC subclass (non-
CC, CC, or MCC) assignment. In order to make this determination, the
average costs for each subset of cases is compared to the expected
costs for cases in that subset. The following format is used to
evaluate each diagnosis:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Code Diagnosis Cnt1 C1 Cnt2 C2 Cnt3 C3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Count (Cnt) is the number of patients in each subset and C1, C2,
and C3 are a measure of the impact on resource use of patients in each
of the subsets. The C1, C2, and C3 values are a measure of the ratio of
average costs for patients with these conditions to the expected
average costs across all cases. The C1 value reflects a patient with no
other secondary diagnosis or with all other secondary diagnoses that
are non-CCs. The C2 value reflects a patient with at least one other
secondary diagnosis that is a CC but none that is an MCC. The C3 value
reflects a patient with at least one other secondary diagnosis that is
an MCC. A value close to 1.0 in the C1 field would suggest that the
code produces the same expected value as a non-CC diagnosis. That is,
average costs for the case are similar to the expected average costs
for that subset and the diagnosis is not expected to increase resource
usage. A higher value in the C1 (or C2 and C3) field suggests more
resource usage is associated with the diagnosis and an increased
likelihood that it is more like a CC or major CC than a non-CC. Thus, a
value close to 2.0 suggests the condition is more like a CC than a non-
CC but not as significant in resource usage as an MCC. A value close to
3.0 suggests the condition is expected to consume resources more
similar to an MCC than a CC or non-CC. For example, a C1 value of 1.8
for a secondary diagnosis means that for the subset of patients who
have the secondary diagnosis and have either no other secondary
diagnosis present, or all the other secondary diagnoses present are
non-CCs, the impact on resource use of the secondary diagnoses is
greater than the expected value for a non-CC by an amount equal to 80
percent of the difference between the expected value of a CC and a non-
CC (that is, the impact on resource use of the secondary diagnosis is
closer to a CC than a non-CC).
We are inviting public comments regarding other possible ways we
can incorporate meaningful indicators of clinical severity.
14. Review of Procedure Codes in MS DRGs 981 Through 983; 984 Through
986; and 987 Through 989
Each year, we review cases assigned to MS-DRGs 981, 982, and 983
(Extensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC,
with CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively); MS-DRGs 984, 985, and 986
(Prostatic O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC,
with CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively); and MS-DRGs 987, 988, and
989 (Nonextensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with
MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC, respectively) to determine whether it
would be appropriate to change the procedures assigned among these MS-
DRGs. MS-DRGs 981 through 983, 984 through 986, and 987 through 989 are
reserved for those cases in which none of the O.R. procedures performed
are related to the principal diagnosis. These MS-DRGs are intended to
capture atypical cases, that is, those cases not occurring with
sufficient frequency to represent a distinct, recognizable clinical
group.
Under the ICD-10 MS-DRGs Version 34, MS-DRGs 984 through 986 are
assigned when one or more of the procedures described by ICD-10-PCS
codes in Table 6P.2. that is associated with this FY 2018 proposed rule
(which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) are performed and are unrelated to the
principal diagnosis. All remaining O.R. procedures are assigned to MS-
DRGs 981 through 983 and 987 through 989, with MS-DRGs 987 through 989
assigned to those discharges in which the only procedures performed are
nonextensive procedures that are unrelated to the principal diagnosis.
We refer the reader to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
56847 through 56848) for a discussion of the movement and redesignation
of procedure codes from MS-DRGs 984 through 986 related to the
transition of the ICD-10 MS-DRGs.
Our review of MedPAR claims data showed that there are no cases
that merited movement or should logically be reassigned from ICD-10 MS-
DRGs 984 through 986 to any of the other MDCs for FY 2018. Therefore,
for FY 2018, we are not proposing to change the procedures assigned
among these MS-DRGs. We are inviting public comments on our proposal to
maintain the current structure of these MS-DRGs.
a. Moving Procedure Codes From MS-DRGs 981 Through 983 or MS-DRGs 987
Through 989 Into MDCs
We annually conduct a review of procedures producing assignment to
MS-DRGs 981 through 983 (Extensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated to
Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively) or MS-DRGs 987 through 989 (Nonextensive O.R. Procedure
Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively) on the basis of volume, by procedure, to see if it would
be appropriate to move procedure codes out of these MS-DRGs
[[Page 19850]]
into one of the surgical MS-DRGs for the MDC into which the principal
diagnosis falls. The data are arrayed in two ways for comparison
purposes. We look at a frequency count of each major operative
procedure code. We also compare procedures across MDCs by volume of
procedure codes within each MDC.
We identify those procedures occurring in conjunction with certain
principal diagnoses with sufficient frequency to justify adding them to
one of the surgical MS-DRGs for the MDC in which the diagnosis falls.
Upon review of the claims data from the December 2016 update of the FY
2016 MedPAR file, we did not find any cases that merited movement or
that should logically be assigned to any of the other MDCs. Therefore,
for FY 2018, we are not proposing to remove any procedures from MS-DRGs
981 through 983 or MS-DRGs 987 through 989 into one of the surgical MS-
DRGs for the MDC into which the principal diagnosis is assigned. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal to maintain the current
structure of these MS-DRGs.
b. Reassignment of Procedures Among MS-DRGs 981 Through 983, 984
Through 986, and 987 Through 989
We also review the list of ICD-10-PCS procedures that, when in
combination with their principal diagnosis code, result in assignment
to MS-DRGs 981 through 983, 984 through 986, or 987 through 989, to
ascertain whether any of those procedures should be reassigned from one
of those three groups of MS-DRGs to another of the three groups of MS-
DRGs based on average costs and the length of stay. We look at the data
for trends such as shifts in treatment practice or reporting practice
that would make the resulting MS-DRG assignment illogical. If we find
these shifts, we would propose to move cases to keep the MS-DRGs
clinically similar or to provide payment for the cases in a similar
manner. Generally, we move only those procedures for which we have an
adequate number of discharges to analyze the data.
Based on the results of our review of the December 2016 update of
the FY 2016 MedPAR file, we are proposing to reassign the procedure
codes currently assigned to MS-DRGs 984 through 986 (Prostatic O.R.
Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively) to MS-DRGs 987 through 989 (Non-extensive
O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively). As shown in the table below, we found a
total of 1,001 cases in MS-DRGs 984 through 986 with an average length-
of-stay of 7.5 days and average costs of $16,539. In MS-DRGs 987
through 989, we found a total of 17,772 cases, with an average length
of stay of 7.5 days and average costs of $16,193.
O.R. Procedures Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRGs 984, 985 and 986 (Prostatic O.R. Procedure Unrelated to 1,001 7.5 $16,539
Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and without CC/MCC,
respectively)..................................................
MS-DRGs 987, 988 and 989 (Non[dash]extensive O.R. Procedure 17,772 7.5 16,193
Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC, and without
CC/MCC, respectively)..........................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The claims data demonstrate that it is no longer necessary to
maintain a separate set of MS-DRGs specifically for the prostatic O.R.
procedures. The average length of stay of 7.5 days is identical in both
sets of MS-DRGs and the average costs are very similar with a
difference of only $346. Our clinical advisors reviewed the data and
support movement of these 1,001 cases into the nonextensive O.R.
procedures MS-DRGs. They noted that treatment practices have shifted
since the inception of the prostatic O.R. procedures grouping and the
average costs are in alignment.
Therefore, for FY 2018, we are proposing to reassign the prostatic
O.R. procedure codes from MS-DRGs 984 through 986 to MS-DRGs 987
through 989 and to delete MS-DRGs 984, 985 and 986 because they would
no longer be needed as a result of this proposed movement. We are
inviting public comments on our proposals.
15. Proposed Changes to the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Coding Systems
In September 1985, the ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee was formed. This is a Federal interdepartmental committee,
co-chaired by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and CMS, charged with
maintaining and updating the ICD-9-CM system. The final update to ICD-
9-CM codes was made on October 1, 2013. Thereafter, the name of the
Committee was changed to the ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance
Committee, effective with the March 19-20, 2014 meeting. The ICD-10
Coordination and Maintenance Committee addresses updates to the ICD-10-
CM and ICD-10-PCS coding systems. The Committee is jointly responsible
for approving coding changes, and developing errata, addenda, and other
modifications to the coding systems to reflect newly developed
procedures and technologies and newly identified diseases. The
Committee is also responsible for promoting the use of Federal and non-
Federal educational programs and other communication techniques with a
view toward standardizing coding applications and upgrading the quality
of the classification system.
The official list of ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure codes by
fiscal year can be found on the CMS Web site at: //cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/codes.html. The official
list of ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS codes can be found on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html.
The NCHS has lead responsibility for the ICD-10-CM and ICD-9-CM
diagnosis codes included in the Tabular List and Alphabetic Index for
Diseases, while CMS has lead responsibility for the ICD-10-PCS and ICD-
9-CM procedure codes included in the Tabular List and Alphabetic Index
for Procedures.
The Committee encourages participation in the previously mentioned
process by health-related organizations. In this regard, the Committee
holds public meetings for discussion of educational issues and proposed
coding changes. These meetings provide an opportunity for
representatives of recognized organizations in the coding field, such
as the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA), the
American Hospital Association (AHA), and various physician specialty
groups, as well as individual physicians, health information management
professionals, and other members of the public, to
[[Page 19851]]
contribute ideas on coding matters. After considering the opinions
expressed at the public meetings and in writing, the Committee
formulates recommendations, which then must be approved by the
agencies.
The Committee presented proposals for coding changes for
implementation in FY 2018 at a public meeting held on September 13-14,
2016, and finalized the coding changes after consideration of comments
received at the meetings and in writing by November 13, 2016.
The Committee held its 2017 meeting on March 7-8, 2017. The
deadline for submitting comments on these code proposals was April 7,
2017. It was announced at this meeting that any new ICD-10-CM/PCS codes
for which there was consensus of public support and for which complete
tabular and indexing changes would be made by May 2017 would be
included in the October 1, 2017 update to ICD-10-CM/ICD-10-PCS. As
discussed in earlier sections of the preamble of this proposed rule,
there are new, revised, and deleted ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes and ICD-
10-PCS procedure codes that are captured in Table 6A.--New Diagnosis
Codes, Table 6B.--New Procedure Codes, Table 6C.--Invalid Diagnosis
Codes, Table 6D.--Invalid Procedure Codes, Table 6E.--Revised Diagnosis
Code Titles, and Table 6F.--Revised Procedure Code Titles for this
proposed rule, which are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html. Because of the length of these tables,
they are not published in the Addendum to this proposed rule. Rather,
they are available via the Internet as discussed in section VI. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule.
Live Webcast recordings of the discussions of procedure codes at
the Committee's September 13-14, 2016 meeting and March 7-8, 2017
meeting can be obtained from the CMS Web site at: //cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/index.html?redirect=/icd9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/03_meetings.asp. The minutes of the
discussions of diagnosis codes at the September 13-14, 2016 meeting and
March 7-8, 2017 meeting can be found at: //www.cdc.gov/nchs/icd/icd10cm_maintenance.html. These Web sites also provide detailed
information about the Committee, including information on requesting a
new code, attending a Committee meeting, and timeline requirements and
meeting dates.
We encourage commenters to address suggestions on coding issues
involving diagnosis codes to: Donna Pickett, Co-Chairperson, ICD-10
Coordination and Maintenance Committee, NCHS, Room 2402, 3311 Toledo
Road, Hyattsville, MD 20782. Comments may be sent by Email to:
[email protected].
Questions and comments concerning the procedure codes should be
addressed to: Patricia Brooks, Co-Chairperson, ICD-10 Coordination and
Maintenance Committee, CMS, Center for Medicare Management, Hospital
and Ambulatory Policy Group, Division of Acute Care, C4-08-06, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850. Comments may be sent by
Email to:
[email protected].
In the September 7, 2001 final rule implementing the IPPS new
technology add-on payments (66 FR 46906), we indicated we would attempt
to include proposals for procedure codes that would describe new
technology discussed and approved at the Spring meeting as part of the
code revisions effective the following October.
Section 503(a) of Public Law 108-173 included a requirement for
updating diagnosis and procedure codes twice a year instead of a single
update on October 1 of each year. This requirement was included as part
of the amendments to the Act relating to recognition of new technology
under the IPPS. Section 503(a) amended section 1886(d)(5)(K) of the Act
by adding a clause (vii) which states that the Secretary shall provide
for the addition of new diagnosis and procedure codes on April 1 of
each year, but the addition of such codes shall not require the
Secretary to adjust the payment (or diagnosis-related group
classification) until the fiscal year that begins after such date. This
requirement improves the recognition of new technologies under the IPPS
system by providing information on these new technologies at an earlier
date. Data will be available 6 months earlier than would be possible
with updates occurring only once a year on October 1.
While section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of the Act states that the
addition of new diagnosis and procedure codes on April 1 of each year
shall not require the Secretary to adjust the payment, or DRG
classification, under section 1886(d) of the Act until the fiscal year
that begins after such date, we have to update the DRG software and
other systems in order to recognize and accept the new codes. We also
publicize the code changes and the need for a mid-year systems update
by providers to identify the new codes. Hospitals also have to obtain
the new code books and encoder updates, and make other system changes
in order to identify and report the new codes.
The ICD-10 (previously the ICD-9-CM) Coordination and Maintenance
Committee holds its meetings in the spring and fall in order to update
the codes and the applicable payment and reporting systems by October 1
of each year. Items are placed on the agenda for the Committee meeting
if the request is received at least 2 months prior to the meeting. This
requirement allows time for staff to review and research the coding
issues and prepare material for discussion at the meeting. It also
allows time for the topic to be publicized in meeting announcements in
the Federal Register as well as on the CMS Web site. Final decisions on
code title revisions are currently made by March 1 so that these titles
can be included in the IPPS proposed rule. A complete addendum
describing details of all diagnosis and procedure coding changes, both
tabular and index, is published on the CMS and NCHS Web sites in June
of each year. Publishers of coding books and software use this
information to modify their products that are used by health care
providers. This 5-month time period has proved to be necessary for
hospitals and other providers to update their systems.
A discussion of this timeline and the need for changes are included
in the December 4-5, 2005 ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance
Committee Meeting minutes. The public agreed that there was a need to
hold the fall meetings earlier, in September or October, in order to
meet the new implementation dates. The public provided comment that
additional time would be needed to update hospital systems and obtain
new code books and coding software. There was considerable concern
expressed about the impact this new April update would have on
providers.
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule, we implemented section
1886(d)(5)(K)(vii) of the Act, as added by section 503(a) of Public Law
108-173, by developing a mechanism for approving, in time for the April
update, diagnosis and procedure code revisions needed to describe new
technologies and medical services for purposes of the new technology
add-on payment process. We also established the following process for
making these determinations. Topics considered during the Fall ICD-10
(previously ICD-9-CM) Coordination and Maintenance Committee meeting
are considered for an April 1 update if a strong and convincing case is
made by the requester at the Committee's public meeting. The request
must identify the reason why a new code is needed in April for purposes
of the new
[[Page 19852]]
technology process. The participants at the meeting and those reviewing
the Committee meeting summary report are provided the opportunity to
comment on this expedited request. All other topics are considered for
the October 1 update. Participants at the Committee meeting are
encouraged to comment on all such requests. There were no requests
approved for an expedited April l, 2017 implementation of a code at the
September 13-14, 2016 Committee meeting. Therefore, there were no new
codes implemented on April 1, 2017.
ICD-9-CM addendum and code title information is published on the
CMS Web site at: //www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/index.html?redirect=/icd9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/01overview.asp#TopofPage. ICD-10-CM and
ICD-10-PCS addendum and code title information is published on the CMS
Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html.
Information on ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes, along with the Official ICD-
10-CM Coding Guidelines, can also be found on the CDC Web site at:
//www.cdc.gov/nchs/icd/icd10.htm. Information on new, revised, and
deleted ICD-10-CM/ICD-10-PCS codes is also provided to the AHA for
publication in the Coding Clinic for ICD-10. AHA also distributes
information to publishers and software vendors.
CMS also sends copies of all ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS coding
changes to its Medicare contractors for use in updating their systems
and providing education to providers.
The code titles are adopted as part of the ICD-10 (previously ICD-
9-CM) Coordination and Maintenance Committee process. Therefore,
although we publish the code titles in the IPPS proposed and final
rules, they are not subject to comment in the proposed or final rules.
The following chart shows the number of ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS
codes and code changes since FY 2016 when ICD-10 was implemented.
Total Number of Codes and Changes in Total Number of Codes per Fiscal
Year ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Codes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fiscal year Number Change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2016:
ICD-10-CM......................................... 69,823 ........
ICD-10-PCS........................................ 71,974 ........
FY 2017:
ICD-10-CM......................................... 71,486 +1,663
ICD-10-PCS........................................ 75,789 +3,815
FY 2018:
ICD-10-CM......................................... 71,772 +286
ICD-10-PCS........................................ 78,299 +2,510
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As mentioned previously, the public is provided the opportunity to
comment on any requests for new diagnosis or procedure codes discussed
at the ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee meeting.
At the September 12-13, 2016 and March 7-8, 2017 Committee
meetings, we discussed any requests we had received for new ICD-10-CM
diagnosis codes and ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that were to be
implemented on October 1, 2017. We invited public comments on any code
requests discussed at the September 12-13, 2016 and March 7-8, 2017
Committee meetings for implementation as part of the October 1, 2017
update. The deadline for commenting on code proposals discussed at the
September 12-13, 2016 Committee meeting was November 13, 2016. The
deadline for commenting on code proposals discussed at the March 7-8,
2017 Committee meeting was April 7, 2017.
16. Proposed Replaced Devices Offered Without Cost or With a Credit
a. Background
In the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47246
through 47251), we discussed the topic of Medicare payment for devices
that are replaced without cost or where credit for a replaced device is
furnished to the hospital. We implemented a policy to reduce a
hospital's IPPS payment for certain MS-DRGs where the implantation of a
device that has been recalled determined the base MS-DRG assignment. At
that time, we specified that we will reduce a hospital's IPPS payment
for those MS-DRGs where the hospital received a credit for a replaced
device equal to 50 percent or more of the cost of the device.
In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51556 through
51557), we clarified this policy to state that the policy applies if
the hospital received a credit equal to 50 percent or more of the cost
of the replacement device and issued instructions to hospitals
accordingly.
b. Proposed Changes for FY 2018
For FY 2018, we are not proposing to add any MS-DRGs to the policy
for replaced devices offered without cost or with a credit. We are
proposing to continue to include the existing MS-DRGs currently subject
to the policy as displayed in the table below.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MDC MS-DRG MS-DRG title
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pre-MDC................................... 001 Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist
System with MCC.
Pre-MDC................................... 002 Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist
System without MCC.
1......................................... 023 Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute
Complex CNS Principal Diagnosis with MCC or
Chemo Implant.
1......................................... 024 Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute
Complex CNS Principal Diagnosis without MCC.
1......................................... 025 Craniotomy & Endovascular Intracranial Procedures
with MCC.
1......................................... 026 Craniotomy & Endovascular Intracranial Procedures
with CC.
1......................................... 027 Craniotomy & Endovascular Intracranial Procedures
without CC/MCC.
1......................................... 040 Peripheral, Cranial Nerve & Other Nervous System
Procedures with MCC.
1......................................... 041 Peripheral, Cranial Nerve & Other Nervous System
Procedures with CC or Peripheral
Neurostimulator.
1......................................... 042 Peripheral, Cranial Nerve & Other Nervous System
Procedures without CC/MCC.
3......................................... 129 Major Head & Neck Procedures with CC/MCC or Major
Device.
3......................................... 130 Major Head & Neck Procedures without CC/MCC.
5......................................... 215 Other Heart Assist System Implant.
5......................................... 216 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure with Cardiac Catheterization with MCC.
5......................................... 217 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure with Cardiac Catheterization with CC.
5......................................... 218 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure with Cardiac Catheterization without
CC/MCC.
5......................................... 219 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure without Cardiac Catheterization with
MCC.
[[Page 19853]]
5......................................... 220 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure without Cardiac Catheterization with
CC.
5......................................... 221 Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic
Procedure without Cardiac Catheterization
without CC/MCC.
5......................................... 222 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant with Cardiac
Catheterization with AMI/Heart Failure/Shock
with MCC.
5......................................... 223 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant with Cardiac
Catheterization with AMI/Heart Failure/Shock
without MCC.
5......................................... 224 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant with Cardiac
Catheterization without AMI/Heart Failure/Shock
with MCC.
5......................................... 225 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant with Cardiac
Catheterization without AMI/Heart Failure/Shock
without MCC.
5......................................... 226 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant without Cardiac
Catheterization with MCC.
5......................................... 227 Cardiac Defibrillator Implant without Cardiac
Catheterization without MCC.
5......................................... 242 Permanent Cardiac Pacemaker Implant with MCC.
5......................................... 243 Permanent Cardiac Pacemaker Implant with CC.
5......................................... 244 Permanent Cardiac Pacemaker Implant without CC/
MCC.
5......................................... 245 AICD Generator Procedures.
5......................................... 258 Cardiac Pacemaker Device Replacement with MCC.
5......................................... 259 Cardiac Pacemaker Device Replacement without MCC.
5......................................... 260 Cardiac Pacemaker Revision Except Device
Replacement with MCC.
5......................................... 261 Cardiac Pacemaker Revision Except Device
Replacement with CC.
5......................................... 262 Cardiac Pacemaker Revision Except Device
Replacement without CC/MCC.
5......................................... 265 AICD Lead Procedures.
5......................................... 266 Endovascular Cardiac Valve Replacement with MCC.
5......................................... 267 Endovascular Cardiac Valve Replacement without
MCC.
5......................................... 268 Aortic and Heart Assist Procedures Except
Pulsation Balloon with MCC.
5......................................... 269 Aortic and Heart Assist Procedures Except
Pulsation Balloon without MCC.
5......................................... 270 Other Major Cardiovascular Procedures with MCC.
5......................................... 271 Other Major Cardiovascular Procedures with CC.
5......................................... 272 Other Major Cardiovascular Procedures without CC/
MCC.
8......................................... 461 Bilateral or Multiple Major Joint Procedures Of
Lower Extremity with MCC.
8......................................... 462 Bilateral or Multiple Major Joint Procedures of
Lower Extremity without MCC.
8......................................... 466 Revision of Hip or Knee Replacement with MCC.
8......................................... 467 Revision of Hip or Knee Replacement with CC.
8......................................... 468 Revision of Hip or Knee Replacement without CC/
MCC.
8......................................... 469 Major Joint Replacement or Reattachment of Lower
Extremity with MCC.
8......................................... 470 Major Joint Replacement or Reattachment of Lower
Extremity without MCC.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are soliciting public comments on our proposal to continue to
include the existing MS-DRGs currently subject to the policy for
replaced devices offered without cost or with credit and to not add any
additional MS-DRGs to the policy. We note that, as discussed in section
II.F.2.b. and in section II.F.5.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to revise the titles for MS-DRG 023 and MS-DRGs
469 and 470. We refer readers to those discussions of the specific
proposed MS-DRG titles. The final list of MS-DRGs subject to the
payment policy for devices provided at no cost or with a credit for FY
2018 will be listed in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, as well as
issued to providers through guidance and instructions in the form of a
Change Request (CR).
17. Other Policy Changes: Other Operating Room (O.R.) and Non-O.R.
Issues
a. O.R. Procedures to Non-O.R. Procedures
For this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we continued our
efforts to address the recommendations for consideration that we
received in response to some of the proposals set forth in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule pertaining to changing the designation of
ICD-10-PCS procedure codes from O.R. procedures to non-O.R. procedures.
As we stated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56871), we
received requests and recommendations for over 800 procedure codes that
we were not able to fully evaluate and finalize for FY 2017. We discuss
these requests and recommendations below.
We also are addressing separate requests that we received regarding
changing the designation of specific ICD-10-PCS procedure codes. For
each group summarized below, the detailed lists of procedure are shown
in Tables 6P.4a. through 6P.4p. (Proposed ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Code
Designations, MCE and MS-DRG Changes--FY 2018) associated with this
proposed rule (which are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html).
(1) Percutaneous/Diagnostic Drainage
One commenter identified 135 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes describing
procedures involving percutaneous diagnostic and therapeutic drainage
of central nervous system, vascular and other body sites that generally
would not require the resources of an operating room and can be
performed at the bedside. The list includes procedure codes that
describe procedures involving drainage with or without placement of a
drainage device. We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are
proposing that the 135 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table
6P.4a. associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(2) Percutaneous Insertion of Intraluminal or Monitoring Device
One commenter identified 28 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes describing
procedures involving the percutaneous insertion of intraluminal and
monitoring devices into central nervous system and other cardiovascular
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We agree with the
commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 28 ICD-10-
[[Page 19854]]
PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4b. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(3) Percutaneous Removal of Drainage, Infusion, Intraluminal or
Monitoring Device
One commenter identified 22 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the percutaneous removal of drainage,
infusion, intraluminal and monitoring devices from central nervous
system and other vascular body parts that generally would not require
the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 22
ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4c. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(4) External Removal of Cardiac or Neurostimulator Lead
One commenter identified four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the external removal of cardiac leads
from the heart and neurostimulator leads from central nervous system
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These four ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
00P6XMZ................... Removal of neurostimulator lead from
cerebral ventricle, external approach.
00PEXMZ................... Removal of neurostimulator lead from cranial
nerve, external approach.
01PYXMZ................... Removal of neurostimulator lead from
peripheral nerve, external approach.
02PAXMZ................... Removal of cardiac lead from heart, external
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(5) Percutaneous Revision of Drainage, Infusion, Intraluminal or
Monitoring Device
One commenter identified 28 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the percutaneous revision of drainage,
infusion, intraluminal and monitoring devices for vascular and heart
and great vessel body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We
agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 28 ICD-
10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4d. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(6) Percutaneous Destruction
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the percutaneous destruction of retina
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These two ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
085E3ZZ................... Destruction of right retina, percutaneous
approach.
085F3ZZ................... Destruction of left retina, percutaneous
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(7) External/Diagnostic Drainage
One commenter identified 20 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external drainage for structures of the
eye that generally would not require the resources of an operating room
and can be performed at the bedside. We agree with the commenter.
Therefore, we are proposing that the 20 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
listed in Table 6P.4e. associated with this proposed rule (which is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html)
be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments
on our proposal.
(8) External Extirpation
One commenter identified four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external extirpation of matter from eye
structures that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These four ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
08C0XZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right eye,
external approach.
08C1XZZ................... Extirpation of matter from left eye,
external approach.
08CSXZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right
conjunctiva, external approach.
08CTXZZ................... Extirpation of matter from left conjunctiva,
external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19855]]
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(9) External Removal of Radioactive Element or Synthetic Substitute
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the external removal of radioactive or
synthetic substitutes from the eye that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These three ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
08P0X1Z................... Removal of radioactive element from right
eye, external approach.
08P0XJZ................... Removal of synthetic substitute from right
eye, external approach.
08P1XJZ................... Removal of synthetic substitute from left
eye, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(10) Endoscopic/Transorifice Diagnostic Drainage
One commenter identified eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) drainage of ear structures that generally would not
require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the
bedside. These eight ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
09977ZX................... Drainage of right tympanic membrane, via
natural or artificial opening, diagnostic.
09978ZX................... Drainage of right tympanic membrane, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic,
diagnostic.
09987ZX................... Drainage of left tympanic membrane, via
natural or artificial opening, diagnostic.
09988ZX................... Drainage of left tympanic membrane, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic,
diagnostic.
099F7ZX................... Drainage of right eustachian tube, via
natural or artificial opening, diagnostic.
099F8ZX................... Drainage of right eustachian tube, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic,
diagnostic.
099G7ZX................... Drainage of left eustachian tube, via
natural or artificial opening, diagnostic.
099G8ZX................... Drainage of left eustachian tube, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic,
diagnostic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(11) External Release
One commenter identified four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the external release of ear structures
that generally would not require the resources of an operating room and
can be performed at the bedside. These four ICD-10-PCS codes are shown
in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
09N0XZZ................... Release right external ear, external
approach.
09N1XZZ................... Release left external ear, external
approach.
09N3XZZ................... Release right external auditory canal,
external approach.
09N4XZZ................... Release left external auditory canal,
external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
four ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(12) External Repair
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the external repair of body parts that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. These three ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in
the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
09QKXZZ................... Repair nose, external approach.
0CQ4XZZ................... Repair buccal mucosa, external approach.
0CQ7XZZ................... Repair tongue, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(13) Endoscopic/Transorifice Destruction
One commenter identified eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the endoscopic/transorifice destruction
of respiratory system body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These eight ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
[[Page 19856]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0B538ZZ................... Destruction of right main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0B548ZZ................... Destruction of right upper lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0B558ZZ................... Destruction of right middle lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0B568ZZ................... Destruction of right lower lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0B578ZZ................... Destruction of left main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0B588ZZ................... Destruction of left upper lobe bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0B598ZZ................... Destruction of lingula bronchus, via natural
or artificial opening endoscopic.
0B5B8ZZ................... Destruction of left lower lobe bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(14) Endoscopic/Transorifice Drainage
One commenter identified 40 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) drainage of respiratory system body parts that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we
are proposing that the 40 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table
6P.4f. associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(15) Endoscopic/Transorifice Extirpation
One commenter identified nine ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice extirpation of
matter from respiratory system body parts that generally would not
require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the
bedside. These nine ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0BCC8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right upper lung
lobe, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BCD8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right middle lung
lobe, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BCF8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right lower lung
lobe, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BCG8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from left upper lung
lobe, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BCH8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from lung lingula, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BCJ8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from left lower lung
lobe, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BCK8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from right lung, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BCL8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from left lung, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BCM8ZZ................... Extirpation of matter from bilateral lungs,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
nine ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(16) Endoscopic/Transorifice Fragmentation
One commenter identified 16 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice fragmentation of
respiratory system body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These 16 ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0BF37ZZ................... Fragmentation in right main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening.
0BF38ZZ................... Fragmentation in right main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BF47ZZ................... Fragmentation in right upper lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening.
0BF48ZZ................... Fragmentation in right upper lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BF57ZZ................... Fragmentation in right middle lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening.
0BF58ZZ................... Fragmentation in right middle lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BF67ZZ................... Fragmentation in right lower lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening.
0BF68ZZ................... Fragmentation in right lower lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BF77ZZ................... Fragmentation in left main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening.
0BF78ZZ................... Fragmentation in left main bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BF87ZZ................... Fragmentation in left upper lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening.
0BF88ZZ................... Fragmentation in left upper lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0BF97ZZ................... Fragmentation in lingula bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening.
0BF98ZZ................... Fragmentation in lingula bronchus, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0BFB7ZZ................... Fragmentation in left lower lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening.
0BFB8ZZ................... Fragmentation in left lower lobe bronchus,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19857]]
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
16 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated as
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(17) Endoscopic/Transorifice Insertion of Intraluminal Device
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving an endoscopic/transorifice (via natural
or artificial opening) insertion of intraluminal devices into
respiratory system body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These two ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0BH17DZ................... Insertion of intraluminal device into
trachea, via natural or artificial opening.
0BH18DZ................... Insertion of intraluminal device into
trachea, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(18) Endoscopic/Transorifice Removal of Radioactive Element
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the endoscopic/transorifice removal of
radioactive elements from respiratory system body parts that generally
would not require the resources of an operating room and can be
performed at the bedside. These two ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the
table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0BPK71Z................... Removal of radioactive element from right
lung, via natural or artificial opening.
0BPK81Z................... Removal of radioactive element from right
lung, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(19) Endoscopic/Transorifice Revision of Drainage, Infusion,
Intraluminal or Monitoring Device
One commenter identified 18 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the revision of drainage, infusion,
intraluminal, or monitoring devices from respiratory system body parts
that generally would not require the resources of an operating room and
can be performed at the bedside. We agree with the commenter.
Therefore, we are proposing that the 18 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
listed in Table 6P.4g. associated with this proposed rule (which is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html)
be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments
on our proposal.
(20) Endoscopic/Transorifice Excision
One commenter identified one ICD-10-PCS procedure code that
describes the procedure involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural
or artificial opening) excision of the digestive system body parts that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. This code is 0DBQ8ZZ (Excision of anus,
via natural or artificial opening endoscopic. We agree with the
commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that ICD-10-PCS procedure code
0DBQ8ZZ be designated as a non-O.R. procedure. We are inviting public
comments on our proposal.
(21) Endoscopic/Transorifice Insertion
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the endoscopic/transorifice (via natural
or artificial opening) insertion of intraluminal device into the
stomach that generally would not require the resources of an operating
room and can be performed at the bedside. These two ICD-10-PCS codes
are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0DH67DZ................... Insertion of intraluminal device into
stomach, via natural or artificial opening.
0DH68DZ................... Insertion of intraluminal device into
stomach, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(22) Endoscopic/Transorifice Removal
One commenter identified six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) removal of feeding devices that generally would not
require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the
bedside. These six ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0DP07UZ................... Removal of feeding device from upper
intestinal tract, via natural or artificial
opening.
0DP08UZ................... Removal of feeding device from upper
intestinal tract, via natural or artificial
opening endoscopic.
0DP67UZ................... Removal of feeding device from stomach, via
natural or artificial opening.
0DP68UZ................... Removal of feeding device from stomach, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0DPD7UZ................... Removal of feeding device from lower
intestinal tract, via natural or artificial
opening
[[Page 19858]]
0DPD8UZ................... Removal of feeding device from lower
intestinal tract, via natural or artificial
opening endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(23) External Reposition
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external reposition of gastrointestinal
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These two ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0DS5XZZ................... Reposition esophagus, external approach.
0DSQXZZ................... Reposition anus, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(24) Endoscopic/Transorifice Drainage
One commenter identified eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) drainage of hepatobiliary system and pancreatic
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These eight ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0F9580Z................... Drainage of right hepatic duct with drainage
device, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0F958ZZ................... Drainage of right hepatic duct, via natural
or artificial opening endoscopic.
0F9680Z................... Drainage of left hepatic duct with drainage
device, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0F968ZZ................... Drainage of left hepatic duct, via natural
or artificial opening endoscopic.
0F9880Z................... Drainage of cystic duct with drainage
device, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
0F988ZZ................... Drainage of cystic duct, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
0F9D8ZZ................... Drainage of pancreatic duct, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
0F9F8ZZ................... Drainage of accessory pancreatic duct, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(25) Endoscopic/Transorifice Fragmentation
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) fragmentation of hepatobiliary system and
pancreatic body parts that generally would not require the resources of
an operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These two ICD-
10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0FFD8ZZ................... Fragmentation in pancreatic duct, via
natural or artificial opening endoscopic.
0FFF8ZZ................... Fragmentation in accessory pancreatic duct,
via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(26) Percutaneous Alteration
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous alteration of the breast
that generally would not require the resources of an operating room and
can be performed at the bedside. These three ICD-10-PCS codes are shown
in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0H0T3JZ................... Alteration of right breast with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
0H0U3JZ................... Alteration of left breast with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
0H0V3JZ................... Alteration of bilateral breast with
synthetic substitute, percutaneous
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19859]]
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(27) External Division and Excision of Skin
One commenter identified 41 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external division and excision of the
skin for body parts that generally would not require the resources of
an operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We agree with
the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 41 ICD-10-PCS
procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4h. associated with this proposed
rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(28) External Excision of Breast
One commenter identified six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external excision of the breast that they
believed would generally not require the resources of an operating room
and can be performed at the bedside. These six ICD-10-PCS codes are
shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0HBTXZZ................... Excision of right breast, external approach.
0HBUXZZ................... Excision of left breast, external approach.
0HBVXZZ................... Excision of bilateral breast, external
approach.
0HBWXZZ................... Excision of right nipple, external approach.
0HBXXZZ................... Excision of left nipple, external approach.
0HBYXZZ................... Excision of supernumerary breast, external
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with the commenter because these procedure codes
describe various types of surgery performed on the breast or nipple
(for example, partial mastectomy) that would typically involve the use
of general anesthesia. Therefore, we are proposing that the six ICD-10-
PCS procedure codes shown in the table above remain designated as O.R.
procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(29) Percutaneous Supplement
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous supplement of the breast
with synthetic substitute that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These three ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0HUT3JZ................... Supplement right breast with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
0HUU3JZ................... Supplement left breast with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
0HUV3JZ................... Supplement bilateral breast with synthetic
substitute, percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(30) Open Drainage
One commenter identified 25 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving open drainage of subcutaneous tissue and
fascia body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. The list includes
procedure codes for drainage with or without placement of a drainage
device. We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that
the 25 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4i. associated
with this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS
Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R.
procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(31) Percutaneous Drainage
One commenter identified two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous drainage of subcutaneous
tissue and fascia body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside.
These two ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0J9J3ZZ................... Drainage of right hand subcutaneous tissue
and fascia, percutaneous approach.
0J9K3ZZ................... Drainage of left hand subcutaneous tissue
and fascia, percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
two ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(32) Percutaneous Extraction
One commenter identified 22 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous extraction of subcutaneous
tissue and fascia body parts that generally would not require the
resources of an operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We
agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 22 ICD-
10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4j. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be
[[Page 19860]]
designated as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on
our proposal.
(33) Open Extraction
One commenter identified 22 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving open extraction of subcutaneous tissue
and fascia body parts that the commenter believed would generally not
require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the
bedside. We disagree with the commenter because these codes describe
procedures that utilize an open approach and are being performed on the
skin and subcutaneous tissue. Depending on the medical reason for the
open extraction, the procedures may require an O.R. setting. Therefore,
we are proposing that the 22 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table
6P.4k. associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) remain designated
as O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(34) Percutaneous and Open Repair
One commenter identified 44 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous and open repair of
subcutaneous tissue and fascia body parts that generally would not
require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at the
bedside. We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that
the 44 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4l. associated
with this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS
Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R.
procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(35) External Release
One commenter identified 28 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external release of bursa and ligament
body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We agree with the
commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 28 ICD-10-PCS procedure
codes listed in Table 6P.4m. associated with this proposed rule (which
is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(36) External Repair
One commenter identified 135 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external repair of various bones and
joints. We believe that these procedures generally would not be
performed in the operating room. We are proposing that the 135 ICD-10-
PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.4n. associated with this
proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(37) External Reposition
One commenter identified 14 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external reposition of various bones.
These 14 ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0NS0XZZ................... Reposition skull, external approach.
0NS1XZZ................... Reposition right frontal bone, external
approach.
0NS2XZZ................... Reposition left frontal bone, external
approach.
0NS3XZZ................... Reposition right parietal bone, external
approach.
0NS4XZZ................... Reposition left parietal bone, external
approach.
0NS5XZZ................... Reposition right temporal bone, external
approach.
0NS6XZZ................... Reposition left temporal bone, external
approach.
0NS7XZZ................... Reposition right occipital bone, external
approach.
0NS8XZZ................... Reposition left occipital bone, external
approach.
0PS3XZZ................... Reposition cervical vertebra, external
approach.
0PS4XZZ................... Reposition thoracic vertebra, external
approach.
0QS0XZZ................... Reposition lumbar vertebra, external
approach.
0QS1XZZ................... Reposition sacrum, external approach.
0QSSXZZ................... Reposition coccyx, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that these procedures generally would not be performed
in the operating room. Therefore, we are proposing that the 14 ICD-10-
PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated as non-O.R.
procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(38) Endoscopic/Transorifice Dilation
One commenter identified eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) dilation of urinary system body parts that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. These eight ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in
the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0T767ZZ................... Dilation of right ureter, via natural or
artificial opening.
0T768ZZ................... Dilation of right ureter, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
0T777ZZ................... Dilation of left ureter, via natural or
artificial opening.
0T778ZZ................... Dilation of left ureter, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
0T7B7DZ................... Dilation of bladder with intraluminal
device, via natural or artificial opening.
0T7B7ZZ................... Dilation of bladder, via natural or
artificial opening.
0T7B8DZ................... Dilation of bladder with intraluminal
device, via natural or artificial opening
endoscopic.
[[Page 19861]]
0T7B8ZZ................... Dilation of bladder, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
eight ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(39) Endoscopic/Transorifice Excision
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving endoscopic/transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) excision of urinary system body parts that the
commenter believed would generally not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These three ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0TBD7ZZ................... Excision of urethra, via natural or
artificial opening.
0TBD8ZZ................... Excision of urethra, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
0TBDXZZ................... Excision of urethra, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with the commenter because, depending on the medical
reason for the excision, the procedures may require an O.R. setting.
Therefore, we are proposing that the three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
shown in the table above remain designated as O.R. procedures. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal.
(40) External/Transorifice Repair
One commenter identified three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external and transorifice (via natural or
artificial opening) repair of the vagina body part that generally would
not require the resources of an operating room and can be performed at
the bedside. These three ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0UQG7ZZ................... Repair vagina, via natural or artificial
opening.
0UQGXZZ................... Repair vagina, external approach.
0UQMXZZ................... Repair vulva, external approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that these
three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(41) Percutaneous Transfusion
One commenter identified 20 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous transfusion of bone marrow
and stem cells that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. We agree with the
commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the 20 ICD-10-PCS procedure
codes listed in Table 6P.4o. associated with this proposed rule (which
is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as non-O.R. procedures. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(42) External/Percutaneous/Transorifice Introduction
One commenter identified 51 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving external, percutaneous and transorifice
(via natural or artificial opening) introduction of substances that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we
are proposing that the 51 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table
6P.4p. associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be designated as
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(43) Percutaneous/Diagnostic and Endoscopic/Transorifice Irrigation,
Measurement and Monitoring
One commenter identified 15 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving percutaneous/diagnostic and endoscopic/
transorifice (via natural or artificial opening) irrigation,
measurement and monitoring of structures, pressures and flow that
generally would not require the resources of an operating room and can
be performed at the bedside. These 15 ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the
table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3E1N38X................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, percutaneous
approach, diagnostic.
3E1N38Z................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, percutaneous
approach.
3E1N78X................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, via natural or
artificial opening, diagnostic.
3E1N78Z................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, via natural or
artificial opening.
3E1N88X................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic, diagnostic.
3E1N88Z................... Irrigation of male reproductive using
irrigating substance, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
4A0635Z................... Measurement of lymphatic flow, percutaneous
approach.
4A063BZ................... Measurement of lymphatic pressure,
percutaneous approach.
4A0C35Z................... Measurement of biliary flow, percutaneous
approach.
[[Page 19862]]
4A0C3BZ................... Measurement of biliary pressure,
percutaneous approach.
4A0C75Z................... Measurement of biliary flow, via natural or
artificial opening.
4A0C7BZ................... Measurement of biliary pressure, via natural
or artificial opening.
4A0C85Z................... Measurement of biliary flow, via natural or
artificial opening endoscopic.
4A1635Z................... Monitoring of lymphatic flow, percutaneous
approach.
4A163BZ................... Monitoring of lymphatic pressure,
percutaneous approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
15 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated as
non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
(44) Imaging
One commenter identified six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving imaging with contrast of hepatobiliary
system body parts that generally would not require the resources of an
operating room and can be performed at the bedside. These six ICD-10-
PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BF030ZZ................... Plain radiography of gallbladder and bile
ducts using high osmolar contrast.
BF031ZZ................... Plain radiography of gallbladder and bile
ducts using low osmolar contrast.
BF03YZZ................... Plain radiography of gallbladder and bile
ducts using other contrast.
BF0C0ZZ................... Plain radiography of hepatobiliary system,
all using high osmolar contrast.
BF0C1ZZ................... Plain radiography of hepatobiliary system,
all using low osmolar contrast.
BF0CYZZ................... Plain radiography of hepatobiliary system,
all using other contrast.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
six ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
(45) Prosthetics
One commenter identified five ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
describe procedures involving the fitting and use of prosthetics and
assistive devices that would not require the resources of an operating
room. These five ICD-10-PCS codes are shown in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
F0DZ8ZZ................... Prosthesis device fitting.
F0DZ9EZ................... Assistive, adaptive, supportive or
protective devices device fitting using
orthosis.
F0DZ9FZ................... Assistive, adaptive, supportive or
protective devices device fitting using
assistive, adaptive, supportive or
protective equipment.
F0DZ9UZ................... Assistive, adaptive, supportive or
protective devices device fitting using
prosthesis.
F0DZ9ZZ................... Assistive, adaptive, supportive or
protective devices device fitting.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We agree with the commenter. Therefore, we are proposing that the
five ICD-10-PCS procedure codes shown in the table above be designated
as non-O.R. procedures. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal.
b. Revision of Neurostimulator Generator
We received a request to review three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
that describe procedures for revision of a neurostimulator generator
that are currently designated as O.R. procedures and assigned to MS-
DRGs 252, 253 and 254 (Other Vascular Procedures with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively). The three codes are 0JWT0MZ (Revision of
stimulator generator in trunk subcutaneous tissue and fascia, open
approach), 0JWT3MZ (Revision of stimulator generator in trunk
subcutaneous tissue and fascia, percutaneous approach), and 0JWTXMZ
(Revision of stimulator generator in trunk subcutaneous tissue and
fascia, external approach).
The requester expressed concern with the MS-DRG assignments and
noted that although these codes are used to report revision of a
carotid sinus stimulator pulse generator and appropriately assigned to
MS-DRGs 252, 253 and 254 in MDC 5 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Circulatory System), they also are very frequently used for the
revision of the more common (for example, gastric, intracranial, sacral
and spinal) neurostimulator generators that would generally not require
the resources of an operating room.
The requestor also stated that the indication for revision of a
neurostimulator generator is typically due to a complication, which
would be reflected in a complication code such as ICD-10-CM diagnosis
code T85.734A (Infection and inflammatory reaction due to implanted
electronic neurostimulator, generator, initial encounter) or T85.890A
(Other specified complication of nervous system prosthetic devices,
implants and grafts, initial encounter). Because both of these
diagnosis codes are assigned to MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of the
Nervous System), when either code is reported in combination with one
of the three procedure codes that describe revision of neurostimulator
generator codes (currently assigned to MDC 5), the resulting MS-DRG
assignment is to MS-DRGs 981, 982 and 983 (Extensive O.R. Procedure
Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC,
respectively).
The requestor presented the following three options for
consideration.
Reclassify the ICD-10-PCS procedure codes from O.R.
Procedures to non-O.R. procedures that affect MS-DRG assignment only in
MDC 5. The requestor stated that, under this option, the procedure
codes would continue to appropriately group to MDC 5 when representing
cases involving carotid
[[Page 19863]]
sinus stimulators and the other types of neurostimulator cases would
appropriately group to medical MS-DRGs.
Add the ICD-10-PCS procedure codes to MDC 1, such as to
MS-DRGs 040, 041 and 042 (Peripheral, Cranial Nerve and Other Nervous
System Procedures with MCC, with CC or Peripheral Neurostimulator and
without CC/MCC, respectively) under MDC 1. The requestor stated that
this option would resolve the inconsistency between a revision of a
carotid sinus stimulator generator being classified as an O.R.
procedure, while the other comparable procedures involving a revision
of a regular neurostimulator generator are not. The requestor also
stated that this option would preclude cases being assigned to MS-DRGs
981 through 983.
Stop classifying the ICD-10-PCS procedure codes as O.R.
procedures entirely. The requestor stated that, under this option, all
cases would then group to medical MS-DRGs, regardless of the type of
neurostimulator generator.
We analyzed claims data for the three revision of neurostimulator
generator procedure codes from the December 2016 update of the FY 2016
MedPAR file and identified cases under MDC 1 (Diseases and Disorders of
the Nervous System) in MS-DRGs 025, 026, and 027 (Craniotomy and
Endovascular Intracranial Procedures with MCC, with CC and without CC/
MCC, respectively); MS-DRGs 029 and 030 (Spinal Procedures with CC or
Neurostimulators and Spinal Procedures without CC/MCC), respectively);
and MS-DRGs 041 and 042 (Peripheral, Cranial Nerve and Other Nervous
System Procedures with CC or Peripheral Neurostimulator and without CC/
MCC, respectively). We also identified cases in MS-DRGs 982 and 983
(Extensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively). Lastly, we identified cases under MDC 5
(Diseases and Disorders of the Circulatory System) in MS-DRGs 252, 253
and 254 (Other Vascular Procedures with MCC, with CC and without CC/
MCC, respectively). Our findings are shown in the table below.
MS-DRGs for Revision of Neurostimulator Generator
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average length
MS-DRG cases of stay Average costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MS-DRG 025--All cases........................................... 18,442 9.1 $29,984
MS-DRG 025--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 1 12.0 73,716
MS-DRG 026--All cases........................................... 8,415 5.6 21,557
MS-DRG 026--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 1 6.0 4,537
MS-DRG 027--All cases........................................... 10,089 2.9 17,320
MS-DRG 027--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 4 1.8 13,906
MS-DRG 029--All cases........................................... 3,192 5.9 23,145
MS-DRG 029--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 6 3.5 32,799
MS-DRG 030--All cases........................................... 1,933 2.9 14,901
MS-DRG 030--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 11 2.2 18,294
MS-DRG 041--All cases........................................... 5,154 5.5 16,633
MS-DRG 041--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 1 1.0 14,145
MS-DRG 042--All cases........................................... 2,099 3.2 13,725
MS-DRG 042--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 2 2.0 28,587
MS-DRG 982--All cases........................................... 15,216 6.6 17,341
MS-DRG 982--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 11 3.0 15,336
MS-DRG 983--All cases........................................... 3,508 3.2 11,627
MS-DRG 983--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 9 4.2 19,951
MS-DRG 252--All cases........................................... 33,817 7.6 23,384
MS-DRG 252--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 1 7.0 18,740
MS-DRG 253--All cases........................................... 27,456 5.5 18,519
MS-DRG 253--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 7 2.4 19,078
MS-DRG 254--All cases........................................... 13,036 2.9 13,253
MS-DRG 254--Cases with revision of neurostimulator generator.... 3 3.0 11,981
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in the table above, the overall volume of cases reporting
revision of neurostimulator generator is low, with a total of only 57
cases found across all of the MS-DRGs reviewed. The average length of
stay for these cases reporting revision of neurostimulator generators
is, in most cases, consistent with the average length of stay for all
cases in the respective MS-DRG, with the majority having an average
length of stay below the average length of stay of all cases in the
respective MS-DRG. Finally, the average costs for cases reporting
revision of neurostimulator generator reflect a wide range, with a low
of $4,537 in MS-DRG 026 to a high of $73,716 in MS-DRG 025. It is clear
that, for MS-DRG 025 where the average costs of all cases were $29,984
and the average costs of the one case reporting revision of a
neurostimulator generator was $73,716, this is an atypical case. It is
also clear from the data that there were other procedures reported on
the claims where a procedure code for a revision of a neurostimulator
generator was assigned due to the various MS-DRG assignments.
After review of the claims data and discussion with our clinical
advisors, we agree with and support the requestor's first option--to
reclassify the three ICD-10-PCS procedure codes for revision of
neurostimulator generators from O.R. procedures to non-O.R. procedures
that affect the assignment for MS-DRGs 252, 253 and 254 to account for
the subset of patients undergoing revision of a carotid sinus
neurostimulator generator specifically. In cases where one of the more
common (for example, gastric, intracranial, sacral and spinal)
neurostimulator generators are undergoing revision, in the absence of
another O.R. procedure, these cases would group to a medical MS-DRG. We
are inviting public comments on our proposal.
c. External Repair of Hymen
We received a request to examine ICD-10-PCS procedure code 0UQKXZZ
(Repair Hymen, External Approach). This procedure code is currently
designated as an O.R. procedure in MS-DRGs 746 and 747 (Vagina, Cervix
and Vulva Procedures with CC/MCC and without CC/MCC, respectively)
under
[[Page 19864]]
MDC 13. The requestor provided examples and expressed concern that
procedure code 0UQKXZZ was assigned to MS-DRG 987 (Non-Extensive O.R.
Procedures Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC) when reported on
a maternal delivery claim. The requestor noted that when a similar code
was reported with an external approach (for example, procedure code
0UQMXZZ (Repair vulva, external approach)), the case was appropriately
assigned to MS-DRG 774 (Vaginal Delivery with Complicating Diagnosis).
The requestor stated that the physician documentation was simply more
specific to the location of the repair and this should not affect
assignment to one of the MS-DRGs for vaginal delivery.
We reviewed claims data involving the examples provided by the
requestor involving ICD-10-PCS procedure code 0UQKXZZ (Repair hymen,
external approach). Our clinical advisors agree with the requestor that
reporting of this procedure code should not affect assignment to one of
the MS-DRGs for vaginal delivery. As discussed earlier in section
II.F.15.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to
change the designation for a number of procedure codes from O.R.
procedures to non-O.R. procedures. Included in that proposal are ICD-
10-PCS procedure codes 0UQGXZZ (Repair vagina, external approach) and
0UQMXZZ (Repair vulva, external approach). Consistent with the change
in designation for these procedure codes, we also are proposing to
designate ICD-10-PCS procedure code 0UQKXZZ (Repair hymen, external
approach) as a non-O.R. procedure. The procedure by itself would
generally not require the resources of an operating room. If the
procedure is performed following a vaginal delivery, it is the vaginal
delivery procedure code 10E0XZZ (Delivery of products of conception)
that determines the MS-DRG assignment because this code is designated
as a non-O.R. procedure affecting the MS-DRG.
Therefore, we are proposing to change the designation of ICD-10-PCS
procedure code 0UQKXZZ (Repair hymen, external approach) to a non-O.R.
procedure. This redesignation will enable more appropriate MS-DRG
assignment for these cases by eliminating erroneous assignment to MS-
DRGs 987 through 989. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
d. Non-O.R. Procedures in MDC 17 (Myeloproliferative Diseases and
Disorders, Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms)
Under MDC 17 (Myeloproliferative Diseases and Disorders, Poorly
Differentiated Neoplasms), there are 11 surgical MS-DRGs. Of these 11
surgical MS-DRGs, there are 5 MS-DRGs containing GROUPER logic that
includes ICD-10-PCS procedure codes designated as O.R. procedures as
well as non-O.R. procedures that affect the MS-DRG. These five MS-DRGs
are MS-DRGs 823, 824, and 825 (Lymphoma and Non-Acute Leukemia with
Other O.R. Procedure with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC,
respectively) and MS-DRGs 829 and 830 (Myeloproliferative Disorders or
Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms with Other O.R. Procedure with CC/MCC
and without CC/MCC, respectively). We refer the reader to the ICD-10
Version 34 MS-DRG Definitions Manual which is available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Data-Files.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&DLSort=0&DLSortDir=ascending for the
complete list of ICD-10-PCS procedure codes assigned to these five MS-
DRGs under MDC 17.
We reviewed the list of 244 ICD-10-PCS non-O.R. procedure codes
currently assigned to these 5 MS-DRGs. Of these 244 procedure codes, we
determined that 55 of the procedure codes do not warrant being
designated as non-O.R. procedures that affect these MS-DRGs because
they describe procedures that would generally not require a greater
intensity of resources for facilities to manage the cases included in
the definition (logic) of these MS-DRGs. Therefore, we are proposing
that the 55 ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed in Table 6P.3c.
associated with this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet
on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html) be removed from the logic
for MS-DRGs 823, 824, 825, 829 and 830 as non-O.R. procedures affecting
the MS-DRG. We also are proposing to revise the titles for these five
MS-DRGs by deleting the reference to ``O.R.'' in the title.
Specifically, we are proposing to revise the titles for MS-DRGs 823,
824, and 825 to ``Lymphoma and Non-Acute Leukemia with Other Procedure
with MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC'', respectively and we are
proposing to revise the titles for MS-DRGs 829 and 830 to
``Myeloproliferative Disorders or Poorly Differentiated Neoplasms with
Other Procedure with CC/MCC and without CC/MCC'', respectively. We are
inviting public comments on our proposals.
G. Recalibration of the Proposed FY 2018 MS-DRG Relative Weights
1. Data Sources for Developing the Proposed Relative Weights
In developing the proposed FY 2018 system of weights, we used two
data sources: Claims data and cost report data. As in previous years,
the claims data source is the MedPAR file. This file is based on fully
coded diagnostic and procedure data for all Medicare inpatient hospital
bills. The FY 2016 MedPAR data used in this proposed rule include
discharges occurring on October 1, 2015, through September 30, 2016,
based on bills received by CMS through December 31, 2016, from all
hospitals subject to the IPPS and short-term, acute care hospitals in
Maryland (which at that time were under a waiver from the IPPS). The FY
2016 MedPAR file used in calculating the proposed relative weights
includes data for approximately 9,607,103 Medicare discharges from IPPS
providers. Discharges for Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage managed care plan are excluded from this analysis. These
discharges are excluded when the MedPAR ``GHO Paid'' indicator field on
the claim record is equal to ``1'' or when the MedPAR DRG payment
field, which represents the total payment for the claim, is equal to
the MedPAR ``Indirect Medical Education (IME)'' payment field,
indicating that the claim was an ``IME only'' claim submitted by a
teaching hospital on behalf of a beneficiary enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage managed care plan. In addition, the December 31, 2016 update
of the FY 2016 MedPAR file complies with version 5010 of the X12 HIPAA
Transaction and Code Set Standards, and includes a variable called
``claim type.'' Claim type ``60'' indicates that the claim was an
inpatient claim paid as fee-for-service. Claim types ``61,'' ``62,''
``63,'' and ``64'' relate to encounter claims, Medicare Advantage IME
claims, and HMO no-pay claims. Therefore, the calculation of the
proposed relative weights for FY 2018 also excludes claims with claim
type values not equal to ``60.'' The data exclude CAHs, including
hospitals that subsequently became CAHs after the period from which the
data were taken. We note that the proposed FY 2018 relative weights are
based on the ICD-
[[Page 19865]]
10-CM diagnoses and ICD-10-PCS procedure codes from the FY 2016 MedPAR
claims data, grouped through the ICD-10 version of the proposed FY 2018
GROUPER (Version 35).
The second data source used in the cost-based relative weighting
methodology is the Medicare cost report data files from the HCRIS.
Normally, we use the HCRIS dataset that is 3 years prior to the IPPS
fiscal year. Specifically, we used cost report data from the December
31, 2016 update of the FY 2015 HCRIS for calculating the proposed FY
2018 cost-based relative weights.
2. Methodology for Calculation of the Proposed Relative Weights
As we explain in section II.E.2. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we calculated the proposed FY 2018 relative weights based on 19
CCRs, as we did for FY 2017. The methodology we are proposing to use to
calculate the FY 2018 MS-DRG cost-based relative weights based on
claims data in the FY 2016 MedPAR file and data from the FY 2015
Medicare cost reports is as follows. We note that we have provided
additional precision in our description of the methodology for FY 2018.
To the extent possible, all the claims were regrouped
using the proposed FY 2018 MS-DRG classifications discussed in sections
II.B. and II.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The transplant cases that were used to establish the
proposed relative weights for heart and heart-lung, liver and/or
intestinal, and lung transplants (MS-DRGs 001, 002, 005, 006, and 007,
respectively) were limited to those Medicare-approved transplant
centers that have cases in the FY 2016 MedPAR file. (Medicare coverage
for heart, heart-lung, liver and/or intestinal, and lung transplants is
limited to those facilities that have received approval from CMS as
transplant centers.)
Organ acquisition costs for kidney, heart, heart-lung,
liver, lung, pancreas, and intestinal (or multivisceral organs)
transplants continue to be paid on a reasonable cost basis. Because
these acquisition costs are paid separately from the prospective
payment rate, it is necessary to subtract the acquisition charges from
the total charges on each transplant bill that showed acquisition
charges before computing the average cost for each MS-DRG and before
eliminating statistical outliers.
Claims with total charges or total lengths of stay less
than or equal to zero were deleted. Claims that had an amount in the
total charge field that differed by more than $30.00 from the sum of
the routine day charges, intensive care charges, pharmacy charges,
implantable devices charges, supplies and equipment charges, therapy
services charges, operating room charges, cardiology charges,
laboratory charges, radiology charges, other service charges, labor and
delivery charges, inhalation therapy charges, emergency room charges,
blood and blood products charges, anesthesia charges, cardiac
catheterization charges, CT scan charges, and MRI charges were also
deleted.
At least 92.2 percent of the providers in the MedPAR file
had charges for 14 of the 19 cost centers. All claims of providers that
did not have charges greater than zero for at least 14 of the 19 cost
centers were deleted. In other words, a provider must have no more than
five blank cost centers. If a provider did not have charges greater
than zero in more than five cost centers, the claims for the provider
were deleted.
Statistical outliers were eliminated by removing all cases
that were beyond 3.0 standard deviations from the geometric mean of the
log distribution of both the total charges per case and the total
charges per day for each MS-DRG.
Effective October 1, 2008, because hospital inpatient
claims include a POA indicator field for each diagnosis present on the
claim, only for purposes of relative weight-setting, the POA indicator
field was reset to ``Y'' for ``Yes'' for all claims that otherwise have
an ``N'' (No) or a ``U'' (documentation insufficient to determine if
the condition was present at the time of inpatient admission) in the
POA field.
Under current payment policy, the presence of specific HAC codes,
as indicated by the POA field values, can generate a lower payment for
the claim. Specifically, if the particular condition is present on
admission (that is, a ``Y'' indicator is associated with the diagnosis
on the claim), it is not a HAC, and the hospital is paid for the higher
severity (and, therefore, the higher weighted MS-DRG). If the
particular condition is not present on admission (that is, an ``N''
indicator is associated with the diagnosis on the claim) and there are
no other complicating conditions, the DRG GROUPER assigns the claim to
a lower severity (and, therefore, the lower weighted MS-DRG) as a
penalty for allowing a Medicare inpatient to contract a HAC. While the
POA reporting meets policy goals of encouraging quality care and
generates program savings, it presents an issue for the relative
weight-setting process. Because cases identified as HACs are likely to
be more complex than similar cases that are not identified as HACs, the
charges associated with HAC cases are likely to be higher as well.
Therefore, if the higher charges of these HAC claims are grouped into
lower severity MS-DRGs prior to the relative weight-setting process,
the relative weights of these particular MS-DRGs would become
artificially inflated, potentially skewing the relative weights. In
addition, we want to protect the integrity of the budget neutrality
process by ensuring that, in estimating payments, no increase to the
standardized amount occurs as a result of lower overall payments in a
previous year that stem from using weights and case-mix that are based
on lower severity MS-DRG assignments. If this would occur, the
anticipated cost savings from the HAC policy would be lost.
To avoid these problems, we reset the POA indicator field to ``Y''
only for relative weight-setting purposes for all claims that otherwise
have an ``N'' or a ``U'' in the POA field. This resetting ``forced''
the more costly HAC claims into the higher severity MS-DRGs as
appropriate, and the relative weights calculated for each MS-DRG more
closely reflect the true costs of those cases.
In addition, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, for FY 2013
and subsequent fiscal years, we finalized a policy to treat hospitals
that participate in the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI)
initiative the same as prior fiscal years for the IPPS payment modeling
and ratesetting process without regard to hospitals' participation
within these bundled payment models (that is, as if hospitals were not
participating in those models under the BPCI initiative). The BPCI
initiative, developed under the authority of section 3021 of the
Affordable Care Act (codified at section 1115A of the Act), is
comprised of four broadly defined models of care, which link payments
for multiple services beneficiaries receive during an episode of care.
Under the BPCI initiative, organizations enter into payment
arrangements that include financial and performance accountability for
episodes of care. For FY 2018, we are are proposing to continue to
include all applicable data from subsection (d) hospitals participating
in BPCI Models 1, 2, and 4 in our IPPS payment modeling and ratesetting
calculations. We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
for a complete discussion on our final policy for the treatment of
hospitals participating in the BPCI initiative in our ratesetting
process. For additional information on
[[Page 19866]]
the BPCI initiative, we refer readers to the CMS' Center for Medicare
and Medicaid Innovation's Web site at: //innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/Bundled-Payments/index.html and to section IV.H.4. of the
preamble of the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53341 through
53343).
The charges for each of the 19 cost groups for each claim were
standardized to remove the effects of differences in proposed area wage
levels, IME and DSH payments, and for hospitals located in Alaska and
Hawaii, the applicable proposed cost-of-living adjustment. Because
hospital charges include charges for both operating and capital costs,
we standardized total charges to remove the effects of differences in
proposed geographic adjustment factors, cost-of-living adjustments, and
DSH payments under the capital IPPS as well. Charges were then summed
by MS-DRG for each of the 19 cost groups so that each MS-DRG had 19
standardized charge totals. Statistical outliers were then removed.
These charges were then adjusted to cost by applying the proposed
national average CCRs developed from the FY 2015 cost report data.
The 19 cost centers that we used in the proposed relative weight
calculation are shown in the following table. The table shows the lines
on the cost report and the corresponding revenue codes that we used to
create the proposed 19 national cost center CCRs. If stakeholders have
comments about the groupings in this table, we may consider those
comments as we finalize our policy.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost from HCRIS Charges from HCRIS Medicare charges from
Revenue codes (Worksheet C, Part 1, (Worksheet C, Part 1, HCRIS (Worksheet D-
Cost center group name (19 MedPAR charge contained in Cost report line Column 5 and line Column 6 & 7 and line 3, Column & line
total) field MedPAR charge description number) Form CMS-2552- number) Form CMS-2552- number) Form CMS-2552-
field 10 10 10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Routine Days................. Private Room 011X and 014X... Adults & C_1_C5_30 C_1_C6_30 D3_HOS_C2_30
Charges. Pediatrics
(General
Routine Care).
Semi-Private 012X, 013X and
Room Charges. 016X-0''CCRs>>X.
Ward Charges.... 015X............
Intensive Days............... Intensive Care 020X............ Intensive Care C_1_C5_31 C_1_C6_31 D3_HOS_C2_31
Charges. Unit.
Coronary Care 021X............ Coronary Care C_1_C5_32 C_1_C6_32 D3_HOS_C2_32
Charges. Unit.
Burn Intensive C_1_C5_33 C_1_C6_33 D3_HOS_C2_33
Care Unit.
Surgical C_1_C5_34 C_1_C6_34 D3_HOS_C2_34
Intensive Care
Unit.
Other Special C_1_C5_35 C_1_C6_35 D3_HOS_C2_35
Care Unit.
Drugs........................ Pharmacy Charges 025X, 026X and Intravenous C_1_C5_64 C_1_C6_64 D3_HOS_C2_64
063X. Therapy.
C_1_C7_64 .....................
Drugs Charged to C_1_C5_73 C_1_C6_73 D3_HOS_C2_73
Patient.
C_1_C7_73
Supplies and Equipment....... Medical/Surgical 0270, 0271, Medical Supplies C_1_C5_71 C_1_C6_71 D3_HOS_C2_71
Supply Charges. 0272, 0273, Charged to
0274, 0277, Patients.
0279, and 0621,
0622, 0623.
C_1_C7_71
Durable Medical 0290, 0291, 0292 DME-Rented...... C_1_C5_96 C_1_C6_96 D3_HOS_C2_96
Equipment and 0294-0299.
Charges.
C_1_C7_96
Used Durable 0293............ DME-Sold........ C_1_C5_97 C_1_C6_97 D3_HOS_C2_97
Medical Charges.
C_1_C7_97 .....................
Implantable Devices.......... ................ 0275, 0276, Implantable C_1_C5_72 C_1_C6_72 D3_HOS_C2_72
0278, 0624. Devices Charged
to Patients.
C_1_C7_72
Therapy Services............. Physical Therapy 042X............ Physical Therapy C_1_C5_66 C_1_C6_66 D3_HOS_C2_66
Charges.
C_1_C7_66
Occupational 043X............ Occupational C_1_C5_67 C_1_C6_67 D3_HOS_C2_67
Therapy Charges. Therapy.
C_1_C7_67
Speech Pathology 044X and 047X... Speech Pathology C_1_C5_68 C_1_C6_68 D3_HOS_C2_68
Charges.
C_1_C7_68
Inhalation Therapy........... Inhalation 041X and 046X... Respiratory C_1_C5_65 C_1_C6_65 D3_HOS_C2_65
Therapy Charges. Therapy.
C_1_C7_65
Operating Room............... Operating Room 036X............ Operating Room.. C_1_C5_50 C_1_C6_50 D3_HOS_C2_50
Charges.
C_1_C7_50
071X Recovery Room C_1_C5_51 C_1_C6_51 D3_HOS_C2_51
C_1_C7_51
Labor & Delivery............. Operating Room 072X Delivery Room C_1_C5_52 C_1_C6_52 D3_HOS_C2_52
Charges and Labor Room
C_1_C7_52
Anesthesia................... Anesthesia 037X Anesthesiology C_1_C5_53 C_1_C6_53 D3_HOS_C2_53
Charges
C_1_C7_53
Cardiology................... Cardiology 048X and 073X Electrocardiolog C_1_C5_69 C_1_C6_69 D3_HOS_C2_69
Charges y
C_1_C7_69
[[Page 19867]]
Cardiac Catheterization...... 0481 Cardiac C_1_C5_59 C_1_C6_59 D3_HOS_C2_59
Catheterization
C_1_C7_59
Laboratory................... Laboratory 030X, 031X, and Laboratory C_1_C5_60 C_1_C6_60 D3_HOS_C2_60
Charges 075X
C_1_C7_60
PBP Clinic C_1_C5_61 C_1_C6_61 D3_HOS_C2_61
Laboratory
Services
C_1_C7_61
074X, 086X Electroencephalo C_1_C5_70 C_1_C6_70 D3_HOS_C2_70
graphy
C_1_C7_70
Radiology.................... Radiology 032X, 040X Radiology--Diagn C_1_C5_54 C_1_C6_54 D3_HOS_C2_54
Charges ostic
C_1_C7_54
028x, 0331, Radiology--Thera C_1_C5_55 C_1_C6_55 D3_HOS_C2_55
0332, 0333, peutic
0335, 0339,
0342
0343 and 344 Radioisotope C_1_C5_56 C_1_C6_56 D3_HOS_C2_56
C_1_C7_56
Computed Tomography (CT) Scan CT Scan Charges 035X Computed C_1_C5_57 C_1_C6_57 D3_HOS_C2_57
Tomography (CT)
Scan
C_1_C7_57
Magnetic Resonance Imaging MRI Charges 061X Magnetic C_1_C5_58 C_1_C6_58 D3_HOS_C2_58
(MRI). Resonance
Imaging (MRI)
C_1_C7_58
Emergency Room............... Emergency Room 045x Emergency C_1_C5_91 C_1_C6_91 D3_HOS_C2_91
Charges
C_1_C7_91
Blood and Blood Products..... Blood Charges 038x Whole Blood & C_1_C5_62 C_1_C6_62 D3_HOS_C2_62
Packed Red
Blood Cells
C_1_C7_62
Blood Storage/ 039x Blood Storing, C_1_C5_63 C_1_C6_63 D3_HOS_C2_63
Processing Processing, &
Transfusing
C_1_C7_63
Other Services............... Other Service 0002-0099, 022X,
Charge 023X,
024X,052X,053X
055X-060X, 064X-
070X, 076X-
078X, 090X-095X
and 099X
Renal Dialysis 0800X Renal Dialysis C_1_C5_74 C_1_C6_74 D3_HOS_C2_74
ESRD Revenue 080X and 082X- C_1_C7_74
Setting Charges 088X
Home Program C_1_C5_94 C_1_C6_94 D3_HOS_C2_94
Dialysis
C_1_C7_94
Outpatient 049X ASC (Non C_1_C5_75 C_1_C6_75 D3_HOS_C2_75
Service Charges Distinct Part)
Lithotripsy 079X C_1_C7_75
Charge
Other Ancillary C_1_C5_76 C_1_C6_76 D3_HOS_C2_76
C_1_C7_76
Clinic Visit 051X Clinic C_1_C5_90 C_1_C6_90 D3_HOS_C2_90
Charges
C_1_C7_90
Observation beds C_1_C5_92.01 C_1_C6_92.01 D3_HOS_C2_92.01
C_1_C7_92.01
Professional 096X, 097X, and Other Outpatient C_1_C5_93 C_1_C6_93 D3_HOS_C2_93
Fees Charges 098X Services
C_1_C7_93
Ambulance 054X Ambulance C_1_C5_95 C_1_C6_95 D3_HOS_C2_95
Charges
C_1_C7_95
Rural Health C_1_C5_88 C_1_C6_88 D3_HOS_C2_88
Clinic
C_1_C7_88
FQHC C_1_C5_89 C_1_C6_89 D3_HOS_C2_89
C_1_C7_89
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Development of Proposed National Average CCRs
We developed the proposed national average CCRs as follows:
Using the FY 2015 cost report data, we removed CAHs, Indian Health
Service hospitals, all-inclusive rate hospitals, and cost reports that
represented time periods of less than 1 year (365 days). We included
hospitals located in Maryland because we include their charges in our
claims database. We then created CCRs for each provider for each cost
center (see prior table for line items used in the calculations) and
removed any CCRs that were greater than 10 or less than 0.01. We
normalized the departmental CCRs by dividing the CCR for each
department by the total CCR for the hospital for the
[[Page 19868]]
purpose of trimming the data. We then took the logs of the normalized
cost center CCRs and removed any cost center CCRs where the log of the
cost center CCR was greater or less than the mean log plus/minus 3
times the standard deviation for the log of that cost center CCR. Once
the cost report data were trimmed, we calculated a Medicare-specific
CCR. The Medicare-specific CCR was determined by taking the Medicare
charges for each line item from Worksheet D-3 and deriving the
Medicare-specific costs by applying the hospital-specific departmental
CCRs to the Medicare-specific charges for each line item from Worksheet
D-3. Once each hospital's Medicare-specific costs were established, we
summed the total Medicare-specific costs and divided by the sum of the
total Medicare-specific charges to produce national average, charge-
weighted CCRs.
After we multiplied the total charges for each MS-DRG in each of
the 19 cost centers by the corresponding national average CCR, we
summed the 19 ``costs'' across each MS-DRG to produce a total
standardized cost for the MS-DRG. The average standardized cost for
each MS-DRG was then computed as the total standardized cost for the
MS-DRG divided by the transfer-adjusted case count for the MS-DRG. The
average cost for each MS-DRG was then divided by the national average
standardized cost per case to determine the proposed relative weight.
The proposed FY 2018 cost-based relative weights were then
normalized by a proposed adjustment factor of 1.736047 so that the
average case weight after recalibration was equal to the average case
weight before recalibration. The proposed normalization adjustment is
intended to ensure that recalibration by itself neither increases nor
decreases total payments under the IPPS, as required by section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
The proposed 19 national average CCRs for FY 2018 are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Group CCR
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Routine Days............................................ 0.449
Intensive Days.......................................... 0.375
Drugs................................................... 0.197
Supplies & Equipment.................................... 0.300
Implantable Devices..................................... 0.327
Therapy Services........................................ 0.314
Laboratory.............................................. 0.116
Operating Room.......................................... 0.186
Cardiology.............................................. 0.108
Cardiac Catheterization................................. 0.115
Radiology............................................... 0.149
MRIs.................................................... 0.077
CT Scans................................................ 0.037
Emergency Room.......................................... 0.166
Blood and Blood Products................................ 0.309
Other Services.......................................... 0.352
Labor & Delivery........................................ 0.363
Inhalation Therapy...................................... 0.163
Anesthesia.............................................. 0.080
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since FY 2009, the relative weights have been based on 100 percent
cost weights based on our MS-DRG grouping system.
When we recalibrated the DRG weights for previous years, we set a
threshold of 10 cases as the minimum number of cases required to
compute a reasonable weight. We are proposing to use that same case
threshold in recalibrating the MS-DRG relative weights for FY 2018.
Using data from the FY 2016 MedPAR file, there were 10 MS-DRGs that
contain fewer than 10 cases. For FY 2018, because we do not have
sufficient MedPAR data to set accurate and stable cost relative weights
for these low-volume MS-DRGs, we are proposing to compute proposed
relative weights for the low-volume MS-DRGs by adjusting their final FY
2017 relative weights by the percentage change in the average weight of
the cases in other MS-DRGs. The crosswalk table is shown:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low[dash]volume MS-DRG MS-DRG title Crosswalk to MS-DRG
------------------------------------------------------------------------
016................... Autologous bone Final FY 2017 relative
marrow transplant w weight (adjusted by
CC/MCC. percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
017................... Autologous bone Final FY 2017 relative
marrow transplant w/ weight (adjusted by
o CC/MCC. percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
789................... Neonates, Died or Final FY 2017 relative
Transferred to weight (adjusted by
Another Acute Care percent change in
Facility. average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
790................... Extreme Immaturity or Final FY 2017 relative
Respiratory Distress weight (adjusted by
Syndrome, Neonate. percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
791................... Prematurity with Final FY 2017 relative
Major Problems. weight (adjusted by
percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
792................... Prematurity without Final FY 2017 relative
Major Problems. weight (adjusted by
percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
793................... Full-Term Neonate Final FY 2017 relative
with Major Problems. weight (adjusted by
percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
794................... Neonate with Other Final FY 2017 relative
Significant Problems. weight (adjusted by
percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
795................... Normal Newborn....... Final FY 2017 relative
weight (adjusted by
percent change in
average weight of the
cases in other MS-DRGs).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
H. Proposed Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies for FY
2018
1. Background
Sections 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L) of the Act establish a process of
identifying and ensuring adequate payment for new medical services and
technologies (sometimes collectively referred to in this section as
``new technologies'') under the IPPS. Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vi) of the
Act specifies that a medical service or technology will be considered
new if it meets criteria established by the Secretary after notice and
opportunity for public comment. Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act
specifies that a new medical service or technology may be considered
for new technology add-on payment if, based on the estimated costs
incurred with respect to discharges involving such service or
technology, the DRG prospective payment rate otherwise applicable to
such discharges under this subsection is inadequate. We note that,
beginning with discharges occurring in FY 2008, CMS transitioned from
CMS-DRGs to MS-DRGs.
The regulations at 42 CFR 412.87 implement these provisions and
specify three criteria for a new medical service or technology to
receive the additional payment: (1) The medical service or technology
must be new; (2) the medical service or technology must be costly such
that the DRG rate otherwise
[[Page 19869]]
applicable to discharges involving the medical service or technology is
determined to be inadequate; and (3) the service or technology must
demonstrate a substantial clinical improvement over existing services
or technologies. Below we highlight some of the major statutory and
regulatory provisions relevant to the new technology add-on payment
criteria, as well as other information. For a complete discussion on
the new technology add-on payment criteria, we refer readers to the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51572 through 51574).
Under the first criterion, as reflected in Sec. 412.87(b)(2), a
specific medical service or technology will be considered ``new'' for
purposes of new medical service or technology add-on payments until
such time as Medicare data are available to fully reflect the cost of
the technology in the MS-DRG weights through recalibration. We note
that we do not consider a service or technology to be new if it is
substantially similar to one or more existing technologies. That is,
even if a technology receives a new FDA approval or clearance, it may
not necessarily be considered ``new'' for purposes of new technology
add-on payments if it is ``substantially similar'' to a technology that
was approved or cleared by FDA and has been on the market for more than
2 to 3 years. In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43813 through 43814), we established criteria for evaluating whether a
new technology is substantially similar to an existing technology,
specifically: (1) Whether a product uses the same or a similar
mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome; (2) whether a
product is assigned to the same or a different MS-DRG; and (3) whether
the new use of the technology involves the treatment of the same or
similar type of disease and the same or similar patient population. If
a technology meets all three of these criteria, it would be considered
substantially similar to an existing technology and would not be
considered ``new'' for purposes of new technology add-on payments. For
a detailed discussion of the criteria for substantial similarity, we
refer readers to the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47351 through
47352), and the FY 2010 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43813 through
43814).
Under the second criterion, Sec. 412.87(b)(3) further provides
that, to be eligible for the add-on payment for new medical services or
technologies, the MS-DRG prospective payment rate otherwise applicable
to discharges involving the new medical service or technology must be
assessed for adequacy. Under the cost criterion, consistent with the
formula specified in section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act, to assess
the adequacy of payment for a new technology paid under the applicable
MS-DRG prospective payment rate, we evaluate whether the charges for
cases involving the new technology exceed certain threshold amounts.
Table 10 that was released with the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
contains the final thresholds that we used to evaluate applications for
new medical service and new technology add-on payments for FY 2018. We
refer readers to the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Home-Page-Items/FY2017-IPPS-Final-Rule-Tables.html to download and
view Table 10.
In the September 7, 2001 final rule that established the new
technology add-on payment regulations (66 FR 46917), we discussed the
issue of whether the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule at 45 CFR parts 160 and 164 applies to claims
information that providers submit with applications for new medical
service and new technology add-on payments. We refer readers to the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51573) for complete information on
this issue.
Under the third criterion, Sec. 412.87(b)(1) of our existing
regulations provides that a new technology is an appropriate candidate
for an additional payment when it represents an advance that
substantially improves, relative to technologies previously available,
the diagnosis or treatment of Medicare beneficiaries. For example, a
new technology represents a substantial clinical improvement when it
reduces mortality, decreases the number of hospitalizations or
physician visits, or reduces recovery time compared to the technologies
previously available. (We refer readers to the September 7, 2001 final
rule for a more detailed discussion of this criterion (66 FR 46902).)
The new medical service or technology add-on payment policy under
the IPPS provides additional payments for cases with relatively high
costs involving eligible new medical services or technologies, while
preserving some of the incentives inherent under an average-based
prospective payment system. The payment mechanism is based on the cost
to hospitals for the new medical service or technology. Under Sec.
412.88, if the costs of the discharge (determined by applying cost-to-
charge ratios (CCRs) as described in Sec. 412.84(h)) exceed the full
DRG payment (including payments for IME and DSH, but excluding outlier
payments), Medicare will make an add-on payment equal to the lesser of:
(1) 50 percent of the estimated costs of the new technology or medical
service (if the estimated costs for the case including the new
technology or medical service exceed Medicare's payment); or (2) 50
percent of the difference between the full DRG payment and the
hospital's estimated cost for the case. Unless the discharge qualifies
for an outlier payment, the additional Medicare payment is limited to
the full MS-DRG payment plus 50 percent of the estimated costs of the
new technology or new medical service.
Section 503(d)(2) of Public Law 108-173 provides that there shall
be no reduction or adjustment in aggregate payments under the IPPS due
to add-on payments for new medical services and technologies.
Therefore, in accordance with section 503(d)(2) of Public Law 108-173,
add-on payments for new medical services or technologies for FY 2005
and later years have not been subjected to budget neutrality.
In the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48561 through 48563), we
modified our regulations at Sec. 412.87 to codify our longstanding
practice of how CMS evaluates the eligibility criteria for new medical
service or technology add-on payment applications. That is, we first
determine whether a medical service or technology meets the newness
criterion, and only if so, do we then make a determination as to
whether the technology meets the cost threshold and represents a
substantial clinical improvement over existing medical services or
technologies. We amended Sec. 412.87(c) to specify that all applicants
for new technology add-on payments must have FDA approval or clearance
for their new medical service or technology by July 1 of each year
prior to the beginning of the fiscal year that the application is being
considered.
The Council on Technology and Innovation (CTI) at CMS oversees the
agency's cross-cutting priority on coordinating coverage, coding and
payment processes for Medicare with respect to new technologies and
procedures, including new drug therapies, as well as promoting the
exchange of information on new technologies and medical services
between CMS and other entities. The CTI, composed of senior CMS staff
and clinicians, was established under section 942(a) of Public Law 108-
173. The Council is co-chaired by the Director of the Center for
Clinical Standards and Quality (CCSQ) and the Director of the Center
for Medicare
[[Page 19870]]
(CM), who is also designated as the CTI's Executive Coordinator.
The specific processes for coverage, coding, and payment are
implemented by CM, CCSQ, and the local Medicare Administrative
Contractors (MACs) (in the case of local coverage and payment
decisions). The CTI supplements, rather than replaces, these processes
by working to assure that all of these activities reflect the agency-
wide priority to promote high-quality, innovative care. At the same
time, the CTI also works to streamline, accelerate, and improve
coordination of these processes to ensure that they remain up to date
as new issues arise. To achieve its goals, the CTI works to streamline
and create a more transparent coding and payment process, improve the
quality of medical decisions, and speed patient access to effective new
treatments. It is also dedicated to supporting better decisions by
patients and doctors in using Medicare-covered services through the
promotion of better evidence development, which is critical for
improving the quality of care for Medicare beneficiaries.
To improve the understanding of CMS' processes for coverage,
coding, and payment and how to access them, the CTI has developed an
``Innovator's Guide'' to these processes. The intent is to consolidate
this information, much of which is already available in a variety of
CMS documents and in various places on the CMS Web site, in a user-
friendly format. This guide was published in 2010 and is available on
the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/CouncilonTechInnov/Downloads/InnovatorsGuide5_10_10.pdf.
As we indicated in the FY 2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48554), we
invite any product developers or manufacturers of new medical services
or technologies to contact the agency early in the process of product
development if they have questions or concerns about the evidence that
would be needed later in the development process for the agency's
coverage decisions for Medicare.
The CTI aims to provide useful information on its activities and
initiatives to stakeholders, including Medicare beneficiaries,
advocates, medical product manufacturers, providers, and health policy
experts. Stakeholders with further questions about Medicare's coverage,
coding, and payment processes, or who want further guidance about how
they can navigate these processes, can contact the CTI at
[email protected].
We note that applicants for add-on payments for new medical
services or technologies for FY 2019 must submit a formal request,
including a full description of the clinical applications of the
medical service or technology and the results of any clinical
evaluations demonstrating that the new medical service or technology
represents a substantial clinical improvement, along with a significant
sample of data to demonstrate that the medical service or technology
meets the high-cost threshold. Complete application information, along
with final deadlines for submitting a full application, will be posted
as it becomes available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/newtech.html. To allow interested parties to identify the new medical
services or technologies under review before the publication of the
proposed rule for FY 2019, the CMS Web site also will post the tracking
forms completed by each applicant.
2. Public Input Before Publication of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
on Add-On Payments
Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(viii) of the Act, as amended by section
503(b)(2) of Public Law 108-173, provides for a mechanism for public
input before publication of a notice of proposed rulemaking regarding
whether a medical service or technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement or advancement. The process for evaluating new
medical service and technology applications requires the Secretary to--
Provide, before publication of a proposed rule, for public
input regarding whether a new service or technology represents an
advance in medical technology that substantially improves the diagnosis
or treatment of Medicare beneficiaries;
Make public and periodically update a list of the services
and technologies for which applications for add-on payments are
pending;
Accept comments, recommendations, and data from the public
regarding whether a service or technology represents a substantial
clinical improvement; and
Provide, before publication of a proposed rule, for a
meeting at which organizations representing hospitals, physicians,
manufacturers, and any other interested party may present comments,
recommendations, and data regarding whether a new medical service or
technology represents a substantial clinical improvement to the
clinical staff of CMS.
In order to provide an opportunity for public input regarding add-
on payments for new medical services and technologies for FY 2018 prior
to publication of the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we published
a notice in the Federal Register on November 9, 2016 (81 FR 78814), and
held a town hall meeting at the CMS Headquarters Office in Baltimore,
MD, on February 14, 2017. In the announcement notice for the meeting,
we stated that the opinions and presentations provided during the
meeting would assist us in our evaluations of applications by allowing
public discussion of the substantial clinical improvement criterion for
each of the FY 2018 new medical service and technology add-on payment
applications before the publication of the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule.
Approximately 66 individuals registered to attend the town hall
meeting in person, while additional individuals listened over an open
telephone line. We also live-streamed the town hall meeting and posted
the town hall on the CMS YouTube Web page at: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=9niqfxXe4oA&t=217s. We considered each applicant's presentation
made at the town hall meeting, as well as written comments submitted on
the applications that were received by the due date of February 24,
2017, in our evaluation of the new technology add-on payment
applications for FY 2018 in this proposed rule.
In response to the published notice and the February 14, 2017 New
Technology Town Hall meeting, we received written comments regarding
the applications for FY 2018 new technology add-on payments. We note
that we do not summarize comments that are unrelated to the
``substantial clinical improvement'' criterion. As explained above and
in the Federal Register notice announcing the New Technology Town Hall
meeting (81 FR78814 through 78816), the purpose of the meeting was
specifically to discuss the substantial clinical improvement criterion
in regard to pending new technology add-on payment applications for FY
2018. Therefore, we are not summarizing these comments in this proposed
rule. We summarize below a general comment that does not relate to a
specific application for FY 2018 new technology add-on payments. We
also summarize comments regarding individual applications, or, if
applicable, indicate that there were no comments received in section
II.H.5. of the preamble of this proposed rule at the end of each
discussion of the individual applications.
[[Page 19871]]
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS: (1) Prohibit local
MACs from denying coverage and add-on payments for new medical services
or technologies approved by the Secretary; and (2) broaden the criteria
applied in making substantial clinical improvement determinations to
require, in addition to existing criteria, that the Secretary consider
whether the new technology or medical service meets one or more of the
following criteria: (a) Results in a reduction of the length of a
hospital stay; (b) improves patient quality of life; (c) creates long-
term clinical efficiencies in treatment; (d) addresses patient-centered
objectives as defined by the Secretary; or (e) meets such other
criteria as the Secretary may specify.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's comments and will consider
them in future rulemaking.
3. ICD-10-PCS Section ``X'' Codes for Certain New Medical Services and
Technologies
As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH final rule (80 FR 49434), the
ICD-10-PCS includes a new section containing the new Section ``X''
codes, which began being used with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2015. Decisions regarding changes to ICD-10-PCS Section
``X'' codes will be handled in the same manner as the decisions for all
of the other ICD-10-PCS code changes. That is, proposals to create,
delete, or revise Section ``X'' codes under the ICD-10-PCS structure
will be referred to the ICD-10 Coordination and Maintenance Committee.
In addition, several of the new medical services and technologies that
have been, or may be, approved for new technology add-on payments may
now, and in the future, be assigned a Section ``X'' code within the
structure of the ICD-10-PCS. We posted ICD-10-PCS Guidelines on the CMS
Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/2016-ICD-10-PCS-and-GEMs.html, including guidelines for ICD-10-PCS Section ``X'' codes.
We encourage providers to view the material provided on ICD-10-PCS
Section ``X'' codes.
4. Proposal To Revise the Reference to an ICD-9-CM Code in Sec.
412.87(b)(2) of the Regulations
The existing regulations under Sec. 412.87(b)(2) state that a
medical service or technology may be considered new within 2 or 3 years
after the point at which data begin to become available reflecting the
ICD-9-CM code assigned to the new service or technology (depending on
when a new code is assigned and data on the new service or technology
become available for DRG recalibration). After CMS has recalibrated the
DRGs, based on available data, to reflect the costs of an otherwise new
medical service or technology, the medical service or technology will
no longer be considered ``new'' under the criterion of this section.
As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH final rule (80 FR 49454),
HIPAA covered entities are required, as of October 1, 2015, to use the
ICD-10 coding system (ICD-10-PCS codes for procedures and ICD-10-CM
codes for diagnoses), instead of the ICD-9-CM coding system, to report
diagnoses and procedures for Medicare hospital inpatient services
provided to Medicare beneficiaries as classified under the MS-DRG
system and paid for under the IPPS. The language in Sec. 412.87(b)(2)
only references an ``ICD-9-CM code.'' Therefore, we are proposing to
revise the regulations at Sec. 412.87(b)(2) to replace the term ``ICD-
9-CM code'' with the term ``inpatient hospital code,'' as defined in
section 1886(d)(5)(K)(iii) of the Act. Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(iii) of
the Act defines an ``inpatient hospital code'' as any code that is used
with respect to inpatient hospital services for which payment may be
made under this subsection of the Act and includes an alphanumeric code
issued under the International Classification of Diseases, 9th
Revision, Clinical Modification (``ICD-9-CM'') and its subsequent
revisions. We are inviting public comments on our proposal.
5. Proposed FY 2018 Status of Technologies Approved for FY 2017 Add-On
Payments
a. CardioMEMSTM HF (Heart Failure) Monitoring System
CardioMEMS, Inc. submitted an application for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2015 for the CardioMEMSTM HF (Heart Failure)
Monitoring System, which is an implantable hemodynamic monitoring
system comprised of an implantable sensor/monitor placed in the distal
pulmonary artery. Pulmonary artery hemodynamic monitoring is used in
the management of heart failure. The CardioMEMSTM HF
Monitoring System measures multiple pulmonary artery pressure
parameters for an ambulatory patient to measure and transmit data via a
wireless sensor to a secure Web site.
The CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System utilizes
radiofrequency (RF) energy to power the sensor and to measure pulmonary
artery (PA) pressure and consists of three components: An Implantable
Sensor with Delivery Catheter, an External Electronics Unit, and a
Pulmonary Artery Pressure Database. The system provides the physician
with the patient's PA pressure waveform (including systolic, diastolic,
and mean pressures) as well as heart rate. The sensor is permanently
implanted in the distal pulmonary artery using transcatheter techniques
in the catheterization laboratory where it is calibrated using a Swan-
Ganz catheter. PA pressures are transmitted by the patient at home in a
supine position on a padded antenna, pushing one button which records
an 18-second continuous waveform. The data also can be recorded from
the hospital, physician's office, or clinic.
The hemodynamic data, including a detailed waveform, are
transmitted to a secure Web site that serves as the Pulmonary Artery
Pressure Database, so that information regarding PA pressure is
available to the physician or nurse at any time via the Internet.
Interpretation of trend data allows the clinician to make adjustments
to therapy and can be used along with heart failure signs and symptoms
to adjust medications.
The applicant received FDA approval on May 28, 2014. After
evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical improvement
criteria for new technology add-on payments for the
CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System and consideration of the
public comments we received in response to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule, we approved the CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring
System for new technology add-on payments for FY 2015 (79 FR 49940).
Cases involving the CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System that
are eligible for new technology add-on payments are identified by
either ICD-10-PCS procedure code 02HQ30Z (Insertion of pressure sensor
monitoring device into right pulmonary artery, percutaneous approach)
or ICD-10-PCS procedure code 02HR30Z (Insertion of pressure sensor
monitoring device into left pulmonary artery, percutaneous approach).
With the new technology add-on payment application, the applicant
stated that the total operating cost of the CardioMEMSTM HF
Monitoring System is $17,750. Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit new
technology add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the average
cost of the device or 50 percent of the costs in excess of the MS-DRG
payment for the case. As a result, the maximum new technology add-on
payment for a case involving the CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring
System is $8,875. We refer the reader to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (79 FR 49937) for complete details on the
CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System.
[[Page 19872]]
Our policy is that a medical service or technology may be
considered new within 2 or 3 years after the point at which data begin
to become available reflecting the inpatient hospital code assigned to
the new service or technology. Our practice has been to begin and end
new technology add-on payments on the basis of a fiscal year, and we
have generally followed a guideline that uses a 6-month window before
and after the start of the fiscal year to determine whether to extend
the new technology add-on payment for an additional fiscal year. In
general, we extend add-on payments for an additional year only if the
3-year anniversary date of the product's entry onto the U.S. market
occurs in the latter half of the fiscal year (70 FR 47362).
With regard to the newness criterion for the
CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System, we considered the
beginning of the newness period to commence when the
CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System was approved by the FDA on
May 28, 2014. The 3-year anniversary date of the entry of the
CardioMEMSTM HF Monitoring System onto the U.S. market (May
28, 2017) will occur prior to the beginning of FY 2018. Therefore, we
are proposing to discontinue new technology add-on payments for this
technology for FY 2018. We are inviting public comments on this
proposal.
b. Defitelio[supreg] (Defibrotide)
Jazz Pharmaceuticals submitted an application for new technology
add-on payments for FY 2017 for defibrotide (Defitelio[supreg]), a
treatment for patients diagnosed with hepatic veno-occlusive disease
(VOD) with evidence of multiorgan dysfunction. VOD, also known as
sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (SOS), is a potentially life-
threatening complication of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
(HSCT), with an incidence rate of 8 percent to 15 percent. Diagnoses of
VOD range in severity from what has been classically defined as a
disease limited to the liver (mild) and reversible, to a severe
syndrome associated with multi-organ dysfunction or failure and death.
Patients treated with HSCT who develop VOD with multi-organ failure
face an immediate risk of death, with a mortality rate of more than 80
percent when only supportive care is used. The applicant asserted that
Defitelio[supreg] improves the survival rate of patients diagnosed with
VOD with multi-organ failure by 23 percent.
Defitelio[supreg] was granted Orphan Drug Designation for the
treatment of VOD in 2003 and for the prevention of VOD in 2007. It has
been available to patients as an investigational drug through an
expanded access program since 2007. The applicant's New Drug
Application (NDA) for Defitelio[supreg] received FDA approval on March
30, 2016. The applicant confirmed that Defitelio[supreg] was not
available on the U.S. market as of the FDA NDA approval date of March
30, 2016. According to the applicant, commercial packaging could not be
completed until the label for Defitelio[supreg] was finalized with FDA
approval, and that commercial shipments of Defitelio[supreg] to
hospitals and treatment centers began on April 4, 2016. Therefore, we
agreed that, based on this information, the newness period for
Defitelio[supreg] begins on April 4, 2016, the date of its first
commercial availability.
The applicant received unique ICD-10-PCS procedure codes to
describe the use of Defitelio[supreg] that became effective October 1,
2016. The approved procedure codes are XW03392 (Introduction of
defibrotide sodium anticoagulant into peripheral vein, percutaneous
approach) and XW04392 (Introduction of defibrotide sodium anticoagulant
into central vein, percutaneous approach).
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for
Defitelio[supreg] and consideration of the public comments we received
in response to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we approved
Defitelio[supreg] for new technology add-on payments for FY 2017 (81 FR
56906). With the new technology add-on payment application, the
applicant estimated that the average Medicare beneficiary would require
a dosage of 25 mg/kg/day for a minimum of 21 days of treatment. The
recommended dose is 6.25 mg/kg given as a 2-hour intravenous infusion
every 6 hours. Dosing should be based on a patient's baseline body
weight, which is assumed to be 70 kg for an average adult patient. All
vials contain 200 mg at a cost of $825 per vial. Therefore, we
determined that cases involving the use of the Defitelio[supreg]
technology would incur an average cost per case of $151,800 (70 kg
adult x 25 mg/kg/day x 21 days = 36,750 mg per patient/200 mg vial =
184 vials per patient x $825 per vial = $151,800). Under Sec.
412.88(a)(2), we limit new technology add-on payments to the lesser of
50 percent of the average cost of the technology or 50 percent of the
costs in excess of the MS-DRG payment for the case. As a result, the
maximum new technology add-on payment amount for a case involving the
use of Defitelio[supreg] is $75,900.
Because the 3-year anniversary date of the entry of
Defitelio[supreg] onto the U.S. market will occur after FY 2018 (April
4, 2019), we are proposing to continue new technology add-on payments
for this technology for FY 2018. The maximum payment for a case
involving Defitelio[supreg] would remain at $75,900 for FY 2018. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal to continue new technology
add-on payments for Defitelio[supreg].
c. GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] Iliac Branch Endoprosthesis (Gore IBE
Device)
W. L. Gore and Associates, Inc. submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for the GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] Iliac
Branch Endoprosthesis (GORE IBE device) for FY 2017. The device
consists of two components: The Iliac Branch Component (IBC) and the
Internal Iliac Component (IIC). The applicant indicated that each
endoprosthesis is pre-mounted on a customized delivery and deployment
system allowing for controlled endovascular delivery via bilateral
femoral access. According to the applicant, the device is designed to
be used in conjunction with the GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] AAA
Endoprosthesis for the treatment of patients requiring repair of common
iliac or aortoiliac aneurysms. When deployed, the GORE IBE device
excludes the common iliac aneurysm from systemic blood flow, while
preserving blood flow in the external and internal iliac arteries.
With regard to the newness criterion, the applicant received pre-
market FDA approval of the GORE IBE device on February 29, 2016. The
applicant submitted a request for an unique ICD-10-PCS procedure code
and was granted approval for the following procedure codes to describe
to use of this technology: 04VC0EZ (Restriction of right common iliac
artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device, one or two
arteries, open approach); 04VC0FZ (Restriction of right common iliac
artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device, three or more
arteries, open approach); 04VC3EZ (Restriction of right common iliac
artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device, one or two
arteries, percutaneous approach); 04VC3FZ (Restriction of right common
iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device, three or
more arteries, percutaneous approach); 04VC4EZ (Restriction of right
common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device,
one or two arteries, percutaneous approach); 04VC4FZ (Restriction of
right common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal
device, three or more, arteries, percutaneous endoscopic, approach);
04VD0EZ (Restriction of left
[[Page 19873]]
common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device,
one or two arteries, open approach); 04VD0FZ (Restriction of left
common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated, intraluminal device,
three or more arteries, open approach); 04VD3EZ (Restriction of left
common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal device,
one or two arteries, percutaneous approach); 04VD3FZ (Restriction of
left common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated intraluminal
device, three or more arteries, percutaneous approach); 04VD4EZ
(Restriction of left common iliac artery with branched or fenestrated
intraluminal device, one or two arteries, percutaneous endoscopic
approach); and 04VD4FZ (Restriction of left common iliac artery with
branched or fenestrated intraluminal device, three or more arteries,
percutaneous endoscopic approach). These new ICD-10-PCS procedure codes
became effective on October 1, 2016.
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for the GORE
IBE device and consideration of the public comments we received in
response to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we approved the
GORE IBE device for new technology add-on payments for FY 2017 (81 FR
56909). With the new technology add-on payment application, the
applicant indicated that the total operating cost of the GORE IBE
device is $10,500. Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit new technology
add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the average cost of the
device or 50 percent of the costs in excess of the MS-DRG payment for
the case. As a result, the maximum new technology add-on payment for a
case involving the GORE IBE device is $5,250.
With regard to the newness criterion for the GORE IBE device, we
considered the beginning of the newness period to commence when the
GORE IBE device received FDA approval on February 29, 2016. Because the
3-year anniversary date of the entry of the GORE IBE device onto the
U.S. market will occur after FY 2018 (February 28, 2019), we are
proposing to continue new technology add-on payments for this
technology for FY 2018. The maximum payment for a case involving the
GORE IBE device would remain at $5,250 for FY 2018. We are inviting
public comments on our proposal to continue new technology add-on
payments for the GORE IBE device.
d. Praxbind[supreg] Idarucizumab
Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc. submitted an application
for new technology add-on payments for FY 2017 for Praxbind[supreg]
Idarucizumab (Idarucizumab), a product developed as an antidote to
reverse the effects of PRADAXAR (Dabigatran), which is also
manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Dabigatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor currently indicated
to: (1) Reduce the risk of stroke and systemic embolism in patients who
have been diagnosed with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF); (2)
treat deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) in
patients who have been administered a parenteral anticoagulant for 5 to
10 days; and (3) reduce the risk of recurrence of DVT and PE in
patients who have been previously diagnosed with NVAF. Currently,
unlike the anticoagulant Warfarin, there is no specific way to reverse
the anticoagulant effect of Dabigatran in the event of a major bleeding
episode. Idarucizumab is a humanized fragment antigen binding (Fab)
molecule, which specifically binds to Dabigatran to deactivate the
anticoagulant effect, thereby allowing thrombin to act in blood clot
formation. The applicant stated that Idarucizumab represents a new
pharmacologic approach to neutralizing the specific anticoagulant
effect of Dabigatran in emergency situations.
Idarucizumab was approved by the FDA on October 16, 2015. Based on
the FDA indication for Idarucizumab, the product can be used in the
treatment of patients who have been diagnosed with NVAF and
administered Dabigatran to reverse life-threatening bleeding events, or
who require emergency surgery or medical procedures and rapid reversal
of the anticoagulant effects of Dabigatran is necessary and desired.
The applicant received unique ICD-10-PCS procedure codes that
became effective October 1, 2016, to describe the use of this
technology. The approved procedure codes are XW03331 (Introduction of
Idarucizumab, Dabigatran reversal agent into peripheral vein,
percutaneous approach, New Technology Group 1) and XW04331
(Introduction of Idarucizumab, Dabigatran reversal agent into central
vein, percutaneous approach, New Technology Group 1).
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for
Idarucizumab and consideration of the public comments we received in
response to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we approved
Idarucizumab for new technology add-on payments for FY 2017 (81 FR
56897). With the new technology add-on payment application, the
applicant indicated that the total operating cost of Idarucizumab is
$3,500. Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit new technology add-on
payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the average cost of the
technology or 50 percent of the costs in excess of the MS-DRG payment
for the case. As a result, the maximum new technology add-on payment
for a case involving Idarucizumab is $1,750.
With regard to the newness criterion for Idarucizumab, we
considered the beginning of the newness period to commence when
Idarucizumab was approved by the FDA on October 16, 2015. Because the
3-year anniversary date of the entry of Idarucizumab onto the U.S.
market will occur after FY 2018 (October 15, 2018), we are proposing to
continue new technology add-on payments for this technology for FY
2018. The maximum payment for a case involving Idarucizumab would
remain at $1,750 for FY 2018. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal to continue new technology add-on payments for Idarucizumab.
e. Lutonix[supreg] Drug Coated Balloon PTA Catheter and
In.PACTTM AdmiralTM Paclitaxel Coated
Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA) Balloon Catheter
Two manufacturers, CR Bard Inc. and Medtronic, submitted
applications for new technology add-on payments for FY 2016 for
LUTONIX[supreg] Drug-Coated Balloon (DCB) Percutaneous Transluminal
Angioplasty (PTA) Catheter (LUTONIX[supreg]) and IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM Paclitaxel Coated Percutaneous Transluminal
Angioplasty (PTA) Balloon Catheter (IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM), respectively. Both of these technologies are
drug-coated balloon angioplasty treatments for patients diagnosed with
peripheral artery disease (PAD). Typical treatments for patients with
PAD include angioplasty, stenting, atherectomy and vascular bypass
surgery. PAD most commonly occurs in the femoropopliteal segment of the
peripheral arteries, is associated with significant levels of morbidity
and impairment in quality of life, and requires treatment to reduce
symptoms and prevent or treat ischemic events.\1\
[[Page 19874]]
Treatment options for symptomatic PAD include noninvasive treatment
such as medication and life-style modification (for example, exercise
programs, diet, and smoking cessation) and invasive options, which
include endovascular treatment and surgical bypass. The 2013 American
College of Cardiology and American Heart Association (ACC/AHA)
guidelines for the management of PAD recommend endovascular therapy as
the first-line treatment for femoropopliteal artery lesions in patients
suffering from claudication (Class I, Level A recommendation).\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Tepe G, Zeller T, Albrecht T, Heller S, Schwarzwalder U,
Beregi JP, Claussen CD, Oldenburg A, Scheller B, Speck U., Local
delivery of paclitaxel to inhibit restenosis during angioplasty of
the leg, N Engl J Med 2008, 358: 689-99.
\2\ Anderson JL, Halperin JL, Albert NM, Bozkurt B, Brindis RG,
Curtis LH, DeMets D, Guyton RA, Hochman JS, Kovacs RJ, Ohman EM,
Pressler SJ, Sellke FW, Shen WK., Management of patients with
peripheral artery disease (compilation of 2005 and 2011 ACCF/AHA
guideline recommendations): A report of the American College of
Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on
Practice Guidelines, J Am Coll Cardiol 2013, 61:1555-70. Available
at: //dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2013.01.004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to both applicants, LUTONIX[supreg] and
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM are the first drug coated
balloons that can be used for treatment of patients who are diagnosed
with PAD. In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we stated that
because cases eligible for the two devices would group to the same MS-
DRGs and we believe that these devices are substantially similar to
each other (that is, they are intended to treat the same or similar
disease in the same or similar patient population and are purposed to
achieve the same therapeutic outcome using the same or similar
mechanism of action), we evaluated both technologies as one application
for new technology add-on payments under the IPPS. The applicants
submitted separate cost and clinical data, and we reviewed and
discussed each set of data separately. However, we made one
determination regarding new technology add-on payments that applied to
both devices. We believe that this is consistent with our policy
statements in the past regarding substantial similarity. Specifically,
we have noted that approval of new technology add-on payments would
extend to all technologies that are substantially similar (66 FR
46915), and we believe that continuing our current practice of
extending a new technology add-on payment without a further application
from the manufacturer of the competing product or a specific finding on
cost and clinical improvement if we make a finding of substantial
similarity among two products is the better policy because we avoid--
Creating manufacturer-specific codes for substantially
similar products;
Requiring different manufacturers of substantially similar
products from having to submit separate new technology add-on payment
applications;
Having to compare the merits of competing technologies on
the basis of substantial clinical improvement; and
Bestowing an advantage to the first applicant representing
a particular new technology to receive approval (70 FR 47351).
CR Bard, Inc. received FDA approval for LUTONIX[supreg] on October
9, 2014. Commercial sales in the U.S. market began on October 10, 2014.
Medtronic received FDA approval for IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM on December 30, 2014. Commercial sales in the U.S.
market began on January 29, 2015.
In accordance with our policy, we stated in the FY 2016 IPPS\LTCH
final rule (80 FR 49463) that we believe it is appropriate to use the
earliest market availability date submitted as the beginning of the
newness period. Accordingly, for both devices, we stated that the
beginning of the newness period will be October 10, 2014.
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for the
LUTONIX[supreg] and IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM
technologies and consideration of the public comments we received in
response to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we approved the
LUTONIX[supreg] and IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM
technologies for new technology add-on payments for FY 2016 (80 FR
49469). Cases involving the LUTONIX[supreg] and IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM technologies that are eligible for new technology
add-on payments are identified using one of the ICD-10-PCS procedure
codes in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-10-PCS code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
047K041................... Dilation of right femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047K0D1................... Dilation of right femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, open approach.
047K0Z1................... Dilation of right femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047K341................... Dilation of right femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047K3D1................... Dilation of right femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous approach.
047K3Z1................... Dilation of right femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047K441................... Dilation of right femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047K4D1................... Dilation of right femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous endoscopic approach.
047K4Z1................... Dilation of right femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047L041................... Dilation of left femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047L0D1................... Dilation of left femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, open approach.
047L0Z1................... Dilation of left femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047L341................... Dilation of left femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047L3D1................... Dilation of left femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous approach.
047L3Z1................... Dilation of left femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047L441................... Dilation of left femoral artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047L4D1................... Dilation of left femoral artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous endoscopic approach.
047L4Z1................... Dilation of left femoral artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047M041................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047M0D1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, open approach.
047M0Z1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery using
drug-coated balloon, open approach.
047M341................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047M3D1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous approach.
047M3Z1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery using
drug-coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047M441................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047M4D1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous endoscopic approach.
[[Page 19875]]
047M4Z1................... Dilation of right popliteal artery using
drug-coated balloon, percutaneous
endoscopic approach.
047N041................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047N0D1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, open approach.
047N0Z1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery using drug-
coated balloon, open approach.
047N341................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047N3D1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous approach.
047N3Z1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous approach.
047N441................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with drug-
eluting intraluminal device using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
047N4D1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery with
intraluminal device using drug-coated
balloon, percutaneous endoscopic approach.
047N4Z1................... Dilation of left popliteal artery using drug-
coated balloon, percutaneous endoscopic
approach.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH final rule (80 FR 49469),
each of the applicants submitted operating costs for its DCB. The
manufacturer of the LUTONIX[supreg] stated that a mean of 1.37 drug-
coated balloons was used during the LEVANT 2 clinical trial. The
acquisition price for the hospital will be $1,900 per drug-coated
balloon, or $2,603 per case (1.37 x $1,900). The applicant projected
that approximately 8,875 cases will involve use of the LUTONIX[supreg]
for FY 2016. The manufacturer for the IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM stated that a mean of 1.4 drug-coated balloons was
used during the IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM DCB arm. The
acquisition price for the hospital will be $1,350 per drug-coated
balloon, or $1,890 per case (1.4 x $1,350). The applicant projected
that approximately 26,000 cases will involve use of the
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM for FY 2016.
For FY 2016, we based the new technology add-on payment for cases
involving these technologies on the weighted average cost of the two
DCBs described by the ICD-10-PCS procedure codes listed above (which
are not manufacturer specific). Because ICD-10 codes are not
manufacturer specific, we cannot set one new technology add-on payment
amount for IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM and a different
new technology add-on payment amount for LUTONIX[supreg]; both
technologies will be captured by using the same ICD-10-PCS procedure
code. As such, we stated that we believe that the use of a weighted
average of the cost of the standard DCBs based on the projected number
of cases involving each technology to determine the maximum new
technology add-on payment would be most appropriate. To compute the
weighted cost average, we summed the total number of projected cases
for each of the applicants, which equaled 34,875 cases (26,000 plus
8,875). We then divided the number of projected cases for each of the
applicants by the total number of cases, which resulted in the
following case-weighted percentages: 25 percent for the LUTONIX[supreg]
and 75 percent for the IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM. We
then multiplied the cost per case for the manufacturer specific DCB by
the case-weighted percentage (0.25 * $2,603 = $662.41 for
LUTONIX[supreg] and 0.75 * $1,890 = $1,409.03 for the
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM). This resulted in a case-
weighted average cost of $2,071.45 for DCBs. Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2),
we limit new technology add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of
the average cost of the device or 50 percent of the costs in excess of
the MS-DRG payment for the case. As a result, the maximum payment for a
case involving the LUTONIX[supreg] or IN.PACTTM
AdmiralTM DCBs is $1,035.72.
With regard to the newness criterion for the LUTONIX[supreg] and
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM technologies, we considered
the beginning of the newness period to commence when LUTONIX[supreg]
gained entry onto the U.S. market on October 10, 2014. As discussed
previously in this section, in general, we extend new technology add-on
payments for an additional year only if the 3-year anniversary date of
the product's entry onto the U.S. market occurs in the latter half of
the upcoming fiscal year. Because the 3-year anniversary date of the
entry of LUTONIX[supreg] onto the U.S. market (October 10, 2017) will
occur in the first half of FY 2018, we are proposing to discontinue new
technology add-on payments for both the LUTONIX[supreg] and
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM technologies for FY 2018. We
are inviting public comments on this proposal.
f. MAGEC[supreg] Spinal Bracing and Distraction System (MAGEC[supreg]
Spine)
Ellipse Technologies, Inc. submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for FY 2017 for the MAGEC[supreg] Spine.
According to the applicant, the MAGEC[supreg] Spine has been developed
for use in the treatment of children diagnosed with severe spinal
deformities, such as scoliosis. The system can be used in the treatment
of skeletally immature patients less than 10 years of age who have been
diagnosed with severe progressive spinal deformities associated with or
at risk of Thoracic Insufficiency Syndrome (TIS).
The MAGEC[supreg] Spine consists of a (spinal growth) rod that can
be lengthened through the use of magnets that are controlled by an
external remote controller (ERC). The rod(s) can be implanted into
children as young as 2 years of age. According to the applicant, use of
the MAGEC[supreg] Spine has proven to be successfully used in the
treatment of patients diagnosed with scoliosis who have not been
responsive to other treatments.
The MAGEC[supreg] Spine initially received FDA clearance for use of
the predicate device, which used a Harrington Rod on February 27, 2014.
The applicant verified that, due to manufacturing delays, the
MAGEC[supreg] Spine was not available for implant until April 1, 2014.
Specifically, the complete MAGEC[supreg] Spine system was produced and
available for shipment for the first implant on April 1, 2014.
Therefore, the newness period for the MAGEC[supreg] Spine began on
April 1, 2014. Subsequent FDA clearance was granted for use of the
modified device, which uses a shorter 70 mm rod on September 18, 2014.
After minor modification of the product, the MAGEC[supreg] Spine
received FDA clearances on March 24, 2015, and May 29, 2015,
respectively.
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for the
MAGEC[supreg] Spine and consideration of the public comments we
received in response to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we
approved the MAGEC[supreg] Spine for new technology add-on payments for
FY 2017 (81 FR 56891). Cases involving the MAGEC[supreg] Spine that are
eligible for new technology add-on payments are identified by ICD-10-
PCS procedure codes XNS0032 (Reposition of lumbar vertebra using
magnetically controlled growth rod(s), open approach); XNS0432
(Reposition of lumbar vertebra using magnetically controlled growth
[[Page 19876]]
rod(s), percutaneous endoscopic approach); XNS3032 (Reposition of
cervical vertebra using magnetically controlled growth rod(s), open
approach); XNS3432 (Reposition of cervical vertebra using magnetically
controlled growth rod(s), percutaneous endoscopic approach); XNS4032
(Reposition of thoracic vertebra using magnetically controlled growth
rod(s), open approach); and XNS4432 (Reposition of thoracic vertebra
using magnetically controlled growth rod(s).
With the new technology add-on payment application, the applicant
stated that the total operating cost of the MAGEC[supreg] Spine was
$17,500 for a single rod and $35,000 for a dual rod. It is historical
practice for CMS to make the new technology add-on payment based on the
average cost of the technology and not the maximum. For example, in the
FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53358), we approved new
technology add-on payments for DIFICIDTM based on the
average dosage of 6.2 days, rather than the maximum 10-day dosage. The
applicant noted that 20 percent of cases use a single rod, while 80
percent of cases use a dual rod. As a result, the weighted average cost
for a single and dual MAGEC[supreg] Spine is $31,500 (((0.2 * $17,500)
+ (0.8 * $35,000))). Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit new technology
add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the average cost of the
device or 50 percent of the costs in excess of the MS-DRG payment for
the case. As a result, the maximum new technology add-on payment for a
case involving the MAGEC[supreg] Spine is $15,750. We refer the reader
to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56888) for complete
details on the MAGEC[supreg] Spine.
With regard to the newness criterion for the MAGEC[supreg] Spine,
we considered the beginning of the newness period to commence when the
MAGEC[supreg] Spine was produced and available for shipment for the
first implant on April 1, 2014. As discussed previously in this
section, in general, we extend new technology add-on payments for an
additional year only if the 3-year anniversary date of the product's
entry onto the U.S. market occurs in the latter half of the upcoming
fiscal year. Because the 3-year anniversary date of the entry of the
MAGEC[supreg] Spine onto the U.S. market (April 1, 2017) will occur
prior to the beginning of FY 2018, we are proposing to discontinue new
technology add-on payments for this technology for FY 2018. We are
inviting public comments on this proposal.
g. Vistogard\TM\ (Uridine Triacetate)
BTG International Inc., submitted an application for new technology
add-on payments for the VistogardTM for FY 2017.
VistogardTM was developed as an antidote to Fluorouracil
toxicity.
Chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is used to treat
specific solid tumors. It acts upon deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and
ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the body, as uracil is a naturally occurring
building block for genetic material. Fluorouracil is a fluorinated
pyrimidine. As a chemotherapy agent, Fluorouracil is absorbed by cells
and causes the cell to metabolize into byproducts that are toxic and
used to destroy cancerous cells. According to the applicant, the
byproducts fluorodoxyuridine monophosphate (F-dUMP) and floxuridine
triphosphate (FUTP) are believed to do the following: (1) Reduce DNA
synthesis; (2) lead to DNA fragmentation; and (3) disrupt RNA
synthesis. Fluorouracil is used to treat a variety of solid tumors such
as colorectal, head and neck, breast, and ovarian cancer. With
different tumor treatments, different dosages, and different dosing
schedules, there is a risk for toxicity in these patients. Patients may
suffer from fluorouracil toxicity/death if 5-FU is delivered in slight
excess or at faster infusion rates than prescribed. The cause of
overdose can happen for a variety of reasons including: Pump
malfunction, incorrect pump programming or miscalculated doses, and
accidental or intentional ingestion.
VistogardTM is an antidote to Fluorouracil toxicity and
is a prodrug of uridine. Once the drug is metabolized into uridine, it
competes with the toxic byproduct FUTP in binding to RNA, thereby
reducing the impact FUTP has on cell death.
The VistogardTM received FDA approval on December 11,
2015. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56910), we stated
that we agreed with the manufacturer that, due to the delay in
availability, the date the newness period begins for
VistogardTM is March 2, 2016, instead of December 11, 2015.
The applicant noted that the VistogardTM is the first
FDA-approved antidote used to reverse fluorouracil toxicity. The
applicant received a unique ICD-10-PCS procedure code that became
effective October 1, 2016, to describe the use of this technology. The
approved procedure code is XW0DX82 (Introduction of Uridine Triacetate
into Mouth and Pharynx, External Approach, New Technology Group 2).
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for
VistogardTM and consideration of the public comments we
received in response to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we
approved VistogardTM for new technology add-on payments for
FY 2017 (81 FR 56912). With the new technology add-on payment
application, the applicant stated that the total operating cost of
VistogardTM is $75,000. Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit
new technology add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the
average cost of the technology or 50 percent of the costs in excess of
the MS-DRG payment for the case. As a result, the maximum new
technology add-on payment for a case involving VistogardTM
is $37,500.
As noted previously, with regard to the newness criterion for the
VistogardTM, we considered the beginning of the newness
period to commence on March 2, 2016. Because the 3-year anniversary
date of the entry of the VistogardTM onto the U.S. market
(March 2, 2019) will occur after FY 2018, we are proposing to continue
new technology add-on payments for this technology for FY 2018. The
maximum payment for a case involving the VistogardTM would
remain at $37,500 for FY 2018. We are inviting public comments on our
proposal to continue new technology add-on payments for the
VistogardTM.
h. Blinatumomab (BLINCYTO[supreg])
Amgen, Inc. submitted an application for new technology add-on
payments for FY 2016 for Blinatumomab (BLINCYTO[supreg]), a bi-specific
T-cell engager (BiTE) used for the treatment of Philadelphia
chromosome-negative (Ph-) relapsed or refractory (R/R) B-cell precursor
acute-lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), which is a rare aggressive cancer
of the blood and bone marrow. Approximately 6,050 individuals are
diagnosed with Ph- R/R B-cell precursor ALL in the United States each
year, and approximately 2,400 individuals, representing 30 percent of
all new cases, are adults. Ph- R/R B-cell precursor ALL occurs when
there are malignant transformations of B-cell or T-cell progenitor
cells, causing an accumulation of lymphoblasts in the blood, bone
marrow, and occasionally throughout the body. As a bi-specific T-cell
engager, the BLINCYTO[supreg] technology attaches to a molecule on the
surface of the tumorous cell, as well as to a molecule on the surface
of normal T-cells, bringing the two into closer proximity and allowing
the normal T-cell to destroy the tumorous cell.
[[Page 19877]]
Specifically, the BLINCYTO[supreg] technology attaches to a cell
identified as CD19, which is present on all of the cells of the
malignant transformations that cause Ph- R/R B-cell precursor ALL and
helps attract the cell into close proximity of the T-cell CD3 with the
intent of getting close enough to allow the T-cell to inject toxins
that destroy the cancerous cell. According to the applicant, the
BLINCYTO[supreg] technology is the first, and the only, bi-specific
CD19-directed CD3 T-cell engager single-agent immunotherapy approved by
the FDA.
BLINCYTO[supreg] is administered as a continuous IV infusion
delivered at a constant flow rate using an infusion pump. A single
cycle of treatment consists of 28 days of continuous infusion, and each
treatment cycle is followed by 2 weeks without treatment prior to
administering any further treatments. A course of treatment would
consist of two phases. Phase 1 consists of initial inductions or
treatments intended to achieve remission followed by additional
inductions and treatments to maintain consolidation; or treatments
given after remission has been achieved to prolong the duration. During
Phase 1 of a single treatment course, up to two cycles of
BLINCYTO[supreg] are administered, and up to three additional cycles
are administered during consolidation. The recommended dosage of
BLINCYTO[supreg] administered during the first cycle of treatment is 9
mcg per day for the first 7 days of treatment. The dosage is then
increased to 28 mcg per day for 3 weeks until completion. During Phase
2 of the treatment course, all subsequent doses are administered as 28
mcg per day throughout the entire duration of the 28-day treatment
period.
With regard to the newness criterion, the BLINCYTO[supreg]
technology received FDA approval on December 3, 2014, for the treatment
of patients diagnosed with Ph- R/R B-cell precursor ALL, and the
product gained entry onto the U.S. market on December 17, 2014.
After evaluation of the newness, costs, and substantial clinical
improvement criteria for new technology add-on payments for
BLINCYTO[supreg] and consideration of the public comments we received
in response to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we approved
BLINCYTO[supreg] for new technology add-on payments for FY 2016 (80 FR
49449). Cases involving BLINCYTO[supreg] that are eligible for new
technology add-on payments are identified using one of the following
ICD-10-PCS procedure codes: XW03351 (Introduction of Blinatumomab
antineoplastic immunotherapy into peripheral vein, percutaneous
approach, New Technology Group 1), or XW04351 (Introduction of
Blinatumomab antineoplastic immunotherapy into central vein,
percutaneous approach, New Technology Group 1).
As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49449),
the applicant recommended that CMS consider and use the cost of the
full 28-day inpatient treatment cycle as the expected length of
treatment when determining the maximum new technology add-on payment
for cases involving the BLINCYTO[supreg], rather than the average cost
of lesser number of days used as other variables. For the reasons
discussed, we disagreed with the applicant and established the maximum
new technology add-on payment amount for a case involving the
BLINCYTO[supreg] technology for FY 2016 using the weighted average of
the cycle 1 and cycle 2 observed treatment length. Specifically, in the
Phase II trial, the most recent data available, 92 patients received
cycle 1 treatment for an average length of 21.2 days, and 52 patients
received cycle 2 treatment for an average length of 10.2 days. The
weighted average of cycle 1 and cycle 2 treatment length is 17 days. We
noted that a small number of patients also received 3 to 5 treatment
cycles. However, based on the data provided, these cases do not appear
to be typical at this point and we excluded them from this calculation.
We noted that, if we included all treatment cycles in this calculation,
the weighted average number of days of treatment is much lower, 10
days. Using the clinical data provided by the applicant, we stated that
we believe setting the maximum new technology add-on payment amount for
a case involving the BLINCYTO[supreg] technology for FY 2016 based on a
17-day length of treatment cycle is representative of historical and
current practice. We also stated that, for FY 2017, if new data on
length of treatment are available, we would consider any such data in
evaluating the maximum new technology add-on payment amount. However,
we did not receive any new data from the applicant to evaluate for FY
2017.
In the application, the applicant estimated that the average
Medicare beneficiary would require a dosage of 9mcg/day for the first 7
days under the first treatment cycle, followed by a dosage of 28mcg/day
for the duration of the treatment cycle, as well as all days included
in subsequent cycles. All vials contain 35mcg at a cost of $3,178.57
per vial. The applicant noted that all vials are single-use. Therefore,
we determined that cases involving the use of the BLINCYTO[supreg]
technology would incur an average cost per case of $54,035.69 (1 vial/
day x 17 days x $3,178.57/vial). Under Sec. 412.88(a)(2), we limit new
technology add-on payments to the lesser of 50 percent of the average
cost of the technology or 50 percent of the costs in excess of the MS-
DRG payment for the case. As a result, the maximum new technology add-
on payment amount for a case involving the use of the BLINCYTO[supreg]
is $27,017.85.
With regard to the newness criterion for BLINCYTO[supreg], we
consider the beginning of the newness period to commence when the
product gained entry onto the U.S. market on December 17, 2014. As
discussed previously in this section, in general, we extend new
technology add-on payments for an additional year only if the 3-year
anniversary date of the product's entry onto the U.S. market occurs in
the latter half of the upcoming fiscal year. Because the 3-year
anniversary date of the entry of the BLINCYTO[supreg] onto the U.S.
market will occur in the first half of FY 2018 (December 17, 2017), we
are proposing to discontinue new technology add-on payments for this
technology for FY 2018. We are inviting public comments on this
proposal.
6. FY 2018 Applications for New Technology Add-On Payments
We received nine applications for new technology add-on payments
for FY 2018. In accordance with the regulations under Sec. 412.87(c),
applicants for new technology add-on payments must have received FDA
approval or clearance by July 1 of the year prior to the beginning of
the fiscal year that the application is being considered. Three
applicants withdrew their applications prior to the issuance of this
proposed rule. We are addressing the remaining six applications below.
a. Bezlotoxumab (ZINPLAVATM)
Merck & Co., Inc. submitted an application for new technology add-
on payments for ZINPLAVATM for FY 2018.
ZINPLAVATM is indicated for use in adult patients who are
receiving antibacterial drug treatment for a diagnosis of Clostridium
difficile infection (CDI) who are at high risk for CDI recurrence.
ZINPLAVATM is not indicated for the treatment of the
presenting episode of CDI and is not an antibacterial drug.
Clostridium difficile (C-diff) is a disease-causing anaerobic,
spore forming bacteria that can affect the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.
Some people carry the C-diff bacterium in their intestines, but never
develop symptoms
[[Page 19878]]
of an infection. The difference between asymptomatic colonization and
pathogenicity is caused primarily by the production of an enterotoxin
(Toxin A) and/or a cytotoxin (Toxin B). The presence of either or both
toxins can lead to symptomatic CDI, which is defined as the acute onset
of diarrhea with a documented infection with toxigenic C-diff, or the
presence of either toxin A or B. The GI tract contains millions of
bacteria, commonly referred to as ``normal flora'' or ``good
bacteria,'' which play a role in protecting the body from infection.
Antibiotics can kill these good bacteria and allow the C-diff bacteria
to multiply and release toxins that damage the cells lining the
intestinal wall, resulting in a CDI. CDI is a leading cause of
hospital-associated gastrointestinal illnesses. Persons at increased
risk for CDI include people who are treated with current or recent
antibiotic use, people who have encountered current or recent
hospitalization, people who are older than 65 years, immunocompromised
patients, and people who have recently had a diagnosis of CDI. CDI
symptoms include, but are not limited to, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and
fever. CDI symptoms range in severity from mild (abdominal discomfort,
loose stools) to severe (profuse, watery diarrhea, severe pain, and
high fevers). Severe CDI can be life-threatening and, in rare cases,
can cause bowel rupture, sepsis and organ failure. CDI is responsible
for 14,000 deaths per year in the United States.
C-diff produces two virulent, pro-inflammatory toxins, Toxin A and
Toxin B, which target host colonocytes (that is, large intestine
endothelial cells) by binding to endothelial cell surface receptors via
combined repetitive oligopeptide (CROP) domains. These toxins cause the
release of inflammatory cytokines leading to intestinal fluid secretion
and intestinal inflammation. The applicant asserted that
ZINPLAVATM targets Toxin B sites within the CROP domain
rather than the C-diff organism itself. According to the applicant, by
targeting C-diff Toxin B, ZINPLAVATM neutralizes Toxin B,
prevents large intestine endothelial cell inflammation, symptoms
associated with CDI, and reduces the recurrence of CDI.
ZINPLAVATM binds to sites within the CROP domain, which
prevents Toxin B from binding to the host cell, thereby preventing the
inflammation and symptoms associated with CDI. ZINPLAVATM is
used concomitantly with standard of care (SOC) antibiotics. Typical
treatment of CDI includes antibiotic therapy using vancomycin,
metronidazole, fidaxomicin, or other antibiotics. Alternative therapies
include fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) and the use of probiotics.
The primary goal of CDI treatment is resolving the infection.
Antibacterial drug treatment remains the cornerstone of treatment of
CDI. However, this treatment option alone may not be adequate for
patients diagnosed with recurrent CDI. A major concern with respect to
a CDI is that even when treatment with an antibacterial drug of a
primary infection is successful, generally, 25 percent to 30 percent of
patients experience a recurrence of the infection within days or weeks
of the presenting episode's symptom resolution. The risk of recurrence
increases to 65 percent with subsequent CDI episodes. Disease
recurrence results from continued disruption of the intestinal
microbiota by SOC CDI antibiotics (or use of other antibiotics used to
treat non-gastrointestinal conditions), combined with persistence of
resistant C-diff spores (relapse) or acquisition of new spores from the
environment (reinfection).
Antibacterial drug use may inhibit the intestinal microbiota from
reestablishing itself, allowing C-diff spores potentially to germinate
and colonize the intestines when the antibacterial drug is
discontinued. If regrowth of C-diff overtakes the reestablishment of
the intestinal microbiota, then spore germination and toxin production
from vegetative C-diff may restart the cycle of CDI and the need for
subsequent treatment. These challenges highlight the need for
nonantibiotic therapies. ZINPLAVATM targets Toxin B rather
than the C-diff bacteria itself. According to the applicant, unlike
antibacterial drugs, ZINPLAVATM is a human monoclonal
antibody and does not affect the microbiota. According to the
applicant, ZINPLAVATM neutralizes C-diff Toxin B and reduces
recurrence of CDI. ZINPLAVATM is given concomitantly during
the course of SOC antibacterial treatment of a CDI.
With respect to the newness criterion, ZINPLAVATM
received FDA approval on October 21, 2016, for reduction of recurrence
of CDI in patients receiving antibacterial drug treatment for CDI and
who are at high risk of CDI recurrence. ZINPLAVATM is
anticipated to be commercially available as of February 2017. We note
that the applicant anticipates submitting a request for a unique ICD-
10-PCS code for the administration of ZINPLAVATM. Currently,
there is a pending ICD-10-CM request to differentiate CDI recurrence.
If approved, the codes will become effective on October 1, 2017 (FY
2018).
As discussed above, if a technology meets all three of the
substantial similarity criteria, it would be considered substantially
similar to an existing technology and would not be considered ``new''
for purposes of new technology add-on payments.
With regard to the first criterion, whether a product uses the same
or a similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome,
according to the applicant, ZINPLAVATM is a human monoclonal
antibody with an innovative mechanism of action. The applicant asserted
that ZINPLAVATM is a novel treatment, with a unique
mechanism of action relative to SOC CDI antibiotics that target C-diff.
The applicant explained that ZINPLAVATM is the first human
monoclonal antibody that targets and neutralizes C. diff Toxin B
because the technology specifically binds to and neutralizes C-diff
Toxin B (which is an exotoxin that contributes to intestinal tissue
damage and immune system effects that underlie the symptoms of CDI) and
inhibits binding of the toxin to mammalian cells. The applicant further
asserted that the administration of ZINPLAVATM, in addition
to standard of care antibacterial drug treatment, reduces CDI
recurrence by providing passive immunity against Toxin B resulting from
persistent or newly acquired C-diff spores. According to the applicant,
ZINPLAVATM is the only FDA-approved treatment indicated for
reducing CDI recurrence as adjunctive therapy in adult patients who are
receiving antibacterial drug treatment for CDI and who are at high risk
for CDI recurrence.
With respect to the second criterion, whether a product is assigned
to the same or a different MS-DRG, the applicant maintained that
patients who may be eligible to receive treatment using
ZINPLAVATM could be in an acute-care hospital setting for a
wide variety of reasons and may develop a secondary CDI as a hospital-
acquired infection and, therefore, cases representing patients that may
be eligible for treatment using the technology can map to a wide range
of MS-DRGs. ZINPLAVATM is indicated for patients receiving
SOC treatment for CDI and who are at a high risk for CDI recurrence. In
order to identify the range of MS-DRGs for which cases representing
patients that may be eligible for treatment using ZINPLAVATM
may map to, the applicant identified all MS-DRGs containing cases that
represent patients presenting with CDI as a primary or secondary
diagnosis. The applicant used
[[Page 19879]]
FY 2015 MedPAR data to map the identified cases to 543 MS-DRGs, with 12
MS-DRGs accounting for approximately 40 percent of all cases. The
applicant segmented these cases based on age because patients 65 years
and older are at higher risk for CDI recurrence. Based on the FY 2015
MedPAR data, MS-DRG distribution was found to be similar, irrespective
of CDI status (primary or secondary), for patients over 65 years of age
and those under 65 years of age. The top 7 MS-DRGs across both age
groups account for nearly 54 percent (over 65 years of age) and 49
percent (under 65 years of age). The applicant further segmented these
cases to determine if status of CDI as a primary or secondary diagnosis
influenced MS-DRG mapping. Regardless of age, when CDI is the primary
diagnosis, approximately 98 percent of patient cases map to the same 3
MS-DRGs: MS-DRG 371 (Major Gastrointestinal Disorders and Peritoneal
Infections with MCC); MS-DRG 372 (Major Gastrointestinal Disorders and
Peritoneal Infections with CC); and MS-DRG 373 (Major Gastrointestinal
Disorders and Peritoneal Infections without CC/MCC), respectively.
Potential cases representing patients who may be eligible for treatment
with ZINPLAVATM would be assigned to the same MS-DRGs as
cases representing patients who receive SOC treatment for a diagnosis
of CDI.
With respect to the third criterion, whether the new use of the
technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, according to the
applicant, ZINPLAVATM is administered concomitantly or as
adjunctive therapy with SOC antibacterial treatment for recurrent CDI.
The applicant stated that ZINPLAVATM is indicated to reduce
recurrence of CDI in adult patients at high risk of CDI recurrence who
are receiving antibacterial drug treatment for CDI. According to the
applicant, the addition of ZINPLAVATM to SOC antibacterial
drug treatment reduces CDI recurrence by providing passive immunity
against Toxin B resulting from persistent or newly acquired C-diff
spores. ZINPLAVATM is used to treat the same or similar type
of disease (recurrent CDI) and a similar patient population receiving
SOC therapy for the treatment of recurrent CDI.
Based on the applicant's statements presented above, because
ZINPLAVATM has a unique mechanism of action, we do not
believe that the technology is substantially similar to existing
technologies and, therefore, meets the newness criterion. We are
inviting public comments on whether ZINPLAVATM meets the
newness criterion.
With regard to the cost criterion, the applicant conducted the
following analysis to demonstrate that the technology meets the cost
criterion. In order to identify the range of MS-DRGs that cases
representing potential patients who may be eligible for treatment using
ZINPLAVATM may map to, the applicant identified all MS-DRGs
for patients diagnosed with CDI as a primary or secondary diagnosis.
Specifically, the applicant searched the FY 2015 MedPAR file for claims
that included target patients over 65 years of age and identified cases
reporting diagnoses of CDI by ICD-9-CM diagnosis code 008.45
(Intestinal infection due to Clostridium difficile) as a primary or
secondary diagnosis. This resulted in 139,135 cases across 543 MS-DRGs,
with approximately 40 percent of all cases mapping to the following 12
MS-DRGs: MS-DRG 177 (Respiratory Infections and Inflammations with
MCC); MS-DRG 193 (Simple Pneumonia and Pleurisy with MCC); MS-DRG
291(Heart Failure and Shock with MCC); MS-DRGs 371, 372, and 373 (Major
Gastrointestinal Disorders and Peritoneal Infections with MCC, with CC,
and without CC/MCC, respectively); MS-DRGs 682 and 683 (Renal Failure
with MCC and with CC, respectively); MS-DRG 853 (Infectious and
Parasitic Diseases with O.R. Procedure with MCC); MS-DRGs 870, 871, and
872 (Septicemia or Severe Sepsis with Mechanical Ventilation >96 Hours,
with MCC, and without MCC, respectively).
Using the 139,135 identified cases, the average unstandardized
case-weighted charge per case was $80,677. The applicant then
standardized the charges. The applicant did not remove charges for the
current treatment because, as discussed above, ZINPLAVATM
will be used concomitantly with SOC antibacterial treatments for the
treatment of CDI as an additive, or adjunctive treatment option, to
reduce the recurrence of CDI infection. The applicant then applied the
2-year inflation factor of 1.098446 from the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final
rule (81 FR 57286) to inflate the charges from FY 2015 to FY 2017. The
applicant noted that the anticipated price for ZINPLAVATM
has yet to be determined; therefore, no charges for
ZINPLAVATM were added in the analysis. Based on the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS Table 10 thresholds, the average case-weighted threshold
amount was $56,871. The inflated average case-weighted standardized
charge per case was $78,929. Because the inflated average case-weighted
standardized charge per case exceeds the average case-weighted
threshold amount, the applicant maintained that the technology meets
the cost criterion. The applicant noted that the inflated average case-
weighted standardized charge per case exceeds the average case-weighted
threshold amount without the average per patient cost of the
technology. As such, the applicant anticipated that the inclusion of
the cost of ZINPLAVATM, at any price point, will further
increase charges above the average case-weighted threshold amount. We
are inviting public comments on whether ZINPLAVATM meets the
cost criterion.
With respect to the substantial clinical improvement criterion, the
applicant asserted that the addition of ZINPLAVATM to SOC
antibacterial drug treatment reduces CDI recurrence because it provides
passive immunity against Toxin B resulting from persistent or newly
acquired C-diff spores.
The applicant conducted two Phase III studies, MODIFY I and MODIFY
II. The primary endpoint of the studies was recurrent CDI within 12
weeks after completion of treatment with ZINPLAVATM. The
first study design initially included actoxumab, an antitoxin A
monoclonal antibody treatment arm that was later discontinued due to a
high failure rate and increase in mortality compared to other treatment
arms.\3\ Clinical data on ZINPLAVATM is provided exclusively
from the FDA briefing document available on the FDA Web site at: //www.fda.gov/AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/Drugs/Anti-InfectiveDrugsAdvisoryCommittee. Information is also provided in the
package insert by the manufacturer, Merck & Company, Inc. The FDA
briefing provided data on the safety and efficacy of
ZINPLAVATM. The FDA considered sustained clinical responses
defined as clinical cure of the initial CDI episode and the absence of
CDI recurrence as an appropriate endpoint to assess the efficacy of
ZINPLAVATM in the prevention of CDI recurrences.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Wilcox MH et al. Bezlotoxumab for Prevention of Recurrent
Clostridium difficile Infection. N Engl J Med. 2017 Jan
26;376(4):305-317.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In MODIFY I trial, the clinical cure rate of the presenting CDI
episode was lower in the ZINPLAVATM arm as compared to the
placebo arm, whereas in MODIFY II trial the clinical cure rate was
lower in the placebo arm as compared to the ZINPLAVATM arm.
Additional analyses showed that, by 3
[[Page 19880]]
weeks post study drug infusion, the clinical cure rates of the
presenting CDI episode were similar between treatment arms.
In MODIFY I, the rate of sustained clinical response was
numerically in favor of ZINPLAVATM (60.1 percent) in
comparison to placebo (55.2 percent) with an adjusted difference and 95
percent CI of 4.8 percent (-2.1 percent; 11.7 percent). In MODIFY II,
the proportion of subjects with sustained clinical response in the
ZINPLAVATM arm (66.8 percent) was also higher than in the
placebo arm (52.1 percent) with an adjusted difference of 14.6 percent
and 95 percent CI (7.8 percent; 21.4 percent). The treatment did not
significantly decrease mortality. Recurrence rates, including CDI-
related hospital readmission rates, reportedly were between 10 and 25
percent. No clinically meaningful differences in the exposure of
bezlotoxumab were found between patients 65 years of age and older and
patients under 65 years of age.
In the Phase III trials, the safety profile of
ZINPLAVATM was similar overall to that of placebo. However,
heart failure was reported more commonly in the two Phase III clinical
trials of ZINPLAVATM-treated patients compared to placebo-
treated patients. These adverse reactions occurred primarily in
patients with underlying congestive heart failure (CHF). In patients
with a history of CHF, 12.7 percent (15/118) of ZINPLAVATM-
treated patients and 4.8 percent (5/104) of placebo-treated patients
had the serious adverse reaction of heart failure during the 12-week
study period. In addition, in patients with a history of CHF, there
were more deaths in ZINPLAVATM-treated patients (19.5
percent (23/118)) than in placebo-treated patients (12.5 percent (13/
104)) during the 12-week study period. We are concerned regarding the
safety of ZINPLAVATM in patients diagnosed with CHF. In
regard to safety, data from the MODIFY I and MODIFY II studies suggest
few adverse events associated with ZINPLAVATM, with no
significant differences in the number of serious adverse events, deaths
or discontinuations of study drug that occurred between the
ZINPLAVATM and the placebo groups. However, both the
ZINPLAVATM and the ZINPLAVATM plus actoxumab
treatment groups experienced more episodes of cardiac failure (defined
as acute or chronic cardiac failure) then compared to the placebo group
(2.2 percent versus 1 percent). We are unsure if the cardiac failure
reported in the studies may be the result of a higher number of
baseline patients with heart failure in the treatment arms or the
result of an adverse effect to ZINPLAVATM. Therefore, we are
concerned with regard to the adverse event of cardiac failure of
ZINPLAVATM.
We are inviting public comments on whether ZINPLAVATM
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
We did not receive any written public comments in response to the
New Technology Town Hall meeting notice regarding the application of
ZINPLAVATM for new technology add-on payments.
b. EDWARDS INTUITY EliteTM Valve System (INTUITY) and
LivaNova Perceval Valve (Perceval)
Two manufacturers, Edwards Lifesciences and LivaNova, submitted
applications for new technology add-on payments for FY 2018 for the
INTUITY EliteTM Valve System (INTUITY) and the Perceval
Valve (Perceval), respectively. Both of these technologies are
prosthetic aortic valves inserted using surgical aortic valve
replacement (AVR). We note that, while Edwards Lifesciences submitted
an application for new technology add-on payments for FY 2017 for the
INTUITY valve, FDA approval was not received by July 1, 2016, and,
therefore, the device was not eligible for consideration for new
technology add-on payments for FY 2017.
Aortic valvular disease is relatively common, primarily manifested
by aortic stenosis. Most aortic stenosis is due to calcification of the
valve, either on a normal tri-leaflet valve or on a congenitally
bicuspid valve. The resistance to outflow of blood is progressive over
time, and as the size of the aortic orifice narrows, the heart must
generate increasingly elevated pressures to maintain blood flow.
Symptoms such as angina, heart failure, and syncope eventually develop,
and portend a very serious prognosis. There is no effective medical
therapy for aortic stenosis, so the diseased valve must be replaced or,
less commonly, repaired.
The INTUITY valve incorporates the expansion feature of a catheter
implanted valve, but is designed to be placed during cardiac surgery.
The manufacturer explained that the INTUITY valve requires fewer
stitches to hold the device in place because of the balloon expanded
design and, therefore, can be inserted more quickly than a standard
valve, and also facilitates minimally invasive cardiac surgery; that
is, use of a smaller incision to allow faster recovery. The
manufacturer of the INTUITY valve indicated that the device is
comprised of: (1) A bovine pericardial aortic bioprosthetic valve; (2)
a balloon expandable stainless steel frame; and (3) a textured sealing
cloth. The manufacturer of the Perceval valve indicated that the
Perceval valve device is comprised of: (1) Sizers used to determine the
correct size of the prosthesis; (2) a dual holder used for positioning
and deployment (available in two models, one for sternal approaches and
one for MIS); (3) a ``smart clip'' to assist during assembly of the
valve on the dual holder to prevent release during positioning; (4) a
dual collapser used to evenly reduce the diameter of the prosthesis
allowing it to mount onto the holder prior to implantation; (5) a dual
collapser base used to allow proper positioning; and (6) a postdilation
catheter used for in situ dilation of the prosthesis after implantation
(available in two models, one for sternal approaches and one for MIS).
According to both applicants, the INTUITY valve and the Perceval valve
are the first sutureless, rapid deployment aortic valves that can be
used for the treatment of patients who are candidates for surgical AVR.
The applicants indicated that the two new device innovations facilitate
MIS approaches through: (1) The device rapid deployment mechanisms; and
(2) the design of the prosthetic valve that allows for markedly fewer
to no sutures to securely fasten the prosthetic valve to the aortic
orifice. The applicants explained that both of these aspects of their
devices are credited with the reduction of operating time.
As noted, according to both applicants, the INTUITY valve and the
Perceval valve are the first sutureless, rapid deployment aortic valves
that can be used for the treatment of patients who are candidates for
surgical AVR. Because potential cases representing patients who are
eligible for treatment using the INTUITY and the Perceval aortic valve
devices would group to the same MS-DRGs, and we believe that these
devices are intended to treat the same or similar disease in the same
or similar patient population, and are purposed to achieve the same
therapeutic outcome using the same or similar mechanism of action, we
believe these two devices are substantially similar to each other and
that it is appropriate to evaluate both technologies as one application
for new technology add-on payments under the IPPS.
With respect to the newness criterion, the INTUITY valve received
FDA approval on August 12, 2016, and was commercially available on the
U.S. market on August 19, 2016. The Perceval valve received FDA
approval
[[Page 19881]]
on January 8, 2016, and was commercially available on the U.S. market
on February 29, 2016. We believe that, in accordance with our policy,
it is appropriate to use the earliest market availability date
submitted as the beginning of the newness period. Therefore, based on
our policy, with regard to both devices, if the technologies are
approved for new technology add-on payments, we believe that the
beginning of the newness period would be February 29, 2016. In
addition, both applicants indicated that ICD-10-PCS code X2RF032
(Replacement of Aortic Valve using Zooplastic Tissue, Rapid Deployment
Technique, Open Approach, New Technology Group 2) would identify
procedures involving the use of the devices when surgically implanted.
We previously stated that, because we believe these two devices are
substantially similar to each other, we believe it is appropriate to
evaluate both technologies as one application for new technology add-on
payment under the IPPS. The applicants submitted separate cost and
clinical data, and we reviewed and discuss each set of data separately.
However, we intend to make one determination regarding new technology
add-on payments that will apply to both devices. We believe that this
is consistent with our policy statements in the past regarding
substantial similarity. Specifically, we have noted that approval of
new technology add-on payments would extend to all technologies that
are substantially similar (66 FR 46915), and we believe that continuing
our current practice of extending new technology add-on payments
without a further application from the manufacturer of the competing
product, or a specific finding on cost and clinical improvement if we
make a finding of substantial similarity among two products is the
better policy because we avoid--
Creating manufacturer-specific codes for substantially
similar products;
Requiring different manufacturers of substantially similar
products to submit separate new technology applications;
Having to compare the merits of competing technologies on
the basis of substantial clinical improvement; and
Bestowing an advantage to the first applicant representing
a particular new technology to receive approval (70 FR 47351).
If these substantially similar technologies were submitted for
review in different (and subsequent) years, rather than the same year,
we would evaluate and make a determination on the first application and
apply that same determination to the second application. However,
because the technologies have been submitted for review in the same
year, we believe that it is appropriate to consider both sets of cost
data and clinical data in making a determination and we do not believe
that it is possible to choose one set of data over another set of data
in an objective manner.
As stated above, we believe that the INTUITY valve and the Perceval
valve are substantially similar to each other for purposes of analyzing
these two applications as one application. We also need to determine
whether the INTUITY valve and the Perceval valve are substantially
similar to existing technologies prior to their approval by the FDA and
their release on the market. As discussed earlier, if a technology
meets all three of the substantial similarity criteria, it would be
considered substantially similar to an existing technology and would
not be considered ``new'' for purposes of new technology add-on
payments.
With respect to the first criterion, whether a product uses the
same or a similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome,
the applicant for the INTUITY valve asserted that its unique design,
which utilizes features that were not previously included in
conventional aortic valves, constitutes a new mechanism of action. The
deployment mechanism allows for rapid deployment. The expandable frame
can reshape the native valve's orifice, creating a larger and more
efficiently shaped effective orifice area. In addition, the expandable
skirt allows for structural differentiation upon fixation of the valve
requiring 3 permanent, guiding sutures rather than the 12 to 18
permanent sutures used to fasten standard prosthetic aortic valves. The
applicant for the Perceval valve described the Perceval valve's
mechanism of action as including: (a) No permanent sutures; (b) a
dedicated delivery system that increases the surgeon's visibility; (c)
an enabler of minimally invasive approach; (d) a complexity reduction
and reproducibility of the procedure; and (e) a unique device assembly
and delivery systems.
With respect to the second and third criteria, whether a product is
assigned to the same or a different MS-DRG and whether the new use of
the technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, the applicant for
the INTUITY valve indicated that the technology is used in the
treatment of the same patient population and potential cases
representing patients that may be eligible for treatment using the
INTUITY valve would be assigned to the same MS-DRGs as cases involving
the use of other prosthetic aortic valves (that is, MS-DRGs 216
(Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic Procedures with Cardiac
Catheterization with MCC), 217 (Cardiac Valve & Other Major
Cardiothoracic Procedures with Cardiac Catheterization with CC), 218
(Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic Procedures with Cardiac
Catheterization without CC/MCC), 219 (Cardiac Valve & Other Major
Cardiothoracic Procedures without Cardiac Catheterization with MCC),
220 (Cardiac Valve & Other Major Cardiothoracic Procedures without
Cardiac Catheterization with CC), and 221 (Cardiac Valve & Other Major
Cardiothoracic Procedures without Cardiac Catheterization without CC/
MCC). The applicant for the Perceval valve also indicated that the
Perceval valve device is used in the treatment of the same patient
population and potential cases representing patients that may be
eligible for treatment using the technology would be assigned to the
same MS-DRGs (MS-DRGs 216 through 221) as cases involving the use of
other prosthetic aortic valves.
After considering the materials included with both applications, we
remain concerned as to whether the mechanism of action described by the
applicants represents an improvement to an existing surgical technique
and technology or a new technology. While the INTUITY and Perceval
valves address some of the challenges posed by implantation of existing
valves, including improving the visibility of the orifice and the
physiological function of the valves, we do not believe that their
mechanisms of action are fundamentally different from that of other
aortic valves. As one of the applicants stated in its application, the
goal of the prosthetic aortic valve is to mimic the native valve that
it has replaced via the incorporation of three leaflets that open and
close in response to pressure gradients developed during the cardiac
cycle. We believe that the INTUITY and Perceval valves are the same or
similar to other prosthetic aortic valves used to treat the same or
similar diagnoses.
We are inviting public comments on whether the mechanisms of action
of the sutureless, rapid deployment of the INTUITY and Perceval valves
differs from the mechanism of action of standard AVR valves and whether
the technologies meet the newness criterion.
As we stated above, each applicant submitted separate analyses
regarding the cost criterion for each of their devices, and both
applicants maintained
[[Page 19882]]
that their device meets the cost criterion. We summarize each analysis
below.
With regard to the cost criterion, the INTUITY valve's applicant
researched the FY 2015 MedPAR claims data file to identify cases
representing patients who may be potential recipients of treatment
using the INTUITY valve. The applicant identified claims that reported
an ICD-9-CM diagnosis code of 424.1 (Aortic valve disorder), in
combination with an ICD-9-CM procedure code of 35.21 (Replacement of
aortic valve with tissue) or 35.22 (Open and other replacement of
aortic valve). The applicant also identified cases with or without a
coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) using the ICD-9-CM procedure codes
in the table below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICD-9-CM code Code description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36.10..................... Aortocoronary bypass for heart
revascularization, not otherwise specified.
36.11..................... (Aorto)coronary bypass of one coronary
artery.
36.12..................... (Aorto)coronary bypass of two coronary
arteries.
36.13..................... (Aorto)coronary bypass of three coronary
arteries.
36.14..................... (Aorto)coronary bypass of four or more
coronary arteries.
36.15..................... Single internal mammary-coronary artery
bypass.
36.16..................... Double internal mammary-coronary artery
bypass.
36.17..................... Abdominal-coronary artery bypass.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant identified a total of 25,173 cases that mapped to MS-
DRGs 216 through 221. Of these cases, the applicant identified 10,251
CABG cases and 14,922 non-CABG cases. According to the applicant,
patients that undergo a procedure without need of a concomitant CABG
are more likely to receive treatment with the INTUITY valve than
patients in need of a concomitant CABG. Therefore, the applicant
weighted the non-CABG cases at 90 percent of total cases and the CABG
cases at 10 percent of total cases under each of the six MS-DRGs. The
final case count is a weighted average of 14,455 cases.
The applicant calculated an average unstandardized charge per case
of $192,506 for all cases. The applicant then removed 100 percent of
the charges for pacemakers, investigational devices, and other implants
that would not be required for patients receiving treatment using the
INTUITY valve. The applicant standardized the charges and then applied
an inflation factor of 1.098446, which is the 2-year inflation factor
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57286), to update the
charges from FY 2015 to FY 2017. The applicant calculated the average
expected charge for the INTUITY valve based on the current list price
of the device. Although the applicant submitted data related to the
cost of the INTUITY valve, the applicant noted that the cost of the
device is proprietary information. To add charges for the device, the
applicant assumed a hospital mark-up of approximately 3.00 percent,
based on the current average CCR for implantable devices (0.331) as
reported in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56876). Based
on the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS Table 10 thresholds, the average case-
weighted threshold amount was $170,321. The applicant computed an
inflated average case-weighted standardized charge per case of
$194,291, which is $23,970 above the average case-weighted threshold
amount. Because the inflated average case-weighted standardized charge
per case exceeds the average case-weighted threshold amount, the
applicant maintained that the technology meets the cost criterion.
We thank the applicant for the analysis above. However, we would
like more information from the applicant regarding how it decided upon
which cases to include in the sensitivity analysis, as well as further
details about how and on what basis the applicant weighted CABG and
non-CABG cases. We are inviting public comments on whether the INTUITY
valve meets the cost criterion.
With regard to the cost criterion in reference to the Perceval
valve, the applicant conducted the following analysis. The applicant
examined FY 2015 MedPAR claims data that included cases reporting an
ICD-9 procedure code of 35.21 or 35.22, in combination with diagnosis
code: 424.1. Noting that MS-DRGs 216 through 221 contained 97 percent
of these cases, the applicant limited its analysis to these 6 MS-DRGs.
The applicant identified 25,193 cases across these MS-DRGs, resulting
in an average case-weighted unstandardized charge per case of $173,477.
The applicant then standardized charges using FY 2015 standardization
factors and applied an inflation factor of 1.089846 from the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH proposed rule (81 FR 25271). The applicant indicated that the
technology meets the cost criterion by applying the inflation factor
from the proposed rule and, therefore, would meet the cost criterion by
applying the higher inflation factor from the final rule.
Included in the average case-weighted standardized charge per case
were charges for the current valve prosthesis. Therefore, the applicant
removed all charges associated with revenue center 0278, and calculated
the adjusted average case-weighted standardized charge per case by
subtracting these charges from the standardized charge per case. The
applicant then added the charge for the new technology by taking the
anticipated hospital cost of the new technology and dividing it by the
national average implantable devices CCR of 0.331. The applicant then
added the charge for the new technology to the inflated average case-
weighted standardized charges per case to arrive at the final inflated
average case-weighted standardized charge per case, which was then
case-weighted based on the distribution of cases within the six MS-
DRGs. This resulted in an inflated average case-weighted standardized
charge per case of $206,109. Using the FY 2017 IPPS Table 10
thresholds, the average case-weighted threshold amount was $173,477.
Because the inflated average case-weighted standardized charge per case
exceeds the average case-weighted threshold amount, the applicant
maintained that the technology meets the cost criterion. We are
inviting public comments on whether the Perceval technology meets the
cost criterion.
With regard to substantial clinical improvement for the INTUITY
valve, the applicant asserted that several aspects of the valve system
represent a substantial clinical improvement over existing
technologies. The applicant believed that the flexible deployment arm
allows improved surgical access and visualization, making the surgery
less challenging for the surgeon, improving the likelihood that the
surgeon can use a minimally invasive approach. According to the
applicant, the assembly of the device only allows the correct valve
size to be fitted, which ensures that the valve does not slip or
[[Page 19883]]
migrate, which prevents paravalvular leaks and patient prosthetic
mismatch. The applicant indicated that the device improves clinical
outcomes for patients undergoing minimally invasive AVR and full-
sternotomy AVR. The applicant stated that the rapid deployment
technology enables reduced operative time, specifically cross-clamp
time, thereby reducing the period of myocardial ischemia. In addition,
the applicant indicated that the device offers a reduction in operative
time for full-sternotomy AVR. The applicant noted that clinical results
document significant patient outcome and utilization improvements,
including improved patient satisfaction, faster return to normal
activity, decreased post-operative pain, reduced mortality and
decreased complications, including need for reoperation due to
bleeding, reduced recovery time, reduced length of stay (both ICU and
overall), more access to minimally invasive surgery, and improved
hemodynamics.
The INTUITY valve has been tested clinically in several trials. In
the TRITON trial (Kocher et al., 2013 \4\), 287 patients diagnosed with
aortic stenosis underwent surgery in 1 of 6 European centers. The first
149 patients received the first generation Model 8300A valve, and the
next 138 patients received the second generation Model 8300AB. The
average age of the patients was 75.7 years. Early, 30-day mortality was
1.7 percent (5/287), the post-op valve gradient was low, and 75 percent
of the patients improved functionally. A total of 4 valves were
explanted in the final 30 days due to bleeding, and 3 were explanted
later for paravalvular leak, endocarditis, and aortic root aneurysms.
Follow-up extended to 3 years (mean 1.8 years).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Kocher AA, Laufer G, Haverich A, et al. One-year outcomes of
the surgical treatment of aortic stenosis with a next generation
surgical aortic valve (TRITON) trial: A prospective multicenter
study of rapid-deployment aortic valve replacement with the EDWARDS
INTUITY valve system. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2013;145:110-116.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implantation of the INTUITY valve using minimally invasive surgery
was compared with conventional aortic valve replacement via full
sternotomy in the CADENCE-MIS randomized trial (Borger et al., 2015
\5\) of 100 patients treated in 1 of 5 centers in Germany. The authors
found no significant difference in 30-day mortality, the need for
pacemaker implantation, significant paravalvular regurgitation, and
quality of life scores at 3 months. Aortic cross-clamp time was
significantly reduced from 54.0 to 41.3 minutes (p < 0.0001), and
cardiopulmonary bypass time was reduced from 74.4 to 68.8 minutes (p =
0.21). Early clinical outcomes were similar: No significant differences
in mortality, reoperation, or other clinical outcomes. The aortic valve
gradient was significantly lower in the MIS group: 8.5 versus 10.3
mmHg.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Borger MA, Moustafine V, Conradi L, et al. A randomized
multicenter trial of minimally invasive rapid deployment versus
conventional full sternotomy aortic valve replacement. Ann Thorac
Surg 2015; 99:17-25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The TRANSFORM trial (Barnhart et al. 2017 \6\) was a single-arm,
non-randomized, multicenter trial, in which 839 patients underwent
rapid deployment AVR surgery. The average age of the patients was 73.5
years. The mean cross-clamp time and cardiopulmonary bypass times for
full sternotomy were 49.3 26.9 min and 69.2
34.7 min, respectively, and for MIS, 63.1 25.4 min and
84.6 33.5 min, respectively. The authors compared these
times to STS database comparators: For full sternotomy, 76.3 minutes
and 104.2 minutes, respectively, and for MIS, 82.9 minutes and 111.4
minutes, respectively. All cause early mortality was 0.8 percent, mean
EOA at 1 year was 1.7 cm\2\; mean gradient, 10.3 mmHg; and moderate and
severe PVL, 1.2 percent and 0.4 percent, respectively. The authors
indicated that the INTUITY valve ``. . . may lead to a relative
reduction in aortic cross-clamp time and cardiopulmonary bypass time''
and ``may confer benefits to patients, such as decreased mortality and
morbidity.'' The authors noted the possibility of potential bias
resulting from the level of experience of the study surgeons relative
to typical cardiac surgeons. In addition, long-term follow-up is not
available, and study comparators from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons
(STS) database were not matched.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Barnhart, G. A. et al. (2017). TRANSFORM (Multicenter
Experience with Rapid Deployment Edwards INTUITY Valve System for
Aortic Valve Replacement) US clinical trial: Performance of a rapid
deployment aortic valve. The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular
Surgery, 153, 241-251.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR 25057), after
reviewing the studies provided by the applicant with its application
for FY 2017, we expressed some specific concerns. We indicated that we
were concerned that the INTUITY valve does not have sufficient
advantages over alternative surgically implanted valves to constitute a
substantial clinical improvement. We noted that, while some of the
studies included with the application demonstrate reduced aortic cross-
clamp time, conventional aortic valve replacement was used in the
comparison group. Therefore, it is unclear whether the reduced aortic
cross-clamp time is associated with the use of the INTUITY valve or as
a result of the MIS surgery in general.
In response to these concerns, the INTUITY valve's applicant stated
that the INTUITY valve is associated with significant clinical benefits
outside of the benefits achieved by use of an MIS approach. The
applicant referenced the sub-study of the TRANSFORM trial, which
compared the MISAVR with the INTUITY valve to MISAVR with a
conventional valve, stating that the results indicated reduced cross-
clamp time and other benefits that are not simply a function of the MIS
approach. The applicant also referenced trials that indicated that the
INTUITY valve had excellent hemodynamic performance (Haverich et
al.,\7\ Borger et al.,\8\ Barnhart et al.\9\), one of which found a
significant improvement in functional status (Haverich et al.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Haverich, A, et al. (2014), Three-year hemodynamic
performance, left ventricular mass regression, and prosthetic-
patient mismatch after rapid deployment aortic valve replacement in
287 patients. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg, 148(6), 2854-60.
\8\ Borger MA, Moustafine V, Concadi L, et al. A randomized
multicenter trial of minimally invasive rapid deployment versus
conventional full sternotomy aortic valve replacement. Ann Thorac
Surg 2015; 99:17-25.
\9\ Barnhart, G.A. et al. (2017). TRANSFORM (Multicenter
Experience with Rapid Deployment Edwards INTUITY Valve System for
Aortic Valve Replacement) US clinical trial: Performance of a rapid
deployment aortic valve. The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular
Surgery, 153, 241-251.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the studies provided by the INTUITY valve
applicant, we are concerned about the possibility of potential bias
resulting from the level of experience of the study surgeons relative
to typical cardiac surgeons, as well as the lack of long-term follow-up
in these studies.
With regard to substantial clinical improvement for the Perceval
valve, the applicant submitted several studies examining the Perceval
valve. The following discussion summarizes some of these studies.
Pollari and colleagues \10\ (2014) utilized a propensity score
analysis to examine 82 matched pairs as part of a larger trial that
included 566 patients treated with bioprosthetic aortic valve
replacement, 166 of which received treatment using the Perceval
sutureless valve and 400 of which received treatment using a stented
valve. Aortic cross-clamp, cardiopulmonary bypass, and operation times
were significantly shorter in the group that received treatment using
the Perceval sutureless
[[Page 19884]]
valve. The Perceval sutureless group also had shorter ICU stays,
hospital stays, and intubation times, and lower incidence of
postoperative atrial fibrillation and respiratory insufficiency. The
authors noted that, despite the promising preliminary results, longer
follow-up is warranted before drawing definite conclusions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Pollari, F. (2014), Better short-term outcome by using
sutureless valves: a propensity-matched score analysis, Ann Thorac
Surg, 98; 611-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a nonrandomized trial of 100 patients in a German hospital,
Santarpino and colleagues \11\ (2013) found that procedures completed
using the Perceval valve were associated with significantly shorter
cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times (40 13.8 and
69 19.1 versus 66 20.4 and 105
34.8) relative to conventional stented bioprosthetic valves, as well as
less frequent use of blood transfusions, shorter ICU stays and shorter
use of intubation. In contrast, Gilmanov and colleagues \12\ (2013)
found that a MIS approach resulted in improved outcomes, albeit longer
aortic cross-clamp times. A meta-analysis by Hurley and colleagues \13\
(2015) found reduced cross-clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times, but
found a significantly higher permanent pacemaker rate with the use of
Perceval sutureless valves.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Santarpino, G. et al. (2013), The Perceval S aortic valve
has the potential of shortening surgical time: Does it also result
in improved outcome?, Ann Thorac Surg, 96, 77-81.
\12\ Gilmanov, D. (2013), Minimally invasive and conventional
aortic valve replacement: a propensity score analysis, Ann Thorac
Surg, 96, 837-843.
\13\ Hurley et al, ``A Meta[hyphen]Analysis Examining
Differences in Short[hyphen]Term Outcomes Between Sutureless and
Conventional Aortic Valve Prostheses,'' Innovations 2015; 10:375-
382.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A study conducted by Dalen and colleagues \14\ (2015) used
propensity score matching to examine early post-operative outcomes and
2-year survival between 171 pairs of patients who underwent
ministernotomy using the Perceval device or a full sternotomy with
stented prosthesis. There were no differences in 30-day mortality or 2-
year survival between the groups. The aortic cross-clamp time and
cardiopulmonary bypass time were shorter, and there were fewer blood
transfusions in the group that received treatment using the Perceval
device. However, this group was also at higher risk for post-operative
permanent pacemaker implantation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Dal[eacute]n, M. (2015), Aortic valve replacement through
full sternotomy with a stented bioprosthesis versus minimally
invasive sternotomy with a sutureless bioprosthesis, Eur J
Cardiothorac Surg 2015; doi:10.1093/ejcts/ezv014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After reviewing the publications submitted by the applicant, we are
concerned that the lack of randomization and blinded investigators may
have influenced the outcomes in many of the studies provided. For
example, in the discussion following Santarpino et al.'s 2013 study,
one of the participants suggested that medical decision-making
regarding ventilation times, ICU times, and blood transfusions may be
affected by the knowledge of investigators as to which valve the
patient received treatment using. Also, as indicated above with respect
to the INTUITY valve, the experience of the surgeons in these studies
may be confounding factors that may have influenced the length of
surgical procedures and/or surgical outcomes.
We are inviting public comments on whether rapid deployment valves,
specifically the INTUITY and Perceval valves, meet the substantial
clinical improvement criterion.
We did not receive any written public comments regarding the
INTUITY and Perceval valves in response to the New Technology Town Hall
meeting notice.
c. Ustekinumab (Stelara[supreg])
Janssen Biotech submitted an application for new technology add-on
payments for the Stelara[supreg] induction therapy for FY 2018.
Stelara[supreg] received FDA approval as an intravenous (IV) infusion
treatment of Crohn's disease (CD) on September 23, 2016, which added a
new indication for the use of Stelara[supreg] and route of
administration for this monoclonal antibody. IV infusion of
Stelara[supreg] is indicated for the treatment of adult patients (18
years and older) diagnosed with moderately to severely active CD who
have: (1) Failed or were intolerant to treatment using immunomodulators
or corticosteroids, but never failed a tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
blocker; or (2) failed or were intolerant to treatment using one or
more TNF blockers. Stelara[supreg] for IV infusion has only one
purpose, induction therapy. Stelara[supreg] must be administered
intravenously by a health care professional in either an inpatient
hospital setting or an outpatient hospital setting.
Stelara[supreg] for IV infusion is packaged in single 130mg vials.
Induction therapy consists of a single IV infusion dose using the
following weight-based dosing regimen: Patients weighing less than (<)
55kg are administered 260mg of Stelara[supreg] (2 vials); patients
weighing more than (>) 55kg, but less than (<) 85kg are administered
390mg of Stelara[supreg] (3 vials); and patients weighing more than (>)
85kg are administered 520mg of Stelara[supreg] (4 vials). An average
dose of Stelara[supreg] administered through IV infusion is 390mg (3
vials). Maintenance doses of Stelara[supreg] are administered at 90mg,
subcutaneously, at 8-week intervals and may occur in the outpatient
hospital setting.
CD is an inflammatory bowel disease of unknown etiology,
characterized by transmural inflammation of the gastrointestinal (GI)
tract. Symptoms of CD may include fatigue, prolonged diarrhea with or
without bleeding, abdominal pain, weight loss and fever. CD can affect
any part of the GI tract including the mouth, esophagus, stomach, small
intestine, and large intestine.
Conventional pharmacologic treatments of CD include antibiotics,
mesalamines, corticosteroids, immunomodulators, tumor necrosis alpha
(TNF[alpha]) inhibitors, and anti-integrin agents. Surgery may be
necessary for some patients diagnosed with CD in which conventional
therapies have failed. The applicant asserted that use of
Stelara[supreg] offers an alternative to conventional pharmacologic
treatments, and has been shown to be successful in the treatment of
patients who have failed treatment using the conventional agents
currently being used for a diagnosis of CD, including TNF[alpha]
inhibitors.
Although the precise cause of CD is unknown, the environment,
genetics, and the patient's immune system are thought to play a role in
this form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Conventional
pharmacologic therapy is directed against many different inflammatory
mediators that produce inflammation and ultimately lead to
gastrointestinal damage. The applicant asserted that it is of paramount
importance to have a variety of pharmacologic agents that can address
the proper inflammatory mediator for a particular patient. The
applicant also asserted that, while the currently available anti-
inflammatory agents used in the treatment of a diagnosis of CD are
excellent medications, these agents do not successfully treat all
patients diagnosed with CD, nor do they reliably sustain disease
remission once a response has been achieved. The applicant believed
that the use of Stelara[supreg] offers an alternative to currently
available treatment options.
With regard to the newness criterion, Stelara[supreg] is not a
newly formulated drug. Stelara[supreg], administered subcutaneously,
received FDA approval in 2009 (September 25, 2009) for the treatment of
moderate to severe plaque psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis in adults.
Its IV use for the treatment of patients diagnosed with CD was approved
by the FDA in 2016 (September 23, 2016). With regard to the new use of
an existing technology, in the September 1, 2001 final rule (66 FR
46915), we stated that if the new use of an existing technology was for
treating patients not expected to
[[Page 19885]]
be assigned to the same MS-DRG as the patients receiving the existing
technology, it may be considered for approval, but it must also meet
the cost and substantial clinical improvement criteria in order to
qualify for the new technology add-on payment. We do not believe that
potential cases representing patients that may be eligible for
treatment with the new use of the Stelara[supreg] for IV treatment of a
diagnosis of CD would be assigned to the same MS-DRGs as cases treated
using the prior indications.
As discussed above, if a technology meets all three of the
substantial similarity criteria, it would be considered substantially
similar to an existing technology and would not be considered ``new''
for purposes of new technology add-on payments.
With regard to the first criterion, whether a product uses the same
or a similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome, we
are concerned that Stelara[supreg]'s mechanism of action does not
appear to differ from the mechanism of action of other monoclonal
antibodies, which also target unique gastrointestinal-selective
cytokines. The applicant believed that the Stelara[supreg] uses a
different mechanism of action than other medications currently
available for the treatment of patients diagnosed with CD. However, we
believe that the mechanism of action for the new use of the
Stelara[supreg] may be similar to the mechanism of action of other
cytokine-selective monoclonal antibodies that disrupt cytokine mediated
signals crucial to the inflammatory process in patients diagnosed with
CD.
The applicant stated that the Stelara[supreg] is a human
IgG1[kappa] monoclonal antibody that binds with specificity to the p40
protein subunit, which is common to both the interleukin-12 (IL-12) and
interleukin (IL-23) cytokines. IL-12 and IL-23 are naturally occurring
cytokines that are involved in inflammatory and immune responses, such
as natural killer cell activation and CD4+ T-cell differentiation and
activation. In in vitro models, the Stelara[supreg] was shown to
disrupt IL-12 and IL-23 mediated signaling and cytokine cascades by
blocking the interaction of these cytokines with a shared cell-surface
receptor chain, IL-12R[beta]1. The cytokines IL-12 and IL-23 have been
implicated as important contributors to chronic inflammation. According
to the applicant, IV induction therapy quickly achieves optimal blood
levels of Stelara[supreg] so that blockade of IL-12 and IL-23 is most
effective. This level of blockade is not achieved with subcutaneous
administration.
The applicant further stated that other available CD anti-
inflammatory or immune modulator therapies do not target the IL-12/IL-
23p40 substrate. Rather, these therapies may target other integrin
pairs such as the alpha4- beta7 integrins. Therefore, the applicant
believed that the Stelara[supreg] drug is not substantially similar to
any other approved drug for the treatment of moderately to severely
active CD. As previously noted, the applicant asserted that, while the
currently available agents are excellent medications, these agents do
not successfully treat all patients diagnosed with CD, nor do these
agents reliably sustain remission once a clinical response has been
achieved. According to the applicant, the new use of the
Stelara[supreg] offers an alternative to currently available treatment
options, and has been shown to be successful in the treatment of
patients who have failed treatment with the conventional agents
currently being used for a diagnosis of CD, including TNF blockers. We
are concerned that the Stelara[supreg]'s mechanism of action is similar
to that of other immune system suppressors used in the treatment of
patients diagnosed with moderately to severely active CD because other
cytokine-selective monoclonal antibodies also disrupt cytokine mediated
signals crucial to the inflammatory process in patients diagnosed with
CD.
With respect to the second criterion, whether a product is assigned
to the same or a different MS-DRG, the applicant maintained that MS-
DRGs 386, 387, and 385 (Inflammatory Bowel Disease with CC, without CC/
MCC, and with MCC, respectively) and MS-DRGs 330, 329 and 331 (Major
Small and Large Bowel Procedures with CC, without CC/MCC, and with MCC,
respectively) are used to identify cases representing patients who may
potentially be eligible for treatment using the Stelara[supreg]. The
applicant researched claims data from the FY 2015 MedPAR file and found
10,344 cases. About 85 percent of potentially eligible cases mapped to
MS-DRGs for inflammatory bowel disease and most of the remainder of
cases mapped to MS-DRGs for bowel surgery. We believe that potential
cases involving Stelara[supreg] induction therapy may be assigned to
the same MS-DRGs as cases representing patients who have been treated
using currently available treatment options.
With respect to the third criterion, whether the new use of the
technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, according to the
applicant, currently available pharmacologic treatments include
antibiotics, mesalamines, corticosteroids, immunomodulators, tumor
necrosis alfa (TNF[alpha]) inhibitors and anti-integrins. The applicant
stated that the new use of the Stelara[supreg] for IV infusion is
indicated for the treatment of adults (18 years and older) diagnosed
with moderately to severely active CD who have: (1) Failed or were
intolerant to treatment with immunomodulators or corticosteroids, but
never failed treatment using a TNF blocker; or (2) failed or were
intolerant to treatment with one or more TNF blockers. The applicant
asserted that Stelara[supreg] for induction therapy is not
substantially similar to other treatment options because it does not
involve the treatment of the same or similar type of patient
population. Patients who are eligible for treatment using the
Stelara[supreg] induction therapy have failed other CD treatment
modalities. The applicant believed that the subset of primary and
secondary nonresponder patients to TNF inhibitor treatments is a
patient population unresponsive to, or ineligible for, currently
available treatments for diagnoses of moderate to severe CD. Based on
the indications for the use of Stelara[supreg], there is a class of
patients who failed, or were intolerant to, treatment using
immunomodulators or corticosteroids, but never failed treatment using a
TNF blocker. The applicant indicated that, for those patients who never
failed treatment with a TNF blocker, this class of patients can be
recognized as two separate patient populations: One population of
patients who have never received treatment using a TNF blocker, or the
other population of patients who have received and responded to
treatment using a TNF blocker. We believe that, if the new use of the
Stelara[supreg] has the same mechanism of action as other immune system
suppressors such as TNF blockers, the patient population that did not
receive treatment using a TNF blocker may not be a new patient
population because those patients may be able to receive treatment
using, and would successfully respond to treatment using, a TNF
blocker. Moreover, if the mechanism of action is the same as other
immune system suppressors, we believe that the new use of the
Stelara[supreg] may be targeted at a new patient population in some
circumstances and instances, but we are concerned that it may not be
targeted at a new patient population in all circumstances and
instances.
[[Page 19886]]
We are inviting public comments on whether the Stelara[supreg]
meets the newness criterion.
With regard to the cost criterion, the applicant conducted the
following analysis to demonstrate that Stelara[supreg] meets the cost
criterion. The applicant searched claims from the FY 2015 MedPAR file
for cases with a principal ICD-9-CM diagnosis of 555.x (Regional
Enteritis), which are cases of a diagnosis of Crohn's Disease that may
be eligible for treatment using Stelara[supreg].
The applicant identified 10,344 cases that mapped to 35 MS-DRGs.
Approximately 85 percent of cases mapped to the following Inflammatory
Bowel MS-DRGs: MS-DRGs 385 (Inflammatory Bowel Disease with MCC), 386
(Inflammatory Bowel Disease with CC), and 387 (Inflammatory Bowel
Disease without CC/MCC). Similarly, 11 percent of the cases mapped to
the following MS-DRGs for bowel surgery: MS-DRGs 329 (Major Small and
Large Bowel Procedures with MCC), 330 (Major Small and Large Bowel
Procedures with CC), and 331 (Major Small and Large Bowel Procedures
without CC/MCC). The remaining cases (4 percent) represented all other
digestive system disorders.
Using the 10,344 identified cases, the average unstandardized case-
weighted charge per case was $39,935. The applicant then standardized
the charges. The applicant did not remove charges for the current
treatment because as discussed above Stelara[supreg] is indicated for
use in patients who fail other treatments. The applicant then applied
the 2-year inflation factor of 1.098446 from the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
final rule (81 FR 57286) to inflate the charges from FY 2015 to FY
2017. The applicant then added charges for the Stelara[supreg]
technology. Specifically, the applicant assumed that hospitals would
mark up Stelara[supreg] IV to the same extent that they currently mark-
up Stelara[supreg] SC (J3357, ustekinumab, 1 mg). The applicant used
the actual hospital mark-up based on charges in the 2017 OPPS proposed
rule file (OPPS claims incurred and paid in CY 2015). Based on the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS Table 10 thresholds, the average case-weighted
threshold amount was $55,023. The inflated average case-weighted
standardized charge per case was $69,826. Because the inflated average
case-weighted standardized charge per case exceeds the average case-
weighted threshold amount, the applicant maintained that the technology
meets the cost criterion. We are inviting public comments whether
Stelara[supreg] meets the cost criterion.
With regard to the third criterion, whether a technology represents
a substantial clinical improvement over existing technologies,
according to the applicant, the new use of the Stelara[supreg] has been
shown to produce clinical response and remission in patients diagnosed
with moderate to severe CD who have failed treatment using conventional
therapies, including antibiotics, mesalamine, corticosteroids,
immunomodulators, and TNF[alpha] inhibitors. Stelara[supreg] has been
commercially available on the U.S. market for the treatment of patients
diagnosed with psoriasis (PsO) since 2009 and the treatment of patients
diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) since 2013, and the applicant
has maintained a safety registry, which enrolled over 12,000 patients
since 2007. According to the applicant, the drug has been extremely
well-tolerated, and the safety profile in patients diagnosed with CD
has been consistent with that experienced in cases representing
patients diagnosed with PsO and PsA.
The applicant presented the results of three pivotal trials
involving over 1,300 patients diagnosed with moderate to severe CD. All
three trials utilized a multicenter, double-blind, placebo controlled
study design. There were two single-dose IV induction trials, which
included patients who had failed treatment using one or more TNF[alpha]
inhibitors (UNITI-1) (N= 741), and patients who had failed treatment
using corticosteroids and/or immunomodulators (UNITI-2) (N =628).
Responders to the single IV induction dose were then eligible to be
enrolled in a maintenance trial (IM-UNITI) (N= 397), which began 8
weeks after administration of the single IV induction dose. IM-UNITI
patients were given subcutaneous Stelara[supreg] and were treated for
44 weeks. Over half of the patients treated with 90mg of
Stelara[supreg] every 12 weeks were able to achieve remission; a highly
significant response compared to placebo, according to the applicant.
The results of these trials have been published by the New England
Journal of Medicine and the applicant provided the published
studies.\15\ The published study supported the applicant's assertion
that Stelara[supreg] single IV dose induces response and remission in
patients diagnosed with moderately to severely active CD that is
refractory to either TNF antagonists or conventional therapy. Of the
patients in the IM-UNITI trial receiving subcutaneous Stelara[supreg]
at 8 weeks or 12 weeks, 53.1 percent and 48 percent, respectively, were
in remission at week 44 as compared with 35.9 percent of those patients
receiving treatment using placebo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Feagan, W.J., et al. (2016) Ustekinumab as Induction and
Maintenance Therapy for Crohn' Disease. The New England Journal of
Medicine. 2016 Nov 17; 3745(20):1946-60.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant submitted published results of a multicenter, double-
blind, placebo controlled Phase III study of Stelara[supreg].\16\ We
are concerned that the study did not effectively establish the need for
Stelara[supreg] induction therapy. Also, the median age of patients in
the study was 37 years, and we are concerned that the study did not
include a significant amount of older patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also are concerned that we do not have enough information to
determine that the new use of the Stelara[supreg] is a substantial
clinical improvement over existing technologies for the treatment of
moderate to severe CD. We note that the UNITI-1, UNITI-2, and IMUNITI
trials were completed to evaluate efficacy and safety of
Stelara[supreg], not superiority of Stelara[supreg] to current
conventional therapy. Our concerns are based on a lack of head-to-head
trials comparing IV induction and maintenance Stelara[supreg] therapy
with conventional therapy in patients diagnosed with moderate to severe
CD that are also primary and secondary nonresponders to treatment using
TNF alpha inhibitor \17\ therapy. We recognize the subset of primary
and secondary nonresponder patients to
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TNF inhibitor treatments as a patient population unresponsive to,
or ineligible for, currently available treatments for diagnoses of
moderate to severe CD. However, we believe that this primary and
secondary TNF alpha inhibitor non-responder patient population
represents patients that experience a gap in treatment for diagnoses of
moderate to severe CD. Specifically, we recognize the nonresponder
patient population as described by Simon et al.\18\ as those patients
who are TNF inhibitor immunogenicity failures, pharmacokinetic
failures, and/or pharmacodynamics failures. We also note the supplement
data in Feagan et al.'s publication \19\ summarized the primary and
secondary nonresponders in UNITI-1. However, we are not clear how the
inclusion of the TNF alpha
[[Page 19887]]
inhibitor intolerant patients with primary and secondary TNF alpha
inhibitor failure patients impacts the final comparison of the placebo
and treatment arms. In addition, we note that in the UNITI-1, UNITI-2,
and IMUNITI studies all treatment arms were allowed to continue
conventional treatments for diagnoses of CD throughout the study. We
are concerned that it is difficult to determine whether the new use of
the Stelara[supreg] represents a substantial clinical improvement over
existing technologies with the concomitant use of other conventional CD
medications throughout the duration of the UNITI-1, UNITI-2, and
IMUNITI studies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Simon E.G., et al., (2016) Ustekinumab for the treatment of
Crohn's disease: can it find its niche? Therapeutic Advances in
Gastroenterology. 2016 Jan; 9(1):26-36.
\19\ Feagan, W.J., et al. (2016) Ustekinumab as Induction and
Maintenance Therapy for Crohn' Disease. The New England Journal of
Medicine. 2016 Nov 17; 3745(20):1946-60.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, as mentioned earlier, based on the indications for the use of
the Stelara[supreg], there is a class of patients who failed, or were
intolerant to, treatment with immunomodulators or corticosteroids, but
never failed treatment using a TNF blocker. According to the applicant,
for those patients who never failed treatment using a TNF blocker, this
patient population can be recognized as two separate patient
populations: one patient population representing patients who never
received treatment using a TNF blocker, or the other patient population
representing patients who received and responded to treatment using a
TNF blocker. In the patient population that did not receive treatment
using a TNF blocker, we are unsure if the new use of the
Stelara[supreg] represents a substantial clinical improvement because
it is possible that some patients will have a positive response to
treatment using a TNF blocker and will not respond successfully to
treatment using Stelara[supreg], or some patients may have a positive
response to both treatment using a TNF blocker and using
Stelara[supreg], or some patients may not respond to treatment using a
TNF blocker, but will have a positive response to treatment using
Stelara[supreg].
We are inviting public comments on whether the Stelara[supreg]
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
We did not receive any written public comments in response to the
New Technology Town Hall meeting notice regarding the application of
Stelara[supreg] for new technology add-on payments.
d. KTE-C19 (Axicabtagene Ciloleucel)
Kite Pharma, Inc. submitted an application for new technology add-
on payments for KTE-C19 (axicabtagene ciloleucel) for FY 2018. The KTE-
C19 technology has not received FDA approval as of the time of the
development of this proposed rule. KTE-C19 is an engineered autologous
T-cell immunotherapy used for the treatment of adult patients with
relapsed/refractory aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) who
are ineligible for autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT). KTE-C19 is a
single intravenous infusion of T-cell immunotherapy.
The applicant noted that KTE-C19 was granted Breakthrough Therapy
Designation by the FDA on December 3, 2015, for the treatment of
patients with refractory DLBCL, PMBCL, and TFL forms of aggressive B-
cell NHL. The applicant submitted a request for priority review by the
FDA in December 2016. The applicant stated that, when approved by the
FDA, KTE-C19 would represent the only FDA-approved treatment for adult
patients with relapsed refractory aggressive B-cell NHL who are
ineligible for ASCT. Currently, there are no ICD-10-CM/PCS codes that
describe the administration and use of KTE-C19. The applicant has
submitted an application for a unique ICD-10-PCS procedure code to
uniquely identify KTE-C19. If approved, the code will be effective
October 1, 2017 (FY 2018).
According to the applicant, adult NHL represents by a heterogeneous
group of B-cell malignancies with varying patterns of behavior and
response to treatment. B-cell NHL can be classified as either
aggressive, or indolent disease, with aggressive variants including
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL); primary mediastinal large B cell
lymphoma (PMBCL) and transformed follicular lymphoma (TFL). Within NHL,
DLBCL is the most common subtype of NHL, accounting for approximately
30 percent of patients with NHL, and survival without treatment is
measured in months.20 21
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Food and Drug Administration. Available at: //www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/opdlisting/oopd/.
\21\ SEER Stat Fact Sheets--NHL. (2016). Available at: //seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/nhl.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant stated that, since the 1970s, cyclophosphamide,
doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) has been the mainstay
of therapy with more intensive regimens failing to show improved
overall survival. The applicant further stated that the approval in
2006 of the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab and its addition to
the traditional CHOP regimen, R-CHOP, for patients with newly diagnosed
aggressive NHL resulted in a dramatic improvement in NHL therapy. The
combination of CHOP and R-CHOP is now first-line therapy for treatment
of patients diagnosed with DLBCL with complete response rates upwards
of 76 percent.\22\ Data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End
Results (SEER) registries have reflected an observed increase of the
median overall survival from 20 to 47 months over the last two decades.
Despite the improved therapies, only 50 to 70 percent of newly
diagnosed patients are cured by standard first-line therapy alone.\23\
Furthermore, relapsed or refractory (r/r) disease continues to carry a
poor prognosis because only 50 percent of patients are eligible for
more intensive second-line regimens, followed by high dose chemotherapy
(HDT) and ASCT. Second-line chemotherapy regimens studied to date
include rituximab, ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (R-ICE) and
rituximab, dexamethasone, cytarabine, and cisplatin (R-DHAP), followed
by consolidative HDT/ASCT. Both regimens offer similar overall response
rates (ORR) of 51 percent with 1 in 4 patients achieving long-term
complete response (CR) at the expense of increased toxicity.\24\ Given
the modest response to second line therapy and/or HDT/ASCT, the
population of patients with the highest unmet need is those with
chemorefractory disease, which include DLBCL, PMBCL and TFL. These
patients are defined as either progressive disease (PD) as best
response to chemotherapy, stable disease as best response following 4
cycles of first-line or 2 cycles of later-line therapy, or relapse
within 12 months of ASCT.25 26 Based on these definitions
and available data from a multicenter retrospective study (SCHOLAR-1),
chemorefractory disease treated with current and historical standards
of care has consistently poor
[[Page 19888]]
outcomes with an ORR of 26 percent and median OS of 6.6 months.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Coiffier B et al. (2002). CHOP chemotherapy plus rituximab
compared with CHOP alone in elderly patients with diffuse large B-
cell lymphoma. N Eng. J Med 2002; 346(4): 235-242.
\23\ Crump M, et al. (2016). Outcomes in refractory aggressive
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL): results from the
international SCHOLAR-1 study. Abstract 7516, poster and oral
presentation at American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
conference, June 2016
\24\ Matasar M, et al. (2013). Ofatumumab in combination with
ICE or DHAP chemotherapy in relapsed or refractory intermediate
grade B-cell lymphoma. Blood. 25 July 2013. Vol 122, No 4.
\25\ Crump M, et al. (2016). Outcomes in patients with
refractory aggressive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL): results
from the international scholar-1 study. Abstract and poster
presented at Pan Pacific Lymphoma Conference (PPLC), July 2016
\26\ Gisselbrecht C, et al. (2016). Results from SCHOLAR-1:
Outcomes in patients with refractory aggressive diffuse large B-cell
lymphoma (DLBCL). Oral presentation at European Hematology
Association conference, July 2016
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the applicant, KTE-C19 is a different pathway to treat
patients diagnosed with relapsed or refractory disease. KTE-C19 is
supplied as a T-cell suspension for infusion. With KTE-C19 treatment, a
patient's own T-cells are harvested and engineered ex vivo by
retroviral transduction of a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) construct
encoding an anti-CD19 CD28/CD3-zeta. The anti-CD19 CAR T-cells are
expanded and infused back into the patient. The new anti-CD19 CAR T-
cells can recognize and eliminate CD19 antigen expressing target cells,
an antigen also expressed on the cell surface of B-cell lymphomas and
leukemias. According to the applicant, prior to KTE-C19 immunotherapy,
the patient would have received outpatient administration of a non-
myeloablative conditioning chemotherapy regimen consisting of
cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m2 IV and fludarabine 30 mg/m2 IV for 3 days at
days -5, -4, and -3 before the infusion of KTE-C19 at Day 0. The
applicant noted that, if KTE-C19 infusion is delayed more than 2 weeks,
readministration of the conditioning chemotherapy regimen may be
required. Hospitalization is recommended for the infusion of KTE-C19.
As discussed earlier, if a technology meets all three of the
substantial similarity criteria, it would be considered substantially
similar to an existing technology and would not be considered ``new''
for purposes of new technology add-on payments.
With regard to the first criterion, the applicant stated that KTE-
C19 does not use the same or similar mechanism of action to achieve a
therapeutic outcome as any other drug or therapy assigned to the same
or a different MS-DRG. The applicant further stated that KTE-C19 is the
first engineered autologous cellular immunotherapy comprised of CAR T-
cells that recognizes CD19 express cancer cells and normal B-cells;
therefore, the applicant believed that KTE-C19's mechanism of action is
distinct and unique from any other cancer drug or biologic that is
currently approved for use in the treatment of aggressive B-cell NHL,
namely single-agent or combination chemotherapy regimens.
With regard to the second criterion, whether a product is assigned
to the same or a different MS-DRG, the applicant noted that based on
the 2014 and 2015 100 Percent Inpatient Standard Analytic files, cases
potentially eligible for treatment using the KTE-C19 and representing
the target patient population span 50 unique MS-DRGs and 73 percent of
all of the cases within these 50 unique MS-DRGs that represent
potentially eligible cases for treatment using KTE-C19 map to the
following 4 MS-DRGs: MS-DRG 840 (Lymphoma & Non-Acute Leukemia with
MCC); MS-DRG 841 (Lymphoma & Non-Acute Leukemia with CC); MS-DRG 846
(Chemotherapy without Acute Leukemia as Secondary Diagnosis with MCC);
and MS-DRG 847 (Chemotherapy without Acute Leukemia as Secondary
Diagnosis with CC). The applicant stated that, with the assignment of
the unique KTE-C19-specific ICD-10-PCS code, patient cases where KTE-
C19 is used will be distinguishable. However, patient cases where KTE-
C19 is used and patient cases that are treated for DLBCL map to the
same MS-DRGs.
With regard to the third criterion, whether the new use of the
technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, the applicant
asserted that when approved by the FDA, KTE-C19 would represent the
only FDA-approved treatment for adult patients diagnosed with relapsed
or refractory aggressive B-cell NHL who are ineligible for ASCT. As a
result, the applicant stated that KTE-C19 is not substantially similar
to any existing technology and meets the newness criterion. CMS is
concerned the CAR technology used in KTE-C19 may have a mechanism of
action similar to that seen with the use of bispecific T cell engager
(BiTE) technology.
We are inviting public comments on whether KTE-C19 meets the
substantial similarity criteria and the newness criterion.
With respect to the cost criterion, the applicant provided an
analysis to demonstrate that KTE-C19 meets the cost criterion. The
applicant used the 2014 and 2015 100 Percent Inpatient Standard
Analytic File (SAF) to assess the MS-DRGs that are most relevant to
patients that may be potentially eligible for treatment using KTE-C19.
The sample was restricted to patients discharged in FY 2015. The
applicant searched for cases with an ICD-9-CM diagnosis code from the
series of 200.7x (large cell lymphoma).
The applicant sought to ensure that claims included in the cost
criterion analysis reflected charges for treating patients diagnosed
with DLBCL and, therefore, minimized the chance that charges were
related to other conditions. Therefore, the applicant searched for
cases with the following criteria:
A primary diagnosis with a ICD-9-CM diagnosis code from
the series of 200.7x (large cell lymphoma) to identify cases of DLBCL
with or without chemotherapy; or
A secondary diagnosis with a ICD-9-CM diagnosis code from
the series of 200.7x (large cell lymphoma) combined with an ICD-9-CM
diagnosis code of V58.11, or V58.12, or ICD-9-CM procedure code 99.25,
99.28, 00.15 or 00.10 to identify cases of DLBCL that received
chemotherapy during their hospitalization.
The applicant excluded claims where the MS-DRG was missing,
Medicare was not the primary payer, there were zero covered charges or
zero covered days, or the provider was not in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
Final Rule Impact File. Additionally, patients under age 18 were
excluded to align with the proposed label that is being prepared for
submission with the KTE-C19 Biologics License Application (BLA). After
applying the trims above, the results showed 762 cases that mapped to
50 MS-DRGs with 11 MS-DRGs containing more than 10 cases. The 11 MS-
DRGs contained a total of 702 cases.
The applicant noted that MS-DRGs 840, 841, 846, and 847 accounted
for 554 (73 percent) of the 762 cases in the cohort.
Using the 702 identified cases, the average unstandardized case-
weighted charge per case was $71,725. The applicant then standardized
the charges. The applicant noted that adult patients with relapsed/
refractory aggressive B-cell NHL who are ineligible for ASCT would
generally not be receiving treatment with both chemotherapy and KTE-
C19. Therefore, all charges listed in the chemotherapy revenue centers
(331, 332, and 335) were removed. The applicant then applied the 2-year
inflation factor of 1.098446 from the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final rule (81
FR 57286) to inflate the charges from FY 2015 to FY 2017. Based on the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS Table 10 thresholds, the average case-weighted
threshold amount was $55,023. The inflated average case-weighted
standardized charge per case was $69,826. Because the inflated average
case-weighted standardized charge per case exceeds the average case-
weighted threshold amount, the applicant maintained that the technology
meets the cost criterion. The applicant noted that it was not necessary
to take into account the average per patient cost of the technology
because the inflated average case-weighted standardized charge per case
exceeds the average case-weighted threshold amount without the average
per patient cost of the technology.
The applicant provided the following three sensitivity analyses to
further demonstrate that the technology meets
[[Page 19889]]
the cost criterion. The three sensitivity analyses consisted of: (1)
cases representing patients identified with an ICD-9-CM diagnosis code
200.7x (large cell lymphoma) and cases representing patients identified
with a secondary DLBCL diagnosis who did not receive chemotherapy; (2)
cases representing patients identified with a primary or secondary ICD-
9-CM diagnosis code from the series of 200.7x (large cell lymphoma) who
received chemotherapy; and (3) cases representing patients under a
broader ICD-9-CM diagnosis code range to capture other types of
lymphoma. In all three of the sensitivity analyses, the inflated
average case-weighted standardized charge per case exceeded the average
case-weighted threshold amount. We are inviting public comments on
whether KTE-C19 meets the cost criterion.
According to the applicant, KTE-C19 represents a substantial
clinical improvement over existing technologies used in the treatment
of patients with aggressive B-cell NHL. The applicant asserted that
KTE-C19 can benefit the patient population with the highest unmet need,
patients with refractory or relapsed disease after failure of first-
line or second-line therapy, and patients who have failed or are
ineligible for ASCT. These patients otherwise have adverse outcomes as
demonstrated by historical control data.
Regarding clinical data for KTE-C19, the applicant stated that
historical control data was the only ethical and feasible comparison
information for these chemorefractory, aggressive NHL patients who have
no other available treatment options and have a very short lifespan
without therapy. According to the applicant, based on meta-analysis of
outcomes in chemorefractory DLBCL, there are no curative options for
aggressive B-cell NHL patients regardless of refractory subgroup, line
of therapy, and disease stage with their median overall survival being
6.6 months.
The applicant provided clinical data from the pivotal Study 1
(ZUMA-1, KTE-C19-101), Phase I and II. The applicant also provided
supportive evidence from Study 2 (NCI 009-C-0082). Study 1 is a Phase
I-II multicenter, open label study evaluating the safety and efficacy
of the use of KTE-C19 in patients diagnosed with aggressive refractory
NHL. The trial consists of two distinct phases designed as Phase I
(n=7) and Phase II (n=92). Phase II is a multi-cohort open label study
evaluating the efficacy of KTE-C19. Study 1 subjects were treated with
cyclophosphamide and fludarabine conditioning chemotherapy, followed by
a target dose of 2 x 10 anti-CD19 CAR T-cells per kg body weight. Study
2 subjects were treated with cryopreserved autologous anti-CD19 CAR T
cells, which were manufactured by a similar, but different process than
that used for KTE-C19. The applicant noted that, as of the analysis
cutoff date for the interim analysis, the results of Study 1
demonstrated rapid and substantial improvement in objective, or overall
response rate. The overall response rate was 79 percent (49 responders
among 62 subjects), with 76 percent overall response rate in Cohort 1
(39 responders among 51 subjects) and 91 percent in Cohort 2 (10
responders among 11 subjects) versus historical control of 26 percent.
According to the applicant, Study 1 overall response rates were
consistent across all age groups, with those patients greater than 65
years of age responding at the rates consistent with those under age 65
years and consistent with earlier, positive results from Study 2. The
applicant further stated that pre-specified criteria for demonstration
of early efficacy were met and an independent safety monitoring board
(DSMB) confirmed the efficacy results and found no additional safety
signals.
The applicant further stated that evidence of substantial
improvement regarding the efficacy of KTE-C19 for the treatment of
chemorefractory, aggressive B-cell NHL is supported by the complete
response rates of KTE-C19 in Study 1 (52 percent) versus the historical
control (8 percent). Additionally, the applicant noted that the results
of Study 1 have demonstrated that treated patients experienced a rapid
response to KTE-C19 with 52 percent showing complete response at 3
months, and 41 percent at 1 month.
As noted above, the applicant cited data results from Study 2,
which is an ongoing Phase 1 safety and efficacy study in which anti-
CD19 CAR T-cells were manufactured using a process similar to, but
different from, KTE-C19 to yield cryopreserved autologous anti-CD19 CAR
T cells. From Study 2, a subset of 13 patients with a diagnosis of
DLBCL/PMBCL was noted to be comparable to those treated in Study 1. The
applicant noted that all patients were diagnosed with refractory DLBCL,
received similar doses of conditioning chemotherapy, and were infused
with the cryopreserved autologous anti-CD19 CAR T-cells (which have
been shown to result in an immunotherapy comparable to KTE-C19). The
applicant noted that the results from Study 2 demonstrated the
following: (a) an overall response rate of 69 percent (9 responders
among 13 patients) (95 percent CI 38.6, 90.9); (b) 47 percent of
patients had complete response at month 3 (ongoing 6+ to 20+ months);
and (c) complete response was observed as early as 1 month in 57
percent of patients in Study 2. According to the applicant, further
results will be reported in February 2017.
The applicant also cited safety results from the pivotal Study 1,
Phase II. According to the applicant, almost all patients in Study 1
(95 percent) experienced Grade 3 or higher adverse events with onset on
or after commencement of conditioning chemotherapy, including
cytopenias (Grade 3 and 4 anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and
lymphopenia were 40 percent, 40 percent, 29 percent, and 5 percent
respectively), and infection (Grade 3 or worse urinary tract infection,
clostridium difficile colitis and lung infection were 5 percent, 5
percent, and 6 percent respectively). All patients were treated
according to standard of care. The clinical trial protocol stipulated
that patients were infused with KTE-C19 in the hospital inpatient
setting and were monitored in the inpatient setting for at least 7 days
for early identification and treatment of KTE-C19 related toxicities,
which primarily include cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicities.
The applicant stated that KTE-C19 is expected to be administered in the
hospital inpatient setting to assure appropriate monitoring of patient
adverse events. The applicant noted that the interim analysis of Study
1 showed the following: length of stay following KTE-C19 infusion was a
median of 15 days; cytokine release syndrome (Grade 3 or higher, 18
percent) and neurotoxicity (Grade 3 or higher, 34 percent) were self-
limiting and generally reversible; two patients died from KTE-C19
related adverse events (hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and cardiac
arrest in the setting of cytokine release syndrome). The medications
most often used to treat KTE-C19 clinical trial complications included
growth factors, blood products, anti-infectives, steroids, tocilizumab,
and vasopressors. In the majority of patients (92 percent), the
applicant noted that predominant toxicities associated with the use of
KTE-C19, cytokine release syndrome and neurologic events, resolved by
data cutoff. Median days to resolution of cytokine release syndrome
complications post-KTE-C19 infusion was 9 days, with median days to
resolution of KTE-C19-related
[[Page 19890]]
neurologic events post-KTE-C19 infusion of 18 days. According to the
applicant, there were no clinically important differences in adverse
event rates across age groups (younger than 65; 65 or older), including
cytokine release syndrome and neurotoxicity, and KTE-C19-related
adverse events in Study 1 were consistent with the earlier Study 2
experience.
The applicant further noted that by the cutoff date for the interim
analysis of Study 1, among all KTE-C19 treated patients, 12 patients in
Study 1, Phase II, including 10 from Cohort 1 and 2 from Cohort 2,
died. Eight of these deaths were due to disease progression. One
subject had disease progression after KTE-C19 treatment and
subsequently had ASCT. After ASCT, the subject died due to sepsis. Two
subjects (3 percent) died due to KTE-C19 related AEs (Grade 5
hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis event and Grade 5 anoxic brain
injury), and one died due to an AE deemed unrelated to KTE-C19 (Grade 5
pulmonary embolism), without disease progression.
We are concerned that there are no published results showing any
survival benefit from the treatment. We also are concerned with the
limited number of subjects (n=82) that were studied after infusion of
KTE-C19 T-cell immunotherapy. Although the applicant references Study
2, we are concerned that the applicant has included data on DLBCL/PMBCL
patients that did not specifically receive KTE-C19. Additionally, we
are concerned that Study 2 was based on 13 patients which can result in
skewed outcomes due to a small patient population. Finally, we note
that, for Study 1 and Study 2, the data on overall survival are not
reported.
We are inviting public comments on whether KTE-C19 meets the
substantial clinical improvement criterion.
Comment: The applicant stated that it has been notified by the
United States Adopted Names Council (USAN Council) that the
technology's name for KTE-C19 has been revised from ``axicabtagene
ciloretroleucel'' to ``axicabtagene ciloleucel.'' In addition, the
applicant requested that all references by CMS to the technology's name
of KTE-C19 use this final naming convention of ``axicabtagene
ciloleucel.''
Response: We appreciate the applicant's updated information and
have correlated the name of the technology throughout the discussion
above.
e. VYXEOSTM (Cytarabine and Daunorubicin Liposome for
Injection)
Celator Pharmaceuticals, Inc. submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for VYXEOSTM for FY 2018. The
proposed indication for the use of VYXEOSTM, which has not
received FDA approval as of the time of the development of this
proposed rule, is the treatment of adult patients diagnosed with acute
myeloid leukemia (AML).
AML is a type of cancer in which the bone marrow makes abnormal
myeloblasts (immature bone marrow white blood cells), red blood cells,
and platelets. If left untreated, AML progresses rapidly. Normally, the
bone marrow makes blood stem cells that develop into mature blood cells
over time. Stem cells have the potential to develop into many different
cell types in the body. Stem cells can act as an internal repair
system, dividing, essentially without limit, to replenish other cells.
When a stem cell divides, each new cell has the potential to either
remain a stem cell or become a specialized cell, such as a muscle cell,
a red blood cell or a brain cell, etc. A blood stem cell may become a
myeloid stem cell or a lymphoid stem cell. Lymphoid stem cells become
white blood cells. A myeloid stem cell becomes one of three types of
mature blood cells: (1) red blood cells that carry oxygen and other
substances to body tissues; (2) white blood cells that fight infection;
or (3) platelets that form blood clots and help to control bleeding. In
patients diagnosed with AML, the myeloid stem cells usually become a
type of myeloblast. The myeloblasts in patients diagnosed with AML are
abnormal and do not become healthy white blood cells. Sometimes in
patients diagnosed with AML, too many stem cells become abnormal red
blood cells or platelets. These abnormal cells are called leukemia
cells or blasts.
AML is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as >20
percent blasts in the bone marrow or blood. AML can also be diagnosed
if the blasts are found to have a chromosome change that occurs only in
a specific type of AML, even if the blast percentage does not reach 20
percent. Leukemia cells can build up in the bone marrow and blood,
resulting in less room for healthy white blood cells, red blood cells,
and platelets. When this occurs, infection, anemia, or increased risk
for bleeding may result. Leukemia cells can spread outside the blood to
other parts of the body, including the central nervous system (CNS),
skin, and gums.
Treatment of AML diagnoses usually consists of two phases;
remission induction and post-remission therapy. Phase one, remission
induction, is aimed at eliminating as many myeloblasts as possible. The
most common used remission induction regimens for AML diagnoses are the
``7+3'' regimens using an antineoplastic and an anthracycline.
Cytarabine and daunorubicin are two commonly used drugs for ``7+3''
remission induction therapy. Cytarabine is continuously administered
intravenously over the course of 7 days, while daunorubicin is
intermittently administered intravenously for the first 3 days. The
``7+3'' regimen typically achieves a 70 to 80 percent complete
remission (CR) rate in most patients under 60 years of age.
High rates of CR are not generally seen in older patients for a
number of reasons, such as different leukemia biology, much higher
incidence of adverse cytogenetic abnormalities, higher rate of
multidrug resistant leukemic cells, and comparatively lower patient
performance status (the standard criteria for measuring how the disease
impacts a patient's daily living abilities). Intensive induction
therapy has worse outcomes in this patient population.\27\ The
applicant asserted that many older adults diagnosed with AML have a
poor performance status \28\ at presentation and multiple medical
comorbidities that make the use of intensive induction therapy quite
difficult or contraindicated altogether. Moreover, the CR rates of
poor-risk patients diagnosed with AML are substantially higher in
patients >60 years old; owing to a higher proportion of secondary AML,
disease developing in the setting of a prior myeloid disorder, or prior
cytotoxic chemotherapy. Therefore, less than half of older adults
diagnosed with AML achieve CR with combination induction regimens.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Juliusson G, Lazarevic V, Horstedt AS, Hagberg O, Hoglund
M. Acute myeloid leukemia in the real world: why population-based
registries are needed. Blood. 2012 Apr 26; 119(17):3890-9.
\28\ Stone RM, et al. (2004). Acute myeloid leukemia. Hematology
Am Soc Hematol Educ Program. 2004:98-117.
\29\ Appelbaum FR, Gundacker H, Head DR. ``Age and acute myeloid
leukemia.'' Blood 2006; 107:3481-3485.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The combination of cytarabine and an anthracycline, either as
``7+3'' regimens or as part of a different regimen incorporating other
cytotoxic agents, may be used as so-called ``salvage'' induction
therapy in the treatment of adults diagnosed with AML who experience
relapse in an attempt to
[[Page 19891]]
achieve CR. According to the applicant, while CR rates of success vary
widely depending on underlying disease biology and host factors, there
is a lower success rate overall in achievement of CR with ``7+3''
regimens compared to VYXEOSTM therapy. In addition, ``7+3''
regimens produce a CR rate of approximately 50 percent in younger adult
patients who have relapsed, but were in CR for at least 1 year.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Kantarjian H, Rayandi F, O'Brien S et al. ``Intensive
chemotherapy does not benefit most older patients (age 70 years and
older) with acute myeloid leukemia.'' Blood 2010; 116(22):4422.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VYXEOSTM is a nano-scale liposomal formulation
containing a fixed combination of cytarabine and daunorubicin in a 5:1
molar ratio. This formulation was developed by the applicant using a
proprietary system known as CombiPlex. According to the applicant,
CombiPlex addresses several fundamental shortcomings of conventional
combination regimens, specifically the conventional ``7+3'' free drug
dosing, as well as the challenges inherent in combination drug
development, by identifying the most effective synergistic molar ratio
of the drugs being combined in vitro, and fixing this ratio in a nano-
scale drug delivery complex to maintain the optimized combination after
administration and ensuring exposure of this ratio to the tumor.
Cytarabine and daunorubicin are co-encapsulated inside the
VYXEOSTM liposome at a fixed ratiometrically, optimized 5:1
cytarabine:daunorubicin molar ratio. According to the applicant,
encapsulation maintains the synergistic ratios, reduces degradation,
and minimizes the impact of drug transporters and the effect of known
resistant mechanisms. The applicant stated that the 5:1 molar ratio has
been shown, in vitro, to maximize synergistic antitumor activity across
multiple leukemic and solid tumor cell lines, including AML, and in
animal model studies to be optimally efficacious compared to other
cytarabine:daunorubicin ratios. In addition, the applicant stated that
in clinical studies, the use of VYXEOSTM has demonstrated
consistently more efficacious results than the conventional ``7+3''
free drug dosing. VYXEOSTM is intended for intravenous
administration after reconstitution with 19 mL sterile water for
injection. VYXEOSTM is administered as a 90-minute
intravenous infusion on days 1, 3, and 5 (induction therapy), as
compared to the ``7+3'' free drug dosing, which consists of two
individual drugs administered on different days, including 7 days of
continuous infusion.
With regard to the ``newness'' criterion, the applicant indicated
that the rolling New Drug Application (NDA) submission to the FDA for
VYXEOSTM began on September 30, 2016. The applicant stated
that it intends to request Priority Review from the FDA.
VYXEOSTM is currently available in the United States only on
an investigational basis, under an Investigational New Drug (IND)
designation. Breakthrough Therapy designation was granted on May 19,
2016, for the treatment of adults diagnosed with therapy-related AML
(t-AML) or AML with myelodysplasia-related changes (AML-MRC). Fast
Track designation was granted by the FDA in January 2015 for the
treatment of elderly patients diagnosed with secondary AML. Orphan Drug
designation was granted by the FDA on August 22, 2008, for the
treatment of acute AML. VYXEOSTM had not received pre-market
(PMA) approval from the FDA at the time of development of this proposed
rule. However, the applicant anticipates receiving approval from the
FDA by July 1, 2017. The applicant also has submitted a request for a
unique ICD-10-PCS code, beginning with FY 2018.
As discussed earlier, if a technology meets all three of the
substantial similarity criteria, it would be considered substantially
similar to an existing technology and would not be considered ``new''
for purposes of new technology add-on payments.
With regard to the first criterion, whether a product uses the same
or a similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome, the
applicant asserted that VYXEOSTM does not use the same or
similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome as any
other drug assigned to the same or a different DRG. The applicant
stated that no other AML treatment is designed, nor is able, to deliver
a fixed, ratiometrically optimized and synergistic drug:drug ratio of
5:1 cytarabine to daunorubicin, and selectively target and accumulate
at the site of malignancy, while minimizing unwanted exposure, which
the applicant based on the data results of preclinical and clinical
studies of the use of VYXEOSTM. The applicant indicated that
VYXEOSTM is a nano-scale liposomal formulation of a fixed
combination of cytarabine and daunorubicin. Further, the applicant
stated that the rationale for the development of VYXEOSTM is
based on prolonged delivery of synergistic drug ratios utilizing the
applicant's proprietary, ratiometric CombiPlex technology. According to
the applicant, conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing has no delivery
complex, and these individual drugs are administered without regard to
their ratio dependent interaction. According to the applicant,
enzymatic inactivation and imbalanced drug efflux and transporter
expression reduce drug levels in the cell. Decreased cytotoxicity leads
to cell survival, emergence of drug resistant cells, and decreased
overall survival.
The applicant provided the results of clinical studies to
demonstrate that the CombiPlex technology and the ratiometric dosing of
VYXEOSTM represent a shift in anticancer agent delivery,
whereby the fixed, optimized dosing provides less drug to achieve
improved efficacy, while maintaining a favorable risk-benefit profile.
The results of this ratiometric dosing approach are in contrast to the
typical combination chemotherapy development that establishes the
recommended dose of one agent and then adds subsequent drugs to the
combination at increasing concentrations until the aggregate effects of
toxicity are considered to be limiting (the ``7+3'' drug regimen).
According to the applicant, this current approach to combination
chemotherapy development assumes that maximum therapeutic activity will
be achieved with maximum dose intensity for all drugs in the
combination, and ignores the possibility that more subtle
concentration-dependent drug interactions could result in frankly
synergistic outcomes.
The applicant maintained that, while VYXEOSTM contains
no novel active agents, its innovative drug delivery mechanism appears
to be a superior way to deliver the two active compounds in an effort
to optimize their efficacy in killing leukemic blasts. However, we are
concerned it is possible that VYXEOSTM may use a similar
mechanism of action compared to current treatment because both the
current treatment regimen and VYXEOSTM are used in the
treatment of AML by intravenous administration of cytarabin and
daunorubicin.
With respect to the second criterion, whether a product is assigned
to the same or a different MS-DRG, the applicant maintained that based
on the 2014 and 2015 100 Percent Inpatient Standard Analytic files,
cases representing patients potentially eligible for treatment using
VYXEOSTM and the target patient population span 134 unique
MS-DRGs, and 78 percent of all of the cases within these 134 unique MS-
DRGs map to the following 4 MS-DRGs: 834 (Acute Leukemia Without Major
O.R. Procedure With MCC), 837 (Chemotherapy With Acute Leukemia as SDX
or With High Dose Chemotherapy
[[Page 19892]]
Agent with MCC), 838 (Chemotherapy With Acute Leukemia as SDX With CC
or High Dose Chemotherapy Agent), and 839 (Chemotherapy With Acute
Leukemia as SDX Without CC/MCC). We believe that these are the same MS-
DRGs that identify cases representing patients who are treated for AML.
With respect to the third criterion, whether the new use of the
technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, the applicant
asserted that VYXEOSTM is indicated for the use in patients
diagnosed with high-risk AML. However, we believe that
VYXEOSTM involves the treatment of the same patient
population as other AML treatment therapies.
We are inviting public comments on whether VYXEOSTM is
substantially similar to existing technology, including whether the
mechanism of action of VYXEOSTM differs from the mechanism
of action of the current treatment regimen. We also are inviting public
comments on whether VYXEOSTM meets the newness criterion.
With regard to the cost criterion, the applicant conducted the
following analysis. The applicant used the 2014 and 2015 100 Percent
Inpatient Standard Analytic Files (SAFs) to assess the MS-DRGs assigned
for hospitalizations most likely to represent patients that may be
eligible for treatment with VYXEOSTM. The sample of claims
was limited to discharges occurring in FY 2015 (that is, from October
1, 2014 to September 30, 2015).
The applicant identified patients as potential VYXEOSTM
candidates by searching for cases indicating a diagnosis of AML.
Specifically, the applicant searched for cases that met the following
criteria:
Had an ICD-9-CM diagnosis code of 205.00 (Acute myeloid
leukemia, without mention of having achieved remission), or 205.02
(Acute myeloid leukemia, in relapse); or
The patient received chemotherapy during their hospital
stay as indicated by the following principal/secondary ICD-9-CM
diagnosis codes or ICD-9-CM procedure codes: V58.11 (Encounter for
antineoplastic chemotherapy); V58.12 (Encounter for antineoplastic
immunotherapy; 00.10 (Implantation of chemotherapeutic agent); 00.15
(High-Dose infusion interleukin-2); 99.25 (Injection or Infusion of
cancer chemotherapeutic substance); or 99.28 (Injection or infusion of
biological response modifier as an antineoplastic agent); and
Excluded cases that had a bone marrow transplant based on
the following ICD-9-CM procedure codes: 41.00 (Bone marrow transplant,
not otherwise specified); 41.01 (Autologous bone marrow transplant
without purging); 41.02 (Allogeneic bone marrow transplant with
purging); 41.03 (Allogeneic bone marrow transplant without purging);
41.04 (Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant without purging);
41.05 (Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant without purging);
41.06 (Cord blood stem cell transplant); 41.07 (Autologous
hematopoietic stem cell transplant with purging); 41.08 (Allogeneic
hematopoietic stem cell transplant); and 41.09 (Autologous bone marrow
transplant with purging).
According to the applicant, the eligible cases span 134 unique MS-
DRGs, 14 of which contain more than 10 cases. The most common MS-DRGs
are MS-DRGs 834, 837, 838, and 839. These 4 MS-DRGs account for 3,601
(78 percent) of the 4,613 potential eligible cases.
Using the 4,613 identified cases, the average unstandardized case-
weighted charge per case was $203,234. The applicant then standardized
the charges. The applicant removed charges for the current treatment.
The applicant then applied the 2-year inflation factor of 1.098446 from
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final rule (81 FR 57286) to inflate the charges
from FY 2015 to FY 2017. Based on the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS Table 10
thresholds, the average case-weighted threshold amount was $84,639. The
inflated average case-weighted standardized charge per case was
$178,392. Because the inflated average case-weighted standardized
charge per case exceeds the average case-weighted threshold amount, the
applicant maintained that the technology meets the cost criterion.
The applicant noted that the average case-weighted standardized
charge per case for the applicable MS-DRGs exceeds the average case-
weighted threshold amount without taking into account the average per
patient cost of the technology to the hospital. Therefore, the analysis
above did not include the cost of VYXEOSTM.
As previously stated, according to the applicant, the potentially
eligible cases used for the cost criterion analysis included patients
diagnosed with AML who received chemotherapy during their hospital
stay, but did not receive a bone marrow transplant. The applicant
asserted that this patient cohort is inclusive of all likely potential
patients that may be eligible for treatment using VYXEOSTM.
The applicant conducted the same analysis, but excluded all pharmacy
and IV therapy charges. Additionally, to test the sensitivity of cohort
specification, the applicant conducted the following four additional
sensitivity analyses that used alternative cohort definitions: (1)
Included AML cases with ICD-9-CM diagnosis code 205.00 and
chemotherapy; (2) included AML cases with ICD-9-CM diagnosis code
205.02 and chemotherapy; (3) included cases with AML principal
diagnosis and chemotherapy; and (4) included AML cases without
requiring chemotherapy. In all of these analyses, the inflated average
case-weighted standardized charge per case exceeded the average case-
weighted threshold amount. We are inviting public comments whether
VYXEOSTM meets the cost criterion.
With regard to substantial clinical improvement, according to the
applicant, clinical data results have shown that the use of
VYXEOSTM represents a substantial clinical improvement for
the treatment of AML in newly diagnosed high-risk, older (60 years and
older) patients, marked by statistically significant improvements in
overall survival, event free survival and response rates, and in
relapsed patients age 18 to 65 years of age, where a statistically
significant improvement in overall survival was documented for the
poor-risk subset of patients as defined by the European Prognostic
Index. In both groups of patients, the applicant stated that there was
significant improvement in survival for the high-risk patient group.
The applicant provided the following specific clinical data results.
The applicant stated the clinical data results show that
treatment with VYXEOSTM in older patients (60 years of age
and older) diagnosed with untreated, high-risk AML will result in
superior survival rates, as compared to patients treated with
conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing. The applicant provided a summary
of the pivotal Phase III Study 301 in which 309 patients were enrolled,
with 153 patients randomized to the VYXEOSTM arm and 156 to
the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm. Among patients aged 60 to 69 years,
there were 96 patients in the VYXEOSTM arm and 102 in the
``7+3'' free drug dosing arm; for patients aged 70 to 75 years, there
were 57 and 54 patients in each arm, respectively. The applicant noted
that the data results from the Phase III Study 301 demonstrated that
first-line treatment of patients diagnosed with high-risk AML in the
VYXEOSTM arm resulted in substantially greater median
overall survival of 9.56 months versus 5.95 months in the ``7+3'' free
drug dosing arm (hazard ratio of 0.69; p =0.005).
[[Page 19893]]
The applicant further asserted that high-risk, older
patients (60 years of age and older) previously untreated for diagnoses
of AML will have a lower risk of early death when treated with
VYXEOSTM than those treated with the conventional ``7+3''
free drug dosing. The applicant cited Medeiros, et al. 2015,\31\ which
reported a large observational study of Medicare beneficiaries and
noted the following: The data result of the study showed that 50 to 60
percent of elderly patients diagnosed with AML remain untreated
following diagnosis; treated patients were more likely younger, male,
and married, and less likely to have secondary diagnoses of AML, poor
performance indicators, and poor comorbidity scores compared to
untreated patients; and in multivariate survival analyses, treated
patients exhibited a significant 33 percent lower risk of death
compared to untreated patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Medeiros B, et al. (2015). Big data analysis of treatment
patterns and outcomes among elderly acute myeloid leukemia patients
in the United States. Ann Hematol. 2015; 94(7): 1127-1138.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on data from the Phase III Study 301,\32\ the applicant cited
the following results: The rate of 60-day mortality was less in the
VYXEOSTM arm (13.7 percent) versus the ``7+3'' free drug
dosing arm (21.2 percent); the reduction in early mortality was due to
fewer deaths from refractory AML (3.3 percent versus 11.3 percent),
with very similar rates of 60-day mortality due to adverse events (10.4
percent versus 9.9 percent); there were fewer deaths in the
VYXEOSTM arm versus the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm during
the treatment phase (7.8 percent versus 11.3 percent); and there were
fewer deaths in the VYXEOSTM arm during the follow-up phase
than in the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm (59.5 percent versus 71.5
percent).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Lancet J, et al. (2016). Final results of a Phase III
randomized trial of VYXEOS (CPX-351) versus 7+3 in older patients
with newly diagnosed, high-risk (secondary) AML. Abstract and oral
presentation at American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), June
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant asserted that high-risk, older patients (60
years of age and older) previously untreated for a diagnosis of AML
exhibited statistically significant improvements in response rates
after treatment with VYXEOSTM versus treatment with the
conventional ``7+3'' free drug chemotherapy dosing, suggesting that the
use of VYXEOSTM is a superior pre-transplant induction
treatment versus ``7+3'' free drug dosing. Restoration of normal
hematopoiesis is the ultimate goal of any therapy for AML diagnoses.
The first phase of treatment consists of induction chemotherapy, in
which the goal is to ``empty'' the bone marrow of all hematopoietic
elements (both benign and malignant), and to allow repopulation of the
marrow with normal cells, thereby yielding remission. According to the
applicant, post-induction response rates were significantly higher
following the use of VYXEOSTM, which elicited a 47.7 percent
total response rate and a 37.3 percent rate for CR, whereas the total
response and CR rates for the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm were 33.3
percent and 25.6 percent, respectively. The CR + CRi rates for patients
aged 60 to 69 years were 50.0 percent in the VYXEOSTM arm
and 36.3 percent in the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm, with an odds
ratio of 1.76 (95 percent CI, 1.00-3.10). For patients aged 70 to 75,
the rates of CR + CRi were 43.9 percent in the VYXEOSTM arm
and 27.8 percent in the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm.
The applicant asserted that VYXEOSTM treatment
will enable high-risk, older patients (60 years of age and older) to
bridge to allogeneic transplant, and VYXEOSTM responding
patients will have markedly better outcomes following transplant. The
applicant stated that diagnoses of secondary AML are considered
incurable with standard chemotherapy approaches and, as with other
high-risk hematological malignancies, transplantation is a useful
treatment alternative. The applicant further stated that autologous
HSCT has limited effectiveness and at this time, only allogeneic HSCT
with full intensity conditioning has been reported to produce long-term
remissions. However, the applicant stated that the clinical study by
Medeiros et al., 2015, reported that, while the use of allogeneic HSCT
is considered a potential cure for AML, its use is limited in older
patients because of significant baseline comorbidities and increased
transplant-related morbidity and mortality. Patients in either arm of
the Phase III Study 301 responding to induction with a CR or CR+CRi
(n=125) were considered for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant
(HCT) when possible. In total, 91 patients were transplanted: 52 (34
percent) from the VYXEOSTM arm and 39 (25 percent) from the
``7+3'' free drug dosing arm. Patient and AML characteristics were
similar according to randomized arm, including percentage of patients
in each arm that underwent transplant in CR+CRi status. However, the
applicant noted that the VYXEOSTM arm contained a higher
percentage of older patients (aged 70 or greater) who were transplanted
(VYXEOSTM, 31 percent; ``7+3'' free drug dosing, 15
percent).\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Stone Hematology 2004; Gordon AACR 2016; NCI, cancer.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to the applicant, patient outcome following transplant
strongly favored patients in the VYXEOSTM arm. The Kaplan-
Meier analysis of the 91 transplanted patients landmarked at the time
of HCT showed that patients in the VYXEOSTM arm had markedly
better overall survival (hazard ratio 0.46; p=0.0046). The time-
dependent Adjustment Model (Cox proportional hazard ratio) was used to
evaluate the contribution of VYXEOSTM to overall survival
rate after adjustment for transplant and showed that
VYXEOSTM remained a significant contributor, even after
adjusting for transplant. The time-dependent Cox hazard ratio for
overall survival rates in the VYXEOSTM arm versus the
``7+3'' free drug dosing arm was 0.51 (95 percent CI, 0.35-0.75;
P=.0007).
The applicant asserted that VYXEOSTM treatment
of previously untreated older patients (60 years of age and older)
diagnosed with high-risk AML increases the response rate and improves
survival compared to conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing in patients
diagnosed with FLT3 mutation. The applicant noted the following:
approximately 20 to 30 percent of AML patients harbor some form of FLT3
mutation, AML patients with a FLT3 mutation have a higher relapse rate
and poorer prognosis than the overall population diagnosed with AML,
and the most common type of mutation is internal tandem duplication
(ITD) mutation localized to a membrane region of the receptor.
The applicant cited Gordon et al., 2016,\34\ which reported on the
significant anti-leukemic activity of VYXEOSTM in AML blasts
exhibiting high-risk characteristics, including FLT3-ITD, that are
typically associated with poor outcomes when treated with conventional
``7+3'' free drug dosing. To determine whether the improved complete
remission and overall survival rates of VYXEOSTM as compared
to conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing are attributable to liposome-
mediated altered drug PK or direct cellular interactions with specific
AML blast samples, the authors evaluated cytotoxicity in 53 AML patient
specimens. Cytotoxicity results were correlated with patient
characteristics,
[[Page 19894]]
as well as VYXEOSTM cellular uptake and molecular phenotype
status including FLT3-ITD, which is a predictor of poor patient
outcomes to conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing. The applicant stated
that a notable result from this research was the observation that AML
blasts exhibiting the FLT3-ITD phenotype exhibited some of the lowest
IC50 (the 50 percent inhibitory concentration) values and,
as a group, were five-fold more sensitive to VYXEOSTM than
those with wild type FLT3. In addition, there was evidence that
increased sensitivity to VYXEOSTM was associated with
increased uptake of the drug-laden liposomes by the patient-derived AML
blasts. The applicant noted that Gordon, et al. 2016, concluded taken
together, the data are consistent with clinical observations where
VYXEOSTM retains significant anti-leukemic activity in AML
patients exhibiting high-risk characteristics. The applicant also noted
that a sub analysis of Phase III Study 301 identified 22 patients
diagnosed with FLT3 mutation in the VYXEOSTM arm and 20 in
the ``7+3'' free drug dosing arm, which resulted in the following
response rates of FLT3 mutated patients, which were higher with
VYXEOSTM (15 of 22, 68.2 percent) versus ``7+3'' free drug
dosing (5 of 20, 25.0 percent); and the Kaplan-Meier analysis of the 42
FLT3 mutated patients showed that patients in the VYXEOSTM
arm had a trend towards better overall survival rates (hazard ratio
0.57; p=0.093).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Gordon M, Tardi P, Lawrence MD et al. ``CPX-351
cytotoxicity against fresh AML blasts increased for FLT3-ITD+ cells
and correlates with drug uptake and clinical outcomes.'' Abstract
287 and poster presented at AACR (American Association for Cancer
Research). April 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant asserted that younger patients (18 to 65
years of age) with poor risk first relapse AML have shown higher
response rates with VYXEOSTM versus conventional ``salvage''
chemotherapy. Overall, the applicant stated that the use of
VYXEOSTM had an acceptable safety profile in this patient
population based on 60-day mortality data. Study 205 \35\ was a
randomized study comparing VYXEOSTM against the
investigator's choice of first ``salvage'' chemotherapy in patients
diagnosed with relapsed AML after a first remission lasting greater
than 1 month (VYXEOSTM arm, n=81 and ``7+3'' free drug
dosing arm, n=44; ages 18 to 65 year of age). Investigator's choice was
almost always based on cytarabine + anthracycline, usually with the
addition of one or two new agents. According to the applicant,
VYXEOSTM demonstrated a higher rate of morphological
leukemia clearance among all patients, 43.2 percent versus 40.0
percent, and the advantage was most apparent in poor-risk patients,
78.7 percent versus 44.4 percent, as defined by the European Prognostic
Index (EPI). In the subset analysis of this EPI poor-risk patient
subset, the applicant stated there was a significant improvement in
survival rate (6.6 versus 4.2 months median, hazard ratio=0.55, p=0.02)
and improved response rate (39.3 percent versus 27 percent). The
applicant also noted the following: the safety profile for the use of
VYXEOSTM was qualitatively similar to that of control
``salvage'' therapy, with nearly identical 60-day mortality rates (14.8
percent versus 15.9 percent); among VYXEOSTM treated
patients, those with no history of prior HSCT (n=59) had higher
response rates (54.2 percent versus 37.8 percent) and lower 60-day
mortality (10.2 percent versus 16.2 percent); overall, the use of
VYXEOSTM had acceptable safety based on 60-day mortality
data, with somewhat higher frequency of neutropenia and
thrombocytopenia-related grade 3-4 adverse events. Even though these
patients are younger (18 to 65 years of age) than the population
studied in Phase III Study 301 (60 years and older), Study 205 patients
were at a later stage of disease and almost all had responded to first-
line therapy (cytarabine + anthracycline) and had relapsed. The
applicant also cited Cortes, et al. 2015,\36\ which reported that
patients diagnosed with first relapse AML have limited likelihood of
response and short expected survival following ``salvage'' treatment
with the results from literature showing that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Cortes J, et al. (2011). Significance of prior HSCT on the
outcome of salvage therapy with CPX-351 or conventional chemotherapy
among first relapse AML patients. Abstract and poster presented at
ASH 2011.
\36\ Cortes J, et al. (2015). Phase II, multicenter, randomized
trial of CPX-351 (cytarabine:daunorubicin) liposome injection versus
intensive salvage therapy in adults with first relapse AML. Cancer.
January 2015, 234-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mitoxantrone, etoposide, and cytarabine induced response
in 23 percent of patients, with median overall survival of only 2
months.
Modulation of deoxycitidine kinase by fludarabine led to
the combination of fludarabine and cytarabine, resulting in a 36
percent CR rate with median remission duration of 39 weeks.
First salvage gemtuzumab ozogamicin induced CR+CRp (or
CR+CRi) response in 30 percent of patients with CD33+ AML and, for
patients with short first CR durations, appeared to be superior to
cytarabine-based therapy.
The applicant noted that Study 205 results showed the use of
VYXEOSTM retained greater anti-leukemic efficacy in patients
diagnosed with poor-risk first relapse AML, and produced higher
morphological leukemia clearance rates (78.7 percent) compared to
conventional ``salvage'' therapy (44 percent). The applicant further
noted that, overall, the use of VYXEOSTM had acceptable
safety profile in this patient population based on 60-day mortality
data.
Based on all of the data presented above, the applicant concluded
that VYXEOSTM represents a substantial clinical improvement
over existing technologies. However, we are concerned that, although
there was an improvement in a number of outcomes in Phase III Study
301, specifically overall survival rate, lower risk of early death,
improved response rates, better outcomes following transplant,
increased response rate and overall survival in patients diagnosed with
FLT3 mutation, and higher response rates versus conventional
``salvage'' chemotherapy in younger patients diagnosed with poor-risk
first relapse, the improved outcomes may not be statistically
significant. Furthermore, we are concerned that the overall improvement
in survival from 5.95 months to 9.56 months may not represent a
substantial clinical improvement. In addition, the rate of adverse
events in both arms of Study 205, given the theoretical benefit of
reduced toxicity with the liposomal formulation, was similar for both
the VYXEOSTM and ``7+3'' free drug treatment groups.
Therefore, we also are concerned that there is a similar rate of
adverse events, such as febrile neutropenia (68 percent versus 71
percent), pneumonia (20 percent versus 15 percent), and hypoxia (13
percent versus 15 percent), with the use of VYXEOSTM as
compared with the conventional ``7+3'' free drug regimen.
We are inviting public comments on whether the VYXEOSTM
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
Below we summarize and respond to comments submitted on
VYXEOSTM during the open comment period in response to the
New Technology Town Hall meeting notice.
Comment: The applicant provided a written response regarding the
definition of ``free drug'' as ``Unbound drug pharmacology;'' an active
drug or other compound that is not bound to a carrier protein-for
example, albumin or alpha[hyphen]1[hyphen]acid glycoprotein. The
applicant explained that the term ``free[hyphen]drug dosing'' is used
to describe the two different non[hyphen]encapsulated, separately
administered drugs in the ``7+3'' free drug regimen (cytarabine and
daunorubicin), each an unrestricted uniform aqueous solution of the
drug in water for continuous administration of cytarabine and separate
intravenous
[[Page 19895]]
administration of daunorubicin according to the ``7+3'' dosing
schedule. The applicant then stated that the fixed molar drug ratio
delivered by VYXEOSTM is not relevant to the conventional
dosing of the two free drugs, cytarabine and daunorubicin. The
applicant explained that the doses of cytarabine and daunorubicin used
in the conventional ``7+3'' free drug dosing regimen were based on the
maximum tolerated dose of the two agents, not on any concept related to
a drug ratio that provides optimal synergy. Finally, the ratio of
cytarabine and daunorubicin administered in free (non[hyphen]liposomal)
form is irrelevant because the administered ratio cannot be maintained
when these drugs are infused separately. This is because the drugs will
be distributed and eliminated differentially and independently of one
another and the ratio will change rapidly and continuously.
Consequently, according to the applicant, the inability to control drug
ratios following administration in conventional dosage forms likely
results in exposure of tumor cells to antagonistic drug ratios with a
corresponding loss of therapeutic activity.
Response: We appreciate the applicant's comments. We will take
these comments into consideration when deciding whether to approve new
technology add-on payments for VYXEOSTM.
f. GammaTileTM
Isoray Medical, Inc. & GammaTile, LLC submitted an application for
new technology add-on payments for FY 2018 for the
GammaTileTM. The GammaTileTM is a brachytherapy
technology for use in the treatment of patients diagnosed with brain
tumors using cesium-131 radioactive sources embedded in a collagen
matrix. GammaTileTM is designed to provide adjuvant
radiation therapy to eliminate remaining tumor cells in patients who
required surgical resection of brain tumors. According to the
applicant, the GammaTileTM is a new vehicle of delivery for
and inclusive of cesium-131 brachytherapy sources embedded within the
product. The applicant stated that the technology has been manufactured
for use in the setting of a craniotomy resection site where there is a
high chance of local recurrence of a CNS or dual-based tumor. The
applicant asserted that the use of GammaTileTM provides a
new, unique modality for treating patients who require radiation
therapy to augment surgical resection of malignancies of the brain. By
offsetting the radiation sources with a 3mm gap of a collagen matrix,
the applicant asserted that the use of GammaTileTM resolves
issues with ``hot'' and ``cold'' spots associated with brachytherapy,
improves safety, and potentially offers a treatment option for patients
with limited, or no other, available options. The
GammaTileTM is biocompatible and bioabsorbable, and is left
in the body permanently without need for future surgical removal. The
applicant asserted that the commercial manufacturing of the product
will significantly improve on the process of constructing customized
implants with greater speed, efficiency, and accuracy than is currently
available, and require less surgical expertise in placement of the
radioactive sources, allowing a greater number of surgeons to utilize
brachytherapy techniques in a wider variety of hospital settings.
The applicant for GammaTileTM has applied for FDA
approval and anticipated FDA approval by the spring of 2017. In its
application, the applicant indicated that it anticipated that the
product would be approved by the FDA for use in both the primary and
salvage treatment of radiosensitive malignances of the brain. However,
the applicant had not received FDA approval at the time of development
of this proposed rule. In subsequent discussions with the applicant,
the applicant indicated that it is only seeking FDA approval for use in
the salvage treatment of recurrent radiosensitive malignances of the
brain. The applicant submitted a request for a unique ICD-10-PCS code
for the administration of GammaTileTM. If approved, the
procedure codes will be effective October 1, 2017 (FY 2018).
As discussed earlier, if a technology meets all three of the
substantial similarity criteria, it would be considered substantially
similar to an existing technology and would not be considered ``new''
for purposes of new technology add-on payments.
With regard to the first criterion, whether a product uses the same
or a similar mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome, the
applicant stated that when compared to treatment using external beam
radiation therapy, GammaTileTM uses a new and unique
mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome. The applicant
explained that the GammaTileTM is fundamentally different in
structure, function, and safety from all external beam radiation
therapies, and delivers treatment through a different mechanism of
action. In contrast to external beam radiation modalities, the
applicant further explained that the GammaTileTM is a form
of internal radiation termed brachytherapy. Brachytherapy treatments
are performed using radiation sources positioned very close to the area
requiring radiation treatment and only deliver radiation to the tissues
that are immediately adjacent to the margin of the surgical resection.
For this reason, brachytherapy is a current standard of care treatment
for many non-central nervous system tumors, including breast, cervical,
and prostate cancers.
Due to the custom positioning of the radiological sources and the
use of the cesium-131 isotope, the applicant noted that the
GammaTileTM focuses therapeutic levels of radiation on an
extremely small area of the brain. Unlike all external beam techniques,
the applicant stated that this radiation does not pass externally
inward through the skull and healthy areas of the brain to reach the
targeted tissue and, therefore, may limit neurocognitive deficits seen
with the use of external beam techniques. Because of the rapid
reduction in radiation intensity that is characteristic of cesium-131,
the applicant asserted that the GammaTileTM can target the
margin of the excision with greater precision than any alternative
treatment option, while sparing healthy brain tissue from unnecessary
and potentially damaging radiation exposure.
The applicant also stated that, when compared to other types of
brain brachytherapy, GammaTileTM uses a new and unique
mechanism of action to achieve a therapeutic outcome. The applicant
explained that cancerous cells at the margins of a tumor resection
cavity can also be irradiated with the placement of brachytherapy
sources in the tumor cavity. However, the applicant asserted that the
GammaTileTM is a pioneering form of brachytherapy for the
treatment of brain tumors that uses the isotope cesium-131 embedded in
a collagen implant that is customized to the geometry of the brain
cavity. According to the applicant, use of cesium-131 and the custom
distribution of seeds in a three-dimensional collagen device result in
a unique and highly effective delivery of radiation therapy to brain
tissue.
With regard to the second criterion, whether a product is assigned
to the same or a different MS-DRG, GammaTileTM is a
treatment option for patients diagnosed with brain tumors that progress
locally after initial treatment with external beam radiation therapy,
and cases representing patients that may be eligible for treatment
involving this technology are assigned to the same MS-DRGs (MS-DRGs 25,
26, and 27 (Craniotomy & Endovascular Intracranial Procedure with MCC,
with CC, and without CC/MCC), respectively)
[[Page 19896]]
as other current treatment forms of brachytherapy and external beam
radiation therapy.
With regard to third criterion, whether the new use of the
technology involves the treatment of the same or similar type of
disease and the same or similar patient population, the applicant
stated that the GammaTileTM offers a treatment option for a
patient population with limited, or no other, available treatment
options. The applicant explained that treatment options for patients
diagnosed with brain tumors that progress locally after initial
treatment with external beam radiation therapy are limited, and there
is no current standard of care in this setting. According to the
applicant, surgery alone for recurrent tumors may provide symptom
relief, but does not remove all of the cancer cells. The applicant
further stated that repeating external beam radiation therapy for
adjuvant treatment is hampered by an increasing risk of brain injury
because additional external beam radiation therapy will increase the
total dose of radiation to brain tissue, as well as increase the total
volume of irradiated brain tissue. Secondary treatment with external
beam radiation therapy is often performed with a reduced and,
therefore, less effective dose. The applicant asserted that
brachytherapy with GammaTileTM may be the only effective
treatment option for these patients.
Based on the above, the applicant concluded that the
GammaTileTM is not substantially similar to other existing
technologies and meets the newness criterion. However, we are concerned
that the mechanism of action for this device may be the same or similar
to current forms of radiation or brachytherapy. Specifically, while the
placement of the cesium-131 source (or any radioactive source) in a
collagen matrix offset may constitute a new delivery vehicle, we are
concerned that this sort of improvement in brachytherapy for use in the
salvage treatment of radiosensitive malignances of the brain may not
represent a new mechanism of action. We also have concerns as to
whether GammaTileTM would represent the first approved use
of offset radioactive material in brachytherapy for recurrent brain
malignancies. The applicant cited studies that used a similar predicate
device, but did not indicate whether these researchers or institutions
are seeking separate FDA approval.
We are inviting public comments on whether GammaTileTM
meets the substantial similarity criteria and the newness criterion.
With regard to the cost criterion, the applicant conducted the
following analysis. The applicant worked with the Barrow Neurological
Institute at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center (St. Joseph's) to
obtain actual claims for craniotomies using a prototype brain
brachytherapy device of stranded cesium-131 seeds held in place with a
collagen tile. The application found a total of 23 claims from FY 2001
through FY 2016 data that used a cesium-131 brachytherapy predicate
device. All 23 claims were assigned to MS-DRGs 25 through 27. Of the 23
cases, 13 cases were assigned to MS-DRG 25, 4 cases were assigned to
MS-DRG 26, and 6 cases were assigned to MS-DRG 27. Using hospital data,
the applicant estimated and then subtracted all charges for the
predicate device and all charges for ancillary services associated with
the device delivery for each case. The applicant standardized the
remaining charges for each case and inflated each case's charges by
applying the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule outlier charge inflation
factor of 1.043957 by the age of each case (that is, the factor was
applied to FY 2011 claims six times, to FY 2012 claims five times,
etc.). The applicant then calculated the average inflated standardized
charges for the cases assigned to MS-DRG 25 ($124,064), MS-DRG 26
($131,677) and MS-DRG 27 ($90,615). The applicant then calculated an
estimate for ancillary charges associated with placement of the
GammaTileTM device, as well as standardized charges for the
GammaTileTM device itself. The applicant determined it meets
the cost criterion because the final average case-weighted standardized
charge per case (including the charges associated with the
GammaTileTM device) of $226,741 exceeds the average case-
weighted threshold amount of $95,783.
We are concerned that the applicant submitted a small sample of
cases to determine it meets the cost criterion. A small sample size may
not be statistically significant to determine if the
GammaTileTM meets the cost criterion. We also note that,
while the applicant has attributed reduced operating room times as a
significant benefit to the GammaTileTM, a reduction in the
associated costs does not appear to be reflected in its calculations.
We are inviting public comments on whether the GammaTileTM
meets the cost criterion.
With regard to substantial clinical improvement, the applicant
stated that the GammaTileTM offers a treatment option for a
patient population unresponsive to, or ineligible for, currently
available treatments and significantly improves clinical outcomes when
compared to currently available treatment options. The applicant
explained that therapeutic options for patients diagnosed with large or
recurrent brain metastases are limited. However, according to the
applicant, the GammaTileTM provides a treatment option for
patients diagnosed with radiosensitive recurrent brain tumors that are
not eligible for treatment with any other currently available treatment
option. Specifically, the applicant stated that GammaTileTM
may provide the only radiation treatment option for patients diagnosed
with tumors located close to sensitive vital brain sites (for example,
brain stem); patients diagnosed with recurrent brain tumors may not be
eligible for additional treatment involving the use of external beam
radiation therapy. There is a lifetime limit for the amount of
radiation therapy a specific area of the body can receive. Patients
whose previous treatment includes external beam radiation therapy may
be precluded from receiving high doses of radiation associated with
subsequent external beam radiation therapy, and the
GammaTileTM can also be used to treat tumors that are too
large for treatment with external beam radiation therapy. These large
tumors are not eligible for treatment with external beam radiation
therapy because the radiation dose to healthy brain tissue would be too
high.
The applicant described how the GammaTileTM improves
clinical outcomes compared to existing treatment options, including
external beam radiation therapy and other forms of brain brachytherapy.
To demonstrate that the GammaTileTM represents a substantial
clinical improvement over existing technologies, the applicant
submitted data from three abstracts, with one associated paper
demonstrating feasibility or superior progression-free survival
compared to the patient's own historical control rate.
In a presentation at the Society for Neuro-Oncology in November
2014 (Dardis, Christopher; Surgery and permanent intraoperative
brachytherapy improves time to progression of recurrent intracranial
neoplasms), the outcomes of 20 patients diagnosed with 27 tumors
covering a variety of histological types treated with the
GammaTileTM prototype were presented. The applicant noted
the following with regard to the patients: (1) All tumors were
intracranial, supratentorial masses and included low and high-grade
meningiomas, metastases from various primary cancers, high-grade
gliomas, and others;
[[Page 19897]]
(2) all treated masses were recurrent following treatment with surgery
and/or radiation and the group averaged two prior craniotomies and two
prior courses of external beam radiation treatment; and (3) following
surgical excision, prototype GammaTilesTM were placed in the
resection cavity to deliver a dose of 60 Gray to a depth of 5 mm of
tissue; and all patients had previously experienced re-growth of their
tumors at the site of treatment and the local control rate of patients
entering the study was 0 percent.
With regard to outcomes, the applicant stated that, after their
initial treatment, patients had a median progression-free survival time
of 5.8 months; post treatment with prototype GammaTilesTM,
at the time of this analysis, only one patient had progressed at the
treatment site, for a local control rate of 96 percent; and median
progression-free survival time, a measure of how long a patient lives
without recurrence of the treated tumor, has not been reached (as this
value can only be calculated when more than 50 percent of treated
patients have failed the prescribed treatment).
A second set of outcomes on prototype GammaTilesTM was
presented at the Society for Neuro-Oncology Conference on Meningioma in
June 2016 (Brachman, David; Surgery and permanent intraoperative
brachytherapy improves time to progress of recurrent intracranial
neoplasms). This study enrolled 16 patients with 20 recurrent grade 2
or 3 meningiomas, who had undergone prior surgical excision external
beam radiation therapy. These patients underwent surgical excision of
the tumor, followed by adjuvant radiation therapy with prototype
GammaTilesTM. The applicant noted the following outcomes:
(1) Of the 20 treated tumors, 19 showed no evidence of radiographic
progression at last follow-up, yielding a local control rate of 95
percent; two of the 20 patients exhibited radiation necrosis (one
symptomatic, one asymptomatic); and (2) the median time to failure from
the prior treatment with external beam radiation therapy was 10.3
months and after treatment with prototype GammaTilesTM only
one patient failed at 18.2 months. Therefore, the median time to same
site failure after prototype GammaTileTM treatment has not
yet been reached (average follow up of 16.7 months, range 1-37 months).
A third prospective study was accepted for presentation at the
November 2016 Society for Neuro-Oncology annual meeting (Youssef, Emad;
Cs131 implants for salvage therapy of recurrent high grade gliomas). In
this study, 13 patients diagnosed with recurrent high-grade gliomas (9
with glioblastoma and 4 with grade 3 astrocytoma) were treated in an
identical manner to the cases described above. Previously, all patients
had failed the international standard treatment for high-grade glioma,
a combination of surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy referred
to as the ``Stupp regimen.'' For the prior therapy, the median time to
failure was 9.2 months (range 1-40 months). After therapy with a
prototype GammaTileTM, the applicant noted the following:
(1) The median time to same site local failure has not been reached and
one failure was seen at 18 months (local control 92 percent); and (2)
with a median follow-up time of 8.1 months (range 1-23 months) one
symptomatic patient (8 percent) and two asymptomatic patients (15
percent) had radiation-related MRI changes. However, no patients
required re-operation for radiation necrosis or wound breakdown.
The applicant asserted that, when considered in total, the data
reported in these three studies support the conclusion that a
significant therapeutic effect results from the addition of
GammaTileTM radiation therapy to the site of surgical
removal. According to the applicant, the fact that these patients had
failed prior best available treatments (aggressive surgical and
adjuvant radiation management) presents the unusual scenario of a
salvage therapy outperforming the current standard-of-care. The
applicant noted that follow-up data continues to accrue on these
patients. The applicant further noted that, although these reported
experiences with the GammaTileTM are as a salvage therapy in
patients who currently have no standard treatment options, it is
anticipated GammaTileTM will also be used as first-line
therapy due to these promising results.
The applicant stated that the use of GammaTileTM reduces
rates of mortality compared to alternative treatment options. The
applicant explained that clinical studies on GammaTileTM
have shown improved local control of tumor recurrence. According to the
applicant, the results of these studies showed local control rates of
92 percent to 96 percent for tumor sites that had local control rates
of 0 percent from previous treatment. The applicant noted that these
studies also have not reached median progression-free survival time
with follow-up times ranging from 1 to 37 months. Previous treatment at
these same sites resulted in median progression-free survival times of
5.8 to 10.3 months.
The applicant further stated that the use of GammaTileTM
reduces rates of radiation necrosis compared to alternative treatment
options. The applicant explained that the rate of symptomatic radiation
necrosis in the GammaTileTM clinical studies of 5 to 8
percent is substantially lower than the 26 percent to 57 percent rate
of symptomatic radiation necrosis requiring re-operation historically
associated with brain brachytherapy, and lower than the rates reported
for initial treatment of similar tumors with modern external beam and
stereotactic radiation techniques. The applicant indicated that this is
consistent with the customized and ideal distribution of radiation
therapy provided by GammaTileTM.
The applicant also asserted that the use of GammaTileTM
reduces the need for re-operation compared to alternative treatment
options. The applicant explained that patients receiving a craniotomy,
followed by external beam radiation therapy or brachytherapy, could
require re-operation in the following three scenarios:
Tumor recurrence at the excision site could require
additional surgical removal;
Symptomatic radiation necrosis could require excision of
the affected tissue; and
Certain forms of brain brachytherapy require the removal
of brachytherapy sources after a given period of time.
However, according to the applicant, because of the high local
control rates, low rates of symptomatic radiation necrosis, and short
half-life of cesium-131, GammaTileTM will reduce the need
for re-operation compared to external beam radiation therapy and other
forms of brain brachytherapy.
Additionally, the applicant stated that the use of
GammaTileTM reduces the need for additional hospital visits
and procedures compared to alternative treatment options. The applicant
noted that the GammaTileTM is placed during surgery, and
does not require any additional visits or procedures. The applicant
contrasted this improvement with external beam radiation therapy, which
is often delivered in multiple fractions that must be administered over
multiple days. The applicant provided an example where WBRT is
delivered over 2 to 3 weeks, while the placement of
GammaTileTM occurs during the craniotomy and does not add
any time to a patient's recovery.
The applicant further stated that the GammaTileTM's high
local control rates and low rates of symptomatic radiation necrosis
will reduce the need for
[[Page 19898]]
additional hospital visits and procedures, and provides a more rapid
initiation and complement of the treatment compared to alternative
treatment options.
Based on consideration of all of the data presented above, the
applicant believed that the use of GammaTileTM represents a
substantial clinical improvement over existing technologies. The
studies were limited to patients diagnosed with recurrent tumors after
previous surgical rescission. As previously discussed, the applicant
explained that it is seeking FDA approval for the use of the
GammaTileTM in the treatment of recurrent malignancies.
We are inviting public comments on whether GammaTileTM
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
We did not receive any written public comments in response to the
New Technology Town Hall meeting notice regarding the application of
GammaTileTM for new technology add-on payments.
III. Proposed Changes to the Hospital Wage Index for Acute Care
Hospitals
A. Background
1. Legislative Authority
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that, as part of the
methodology for determining prospective payments to hospitals, the
Secretary adjust the standardized amounts for area differences in
hospital wage levels by a factor (established by the Secretary)
reflecting the relative hospital wage level in the geographic area of
the hospital compared to the national average hospital wage level. We
currently define hospital labor market areas based on the delineations
of statistical areas established by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). A discussion of the proposed FY 2018 hospital wage index based
on the statistical areas appears under sections III.A.2. and G. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to update
the wage index annually and to base the update on a survey of wages and
wage-related costs of short-term, acute care hospitals. (CMS collects
these data on the Medicare cost report, CMS Form 2552-10, Worksheet S-
3, Parts II, III, and IV. The OMB control number for approved
collection of this information is 0938-0050.) This provision also
requires that any updates or adjustments to the wage index be made in a
manner that ensures that aggregate payments to hospitals are not
affected by the change in the wage index. The proposed adjustment for
FY 2018 is discussed in section II.B. of the Addendum to this proposed
rule.
As discussed in section III.J. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we also take into account the geographic reclassification of
hospitals in accordance with sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and 1886(d)(10) of
the Act when calculating IPPS payment amounts. Under section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, the Secretary is required to adjust the
standardized amounts so as to ensure that aggregate payments under the
IPPS after implementation of the provisions of sections 1886(d)(8)(B),
1886(d)(8)(C), and 1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal to the aggregate
prospective payments that would have been made absent these provisions.
The proposed budget neutrality adjustment for FY 2018 is discussed in
section II.A.4.b. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act also provides for the collection
of data every 3 years on the occupational mix of employees for short-
term, acute care hospitals participating in the Medicare program, in
order to construct an occupational mix adjustment to the wage index. A
discussion of the occupational mix adjustment that we are proposing to
apply to the FY 2018 wage index, appears under sections III.E.3. and F.
of the preamble of this proposed rule.
2. Core-Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) for the Proposed FY 2018
Hospital Wage Index
The wage index is calculated and assigned to hospitals on the basis
of the labor market area in which the hospital is located. Under
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, beginning with FY 2005, we delineate
hospital labor market areas based on OMB-established Core-Based
Statistical Areas (CBSAs). The current statistical areas (which were
implemented beginning with FY 2015) are based on revised OMB
delineations issued on February 28, 2013, in OMB Bulletin No. 13-01.
OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 established revised delineations for
Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and
Combined Statistical Areas in the United States and Puerto Rico based
on the 2010 Census, and provided guidance on the use of the
delineations of these statistical areas using standards published on
June 28, 2010 in the Federal Register (75 FR 37246 through 37252). We
refer readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49951
through 49963) for a full discussion of our implementation of the OMB
labor market area delineations beginning with the FY 2015 wage index.
Generally, OMB issues major revisions to statistical areas every 10
years, based on the results of the decennial census. However, OMB
occasionally issues minor updates and revisions to statistical areas in
the years between the decennial censuses through OMB Bulletins. On July
15, 2015, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 15-01, which provides updates to
and supersedes OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 that was issued on February 28,
2013. The attachment to OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 provides detailed
information on the update to statistical areas since February 28, 2013.
The updates provided in OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 are based on the
application of the 2010 Standards for Delineating Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Areas to Census Bureau population estimates
for July 1, 2012 and July 1, 2013. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 56913), we adopted the updates set forth in OMB Bulletin
No. 15-01 effective October 1, 2016, beginning with the FY 2017 wage
index. For a complete discussion of the adoption of the updates set
forth in OMB Bulletin No. 15-01, we refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule.
For FY 2018, we are continuing to use the OMB delineations that we
adopted beginning with FY 2015 to calculate the area wage indexes, with
updates as reflected in OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 specified in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
3. Codes for Constituent Counties in CBSAs
CBSAs are made up of one or more constituent counties. Each CBSA
and constituent county has its own unique identifying codes. There are
two different lists of codes associated with counties: Social Security
Administration (SSA) codes and Federal Information Processing Standard
(FIPS) codes. Historically, CMS has listed and used SSA and FIPS county
codes to identify and crosswalk counties to CBSA codes for purposes of
the hospital wage index. We have learned that SSA county codes are no
longer being maintained and updated. However, the FIPS codes continue
to be maintained by the U.S. Census Bureau. The Census Bureau's most
current statistical area information is derived from ongoing census
data received since 2010; the most recent data are from 2015. For the
purposes of crosswalking counties to CBSAs, we are proposing to
discontinue the use of SSA county codes and begin using only the FIPS
county codes.
[[Page 19899]]
The Census Bureau maintains a complete list of changes to counties
or county equivalent entities on the Web site at: //www.census.gov/geo/reference/county-changes.html. In our proposed
transition to using only FIPS codes for counties for the hospital wage
index, we are proposing to update the FIPS codes used for crosswalking
counties to CBSAs for the hospital wage index to incorporate changes to
the counties or county equivalent entities included in the Census
Bureau's most recent list. Based on information included in the Census
Bureau's Web site, since 2010, the Census Bureau has made the following
updates to the FIPS codes for counties or county equivalent entities:
Petersburg Borough, AK (FIPS State County Code 02-195),
CBSA 02, was created from part of former Petersburg Census Area (02-
195) and part of Hoonah-Angoon Census Area (02-105). The CBSA code
remains 02.
The name of La Salle Parish, LA (FIPS State County Code
22-059), CBSA 14, is now LaSalle Parish, LA (FIPS State County Code 22-
059). The CBSA code remains as 14.
The name of Shannon County, SD (FIPS State County Code 46-
113), CBSA 43, is now Oglala Lakota County, SD (FIPS State County Code
46-102). The CBSA code remains as 43.
We believe that it is important to use the latest counties or
county equivalent entities in order to properly crosswalk hospitals
from a county to a CBSA for purposes of the hospital wage index used
under the IPPS. In addition, we believe that using the latest FIPS
codes will allow us to maintain a more accurate and up-to-date payment
system that reflects the reality of population shifts and labor market
conditions. Therefore, we are proposing to implement these FIPS code
updates, effective October 1, 2017, beginning with the FY 2018 wage
indexes. We are proposing to use these update changes to calculate area
wage indexes in a manner that is generally consistent with the CBSA-
based methodologies finalized in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule and the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. We note that while the county update
changes listed earlier changed the county names, the CBSAs to which
these counties map did not change from the prior counties. Therefore,
there is no impact or change to hospitals in these counties; they
continue to be considered rural for the hospital wage index under these
changes. For FY 2018, Tables 2 and 3 associated with this proposed rule
and the County to CBSA Crosswalk File and Urban CBSAs and Constituent
Counties for Acute Care Hospitals File posted on the CMS Web site
reflect these county changes. We are inviting public comments on our
proposals.
B. Worksheet S-3 Wage Data for the Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index
The proposed FY 2018 wage index values are based on the data
collected from the Medicare cost reports submitted by hospitals for
cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2014 (the FY 2017 wage indexes
were based on data from cost reporting periods beginning during FY
2013).
1. Included Categories of Costs
The proposed FY 2018 wage index includes all of the following
categories of data associated with costs paid under the IPPS (as well
as outpatient costs):
Salaries and hours from short-term, acute care hospitals
(including paid lunch hours and hours associated with military leave
and jury duty);
Home office costs and hours;
Certain contract labor costs and hours, which include
direct patient care, certain top management, pharmacy, laboratory, and
nonteaching physician Part A services, and certain contract indirect
patient care services (as discussed in the FY 2008 final rule with
comment period (72 FR 47315 through 47317)); and
Wage-related costs, including pension costs (based on
policies adopted in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51586
through 51590)) and other deferred compensation costs.
2. Excluded Categories of Costs
Consistent with the wage index methodology for FY 2017, the
proposed wage index for FY 2018 also excludes the direct and overhead
salaries and hours for services not subject to IPPS payment, such as
skilled nursing facility (SNF) services, home health services, costs
related to GME (teaching physicians and residents) and certified
registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), and other subprovider components
that are not paid under the IPPS. The proposed FY 2018 wage index also
excludes the salaries, hours, and wage-related costs of hospital-based
rural health clinics (RHCs), and Federally qualified health centers
(FQHCs) because Medicare pays for these costs outside of the IPPS (68
FR 45395). In addition, salaries, hours, and wage-related costs of CAHs
are excluded from the wage index for the reasons explained in the FY
2004 IPPS final rule (68 FR 45397 through 45398).
3. Use of Wage Index Data by Suppliers and Providers Other Than Acute
Care Hospitals Under the IPPS
Data collected for the IPPS wage index also are currently used to
calculate wage indexes applicable to suppliers and other providers,
such as SNFs, home health agencies (HHAs), ambulatory surgical centers
(ASCs), and hospices. In addition, they are used for prospective
payments to IRFs, IPFs, and LTCHs, and for hospital outpatient
services. We note that, in the IPPS rules, we do not address comments
pertaining to the wage indexes of any supplier or provider except IPPS
providers and LTCHs. Such comments should be made in response to
separate proposed rules for those suppliers and providers.
C. Verification of Worksheet S-3 Wage Data
The wage data for the proposed FY 2018 wage index were obtained
from Worksheet S-3, Parts II and III of the Medicare cost report (Form
CMS-2552-10) for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2013, and before October 1, 2014. For wage index purposes, we refer
to cost reports during this period as the ``FY 2014 cost report,'' the
``FY 2014 wage data,'' or the ``FY 2014 data.'' Instructions for
completing the wage index sections of Worksheet S-3 are included in the
Provider Reimbursement Manual (PRM), Part 2 (Pub. No. 15-2), Chapter
40, Sections 4005.2 through 4005.4. The data file used to construct the
proposed FY 2018 wage index includes FY 2014 data submitted to us as of
February 10, 2017. As in past years, we performed an extensive review
of the wage data, mostly through the use of edits designed to identify
aberrant data.
We asked our MACs to revise or verify data elements that result in
specific edit failures. For the proposed FY 2018 wage index, we
identified and excluded 51 providers with aberrant data that should not
be included in the wage index, although if data elements for some of
these providers are corrected, we intend to include data from those
providers in the final FY 2018 wage index. We also adjusted certain
aberrant data and included these data in the proposed wage index. For
example, in situations where a hospital did not have documentable
salaries, wages, and hours for housekeeping and dietary services, we
imputed estimates, in accordance with policies established in the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49965 through 49967). We
instructed MACs to complete their data verification of questionable
data elements and to transmit any changes to
[[Page 19900]]
the wage data no later than March 24, 2017. The revised data will be
reflected in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
In constructing the proposed FY 2018 wage index, we included the
wage data for facilities that were IPPS hospitals in FY 2014, inclusive
of those facilities that have since terminated their participation in
the program as hospitals, as long as those data did not fail any of our
edits for reasonableness. We believed that including the wage data for
these hospitals is, in general, appropriate to reflect the economic
conditions in the various labor market areas during the relevant past
period and to ensure that the current wage index represents the labor
market area's current wages as compared to the national average of
wages. However, we excluded the wage data for CAHs as discussed in the
FY 2004 IPPS final rule (68 FR 45397 through 45398). For the this
proposed rule, we removed 7 hospitals that converted to CAH status on
or after January 22, 2016, the cut-off date for CAH exclusion from the
FY 2017 wage index, and through and including January 23, 2017, the
cut-off date for CAH exclusion from the FY 2018 wage index. After
excluding CAHs and hospitals with aberrant data, we calculated the
proposed wage index using the Worksheet S-3, Part II and III wage data
of 3,325 hospitals.
For the proposed FY 2018 wage index, we allotted the wages and
hours data for a multicampus hospital among the different labor market
areas where its campuses are located in the same manner that we
allotted such hospitals' data in the FY 2017 wage index (81 FR 56915).
Table 2, which contains the proposed FY 2018 wage index associated with
proposed rule (available via the Internet on the CMS Web site),
includes separate wage data for the campuses of 9 multicampus
hospitals.
D. Method for Computing the Proposed FY 2018 Unadjusted Wage Index
1. Proposed Methodology for FY 2018
The method used to compute the proposed FY 2018 wage index without
an occupational mix adjustment follows the same methodology that we
used to compute the proposed wage indexes without an occupational mix
adjustment since FY 2012 (76 FR 51591 through 51593).
As discussed in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in ``Step
5,'' for each hospital, we adjust the total salaries plus wage-related
costs to a common period to determine total adjusted salaries plus
wage-related costs. To make the wage adjustment, we estimate the
percentage change in the employment cost index (ECI) for compensation
for each 30-day increment from October 14, 2013, through April 15,
2015, for private industry hospital workers from the BLS' Compensation
and Working Conditions. We have consistently used the ECI as the data
source for our wages and salaries and other price proxies in the IPPS
market basket, and we are not proposing any changes to the usage of the
ECI for FY 2018. The factors used to adjust the hospital's data were
based on the midpoint of the cost reporting period, as indicated in the
following table.
Midpoint of Cost Reporting Period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjustment
After Before factor
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10/14/2013......................... 11/15/2013............ 1.02310
11/14/2013......................... 12/15/2013............ 1.02155
12/14/2013......................... 01/15/2014............ 1.02004
01/14/2014......................... 02/15/2014............ 1.01866
02/14/2014......................... 03/15/2014............ 1.01740
03/14/2014......................... 04/15/2014............ 1.01615
04/14/2014......................... 05/15/2014............ 1.01482
05/14/2014......................... 06/15/2014............ 1.01339
06/14/2014......................... 07/15/2014............ 1.01193
07/14/2014......................... 08/15/2014............ 1.01048
08/14/2014......................... 09/15/2014............ 1.00905
09/14/2014......................... 10/15/2014............ 1.00761
10/14/2014......................... 11/15/2014............ 1.00614
11/14/2014......................... 12/15/2014............ 1.00463
12/14/2014......................... 01/15/2015............ 1.00309
01/14/2015......................... 02/15/2015............ 1.00155
02/14/2015......................... 03/15/2015............ 1.00000
03/14/2015......................... 04/15/2015............ 0.99845
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, the midpoint of a cost reporting period beginning
January 1, 2014, and ending December 31, 2014, is June 30, 2014. An
adjustment factor of 1.01193 would be applied to the wages of a
hospital with such a cost reporting period.
Using the data as previously described, the proposed FY 2018
national average hourly wage (unadjusted for occupational mix) is
$42.0043.
Previously, we also would provide a Puerto Rico overall average
hourly wage. As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 56915), prior to January 1, 2016, Puerto Rico hospitals were paid
based on 75 percent of the national standardized amount and 25 percent
of the Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount. As a result, we
calculated a Puerto Rico-specific wage index that was applied to the
labor share of the Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount. Section
601 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-113)
amended section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act to specify that the payment
calculation with respect to operating costs of inpatient hospital
services of a subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospital for inpatient
hospital discharges on or after January 1, 2016, shall use 100 percent
of the national standardized amount. As we stated in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56915 through 56916), because Puerto Rico
hospitals are no longer paid with a Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount as of January 1, 2016, under section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act,
as amended by section 601 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016,
there is no longer a need to calculate a Puerto Rico-specific average
hourly wage and wage index. Hospitals in Puerto Rico are now paid 100
percent of the national standardized amount and, therefore, are subject
to the national average hourly wage (unadjusted for occupational mix)
(which is $42.0043 for this FY 2018 proposed rule) and the national
wage index, which is applied to the national labor share of the
national standardized amount. For FY 2018, we are not proposing a
Puerto Rico-specific overall average hourly wage or wage index.
2. Clarification of Other Wage Related Costs in the Wage Index
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to update
the wage index based on a survey of hospitals' costs that are
attributable to wages and wage-related costs. In the September 1, 1994
IPPS final rule (59 FR 45356), we developed a list of ``core'' wage-
related costs that hospitals may report on Worksheet S-3, Part II of
the Medicare hospital cost report in order to include those costs in
the wage index. Core wage-related costs include categories of
retirement cost, plan administrative costs, health and insurance costs,
taxes, and other specified costs such as tuition reimbursement. In
addition to these categories of core wage-related costs, we allow
hospitals to report wage-related costs other than those on the core
list if the other wage-related costs meet certain criteria. The
criteria for including other wage-related costs in the wage index are
discussed in the September 1, 1994 IPPS final rule (59 FR 45357) and
also are listed in the Provider Reimbursement Manual (PRM), Part II,
Chapter 40, Sections 4005.2 through 4005.4), Line 18 of the Medicare
cost report (Form CMS-2552-10, OMB control number 0938-0050).
Specifically, ``other'' wage-related costs are allowable for the wage
index if the cost for employees whose services are paid under the IPPS
exceeds 1 percent of the total adjusted salaries net of
[[Page 19901]]
excluded area salaries, is a fringe benefit as defined by the IRS and
has been reported to the IRS (as income to the employees or
contractors), is not being furnished for the convenience of the
provider, and is not listed on Worksheet S-3, Part IV.
We note that other wage-related costs are not to include benefits
already included in Line 1 salaries on Worksheet S-3, Part II (refer to
the cost report instructions for Worksheet S-3, Part II, Line 18, which
state, `` `Other' wage-related costs do not include wage-related costs
reported on line 1 of this worksheet.''). We also note that the 1-
percent test is conducted by dividing each individual category of the
other wage-related cost (that is, the numerator) by the sum of the
following lines on the Medicare hospital cost report (Form CMS-2552-
10): Worksheet S-3, Part II, Lines 11, 12, 13, and 14, Column 4, and
Worksheet S-3, Part III, Line 3, Column 4 (that is, the denominator).
The other wage-related costs associated with contract labor and home
office/related organization personnel are included in the numerator
because these other wage-related costs are allowed in the wage index
(in addition to other wage related costs for direct employees),
assuming the requirements for inclusion in the wage index are met. For
example, if a hospital is trying to include a parking garage as an
other-wage related cost that is reported on the W-2 or 1099 form, when
running the 1-percent test, include in the numerator all the parking
garage other wage-related cost for direct salary employees, contracted
employees, and home office employees and divide by the sum of Worksheet
S-3, Part II, Lines 11, 12, 13, and 14, Column 4, and Worksheet S-3,
Part III, Line 3, Column 4. For the category of parking other wage-
related costs, the 1-percent test would be run only one time, inclusive
of other wage related costs for employee salaries, contracted
employees, and home office employees. We intend to clarify the hospital
cost report instructions to reflect that contract labor and home
office/related organization salaries should be added to the subtotal of
salaries on Worksheet S-3, Part III, Line 3, Column 4 (Line 3 is the
difference of net salaries minus excluded area salaries) for purposes
of performing the 1-percent test. If a hospital has more than one other
wage-related cost, the 1-percent must be conducted separately for each
other wage-related cost (for example, parking and cafeteria separately;
do not sum all the different types of other wage-related costs together
and then run the 1-percent test). If the 1-percent test is met for a
particular type of other wage-related costs, and the other criteria
listed earlier are met as well, the other wage-related cost may be
reported on Worksheet S-3, Part II, Line 18 of the hospital cost
report.
We originally allowed for the inclusion of wage-related costs other
than those on the core list because we were concerned that individual
hospitals might incur unusually large wage-related costs that are not
reflected on the core list but that may represent a significant wage-
related cost. However, we are reconsidering allowing other wage-related
costs to be included in the wage index because recent internal reviews
of the FY 2018 wage data show that only a small minority of hospitals
are reporting other wage-related costs that meet the 1-percent test
described earlier. In the calculation of the proposed FY 2018 wage
index, for each hospital reporting other wage-related costs on Line 18
of Worksheet S-3, we performed the 1-percent test. We then made
internal edits removing other wage-related costs on Line 18 where
hospitals reported data that failed to meet the mathematical
requirement that other wage-related costs must exceed 1 percent of
total adjusted salaries net of excluded area salaries. After this
review, only approximately 80 hospitals of approximately 3,320
hospitals had other wage-related costs on Line 18 meeting the 1-percent
test. We believe that such a limited number of hospitals nationally
reporting and meeting the 1-percent test may indicate that other wage-
related costs might not constitute an appropriate part of a relative
measure of wage costs in a particular labor market area, a longstanding
tenet of the wage index. In other words, while other wage-related costs
may represent costs that may have an impact on an individual hospital's
average hourly wage, we do not believe that costs reported by only a
very small minority of hospitals accurately reflect the economic
conditions of the labor market areas in which those hospitals are
located. Therefore, it is possible that inclusion of other wage-related
costs in the wage index in such a limited manner may distort the
average hourly wage of a particular labor market area so that its wage
index does not accurately represent that labor market area's current
wages relative to national wages.
Furthermore, the open-ended nature of the types of other wage-
related costs that may be included on Line 18 of Worksheet S-3, in
contrast to the concrete list of core wage-related costs, may hinder
consistent and proper reporting of fringe benefits. Our internal review
indicates widely divergent types of costs that hospitals are reporting
as other wage-related costs on Line 18. We are concerned that
inconsistent reporting of other wage-related costs on Line 18 further
compromises the accuracy of the wage index as a representation of the
relative average hourly wage for each labor market area. Our intent in
creating a core list of wage-related costs in the September 1, 1994
IPPS final rule was to promote consistent reporting of fringe benefits,
and we are increasingly concerned that inconsistent reporting of wage-
related costs on Line 18 of Worksheet S-3 undermines this effort.
Specifically, we expressed in the September 1, 1994 IPPS final rule
that since we began including fringe benefits in the wage index, we
have been concerned with the inconsistent reporting of fringe benefits,
whether because of a lack of provider proficiency in identifying fringe
benefit costs or varying interpretations across fiscal intermediaries
of the definition for fringe benefits in PRM-I, Section 2144.1 (59 FR
45356).
We believe that the limited and inconsistent use of Line 18 of
Worksheet S-3 for reporting wage-related costs other than the core list
might indicate that including other wage-related costs in the wage
index compromises the accuracy of the wage index as a relative measure
of wages in a given labor market area. Therefore, we are seeking public
comments on whether we should, in future rulemaking, propose to only
include the wage-related costs on the core list in the calculation of
the wage index and not to include any other wage-related costs in the
calculation of the wage index.
Meanwhile, in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are
clarifying that, under our current policy, an other wage-related cost
(which we define as the value of a benefit) must be a fringe benefit as
described by the IRS (refer to IRS Publication 15-B) and must be
reported to the IRS on employees' or contractors' W-2 or 1099 forms as
taxable income in order to be considered an other wage-related cost on
Line 18 of Worksheet S-3 and for the wage index. That is, other wage-
related costs that are not reported to the IRS on employees' or
contractors' W-2 or 1099 forms as taxable income, even if not required
to be reported to the IRS according to IRS requirements, will not be
included in the wage index. This is consistent with current cost report
instructions for Line 18 of Worksheet S-3, Part II of the Medicare cost
report, Form 2552-10, which state that, to be considered an allowable
other wage-related costs, the cost ``has been
[[Page 19902]]
reported to the IRS.'' We will apply this policy to the process for
calculating the wage index for FY 2019, including the FY 2019 desk
reviews beginning in September 2017.
We believe this clarification is necessary because some hospitals
have incorrectly interpreted prior manual and existing preamble
language to mean that a cost could be considered an other wage-related
cost if the provider's reporting (or not reporting) of the cost was in
accordance with IRS requirements, rather than if the cost was actually
reported on an employee's or contractor's W-2 or 1099 form as taxable
income. We believe that such an interpretation of our policy would
require an analysis of whether the reporting or not reporting of the
cost to the IRS was done properly in accordance with IRS regulations
and guidance in order to allow the cost as an other wage-related cost.
We believe that the determinations regarding the proper or improper
reporting of certain other wage-related costs to the IRS for the
purpose of inclusion in the Medicare wage index are impractical for CMS
and the MACs because we do not have the expertise and fluency in IRS
regulations and tax law sufficient to perform such technical reviews of
hospital wage-related costs. In contrast, our current policy of
including an amount as an other wage-related cost for wage index
purposes only if the amount was actually reported to the IRS on
employees' or contractors' W-2 or 1099 forms as taxable income is a
straightforward policy that we believe provides clarity to all involved
parties. The brightline test of allowing an other wage-related cost to
be included in the wage index only if it has been reported on an
employee's or contractor's W-2 or 1099 form as taxable income helps
ensure consistent treatment of other wage-related costs for all
hospitals. Considering the variety of types of costs that may be
included on Line 18 of Worksheet S-3 of the cost report for other wage-
related costs (assuming the 1-percent test is met and other criteria
are met), we believe that a straightforward policy that is simple for
hospitals and CMS to apply is particularly important.
In addition, we believe the policy we are clarifying in this
proposed rule, that an other wage-related cost can be included in the
wage index only if it was reported to the IRS as taxable income on the
employee's or contractor's W-2 or 1099, is consistent with CMS'
longstanding position that a fringe benefit is not furnished for the
convenience of the employer or otherwise excludable from income as a
fringe benefit (such as a working condition fringe) and that
inappropriate types of costs may not be included in the wage index. In
response to a comment when we finalized the criteria for other wage-
related costs in the September 1, 1994 IPPS final rule (59 FR 45359),
we stated that ``items such as the unrecovered cost of employee meals,
tuition reimbursement, and auto allowances will only be allowed as a
wage-related cost for purposes of the wage index if properly reported
to the IRS on an employee's W-2 form as a fringe benefit.'' (We note
that the September, 1 1994 IPPS final rule does not mention the 1099
form for contractors, as contract labor was not allowed at that time in
the wage index. Consistent with our treatment of costs for contract
labor similar to that of employees for the wage index, we are
clarifying that the requirement that a cost be reported to the IRS to
be allowed as a wage-related cost for the wage index also applies to
contract labor, which must be reported on the contractor's 1099 to be
allowed as a wage-related cost for the wage index.) We believe that
requiring other wage-related costs to be reported on employees' or
contractors' W-2 or 1099 forms to be allowable for Line 18 of Worksheet
S-3 of the Medicare cost report is consistent with the requirement that
the cost is not being furnished for the convenience of the employer. A
cost reported on an employee's or contractor's W-2 or 1099 form as
taxable income is clearly a wage-related cost that is provided solely
for the benefit of the employee. We believe that the requirement that
other wage-related costs be a benefit to the employee also guarantees
that administrative costs such as overhead and capitalized costs are
excluded from other wage-related costs in the wage index.
Therefore, for the reasons discussed above, we are clarifying that
a cost must be a fringe benefit as described by the IRS and must be
reported to the IRS on employees' or contractors' W-2 or 1099 forms as
taxable income in order to be considered an other wage-related cost on
Line 18 of Worksheet S-3 and for the wage index. In addition, as
discussed earlier, we are seeking public comments on whether we should
consider in future rulemaking removing other wage-related costs from
the wage index.
Because some hospitals have incorrectly interpreted prior manual
and existing preamble language, as stated earlier, we are restating the
criteria from the September 1, 1994 IPPS final rule (59 FR 45357) for
allowing other wage-related costs for the wage index, with
clarifications. The criteria follow below, and we intend to update the
manual with these clarifications:
Other Wage-Related Costs. A hospital may be able to report a wage-
related cost (defined as the value of the benefit) that does not appear
on the core list if it meets all of the following criteria:
The wage-related cost is provided at a significant
financial cost to the employer. To meet this test, the individual wage-
related cost must be greater than 1 percent of total salaries after the
direct excluded salaries are removed (the sum of Worksheet S-3, Part
II, Lines 11, 12, 13, 14, column 4, and Worksheet S-3, Part III, Line
3, Column 4).
The wage-related cost is a fringe benefit as described by
the IRS and is reported to the IRS on an employee's or contractor's W-2
or 1099 form as taxable income.
The wage-related cost is not furnished for the convenience
of the provider or otherwise excludable from income as a fringe benefit
(such as a working condition fringe).
We note that those wage-related costs reported as salaries on Line
1 (for example, loan forgiveness and sick pay accruals) should not be
included as other wage-related costs on Line 18.
E. Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment to the FY 2018 Wage Index
As stated earlier, section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act provides for
the collection of data every 3 years on the occupational mix of
employees for each short-term, acute care hospital participating in the
Medicare program, in order to construct an occupational mix adjustment
to the wage index, for application beginning October 1, 2004 (the FY
2005 wage index). The purpose of the occupational mix adjustment is to
control for the effect of hospitals' employment choices on the wage
index. For example, hospitals may choose to employ different
combinations of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, nursing
aides, and medical assistants for the purpose of providing nursing care
to their patients. The varying labor costs associated with these
choices reflect hospital management decisions rather than geographic
differences in the costs of labor.
1. Use of 2013 Occupational Mix Survey for the FY 2018 Wage Index
Section 304(c) of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2001 (Pub.
L. 106-554) amended section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act to require CMS to
collect data every 3 years on the occupational mix of employees for
each short-term, acute care hospital participating in the
[[Page 19903]]
Medicare program. We collected data in 2013 to compute the occupational
mix adjustment for the FY 2016, FY 2017, and FY 2018 wage indexes. A
new measurement of occupational mix is required for FY 2019.
The 2013 survey included the same data elements and definitions as
the previous 2010 survey and provided for the collection of hospital-
specific wages and hours data for nursing employees for calendar year
2013 (that is, payroll periods ending between January 1, 2013 and
December 31, 2013). We published the 2013 survey in the Federal
Register on February 28, 2013 (78 FR 13679 through 13680). This survey
was approved by OMB on May 14, 2013, and is available on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/Medicare-Wage-Index-Occupational-Mix-Survey2013.html. The 2013 Occupational Mix Survey
Hospital Reporting Form CMS-10079 for the Wage Index Beginning FY 2016
(in Excel format) is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/Medicare-Wage-Index-Occupational-Mix-Survey2013.html. Hospitals were required to submit
their completed 2013 surveys to their MACs by July 1, 2014. The
preliminary, unaudited 2013 survey data were posted on the CMS Web site
on July 11, 2014. As with the Worksheet S-3, Parts II and III cost
report wage data, we asked our MACs to revise or verify data elements
in hospitals' occupational mix surveys that result in certain edit
failures.
2. Use of the 2016 Medicare Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey for the
FY 2019 Wage Index
As stated earlier, a new measurement of occupational mix is
required for FY 2019. The FY 2019 occupational mix adjustment will be
based on a new calendar year (CY) 2016 survey. The CY 2016 survey (CMS
Form CMS-10079) received OMB approval on September 27, 2016. The final
CY 2016 Occupational Mix Survey Hospital Reporting Form is available on
the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/2016-Occupational-Mix-Survey-Hospital-Reporting-Form-CMS-10079-for-the-Wage-Index-Beginning-FY-2019.html. Hospitals are required to submit their
completed 2016 surveys to their MACs by July 3, 2017. The preliminary,
unaudited CY 2016 survey data will be posted on the CMS Web site in
mid-July 2017. As with the Worksheet S-3, Parts II and III cost report
wage data, as part of the FY 2019 desk review process, the MACs will
revise or verify data elements in hospitals' occupational mix surveys
that result in certain edit failures.
3. Calculation of the Proposed Occupational Mix Adjustment for FY 2018
For FY 2018, we are proposing to calculate the occupational mix
adjustment factor using the same methodology that we have used since
the FY 2012 wage index (76 FR 51582 through 51586) and to apply the
occupational mix adjustment to 100 percent of the FY 2018 wage index.
Because the statute requires that the Secretary measure the earnings
and paid hours of employment by occupational category not less than
once every 3 years, all hospitals that are subject to payments under
the IPPS, or any hospital that would be subject to the IPPS if not
granted a waiver, must complete the occupational mix survey, unless the
hospital has no associated cost report wage data that are included in
the FY 2018 wage index. For the proposed FY 2018 wage index, we are
using the Worksheet S-3, Parts II and III wage data of 3,325 hospitals,
and we are using the occupational mix surveys of 3,128 hospitals for
which we also have Worksheet S-3 wage data, which represented a
``response'' rate of 94 percent (3,128/3,325). For the proposed FY 2018
wage index, we are applying proxy data for noncompliant hospitals, new
hospitals, or hospitals that submitted erroneous or aberrant data in
the same manner that we applied proxy data for such hospitals in the FY
2012 wage index occupational mix adjustment (76 FR 51586). As a result
of applying this methodology, the proposed FY 2018 occupational mix
adjusted national average hourly wage is $41.9599.
F. Analysis and Implementation of the Proposed Occupational Mix
Adjustment and the Proposed FY 2018 Occupational Mix Adjusted Wage
Index
As discussed in section III.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, for FY 2018, we are proposing to apply the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the FY 2018 wage index. We calculated the
proposed occupational mix adjustment using data from the 2013
occupational mix survey data, using the methodology described in the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51582 through 51586). Using the
occupational mix survey data and applying the occupational mix
adjustment to 100 percent of the FY 2017 wage index results in a
proposed national average hourly wage of $41.9599.
The proposed FY 2018 national average hourly wages for each
occupational mix nursing subcategory as calculated in Step 2 of the
occupational mix calculation are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
Occupational mix nursing subcategory hourly wage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
National RN............................................. $38.84760578
National LPN and Surgical Technician.................... 22.72715122
National Nurse Aide, Orderly, and Attendant............. 15.94890269
National Medical Assistant.............................. 17.97139786
National Nurse Category................................. 32.84544016
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed national average hourly wage for the entire nurse
category as computed in Step 5 of the occupational mix calculation is
$32.84544016. Hospitals with a nurse category average hourly wage (as
calculated in Step 4) of greater than the national nurse category
average hourly wage receive an occupational mix adjustment factor (as
calculated in Step 6) of less than 1.0. Hospitals with a nurse category
average hourly wage (as calculated in Step 4) of less than the national
nurse category average hourly wage receive an occupational mix
adjustment factor (as calculated in Step 6) of greater than 1.0.
Based on the 2013 occupational mix survey data, we determined (in
Step 7 of the occupational mix calculation) that the national
percentage of hospital employees in the nurse category is 42.6 percent,
and the national percentage of hospital employees in the all other
occupations category is 57.4 percent. At the CBSA level, the percentage
of hospital employees in the nurse category ranged from a low of 25.7
percent in one CBSA to a high of 73.5 percent in another CBSA.
We compared the FY 2018 proposed occupational mix adjusted wage
indexes for each CBSA to the unadjusted wage indexes for each CBSA. As
a result of applying the proposed occupational mix adjustment to the
wage data, the proposed wage index values for 223 (54.7 percent) urban
areas and 23 (48.9 percent) rural areas would increase. The proposed
wage index values for 108 (26.5 percent) urban areas would increase by
greater than or equal to 1 percent but less than 5 percent, and the
proposed wage index values for 6 (1.5 percent) urban areas would
increase by 5 percent or more. The proposed wage index values for 10
(21.3 percent) rural areas would increase by greater than or equal to 1
percent but less than 5
[[Page 19904]]
percent, and no rural areas' proposed wage index values would increase
by 5 percent or more. However, the proposed wage index values for 184
(45.1 percent) urban areas and 24 (51.1 percent) rural areas would
decrease. The proposed wage index values for 85 (20.8 percent) urban
areas would decrease by greater than or equal to 1 percent but less
than 5 percent, and no urban areas' final wage index value would
decrease by 5 percent or more. The proposed wage index values of 8
(17.0 percent) rural areas would decrease by greater than or equal to 1
percent and less than 5 percent, and no rural areas' final wage index
values would decrease by 5 percent or more. The largest proposed
positive impacts would be 17.4 percent for an urban area and 2.9
percent for a rural area. The largest proposed negative impacts would
be 4.9 percent for an urban area and 2.3 percent for a rural area. One
urban area's proposed wage index, but no rural area wage indexes, would
remain unchanged by application of the occupational mix adjustment.
These results indicate that a larger percentage of urban areas (54.7
percent) would benefit from the occupational mix adjustment than would
rural areas (48.9 percent).
G. Proposed Application of the Rural, Imputed, and Frontier Floors
1. Proposed Rural Floor
Section 4410(a) of Public Law 105-33 provides that, for discharges
on or after October 1, 1997, the area wage index applicable to any
hospital that is located in an urban area of a State may not be less
than the area wage index applicable to hospitals located in rural areas
in that State. This provision is referred to as the ``rural floor''.
Section 3141 of Public Law 111-148 also requires that a national budget
neutrality adjustment be applied in implementing the rural floor. Based
on the proposed FY 2018 wage index associated with this proposed rule
(which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site), we estimated
that 366 hospitals would receive an increase in their FY 2018 proposed
wage index due to the application of the rural floor.
2. Proposed Expiration of the Imputed Floor Policy
In the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49109 through 49111), we
adopted the ``imputed floor'' policy as a temporary 3-year regulatory
measure to address concerns from hospitals in all-urban States that
have argued that they are disadvantaged by the absence of rural
hospitals to set a wage index floor for those States. Since its initial
implementation, we have extended the imputed floor policy seven times,
the last of which was adopted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
and is set to expire on September 30, 2017. (We refer readers to
further discussions of the imputed floor in the FY 2014, FY 2015, FY
2016, and FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules (78 FR 50589 through 50590,
79 FR 49969 through 49970, 80 FR 49497 through 49498, and 81 FR 56921
through 56922, respectively) and to the regulations at 42 CFR
412.64(h)(4).) Currently, there are three all-urban States--Delaware,
New Jersey, and Rhode Island--with a range of wage indexes assigned to
hospitals in these States, including through reclassification or
redesignation. (We refer readers to discussions of geographic
reclassifications and redesignations in section III.J. of the preamble
of this proposed rule.)
In computing the imputed floor for an all-urban State under the
original methodology, which was established beginning in FY 2005, we
calculated the ratio of the lowest-to-highest CBSA wage index for each
all-urban State as well as the average of the ratios of lowest-to-
highest CBSA wage indexes of those all-urban States. We then compared
the State's own ratio to the average ratio for all-urban States and
whichever is higher is multiplied by the highest CBSA wage index value
in the State--the product of which established the imputed floor for
the State. As of FY 2012, there were only two all-urban States--New
Jersey and Rhode Island-- and only New Jersey benefitted under this
methodology. Under the previous OMB labor market area delineations,
Rhode Island had only one CBSA (Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI-
MA) and New Jersey had 10 CBSAs. Therefore, under the original
methodology, Rhode Island's own ratio equaled 1.0, and its imputed
floor was equal to its original CBSA wage index value. However, because
the average ratio of New Jersey and Rhode Island was higher than New
Jersey's own ratio, this methodology provided a benefit for New Jersey,
but not for Rhode Island.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53368 through
53369), we retained the imputed floor calculated under the original
methodology as discussed above, and established an alternative
methodology for computing the imputed floor wage index to address the
concern that the original imputed floor methodology guaranteed a
benefit for one all-urban State with multiple wage indexes (New Jersey)
but could not benefit the other all-urban State (Rhode Island). The
alternative methodology for calculating the imputed floor was
established using data from the application of the rural floor policy
for FY 2013. Under the alternative methodology, we first determined the
average percentage difference between the post-reclassified, pre-floor
area wage index and the post-reclassified, rural floor wage index
(without rural floor budget neutrality applied) for all CBSAs receiving
the rural floor. (Table 4D associated with the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site)
included the CBSAs receiving a State's rural floor wage index.) The
lowest postreclassified wage index assigned to a hospital in an all-
urban State having a range of such values then is increased by this
factor, the result of which establishes the State's alternative imputed
floor. We amended Sec. 412.64(h)(4) of the regulations to add new
paragraphs to incorporate the finalized alternative methodology, and to
make reference and date changes. In summary, for the FY 2013 wage
index, we did not make any changes to the original imputed floor
methodology at Sec. 412.64(h)(4) and, therefore, made no changes to
the New Jersey imputed floor computation for FY 2013. Instead, for FY
2013, we adopted a second, alternative methodology for use in cases
where an all-urban State has a range of wage indexes assigned to its
hospitals, but the State cannot benefit under the original methodology.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50589 through
50590), we extended the imputed floor policy (both the original
methodology and the alternative methodology) for 1 additional year,
through September 30, 2014, while we continued to explore potential
wage index reforms.
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49969 through
49970), for FY 2015, we adopted a policy to extend the imputed floor
policy (both the original methodology and alternative methodology) for
another year, through September 30, 2015, as we continued to explore
potential wage index reforms. In that final rule, we revised the
regulations at Sec. 412.64(h)(4) and (h)(4)(vi) to reflect the 1-year
extension of the imputed floor.
As discussed in section III.B. of the preamble of that FY 2015
final rule, we adopted the new OMB labor market area delineations
beginning in FY 2015. Under the new OMB delineations, Delaware became
an all-urban State, along with New Jersey and Rhode Island. Under the
new OMB delineations, Delaware has three CBSAs, New Jersey has seven
CBSAs, and Rhode Island continues to have only one CBSA (Providence-
Warwick, RI-MA). We refer readers to a detailed discussion of our
adoption of the new
[[Page 19905]]
OMB labor market area delineations in section III.B. of the preamble of
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. Therefore, under the adopted new
OMB delineations discussed in section III.B. of the preamble of the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, Delaware became an all-urban State and
was subject to an imputed floor as well for FY 2015.
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49497 through
49498), for FY 2016, we extended the imputed floor policy (under both
the original methodology and the alternative methodology) for 1
additional year, through September 30, 2016. In that final rule, we
revised the regulations at Sec. 412.64(h)(4) and (h)(4)(vi) to reflect
this additional 1-year extension.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56921 through
56922), for FY 2017, we extended the imputed floor policy (under both
the original methodology and the alternative methodology) for 1
additional year, through September 30, 2017. In that final rule, we
revised the regulations at Sec. 412.64(h)(4) and (h)(4)(vi) to reflect
this additional 1-year extension.
The imputed floor is set to expire effective October 1, 2017, and
we are not proposing to extend the imputed floor policy. In the FY 2005
IPPS final rule (69 FR 49110), we adopted the imputed floor policy for
all-urban States under the authority of section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act, which gives the Secretary broad authority to adjust the proportion
(as estimated by the Secretary from time to time) of hospitals' costs
which are attributable to wages and wage-related costs of the DRG
prospective payment rates for area differences in hospital wage levels
by a factor (established by the Secretary). However, we have expressed
reservations about establishment of an imputed floor, considering that
the imputed rural floor methodology creates a disadvantage in the
application of the wage index to hospitals in States with rural
hospitals but no urban hospitals receiving the rural floor (72 FR 24786
and 72 FR 47322). As we discussed in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule (72 FR
47322), the application of the rural and imputed floors requires
transfer of payments from hospitals in States with rural hospitals but
where the rural floor is not applied to hospitals in States where the
rural or imputed floor is applied. For this reason, in this proposed
rule, we are proposing not to apply an imputed floor to wage index
calculations and payments for hospitals in all-urban States for FY 2018
and subsequent years. That is, hospitals in New Jersey, Delaware, and
Rhode Island (and in any other all-urban State) would receive a wage
index that is calculated without applying an imputed floor for FY 2018
and subsequent years. Therefore, only States containing both rural
areas and hospitals located in such areas (including any hospital
reclassified as rural under the provisions of Sec. 412.103 of the
regulations) would benefit from the rural floor, in accordance with
section 4410 of Public Law 105-33. In addition, we would no longer
include the imputed floor as a factor in the national budget neutrality
adjustment. Therefore, the proposed wage index and impact tables
associated with this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (which are
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site) do not reflect the
imputed floor policy, and there is no proposed national budget
neutrality adjustment for the imputed floor for FY 2018. We are
inviting public comments on our proposal not to extend the imputed
floor for FY 2018 and subsequent years.
3. Proposed State Frontier Floor for FY 2018
Section 10324 of Public Law 111-148 requires that hospitals in
frontier States cannot be assigned a wage index of less than 1.0000.
(We refer readers to the regulations at 42 CFR 412.64(m) and to a
discussion of the implementation of this provision in the FY 2011 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50160 through 50161).) Fifty-two hospitals
would receive the frontier floor value of 1.0000 for their FY 2018 wage
index in this proposed rule. These hospitals are located in Montana,
Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming. We are not proposing
any changes to the frontier floor policy for FY 2018. The areas
affected by the proposed rural and frontier floor policies for the
proposed FY 2018 wage index are identified in Table 2 associated with
this proposed rule, which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site.
H. Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index Tables
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49498 and 49807
through 49808), we finalized a proposal to streamline and consolidate
the wage index tables associated with the IPPS proposed and final rules
for FY 2016 and subsequent fiscal years. Prior to FY 2016, the wage
index tables had consisted of 12 tables (Tables 2, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C,
4D, 4E, 4F, 4J, 9A, and 9C) that were made available via the Internet
on the CMS Web site. Effective beginning FY 2016, with the exception of
Table 4E, we streamlined and consolidated 11 tables (Tables 2, 3A, 3B,
4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, 4F, 4J, 9A, and 9C) into 2 tables (Tables 2 and 3). We
refer readers to section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule for
a discussion of the proposed wage index tables for FY 2018.
I. Revisions to the Wage Index Based on Hospital Redesignations and
Reclassifications
1. General Policies and Effects of Reclassification and Redesignation
Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the Medicare Geographic
Classification Review Board (MGCRB) considers applications by hospitals
for geographic reclassification for purposes of payment under the IPPS.
Hospitals must apply to the MGCRB to reclassify not later than 13
months prior to the start of the fiscal year for which reclassification
is sought (usually by September 1). Generally, hospitals must be
proximate to the labor market area to which they are seeking
reclassification and must demonstrate characteristics similar to
hospitals located in that area. The MGCRB issues its decisions by the
end of February for reclassifications that become effective for the
following fiscal year (beginning October 1). The regulations applicable
to reclassifications by the MGCRB are located in 42 CFR 412.230 through
412.280. (We refer readers to a discussion in the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 39874 and 39875) regarding how the MGCRB defines mileage
for purposes of the proximity requirements.) The general policies for
reclassifications and redesignations and the policies for the effects
of hospitals' reclassifications and redesignations on the wage index
are discussed in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the FY 2012
final wage index (76 FR 51595 and 51596). In addition, in the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we discussed the effects on the wage index of
urban hospitals reclassifying to rural areas under 42 CFR 412.103.
Hospitals that are geographically located in States without any rural
areas are ineligible to apply for rural reclassification in accordance
with the provisions of 42 CFR 412.103.
On April 21, 2016, we published an interim final rule with comment
period (IFC) in the Federal Register (81 FR 23428 through 23438) that
included provisions amending our regulations to allow hospitals
nationwide to have simultaneous Sec. 412.103 and MGCRB
reclassifications. For reclassifications effective beginning FY 2018, a
hospital may acquire rural status under Sec. 412.103 and subsequently
apply for a reclassification under the MGCRB using distance and average
hourly wage criteria designated for rural hospitals. In
[[Page 19906]]
addition, we provided that a hospital that has an active MGCRB
reclassification and is then approved for redesignation under Sec.
412.103 will not lose its MGCRB reclassification; such a hospital
receives a reclassified urban wage index during the years of its active
MGCRB reclassification and is still considered rural under section
1886(d) of the Act and for other purposes.
We discussed that when there is both a Sec. 412.103 redesignation
and an MGCRB reclassification, the MGCRB reclassification controls for
wage index calculation and payment purposes. We exclude hospitals with
Sec. 412.103 redesignations from the calculation of the reclassified
rural wage index if they also have an active MGCRB reclassification to
another area. That is, if an application for urban reclassification
through the MGCRB is approved, and is not withdrawn or terminated by
the hospital within the established timelines, we consider the
hospital's geographic CBSA and the urban CBSA to which the hospital is
reclassified under the MGCRB for the wage index calculation. We refer
readers to the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23428 through 23438) and the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56922 through 56930) for a full
discussion of the effect of simultaneous reclassifications under both
the Sec. 412.103 and the MGCRB processes on wage index calculations.
2. MGCRB Reclassification and Redesignation Issues for FY 2018
a. FY 2018 Reclassification Requirements and Approvals
As previously stated, under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the
MGCRB considers applications by hospitals for geographic
reclassification for purposes of payment under the IPPS. The specific
procedures and rules that apply to the geographic reclassification
process are outlined in regulations under 42 CFR 412.230 through
412.280.
At the time this proposed rule was constructed, the MGCRB had
completed its review of FY 2018 reclassification requests. Based on
such reviews, there are 375 hospitals approved for wage index
reclassifications by the MGCRB starting in FY 2018. Because MGCRB wage
index reclassifications are effective for 3 years, for FY 2018,
hospitals reclassified beginning in FY 2016 or FY 2017 are eligible to
continue to be reclassified to a particular labor market area based on
such prior reclassifications for the remainder of their 3-year period.
There were 257 hospitals approved for wage index reclassifications in
FY 2016 that will continue for FY 2018, and 274 hospitals approved for
wage index reclassifications in FY 2017 that will continue for FY 2018.
Of all the hospitals approved for reclassification for FY 2016, FY
2017, and FY 2018, based upon the review at the time of this proposed
rule, 906 hospitals are in a MGCRB reclassification status for FY 2018.
Under the regulations at 42 CFR 412.273, hospitals that have been
reclassified by the MGCRB are permitted to withdraw their applications
if the request for withdrawal is received by the MGCRB within 45 days
of the publication of CMS' annual notice of proposed rulemaking
concerning changes to the inpatient hospital prospective payment system
and proposed payment rates for the fiscal year for which the
application has been filed. (We note that in section III.I.4. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise the above
described regulation text to specify that written notice to the MGCRB
must be provided within 45 days from the date of public display of the
proposed rule at the Office of the Federal Register. If finalized, that
proposal would be effective beginning with the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule.) For information about withdrawing, terminating, or
canceling a previous withdrawal or termination of a 3-year
reclassification for wage index purposes, we refer readers to Sec.
412.273, as well as the FY 2002 IPPS final rule (66 FR 39887 through
39888) and the FY 2003 IPPS final rule (67 FR 50065 through 50066).
Additional discussion on withdrawals and terminations, and
clarifications regarding reinstating reclassifications and ``fallback''
reclassifications were included in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule (72 FR
47333).
Changes to the wage index that result from withdrawals of requests
for reclassification, terminations, wage index corrections, appeals,
and the Administrator's review process for FY 2018 will be incorporated
into the wage index values published in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule. These changes affect not only the wage index value for specific
geographic areas, but also the wage index value that redesignated/
reclassified hospitals receive; that is, whether they receive the wage
index that includes the data for both the hospitals already in the area
and the redesignated/reclassified hospitals. Further, the wage index
value for the area from which the hospitals are redesignated/
reclassified may be affected.
Applications for FY 2019 reclassifications are due to the MGCRB by
September 1, 2017 (the first working day of September 2017). We note
that this is also the deadline for canceling a previous wage index
reclassification, withdrawal, or termination under 42 CFR 412.273(d).
Applications and other information about MGCRB reclassifications may be
obtained, beginning in mid-July 2017, via the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Review-Boards/MGCRB/index.html, or by calling the MGCRB at (410) 786-1174. The
mailing address of the MGCRB is: 2520 Lord Baltimore Drive, Suite L,
Baltimore, MD 21244-2670.
Under previous regulations at 42 CFR 412.256(a)(1), applications
for reclassification were required to be mailed or delivered to the
MGCRB, with a copy to CMS, and were not allowed to be submitted through
the facsimile (FAX) process or by other electronic means. Because we
believed this previous policy was outdated and overly restrictive and
to promote ease of application for FY 2018 and subsequent years, in the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56928), we revised this policy
to require applications and supporting documentation to be submitted
via the method prescribed in instructions by the MGCRB, with an
electronic copy to CMS. We revised Sec. 412.256(a)(1) to specify that
an application must be submitted to the MGCRB according to the method
prescribed by the MGCRB, with an electronic copy of the application
sent to CMS. We specified that CMS copies should be sent via email to
[email protected].
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56928), we
reiterated that MGCRB application requirements will be published
separately from the rulemaking process, and paper applications will
likely still be required. The MGCRB makes all initial determinations
for geographic reclassification requests, but CMS requests copies of
all applications to assist in verifying a reclassification status
during the wage index development process. We stated that we believed
that requiring electronic versions would better aid CMS in this
process, and would reduce the overall burden upon hospitals.
b. Extension of PRA Information Collection Requirement Approval for
MGCRB Applications
As stated earlier, under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the MGCRB
considers applications by hospitals for geographic reclassification for
purposes of payment under the IPPS. The specific
[[Page 19907]]
procedures and rules that apply to the geographic reclassification
process are outlined in the regulations under 42 CFR 412.230 through
412.280. The current information collection requirements for the MGCRB
procedures and criteria and supporting regulations in 42 CFR 412.256
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act provisions are currently
approved under OMB Control Number 0938-0573 and expired on February 28,
2017. An extension of the currently approved collection is required in
time for applications due to the MGCRB September 1, 2017 for FY 2019
reclassifications. As discussed in section XIII.B. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, a request for an extension of the current
information collection requirements for the MGCRB procedures and
criteria and supporting regulations is currently awaiting approval by
OMB and can be accessed at: //www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=201612-0938-023.
c. Proposed Deadline for Submittal of Documentation of Sole Community
Hospital (SCH) and Rural Referral Center (RRC) Classification Status to
the MGCRB
The regulations at 42 CFR 412.230(a)(3), consistent with section
1886(d)(10)(D)(i)(III) of the Act, set special rules for sole community
hospitals (SCHs) and rural referral centers (RRCs) that are
reclassifying under the MGCRB. Specifically, a hospital that is an RRC
or an SCH, or both, does not have to demonstrate a close proximity to
the area to which it seeks redesignation. If a hospital that is an RRC
or an SCH, or both, qualifies for urban redesignation, it is
redesignated to the urban area that is closest to the hospital. If the
hospital is closer to another rural area than to any urban area, it may
seek redesignation to either the closest rural or the closest urban
area.
In addition, section 1886(d)(10)(D)(iii) of the Act, as implemented
in the regulations at Sec. 412.230(d)(3)(i), provides an exception to
certain wage comparison criteria for RRCs and former RRCs reclassifying
under the MGCRB. Under Sec. 412.230(d)(3)(i), if a hospital was ever
an RRC, it does not have to demonstrate that it meets the average
hourly wage criterion at Sec. 412.230(d)(1)(iii), which would require
that the hospital's average hourly wage be at least 106 percent for
rural hospitals and at least 108 percent for urban hospitals of the
average hourly wage of all other hospitals in the area in which the
hospital is located. Rather, as codified at Sec. 412.230(d)(3)(ii),
consistent with our authority under section 1886(d)(10)(D)(i) of the
Act, if a hospital was ever an RRC, it is required to meet only the
criterion for rural hospitals at Sec. 412.230(d)(1)(iv), which
requires that the hospital's average hourly wage is equal to at least
82 percent of the average hourly wage of hospitals in the area to which
it seeks redesignation. The regulations at Sec. 412.96 set forth the
criteria that a hospital must meet in order to qualify as an RRC.
For a hospital to use the special rules at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) for
SCHs and RRCs, the existing regulation at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) requires
that the hospital be an active SCH or an RRC as of the date of the
MGCRB's review. In addition, for a hospital to use the RRC exceptions
at Sec. 412.230(d)(3), a hospital must either be an RRC at the time of
the MGCRB's review or have previously been classified as an RRC in the
past. In other words, under the existing regulations, if a hospital is
approved by CMS as an SCH or an RRC but the approval is not yet
effective at the time of the MGCRB's review, the hospital's status as
an SCH or an RRC would not be considered in the MGCRB's decision,
unless the hospital was a former RRC, in which case it would be able to
use the RRC exceptions at Sec. 412.230(d)(3).
The MGCRB currently accepts supporting documentation of SCH and RRC
classification (the CMS approval letter) up until the date of MGCRB's
review, which varies annually. A hospital may apply at any time for
classification as an SCH, and the classification is effective 30 days
after the date of CMS' written notification of approval, in accordance
with Sec. 412.92. Considering that the MGCRB usually meets in early
February, hospitals typically seek to obtain SCH approval letters no
later than early January (30 days prior to the date of MGCRB review)
for the SCH status to be effective as of the date of the MGCRB's
review. However, consistent with section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, a
hospital must submit its application for RRC status during the quarter
before the first quarter of the hospital's cost reporting period, to be
effective at the beginning of the next cost reporting period. The
existing regulation at Sec. 412.230(a)(3), combined with the statutory
timeframe for RRC classification, require that a hospital's cost
reporting period as an RRC begin on or before the date of the MGCRB's
review in order to be considered an RRC by the MGCRB for purposes of
the special rules under Sec. 412.230(a)(3). Similarly, in order to use
the RRC exceptions under Sec. 412.230(d)(3), a hospital's RRC status
must be effective on the date of the MGCRB's review, or (unlike Sec.
412.230(a)(3)) the hospital must have had RRC status in the past. For
example, a hospital with a cost reporting period beginning in March
would obtain RRC approval, in accordance with the statutory timeframe,
during the December through February quarter (potentially before the
MGCRB's decision), but would not be considered an RRC by the MGCRB
because the approval would not be effective until the next cost
reporting period begins in March, after the MGCRB's decision (unless,
for purposes of Sec. 412.230(d)(3), the hospital had previously been
classified as an RRC in the past).
The current practice of accepting SCH and RRC approvals up until
the date of MGCRB review does not ensure adequate time for the MGCRB to
include SCH and RRC approvals in its review. We note that many
hospitals now obtain SCH or RRC status based on a Sec. 412.103
reclassification in order to reclassify using the special rules and
exceptions under the MGCRB following the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR
23428), which revised the regulations to allow hospitals nationwide to
reclassify based on acquired rural status. We believe that the
additional volume of SCH and RRC approvals submitted to the MGCRB
increases the need for an earlier deadline for documentation of SCH and
RRC classifications to be submitted to the MGCRB for purposes of the
special rules at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and the exception for RRCs at
Sec. 412.230(d)(3). In addition, because the date of the MGCRB's
review varies annually, we believe hospitals would benefit from the
certainty of a set date by which documentation of RRC or SCH status
must be submitted in order to have that status considered by the MGCRB
under 412.230(a)(3) and Sec. 412.230(d)(3).
Therefore, to ensure sufficient time for the MGCRB to include SCH
and RRC status approvals in its review and increase clarity for
hospitals, while allowing as much time and flexibility as possible for
hospitals applying for RRC status to be considered RRCs by the MGCRB,
we are proposing to revise the regulations at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and
Sec. 412.230(d)(3). We are proposing to revise the regulations at
Sec. 412.230(a)(3) in two ways. First, we are proposing to establish a
deadline of the first business day after January 1 for hospitals to
submit to the MGCRB documentation of SCH or RRC status approval (the
CMS approval letter) in order to take advantage of the special rules
under Sec. 412.230(a)(3) when reclassifying under the MGCRB. We
believe that this date of the first business day after January 1 would
provide sufficient time for the MGCRB to consider documentation of
[[Page 19908]]
SCH or RRC status approval in its review, without negatively affecting
hospitals seeking to obtain SCH or RRC status, as explained below.
Second, we are proposing to revise Sec. 412.230(a)(3) to require
hospitals to submit documentation of SCH or RRC status approval (the
CMS approval letter) by the deadline above, rather than to have SCH or
RRC classification that is effective as of the date of MGCRB review, in
order to use the special rules for SCHs and RRCs under Sec.
412.230(a)(3). Likewise, we are proposing to revise the regulations at
Sec. 412.230(d)(3) so that a hospital qualifies for these RRC
exceptions if it was ever approved as a RRC. In other words, the
exceptions at Sec. 412.230(d)(3) would continue to apply to hospitals
that were ever classified as RRCs, but consistent with our authority
under section 1886(d)(10)(D)(i) of the Act to publish guidelines to be
utilized by the MGCRB, we would also extend these exceptions to
hospitals that were ever approved as RRCs. Similar to Sec.
412.230(a)(3), we also are proposing to establish a deadline of the
first business day after January 1 for hospitals to submit
documentation of RRC status approval (the CMS approval letter) in order
to take advantage of the exception under Sec. 412.230(d)(3) when
reclassifying under the MGCRB. These proposed revisions would more
appropriately allow the MGCRB to prepare for its review and would allow
hospitals obtaining SCH or RRC status approval as late as the first
business day after January 1 to have these classifications considered
by the MGCRB under Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and (d)(3), irrespective of the
effective date of these classifications. These proposals would not
substantially affect hospitals seeking SCH classification for purposes
of reclassifying under the MGCRB because a hospital must obtain SCH
status approval by early January under the existing regulation in order
to have that classification effective 30 days later by the time the
Board usually meets in early February. For hospitals seeking RRC
classification for purposes of reclassifying under the MGCRB, however,
the proposed deadline of no later than the first business day after
January 1, in concert with our proposal to accept documentation of
approval (the CMS approval letter) instead of requiring the hospital to
be an active RRC at the time of the MGCRB review in order to take
advantage of the special rules and exceptions under Sec. 412.230(a)(3)
and (d)(3), is beneficial. The proposed revisions to the regulations at
Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and (d)(3) accommodate more hospitals with various
cost reporting year ends by allowing hospitals with cost reporting
periods beginning soon after the MGCRB's decision to have RRC status
approvals included in the MGCRB's review. Under the proposals, the
MGCRB would consider an RRC status approval obtained as late as the
first business day after January 1 instead of requiring the RRC
classification to be effective by the time the Board meets, which has
been in February in past years. For example, a hospital with a cost
reporting period beginning as late as March, which could apply for RRC
status approval in accordance with the statutory timeframe starting in
December, would be considered an RRC by the MGCRB if it submits
documentation of approval of RRC status no later than the first
business day after January 1, even though the approval would not be
effective until after the MGCRB's decision.
For the reasons discussed above, consistent with our authority
under section 1886(d)(10)(D)(i) of the Act to publish guidelines to be
utilized by the MGCRB, we are proposing to revise the regulations at
Sec. 412.230(a)(3) to specify that, to be redesignated under the
special rules in that paragraph, the hospital must submit documentation
of the approval of SCH or RRC status to the MGCRB no later than the
first business day after January 1. In addition, we are proposing
conforming revisions to paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii) of Sec. 412.230
to reflect that these paragraphs apply to hospitals with SCH and RRC
approval as specified above (and not only effective status).
Specifically, we are proposing to revise Sec. 412.230(a)(3)(i) to
specify that a hospital that is approved as an RRC or SCH, or both,
does not have to demonstrate a close proximity to the area to which it
seeks redesignation; and to revise Sec. 412.230(a)(3)(ii) to specify
that this paragraph applies if a hospital that is approved as an RRC or
SCH, or both, qualifies for urban redesignation. We note that we are
proposing additional revisions to Sec. 412.230(a)(3)(ii) as discussed
in section III.I.2.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
In addition, for the reasons discussed above, consistent with our
authority under section 1886(d)(10)(D)(i) of the Act to publish
guidelines to be utilized by the MGCRB, we are proposing to revise the
regulations at Sec. 412.230(d)(3). Specifically, we are proposing to
add introductory language to Sec. 412.230(d)(3) to specify that for
the exceptions in this paragraph to apply, the hospital must submit
documentation of the approval of RRC status (current or past) to the
MGCRB no later than the first business day after January 1. In
addition, we are proposing to revise Sec. 412.230(d)(3)(i) to specify
that if a hospital was ever approved as an RRC, it does not have to
demonstrate that it meets the average hourly wage criterion set forth
in Sec. 412.230(d)(1)(iii); and to revise Sec. 412.230(d)(3)(ii) to
specify that if a hospital was ever approved as an RRC, it is required
to meet only the criterion that applies to rural hospitals under Sec.
412.230(d)(1)(iv), regardless of its actual location in an urban or
rural area.
We are inviting public comments on these proposals.
d. Clarification of Special Rules for SCHs and RRCs Reclassifying to
Geographic Home Area
Following issuance of the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23428),
hospitals may simultaneously be redesignated as rural under Sec.
412.103 and reclassified under the MGCRB. An urban hospital seeking
benefits of rural status, such as rural payments for disproportionate
share hospitals (DSH) and eligibility for the 340B Drug Pricing Program
administered by HRSA, without the associated rural wage index may be
redesignated as rural under Sec. 412.103 (if it meets the applicable
requirements) and also reclassify under the MGCRB to an urban area
(again, if it meets the applicable requirements). As discussed earlier
and in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56922 through
56927), a hospital with simultaneous Sec. 412.103 redesignation and
MGCRB reclassification receives the wage index of the CBSA to which it
is reclassified under the MGCRB while still maintaining Sec. 412.103
reclassified rural status for other purposes.
Hospitals that are redesignated under Sec. 412.103 may seek MGCRB
reclassification to their geographic home area. Such hospitals
automatically meet the criteria for proximity, but must still
demonstrate that they meet the wage comparison requirements using the
criteria for rural hospitals at Sec. 412.230(d). Specifically, a
hospital with a Sec. 412.103 redesignation seeking reclassification
under the MGCRB must demonstrate that its average hourly wage is at
least 106 percent of the average hourly wage of all other hospitals in
the area in which the hospital is located in accordance with Sec.
412.230(d)(1)(iii), and the hospital's average hourly wage is equal to
at least 82 percent of the average hourly wage of hospitals in the area
to which it seeks redesignation, in accordance with Sec.
412.230(d)(1)(iv). In this case, both the area in which the hospital is
located and
[[Page 19909]]
the area to which it seeks redesignation are the geographic home area.
If a hospital with a Sec. 412.103 rural redesignation also has SCH
or RRC status based on its acquired rural status, the hospital may use
the exception at Sec. 412.230(d)(3) for RRCs seeking reclassification
under the MGCRB and the special reclassification rules at Sec.
412.230(a)(3) for SCHs and RRCs. Specifically, under Sec.
412.230(d)(3)(ii), an RRC or former RRC must only demonstrate that its
average hourly wage is equal to at least 82 percent of the average
hourly wage of hospitals in the area to which it seeks redesignation.
In other words, a hospital with RRC status based on a Sec. 412.103
rural redesignation that is seeking additional reclassification under
the MGCRB to its geographic home area must only demonstrate that its
average hourly wage is equal to at least 82 percent of the average
hourly wage of hospitals in its geographic home area. The proximity
requirement is waived under Sec. 412.230(a)(3) for SCHs and RRCs, and
SCHs and RRCs are redesignated to the urban area that is closest to the
hospital (or if the hospital is closer to another rural area than to
any urban area, it may seek redesignation to either the closest rural
area or the closest urban area).
The existing regulation at Sec. 412.230(a)(3)(ii) states that if
an SCH or RRC qualifies for urban redesignation, it is redesignated to
the urban area that is closest to the hospital. As currently worded, we
believe it is unclear how this provision would apply to a hospital with
a Sec. 412.103 rural redesignation and SCH or RRC status. If the urban
area that is closest to the hospital is interpreted to mean the
hospital's geographic home area, a hospital with a Sec. 412.103 rural
redesignation and SCH or RRC status would not be able to reclassify to
any closest area outside of the hospital's geographic home area, but
would only be allowed to reclassify to the geographic home area.
Alternatively, if the urban area that is closest to the hospital is
interpreted to mean the closest urban area to the hospital's geographic
home area, the hospital would seem to be precluded from reclassifying
under the MGCRB to its geographic home area. In other words, under the
existing language of this regulation, the urban area that is closest to
the hospital can either be interpreted to mean the hospital's
geographic home area, or the closest area outside of the hospital's
geographic home area.
We believe it would be appropriate to revise Sec.
412.230(a)(3)(ii) to clarify that it allows for redesignation to either
the hospital's geographic home area or to the closest area outside of
the hospital's geographic home area. Prior to the April 21, 2016
interim final rule with comment period (IFC) (81 FR 23428), it was not
possible for a hospital with Sec. 412.103 rural redesignation to seek
reclassification to its geographic home area or to the closest area
outside its geographic home area under the MGCRB because dual
reclassification under Sec. 412.103 and under the MGCRB was not
permitted. However, the IFC allowed dual Sec. 412.103 and MGCRB
reclassifications, so a hospital may now reclassify to a rural area
under Sec. 412.103 and then reclassify back to its geographic home
area or another area under the MGCRB for wage index purposes (if it
meets all criteria). Thus, depending on the circumstances, a hospital
may seek to reclassify to either its geographic home area or the
closest area outside of its geographic home area.
Therefore, we are proposing to revise the regulations at Sec.
412.230(a)(3)(ii) to clarify that a hospital with a Sec. 412.103 rural
redesignation and SCH or RRC approval may reclassify under the MGCRB to
its geographic home area or to the closest area outside of its
geographic home area. Specifically, we are proposing to revise Sec.
412.230(a)(3)(ii) to state that if a hospital that is approved as an
RRC or an SCH, or both, qualifies for urban redesignation, it is
redesignated to the urban area that is closest to the hospital or to
the hospital's geographic home area. If the hospital is closer to
another rural area than to any urban area, it may seek redesignation to
either the closest rural or the closest urban area.
3. Redesignations Under Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act
In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51599 through
51600), we adopted the policy that, beginning with FY 2012, an eligible
hospital that waives its Lugar status in order to receive the out-
migration adjustment has effectively waived its deemed urban status
and, thus, is rural for all purposes under the IPPS effective for the
fiscal year in which the hospital receives the out-migration
adjustment. In addition, we adopted a minor procedural change that
would allow a Lugar hospital that qualifies for and accepts the out-
migration adjustment (through written notification to CMS within 45
days from the publication of the proposed rule) to waive its urban
status for the full 3-year period for which its out-migration
adjustment is effective. (We note that, in section III.I.4. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise this policy
to require a Lugar hospital that qualifies for and accepts the out-
migration adjustment, or that no longer wishes to accept the out-
migration adjustment and instead elects to return to its deemed urban
status, to notify CMS within 45 days from the date of public display of
the proposed rule at the Office of the Federal Register.) By doing so,
such a Lugar hospital would no longer be required during the second and
third years of eligibility for the out-migration adjustment to advise
us annually that it prefers to continue being treated as rural and
receive the out-migration adjustment. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 56930), we again clarified that such a request to
waive Lugar status, received within 45 days of the publication of the
proposed rule, is valid for the full 3-year period for which the
hospital's out-migration adjustment is effective. We further clarified
that if a hospital wishes to reinstate its urban status for any fiscal
year within this 3-year period, it must send a request to CMS within 45
days of publication of the proposed rule for that particular fiscal
year. We indicated that such reinstatement requests may be sent
electronically to
[email protected]. We wish to further clarify
that both requests to waive and to reinstate ``Lugar'' status may be
sent to this mailbox. To ensure proper accounting, we request hospitals
to include their CCN, and either ``waive Lugar'' or ``reinstate
Lugar'', in the subject line of these requests.
4. Proposed Changes to the 45-Day Notification Rules
Certain Medicare regulations specify that hospitals have 45 days
from the publication of the annual proposed rule for the hospital
inpatient prospective payment system to inform CMS or the MGCRB of
certain requested reclassification/redesignation and out-migration
adjustment changes relating to the development of the hospital wage
index. Specifically, 42 CFR 412.64(i)(3)(iii), which provides for
adjusting the wage index to account for commuting patterns of hospital
workers, and 42 CFR 412.211(f)(3)(iii), which provides for the same
adjustment for hospitals in Puerto Rico, state that a hospital may
waive the application of this wage index adjustment by notifying CMS in
writing within 45 days after the publication of the annual notice of
proposed rulemaking for the hospital inpatient prospective payment
system. The regulations at Sec. 412.273(c) concerning withdrawing an
MGCRB application, terminating an approved 3-year reclassification, or
canceling a previous withdrawal or termination, also state
(specifically Sec. 412.273(c)(1)(ii)
[[Page 19910]]
and (2)) that a request for withdrawal or termination must be received
by the MGCRB within 45 days of publication of CMS' annual notice of
proposed rulemaking concerning changes to the inpatient hospital
prospective payment system and proposed payment rates. Similarly, the
policy outlined in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51599
through 51600) allows a Lugar hospital that qualifies for and accepts
the out-migration adjustment, or that no longer wishes to accept the
out-migration adjustment and instead elects to return to its deemed
urban status to notify CMS within 45 days from the publication of the
proposed rule.
We are proposing to revise the above described regulation text and
policies as follows to specify that written notification to CMS or the
MGCRB (as applicable) must be provided within 45 days from the date of
public display of the annual proposed rule for the hospital inpatient
prospective payment system at the Office of the Federal Register. We
believe that the public has access to the necessary information from
the date of public display of the proposed rule at the Office of the
Federal Register and on its Web site in order to make the decisions at
issue. Specifically, we are proposing to revise the regulations at
Sec. 412.64(i)(3)(iii) and Sec. 412.211(f)(3)(iii) to provide that a
hospital may waive the application of the wage index adjustment by
notifying CMS within 45 days of the date of public display of the
annual notice of proposed rulemaking for the hospital inpatient
prospective payment system at the Office of the Federal Register. In
addition, we are proposing to revise the regulations at Sec.
412.273(c)(1)(ii) and (c)(2) to provide that a request for withdrawal
or termination of an MGCRB reclassification must be received by the
MGCRB within 45 days of the date of public display at the Office of the
Federal Register of the annual notice of proposed rulemaking concerning
changes to the inpatient hospital prospective payment system and
proposed payment rates for the fiscal year for which the application
has been filed (in the case of a withdrawal under Sec.
412.273(c)(1)(ii)), or for the fiscal year for which the termination is
to apply (under Sec. 412.273(c)(2)). We also are proposing to revise
our policy outlined in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51599 through 51600) (as described above) to require a Lugar hospital
that qualifies for and accepts the out-migration adjustment, or that no
longer wishes to accept the out-migration adjustment and instead elects
to return to its deemed urban status to notify CMS within 45 days from
the date of public display of the proposed rule at the Office of the
Federal Register. We are inviting public comments on these proposals.
J. Proposed Out-Migration Adjustment Based on Commuting Patterns of
Hospital Employees
In accordance with section 1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by
section 505 of Pub. L. 108-173, beginning with FY 2005, we established
a process to make adjustments to the hospital wage index based on
commuting patterns of hospital employees (the ``out-migration''
adjustment). The process, outlined in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69
FR 49061), provides for an increase in the wage index for hospitals
located in certain counties that have a relatively high percentage of
hospital employees who reside in the county but work in a different
county (or counties) with a higher wage index.
Section 1886(d)(13)(B) of the Act requires the Secretary to use
data the Secretary determines to be appropriate to establish the
qualifying counties. When the provision of section 1886(d)(13) of the
Act was implemented for the FY 2005 wage index, we analyzed commuting
data compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau that were derived from a
special tabulation of the 2000 Census journey-to-work data for all
industries (CMS extracted data applicable to hospitals). These data
were compiled from responses to the ``long-form'' survey, which the
Census Bureau used at the time and which contained questions on where
residents in each county worked (69 FR 49062). However, the 2010 Census
was ``short form'' only; information on where residents in each county
worked was not collected as part of the 2010 Census. The Census Bureau
worked with CMS to provide an alternative dataset based on the latest
available data on where residents in each county worked in 2010, for
use in developing a new out-migration adjustment based on new commuting
patterns developed from the 2010 Census data beginning with FY 2016.
To determine the out-migration adjustments and applicable counties
for FY 2016, we analyzed commuting data compiled by the Census Bureau
that were derived from a custom tabulation of the American Community
Survey (ACS), an official Census Bureau survey, utilizing 2008 through
2012 (5-Year) Microdata. The data were compiled from responses to the
ACS questions regarding the county where workers reside and the county
to which workers commute. As we discussed in the FY 2016 and FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules (80 FR 49501 and 81 FR 56930, respectively),
the same policies, procedures, and computation that were used for the
FY 2012 out-migration adjustment were applicable for FY 2016 and FY
2017, and we are proposing to use them again for FY 2018. We have
applied the same policies, procedures, and computations since FY 2012,
and we believe they continue to be appropriate for FY 2018. We refer
readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49500 through
49502) for a full explanation of the revised data source.
For FY 2018, until such time that CMS finalizes out-migration
adjustments based on the next Census, the out-migration adjustment
continues to be based on the data derived from the custom tabulation of
the ACS utilizing 2008 through 2012 (5-Year) Microdata. For FY 2018, we
are not proposing any changes to the methodology or data source that we
used for FY 2016 (81 FR 25071). (We refer readers to a full discussion
of the out-migration adjustment, including rules on deeming hospitals
reclassified under section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10) of the Act
to have waived the out-migration adjustment, in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (76 FR 51601 through 51602).) Table 2 associated with
this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site) includes the proposed out-migration adjustments for the FY 2018
wage index.
K. Reclassification From Urban to Rural Under Section 1886(d)(8)(E) of
the Act, Implemented at 42 CFR 412.103
Under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act, a qualifying prospective
payment hospital located in an urban area may apply for rural status
for payment purposes separate from reclassification through the MGCRB.
Specifically, section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act provides that, not later
than 60 days after the receipt of an application (in a form and manner
determined by the Secretary) from a subsection (d) hospital that
satisfies certain criteria, the Secretary shall treat the hospital as
being located in the rural area (as defined in paragraph (2)(D)) of the
State in which the hospital is located. We refer readers to the
regulations at 42 CFR 412.103 for the general criteria and application
requirements for a subsection (d) hospital to reclassify from urban to
rural status in accordance with section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act. The
FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51595 through 51596) includes
our policies
[[Page 19911]]
regarding the effect of wage data from reclassified or redesignated
hospitals.
Hospitals must meet the criteria to be reclassified from urban to
rural status under Sec. 412.103, as well as fulfill the requirements
for the application process. There may be one or more reasons that a
hospital applies for the urban to rural reclassification, and the
timeframe that a hospital submits an application is often dependent on
those reason(s). Because the wage index is part of the methodology for
determining the prospective payments to hospitals for each fiscal year,
we believe there should be a definitive timeframe within which a
hospital should apply for rural status in order for the
reclassification to be reflected in the next Federal fiscal year's wage
data used for setting payment rates.
Therefore, after notice of proposed rulemaking and consideration of
public comments, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56931
through 56932), we revised Sec. 412.103(b) by adding paragraph (6) to
specify that, in order for a hospital to be treated as rural in the
wage index and budget neutrality calculations under Sec.
412.64(e)(1)(ii), (e)(2), (e)(4), and (h) for payment rates for the
next Federal fiscal year, the hospital's filing date must be no later
than 70 days prior to the second Monday in June of the current Federal
fiscal year and the application must be approved by the CMS Regional
Office in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 412.103. We refer
readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for a full discussion
of this policy. We clarified that the lock-in date does not affect the
timing of payment changes occurring at the hospital-specific level as a
result of reclassification from urban to rural under Sec. 412.103.
This lock-in date also does not change the current regulation that
allows hospitals that qualify under Sec. 412.103(a) to request, at any
time during a cost reporting period, to reclassify from urban to rural.
A hospital's rural status and claims payment reflecting its rural
status continue to be effective on the filing date of its
reclassification application, which is the date the CMS Regional Office
receives the application, in accordance with Sec. 412.103(d). The
hospital's IPPS claims will be paid reflecting its rural status on the
filing date (the effective date) of the reclassification, regardless of
when the hospital applies.
L. Clarification of Application Deadline for Rural Referral Center
(RRC) Classification
Section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, implemented at 42 CFR 412.96,
provides for the classification and special treatment of rural referral
centers (RRCs). The regulations at Sec. 412.96 set forth the criteria
that a hospital must meet in order to qualify as an RRC. Under Sec.
412.96(b)(1)(ii), a hospital may qualify as an RRC if it is located in
a rural area and has 275 or more beds during its most recently
completed cost reporting period. The hospital also can obtain RRC
status by showing that at least 50 percent of its Medicare patients are
referred from other hospitals or from physicians not on the staff of
the hospital, and at least 60 percent of the hospital's Medicare
patients live more than 25 miles from the hospital, and at least 60
percent of all the services that the hospital furnishes to Medicare
beneficiaries are furnished to beneficiaries who live more than 25
miles from the hospital (Sec. 412.96(b)(2)), or by showing that the
hospital meets the alternative criteria at Sec. 412.96(c). We refer
readers to 42 CFR 412.96 for a full description of the criteria for
classification as an RRC.
Consistent with section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, the hospital
must submit its application for RRC status during the last quarter of
the hospital's cost reporting period, to be effective with the
beginning of the next cost reporting period. Specifically, section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act provides that an appeal allowed under this
paragraph must be submitted to the Secretary (in such form and manner
as the Secretary may prescribe) during the quarter before the first
quarter of the hospital's cost reporting period (or, in the case of a
cost reporting period beginning during October 1984, during the first
quarter of that period), and the Secretary must make a final
determination with respect to such appeal within 60 days after the date
the appeal was submitted. Any payment adjustments necessitated by a
reclassification based upon the appeal will be effective at the
beginning of such cost reporting period. Therefore, in this proposed
rule, we are clarifying that applications for RRC status must be
submitted during this timeframe. That is, applications for RRC status
must be submitted during the last quarter of the cost reporting period
before the first quarter of a hospital's cost reporting year. If
approved, the RRC status is effective with the beginning of the
hospital's cost reporting period occurring after the last quarter of
the cost reporting period in which the hospital submits an application.
We also are clarifying in this proposed rule that, while RRC
applications must be submitted only within the timeframe described
above, applications for urban-to-rural reclassification under Sec.
412.103 may be submitted at any time for the hospital to be approved
for rural reclassification. This includes hospitals seeking rural
reclassification under Sec. 412.103(a)(3), which states that a
hospital meets criteria for urban-to-rural reclassification if the
hospital would qualify as a RRC as set forth in Sec. 412.96, or as an
SCH as set forth in Sec. 412.92, if the hospital were located in a
rural area. A hospital seeking RRC status based on a rural
reclassification under Sec. 412.103, including Sec. 412.103(a)(3),
must still submit an application for RRC status during the last quarter
of its cost reporting year before the next cost reporting period in
accordance with section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act. While the Sec.
412.103 rural redesignation would be effective as of the date of filing
the application, in accordance with Sec. 412.103(d), the RRC status
would be effective beginning with the hospital's cost reporting period
occurring after the last quarter of the cost reporting period in which
the hospital submits an application.
Because a hospital may only apply for RRC status during the last
quarter of its cost reporting year in accordance with section
1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, hospitals seeking RRC status, in order to
reclassify through the MGCRB using the special rules for SCHs and RRCs
at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and the exceptions at Sec. 412.230(d)(3) for
RRCs, may be disadvantaged due to their cost reporting year end. As
discussed in section III.I.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to revise the regulations at Sec. 412.230(a)(3) and
(d)(3) to allow hospitals to submit documentation of the approval of
SCH or RRC status (as applicable) to the MGCRB no later than the first
business day after January 1. We believe our proposal to accept
documentation of approval of RRC classification, instead of requiring
that the hospital be classified as a RRC at the time of Board review,
would accommodate more hospitals with various cost reporting period
endings. We refer readers to section III.I.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for further discussion of this proposal.
M. Process for Wage Index Data Corrections
1. Process for Hospitals To Request Wage Index Data Corrections
The preliminary, unaudited Worksheet S-3 wage data files for the
proposed FY 2018 wage index were made available on May 16, 2016, and
the preliminary CY 2013 occupational
[[Page 19912]]
mix data files on May 16, 2016, through the Internet on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html.
On January 30, 2017, we posted a public use file (PUF) at //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html containing FY 2018 wage index data available as of January
29, 2017. This PUF contains a tab with the Worksheet S-3 wage data
(which includes Worksheet S-3, Parts II and III wage data from cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October l, 2013 through
September 30, 2014; that is, FY 2014 wage data), a tab with the
occupational mix data (which includes data from the CY 2013
occupational mix survey, Form CMS-10079), a tab containing the
Worksheet S-3 wage data of hospitals deleted from the January 30, 2017
wage data PUF, and a tab containing the CY 2013 occupational mix data
(if any) of the hospitals deleted from the January 30, 2017 wage data
PUF. In a memorandum dated January 27, 2017, we instructed all MACs to
inform the IPPS hospitals that they service of the availability of the
January 30, 2017 wage index data PUFs, and the process and timeframe
for requesting revisions in accordance with the FY 2018 Wage Index
Timetable.
In the interest of meeting the data needs of the public, beginning
with the proposed FY 2009 wage index, we post an additional PUF on our
Web site that reflects the actual data that are used in computing the
proposed wage index. The release of this file does not alter the
current wage index process or schedule. We notify the hospital
community of the availability of these data as we do with the current
public use wage data files through our Hospital Open Door Forum. We
encourage hospitals to sign up for automatic notifications of
information about hospital issues and about the dates of the Hospital
Open Door Forums at the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/OpenDoorForums/index.html.
In a memorandum dated May 16, 2016, we instructed all MACs to
inform the IPPS hospitals that they service of the availability of the
wage index data files and the process and timeframe for requesting
revisions. We also instructed the MACs to advise hospitals that these
data were also made available directly through their representative
hospital organizations.
If a hospital wished to request a change to its data as shown in
the May 16, 2016 wage data files and May 16, 2016 occupational mix data
files, the hospital had to submit corrections along with complete,
detailed supporting documentation to its MAC by September 2, 2016.
Hospitals were notified of this deadline and of all other deadlines and
requirements, including the requirement to review and verify their data
as posted in the preliminary wage index data files on the Internet,
through the letters sent to them by their MACs.
November 4, 2016 was the date by when MACs notified State hospital
associations regarding hospitals that failed to respond to issues
raised during the desk reviews. The MACs notified the hospitals by mid-
January 2017 of any changes to the wage index data as a result of the
desk reviews and the resolution of the hospitals' revision requests.
The MACs also submitted the revised data to CMS by January 20, 2017.
CMS published the wage index PUFs that included hospitals' revised wage
index data on January 30, 2017. Hospitals had until February 17, 2017,
to submit requests to the MACs for reconsideration of adjustments made
by the MACs as a result of the desk review, and to correct errors due
to CMS' or the MAC's mishandling of the wage index data. Hospitals also
were required to submit sufficient documentation to support their
requests.
After reviewing requested changes submitted by hospitals, MACs were
required to transmit to CMS any additional revisions resulting from the
hospitals' reconsideration requests by March 24, 2017. Under our
current policy, the deadline for a hospital to request CMS intervention
in cases where a hospital disagreed with a MAC's policy interpretation
was April 5, 2017. Beginning next year (that is, April 2018 for wage
data revisions for the FY 2019 wage index), we are proposing to require
that a hospital that seeks to challenge the MAC's handling of wage data
on any basis (including a policy, factual, or any other dispute) must
request CMS to intervene by the date in April that is specified as the
deadline for hospitals to appeal MAC determinations and request CMS'
intervention in cases where the hospital disagrees with the MAC's
determination (the wage index timetable would be updated to reflect the
specified date). We note that, as we did for the FY 2017 wage index,
for the FY 2018 wage index, in accordance with the FY 2018 wage index
timeline posted on the CMS Web site at //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html, the April appeals have to be
sent via mail and email. We refer readers to the wage index timeline
for complete details.
Hospitals are given the opportunity to examine Table 2, which is
listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule and
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html. Table 2 contains each
hospital's proposed adjusted average hourly wage used to construct the
wage index values for the past 3 years, including the FY 2014 data used
to construct the proposed FY 2018 wage index. We note that the proposed
hospital average hourly wages shown in Table 2 only reflect changes
made to a hospital's data that were transmitted to CMS by early
February 2017.
We plan to post the final wage index data PUFs in late April 2017
on the Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html. The April 2017 PUFs are made available solely for
the limited purpose of identifying any potential errors made by CMS or
the MAC in the entry of the final wage index data that resulted from
the correction process previously described (revisions submitted to CMS
by the MACs by March 24, 2017).
After the release of the April 2017 wage index data PUFs, changes
to the wage and occupational mix data can only be made in those very
limited situations involving an error by the MAC or CMS that the
hospital could not have known about before its review of the final wage
index data files. Specifically, neither the MAC nor CMS will approve
the following types of requests:
Requests for wage index data corrections that were
submitted too late to be included in the data transmitted to CMS by the
MACs on or before March 24, 2017.
Requests for correction of errors that were not, but could
have been, identified during the hospital's review of the January 30,
2017 wage index PUFs.
Requests to revisit factual determinations or policy
interpretations made by the MAC or CMS during the wage index data
correction process.
If, after reviewing the April 2017 final wage index data PUFs, a
hospital believes that its wage or occupational
[[Page 19913]]
mix data were incorrect due to a MAC or CMS error in the entry or
tabulation of the final data, the hospital is given the opportunity to
notify both its MAC and CMS regarding why the hospital believes an
error exists and provide all supporting information, including relevant
dates (for example, when it first became aware of the error). The
hospital is required to send its request to CMS and to the MAC no later
than May 30, 2017. Similar to the April appeals, beginning with the FY
2015 wage index, in accordance with the FY 2018 wage index timeline
posted on the CMS Web site at //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files-Items/FY2018-Wage-Index-Home-Page.html, the May appeals must be sent via mail
and email to CMS and the MACs. We refer readers to the wage index
timeline for complete details.
Verified corrections to the wage index data received timely by CMS
and the MACs (that is, by May 30, 2017) will be incorporated into the
final FY 2018 wage index, which will be effective October 1, 2017.
We created the processes previously described to resolve all
substantive wage index data correction disputes before we finalize the
wage and occupational mix data for the FY 2018 payment rates.
Accordingly, hospitals that do not meet the procedural deadlines set
forth above will not be afforded a later opportunity to submit wage
index data corrections or to dispute the MAC's decision with respect to
requested changes. Specifically, our policy is that hospitals that do
not meet the procedural deadlines set forth above (requiring requests
to MACs by the specified date in February and, where such requests are
unsuccessful, requests for intervention by CMS by the specified date in
April) will not be permitted to challenge later, before the PRRB, the
failure of CMS to make a requested data revision. We refer readers also
to the FY 2000 IPPS final rule (64 FR 41513) for a discussion of the
parameters for appeals to the PRRB for wage index data corrections.
Again, we believe the wage index data correction process described
earlier provides hospitals with sufficient opportunity to bring errors
in their wage and occupational mix data to the MAC's attention.
Moreover, because hospitals have access to the final wage index data
PUFs by late April 2017, they have the opportunity to detect any data
entry or tabulation errors made by the MAC or CMS before the
development and publication of the final FY 2018 wage index by August
2017, and the implementation of the FY 2018 wage index on October 1,
2017. Given these processes, the wage index implemented on October 1
should be accurate. Nevertheless, in the event that errors are
identified by hospitals and brought to our attention after May 30,
2017, we retain the right to make midyear changes to the wage index
under very limited circumstances.
Specifically, in accordance with 42 CFR 412.64(k)(1) of our
regulations, we make midyear corrections to the wage index for an area
only if a hospital can show that: (1) The MAC or CMS made an error in
tabulating its data; and (2) the requesting hospital could not have
known about the error or did not have an opportunity to correct the
error, before the beginning of the fiscal year. For purposes of this
provision, ``before the beginning of the fiscal year'' means by the May
deadline for making corrections to the wage data for the following
fiscal year's wage index (for example, May 30, 2017 for the FY 2018
wage index). This provision is not available to a hospital seeking to
revise another hospital's data that may be affecting the requesting
hospital's wage index for the labor market area. As indicated earlier,
because CMS makes the wage index data available to hospitals on the CMS
Web site prior to publishing both the proposed and final IPPS rules,
and the MACs notify hospitals directly of any wage index data changes
after completing their desk reviews, we do not expect that midyear
corrections will be necessary. However, under our current policy, if
the correction of a data error changes the wage index value for an
area, the revised wage index value will be effective prospectively from
the date the correction is made.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47385 through 47387 and
47485), we revised 42 CFR 412.64(k)(2) to specify that, effective on
October 1, 2005, that is, beginning with the FY 2006 wage index, a
change to the wage index can be made retroactive to the beginning of
the Federal fiscal year only when CMS determines all of the following:
(1) The MAC or CMS made an error in tabulating data used for the wage
index calculation; (2) the hospital knew about the error and requested
that the MAC and CMS correct the error using the established process
and within the established schedule for requesting corrections to the
wage index data, before the beginning of the fiscal year for the
applicable IPPS update (that is, by the May 30, 2017 deadline for the
FY 2018 wage index); and (3) CMS agreed before October 1 that the MAC
or CMS made an error in tabulating the hospital's wage index data and
the wage index should be corrected.
In those circumstances where a hospital requested a correction to
its wage index data before CMS calculated the final wage index (that
is, by the May 30, 2017 deadline for the FY 2018 wage index), and CMS
acknowledges that the error in the hospital's wage index data was
caused by CMS' or the MAC's mishandling of the data, we believe that
the hospital should not be penalized by our delay in publishing or
implementing the correction. As with our current policy, we indicated
that the provision is not available to a hospital seeking to revise
another hospital's data. In addition, the provision cannot be used to
correct prior years' wage index data; and it can only be used for the
current Federal fiscal year. In situations where our policies would
allow midyear corrections other than those specified in 42 CFR
412.64(k)(2)(ii), we continue to believe that it is appropriate to make
prospective-only corrections to the wage index.
We note that, as with prospective changes to the wage index, the
final retroactive correction will be made irrespective of whether the
change increases or decreases a hospital's payment rate. In addition,
we note that the policy of retroactive adjustment will still apply in
those instances where a final judicial decision reverses a CMS denial
of a hospital's wage index data revision request.
2. Process for Data Corrections by CMS After the January Public Use
File (PUF)
The process set forth with the wage index timeline discussed in
section III.M.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule allows hospitals
to request corrections to their wage index data within prescribed
timeframes. In addition to hospitals' opportunity to request
corrections of wage index data errors or MACs' mishandling of data, CMS
has the authority under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act to make
corrections to hospital wage index and occupational mix data in order
to ensure the accuracy of the wage index. As we explained in the FY
2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49490 through 49491) and the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56914), section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act requires the Secretary to adjust the proportion of hospitals'
costs attributable to wages and wage-related costs for area differences
reflecting the relative hospital wage level in the geographic areas of
the hospital compared to the national average hospital wage level. We
believe that, under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we have
discretion to make
[[Page 19914]]
corrections to hospitals' data to help ensure that the costs
attributable to wages and wage-related costs in fact accurately reflect
the relative hospital wage level in the hospitals' geographic areas.
We have an established multistep, 15-month process for the review
and correction of the hospital wage data that is used to create the
IPPS wage index for the upcoming fiscal year. Since the origin of the
IPPS, the wage index has been subject to its own annual review process,
first by the MACs, and then by CMS. As a standard practice, after each
annual desk review, CMS reviews the results of the MACs' desk reviews
and focuses on items flagged during the desk review, requiring that, if
necessary, hospitals provide additional documentation, adjustments, or
corrections to the data. This ongoing communication with hospitals
about their wage data may result in the discovery by CMS of additional
items that were reported incorrectly or other data errors, even after
the posting of the January PUF, and throughout the remainder of the
wage index development process. In addition, the fact that CMS analyzes
the data from a regional and even national level, unlike the review
performed by the MACs that review a limited subset of hospitals, can
facilitate additional editing of the data that may not be readily
apparent to the MACs. In these occasional instances, an error may be of
sufficient magnitude that the wage index of an entire CBSA is affected.
Accordingly, CMS uses its authority to ensure that the wage index
accurately reflects the relative hospital wage level in the geographic
area of the hospital compared to the national average hospital wage
level, by continuing to make corrections to hospital wage data upon
discovering incorrect wage data, distinct from instances in which
hospitals request data revisions.
We note that CMS corrects errors to hospital wage data as
appropriate, regardless of whether that correction will raise or lower
a hospital's average hourly wage. For example, as discussed in section
III.D.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, in the calculation of
the proposed FY 2018 wage index, upon discovering that hospitals
reported other wage-related costs on Line 18 of Worksheet S-3, despite
those other wage-related costs failing to meet the requirement that
other wage related costs must exceed 1 percent of total adjusted
salaries net of excluded area salaries, CMS made internal edits to
remove those other wage-related costs from Line 18. Conversely, if CMS
discovers after conclusion of the desk review, for example, that a MAC
inadvertently failed to incorporate positive adjustments resulting from
a prior year's wage index appeal to a hospital's wage related costs
such as pension, CMS would correct that data error and the hospital's
average hourly wage would likely increase as a result.
While we maintain CMS' authority to conduct additional review and
make resulting corrections at any time during the wage index
development process, we are proposing a process for hospitals to
request further review of a correction made by CMS starting with the FY
2019 wage index. In order to allow opportunity for input from hospitals
concerning corrections made by CMS after the posting of the January
PUF, we are proposing a process similar to the existing process in
which hospitals may request corrections to wage index data displayed in
the January PUF. Instances where CMS makes a correction to a hospital's
data after the January PUF based on a different understanding than the
hospital about certain reported costs, for example, could potentially
be resolved using this proposed process before the final wage index is
calculated. We believe this proposed process and timeline (as descrbed
above) would bring additional transparency to instances where CMS makes
data corrections after the January PUF, and would provide opportunities
for hospitals to request further review of CMS changes in time for the
most accurate data to be reflected in the final wage index
calculations.
Effective beginning with the FY 2019 wage index development cycle,
we are proposing to use existing appeal deadlines (in place for
hospitals to appeal determinations made by the MAC during the desk
review process) for hospitals to dispute corrections made by CMS after
posting of the January PUF that do not arise from a hospital request
for a wage data revision. Starting with the April appeal deadline,
hospitals would use the soonest approaching appeal deadline to dispute
any adjustments made by CMS. However, if a hospital was notified of an
adjustment within 14 days of an appeal deadline, the hospital would
have until the next appeal deadline to dispute any adjustments. We
believe this would give hospitals sufficient time to prepare an appeal
of adjustments made by CMS after the January PUF. Specifically, for any
adjustments made by CMS between the date the January PUF is posted and
at least 14 calendar days before the April appeals deadline, we are
proposing that hospitals would have until the April appeals deadline
(which, for example, is April 5 in the FY 2018 Wage Index Timetable) to
dispute the adjustments. For any adjustments made by CMS between 13
calendar days before the April appeals deadline and 14 calendar days
before the May appeals deadline, we are proposing that hospitals would
have until the May appeals deadline (which, for example, is May 30 in
the FY 2018 Wage Index Timetable) to dispute the adjustments. In cases
where hospitals disagree with CMS adjustments of which they were
notified 13 calendar days before the May appeals deadline or later, the
hospitals could appeal to the PRRB with no need for further review by
CMS before such appeal.
We are using dates from the FY 2018 Wage Index Timetable in the
following example (we reiterate that this appeals process would be
effective beginning with the FY 2019 wage index cycle, but for
illustrative purposes, we are using dates from the FY 2018 Wage Index
Timetable, the most recently published wage index timetable): A
hospital that is notified by the MAC or CMS of an adjustment to its
wage data after the release of the January 30, 2017 PUF could use the
April 5, 2017 appeals deadline to dispute the adjustment. If the
hospital is notified of an adjustment by CMS or the MAC to its wage
data after March 22, 2017 (that is, less than 14 days prior to the
April 5 appeals deadline), it could use the May 30, 2017 appeals
deadline to dispute the adjustment. If the hospital is first notified
about the adjustment after May 16, 2017 (that is, less than 14 days
prior to the May 30 deadline), and disagrees with the adjustment, the
hospital could appeal directly to the PRRB.
As with the existing process for requesting wage data corrections,
we are proposing that a hospital disputing an adjustment made by CMS
after the posting of the January PUF would be required to request a
correction by the first applicable deadline. For example, if a hospital
was notified on March 20 of an adjustment to its data by CMS and does
not appeal by April 5, the hospital would not be able to appeal by May
30 or bring the case before the PRRB. That is, hospitals that did not
meet the procedural deadlines set forth above would not be afforded a
later opportunity to submit wage index data corrections or to dispute
CMS' decision with respect to requested changes. As with the existing
process for hospitals to request wage data corrections, our policy is
that hospitals that do not meet the procedural deadlines set forth
earlier would not be permitted to challenge later, before the PRRB, the
failure of CMS to make a requested data revision.
[[Page 19915]]
In summary, under the statute, CMS has discretion to make
corrections and revisions to hospitals' wage data throughout the
multistep wage index development process, and we are proposing a
pathway for hospitals to request additional review of corrections to
their wage data made by CMS. Beginning with the development of the FY
2019 wage index, we are proposing a process whereby CMS could continue
to correct data after the posting of the January PUF, while allowing
hospitals to appeal changes made by CMS using existing deadlines from
the process for hospitals to request wage data corrections. As with the
existing process, a hospital would be required to appeal by the first
applicable deadline, if relevant, to maintain the right to appeal to
the PRRB to dispute a correction to its wage data made by CMS.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
N. Proposed Labor Market Share for the Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act directs the Secretary to adjust
the proportion of the national prospective payment system base payment
rates that are attributable to wages and wage-related costs by a factor
that reflects the relative differences in labor costs among geographic
areas. It also directs the Secretary to estimate from time to time the
proportion of hospital costs that are labor-related and to adjust the
proportion (as estimated by the Secretary from time to time) of
hospitals' costs which are attributable to wages and wage-related costs
of the DRG prospective payment rates. We refer to the portion of
hospital costs attributable to wages and wage-related costs as the
labor-related share. The labor-related share of the prospective payment
rate is adjusted by an index of relative labor costs, which is referred
to as the wage index.
Section 403 of Public Law 108-173 amended section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act to provide that the Secretary must employ 62 percent as the
labor-related share unless this would result in lower payments to a
hospital than would otherwise be made. However, this provision of
Public Law 108-173 did not change the legal requirement that the
Secretary estimate from time to time the proportion of hospitals' costs
that are attributable to wages and wage-related costs. Thus, hospitals
receive payment based on either a 62-percent labor-related share, or
the labor-related share estimated from time to time by the Secretary,
depending on which labor-related share resulted in a higher payment.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50596 through
50607), we rebased and revised the hospital market basket. We
established a FY 2010-based IPPS hospital market basket to replace the
FY 2006-based IPPS hospital market basket, effective October 1, 2013.
In that final rule, we presented our analysis and conclusions regarding
the frequency and methodology for updating the labor-related share for
FY 2014. Using the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, we finalized a
labor-related share for FY 2014, FY 2015, FY 2016, and FY 2017 of 69.6
percent. In addition, in FY 2014, we implemented this revised and
rebased labor-related share in a budget neutral manner (78 FR 51016).
However, consistent with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we did not
take into account the additional payments that would be made as a
result of hospitals with a wage index less than or equal to 1.0000
being paid using a labor-related share lower than the labor-related
share of hospitals with a wage index greater than 1.0000.
For FY 2018, as described in section IV. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to rebase and revise the IPPS market
basket reflecting 2014 data. We also are proposing to recalculate the
labor-related share for discharges occurring on or after October 1,
2017 using the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket. As discussed in
Appendix A of this proposed rule, we are proposing this revised and
rebased labor-related share in a budget neutral manner. However,
consistent with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we did not take into
account the additional payments that would be made as a result of
hospitals with a wage index less than or equal to 1.0000 being paid
using a labor-related share lower than the labor-related share of
hospitals with a wage index greater than 1.0000.
The labor-related share is used to determine the proportion of the
national IPPS base payment rate to which the area wage index is
applied. We include a cost category in the labor-related share if the
costs are labor intensive and vary with the local labor market. As
described in section IV. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to include in the labor-related share the national average
proportion of operating costs that are attributable to Wages and
Salaries, Employee Benefits, Professional Fees: Labor-Related,
Administrative and Facilities Support Services, Installation,
Maintenance, and Repair Services, and All Other: Labor-Related Services
as measured in the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket. Therefore,
for FY 2018, we are proposing to use a labor-related share of 68.3
percent for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017.
Prior to January 1, 2016, Puerto Rico hospitals were paid based on
75 percent of the national standardized amount and 25 percent of the
Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount. As a result, we applied the
Puerto Rico-specific labor-related share percentage and nonlabor-
related share percentage to the Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount. Section 601 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub.
L. 114-113) amended section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act to specify that
the payment calculation with respect to operating costs of inpatient
hospital services of a subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospital for
inpatient hospital discharges on or after January 1, 2016, shall use
100 percent of the national standardized amount. Because Puerto Rico
hospitals are no longer paid with a Puerto Rico-specific standardized
amount as of January 1, 2016, under section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act as
amended by section 601 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016,
there is no longer a need for us to calculate a Puerto Rico-specific
labor-related share percentage and nonlabor-related share percentage
for application to the Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount.
Hospitals in Puerto Rico are now paid 100 percent of the national
standardized amount and, therefore, are subject to the national labor-
related share and nonlabor-related share percentages that are applied
to the national standardized amount. Accordingly, for FY 2018, we are
not proposing a Puerto Rico-specific labor-related share percentage or
a nonlabor-related share percentage.
Tables 1A and 1B, which are published in section VI. of the
Addendum to this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule and available via
the Internet on the CMS Web site, reflect the proposed national labor-
related share, which is also applicable to Puerto Rico hospitals. For
FY 2018, for all IPPS hospitals (including Puerto Rico hospitals) whose
wage indexes are less than or equal to 1.0000, we are proposing to
apply the wage index to a labor-related share of 62 percent of the
national standardized amount. For all hospitals (including Puerto Rico
hospitals) whose wage indexes are greater than 1.0000, for FY 2018, we
are proposing to apply the wage index to a proposed labor-related share
of 68.3 percent of the national standardized amount.
[[Page 19916]]
IV. Proposed Rebasing and Revising of the Hospital Market Baskets for
Acute Care Hospitals
A. Background
Effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after July 1,
1979, we developed and adopted a hospital input price index (that is,
the hospital market basket for operating costs). Although ``market
basket'' technically describes the mix of goods and services used in
providing hospital care, this term is also commonly used to denote the
input price index (that is, cost category weights and price proxies
combined) derived from that market basket. Accordingly, the term
``market basket'' as used in this document refers to the hospital input
price index.
The percentage change in the market basket reflects the average
change in the price of goods and services hospitals purchase in order
to provide inpatient care. We first used the market basket to adjust
hospital cost limits by an amount that reflected the average increase
in the prices of the goods and services used to provide hospital
inpatient care. This approach linked the increase in the cost limits to
the efficient utilization of resources.
Since the inception of the IPPS, the projected change in the
hospital market basket has been the integral component of the update
factor by which the prospective payment rates are updated every year.
An explanation of the hospital market basket used to develop the
prospective payment rates was published in the Federal Register on
September 1, 1983 (48 FR 39764). We also refer readers to the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50596) in which we discussed the most
recent previous rebasing of the hospital input price index.
The hospital market basket is a fixed-weight, Laspeyres-type price
index. A Laspeyres-type price index measures the change in price, over
time, of the same mix of goods and services purchased in the base
period. Any changes in the quantity or mix of goods and services (that
is, intensity) purchased over time are not measured.
The index itself is constructed in three steps. First, a base
period is selected (in this proposed rule, we are proposing to use 2014
as the base period) and total base period expenditures are estimated
for a set of mutually exclusive and exhaustive spending categories,
with the proportion of total costs that each category represents being
calculated. These proportions are called ``cost weights'' or
``expenditure weights.'' Second, each expenditure category is matched
to an appropriate price or wage variable, referred to as a ``price
proxy.'' In almost every instance, these price proxies are derived from
publicly available statistical series that are published on a
consistent schedule (preferably at least on a quarterly basis).
Finally, the expenditure weight for each cost category is multiplied by
the level of its respective price proxy. The sum of these products
(that is, the expenditure weights multiplied by their price index
levels) for all cost categories yields the composite index level of the
market basket in a given period. Repeating this step for other periods
produces a series of market basket levels over time. Dividing an index
level for a given period by an index level for an earlier period
produces a rate of growth in the input price index over that timeframe.
As noted above, the market basket is described as a fixed-weight
index because it represents the change in price over time of a constant
mix (quantity and intensity) of goods and services needed to provide
hospital services. The effects on total expenditures resulting from
changes in the mix of goods and services purchased subsequent to the
base period are not measured. For example, a hospital hiring more
nurses to accommodate the needs of patients would increase the volume
of goods and services purchased by the hospital, but would not be
factored into the price change measured by a fixed-weight hospital
market basket. Only when the index is rebased would changes in the
quantity and intensity be captured, with those changes being reflected
in the cost weights. Therefore, we rebase the market basket
periodically so that the cost weights reflect recent changes in the mix
of goods and services that hospitals purchase (hospital inputs) to
furnish inpatient care between base periods.
We last rebased the hospital market basket cost weights effective
for FY 2014 (78 FR 50596), with FY 2010 data used as the base period
for the construction of the market basket cost weights. For this FY
2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are proposing to rebase the cost
structure for the IPPS hospital index from FY 2010 to 2014, as
discussed below.
B. Rebasing and Revising the IPPS Market Basket
The terms ``rebasing'' and ``revising,'' while often used
interchangeably, actually denote different activities. ``Rebasing''
means moving the base year for the structure of costs of an input price
index (for example, in this proposed rule, we are proposing to shift
the base year cost structure for the IPPS hospital index from FY 2010
to 2014). We note that we are no longer referring to the market basket
as a ``FY 2014-based'' market basket and instead refer to the proposed
market basket as simply ``2014-based''. We are proposing this change in
naming convention for the market basket because the base year cost
weight data for the proposed market basket does not reflect only fiscal
year data. For example, the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket uses
Medicare cost report data and other government data that reflect 2014
fiscal year, 2014 calendar year, and 2014 State fiscal year expenses to
determine the base year cost weights. Given that it is based on a mix
of classifications of 2014 data, we are proposing to refer to the
market basket as ``2014-based'' instead of ``FY 2014-based'' or ``CY
2014-based''.
``Revising'' means changing data sources or price proxies used in
the input price index. As published in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70
FR 47387), in accordance with section 404 of Public Law 108-173, CMS
determined a new frequency for rebasing the hospital market basket. We
established a rebasing frequency of every 4 years and, therefore, for
the FY 2018 IPPS update, we are proposing to rebase and revise the IPPS
market basket from FY 2010 to 2014. We are inviting public comments on
our proposed methodology.
1. Development of Cost Categories and Weights
a. Use of Medicare Cost Report Data
The major source of expenditure data for developing the proposed
rebased and revised hospital market basket cost weights is the 2014
Medicare cost reports. These 2014 Medicare cost reports are for cost
reporting periods beginning on and after October 1, 2013 and before
October 1, 2014. We note that while these dates appear to reflect
fiscal year data, in order to be classified as a ``2014 cost report,''
a hospital's cost reporting period must begin between these dates. For
example, we found that of the 2014 Medicare cost reports for IPPS
hospitals, approximately 40 percent of the reports had a begin date on
January 1, 2014, approximately 30 percent had a begin date on July 1,
2014, and approximately 18 percent had a begin date on October 1, 2013.
For this reason, we are defining the base year of the market basket as
``2014-based'' instead of ``FY 2014-based''. We are proposing to use
2014 as the base year because we believe that the 2014 Medicare cost
reports represent the most recent, complete set of Medicare cost report
data available to develop cost weights for IPPS hospitals. As was done
[[Page 19917]]
in previous rebasings, these cost reports are from IPPS hospitals only
(hospitals excluded from the IPPS and CAHs are not included) and are
based on IPPS Medicare-allowable operating costs. IPPS Medicare-
allowable operating costs are costs that are eligible to be paid under
the IPPS. For example, the IPPS market basket excludes home health
agency (HHA) costs as these costs would be paid under the HHA PPS and,
therefore, these costs are not IPPS Medicare-allowable costs.
We are proposing to derive costs for eight major expenditures or
cost categories for the 2014-based IPPS market basket from the CMS
Medicare cost reports (Form 2552-10, OMB Control Number 0938-0050):
Wages and Salaries, Employee Benefits, Contract Labor, Pharmaceuticals,
Professional Liability Insurance (Malpractice), Blood and Blood
Products, Home Office Contract Labor, and a residual ``All Other''
category. The residual ``All Other'' category reflects all remaining
costs that are not captured in the other seven cost categories. We are
proposing that, for the 2014-based IPPS market basket, we obtain costs
for one additional major cost category from the Medicare cost reports
compared to the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket--Home Office Contract
Labor Costs. We describe below the detailed methodology for obtaining
costs for each of the seven cost categories directly determined from
the Medicare cost reports.
(1) Wages and Salaries Costs
To derive wages and salaries costs for the Medicare allowable cost
centers, we are proposing to first calculate total unadjusted wages and
salaries costs as reported on Worksheet S-3, part II. We are then
proposing to remove the wages and salaries attributable to non-Medicare
allowable cost centers (that is, excluded areas) as well as a portion
of overhead wages and salaries attributable to these excluded areas.
Specifically, wages and salaries costs are equal to total wages and
salaries as reported on Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, Line 1, less
excluded area wages and salaries (reported on Worksheet S-3, Part II,
Column 4, Lines 3 and 5 through 10) and less overhead wages and
salaries attributable to the excluded areas.
Overhead wages and salaries are attributable to the entire IPPS
facility. Therefore, we are proposing to only include the proportion
attributable to the Medicare allowable cost centers. We are proposing
to estimate the proportion of overhead wages and salaries that are not
attributable to Medicare allowable costs centers (that is, excluded
areas) by multiplying the ratio of excluded area wages and salaries (as
defined earlier) to total wages and salaries (Worksheet S-3, part II,
Column 4, Line 1) by total overhead wages and salaries (Worksheet A,
Column 1, Lines 4 through 18). A similar methodology was used to derive
wages and salaries costs in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(2) Employee Benefits Costs
We are proposing to derive employee benefits costs using a similar
methodology as the wages and salaries costs; that is, reflecting
employee benefits costs attributable to the Medicare allowable cost
centers. First, we calculate total unadjusted employee benefits costs
as the sum of Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, Lines 17, 18, 20, and
22. We then exclude those employee benefits attributable to the
overhead wages and salaries for the non-Medicare allowable cost centers
(that is, excluded areas). Employee benefits attributable to the non-
Medicare allowable cost centers are derived by multiplying the ratio of
total employee benefits (equal to the sum of Worksheet S-3, Part II,
Column 4, Lines 17 through 25) to total wages and salaries (Worksheet
S-3, Part II, Column 4, Line 1) by excluded overhead wages and salaries
(as derived above for wages and salaries costs). A similar methodology
was used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(3) Contract Labor Costs
Contract labor costs are primarily associated with direct patient
care services. Contract labor costs for services such as accounting,
billing, and legal are estimated using other government data sources as
described below. We are proposing to derive contract labor costs for
the 2014-based IPPS market basket as the sum of Worksheet S-3, Part II,
Column 4, Lines 11, 13 and 15. A similar methodology was used in the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket.
(4) Professional Liability Insurance Costs
We are proposing that professional liability insurance (PLI) costs
(often referred to as malpractice costs) be equal to premiums, paid
losses, and self-insurance costs reported on Worksheet S-2, Part I,
Columns 1 through 3, Line 118.01. A similar methodology was used for
the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(5) Pharmaceuticals Costs
We are proposing to calculate pharmaceuticals costs using nonsalary
costs reported for the Pharmacy cost center (Worksheet A, Column 2,
Line 15) and Drugs Charged to Patients cost center (Worksheet A, Column
2, Line 73) less estimated employee benefits attributable to these two
cost centers. We are proposing to estimate these employee benefits
costs by multiplying the ratio of total employee benefits (equal to the
sum of Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, Lines 17 through 25) to total
wages and salaries (Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, Line 1) by total
wages and salaries costs for the Pharmacy and Drugs Charged to Patients
cost centers (equal to the sum of Worksheet A, Column 1, Lines 15 and
73). A similar methodology was used for the FY 2010-based IPPS market
basket.
(6) Blood and Blood Products Costs
We are proposing to calculate blood and blood products costs using
nonsalary costs reported for the Whole Blood & Packed Red Blood Cells
cost center (Worksheet A, Column 2, Line 62) and the Blood Storing,
Processing, & Transfusing cost center (Worksheet A, Column 2, Line 63)
less estimated employee benefits attributable to these two cost
centers. We estimate these employee benefits costs by multiplying the
ratio of total employee benefits (equal to the sum of Worksheet S-3,
Part II, Column 4, Lines 17 through 25) to total wages and salaries
(Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, Line 1) by total wages and salaries
for the Whole Blood & Packed Red Blood Cells and Blood Storing,
Processing, & Transfusing cost centers (equal to the sum of Worksheet
A, Column 1, Lines 62 and 63). A similar methodology was used for the
FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(7) Home Office Contract Labor Costs
We are proposing to determine home office contract labor costs
using data reported on Worksheet S-3, Part II, Column 4, line 14.
Specifically, we are proposing to determine the Medicare allowable
portion of these costs by multiplying them by the ratio of total
Medicare allowable operating costs (as defined below in section
IV.B.1.b. of the preamble to this proposed rule) to total operating
costs (calculated as Worksheet B, Part I, Column 26, Line 202, less
Worksheet B, Part I, Column 0, Lines 1 through 3). Home office contract
labor costs in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket were calculated
using the U.S. Census Bureau's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
Benchmark Input-Output (I-O) data, as described below in section
IV.B.1.c. of the preamble to this proposed rule.
[[Page 19918]]
b. Final Major Cost Category Computation
After we derived costs for the seven major cost categories for each
provider using the Medicare cost report data as previously described,
we address data outliers using the following steps. First, we divide
the costs for each of the seven categories by total Medicare allowable
operating costs calculated for the provider to obtain cost weights for
each PPS hospital. We are proposing that total Medicare allowable
operating costs are equal to noncapital costs (Worksheet B, part I,
Column 26 less Worksheet B, part II, Column 26) that are attributable
to the Medicare allowable cost centers of the hospital. Medicare
allowable cost centers are Lines 30 through 35, 50, 51, 53 through 60,
62 through 76, 90, 91, 92.01 and 93.
We then remove those providers whose derived cost weights fall in
the top and bottom five percent of provider-specific cost weights to
ensure the removal of outliers. After the outliers have been removed,
we sum the costs for each category across all remaining providers. We
then divide this by the sum of total Medicare allowable operating costs
across all remaining providers to obtain a cost weight for the proposed
2014-based IPPS market basket for the given category. Finally, we
calculate the residual ``All Other'' cost weight that reflects all
remaining costs that are not captured in the seven cost categories
listed.
Table IV-01 below shows the major cost categories and their
respective cost weights as derived from the Medicare cost reports for
this proposed rule.
Table IV-01--Major Cost Categories as Derived From the Medicare Cost
Reports
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Major cost categories FY 2010 Proposed 2014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wages and Salaries...................... 45.8 42.1
Employee Benefits....................... 12.7 12.0
Contract Labor.......................... 1.8 1.8
Professional Liability Insurance 1.3 1.2
(Malpractice)..........................
Pharmaceuticals......................... 5.4 5.9
Blood and Blood Products................ 1.1 0.8
Home Office Contract Labor *............ .............. 4.2
``All Other'' Residual.................. 31.9 32.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Home office contract labor costs were included in the ``All Other''
residual cost weight of the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
From FY 2010 to 2014, the Wages and Salaries and Employee Benefits
cost weights as calculated directly from the Medicare cost reports
decreased by approximately 3.7 and 0.7 percentage points, respectively,
while the Contract Labor cost weight was unchanged. The decrease in the
Wages and Salaries cost weight occurred among most cost centers and in
aggregate for the General Service (overhead), Inpatient Routine
Service, Ancillary Service, and Outpatient Service cost centers.
As we did for the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket (78 FR 50597),
we are proposing to allocate contract labor costs to the Wages and
Salaries and Employee Benefits cost weights based on their relative
proportions for employed labor under the assumption that contract labor
costs are comprised of both wages and salaries and employee benefits.
The contract labor allocation proportion for wages and salaries is
equal to the Wages and Salaries cost weight as a percent of the sum of
the Wages and Salaries cost weight and the Employee Benefits cost
weight. Using the 2014 Medicare cost report data, this percentage is 78
percent. Therefore, we are proposing to allocate approximately 78
percent of the Contract Labor cost weight to the Wages and Salaries
cost weight and 22 percent to the Employee Benefits cost weight. The FY
2010-based IPPS market basket also allocated 78 percent of the Contract
Labor cost weight to the Wages and Salaries cost weight.
Table IV-02 below shows the Wages and Salaries and Employee
Benefits cost weights after contract labor allocation for the FY 2010-
based IPPS market basket and the proposed 2014-based IPPS market
basket.
Table IV-02--Wages and Salaries and Employee Benefits Cost Weights After
Contract Labor Allocation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010-based Proposed 2014-
Major cost categories IPPS market based IPPS
basket market basket
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wages and Salaries...................... 47.2 43.4
Employee Benefits....................... 13.1 12.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Derivation of the Detailed Cost Weights
To further divide the ``All Other'' residual cost weight estimated
from the 2014 Medicare cost report data into more detailed cost
categories, we are proposing to use the 2007 Benchmark I-O ``Use
Tables/Before Redefinitions/Purchaser Value'' for NAICS 622000,
Hospitals, published by the BEA. These data are publicly available at
the following Web site: //www.bea.gov/industry/io_annual.htm. The
BEA Benchmark I-O data are generally scheduled for publication every 5
years on a lagged basis, with the most recent data available for 2007.
The 2007 Benchmark I-O data are derived from the 2007 Economic Census
and are the building blocks for BEA's economic accounts. Therefore,
they represent the most comprehensive and complete set of data on the
economic processes or mechanisms by which output is produced and
distributed.\37\ BEA also produces Annual I-O estimates. However, while
based on a similar methodology, these estimates reflect less
comprehensive and less detailed data sources and are subject to
revision when benchmark data become available. Instead of using the
less detailed Annual I-O data, we are proposing to
[[Page 19919]]
inflate the detailed 2007 Benchmark I-O data forward to 2014 by
applying the annual price changes from the respective price proxies to
the appropriate market basket cost categories that are obtained from
the 2007 Benchmark I-O data. In our calculations for this proposed
rule, we repeated this practice for each year. We then calculated the
cost shares that each cost category represents of the 2007 data
inflated to 2014. These resulting 2014 cost shares were applied to the
``All Other'' residual cost weight to obtain the detailed cost weights
for the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket. For example, the cost
for Food: Direct Purchases represents 7.3 percent of the sum of the
``All Other'' 2007 Benchmark I-O Hospital Expenditures inflated to
2014. Therefore, the Food: Direct Purchases cost weight represents 7.3
percent of the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket's ``All Other''
cost category (32.0 percent), yielding a Food: Direct Purchases
proposed cost weight of 2.3 percent in the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket (0.073 x 32.0 percent = 2.3 percent). For the FY 2010-
based IPPS market basket (78 FR 50597), we used the same methodology
utilizing the 2002 Benchmark I-O data (aged to FY 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ //www.bea.gov/papers/pdf/IOmanual_092906.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using this methodology, we are proposing to derive 18 detailed cost
categories from the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket residual
cost weight (32.0 percent). These categories are: (1) Fuel: Oil and
Gas; (2) Electricity; (3) Water and Sewerage; (4) Food: Direct
Purchases; (5) Food: Contract Services; (6) Chemicals; (7) Medical
Instruments; (8) Rubber and Plastics; (9) Paper and Printing Products;
(10) Miscellaneous Products; (11) Professional Fees: Labor-Related;
(12) Administrative and Facilities Support Services; (13) Installation,
Maintenance, and Repair Services; (14) All Other: Labor-Related
Services; (15) Professional Fees: Nonlabor-Related; (16) Financial
Services; (17) Telephone Services; and (18) All Other: Nonlabor-Related
Services.
Similar to the 2013-based LTCH market basket, the proposed 2014-
based IPPS market basket does not include separate cost categories for
Apparel, Machinery and Equipment, and Postage. Due to the small weights
associated with these detailed categories and relatively stable price
growth in the applicable price proxy, we believe that consolidating
these smaller cost category weights with other cost categories in the
proposed market basket that experience similar price increases
eliminates unnecessary complexity to the market basket without having a
material impact on the total market basket increase. Therefore, we are
proposing to include Apparel and Machinery and Equipment in the
Miscellaneous Products cost category and Postage in the All-Other:
Nonlabor-Related Services cost category. We note that the machinery and
equipment expenses are for equipment that is paid for in a given year
and not depreciated over the asset's useful life. Depreciation expenses
for movable equipment are reflected in the proposed 2014-based Capital
Input Price Index (described in section IV.D. of the preamble of this
proposed rule). For the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket, we also
are proposing to include a separate cost category for Installation,
Maintenance, and Repair Services in order to proxy these costs by a
price index that better reflects the price changes of labor associated
with maintenance-related services.
2. Selection of Proposed Price Proxies
After computing the proposed 2014 cost weights for the IPPS market
basket, it was necessary to select appropriate wage and price proxies
to reflect the rate of price change for each expenditure category. With
the exception of the proxy for professional liability insurance (PLI),
all the proxies we are proposing are based on Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) data and are grouped into one of the following BLS
categories:
Producer Price Indexes--Producer Price Indexes (PPIs)
measure price changes for goods sold in markets other than the retail
market. PPIs are preferable price proxies for goods and services that
hospitals purchase as inputs because PPIs better reflect the actual
price changes encountered by hospitals. For example, we are proposing
to use a PPI for prescription drugs, rather than the Consumer Price
Index (CPI) for prescription drugs, because hospitals generally
purchase drugs directly from a wholesaler. The PPIs that we are
proposing to use measure price changes at the final stage of
production.
Consumer Price Indexes--Consumer Price Indexes (CPIs)
measure change in the prices of final goods and services bought by the
typical consumer. Because they may not represent the price faced by a
producer, we are proposing to use CPIs only if an appropriate PPI is
not available, or if the expenditures are more like those faced by
retail consumers in general rather than by purchasers of goods at the
wholesale level. For example, the CPI for food purchased away from home
is proposed to be used as a proxy for contracted food services.
Employment Cost Indexes--Employment Cost Indexes (ECIs)
measure the rate of change in employee wage rates and employer costs
for employee benefits per hour worked. These indexes are fixed-weight
indexes and strictly measure the change in wage rates and employee
benefits per hour. Appropriately, they are not affected by shifts in
employment mix.
We evaluated the price proxies using the criteria of reliability,
timeliness, availability, and relevance. Reliability indicates that the
index is based on valid statistical methods and has low sampling
variability. Timeliness implies that the proxy is published regularly,
preferably at least once a quarter. Availability means that the proxy
is publicly available. Finally, relevance means that the proxy is
applicable and representative of the cost category weight to which it
is applied. We believe the proposed PPIs, CPIs, and ECIs selected meet
these criteria.
Below we present a detailed explanation of the price proxies that
we are proposing for each cost category weight. We note that many of
the proxies that we are proposing to use for the 2014-based IPPS market
basket are the same as those used for the FY 2010-based IPPS market
basket.
(1) Wages and Salaries
We are proposing to use the ECI for Wages and Salaries for All
Civilian Workers in Hospitals (BLS series code CIU1026220000000I) to
measure the price growth of this cost category. This is the same price
proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(2) Employee Benefits
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Benefits for All Civilian
Workers in Hospitals to measure the price growth of this cost category.
This ECI is calculated using the ECI for Total Compensation for All
Civilian Workers in Hospitals (BLS series code CIU1016220000000I) and
the relative importance of wages and salaries within total
compensation. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket.
(3) Fuel: Oil and Gas
We are proposing to change the proxy used for the Fuel: Oil and Gas
cost category. The FY 2010-based IPPS market basket uses the PPI
Industry for Petroleum Refineries (BLS series code PCU32411-32411-) to
proxy these expenses.
For the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket, we are proposing to
use a blend of the PPI Industry for Petroleum Refineries (BLS series
code
[[Page 19920]]
PCU32411-32411-) and the PPI Commodity for Natural Gas (BLS series code
WPU0531). Our analysis of the BEA 2007 Benchmark I-O data (use table
before redefinitions, purchaser's value for NAICS 622000 [Hospitals])
shows that petroleum refineries expenses account for approximately 70
percent and Natural Gas expenses account for approximately 30 percent
of the Fuel: Oil and Gas expenses. Therefore, we are proposing a
blended proxy of 70 percent of the PPI Industry for Petroleum
Refineries (BLS series code PCU32411-32411-) and 30 percent of the PPI
Commodity for Natural Gas (BLS series code WPU0531). We believe that
these two price proxies are the most technically appropriate indices
available to measure the price growth of the Fuel: Oil and Gas cost
category in the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket.
(4) Electricity
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Commercial Electric
Power (BLS series code WPU0542) to measure the price growth of this
cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket.
(5) Water and Sewerage
We are proposing to use the CPI for Water and Sewerage Maintenance
(All Urban Consumers) (BLS series code CUUR0000SEHG01) to measure the
price growth of this cost category. This is the same price proxy used
in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(6) Professional Liability Insurance
We are proposing to proxy price changes in hospital professional
liability insurance premiums (PLI) using percentage changes as
estimated by the CMS Hospital Professional Liability Index. To generate
these estimates, we collected commercial insurance premiums for a fixed
level of coverage while holding nonprice factors constant (such as a
change in the level of coverage). This is the same price proxy used in
the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(7) Pharmaceuticals
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Pharmaceuticals for
Human Use, Prescription (BLS series code WPUSI07003) to measure the
price growth of this cost category. This is the same price proxy used
in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(8) Food: Direct Purchases
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Processed Foods and
Feeds (BLS series code WPU02) to measure the price growth of this cost
category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS
market basket.
(9) Food: Contract Services
We are proposing to use the CPI for Food Away From Home (All Urban
Consumers) (BLS series code CUUR0000SEFV) to measure the price growth
of this cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket.
(10) Chemicals
We are proposing to continue to use a four-part blended index
composed of the PPI Industry for Industrial Gas Manufacturing (BLS
series code PCU325120325120P), the PPI Industry for Other Basic
Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing (BLS series code PCU32518-32518-), the
PPI Industry for Other Basic Organic Chemical Manufacturing (BLS series
code PCU32519-32519-), and the PPI Industry for Soap and Cleaning
Compound Manufacturing (BLS series code PCU32561-32561-). We are
proposing to update the blended weights using 2007 Benchmark I-O data,
which we also are proposing to use for the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket. The FY 2010-based IPPS market basket included the same
blended chemical price proxy, but used the 2002 Benchmark I-O data to
determine the weights of the blended chemical price index. The 2007
Benchmark I-O data has a higher weight for organic chemical products
and a lower weight for the other chemical products compared to the 2002
Benchmark I-O data.
Table IV-03 below shows the proposed weights for each of the four
PPIs used to create the blended index compared to those used for the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket.
Table IV-03--Blended Chemical Weights
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010-based Proposed 2014-
Name IPPS weights based IPPS NAICS
(%) weights (%)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PPI for Industrial Gas Manufacturing............................ 35 32 325120
PPI for Other Basic Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing............ 25 17 325180
PPI for Other Basic Organic Chemical Manufacturing.............. 30 45 325190
PPI for Soap and Cleaning Compound Manufacturing................ 10 6 325610
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(11) Blood and Blood Products
We are proposing to use the PPI Industry for Blood and Organ Banks
(BLS series code PCU621991621991) to measure the price growth of this
cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket.
(12) Medical Instruments
We are proposing to use a blended price proxy for the Medical
Instruments cost category. The 2007 Benchmark Input-Output data shows
an approximate 50/50 split between Surgical and Medical Instruments and
Medical and Surgical Appliances and Supplies for this cost category.
Therefore, we are proposing a blend composed of 50 percent of the PPI
Commodity for Surgical and Medical Instruments (BLS series code
WPU1562) and 50 percent of the PPI Commodity for Medical and Surgical
Appliances and Supplies (BLS series code WPU1563). The FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket used the single, higher level PPI Commodity for
Medical, Surgical, and Personal Aid Devices (BLS series code WPU156).
We believe that the proposed price proxy better reflects the mix of
expenses for this cost category as obtained from the 2007 Benchmark I-O
data.
(13) Rubber and Plastics
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Rubber and Plastic
Products (BLS series code WPU07) to measure the price growth of this
cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket.
[[Page 19921]]
(14) Paper and Printing Products
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Converted Paper and
Paperboard Products (BLS series code WPU0915) to measure the price
growth of this cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the
FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(15) Miscellaneous Products
We are proposing to use the PPI Commodity for Finished Goods Less
Food and Energy (BLS series code WPUFD4131) to measure the price growth
of this cost category. This is the same price proxy used in the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket.
(16) Professional Fees: Labor-Related
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for Private
Industry Workers in Professional and Related (BLS series code
CIU2010000120000I) to measure the price growth of this category. It
includes occupations such as legal, accounting, and engineering
services. This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS
market basket.
(17) Administrative and Facilities Support Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for Private
Industry Workers in Office and Administrative Support (BLS series code
CIU2010000220000I) to measure the price growth of this category. This
is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(18) Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for All
Civilian Workers in Installation, Maintenance, and Repair (BLS series
code CIU1010000430000I) to measure the price growth of this new cost
category. Previously these costs were included in the All Other: Labor-
Related Services category and were proxied by the ECI for Total
Compensation for Private Industry Workers in Service Occupations (BLS
series code CIU2010000300000I). We believe that this index better
reflects the price changes of labor associated with maintenance-related
services and its incorporation represents a technical improvement to
the market basket.
(19) All Other: Labor-Related Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for Private
Industry Workers in Service Occupations (BLS series code
CIU2010000300000I) to measure the price growth of this cost category.
This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market
basket.
(20) Professional Fees: Nonlabor-Related
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for Private
Industry Workers in Professional and Related (BLS series code
CIU2010000120000I) to measure the price growth of this category. This
is the same price proxy that we are proposing to use for the
Professional Fees: Labor-Related cost category and the same price proxy
used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
(21) Financial Services
We are proposing to use the ECI for Total Compensation for Private
Industry Workers in Financial Activities (BLS series code
CIU201520A000000I) to measure the price growth of this cost category.
This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market
basket.
(22) Telephone Services
We are proposing to use the CPI for Telephone Services (BLS series
code CUUR0000SEED) to measure the price growth of this cost category.
This is the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market
basket.
(23) All Other: Nonlabor-Related Services
We are proposing to use the CPI for All Items Less Food and Energy
(BLS series code CUUR0000SA0L1E) to measure the price growth of this
cost category. We believe that using the CPI for All Items Less Food
and Energy avoids double counting of changes in food and energy prices
as they are already captured elsewhere in the market basket. This is
the same price proxy used in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
Table IV-04 below sets forth the proposed 2014-based IPPS market
basket, including the cost categories and their respective weights and
price proxies. For comparison purposes, the corresponding FY 2010-based
IPPS market basket cost weights also are listed.
Table IV-04--Proposed 2014-Based IPPS Market Basket Cost Categories, Cost Weights, and Price Proxies Compared to
FY 2010-Based IPPS Market Basket Cost Weights
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY Proposed
2010[dash]based 2014[dash]based
Cost categories IPPS market IPPS market Proposed 2014-based IPPS market
basket cost basket cost basket price proxies
weights weights
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Compensation.............................. 60.3 55.8 ...............................
A. Wages and Salaries \1\................ 47.2 43.4 ECI for Wages and Salaries for
All Civilian Workers in
Hospitals.
B. Employee Benefits \1\................. 13.1 12.4 ECI for Total Benefits for All
Civilian Workers in Hospitals.
2. Utilities................................. 2.2 2.5 ...............................
A. Fuel: Oil and Gas..................... 0.4 1.3 Blend of PPIs for Petroleum
Refineries and Natural Gas.
B. Electricity........................... 1.7 1.0 PPI Commodity for Commercial
Electric Power.
C. Water and Sewerage.................... 0.1 0.1 CPI for Water and Sewerage
Maintenance (All Urban
Consumers).
3. Professional Liability Insurance.......... 1.3 1.2 CMS Hospital Professional
Liability Insurance Premium
Index.
4. All Other................................. 36.1 40.5 ...............................
A. All Other Products.................... 19.5 17.4 ...............................
(1.) Pharmaceuticals................. 5.4 5.9 PPI Commodity for
Pharmaceuticals for Human Use,
Prescription.
(2.) Food: Direct Purchases.......... 4.2 2.3 PPI Commodity for Processed
Foods and Feeds.
[[Page 19922]]
(3.) Food: Contract Services......... 0.6 1.3 CPI for Food Away From Home
(All Urban Consumers).
(4.) Chemicals....................... 1.5 0.9 Blend of Chemical PPIs.
(5.) Blood and Blood Products........ 1.1 0.8 PPI Industry for Blood and
Organ Banks.
(6.) Medical Instruments............. 2.6 2.9 Blend of PPI for Surgical and
Medical Instruments and PPI
for Medical and Surgical
Appliances and Supplies.
(7.) Rubber and Plastics............. 1.6 0.8 PPI Commodity for Rubber and
Plastic Products.
(8.) Paper and Printing Products..... 1.5 1.5 PPI Commodity for Converted
Paper and Paperboard Products.
(9.) Miscellaneous Products \2\...... 1.0 1.1 PPI Commodity for Finished
Goods less Food and Energy.
B. Labor-Related Services................ 9.2 12.5 ...............................
(1.) Professional Fees: Labor-Related 5.5 6.8 ECI for Total Compensation for
Private Industry Workers in
Professional and Related.
(2.) Administrative and Facilities 0.6 1.0 ECI for Total Compensation for
Support Services. Private Industry Workers in
Office and Administrative
Support.
(3.) Installation, Maintenance and ............... 2.4 ECI for Total Compensation for
Repair Services. Civilian Workers in
Installation, Maintenance, and
Repair.
(4.) All Other: Labor-Related 3.1 2.3 ECI for Total Compensation for
Services. Private Industry Workers in
Service Occupations.
C. Nonlabor-Related Services............. 7.4 10.7 ...............................
(1.) Professional Fees: Nonlabor- 3.7 5.1 ECI for Total Compensation for
Related. Private Industry Workers in
Professional and Related.
(2.) Financial Services.............. 1.2 3.0 ECI for Total Compensation for
Private Industry Workers in
Financial Activities.
(3.) Telephone Services.............. 0.6 0.8 CPI for Telephone Services.
(4.) All Other: Nonlabor-Related 1.9 1.7 CPI for All Items less Food and
Services \3\. Energy.
------------------
Total............................ 100.0 100.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The cost weights are calculated using three decimal places. For presentational purposes, we are displaying
one decimal and therefore, the detail may not add to the total due to rounding.
\1\ Contract labor is distributed to wages and salaries and employee benefits based on the share of total
compensation that each category represents.
\2\ The FY 2010-based IPPS market basket Miscellaneous Products cost category also includes Apparel and
Machinery and Equipment cost categories. These costs were not broken out separately in the 2014-based IPPS
market basket.
\3\ The FY 2010-based IPPS market basket All Other: Nonlabor-Related Services cost category also includes the
Postage cost category. These costs were not broken-out separately in the 2014-based IPPS market basket.
Table IV-05 below compares both the historical and forecasted
percent changes in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket and the
proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket. The forecasted growth rates in
Table IV-05 are based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s (IGI) fourth
quarter 2016 forecast with historical data through third quarter 2016.
Table IV-05.--FY 2010-Based and Proposed 2014-Based IPPS Hospital
Operating Index Percent Change, FY 2013 Through FY 2020
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010-based Proposed 2014-
IPPS market based IPPS
Fiscal Year (FY) basket percent market basket
change percent change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Historical data:
FY 2013............................. 2.0 2.0
FY 2014............................. 1.8 1.8
FY 2015............................. 1.8 1.6
FY 2016............................. 1.7 1.7
Average FYs 2013-2016............... 1.8 1.8
Forecast:
FY 2017............................. 2.6 2.7
FY 2018............................. 2.9 2.9
FY 2019............................. 3.0 3.0
FY 2020............................. 3.0 3.0
[[Page 19923]]
Average FYs 2017-2020............... 2.9 2.9
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: IHS Global Insight, Inc., 4th Quarter 2016 forecast.
There is no difference between the average percent change in the FY
2010-based and the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket over the FY
2013 through FY 2016 time period. For FY 2018, the increase is 2.9
percent for both the FY 2010-based and proposed 2014-based IPPS market
baskets.
3. Labor-Related Share
Under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the Secretary estimates
from time to time the proportion of payments that are labor-related.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act states that the Secretary shall adjust
the proportion, (as estimated by the Secretary from time to time) of
hospitals' costs which are attributable to wages and wage-related
costs, of the DRG prospective payment rates. We refer to the proportion
of hospitals' costs that are attributable to wages and wage-related
costs as the ``labor-related share.''
The labor-related share is used to determine the proportion of the
national PPS base payment rate to which the area wage index is applied.
We include a cost category in the labor-related share if the costs are
labor intensive and vary with the local labor market. For the FY 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are proposing to include in the labor-
related share the national average proportion of operating costs that
are attributable to the following cost categories in the proposed 2014-
based IPPS market basket: Wages and Salaries, Employee Benefits,
Professional Fees: Labor-Related, Administrative and Facilities Support
Services, Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Services, and All
Other: Labor-Related Services, as we did in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (78 FR 50594). As noted in section IV.B.1.c. of the preamble
of this proposed rule, for the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket,
we are proposing the creation of a separate cost category for
Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Services. These expenses were
previously included in the All Other: Labor-Related Services cost
category in the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, along with other
services, including, but not limited to, janitorial, waste management,
security, and dry cleaning/laundry services. Because these services
tend to be labor-intensive and are mostly performed at the facility
(and, therefore, unlikely to be purchased in the national market), we
continue to believe that they meet our definition of labor-related
services.
Similar to the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, we are proposing
that the Professional Fees: Labor-Related cost category includes
expenses associated with advertising and a proportion of legal
services, accounting and auditing, engineering, management consulting,
and management of companies and enterprises expenses. As was done in
the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket rebasing, we are proposing to
determine the proportion of legal, accounting and auditing,
engineering, and management consulting services that meet our
definition of labor-related services based on a survey of hospitals
conducted by CMS in 2008. We notified the public of our intent to
conduct this survey on December 9, 2005 (70 FR 73250) and received no
comments (71 FR 8588).
A discussion of the composition of the survey and
poststratification can be found in the FY 2010 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(74 FR 43850 through 43856). Based on the weighted results of the
survey, we determined that hospitals purchase, on average, the
following portions of contracted professional services outside of their
local labor market:
34 percent of accounting and auditing services;
30 percent of engineering services;
33 percent of legal services; and
42 percent of management consulting services.
We are proposing to apply each of these percentages to its
respective Benchmark I-O cost category underlying the professional fees
cost category. This is the methodology that we used to separate the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket professional fees cost category into
Professional Fees: Labor-Related and Professional Fees: Nonlabor-
Related cost categories. We are proposing to use the same methodology
and survey results to separate the professional fees costs for the
2014-based IPPS market basket into Professional Fees: Labor-Related and
Professional Fees: Nonlabor-Related cost categories. We believe these
survey results are appropriate to use for the 2014-based IPPS market
basket as they empirically determine the proportion of contracted
professional services purchased by the industry that is attributable to
local firms and the proportion that is purchased from national firms.
In the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket, nonmedical
professional fees that were subject to allocation based on these survey
results represent 4.9 percent of total operating costs (and are limited
to those fees related to Accounting & Auditing, Legal, Engineering, and
Management Consulting services). Based on our survey results, we are
proposing to apportion 3.1 percentage points of the 4.9 percentage
point figure into the Professional Fees: Labor-Related share cost
category and designating the remaining 1.8 percentage point into the
Professional Fees: Nonlabor-Related cost category.
In addition to the professional services listed earlier, we also
classify a proportion of the home office expenses into the Professional
Fees: Labor-Related cost category as was done in the previous rebasing.
For the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, we obtained home office
expenses from the Benchmark I-O data for the NAICS 55 industry
(Management of Companies and Enterprises). As stated in section
IV.B.1.a. of the preamble to this proposed rule, for the 2014-based
IPPS market basket, we are proposing to obtain these data from the
Medicare cost reports. We believe that many of the home office costs
are labor-intensive and vary with the local labor market. However, data
indicate that not all IPPS hospitals with home offices have home
offices located in their local labor market. Therefore, we are
proposing to include in the labor-related share only a proportion of
the home office expenses based on the methodology described below.
[[Page 19924]]
For the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, we used data primarily
from the Medicare cost reports and a CMS database of Home Office
Medicare Records (HOMER) (a database that provides city and state
information (addresses) for home offices). We determined the proportion
of costs that should be allocated to the labor-related share based on
the percent of hospital home office compensation as reported in
Worksheet S-3, Part II. Using this methodology, we determined that 62
percent of hospitals' home office compensation costs were for home
offices located in their respective local labor markets (defined as the
same Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)). Therefore, we classified 62
percent of these costs into the Professional Fees: Labor-Related
Services cost category and the remaining 38 percent into the
Professional Fees: Nonlabor-Related Services cost category for the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket. For a detailed discussion of this
analysis, we refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78
FR 50601).
For the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket, we conducted a
similar analysis of home office data. For consistency, we believe that
it is important for our analysis on home office data to be conducted on
the same IPPS hospitals used to derive the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket cost weights. The Medicare cost report requires a
hospital to report information regarding their home office provider.
Approximately 64 percent of IPPS hospitals reported some type of home
office information on their Medicare cost report for 2014 (for example,
city, State, and zip code). Using the data reported on the Medicare
cost report, we compared the location of the hospital with the location
of the hospital's home office. We then determined the proportion of
costs that should be allocated to the labor-related share based on the
percent of total hospital home office compensation costs for those
hospitals that had home offices located in their respective local labor
markets--defined as being in the same MSA. We determined a hospital's
and home office's MSAs using their zip code information from the
Medicare cost report.
Similar to the FY 2010-based IPPS market basket, we determined the
proportion of costs that should be allocated to the labor-related share
based on the percent of hospital home office compensation as reported
in Worksheet S-3, Part II. Using this methodology, we determined that
60 percent of hospitals' home office compensation costs were for home
offices located in their respective local labor markets. Therefore, we
are proposing to allocate 60 percent of home office expenses to the
labor-related share.
In the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket, home office expenses
that were subject to allocation based on the home office allocation
methodology represent 4.2 percent of total operating costs. Based on
the results of the home office analysis discussed above, we are
apportioning 2.5 percentage points of the 4.2 percentage points figure
into the Professional Fees: Labor-Related cost category and designating
the remaining 1.7 percentage points into the Professional Fees:
Nonlabor-Related cost category. In summary, based on the two
allocations mentioned above, we apportioned 5.6 percentage points of
the professional fees and home office cost weights into the
Professional Fees: Labor-Related cost category. This amount is added to
the portion of professional fees that we already identified as labor-
related using the I-O data such as contracted advertising and marketing
costs (approximately 1.2 percentage point of total operating costs)
resulting in a Professional Fees: Labor-Related cost weight of 6.8
percent.
Below is a table comparing the proposed 2014-based labor-related
share and the FY 2010-based labor-related share. As discussed in
section IV.B.1.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, the Wages and
Salaries and Employee Benefits cost weights reflect contract labor
costs.
Table IV-06--Comparision of the FY 2010-Based Labor-Related Share and
the Proposed 2014-Based Labor-Related Share
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010-based Proposed 2014-
IPPS market based IPPS
basket cost market basket
weights cost weights
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wages and Salaries...................... 47.2 43.4
Employee Benefits....................... 13.1 12.4
Professional Fees: Labor-Related........ 5.5 6.8
Administrative and Facilities Support 0.6 1.0
Services...............................
Installation, Maintenance, and Repair .............. 2.4
Services\1\............................
All Other: Labor-Related Services....... 3.1 2.3
-------------------------------
Total Labor-Related Share........... 69.6 68.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Detail may not add to total due to rounding.
\1\ Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Services costs were previously
included in the All Other: Labor-Related Services cost category of the
FY 2010-based IPPS market basket.
Using the cost category weights from the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket, we calculated a labor-related share of 68.3 percent,
approximately 1.3 percentage points lower than the current labor-
related share of 69.6 percent. Therefore, we are proposing to use a
labor-related share of 68.3 percent for discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2017. We continue to believe, as we have stated in the
past, that these operating cost categories are related to, influenced
by, or vary with the local markets. Therefore, our definition of the
labor-related share continues to be consistent with section 1886(d)(3)
of the Act. We note that section 403 of Pub. L. 108-173 amended
sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act to provide that
the Secretary must employ 62 percent as the labor-related share unless
62 percent would result in lower payments to a hospital than would
otherwise be made.
C. Market Basket for Certain Hospitals Presently Excluded From the IPPS
In the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43857), we
adopted the use of the FY 2006-based IPPS operating market basket
percentage
[[Page 19925]]
increase to update the target amounts for children's hospitals, PPS-
excluded cancer hospitals and religious nonmedical health care
institutions (RNHCIs). Children's hospitals and PPS-excluded cancer
hospitals and RNHCIs are still reimbursed solely under the reasonable
cost-based system, subject to the rate-of-increase limits. Under these
limits, an annual target amount (expressed in terms of the inpatient
operating cost per discharge) is set for each hospital based on the
hospital's own historical cost experience trended forward by the
applicable rate-of-increase percentages.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50603), under the
broad authority in sections 1886(b)(3)(A) and (B), 1886(b)(3)(E), and
1871 of the Act and section 4454 of the BBA, consistent with our use of
the IPPS operating market basket percentage increase to update target
amounts, we adopted the use of the FY 2010-based IPPS operating market
basket percentage increase to update the target amounts for children's
hospitals, PPS-excluded cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs that are paid on
the basis of reasonable cost subject to the rate-of-increase limits
under Sec. 413.40. In addition, as discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (79 FR 50156 through 50157), consistent with Sec. Sec.
412.23(g), 413.40(a)(2)(ii)(A), and 413.40(c)(3)(viii), we also have
used the percentage increase in the FY 2010-based IPPS operating market
basket to update the target amounts for short-term acute care hospitals
located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico (that is, hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa). These hospitals also are
paid on the basis of reasonable cost, subject to the rate-of-increase
limits under Sec. 413.40.
Due to the small number of children's and cancer hospitals and
RNHCIs and hospitals located outside the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, and Puerto Rico and because these facilities provide limited
Medicare cost report data, we are unable to create a separate market
basket specifically for these facilities. Due to the limited cost
report data available, we believe that the proposed 2014-based IPPS
operating market basket most closely represents the cost structure of
children's hospitals, PPS-excluded cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and
hospitals located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico. We believe this is appropriate as the IPPS operating
market basket would reflect the input price growth for providing
inpatient hospital services (similar to the services provided by the
above excluded facilities) based on the specific mix of goods and
services required. Therefore, we are proposing to use the 2014-based
IPPS market basket percentage increase to update the target amounts for
children's hospitals, PPS-excluded cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and
hospitals located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico that are paid on the basis of reasonable cost subject to
the rate-of-increase limits under Sec. 413.40. We believe it is the
best available measure of the average increase in the prices of the
goods and services purchased by children's hospitals, the cancer
hospitals, RNHCIs, and hospitals located outside the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico in order to provide care.
D. Rebasing and Revising the Capital Input Price Index (CIPI)
The CIPI was originally described in the FY 1993 IPPS final rule
(57 FR 40016). There have been subsequent discussions of the CIPI
presented in the IPPS proposed and final rules. The FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (78 FR 50603 through 50607) described the most recent
rebasing and revision of the CIPI to a FY 2010 base year, which
reflected the capital cost structure of IPPS hospitals available at
that time.
For the FY 2018 IPPS update, we are proposing to rebase and revise
the CIPI to a 2014 base year to reflect a more current structure of
capital costs for IPPS hospitals. This proposed 2014-based CIPI was
derived using 2014 cost reports for IPPS hospitals, which includes
providers whose cost reporting period began on or after October 1,
2013, and prior to September 30, 2014. While we proposed and finalized
the title of the current CIPI in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH proposed and
final rules as ``FY 2010-based CIPI'', for the proposed CIPI, we are
now proposing to simply refer to the proposed CIPI as ``2014-based
CIPI'' (dropping the reference to FY). As discussed in section IV.B. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, for the 2014-based IPPS operating
market basket, we are proposing this change in naming convention for
the market basket because the base year cost weight data for the
proposed market basket do not reflect only fiscal year data. Similarly,
the proposed 2014-based CIPI uses Medicare cost report data and other
government data that reflect 2014 fiscal year, 2014 calendar year, and
2014 State fiscal year expenses to determine the base year cost weights
and vintage weights. Given that it is based on a mix of classifications
of 2014 data, we are proposing to refer to the CIPI as ``2014-based''
instead of ``FY 2014-based'' or ``CY 2014-based''. However, the methods
and data used to derive each of these CIPI are similar. As with the FY
2010-based index, we are proposing to develop two sets of weights to
derive the proposed 2014-based CIPI. The first set of weights
identifies the proportion of hospital capital expenditures attributable
to each expenditure category, while the second set of weights is a set
of relative vintage weights for depreciation and interest. The set of
vintage weights is used to identify the proportion of capital
expenditures within a cost category that is attributable to each year
over the useful life of the capital assets in that category. A more
thorough discussion of vintage weights is provided later in this
section.
Using 2014 Medicare cost reports, we are able to group capital
costs into the following categories: Depreciation, Interest, Lease, and
Other. For each of these categories, we are proposing to determine what
proportion of total capital costs the category represents using the
data reported by IPPS hospitals on Worksheet A-7, which is the same
methodology used for the FY 2010-based CIPI. As shown in the left
column of Table IV-07, in 2014 depreciation expenses accounted for 66.4
percent of total capital costs, interest expenses accounted for 16.3
percent, leasing expenses accounted for 11.8 percent, and other capital
expenses accounted for 5.5 percent.
We also are proposing to allocate lease costs across each of the
remaining capital cost categories as was done in the FY 2010-based
CIPI. This would result in three primary capital cost categories in the
proposed 2014-based CIPI: Depreciation, Interest, and Other. Lease
costs are unique in that they are not broken out as a separate cost
category in the proposed 2014-based CIPI. Rather, we are proposing to
proportionally distribute leasing costs among the cost categories of
Depreciation, Interest, and Other, reflecting the assumption that the
underlying cost structure of leases is similar to that of capital costs
in general. As was done for the FY 2010-based CIPI, we are proposing to
assume that 10 percent of the lease costs as a proportion of total
capital costs represents overhead and to assign those costs to the
Other capital cost category accordingly. Therefore, we are assuming
that approximately 1.2 percent (11.8 percent x 0.1) of total capital
costs represent lease costs attributable to overhead, and we are
proposing to add this 1.2 percent to the 5.5 percent Other cost
category weight. We are then proposing to distribute the remaining
lease costs
[[Page 19926]]
(10.6 percent, or 11.8 percent-1.2 percent) proportionally across the
three cost categories (Depreciation, Interest, and Other) based on the
proportion that these categories comprise of the sum of the
Depreciation, Interest, and Other cost categories (excluding lease
expenses). For example, the Other cost category represented 6.3 percent
of all three cost categories (Depreciation, Interest, and Other) prior
to any lease expenses being allocated. This 6.3 percent is applied to
the 10.6 percent of remaining lease expenses so that another 0.7
percent of lease expenses as a percent of total capital costs is
allocated to the Other cost category. Therefore, the resulting proposed
Other cost weight is 7.4 percent (5.5 percent + 1.2 percent + 0.7
percent). This is the same methodology used for the FY 2010-based CIPI.
The resulting cost weights of the proposed allocation of lease expenses
are shown in the right column of Table IV-07.
Table IV-07--Proposed Allocation of Lease Expenses for the Proposed 2014-Based CIPI
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed cost shares Proposed cost shares
obtained from medicare after allocation of
Cost categories cost reports (percent lease expenses (percent
of total capital costs) of total capital costs)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Depreciation.................................................. 66.4 74.4
Interest...................................................... 16.3 18.2
Lease......................................................... 11.8 .......................
Other......................................................... 5.5 7.4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, we are proposing to further divide the Depreciation and
Interest cost categories. We are proposing to separate the Depreciation
cost category into the following two categories: (1) Building and Fixed
Equipment and (2) Movable Equipment. We also are proposing to separate
the Interest cost category into the following two categories: (1)
Government/Nonprofit; and (2) For-profit.
To disaggregate the depreciation cost weight, we needed to
determine the percent of total depreciation costs for IPPS hospitals
(after the allocation of lease costs) that are attributable to building
and fixed equipment, which we hereafter refer to as the ``fixed
percentage.'' Based on Worksheet A-7 data from the 2014 IPPS Medicare
cost reports, we have determined that depreciation costs for building
and fixed equipment account for approximately 49 percent of total
depreciation costs, while depreciation costs for movable equipment
account for approximately 51 percent of total depreciation costs. As
was done for the FY 2010-based CIPI, we are proposing to apply this
fixed percentage to the depreciation cost weight (after leasing costs
are included) to derive a Depreciation cost weight attributable to
Building and Fixed Equipment and a Depreciation cost weight
attributable to Movable Equipment.
To disaggregate the interest cost weight, we needed to determine
the percent of total interest costs for IPPS hospitals that are
attributable to government and nonprofit facilities, which we hereafter
refer to as the ``nonprofit percentage,'' because interest price
pressures tend to differ between nonprofit and for-profit facilities.
We are proposing to use interest costs data from Worksheet A-7 of the
2014 Medicare cost reports for IPPS hospitals, which is the same
methodology used for the FY 2010-based CIPI. The nonprofit percentage
determined using this method is 86 percent. Table IV-08 provides a
comparison of the FY 2010-based CIPI cost weights and the proposed
2014-based CIPI cost weights.
After the capital cost category weights were computed, it was
necessary to select appropriate price proxies to reflect the rate-of-
increase for each expenditure category. We are proposing to apply the
same price proxies as were used in the FY 2010-based CIPI, which are
listed below and provided in Table IV-08. We also are proposing to
continue to vintage weight the capital price proxies for Depreciation
and Interest to capture the long-term consumption of capital. This
vintage weighting method is the same method that was used for the FY
2010-based CIPI and is described below.
We are proposing to continue to proxy the: Depreciation--Building
and Fixed Equipment cost category by the BEA Chained Price Index for
Private Fixed Investment in Structures, Nonresidential, Hospitals and
Special Care (BEA Table 5.4.4. Price Indexes for Private Fixed
Investment in Structures by Type). As stated in the FY 2010 IPPS/LTCH
final rule (74 FR 43860), for the FY 2006-based CIPI we finalized the
use of this index to measure the price growth of this cost category.
This BEA index is intended to capture prices for construction of
facilities such as hospitals, nursing homes, hospices, and
rehabilitation centers. For the Depreciation--Movable Equipment cost
category, we are proposing to continue to measure the price growth
using the PPI Commodity for Machinery and Equipment (BLS series code
WPU11). This price index reflects price inflation associated with a
variety of machinery and equipment that would be utilized by hospitals
including but not limited to communication equipment, computers, and
medical equipment. For the Nonprofit Interest and For-profit Interest
cost categories, we are proposing to continue to measure the price
growth using the average yield on domestic municipal bonds (Bond Buyer
20-bond index) and the average yield on Moody's Aaa bonds (Federal
Reserve), respectively. As stated above, we are proposing two proxies
because interest price pressures tend to differ between nonprofit and
for-profit facilities. For the Other capital cost category (including
insurances, taxes, and other capital-related costs), we are proposing
to continue to measure the price growth using the CPI for Rent of
Primary Residence (All Urban Consumers) (BLS series code CUUS0000SEHA),
which would reflect the price growth of these costs. We believe that
these price proxies continue to be the most appropriate proxies for
IPPS capital costs that meet our selection criteria of relevance,
timeliness, availability, and reliability.
[[Page 19927]]
Table IV-08--Proposed 2014-Based CIPI Cost Weights and Price Proxies With FY 2010-Based CIPI Cost Weights
Included for Comparision
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010 cost Proposed 2014
Cost categories weights cost weights Proposed price proxy
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total..................................... 100.0 100.0 ..................................
Depreciation.......................... 74.0 74.4 ..................................
Building and Fixed Equipment...... 36.2 36.7 BEA's Chained Price Index for
Private Fixed Investment in
Structures, Nonresidential,
Hospitals and Special Care.
Movable Equipment................. 37.9 37.7 PPI Commodity for Machinery and
Equipment.
Interest.............................. 19.2 18.2 ..................................
Government/Nonprofit.............. 17.1 15.7 Average Yield on Domestic
Municipal Bonds (Bond Buyer 20-
Bond Index).
For-Profit........................ 2.1 2.5 Average Yield on Moody's Aaa
Bonds.
Other..................................... 6.8 7.4 CPI for Rent of Primary Residence.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The cost weights are calculated using three decimal places. For presentational purposes, we are displaying
one decimal and therefore, the detail may not add to the total due to rounding.
Because capital is acquired and paid for over time, capital
expenses in any given year are determined by both past and present
purchases of physical and financial capital. The proposed vintage-
weighted 2014-based CIPI is intended to capture the long-term
consumption of capital, using vintage weights for depreciation
(physical capital) and interest (financial capital). These vintage
weights reflect the proportion of capital purchases attributable to
each year of the expected life of building and fixed equipment, movable
equipment, and interest. We are proposing to use vintage weights to
compute vintage-weighted price changes associated with depreciation and
interest expenses.
Vintage weights are an integral part of the CIPI. Capital costs are
inherently complicated and are determined by complex capital purchasing
decisions, over time, based on such factors as interest rates and debt
financing. In addition, capital is depreciated over time instead of
being consumed in the same period it is purchased. By accounting for
the vintage nature of capital, we are able to provide an accurate and
stable annual measure of price changes. Annual nonvintage price changes
for capital are unstable due to the volatility of interest rate changes
and, therefore, do not reflect the actual annual price changes for IPPS
capital costs. The CIPI reflects the underlying stability of the
capital acquisition process.
To calculate the vintage weights for depreciation and interest
expenses, we first needed a time series of capital purchases for
building and fixed equipment and movable equipment. We found no single
source that provides an appropriate time series of capital purchases by
hospitals for all of the above components of capital purchases. The
early Medicare cost reports did not have sufficient capital data to
meet this need. Data we obtained from the American Hospital Association
(AHA) did not include annual capital purchases. However, we were able
to obtain data on total expenses back to 1963 from the AHA.
Consequently, we are proposing to use data from the AHA Panel Survey
and the AHA Annual Survey to obtain a time series of total expenses for
hospitals. We then are proposing to use data from the AHA Panel Survey
supplemented with the ratio of depreciation to total hospital expenses
obtained from the Medicare cost reports to derive a trend of annual
depreciation expenses for 1963 through 2014. We are proposing to
separate these depreciation expenses into annual amounts of building
and fixed equipment depreciation and movable equipment depreciation as
determined earlier. From these annual depreciation amounts, we derived
annual end-of-year book values for building and fixed equipment and
movable equipment using the expected life for each type of asset
category. We used the AHA data and similar methodology to derive the FY
2010-based IPPS capital market basket (78 FR 50604).
To continue to calculate the vintage weights for depreciation and
interest expenses, we also needed to account for the expected lives for
building and fixed equipment, movable equipment, and interest for the
proposed 2014-based CIPI. We are proposing to calculate the expected
lives using Medicare cost report data. The expected life of any asset
can be determined by dividing the value of the asset (excluding fully
depreciated assets) by its current year depreciation amount. This
calculation yields the estimated expected life of an asset if the rates
of depreciation were to continue at current year levels, assuming
straight-line depreciation. Using this proposed method, we determined
the average expected life of building and fixed equipment to be equal
to 27 years, and the average expected life of movable equipment to be
equal to 12 years. For the expected life of interest, we believe that
vintage weights for interest should represent the average expected life
of building and fixed equipment because, based on previous research
described in the FY 1997 IPPS final rule (61 FR 46198), the expected
life of hospital debt instruments and the expected life of buildings
and fixed equipment are similar. We note that the FY 2010-based CIPI
was based on an expected average life of building and fixed equipment
of 26 years and an expected average life of movable equipment of 12
years.
Multiplying these expected lives by the annual depreciation amounts
results in annual year-end asset costs for building and fixed equipment
and movable equipment. We then calculated a time series, beginning in
1964, of annual capital purchases by subtracting the previous year's
asset costs from the current year's asset costs.
For the building and fixed equipment and movable equipment vintage
weights, we are proposing to use the real annual capital-related
purchase amounts for each asset type to capture the actual amount of
the physical acquisition, net of the effect of price inflation. These
real annual capital-related purchase amounts are produced by deflating
the nominal annual purchase amount by the associated price proxy as
provided earlier in this proposed rule. For the interest vintage
weights, we are proposing to use the total nominal annual capital-
related purchase amounts to capture the value of the debt instrument
(including, but not limited to, mortgages and bonds). Using these
capital purchases time series specific to each asset type, we are
proposing to calculate the vintage weights for building and fixed
[[Page 19928]]
equipment, for movable equipment, and for interest.
The vintage weights for each asset type are deemed to represent the
average purchase pattern of the asset over its expected life (in the
case of building and fixed equipment and interest, 27 years, and in the
case of movable equipment, 12 years). For each asset type, we are
proposing to use the time series of annual capital purchases amounts
available from 2014 back to 1964. These data allow us to derive twenty-
five 27-year periods of capital purchases for building and fixed
equipment and interest, and forty 12-year periods of capital purchases
for movable equipment. For each 27-year period for building and fixed
equipment and interest, or 12-year period for movable equipment, we are
proposing to calculate annual vintage weights by dividing the capital-
related purchase amount in any given year by the total amount of
purchases over the entire 27-year or 12-year period. This calculation
was done for each year in the 27-year or 12-year period and for each of
the periods for which we have data. We then calculated the average
vintage weight for a given year of the expected life by taking the
average of these vintage weights across the multiple periods of data.
The vintage weights for the proposed 2014-based CIPI and the FY
2010-based CIPI are presented in Table IV-09 below.
Table IV-09--Proposed 2014-Based CIPI and FY 2010-Based CIPI Vintage Weights
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Building and fixed equipment Movable equipment Interest
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year \1\ Proposed 2014- FY 2010-based Proposed 2014- FY 2010-based Proposed 2014- FY 2010-based
based 27 years 26 years based 12 years 12 years based 27 years 26 years
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1....................................................... 0.024 0.023 0.062 0.064 0.012 0.012
2....................................................... 0.025 0.024 0.064 0.068 0.014 0.013
3....................................................... 0.027 0.026 0.070 0.071 0.015 0.015
4....................................................... 0.028 0.028 0.074 0.073 0.017 0.017
5....................................................... 0.030 0.029 0.078 0.076 0.019 0.018
6....................................................... 0.031 0.031 0.082 0.078 0.021 0.021
7....................................................... 0.033 0.032 0.086 0.084 0.023 0.023
8....................................................... 0.034 0.034 0.088 0.088 0.025 0.025
9....................................................... 0.035 0.036 0.092 0.092 0.027 0.028
10...................................................... 0.036 0.038 0.097 0.098 0.029 0.030
11...................................................... 0.037 0.040 0.102 0.103 0.030 0.033
12...................................................... 0.039 0.041 0.105 0.106 0.033 0.036
13...................................................... 0.040 0.042 .............. .............. 0.035 0.038
14...................................................... 0.040 0.042 .............. .............. 0.037 0.040
15...................................................... 0.039 0.043 .............. .............. 0.037 0.043
16...................................................... 0.039 0.044 .............. .............. 0.040 0.045
17...................................................... 0.040 0.044 .............. .............. 0.041 0.047
18...................................................... 0.042 0.044 .............. .............. 0.045 0.048
19...................................................... 0.042 0.044 .............. .............. 0.048 0.051
20...................................................... 0.042 0.044 .............. .............. 0.050 0.052
21...................................................... 0.043 0.045 .............. .............. 0.052 0.056
22...................................................... 0.043 0.045 .............. .............. 0.054 0.057
23...................................................... 0.042 0.045 .............. .............. 0.055 0.060
24...................................................... 0.042 0.046 .............. .............. 0.057 0.062
25...................................................... 0.043 0.045 .............. .............. 0.059 0.064
26...................................................... 0.043 0.045 .............. .............. 0.061 0.066
27...................................................... 0.043 .............. .............. .............. 0.062 ..............
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................................... 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Numbers may not add to total due to rounding.
\1\ Vintage weight in the last year (for example, year 27 for the proposed 2014-based CIPI) is applied to the most recent data point and prior vintage
weights are applied going back in time. For example, year 27 vintage weight would be applied to the 2018q3 fixed price proxy level, year 26 vintage
weight would be applied to the 2017q3 fixed price proxy level, etc.
The process of creating vintage-weighted price proxies requires
applying the vintage weights to the price proxy index where the last
applied vintage weight in Table IV-09 is applied to the most recent
data point. We have provided on the CMS Web site an example of how the
vintage weighting price proxies are calculated, using example vintage
weights and example price indices. The example can be found under the
following CMS Web site link: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/MedicareProgramRatesStats/MarketBasketResearch.html in the zip file
titled ``Weight Calculations as described in the IPPS FY 2010 Proposed
Rule.''
Table IV-10 below compares both the historical and forecasted
percent changes in the FY 2010-based CIPI and the proposed 2014-based
CIPI.
[[Page 19929]]
Table IV-10--Comparison of FY 2010-Based and Proposed 2014-Based Capital
Input Price Index, Percent Change, FY 2013 Through FY 2020
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CIPI, FY 2010- Proposed CIPI,
Fiscal year based 2014-based
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Historical Data:
FY 2013............................. 1.1 1.0
FY 2014............................. 1.2 1.2
FY 2015............................. 1.2 1.1
FY 2016............................. 1.1 1.0
Average FYs 2013-2016............... 1.2 1.1
Forecast:
FY 2017............................. 1.1 1.0
FY 2018............................. 1.3 1.2
FY 2019............................. 1.5 1.4
FY 2020............................. 1.5 1.5
Average FYs 2017-2020............... 1.4 1.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: IHS Global Insight, Inc., 4th quarter 2016 forecast.
IHS Global Insight, Inc. forecasts a 1.2 percent increase in the
proposed 2014-based CIPI for FY 2018, as shown in Table IV-10. The
underlying vintage-weighted price increases for depreciation (including
building and fixed equipment and movable equipment) and interest
(including government/nonprofit and for-profit) based on the proposed
2014-based CIPI are included in Table IV-11.
Table IV-11--Proposed 2014-Based Capital Input Price Index Percent Changes, Total and Depreciation and Interest
Components--FYs 2013 Through 2020
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fiscal year Total Depreciation Interest
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Historical Data: .............. .............. ..............
FY 2013..................................................... 1.0 1.7 -2.5
FY 2014..................................................... 1.2 1.8 -1.8
FY 2015..................................................... 1.1 1.8 -2.7
FY 2016..................................................... 1.0 1.7 -3.0
Forecast: .............. .............. ..............
FY 2017..................................................... 1.0 1.6 -2.7
FY 2018..................................................... 1.2 1.6 -1.6
FY 2019..................................................... 1.4 1.6 -0.6
FY 2020..................................................... 1.5 1.6 0.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: IHS Global Insight, Inc., 4th quarter 2016 forecast.
Rebasing the CIPI from FY 2010 to 2014 decreased the percent change
in the forecasted update for FY 2018 by 0.1 percentage point, from 1.3
percent to 1.2 percent, as shown in Table IV-10. The lower FY 2018
update is primarily due to a change in the vintage weights for the
proposed 2014-based CIPI, which includes updating the asset purchase
data through 2014 and changing the building and fixed equipment and
interest asset lives from 26 years to 27 years. This lower update is
only partially offset by the change in the base year weights, which
produce a faster increase due to more weight being given to the
Depreciation cost category and less weight being given to the Interest
cost category. As shown in Table IV-11, for FY 2018, vintage-weighted
price growth is projected to be positive for the Depreciation cost
category and negative for Interest cost category.
V. Other Decisions and Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating
System
A. Proposed Changes to MS-DRGs Subject to the Postacute Care Transfer
and MS-DRG Special Payment Policies (Sec. 412.4)
1. Background
Existing regulations at 42 CFR 412.4(a) define discharges under the
IPPS as situations in which a patient is formally released from an
acute care hospital or dies in the hospital. Section 412.4(b) defines
acute care transfers, and Sec. 412.4(c) defines postacute care
transfers. Our policy set forth in Sec. 412.4(f) provides that when a
patient is transferred and his or her length of stay is less than the
geometric mean length of stay for the MS-DRG to which the case is
assigned, the transferring hospital is generally paid based on a
graduated per diem rate for each day of stay, not to exceed the full
MS-DRG payment that would have been made if the patient had been
discharged without being transferred.
The per diem rate paid to a transferring hospital is calculated by
dividing the full MS-DRG payment by the geometric mean length of stay
for the MS-DRG. Based on an analysis that showed that the first day of
hospitalization is the most expensive (60 FR 45804), our policy
generally provides for payment that is twice the per diem amount for
the first day, with each subsequent day paid at the per diem amount up
to the full MS-DRG payment (Sec. 412.4(f)(1)). Transfer cases also are
eligible for outlier payments. In general, the outlier threshold for
transfer cases, as described in Sec. 412.80(b), is equal to the fixed-
loss outlier threshold for nontransfer cases (adjusted for geographic
variations in costs), divided by the geometric mean length of stay for
the MS-DRG, and multiplied by the length of stay for the case, plus 1
day.
[[Page 19930]]
We established the criteria set forth in Sec. 412.4(d) for
determining which DRGs qualify for postacute care transfer payments in
the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47419 through 47420). The
determination of whether a DRG is subject to the postacute care
transfer policy was initially based on the Medicare Version 23.0
GROUPER (FY 2006) and data from the FY 2004 MedPAR file. However, if a
DRG did not exist in Version 23.0 or a DRG included in Version 23.0 is
revised, we use the current version of the Medicare GROUPER and the
most recent complete year of MedPAR data to determine if the DRG is
subject to the postacute care transfer policy. Specifically, if the MS-
DRG's total number of discharges to postacute care equals or exceeds
the 55th percentile for all MS-DRGs and the proportion of short-stay
discharges to postacute care to total discharges in the MS-DRG exceeds
the 55th percentile for all MS-DRGs, CMS will apply the postacute care
transfer policy to that MS-DRG and to any other MS-DRG that shares the
same base MS-DRG. The statute directs us to identify MS-DRGs based on a
high volume of discharges to postacute care facilities and a
disproportionate use of postacute care services. As discussed in the FY
2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47416), we determined that the 55th
percentile is an appropriate level at which to establish these
thresholds. In that same final rule (70 FR 47419), we stated that we
will not revise the list of DRGs subject to the postacute care transfer
policy annually unless we are making a change to a specific MS-DRG.
To account for MS-DRGs subject to the postacute care policy that
exhibit exceptionally higher shares of costs very early in the hospital
stay, Sec. 412.4(f) also includes a special payment methodology. For
these MS-DRGs, hospitals receive 50 percent of the full MS-DRG payment,
plus the single per diem payment, for the first day of the stay, as
well as a per diem payment for subsequent days (up to the full MS-DRG
payment (Sec. 412.4(f)(6)). For an MS-DRG to qualify for the special
payment methodology, the geometric mean length of stay must be greater
than 4 days, and the average charges of 1-day discharge cases in the
MS-DRG must be at least 50 percent of the average charges for all cases
within the MS-DRG. MS-DRGs that are part of an MS-DRG severity level
group will qualify under the MS-DRG special payment methodology policy
if any one of the MS-DRGs that share that same base MS-DRG qualifies
(Sec. 412.4(f)(6)).
2. Proposed Changes for FY 2018
Based on our annual review of MS-DRGs, we have identified three MS-
DRGs that we are proposing to be included on the list of MS-DRGs
subject to the special payment transfer policy. As we discuss in
section II.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule, in response to
public comments and based on our analysis of FY 2016 MedPAR claims
data, we are proposing to make changes to MS-DRGs, effective for FY
2018.
As discussed in section II.F.14.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to delete MS-DRGs 984, 985, and 986 (Prostatic
O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with MCC, with CC and
without CC/MCC, respectively) and reassign the procedure codes
currently assigned to these three MS-DRGs to MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989
(Non-Extensive O.R. Procedure Unrelated to Principal Diagnosis with
MCC, with CC and without CC/MCC, respectively).
In light of these proposed changes to the MS-DRGs for FY 2018,
according to the regulations under Sec. 412.4(d), we evaluated
proposed revised MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989 (which would contain the
proposed reassigned procedures from MS-DRGs 984, 985, and 986) against
the general postacute care transfer policy criteria using the FY 2016
MedPAR data. If an MS-DRG qualified for the postacute care transfer
policy, we also evaluated that MS-DRG under the special payment
methodology criteria according to regulations at Sec. 412.4(f)(6). We
continue to believe it is appropriate to reassess MS-DRGs when
proposing reassignment of procedure or diagnosis codes that would
result in material changes to an MS-DRG. MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989 are
currently subject to the postacute care transfer policy. As a result of
our review, the proposed revised MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989 continue to
qualify to be included on the list of MS-DRGs that are subject to the
postacute care transfer policy. We are not proposing to change the
postacute care transfer policy status for MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989.
List of Proposed Revised MS-DRGs Subject To Review of Postacute Care Transfer Policy Status for FY 2018
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent of
short-stay
Postacute care postacute care
transfers Short-stay transfers to Postacute care transfer
Proposed revised MS-DRG MS-DRG title Total cases (55th postacute care all cases policy status
percentile: transfers (55th
1,419) percentile:
8.01068%)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
987........................ Non-Extensive O.R. Procedure 8,131 4,210 1,355 16.66462 YES.
Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis with MCC.
988........................ Non-Extensive O.R. Procedure 8,239 3,416 706 8.56900 YES.
Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis with CC.
989........................ Non-Extensive O.R. Procedure 2,216 * 499 47 * 2.12094 ** YES.
Unrelated to Principal
Diagnosis without MCC/CC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Indicates a current postacute care transfer policy criterion that the MS-DRG did not meet.
** As described in the policy at 42 CFR 412.4(d)(3)(ii)(D), MS-DRGs that share the same base MS-DRG will all qualify under the postacute care transfer
policy if any one of the MS-DRGs that share that same base MS-DRG qualifies.
We also have determined that proposed revised MS-DRGs 987, 988, and
989 would meet the criteria for the MS-DRG special payment methodology.
MS-DRGs 987, 988, and 989 are not currently listed as being subject to
the special payment policy. Therefore, we are proposing that these
three proposed revised MS-DRGs would be subject to
[[Page 19931]]
the MS-DRG special payment methodology, effective FY 2018.
List of Proposed Revised MS-DRGs Subject To Review of Special Payment Policy Status for FY 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50 Percent of
Average average
Proposed revised MS-DRG title Geometric mean charges of 1- charges for Special payment
MS-DRG length of stay day all cases policy status
discharges within MS-DRG
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
987................ Non-Extensive O.R. 8.1 $36,526 $53,449 * YES.
Procedure Unrelated
to Principal
Diagnosis with MCC.
988................ Non-Extensive O.R. 8.6 35,629 29,119 YES.
Procedure Unrelated
to Principal
Diagnosis with CC.
989................ Non-Extensive O.R. 2.2 0 0 * YES.
Procedure Unrelated
to Principal
Diagnosis without
MCC/CC.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As described in the policy at 42 CFR 412.4(d)(6)(iv), MS-DRGs that share the same base MS-DRG will all qualify
under the MS-DRG special payment policy if any one of the MS-DRGs that share that same base MS-DRG qualifies.
The proposed postacute care transfer policy status and special
payment policy status of these MS-DRGs are reflected in Table 5
associated with this proposed rule, which is listed in section VI. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule and available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site.
B. Proposed Changes in the Inpatient Hospital Update for FY 2018 (Sec.
412.64(d))
1. Proposed FY 2018 Inpatient Hospital Update
In accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, each year
we update the national standardized amount for inpatient hospital
operating costs by a factor called the ``applicable percentage
increase.'' For FY 2018, we are setting the applicable percentage
increase by applying the adjustments listed in this section in the same
sequence as we did for FY 2017. Specifically, consistent with section
1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, as amended by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a)
of the Affordable Care Act, we are setting the applicable percentage
increase by applying the following adjustments in the following
sequence. The applicable percentage increase under the IPPS is equal to
the rate-of-increase in the hospital market basket for IPPS hospitals
in all areas, subject to--
(a) A reduction of one-quarter of the applicable percentage
increase (prior to the application of other statutory adjustments; also
referred to as the market basket update or rate-of-increase (with no
adjustments)) for hospitals that fail to submit quality information
under rules established by the Secretary in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act;
(b) A reduction of three-quarters of the applicable percentage
increase (prior to the application of other statutory adjustments; also
referred to as the market basket update or rate-of-increase (with no
adjustments)) for hospitals not considered to be meaningful EHR users
in accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act;
(c) An adjustment based on changes in economy-wide productivity
(the multifactor productivity (MFP) adjustment); and
(d) An additional reduction of 0.75 percentage point as required by
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act.
Sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) and (b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act, as added
by section 3401(a) of the Affordable Care Act, state that application
of the MFP adjustment and the additional FY 2018 adjustment of 0.75
percentage point may result in the applicable percentage increase being
less than zero.
We note that, in compliance with section 404 of the MMA, in this
proposed rule, we are proposing to replace the FY 2010-based IPPS
operating and capital market baskets with the revised and rebased 2014-
based IPPS operating and capital market baskets for FY 2018.
We are proposing to base the proposed FY 2018 market basket update
used to determine the applicable percentage increase for the IPPS on
IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s (IGI's) fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the
proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket rate-of-increase with historical
data through third quarter 2016, which is estimated to be 2.9 percent.
We are proposing that if more recent data subsequently become available
(for example, a more recent estimate of the market basket and the MFP
adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate, to determine the
FY 2018 market basket update and the MFP adjustment in the final rule.
For FY 2018, depending on whether a hospital submits quality data
under the rules established in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act (hereafter referred to as a hospital
that submits quality data) and is a meaningful EHR user under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act (hereafter referred to as a hospital that
is a meaningful EHR user), there are four possible applicable
percentage increases that can be applied to the standardized amount as
specified in the table that appears later in this section.
In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51689 through
51692), we finalized our methodology for calculating and applying the
MFP adjustment. As we explained in that rule, section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, as added by section 3401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act, defines this productivity adjustment as equal to
the 10-year moving average of changes in annual economy-wide, private
nonfarm business MFP (as projected by the Secretary for the 10-year
period ending with the applicable fiscal year, calendar year, cost
reporting period, or other annual period). The Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) publishes the official measure of private nonfarm
business MFP. We refer readers to the BLS Web site at //www.bls.gov/mfp for the BLS historical published MFP data.
MFP is derived by subtracting the contribution of labor and capital
input growth from output growth. The projections of the components of
MFP are currently produced by IGI, a nationally recognized economic
forecasting firm with which CMS contracts to forecast the components of
the market baskets and MFP. As we discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (80 FR 49509), beginning with the FY 2016 rulemaking
cycle, the MFP adjustment is calculated using the revised series
developed by IGI to proxy the aggregate capital inputs. Specifically,
in order to generate a forecast of MFP, IGI forecasts BLS aggregate
capital inputs using a
[[Page 19932]]
regression model. A complete description of the MFP projection
methodology is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/MedicareProgramRatesStats/MarketBasketResearch.html. As discussed in
the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, if IGI makes changes to the MFP
methodology, we will announce them on our Web site rather than in the
annual rulemaking.
For FY 2018, we are proposing an MFP adjustment of 0.4 percentage
point. Similar to the market basket update, for the proposed rule, we
used IGI's fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the MFP adjustment with
historical data through third quarter 2016 to compute the proposed MFP
adjustment. We are proposing that if more recent data subsequently
become available, we would use such data, if appropriate, to determine
the FY 2018 market basket update and MFP adjustment for the final rule.
Based on these data, for this proposed rule, we have determined
four proposed applicable percentage increases to the standardized
amount for FY 2018, as specified in the following table:
Proposed FY 2018 Applicable Percentage Increases for the IPPS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital Hospital Hospital did Hospital did
submitted submitted NOT submit NOT submit
quality data quality data quality data quality data
FY 2018 and is a and is NOT a and is a and is NOT a
meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR
user user user user
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Market Basket Rate-of-Increase......... 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to Submit 0.0 0.0 -0.725 -0.725
Quality Data under Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)
of the Act.....................................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to be a 0.0 -2.175 0.0 -2.175
Meaningful EHR User under Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act...................
Proposed MFP Adjustment under Section -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) of the Act...................
Statutory Adjustment under Section -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75
1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act..................
Proposed Applicable Percentage Increase Applied 1.75 -0.425 1.025 -1.15
to Standardized Amount.........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to revise the existing regulations at 42 CFR
412.64(d) to reflect the current law for the FY 2018 update.
Specifically, in accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, we
are proposing to revise paragraph (vii) of Sec. 412.64(d)(1) to
include the applicable percentage increase to the FY 2018 operating
standardized amount as the percentage increase in the market basket
index, subject to the reductions specified under Sec. 412.64(d)(2) for
a hospital that does not submit quality data and Sec. 412.64(d)(3) for
a hospital that is not a meaningful EHR user, less an MFP adjustment
and less an additional reduction of 0.75 percentage point.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act provides that the applicable
percentage increase to the hospital-specific rates for SCHs equals the
applicable percentage increase set forth in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of
the Act (that is, the same update factor as for all other hospitals
subject to the IPPS). Therefore, the update to the hospital-specific
rates for SCHs also is subject to section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act,
as amended by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable Care Act.
As discussed in section V.H. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
section 205 of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015
(MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10, enacted on April 16, 2015) extended the MDH
program (which, under previous law, was to be in effect for discharges
on or before March 31, 2015 only) for discharges occurring on or after
April 1, 2015, through FY 2017 (that is, for discharges occurring on or
before September 30, 2017). Therefore, under current law, the MDH
program will expire at the end of FY 2017.
For FY 2018, we are proposing the following updates to the
hospital-specific rates applicable to SCHs: A proposed update of 1.75
percent for a hospital that submits quality data and is a meaningful
EHR user; a proposed update of 1.025 percent for a hospital that fails
to submit quality data and is a meaningful EHR user; a proposed update
of -0.425 percent for a hospital that submits quality data and is not a
meaningful EHR user; and a proposed update of -1.15 percent for a
hospital that fails to submit quality data and is not a meaningful EHR
user. As mentioned previously, for this FY 2018 proposed rule, we are
using IGI's fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the proposed 2014-based
IPPS market basket update with historical data through third quarter
2016. Similarly, we are using IGI's fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the
MFP adjustment. We are proposing that if more recent data subsequently
become available (for example, a more recent estimate of the market
basket increase and the MFP adjustment), we would use such data, if
appropriate, to determine the update in the final rule.
2. Proposed FY 2018 Puerto Rico Hospital Update
As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56937
through 56938), prior to January 1, 2016, Puerto Rico hospitals were
paid based on 75 percent of the national standardized amount and 25
percent of the Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount. Section 601 of
Public Law 114-113 amended section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act to specify
that the payment calculation with respect to operating costs of
inpatient hospital services of a subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospital
for inpatient hospital discharges on or after January 1, 2016, shall
use 100 percent of the national standardized amount. Because Puerto
Rico hospitals are no longer paid with a Puerto Rico-specific
standardized amount under the amendments to section 1886(d)(9)(E) of
the Act, there is no longer a need for us to propose an update to the
Puerto Rico standardized amount. Hospitals in Puerto Rico are now paid
100 percent of the national standardized amount and, therefore, are
subject to the same update to the national standardized amount
discussed under section V.B.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
Accordingly, for FY 2018, we are proposing an applicable percentage
increase of 1.75 to the standardized amount for hospitals located in
Puerto Rico.
We note that section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, which
specifies the adjustment to the
[[Page 19933]]
applicable percentage increase for ``subsection (d)'' hospitals that do
not submit quality data under the rules established by the Secretary,
is not applicable to hospitals located in Puerto Rico.
In addition, section 602 of Public Law 114-113 amended section
1886(n)(6)(B) of the Act to specify that Puerto Rico hospitals are
eligible for incentive payments for the meaningful use of certified EHR
technology, effective beginning FY 2016, and also to apply the
adjustments to the applicable percentage increase under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act to Puerto Rico hospitals that are not
meaningful EHR users, effective FY 2022. Accordingly, because the
provisions of section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act are not applicable
to hospitals located in Puerto Rico until FY 2022, the adjustments
under this provision are not applicable for FY 2018.
C. Proposed Change to Volume Decrease Adjustment for Sole Community
Hospitals (SCHs) and Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospitals (MDHs)
(Sec. 412.92)
1. Background
Sections 1886(d)(5)(D) and (d)(5)(G) of the Act provide special
payment protections under the IPPS to sole community hospitals (SCHs)
and Medicare-dependent, small rural hospitals (MDHs), respectively.
Section 1886(d)(5)(D)(iii) of the Act defines an SCH in part as a
hospital that the Secretary determines is located more than 35 road
miles from another hospital or that, by reason of factors such as
isolated location, weather conditions, travel conditions, or absence of
other like hospitals (as determined by the Secretary), is the sole
source of inpatient hospital services reasonably available to Medicare
beneficiaries. The regulations at 42 CFR 412.92 set forth the criteria
that a hospital must meet to be classified as a SCH. For more
information on SCHs, we refer readers to the FY 2009 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43894 through 43897).
Section 1886(d)(5)(G)(iv) of the Act defines an MDH as a hospital
that is located in a rural area, has not more than 100 beds, is not an
SCH, and has a high percentage of Medicare discharges (that is, not
less than 60 percent of its inpatient days or discharges during the
cost reporting period beginning in FY 1987 or two of the three most
recently audited cost reporting periods for which the Secretary has a
settled cost report were attributable to inpatients entitled to
benefits under Part A). The regulations at 42 CFR 412.108 set forth the
criteria that a hospital must meet to be classified as an MDH. The MDH
program is not authorized by statute beyond September 30, 2017.
Therefore, beginning October 1, 2017, all hospitals that previously
qualified for MDH status under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act will no
longer have MDH status and will be paid based on the IPPS Federal rate.
For additional information on the MDH program and the payment
methodology, we refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(76 FR 51683 through 51684).
2. Proposed Changes to the Volume Decrease Adjustment Calculation
Methodology for SCHs
Section 1886(d)(5)(D)(ii) and section 1886(d)(5)(G)(iii) of the Act
require that the Secretary adjust the payments made to an SCH and MDH,
respectively, as may be necessary to fully compensate the hospital for
the fixed costs it incurs in providing inpatient hospital services,
including the reasonable cost of maintaining necessary core staff and
services, when it experiences a decrease of more than 5 percent in its
total number of inpatient discharges due to circumstances beyond its
control. These adjustments are known as ``volume decrease
adjustments.''
The regulations governing volume decrease adjustments are found at
Sec. 412.92(e) for SCHs and Sec. 412.108(d) for MDHs. As noted
earlier, the MDH program is set to expire as of October 1, 2017. As
such, we are not proposing specific amendments to the regulations at
Sec. 412.108(d) for MDHs. However, we are proposing that if the MDH
program ends up being extended by law, similar to how it was extended
by section 205 of the MACRA (Pub. L. 114-10) and prior legislation, the
following proposed changes to the volume decrease adjustment
methodology and the proposed amendment to Sec. 412.92(e)(3) for SCHs
would also be made to the parallel requirements for MDHs under Sec.
412.108(d)(3).
To qualify for a volume decrease adjustment, the SCH must: (a)
Submit documentation demonstrating the size of the decrease in
discharges and the resulting effect on per discharge costs; and (b)
show that the decrease is due to circumstances beyond the hospital's
control. If an SCH demonstrates to the MAC's satisfaction that it has
suffered a qualifying decrease in total inpatient discharges, the MAC
determines the appropriate amount, if any, due to the SCH as an
adjustment.
As we have noted in the PRM and in adjudications rendered by the
PRRB and the CMS Administrator, under the current methodology, the MAC
determines a volume decrease adjustment amount not to exceed the cap
calculated as the difference between the lesser of (1) the hospital's
current year's Medicare inpatient operating costs or (2) its prior
year's Medicare inpatient operating costs multiplied by the appropriate
IPPS update factor and the hospital's total MS-DRG revenue for
inpatient operating costs (including outlier payments, DSH payments,
and IME payments). In determining the volume decrease adjustment
amount, the MAC considers the individual hospital's needs and
circumstances, including the reasonable cost of maintaining necessary
core staff and services in view of minimum staffing requirements
imposed by State agencies; the hospital's fixed costs (including
whether any semi-fixed costs are to be considered fixed) other than
those costs paid on a reasonable cost basis; and the length of time the
hospital has experienced a decrease in utilization.
We have set forth interpretive guidance regarding volume decrease
adjustments in the preambles to various rules and in Section 2810.1 of
the Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part 1 (PRM-1). The adjustment also
has been the subject of a series of adjudications, rendered by the PRRB
and the CMS Administrator. For example, we refer readers to Greenwood
County Hospital Eureka, Kansas, v. Blue Cross Blue Shield Association/
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas, 2006 WL 3050893 (PRRB, August 29,
2006); Unity Healthcare Muscatine, Iowa v. Blue Cross Blue Shield
Association/Wisconsin Physicians Service, 2014 WL 5450066 (CMS
Administrator September 4, 2014); Lakes Regional Healthcare Spirit
Lake, Iowa v. Blue Cross Blue Shield Association/Wisconsin Physicians
Service, 2014 WL 5450078 (CMS Administrator September 4, 2014); and
Fairbanks Memorial Hospital v. Wisconsin Physician Services/BlueCross
BlueShield Association, 2015 WL 5852432 (CMS Administrator, August 5,
2015). In those adjudications, the PRRB and the CMS Administrator have
recognized that: (1) The volume decrease adjustment is intended to
compensate qualifying SCHs for their fixed costs only, and that
variable costs are to be excluded from the adjustment; and (2) an SCH's
volume decrease adjustment should be reduced to reflect the
compensation of fixed costs that has already been made through MS-DRG
payments.
However, some hospitals have recently expressed concerns regarding
the exact calculations that the MACs use when determining the volume
decrease
[[Page 19934]]
adjustment. The issue also has been addressed in some recent decisions
of the PRRB. Under the current calculation methodology, the MACs
calculate the volume decrease adjustment by subtracting the hospital's
total MS-DRG revenue for inpatient operating costs, including outlier
payments and IME and DSH payments in the cost reporting period in which
the volume decrease occurred, from fixed costs in the cost reporting
period in which the volume decrease occurred, minus any adjustment for
excess staff. If the result of that calculation is greater than zero
and less than the cap, the hospital receives that amount in a lump-sum
payment. If the result of that calculation is zero or less than zero,
the hospital does not receive a volume decrease payment adjustment.
Under the IPPS, MS-DRG payments are not based on an individual
hospital's actual costs in a given cost reporting period. However, the
main issue raised by the PRRB and individual hospitals is that, under
the current calculation methodology, if the hospital's total MS-DRG
revenue for treating Medicare beneficiaries for which it incurs
inpatient operating costs (consisting of fixed, semi-fixed, and
variable costs) exceeds the hospital's fixed costs, the calculation by
the MACs results in no volume decrease adjustment for the hospital. In
some recent decisions, the PRRB has indicated that it believes it would
be more appropriate for the MACs to adjust the hospital's total MS-DRG
revenue from Medicare by looking at the ratio of a hospital's fixed
costs to its total costs (as determined by the MAC) and applying that
ratio as a proxy for the share of the hospital's MS-DRG payments that
it assumes are attributable (or allocable) to fixed costs, and then
comparing that estimate of the fixed portion of MS-DRG payments to the
hospital's fixed costs. In this way, the calculation would compare
estimated Medicare revenue for fixed costs to the hospital's fixed
costs when determining the volume decrease adjustment.
We continue to believe that our current approach in calculating
volume decrease adjustments is reasonable and consistent with the
statute. Nevertheless, we understand why hospitals might take the view
that CMS should make an effort, in some way, to ascertain whether a
portion of MS-DRG payments can be allocated or attributed to fixed
costs in order to fulfill the statutory mandate to ``fully compensate''
a qualifying SCH for its fixed costs.
Accordingly, after considering these views, we are proposing to
prospectively change how the MACs calculate the volume decrease
adjustments and require that the MACs compare estimated Medicare
revenue for fixed costs to the hospital's fixed costs to remove any
conceivable possibility that a hospital that qualifies for the volume
decrease adjustment could ever be less than fully compensated for fixed
costs as a result of the application of the adjustment. We are
proposing that, in order to estimate the fixed portion of the Medicare
revenue, the MACs would apply the ratio of the hospital's fixed costs
to total costs in the cost reporting period when it experienced the
volume decrease to the hospital's total Medicare revenue in that same
cost reporting period. We are proposing to revise the regulations at 42
CFR 412.92(e)(3) to reflect our proposed change in the MAC's
calculation of the volume decrease adjustment that would apply
prospectively to cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2017, and to reflect that the language requiring that the volume
decrease adjustment amount not exceed the difference between the
hospital's Medicare inpatient operating costs and the hospital's total
DRG revenue for inpatient operating costs would only apply to cost
reporting periods beginning before October 1, 2017, but not to
subsequent cost reporting periods. Under the proposed methodology, if a
hospital's total MS-DRG payment is less than its total Medicare
inpatient operating costs, the sum of any resulting volume decrease
adjustment payment and its MS-DRG payment would never exceed its total
Medicare inpatient operating costs due to the fact that the fixed cost
percentage is applied to the MS-DRG payment in calculating the volume
decrease adjustment amount. By taking the ratio derived from the subset
of fixed costs to total costs and applying that same ratio to the MS-
DRG payment, we ensure that the sum of a hospital's IPPS payment and
its volume decrease adjustment payment would never exceed its total
Medicare inpatient operating costs, thus negating the need for a cap
calculation. Thus, the proposed methodology renders the current volume
decrease adjustment cap calculation obsolete. Conversely, if a
hospital's total MS-DRG payment is greater than its total Medicare
inpatient operating costs, calculating a volume decrease adjustment
using the proposed methodology would result in a negative payment
amount, which would yield a volume decrease adjustment payment of zero.
Finally, if a hospital's total MS-DRG payment is equal to its total
Medicare inpatient operating costs, calculating a volume decrease
adjustment using the proposed methodology would also yield a volume
decrease adjustment payment of zero. Furthermore, we believe that
because a hospital could not foresee a decrease in its volume from one
year to the next and would therefore not plan for a volume decrease
adjustment, the volume decrease adjustment payment should therefore not
be limited to a cap that is based on the previous year's costs. For
these reasons, we are proposing to remove the cap calculation from the
volume decrease adjustment calculation methodology in future periods.
We are proposing that these proposed changes in the MAC's
calculation of the volume decrease adjustment would be prospective,
effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2017. If these proposed changes are adopted, we also intend to update
Section 2810.1 of the PRM-1 to reflect the changes in the calculation
of the volume decrease adjustment by the MAC. For volume decrease
adjustments for earlier cost reporting periods, the current calculation
methodology will continue. In addition, we are not proposing to change
any part of the methodology, criteria, rules, or presumptions we
consider and apply in determining whether to classify a given cost as
fixed, semi-fixed, or variable for purposes of the volume decrease
adjustment.
The following example illustrates the calculation of the volume
decrease adjustment by the MAC under our proposed change.
Example: In its cost reporting period beginning October 1, 2017,
Hospital A has total Medicare inpatient operating costs equaling
$1,600,000 and total MS-DRG revenue (including outlier payments, IME
and DSH) of $1,400,000. The MAC determines that the hospital qualifies
for a volume decrease adjustment for this cost reporting period. The
MAC classifies $1,360,000 of Hospital A's costs as fixed and $240,000
as variable. Hospital A's fixed cost ratio is therefore .85 =
$1,360,000/$1,600,000. The MAC applies this ratio to the total MS-DRG
revenue of $1,400,000 to estimate the hospital's fixed MS-DRG revenue
to be $1,190,000. The volume decrease adjustment payment is then
calculated by comparing the fixed MS-DRG revenue of $1,190,000 to the
fixed costs of $1,360,000, resulting in a volume decrease adjustment
payment of $170,000 ($1,360,000 minus $1,190,000).
[[Page 19935]]
Under the current methodology used by the MACs, Hospital A would
receive no volume decrease adjustment payment because its total MS-DRG
revenue from Medicare of $1,400,000 exceeded the hospital's fixed costs
of $1,360,000. Furthermore, under the current methodology, but not
under our proposed methodology, it is possible that a hospital would
still receive no volume decrease adjustment payment even if its fixed
costs exceeded its total MS-DRG revenue if those fixed costs exceeded
the previous year's costs updated for inflation.
We also are proposing changes to an adjustment that might be made
to a hospital's staffing costs in calculating the volume decrease
adjustment. The statute and regulations and the PRM imply, and we have
expressly indicated in prior rulemaking, most recently in the FY 2006
rulemaking, our belief that not all staff costs can necessarily be
considered fixed costs (71 FR 48056 through 48060). Therefore, we
currently require a hospital, when applying for a volume decrease
adjustment, to demonstrate that it appropriately adjusted the number of
staff in inpatient areas of the hospital based on the decrease in the
number of inpatient days but not beyond minimum levels as required by
State or local laws. If a hospital does not appropriately adjust its
number of staff, the cost of maintaining those staff members is
deducted from the total volume decrease adjustment payment. In
reviewing the volume decrease adjustment calculation, we have also
weighed the administrative burden on the hospital of making this
demonstration to CMS, as compared to an assumption that it is likely
that a hospital would, in its normal course of business, adjust its
staffing levels as revenue declines. In the absence of evidence to
contrary, we believe that a hospital would adjust its staffing levels
as revenue declines rather than maintain those staffing levels for the
sole purpose of potentially having those staffing costs eventually
reflected in a Medicare volume decrease adjustment payment that the
hospital may or may not qualify for when it files its cost report.
Therefore, we are proposing to modify the volume decrease adjustment
process to no longer require that a hospital explicitly demonstrate
that it appropriately adjusted the number of staff in inpatient areas
of the hospital based on the decrease in the number of inpatient days
and to no longer require the MAC to adjust the volume decrease
adjustment payment amount for excess staffing. We are proposing that
these changes would be effective for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2017.
In summary, we are proposing to prospectively require that the MACs
compare Medicare revenue allocable to fixed costs from the cost
reporting period when the hospital experienced the volume decrease to
the hospital's fixed costs from that same cost reporting period when
calculating a volume decrease adjustment and that the cap will no
longer be applied to the volume decrease adjustment calculation
methodology. We are proposing to revise the regulations at Sec.
412.92(e)(3) to reflect our proposed changes. We also are proposing to
prospectively modify the volume decrease adjustment process to no
longer require that a hospital explicitly demonstrate that it
appropriately adjusted the number of staff in inpatient areas of the
hospital based on the decrease in the number of inpatient days and to
no longer require the MAC to adjust the volume decrease adjustment
payment amount for excess staffing. We are proposing that these changes
be effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2017. As we noted earlier, we are proposing that if the MDH program
ends up being extended by law, similar to how it was extended by
section 205 of the MACRA (Pub. L. 114-10) and prior legislation, these
proposed changes to the volume decrease adjustment methodology and the
proposed amendment to Sec. 412.92(e)(3) for SCHs would also be made to
the parallel requirements for MDHs under Sec. 412.108(d)(3).
D. Rural Referral Centers (RRCs): Proposed Annual Updates to Case-Mix
Index and Discharge Criteria (Sec. 412.98)
Under the authority of section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, the
regulations at Sec. 412.96 set forth the criteria that a hospital must
meet in order to qualify under the IPPS as a rural referral center
(RRC). RRCs receive some special treatment under both the DSH payment
adjustment and the criteria for geographic reclassification.
Section 402 of Public Law 108-173 raised the DSH payment adjustment
for RRCs such that they are not subject to the 12-percent cap on DSH
payments that is applicable to other rural hospitals. RRCs also are not
subject to the proximity criteria when applying for geographic
reclassification. In addition, they do not have to meet the requirement
that a hospital's average hourly wage must exceed, by a certain
percentage, the average hourly wage of the labor market area in which
the hospital is located.
Section 4202(b) of Public Law 105-33 states, in part, that any
hospital classified as an RRC by the Secretary for FY 1991 shall be
classified as such an RRC for FY 1998 and each subsequent fiscal year.
In the August 29, 1997 IPPS final rule with comment period (62 FR
45999), we reinstated RRC status for all hospitals that lost that
status due to triennial review or MGCRB reclassification. However, we
did not reinstate the status of hospitals that lost RRC status because
they were now urban for all purposes because of the OMB designation of
their geographic area as urban. Subsequently, in the August 1, 2000
IPPS final rule (65 FR 47089), we indicated that we were revisiting
that decision. Specifically, we stated that we would permit hospitals
that previously qualified as an RRC and lost their status due to OMB
redesignation of the county in which they are located from rural to
urban, to be reinstated as an RRC. Otherwise, a hospital seeking RRC
status must satisfy all of the other applicable criteria. We use the
definitions of ``urban'' and ``rural'' specified in subpart D of 42 CFR
part 412. One of the criteria under which a hospital may qualify as an
RRC is to have 275 or more beds available for use (Sec.
412.96(b)(1)(ii)). A rural hospital that does not meet the bed size
requirement can qualify as an RRC if the hospital meets two mandatory
prerequisites (a minimum case-mix index (CMI) and a minimum number of
discharges), and at least one of three optional criteria (relating to
specialty composition of medical staff, source of inpatients, or
referral volume). (We refer readers to Sec. 412.96(c)(1) through
(c)(5) and the September 30, 1988 Federal Register (53 FR 38513) for
additional discussion.) With respect to the two mandatory
prerequisites, a hospital may be classified as an RRC if--
The hospital's CMI is at least equal to the lower of the
median CMI for urban hospitals in its census region, excluding
hospitals with approved teaching programs, or the median CMI for all
urban hospitals nationally; and
The hospital's number of discharges is at least 5,000 per
year, or, if fewer, the median number of discharges for urban hospitals
in the census region in which the hospital is located. The number of
discharges criterion for an osteopathic hospital is at least 3,000
discharges per year, as specified in section 1886(d)(5)(C)(i) of the
Act.
1. Case-Mix Index (CMI)
Section 412.96(c)(1) provides that CMS establish updated national
and regional CMI values in each year's annual notice of prospective
payment
[[Page 19936]]
rates for purposes of determining RRC status. The methodology we used
to determine the national and regional CMI values is set forth in the
regulations at Sec. 412.96(c)(1)(ii). The proposed national median CMI
value for FY 2018 is based on the CMI values of all urban hospitals
nationwide, and the proposed regional median CMI values for FY 2018 are
based on the CMI values of all urban hospitals within each census
region, excluding those hospitals with approved teaching programs (that
is, those hospitals that train residents in an approved GME program as
provided in Sec. 413.75). These proposed values are based on
discharges occurring during FY 2016 (October 1, 2015 through September
30, 2016), and include bills posted to CMS' records through December
2016.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing that, in addition to
meeting other criteria, if rural hospitals with fewer than 275 beds are
to qualify for initial RRC status for cost reporting periods beginning
on or after October 1, 2017, they must have a CMI value for FY 2016
that is at least--
1.6635 (national--all urban); or
The median CMI value (not transfer-adjusted) for urban
hospitals (excluding hospitals with approved teaching programs as
identified in Sec. 413.75) calculated by CMS for the census region in
which the hospital is located.
The proposed median CMI values by region are set forth in the
following table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Case-mix index
Region value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. New England (CT, ME, MA, NH, RI, VT)................. 1.4186
2. Middle Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY)......................... 1.5126
3. South Atlantic (DE, DC, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV).. 1.5393
4. East North Central (IL, IN, MI, OH, WI).............. 1.5921
5. East South Central (AL, KY, MS, TN).................. 1.5179
6. West North Central (IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD)...... 1.6346
7. West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX).................. 1.6949
8. Mountain (AZ, CO, ID, MT, NV, NM, UT, WY)............ 1.7614
9. Pacific (AK, CA, HI, OR, WA)......................... 1.6466
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We intend to update these proposed CMI values in the FY 2018 final
rule to reflect the updated FY 2016 MedPAR file, which will contain
data from additional bills received through March 2017.
A hospital seeking to qualify as an RRC should obtain its hospital-
specific CMI value (not transfer-adjusted) from its MAC. Data are
available on the Provider Statistical and Reimbursement (PS&R) System.
In keeping with our policy on discharges, the CMI values are computed
based on all Medicare patient discharges subject to the IPPS MS-DRG-
based payment.
2. Discharges
Section 412.96(c)(2)(i) provides that CMS set forth the national
and regional numbers of discharges criteria in each year's annual
notice of prospective payment rates for purposes of determining RRC
status. As specified in section 1886(d)(5)(C)(ii) of the Act, the
national standard is set at 5,000 discharges. In this proposed rule,
for FY 2018, we are proposing to update the regional standards based on
discharges for urban hospitals' cost reporting periods that began
during FY 2015 (that is, October 1, 2014 through September 30, 2015),
which are the latest cost report data available at the time this
proposed rule was developed. Therefore, we are proposing that, in
addition to meeting other criteria, a hospital, if it is to qualify for
initial RRC status for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2017, must have, as the number of discharges for its cost
reporting period that began during FY 2015, at least--
5,000 (3,000 for an osteopathic hospital); or
The median number of discharges for urban hospitals in the
census region in which the hospital is located as reflected in the
following table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Region discharges
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. New England (CT, ME, MA, NH, RI, VT)................. 7,991
2. Middle Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY)......................... 10,268
3. South Atlantic (DE, DC, FL, GA, MD, NC, SC, VA, WV).. 10,503
4. East North Central (IL, IN, MI, OH, WI).............. 8,202
5. East South Central (AL, KY, MS, TN).................. 8,697
6. West North Central (IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD)...... 7,532
7. West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX).................. 5,189
8. Mountain (AZ, CO, ID, MT, NV, NM, UT, WY)............ 8,887
9. Pacific (AK, CA, HI, OR, WA)......................... 8,856
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We intend to update these numbers in the FY 2018 final rule based
on the latest available cost report data.
We note that the median number of discharges for hospitals in each
census region is greater than the national standard of 5,000
discharges. Therefore, under this proposed rule, 5,000 discharges is
the minimum criterion for all hospitals, except for osteopathic
hospitals for which the minimum criterion is 3,000 discharges.
E. Proposed Payment Adjustment for Low-Volume Hospitals (Sec. 412.101)
1. Expiration of Temporary Changes to Low-Volume Hospital Payment
Policy
Under section 1886(d)(12) of the Act, as amended, most recently by
section 204 of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015
(MACRA), Public Law 114-10, the temporary changes in the low-volume
hospital payment policy originally provided by the Affordable Care Act
and extended through subsequent legislation are effective through FY
2017. Beginning with FY 2018, the preexisting low-volume hospital
payment adjustment and qualifying criteria, as implemented
[[Page 19937]]
in FY 2005 and discussed later in this section, will resume. We discuss
the proposed payment policies for FY 2018 in section V.E.3. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
2. Background
Section 1886(d)(12) of the Act, as added by section 406(a) of
Public Law 108-173, provides for a payment adjustment to account for
the higher costs per discharge for low-volume hospitals under the IPPS,
effective beginning FY 2005. Sections 3125 and 10314 of the Affordable
Care Act amended section 1886(d)(12) of the Act by modifying the
definition of a low-volume hospital and the methodology for calculating
the payment adjustment for low-volume hospitals, effective only for
discharges occurring during FYs 2011 and 2012. Specifically, the
provisions of the Affordable Care Act amended the qualifying criteria
for low-volume hospitals to specify, for FYs 2011 and 2012, that a
hospital qualifies as a low-volume hospital if it is more than 15 road
miles from another subsection (d) hospital and has less than 1,600
discharges of individuals entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits under
Medicare Part A during the fiscal year. In addition, the statute, as
amended by the Affordable Care Act, provides that the low-volume
hospital payment adjustment (that is, the percentage increase) is
determined using a continuous linear sliding scale ranging from 25
percent for low-volume hospitals with 200 or fewer discharges of
individuals entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits under Medicare Part
A in the fiscal year to 0 percent for low-volume hospitals with greater
than 1,600 discharges of such individuals in the fiscal year. The
temporary changes to the low-volume hospital qualifying criteria and
the payment adjustment originally provided by the Affordable Care Act
were extended by subsequent legislation, most recently through FY 2017
by section 204 of the MACRA. (We refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 56941 through 59943) for a detailed summary of
the applicable legislation.) Under current law, beginning with FY 2018,
the preexisting low-volume hospital qualifying criteria and payment
adjustment, as implemented in FY 2005 and described in this section,
will resume. The regulations implementing the low-volume hospital
adjustment provided by section 1886(d)(12) of the Act are located at 42
CFR 412.101.
The additional payment adjustment to a low-volume hospital provided
for under section 1886(d)(12) of the Act is in addition to any payment
calculated under this section. Therefore, the additional payment
adjustment is based on the per discharge amount paid to the qualifying
hospital under section 1886 of the Act. In other words, the low-volume
add-on payment amount is based on total per discharge payments made
under section 1886 of the Act, including capital, DSH, IME, and
outliers. For hospitals paid based on the hospital-specific rate, the
low-volume add-on payment amount is based on either the Federal rate or
the hospital-specific rate, whichever results in a greater operating
IPPS payment.
Section 1886(d)(12)(C)(i) of the Act defines a low-volume hospital,
for fiscal years other than FYs 2011 through 2017, as a subsection (d)
hospital (as defined in paragraph (1)(B)) that the Secretary determines
is located more than 25 road miles from another subsection (d) hospital
and that has less than 800 discharges during the fiscal year. Section
1886(d)(12)(C)(ii) of the Act further stipulates that the term
``discharge'' means an inpatient acute care discharge of an individual,
regardless of whether the individual is entitled to benefits under
Medicare Part A. Therefore, for fiscal years other than FYs 2011
through 2017, the term ``discharge'' refers to total discharges,
regardless of payer (that is, not only Medicare discharges).
Furthermore, section 1886(d)(12)(B) of the Act requires, for discharges
occurring in FYs 2005 through 2010 and FY 2018 and subsequent years,
that the Secretary determine an applicable percentage increase for
these low-volume hospitals based on the ``empirical relationship''
between the standardized cost-per-case for such hospitals and the total
number of discharges of such hospitals and the amount of the additional
incremental costs (if any) that are associated with such number of
discharges. The statute thus mandates that the Secretary develop an
empirically justifiable adjustment based on the relationship between
costs and discharges for these low-volume hospitals. Section
1886(d)(12)(B)(iii) of the Act limits the applicable percentage
increase adjustment to no more than 25 percent.
Based on an analysis we conducted for the FY 2005 IPPS final rule
(69 FR 49099 through 49102), a 25-percent low-volume adjustment to all
qualifying hospitals with less than 200 discharges was found to be most
consistent with the statutory requirement to provide relief to low-
volume hospitals where there is empirical evidence that higher
incremental costs are associated with low numbers of total discharges.
In the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47432 through 47434), we stated
that multivariate analyses supported the existing low-volume adjustment
implemented in FY 2005.
3. Proposed Payment Adjustment for FY 2018 and Subsequent Fiscal Years
In accordance with section 1886(d)(12) of the Act, beginning with
FY 2018, the low-volume hospital definition and payment adjustment
methodology will revert back to the statutory requirements that were in
effect prior to the amendments made by the Affordable Care Act and
extended by subsequent legislation. Therefore, effective for FY 2018
and subsequent years, in order to qualify as a low-volume hospital, a
subsection (d) hospital must be more than 25 road miles from another
subsection (d) hospital and have less than 200 discharges (that is,
less than 200 discharges total, including both Medicare and non-
Medicare discharges) during the fiscal year. As discussed earlier, the
statute specifies that a low-volume hospital must have less than 800
discharges during the fiscal year. However, as required by section
1886(d)(12)(B)(i) of the Act and as discussed earlier, the Secretary
has developed an empirically justifiable payment adjustment based on
the relationship, for IPPS hospitals with less than 800 discharges,
between the additional incremental costs (if any) that are associated
with a particular number of discharges. Based on an analysis we
conducted for the FY 2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49099 through 49102),
a 25-percent low-volume adjustment to all qualifying hospitals with
less than 200 discharges was found to be most consistent with the
statutory requirement to provide relief for low-volume hospitals where
there is empirical evidence that higher incremental costs are
associated with low numbers of total discharges. (Under the policy we
established in that same final rule, hospitals with between 200 and 799
discharges do not receive a low-volume hospital adjustment.)
As described earlier, for FYs 2005 through 2010 and FY 2018 and
subsequent years, the discharge determination is made based on the
hospital's number of total discharges, that is, Medicare and non-
Medicare discharges. The hospital's most recently submitted cost report
is used to determine if the hospital meets the discharge criterion to
receive the low-volume payment adjustment in the current year (Sec.
412.101(b)(2)(i)). We use cost report data to determine if a hospital
meets the discharge criterion because this is the best available data
source that includes information on
[[Page 19938]]
both Medicare and non-Medicare discharges. We note that, for FYs 2011
through 2017, we used the most recently available MedPAR data to
determine the hospital's Medicare discharges because only Medicare
discharges were used to determine if a hospital met the discharge
criterion for those years.
For FY 2018 and for subsequent fiscal years, in addition to a
discharge criterion, the eligibility for the low-volume payment
adjustment is also dependent upon the hospital meeting the mileage
criterion specified at Sec. 412.101(b)(2)(i). Specifically, to meet
the mileage criterion to qualify for the low-volume payment adjustment
for FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal years, a hospital must be located
more than 25 road miles from the nearest subsection (d) hospital. We
define, at Sec. 412.101(a), the term ``road miles'' to mean ``miles''
as defined at Sec. 412.92(c)(1) (75 FR 50238 through 50275 and 50414).
In the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50238 through 50275
and 50414) and subsequent rulemaking, most recently in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56942 through 56943), we discussed the
process for requesting and obtaining the low-volume hospital payment
adjustment. In order to qualify for the low-volume hospital payment
adjustment, a hospital must provide to its MAC sufficient evidence to
document that it meets the discharge and distance requirements. The MAC
will determine, based on the most recent data available, if the
hospital qualifies as a low-volume hospital, so that the hospital will
know in advance whether or not it will receive a payment adjustment.
The MAC and CMS may review available data, in addition to the data the
hospital submits with its request for low-volume hospital status, in
order to determine whether or not the hospital meets the qualifying
criteria.
In order to receive a low-volume hospital payment adjustment under
Sec. 412.101, a hospital must notify and provide documentation to its
MAC that it meets the mileage criterion. The use of a Web-based mapping
tool as part of documenting that the hospital meets the mileage
criterion for low-volume hospitals is acceptable. The MAC will
determine if the information submitted by the hospital, such as the
name and street address of the nearest hospitals, location on a map,
and distance (in road miles, as defined in the regulations at Sec.
412.101(a)) from the hospital requesting low-volume hospital status, is
sufficient to document that it meets the mileage criterion. If not, the
MAC will follow up with the hospital to obtain additional necessary
information to determine whether or not the hospital meets the low-
volume mileage criterion. In addition, the MAC will refer to the
hospital's most recently submitted cost report to determine whether or
not the hospital meets the discharge criterion. A hospital should refer
to its most recently submitted cost report for total discharges
(Medicare and non-Medicare) in order to decide whether or not to apply
for low-volume hospital status for a particular fiscal year. A hospital
must continue to meet the qualifying criteria at Sec. 412.101(b)(2)(i)
as a low-volume hospital (that is, the discharge criterion and the
mileage criterion) in order to receive the payment adjustment in that
year; that is, low-volume hospital status is not based on a ``one-
time'' qualification (75 FR 50238 through 50275).
In order to be a low-volume hospital in FY 2018 and subsequent
fiscal years, in accordance with our previously established procedure,
a hospital must make a written request for low-volume hospital status
that is received by its MAC by September 1 immediately preceding the
start of the Federal fiscal year for which the hospital is applying for
low-volume hospital status in order for the 25-percent, low-volume,
add-on payment adjustment to be applied to payments for its discharges
for the fiscal year beginning on or after October 1 immediately
following the request (that is, the start of the Federal fiscal year).
For a hospital whose request for low-volume hospital status is received
after September 1, if the MAC determines the hospital meets the
criteria to qualify as a low-volume hospital, the MAC will apply the
25-percent, low-volume, add-on payment adjustment to determine payment
for the hospital's discharges for the fiscal year, effective
prospectively within 30 days of the date of the MAC's low-volume status
determination.
Specifically, for FY 2018, a hospital must make a written request
for low-volume hospital status that is received by its MAC no later
than September 1, 2017, in order for the 25-percent, low-volume, add-on
payment adjustment to be applied to payments for its discharges
beginning on or after October 1, 2017 (through September 30, 2018).
Under this procedure, a hospital that qualified for the low-volume
hospital payment adjustment for FY 2017 may continue to receive a low-
volume hospital payment adjustment for FY 2018 without reapplying if it
meets both the discharge criterion and the mileage criterion applicable
for FY 2018. As in previous years, we are proposing that such a
hospital must send written verification that is received by its MAC no
later than September 1, 2017, stating that it meets the mileage
criterion applicable for FY 2018. For FY 2018, we are further proposing
that this written verification must also state, based upon the most
recently submitted cost report, that the hospital meets the discharge
criterion applicable for FY 2018 (that is, less than 200 discharges
total, including both Medicare and non-Medicare discharges). If a
hospital's request for low-volume hospital status for FY 2018 is
received after September 1, 2017, and if the MAC determines the
hospital meets the criteria to qualify as a low-volume hospital, the
MAC will apply the 25-percent, low-volume, add-on payment adjustment to
determine the payment for the hospital's FY 2018 discharges, effective
prospectively within 30 days of the date of the MAC's low-volume
hospital status determination. We note that this process mirrors our
established application process but is updated to ensure that providers
currently receiving the low-volume hospital payment adjustment verify
that they meet both the mileage criterion and the discharge criterion
applicable for FY 2018 to continue receiving the adjustment for FY
2018. For additional information on our established application process
for the low-volume hospital payment adjustment, we refer readers to the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56942 through 56943).
In the FY 2016 IPPS interim final rule with comment period (80 FR
49594 through 49597 and 49767), we made conforming changes to the
regulations at 42 CFR 412.101 to reflect the extension of the changes
to the qualifying criteria and the payment adjustment methodology for
low-volume hospitals through FY 2017 in accordance with section 204 of
the MACRA. Under these revisions, beginning with FY 2018, consistent
with current law, the low-volume hospital qualifying criteria and
payment adjustment methodology will return to the criteria and
methodology that were in effect prior to the amendments made by the
Affordable Care Act (that is, the low-volume hospital payment policy in
effect for FYs 2005 through 2010). Therefore, no further revisions to
the policy or to the regulations at Sec. 412.101 are required to
conform them to the statutory requirement that the low-volume hospital
policy in effect prior to the Affordable Care Act will again be in
effect for FY 2018 and subsequent years.
For this reason, we are not proposing specific amendments to the
regulations at Sec. 412.101 to reflect the expiration of the temporary
changes to the low-volume hospital payment adjustment policy originally
provided for by the
[[Page 19939]]
Affordable Care Act. However, we are proposing that if these temporary
changes to the low-volume hospital payment policy were to be extended
by law, similar to extensions provided through FY 2013, by the American
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA), Public Law 112-240; through March
31, 2014, by the Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013, Public Law 113-
167; through March 31, 2015, by the Protecting Access to Medicare Act
of 2014 (PAMA), Public Law 113-93; and most recently through FY 2017,
by the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA),
Public Law 114-10, we would make conforming changes to the regulations
at Sec. 412.101(b) through (d), as appropriate, to reflect any such
extension.
These conforming changes would only be made if the temporary
changes to the low-volume hospital payment adjustment policy were to be
extended by statute beyond the current expiration date of September 30,
2017. If these temporary changes were to be extended by statute, for FY
2018, consistent with our historical policy and our implementation of
the prior extensions, qualifying low-volume hospitals and their payment
adjustment would be determined using the most recently available
Medicare discharge data available at the time of the final rule, which
we expect would be from the March 2017 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR
file. Consistent with past practice, if these temporary changes were to
be extended for FY 2018 before the development of the final rule, we
would list the subsection (d) hospitals with fewer than 1,600 Medicare
discharges based on the claims data from the March 2017 update of the
FY 2016 MedPAR file and their potential low-volume hospital payment
adjustment for FY 2018 in Table 14 listed in the Addendum of the final
rule. In such an event, hospitals would still submit requests or
verification to the MAC, as outlined earlier, but updated as needed to
reflect the applicable discharge and mileage criteria in accordance
with any such extension for FY 2018.
4. Proposed Parallel Low-Volume Hospital Payment Adjustment Regarding
Hospitals Operated by the Indian Health Services (IHS) or a Tribe
As previously stated, section 1886(d)(12)(C) of the Act and our
regulations at 42 CFR 412.101(b)(2) require that, in order to qualify
for the low-volume hospital payment adjustment, a hospital must be
located more than a specified number of miles from the nearest
subsection (d) hospital (referred to as the mileage criterion). Section
1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act defines a ``subsection (d) hospital'' as a
hospital located in one of the 50 States or District of Columbia, other
than the specified excluded types of hospitals. As stated in prior
rulemaking (for example, 79 FR 50153), CMS considers IHS and Tribal
hospitals to be subsection (d) hospitals. However, given the unique
nature of IHS and Tribal hospitals and the populations they serve, as
discussed below, we believe it would be appropriate to provide
additional flexibility in determining eligibility for the low-volume
hospital payment adjustment for IHS and non-IHS hospitals and Tribal
hospitals that are located less than the specified mileage from one
another. Specifically, we are proposing that, for an IHS or Tribal
hospital, only its proximity to other IHS or Tribal hospitals would be
used to determine if the mileage criterion is met. Similarly, for a
non-IHS hospital, only its proximity to other non-IHS hospitals would
be used to determine if the mileage criterion is met.
Except for emergencies and a few other limited special cases, those
individuals who are not members of a Federally recognized Tribe are not
eligible for treatment at IHS or Tribal hospitals. Therefore, such a
hospital is not a valid option for the general Medicare population,
including local residents who are not members of a Federally recognized
Tribe or not otherwise eligible for IHS services. Therefore, we believe
it would be appropriate to not consider IHS and Tribal hospitals when
evaluating whether a non-IHS hospital meets the mileage criterion.
Likewise, we believe it would be appropriate to not consider non-
IHS hospitals when evaluating whether an IHS or Tribal hospital meet
the mileage criterion. The principal mission of the IHS is the
provision of health care to American Indians and Alaska Natives
throughout the United States. In carrying out that mission, IHS
operates under two primary authorizing statutes. The first statute, the
Snyder Act, authorizes IHS to expend such moneys as Congress may
determine from time to time appropriate for the conservation of the
health of American Indians or Alaska Natives. We refer readers to 25
U.S.C. 13 (providing that the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) will
expend funds as appropriated for, among other things, the conservation
of health of American Indians and Alaska Natives); and 42 U.S.C.
2001(a) (transferring the responsibility for American Indian and Alaska
Native health care from BIA to HHS). The second statute, the Indian
Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA), established IHS as an agency
within the Public Health Service of HHS and provides authority for
numerous programs to address particular health initiatives for American
Indians and Alaska Natives, such as alcohol and substance abuse and
diabetes (25 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.).
IHS and Tribal hospitals are charged with addressing the health of
American Indians and Alaska Natives and are uniquely situated to
provide services to this population. For this reason, we believe it
would be appropriate to not consider the non-IHS hospitals when
evaluating whether an IHS or Tribal hospital meets the mileage
criterion.
Because IHS and Tribal hospitals are subsection (d) hospitals, we
are proposing to use our authority under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of
the Act to provide an adjustment equal to the applicable low-volume
adjustment provided for under section 1886(d)(12) of the Act for an IHS
or Tribal hospital whose sole disqualifier for the low-volume hospital
adjustment is its proximity to a non-IHS hospital, and for a non-IHS
hospital whose sole disqualifier is its proximity to an IHS or Tribal
hospital. Such an adjustment would provide that, practically speaking,
an IHS or Tribal hospital would be able to receive a low-volume
hospital adjustment based on its distance to the nearest IHS or Tribal
hospital, and a non-IHS hospital would be able to qualify to receive a
low-volume hospital adjustment based on its distance to the nearest
non-IHS hospital. We believe it is appropriate to apply this authority
here, given the unique characteristics of IHS and Tribal hospitals, as
discussed above. To implement this proposed adjustment, we are
proposing to revise 42 CFR 412.101 by adding paragraph (e) to provide
that, for discharges occurring in FY 2018 and subsequent years, only
the distance between IHS or Tribal hospitals would be considered when
assessing whether an IHS or Tribal hospital meets the mileage criterion
under Sec. 412.101(b)(2). Similarly, only the distance between non-IHS
hospitals would be considered when assessing whether a non-IHS hospital
meets the mileage criterion under Sec. 412.101(b)(2).
F. Indirect Medical Education (IME) Payment Adjustment Factor for FY
2018 (Sec. 412.105)
Under the IPPS, an additional payment amount is made to hospitals
with residents in an approved graduate medical education (GME) program
in order to reflect the higher indirect patient care costs of teaching
hospitals
[[Page 19940]]
relative to nonteaching hospitals. The payment amount is determined by
use of a statutorily specified adjustment factor. The regulations
regarding the calculation of this additional payment, known as the IME
adjustment, are located at Sec. 412.105. We refer readers to the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51680) for a full discussion of
the IME adjustment and IME adjustment factor. Section
1886(d)(5)(B)(ii)(XII) of the Act provides that, for discharges
occurring during FY 2008 and fiscal years thereafter, the IME formula
multiplier is 1.35. Accordingly, for discharges occurring during FY
2018, the formula multiplier is 1.35. We estimate that application of
this formula multiplier for the FY 2018 IME adjustment will result in
an increase in IPPS payment of 5.5 percent for every approximately 10
percent increase in the hospital's resident to bed ratio.
G. Proposed Payment Adjustment for Medicare Disproportionate Share
Hospitals (DSHs) for FY 2018 (Sec. 412.106)
1. General Discussion
Section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act provides for additional Medicare
payments to subsection (d) hospitals that serve a significantly
disproportionate number of low-income patients. The Act specifies two
methods by which a hospital may qualify for the Medicare
disproportionate share hospital (DSH) adjustment. Under the first
method, hospitals that are located in an urban area and have 100 or
more beds may receive a Medicare DSH payment adjustment if the hospital
can demonstrate that, during its cost reporting period, more than 30
percent of its net inpatient care revenues are derived from State and
local government payments for care furnished to needy patients with low
incomes. This method is commonly referred to as the ``Pickle method.''
The second method for qualifying for the DSH payment adjustment, which
is the most common, is based on a complex statutory formula under which
the DSH payment adjustment is based on the hospital's geographic
designation, the number of beds in the hospital, and the level of the
hospital's disproportionate patient percentage (DPP). A hospital's DPP
is the sum of two fractions: The ``Medicare fraction'' and the
``Medicaid fraction.'' The Medicare fraction (also known as the ``SSI
fraction'' or ``SSI ratio'') is computed by dividing the number of the
hospital's inpatient days that are furnished to patients who were
entitled to both Medicare Part A and Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
benefits by the hospital's total number of patient days furnished to
patients entitled to benefits under Medicare Part A. The Medicaid
fraction is computed by dividing the hospital's number of inpatient
days furnished to patients who, for such days, were eligible for
Medicaid, but were not entitled to benefits under Medicare Part A, by
the hospital's total number of inpatient days in the same period.
Because the DSH payment adjustment is part of the IPPS, the
statutory references to ``days'' in section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act
have been interpreted to apply only to hospital acute care inpatient
days. Regulations located at Sec. 412.106 govern the Medicare DSH
payment adjustment and specify how the DPP is calculated as well as how
beds and patient days are counted in determining the Medicare DSH
payment adjustment. Under Sec. 412.106(a)(1)(i), the number of beds
for the Medicare DSH payment adjustment is determined in accordance
with bed counting rules for the IME adjustment under Sec. 412.105(b).
Section 3133 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as
amended by section 10316 of the same Act and section 1104 of the Health
Care and Education Reconciliation Act (Pub. L. 111-152), added a
section 1886(r) to the Act that modifies the methodology for computing
the Medicare DSH payment adjustment. (For purposes of this proposed
rule, we refer to these provisions collectively as section 3133 of the
Affordable Care Act.) Beginning with discharges in FY 2014, hospitals
that qualify for Medicare DSH payments under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act receive 25 percent of the amount they previously would have
received under the statutory formula for Medicare DSH payments. This
provision applies equally to hospitals that qualify for DSH payments
under section 1886(d)(5)(F)(i)(I) of the Act and those hospitals that
qualify under the Pickle method under section 1886(d)(5)(F)(i)(II) of
the Act.
The remaining amount, equal to an estimate of 75 percent of what
otherwise would have been paid as Medicare DSH payments, reduced to
reflect changes in the percentage of individuals who are uninsured, is
available to make additional payments to each hospital that qualifies
for Medicare DSH payments and that has uncompensated care. The payments
to each hospital for a fiscal year are based on the hospital's amount
of uncompensated care for a given time period relative to the total
amount of uncompensated care for that same time period reported by all
hospitals that receive Medicare DSH payments for that fiscal year.
As provided by section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act, section
1886(r) of the Act requires that, for FY 2014 and each subsequent
fiscal year, a subsection (d) hospital that would otherwise receive DSH
payments made under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act receives two
separately calculated payments. Specifically, section 1886(r)(1) of the
Act provides that the Secretary shall pay to such subsection (d)
hospital (including a Pickle hospital) 25 percent of the amount the
hospital would have received under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act for
DSH payments, which represents the empirically justified amount for
such payment, as determined by the MedPAC in its March 2007 Report to
Congress. We refer to this payment as the ``empirically justified
Medicare DSH payment.''
In addition to this empirically justified Medicare DSH payment,
section 1886(r)(2) of the Act provides that, for FY 2014 and each
subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary shall pay to such subsection (d)
hospital an additional amount equal to the product of three factors.
The first factor is the difference between the aggregate amount of
payments that would be made to subsection (d) hospitals under section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act if subsection (r) did not apply and the
aggregate amount of payments that are made to subsection (d) hospitals
under section 1886(r)(1) of the Act for each fiscal year. Therefore,
this factor amounts to 75 percent of the payments that would otherwise
be made under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act.
The second factor is, for FYs 2014 through 2017, 1 minus the
percent change in the percent of individuals under the age of 65 who
are uninsured, determined by comparing the percent of such individuals
who were uninsured in 2013, the last year before coverage expansion
under the Affordable Care Act (as calculated by the Secretary based on
the most recent estimates available from the Director of the
Congressional Budget Office before a vote in either House on the Health
Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 that, if determined in
the affirmative, would clear such Act for enrollment), and the percent
of individuals who were uninsured in the most recent period for which
data are available (as so calculated) minus 0.1 percentage point for FY
2014, and minus 0.2 percentage point for FYs 2015 through 2017. For FYs
2014 through 2017, the baseline for the estimate of the change in
uninsurance is fixed by the
[[Page 19941]]
most recent estimate of the Congressional Budget Office before the
final vote on the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010,
which is contained in a March 20, 2010 letter from the Director of the
Congressional Budget Office to the Speaker of the House. (The March 20,
2010 letter is available for viewing on the following Web site: //www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/113xx/doc11379/amendreconprop.pdf.)
For FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal years, the second factor is 1
minus the percent change in the percent of individuals who are
uninsured, as determined by comparing the percent of individuals who
were uninsured in 2013 (as estimated by the Secretary, based on data
from the Census Bureau or other sources the Secretary determines
appropriate, and certified by the Chief Actuary of CMS), and the
percent of individuals who were uninsured in the most recent period for
which data are available (as so estimated and certified), minus 0.2
percentage point for FYs 2018 and 2019.
The third factor is a percent that, for each subsection (d)
hospital, represents the quotient of the amount of uncompensated care
for such hospital for a period selected by the Secretary (as estimated
by the Secretary, based on appropriate data), including the use of
alternative data where the Secretary determines that alternative data
are available which are a better proxy for the costs of subsection (d)
hospitals for treating the uninsured, and the aggregate amount of
uncompensated care for all subsection (d) hospitals that receive a
payment under section 1886(r) of the Act. Therefore, this third factor
represents a hospital's uncompensated care amount for a given time
period relative to the uncompensated care amount for that same time
period for all hospitals that receive Medicare DSH payments in the
applicable fiscal year, expressed as a percent.
For each hospital, the product of these three factors represents
its additional payment for uncompensated care for the applicable fiscal
year. We refer to the additional payment determined by these factors as
the ``uncompensated care payment.''
Section 1886(r) of the Act applies to FY 2014 and each subsequent
fiscal year. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50620
through 50647) and the FY 2014 IPPS interim final rule with comment
period (78 FR 61191 through 61197), we set forth our policies for
implementing the required changes to the Medicare DSH payment
methodology made by section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act for FY
2014. In those rules, we noted that, because section 1886(r) of the Act
modifies the payment required under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act,
it affects only the DSH payment under the operating IPPS. It does not
revise or replace the capital IPPS DSH payment provided under the
regulations at 42 CFR part 412, subpart M, which were established
through the exercise of the Secretary's discretion in implementing the
capital IPPS under section 1886(g)(1)(A) of the Act.
Finally, section 1886(r)(3) of the Act provides that there shall be
no administrative or judicial review under section 1869, section 1878,
or otherwise of any estimate of the Secretary for purposes of
determining the factors described in section 1886(r)(2) of the Act or
of any period selected by the Secretary for the purpose of determining
those factors. Therefore, there is no administrative or judicial review
of the estimates developed for purposes of applying the three factors
used to determine uncompensated care payments, or the periods selected
in order to develop such estimates.
2. Eligibility for Empirically Justified Medicare DSH Payments and
Uncompensated Care Payments
As indicated earlier, the payment methodology under section 3133 of
the Affordable Care Act applies to ``subsection (d) hospitals'' that
would otherwise receive a DSH payment made under section 1886(d)(5)(F)
of the Act. Therefore, hospitals must receive empirically justified
Medicare DSH payments in a fiscal year in order to receive an
additional Medicare uncompensated care payment for that year.
Specifically, section 1886(r)(2) of the Act states that, in addition to
the payment made to a subsection (d) hospital under section 1886(r)(1)
of the Act, the Secretary shall pay to such subsection (d) hospitals an
additional amount. Because section 1886(r)(1) of the Act refers to
empirically justified Medicare DSH payments, the additional payment
under section 1886(r)(2) of the Act is limited to hospitals that
receive empirically justified Medicare DSH payments in accordance with
section 1886(r)(1) of the Act for the applicable fiscal year.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50622) and the FY
2014 IPPS interim final rule with comment period (78 FR 61193), we
provided that hospitals that are not eligible to receive empirically
justified Medicare DSH payments in a fiscal year will not receive
uncompensated care payments for that year. We also specified that we
would make a determination concerning eligibility for interim
uncompensated care payments based on each hospital's estimated DSH
status for the applicable fiscal year (using the most recent data that
are available). We indicated that our final determination on the
hospital's eligibility for uncompensated care payments will be based on
the hospital's actual DSH status at cost report settlement for that
payment year.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50622) and the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50006), we specified our policies
for several specific classes of hospitals within the scope of section
1886(r) of the Act. We refer readers to those two final rules for a
detailed discussion of our policies. In summary, we specified the
following:
Subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospitals that are eligible for
DSH payments also are eligible to receive empirically justified
Medicare DSH payments and uncompensated care payments under the new
payment methodology (78 FR 50623 and 79 FR 50006).
Maryland hospitals are not eligible to receive empirically
justified Medicare DSH payments and uncompensated care payments under
the payment methodology of section 1886(r) of the Act because they are
not paid under the IPPS. As discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (79 FR 50007), effective January 1, 2014, the State of
Maryland elected to no longer have Medicare pay Maryland hospitals in
accordance with section 1814(b)(3) of the Act and entered into an
agreement with CMS that Maryland hospitals will be paid under the
Maryland All-Payer Model. However, under the Maryland All-Payer Model,
Maryland hospitals still are not paid under the IPPS. Therefore, they
remain ineligible to receive empirically justified Medicare DSH
payments or uncompensated care payments under section 1886(r) of the
Act.
SCHs that are paid under their hospital-specific rate are
not eligible for Medicare DSH payments. SCHs that are paid under the
IPPS Federal rate receive interim payments based on what we estimate
and project their DSH status to be prior to the beginning of the
Federal fiscal year (based on the best available data at that time)
subject to settlement through the cost report, and if they receive
interim empirically justified Medicare DSH payments in a fiscal year,
they also will receive interim uncompensated care payments for that
fiscal year on a per discharge basis, subject as well to settlement
through the cost report. Final eligibility determinations will be made
at the end
[[Page 19942]]
of the cost reporting period at settlement, and both interim
empirically justified Medicare DSH payments and uncompensated care
payments will be adjusted accordingly (78 FR 50624 and 79 FR 50007).
MDHs are paid based on the IPPS Federal rate or, if
higher, the IPPS Federal rate plus 75 percent of the amount by which
the Federal rate is exceeded by the updated hospital-specific rate from
certain specified base years (76 FR 51684). The IPPS Federal rate used
in the MDH payment methodology is the same IPPS Federal rate that is
used in the SCH payment methodology. Section 205 of the Medicare Access
and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA), Public Law 114-10,
enacted April 16, 2015, extended the MDH program for discharges on or
after April 1, 2015, through September 30, 2017. Because MDHs are paid
based on the IPPS Federal rate, for FY 2017, MDHs continue to be
eligible to receive empirically justified Medicare DSH payments and
uncompensated care payments if their DPP is at least 15 percent. We
apply the same process to determine MDHs' eligibility for empirically
justified Medicare DSH and uncompensated care payments, as we do for
all other IPPS hospitals, through September 30, 2017. We note that
there has not been legislation at the time of development of this
proposed rule that would extend the MDH program beyond September 30,
2017. However, if the MDH program were to be extended beyond its
current expiration date, similar to how it was extended under MACRA,
MDHs would continue to be paid based on the IPPS Federal rate or, if
higher, the IPPS Federal rate plus 75 percent of the amount by which
the Federal rate is exceeded by the updated hospital-specific rate from
certain specified base years. Accordingly, if the MDH program were to
be extended beyond its current expiration date of September 30, 2017,
we would continue to make a determination concerning eligibility for
interim uncompensated care payments based on each hospital's estimated
DSH status for the applicable fiscal year (using the most recent data
that are available). Our final determination on the hospital's
eligibility for uncompensated care payments would be based on the
hospital's actual DSH status at cost report settlement for that payment
year. In addition, as we do for all IPPS hospitals, we would calculate
a numerator for Factor 3 for all MDHs, regardless of whether they are
projected to be eligible for Medicare DSH payments during the fiscal
year, but the denominator for Factor 3 would be based on the
uncompensated care data from the hospitals that we have projected to be
eligible for Medicare DSH payments during the fiscal year.
These policies for MDHs would only apply in FY 2018 if the MDH
program is extended by statute, beyond its current expiration date of
September 30, 2017.
IPPS hospitals that have elected to participate in the
Bundled Payments for Care Improvement initiative and IPPS hospitals
that are participating in the mandatory Comprehensive Care for Joint
Replacement Model, the Episde Payment Models, or the Cardiac
Rehabilitation Incentive Payment Model continue to be paid under the
IPPS (77 FR 53342) and, therefore, are eligible to receive empirically
justified Medicare DSH payments and uncompensated care payments (78 FR
50625 and 79 FR 50008).
Hospitals Participating in the Rural Community Hospital
Demonstration Program are not eligible to receive empirically justified
Medicare DSH payments and uncompensated care payments under section
1886(r) of the Act because they are not paid under the IPPS (78 FR
50625 and 79 FR 50008). The Rural Community Hospital Demonstration
Program was originally authorized for a 5-year period by section 410A
of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173), and extended for another 5-year period
by sections 3123 and 10313 of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 114-
255). The period of performance for this 5-year extension period ended
December 31, 2016. Section 15003 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L.
114-255), enacted December 13, 2016, again amended section 410A of
Public Law 108-173 to require a 10-year extension period (in place of
the 5-year extension required by the Affordable Care Act), to begin on
the date immediately following the last day of the initial 5-year
period. Section 15003 also requires that, no later than 120 days after
enactment of Public Law 114-255, the Secretary issue a solicitation to
select additional hospitals to participate in the demonstration program
for the second 5 years of the 10-year extension period so long as the
maximum number of 30 hospitals stipulated by the Affordable Care Act is
not exceeded. (We refer readers to section V.L. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for a full discussion of the provisions of section 15003
of Public Law 114-255 and our proposals for implementation.) As of the
time of development of this proposed rule, the entire set of hospitals
that will participate in the second 5 years of the extension period is
unknown. However, we intend to apply a similar payment methodology
during the remainder of the extension period. As a result, we expect
that hospitals participating in the demonstration will not receive
empirically justified DSH payments, and that they will be excluded from
receiving interim and final uncompensated care payments for FY 2018 and
subsequent fiscal years for the duration of the second 5 years of the
extension period.
3. Empirically Justified Medicare DSH Payments
As we have discussed earlier, section 1886(r)(1) of the Act
requires the Secretary to pay 25 percent of the amount of the Medicare
DSH payment that would otherwise be made under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act to a subsection (d) hospital. Because section 1886(r)(1) of the
Act merely requires the program to pay a designated percentage of these
payments, without revising the criteria governing eligibility for DSH
payments or the underlying payment methodology, we stated in the FY
2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that we did not believe that it was
necessary to develop any new operational mechanisms for making such
payments. Therefore, in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50626), we implemented this provision by advising MACs to simply adjust
the interim claim payments to the requisite 25 percent of what would
have otherwise been paid. We also made corresponding changes to the
hospital cost report so that these empirically justified Medicare DSH
payments can be settled at the appropriate level at the time of cost
report settlement. We provided more detailed operational instructions
and cost report instructions following issuance of the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule that are available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/2014-Transmittals-Items/R5P240.html.
4. Uncompensated Care Payments
As we discussed earlier, section 1886(r)(2) of the Act provides
that, for each eligible hospital in FY 2014 and subsequent years, the
uncompensated care payment is the product of three factors. These three
factors represent our estimate of 75 percent of the amount of Medicare
DSH payments that would otherwise have been paid, an adjustment to this
amount for the percent change in the national rate of uninsurance
compared to the rate of
[[Page 19943]]
uninsurance in 2013, and each eligible hospital's estimated
uncompensated care amount relative to the estimated uncompensated care
amount for all eligible hospitals. Below we discuss the data sources
and methodologies for computing each of these factors, our final
policies for FYs 2014 through 2017, and our proposed policies for FY
2018.
a. Proposed Calculation of Factor 1 for FY 2018
Section 1886(r)(2)(A) of the Act establishes Factor 1 in the
calculation of the uncompensated care payment. Section 1886(r)(2)(A) of
the Act states that this factor is equal to the difference between (1)
the aggregate amount of payments that would be made to subsection (d)
hospitals under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act if section 1886(r) of
the Act did not apply for such fiscal year (as estimated by the
Secretary); and (2) the aggregate amount of payments that are made to
subsection (d) hospitals under section 1886(r)(1) of the Act for such
fiscal year (as so estimated). Therefore, section 1886(r)(2)(A)(i) of
the Act represents the estimated Medicare DSH payments that would have
been made under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act if section 1886(r) of
the Act did not apply for such fiscal year. Under a prospective payment
system, we would not know the precise aggregate Medicare DSH payment
amount that would be paid for a Federal fiscal year until cost report
settlement for all IPPS hospitals is completed, which occurs several
years after the end of the Federal fiscal year. Therefore, section
1886(r)(2)(A)(i) of the Act provides authority to estimate this amount,
by specifying that, for each fiscal year to which the provision
applies, such amount is to be estimated by the Secretary. Similarly,
section 1886(r)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act represents the estimated
empirically justified Medicare DSH payments to be made in a fiscal
year, as prescribed under section 1886(r)(1) of the Act. Again, section
1886(r)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act provides authority to estimate this
amount.
Therefore, Factor 1 is the difference between our estimates of: (1)
The amount that would have been paid in Medicare DSH payments for the
fiscal year, in the absence of the new payment provision; and (2) the
amount of empirically justified Medicare DSH payments that are made for
the fiscal year, which takes into account the requirement to pay 25
percent of what would have otherwise been paid under section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act. In other words, this factor represents our
estimate of 75 percent (100 percent minus 25 percent) of our estimate
of Medicare DSH payments that would otherwise be made, in the absence
of section 1886(r) of the Act, for the fiscal year.
As we did for FY 2017, in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule,
in order to determine Factor 1 in the uncompensated care payment
formula for FY 2018, we are proposing to continue the policy
established in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50628
through 50630) and in the FY 2014 IPPS interim final rule with comment
period (78 FR 61194) of determining Factor 1 by developing estimates of
both the aggregate amount of Medicare DSH payments that would be made
in the absence of section 1886(r)(1) of the Act and the aggregate
amount of empirically justified Medicare DSH payments to hospitals
under 1886(r)(1) of the Act. These estimates will not be revised or
updated after we know the final Medicare DSH payments for FY 2018.
Therefore, in order to determine the two elements of proposed
Factor 1 for FY 2018 (Medicare DSH payments prior to the application of
section 1886(r)(1) of the Act, and empirically justified Medicare DSH
payments after application of section 1886(r)(1) of the Act), for this
proposed rule, we used the most recently available projections of
Medicare DSH payments for the fiscal year, as calculated by CMS' Office
of the Actuary using the most recently filed Medicare hospital cost
report with Medicare DSH payment information and the most recent
Medicare DSH patient percentages and Medicare DSH payment adjustments
provided in the IPPS Impact File.
For purposes of calculating proposed Factor 1 and modeling the
impact of this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we used the Office
of the Actuary's January 2017 Medicare DSH estimates, which are based
on data from the December 2016 update of the Medicare Hospital Cost
Report Information System (HCRIS) and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule IPPS Impact file, published in conjunction with the publication of
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. Because SCHs that are projected
to be paid under their hospital-specific rate are excluded from the
application of section 1886(r) of the Act, these hospitals also were
excluded from the January 2017 Medicare DSH estimates. Furthermore,
because section 1886(r) of the Act specifies that the uncompensated
care payment is in addition to the empirically justified Medicare DSH
payment (25 percent of DSH payments that would be made without regard
to section 1886(r) of the Act), Maryland hospitals participating in the
Maryland All-Payer Model that do not receive DSH payments were also
excluded from the Office of the Actuary's January 2017 Medicare DSH
estimates. Hospitals that had been participating in the Rural Community
Hospital Demonstration Program through December 31, 2016 were included
in these estimates. (As discussed earlier, the Affordable Care Act
authorized a 5-year extension period for the demonstration, which ended
December 31, 2016.) The demonstration was extended for an additional 5
years by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255. Although the hospitals
that will participate in the second 5 years of the extension period had
not been determined at the time of development of this proposed rule,
we intend to apply a similar payment methodology during the second 5
years of the extension period as for the earlier periods of the
demonstration. Therefore, hospitals participating in the demonstration
would not be eligible to receive DSH payments. If the hospitals
participating in the second 5 years of the extension period are known
prior to the development of the Medicare DSH estimates for the FY 2018
final rule, these hospitals would be excluded from the Office of the
Actuary's final Medicare DSH estimates for FY 2018.
For this proposed rule, using the data sources discussed above, the
Office of the Actuary used the most recently submitted Medicare cost
report data to identify Medicare DSH payments and the most recent
Medicare DSH payment adjustments and applied inflation updates and
assumptions for future changes in utilization and case-mix to estimate
Medicare DSH payments for the upcoming fiscal year. The January 2017
Office of the Actuary estimate for Medicare DSH payments for FY 2018,
without regard to the application of section 1886(r)(1) of the Act, is
approximately $16.003 billion. This estimate excludes Maryland
hospitals participating in the Maryland All-Payer Model and SCHs paid
under their hospital-specific payment rate. Therefore, based on the
January 2017 estimate, the estimate for empirically justified Medicare
DSH payments for FY 2018, with the application of section 1886(r)(1) of
the Act, is approximately $4.001 billion (or 25 percent of the total
amount of estimated Medicare DSH payments for FY 2018). Under Sec.
412.106(g)(1)(i) of the regulations, Factor 1 is the difference between
these two estimates of the Office of the Actuary. Therefore, in this
proposed rule, we are proposing that Factor 1 for
[[Page 19944]]
FY 2018 is $12,001,915,095.04, which is equal to 75 percent of the
total amount of estimated Medicare DSH payments for FY 2018
($16,002,553,460.05 minus $4,000,638,365.01).
The Office of the Actuary's estimates for FY 2018 for this proposed
rule began with a baseline of $12.405 billion in Medicare DSH
expenditures for FY 2014. The following table shows the factors applied
to update this baseline through the current estimate for FY 2018:
Factors Applied for FY 2015 Through FY 2018 To Estimate Medicare DSH Expenditures Using 2014 Baseline
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated DSH
FY Update Discharge Case-mix Other Total payment (in
billions) *
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015.................................................... 1.014 1.0068 1.005 1.0493 1.076581 $13.355
2016.................................................... 1.009 0.9757 1.027 1.0689 1.080724 14.433
2017.................................................... 1.0015 1.0058 1.005 1.0535 1.066506 15.393
2018.................................................... 1.022088 1.0188 1.005 0.9934 1.039603 16.003
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Rounded.
In this table, the discharge column shows the increase in the
number of Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) inpatient hospital discharges.
The figures for FY 2015 are based on Medicare claims data that have
been adjusted by a completion factor. The discharge figure for FY 2016
is based on preliminary data for 2016. The discharge figures for FYs
2017 and 2018 are assumptions based on recent trends recovering back to
the long-term trend and assumptions related to how many beneficiaries
will be enrolled in Medicare Advantage (MA) plans. The case-mix column
shows the increase in case-mix for IPPS hospitals. The case-mix figures
for FY 2015 are based on actual data adjusted by a completion factor.
The FY 2016 increase is based on preliminary data adjusted by a
completion factor. The FYs 2017 and 2018 increases are based on the
recommendation of the 2010-2011 Medicare Technical Review Panel. The
``Other'' column shows the increase in other factors that contribute to
the Medicare DSH estimates. These factors include the difference
between the total inpatient hospital discharges and the IPPS
discharges, and various adjustments to the payment rates that have been
included over the years but are not reflected in the other columns
(such as the change in rates for the 2-midnight stay policy). In
addition, the ``Other'' column includes a factor for the Medicaid
expansion due to the Affordable Care Act. In the past, commenters have
contended that the ``Other'' column understates the effect of the
Medicaid expansion. The factor for Medicaid expansion was developed
using public information and statements for each State regarding its
intent to implement the expansion. Based on this information, it is
assumed that 50 percent of all individual who were potentially newly
eligible Medicaid enrollees in 2016 resided in States that had elected
to expand Medicaid eligibility and, for 2017 and thereafter, that 55
percent of such individuals would reside in expansion States. In the
future, these assumptions may change based on actual participation by
States. For a discussion of general issues regarding Medicaid
projections, we refer readers to the 2016 Actuarial Report on the
Financial Outlook for Medicaid (//www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Research/ActuarialStudies/Downloads/MedicaidReport2016.pdf). We note that, in developing their estimates of
the effect of Medicaid expansion on Medicare DSH expenditures, our
actuaries have assumed that the new Medicaid enrollees are healthier
than the average Medicaid recipient and, therefore, use fewer hospital
services.
The table below shows the factors that are included in the
``Update'' column of the above table:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Affordable
Market basket Care Act Multifactor Documentation Total update
FY percentage payment productivity and coding percentage
reductions adjustment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2015............................ 2.9 -0.2 -0.5 -0.8 1.4
2016............................ 2.4 -0.2 -0.5 -0.8 0.9
2017............................ 2.7 -0.75 -0.3 -1.5 0.15
2018............................ 2.9 -0.75 -0.4 0.4588 2.2088
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: All numbers are based on FY 2018 President's Budget projections.
We are inviting public comments on our proposed calculation of
Factor 1 for FY 2018.
b. Proposed Calculation of Factor 2 for FY 2018
(1) Background
Section 1886(r)(2)(B) of the Act establishes Factor 2 in the
calculation of the uncompensated care payment. Specifically, section
1886(r)(2)(B)(i) of the Act provides that, for each of FYs 2014, 2015,
2016, and 2017, a factor equal to 1 minus the percent change in the
percent of individuals under the age of 65 who are uninsured, as
determined by comparing the percent of such individuals (1) who were
uninsured in 2013, the last year before coverage expansion under the
Affordable Care Act (as calculated by the Secretary based on the most
recent estimates available from the Director of the Congressional
Budget Office before a vote in either House on the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 that, if determined in the
affirmative, would clear such Act for enrollment); and (2) who are
uninsured in the most recent period for which data are available (as so
calculated), minus 0.1 percentage point for FY 2014 and minus 0.2
percentage point for each of FYs 2015, 2016, and 2017.
Section 1886(r)(2)(B)(i)(I) of the Act further indicates that the
percent of
[[Page 19945]]
individuals under 65 without insurance in 2013 must be the percent of
such individuals who were uninsured in 2013, the last year before
coverage expansion under the Affordable Care Act (as calculated by the
Secretary based on the most recent estimates available from the
Director of the Congressional Budget Office before a vote in either
House on the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 that,
if determined in the affirmative, would clear such Act for enrollment).
The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act (Pub. L. 111-152) was
enacted on March 30, 2010. It was passed in the House of
Representatives on March 21, 2010, and by the Senate on March 25, 2010.
Because the House of Representatives was the first House to vote on the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 on March 21, 2010,
we have determined that the most recent estimate available from the
Director of the Congressional Budget Office ``before a vote in either
House on the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 . .
.'' (emphasis added) appeared in a March 20, 2010 letter from the
director of the CBO to the Speaker of the House. Therefore, we believe
that only the estimates in this March 20, 2010 letter meet the
statutory requirement under section 1886(r)(2)(B)(i)(I) of the Act. (To
view the March 20, 2010 letter, we refer readers to the Web site at:
//www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/111th-congress-2009-2010/costestimate/amendreconprop.pdf.)
In its March 20, 2010 letter to the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, the CBO provided two estimates of the ``post-policy
uninsured population.'' The first estimate is of the ``Insured Share of
the Nonelderly Population Including All Residents'' (82 percent) and
the second estimate is of the ``Insured Share of the Nonelderly
Population Excluding Unauthorized Immigrants'' (83 percent). In the FY
2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50631), we used the first estimate
that includes all residents, including unauthorized immigrants. We
stated that we believe this estimate is most consistent with the
statute, which requires us to measure ``the percent of individuals
under the age of 65 who are uninsured'' and provides no exclusions
except for individuals over the age of 65. In addition, we stated that
we believe that this estimate more fully reflects the levels of
uninsurance in the United States that influence uncompensated care for
hospitals than the estimate that reflects only legal residents. The
March 20, 2010 CBO letter reports these figures as the estimated
percentage of individuals with insurance. However, because section
1886(r)(2)(B)(i) of the Act requires that we compare the percent of
individuals who are uninsured in the most recent period for which data
are available with the percent of individuals who were uninsured in
2013, in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we used the CBO
insurance rate figure and subtracted that amount from 100 percent (that
is, the total population without regard to insurance status) to
estimate the 2013 baseline percent of individuals without insurance.
Therefore, for FYs 2014 through 2017, our estimate of the uninsurance
percentage for 2013 was 18 percent.
Section 1886(r)(2)(B)(i) of the Act requires that we compare the
baseline uninsurance rate to the percent of such individuals who are
uninsured in the most recent period for which data are available (as so
calculated). In the FY 2014, FY 2015, FY 2016, and FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rules (78 FR 50634, 79 FR 50014, 80 FR 49522, and 81 FR
56952, respectively), we used the same data source, CBO estimates, to
calculate this percent of individuals without insurance. In response to
public comments, we also agreed that we should normalize the CBO
estimates, which are based on the calendar year, for the Federal fiscal
years for which each calculation of Factor 2 is made (78 FR 50633).
Therefore, for the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56952), we
used the most recently available estimate of the uninsurance rate,
which was based on the CBO's March 2016 estimates of the effects of the
Affordable Care Act on health insurance coverage (which are available
at //www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/114th-congress-2015-2016/reports/51385-HealthInsuranceBaseline.pdf). The CBO's March 2016
estimate of individuals under the age of 65 with insurance in CY 2016
was 90 percent. Therefore, the CBO's most recent estimate of the rate
of uninsurance in CY 2016 was 10 percent (that is, 100 percent minus 90
percent). The CBO's March 2016 estimate of individuals under the age of
65 with insurance in CY 2017 was also 90 percent. Therefore, the CBO's
most recent estimate of the rate of uninsurance in CY 2017 available
for the FY 2017 final rule was also 10 percent (that is, 100 percent
minus 90 percent).
The calculation of the final Factor 2 for FY 2017, employing a
weighted average of the CBO projections for CY 2016 and CY 2017, was as
follows:
CY 2016 rate of insurance coverage (March 2016 CBO
estimate): 90 percent.
CY 2017 rate of insurance coverage (March 2016 CBO
estimate): 90 percent.
FY 2016 rate of insurance coverage: (90 percent * .25) +
(90 percent * .75) = 90 percent.
Percent of individuals without insurance for 2013 (March
2010 CBO estimate): 18 percent.
Percent of individuals without insurance for FY 2017
(weighted average): 10 percent.
1-((0.10-0.18)/0.18) = 1-0.4444 = 0.5555 (55.56
percent)
0.5556 (55.56 percent)-.002 (0.2 percentage points for FY 2017 under
section 1886(r)(2)(B)(i) of the Act) = 0.5536 or 55.36 percent
0.5536 = Factor 2
Therefore, the final Factor 2 for FY 2017 was 55.36 percent.
The FY 2017 final uncompensated care amount was: $10,797,476,782.62
x 0.5536 = $5,977,483,146.86.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 uncompensated care total available........... $5,977,483,146.86
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Proposed Methodology for Calculation of Factor 2 for FY 2018
Section 1886(r)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act permits the use of a data
source other than the CBO estimates to determine the percent change in
the rate of uninsurance beginning in FY 2018. In addition, for FY 2018
and subsequent years, the statute does not require that the estimate of
the percent of individuals who are uninsured be limited to individuals
who are under 65. Specifically, the statute states that, for FY 2018
and subsequent fiscal years, the second factor is 1 minus the percent
change in the percent of individuals who are uninsured, as determined
by comparing the percent of individuals who were uninsured in 2013 (as
estimated by the Secretary, based on data from the Census Bureau or
other sources the Secretary determines appropriate, and certified by
the Chief Actuary of CMS) and the percent of individuals who were
uninsured in the most recent period for which data are available (as so
estimated and certified), minus 0.2 percentage point for FYs 2018 and
2019. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56952), we
indicated that we planned to address changes to the methodology for
determining Factor 2 and the viability of potential alternative data
sources in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule.
In our analysis of a potential data source for the rate of
uninsurance for purposes of computing Factor 2 in FY 2018, we
considered the following: (a)
[[Page 19946]]
The extent to which the source accounted for the full U.S. population;
(b) the extent to which the source comprehensively accounted for both
public and private health insurance coverage in deriving its estimates
of the number of uninsured; (c) the extent to which the source utilized
data from the Census Bureau; (d) the timeliness of the estimates; (e)
the continuity of the estimates over time; (f) the accuracy of the
estimates; and (g) the availability of projections (including the
availability of projections using an established estimation methodology
that would allow for calculation of the rate of uninsurance for the
applicable Federal fiscal year). These considerations are consistent
with the statutory requirement that this estimate be based on data from
the Census Bureau or other sources the Secretary determines appropriate
and help to ensure the data source will provide reasonable estimates
for the rate of uninsurance that are available in conjunction with the
IPPS rulemaking cycle.
We have determined that the source that, on balance, best meets all
of these considerations is the uninsured estimates produced by CMS'
Office of the Actuary (OACT) as part of the development of the National
Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA). The NHEA represents the
government's official estimates of economic activity (spending) within
the health sector. The information contained in the NHEA has been used
to study numerous topics related to the health care sector, including,
but not limited to, changes in the amount and cost of health services
purchased and the payers or programs that provide or purchase these
services; the economic causal factors at work in the health sector; the
impact of policy changes, including major health reform; and
comparisons to other countries' health spending. Of relevance to the
determination of Factor 2 is that the comprehensive and integrated
structure of the NHEA creates an ideal tool for evaluating changes to
the health care system, such as the mix of the insured and uninsured
because this mix is integral to the well-established NHEA methodology.
Below we describe some aspects of the methodology used to develop the
NHEA that we believe are particularly relevant in estimating the
percent change in the rate of uninsurance for FY 2018. A full
description of the methodology used to develop the NHEA is available on
the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/Downloads/DSM-15.pdf.
The NHEA estimates of U.S. population reflect the Census Bureau's
definition of the resident-based population, which includes all people
who usually reside in the 50 States or the District of Columbia, but
excludes residents living in Puerto Rico and areas under U.S.
sovereignty, members of the U.S. Armed Forces overseas, and U.S.
citizens whose usual place of residence is outside of the United
States, plus a small (typically less than 0.2 percent of population)
adjustment to reflect Census undercounts. In past years, the estimates
for Factor 2 were made using the CBO's uninsured population estimates
for the under 65 population. For FY 2018 and subsequent years, the
statute does not restrict the estimate to the measurement of the
percent of individuals under the age of 65 who are uninsured.
Accordingly, we believe it is appropriate to use an estimate that
reflects the rate of uninsurance in the United States across all age
groups. In addition, we continue to believe that a resident-based
population estimate more fully reflects the levels of uninsurance in
the United States that influence uncompensated care for hospitals than
an estimate that reflects only legal residents. The NHEA estimates of
uninsurance are for the total U.S. population (all ages) and not by
specific age cohort, such as the population under the age of 65.
The NHEA includes comprehensive enrollment estimates for total
private health insurance (PHI) (including direct and employer-sponsored
plans), Medicare, Medicaid, the Children's Health Insurance Program
(CHIP), and other public programs, and estimates of the number of
individuals who are uninsured. Estimates of total PHI enrollment are
available for 1960 through 2015, estimates of Medicaid, Medicare, and
CHIP enrollment are available for the length of the respective
programs, and all other estimates (including the more detailed
estimates of direct-purchased and employer-sponsored insurance) are
available for 1987 through 2015. The NHEA data are publicly available
on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/index.html.
In order to compute Factor 2, the first metric that is needed is
the proportion of the total U.S. population that was uninsured in 2013.
In developing the estimates for the NHEA, OACT's methodology included
using the number of uninsured individuals for 1987 through 2009 based
on the enhanced Current Population Survey (CPS) from the State Health
Access Data Assistance Center (SHADAC). The CPS, sponsored jointly by
the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS),
is the primary source of labor force statistics for the population of
the United States. (We refer readers to the Web site at: //www.census.gov/programs-surveys/cps.html.) The enhanced CPS, available
from SHADAC (available at //datacenter.shadac.org) accounts for
changes in the CPS methodology over time. OACT further adjusts the
enhanced CPS for an estimated undercount of Medicaid enrollees (a
population that is often not fully captured in surveys that include
Medicaid enrollees due to a perceived stigma associated with being
enrolled in the Medicaid program or confusion about the source of their
health insurance).
To estimate the number of uninsured individuals for 2010 through
2014, OACT extrapolates from the 2009 CPS data using data from the
National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). The NHIS is one of the major
data collection programs of the National Center for Health Statistics
(NCHS), which is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). The U.S. Census Bureau is the data collection agent for the
NHIS. The NHIS results have been instrumental over the years in
providing data to track health status, health care access, and progress
toward achieving national health objectives. For further information
regarding the NHIS, we refer readers to the CDC Web site at: //www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis/index.htm. For 2015, the estimate of the rate of
uninsurance in the NHEA matches with the estimate from the NHIS.
The next metrics needed to compute Factor 2 are projections of the
rate of uninsurance in both calendar years 2017 and 2018. On an annual
basis, the OACT projects enrollment and spending trends for the coming
10-year period. Those projections (currently for years 2016 through
2025) use the latest NHEA historical data, which presently run through
2015. The NHEA projection methodology accounts for expected changes in
enrollment across all of the categories of insurance coverage
previously listed. The sources for projected growth rates in enrollment
for Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP include the latest Medicare Trustees
Report, the Medicaid Actuarial Report, or other updated estimates as
produced by the OACT. Projected rates of growth in enrollment for
private health insurance and the uninsured are based largely on
[[Page 19947]]
OACT's econometric models, which rely on the set of macroeconomic
assumptions underlying the latest Medicare Trustees Report. Greater
detail can be found in OACT's report titled ``Projections of National
Health Expenditure: Methodology and Model Specification,'' which is
available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/NationalHealthExpendData/Downloads/ProjectionsMethodology.pdf.
The use of data from the NHEA to estimate the rate of uninsurance
is consistent with the statute and meets the criteria we have
identified for determining the appropriate data source. Section
1886(r)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act instructs the Secretary to estimate the
rate of uninsurance for purposes of Factor 2 based on data from the
Census Bureau or other sources the Secretary determines appropriate.
The NHEA utilizes data from the Census Bureau; the estimates are
available in time for the IPPS rulemaking cycle; the estimates are
produced by OACT on an annual basis and are expected to continue to be
produced for the foreseeable future; and projections are available for
calendar year time periods that span the upcoming fiscal year.
Timeliness and continuity are important considerations because of our
need to be able to update this estimate annually. Accuracy is also a
very important consideration and, all things being equal, we would
choose the most accurate data source that sufficiently meets our other
criteria.
Using these data sources and the methodologies described above,
OACT estimates that the uninsured rate for the historical, baseline
year of 2013 was 14 percent and for CYs 2017 and 2018 is 8.3 percent
and 8.1 percent respectively. As required by section 1886(r)(2)(B)(ii)
of the Act, the Chief Actuary of CMS has certified these estimates.
As with the CBO estimates on which we based Factor 2 in prior
fiscal years, the NHEA estimates are for a calendar year. In the
rulemaking for FY 2014, many commenters noted that the uncompensated
care payments are made on fiscal year and not a calendar year basis and
requested that CMS normalize the CBO estimate to reflect a fiscal year
basis. Specifically, commenters requested that CMS calculate a weighted
average of the CBO estimate for October through December 2013 and the
CBO estimate for January through September 2014 when determining Factor
2 for FY 2014. We agreed with the commenters that normalizing the
estimate to cover FY 2014 rather than CY 2014 would more accurately
reflect the rate of uninsurance that hospitals would experience during
the FY 2014 payment year. Accordingly, we estimated the rate of
uninsurance for FY 2014 by calculating a weighted average of the CBO
estimates for CY 2013 and CY 2014 (78 FR 50633). We have continued this
weighted average approach in each fiscal year since FY 2014.
We continue to believe that, in order to estimate the rate of
uninsurance during a fiscal year more accurately, Factor 2 should
reflect the estimated rate of uninsurance that hospitals will
experience during the fiscal year, rather than the rate of uninsurance
during only one of the calendar years that the fiscal year spans.
However, we have concerns about the future potential for the uninsured
rate to vary nonuniformly in the 2 calendar years that the fiscal year
spans (for example, due to changes in the economy or changes in
legislation). Nevertheless, for FY 2018, because OACT's current
estimates of the percent of individuals without insurance in CY 2017
and CY 2018 are relatively close, we do not believe this is a
significant policy issue and are proposing to continue with the
weighted average approach used in past fiscal years in order to
estimate the rate of uninsurance for FY 2018.
The calculation of the proposed Factor 2 for FY 2018 using a
weighted average of OACT's projections for CY 2017 and CY 2018 is as
follows:
Percent of individuals without insurance for CY 2013: 14
percent.
Percent of individuals without insurance for CY 2017: 8.3
percent.
Percent of individuals without insurance for CY 2018: 8.1
percent.
Percent of individuals without insurance for FY 2018 (0.25
times 0.083) + (0.75 times 0.081): 8.15 percent
1-[verbar]((0.0815-0.14)/0.14)[verbar] = 1-0.4179 = 0.5821 (58.21
percent)
0.5821 (58.21 percent)-.002 (0.2 percentage points for FY 2018 under
section 1886(r)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act) = 0.5801 or 58.01 percent
0.5801 = Factor 2
Therefore, the proposed Factor 2 for FY 2018 is 58.01 percent.
The proposed FY 2018 uncompensated care amount is:
$12,001,915,095.04 x 0.5801 = $6,962,310,946.63.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FY 2018 uncompensated care total available.. $6,962,310,946.63
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comments on our proposed methodology for
calculation of Factor 2 for FY 2018.
c. Calculation of Proposed Factor 3 for FY 2018
(1) Background
Section 1886(r)(2)(C) of the Act defines Factor 3 in the
calculation of the uncompensated care payment. As we have discussed
earlier, section 1886(r)(2)(C) of the Act states that Factor 3 is equal
to the percent, for each subsection (d) hospital, that represents the
quotient of (1) the amount of uncompensated care for such hospital for
a period selected by the Secretary (as estimated by the Secretary,
based on appropriate data (including, in the case where the Secretary
determines alternative data are available that are a better proxy for
the costs of subsection (d) hospitals for treating the uninsured, the
use of such alternative data)); and (2) the aggregate amount of
uncompensated care for all subsection (d) hospitals that receive a
payment under section 1886(r) of the Act for such period (as so
estimated, based on such data).
Therefore, Factor 3 is a hospital-specific value that expresses the
proportion of the estimated uncompensated care amount for each
subsection (d) hospital and each subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospital
with the potential to receive Medicare DSH payments relative to the
estimated uncompensated care amount for all hospitals estimated to
receive Medicare DSH payments in the fiscal year for which the
uncompensated care payment is to be made. Factor 3 is applied to the
product of Factor 1 and Factor 2 to determine the amount of the
uncompensated care payment that each eligible hospital will receive for
FY 2014 and subsequent fiscal years. In order to implement the
statutory requirements for this factor of the uncompensated care
payment formula, it was necessary to determine: (1) The definition of
uncompensated care or, in other words, the specific items that are to
be included in the numerator (that is, the estimated uncompensated care
amount for an individual hospital) and the denominator (that is, the
estimated uncompensated care amount for all hospitals estimated to
receive Medicare DSH payments in the applicable fiscal year); (2) the
data source(s) for the estimated uncompensated care amount; and (3) the
timing and manner of computing the quotient for each hospital estimated
to receive Medicare DSH payments. The statute instructs the Secretary
to estimate the amounts of uncompensated care for a period based on
appropriate data. In addition, we note that the statute permits the
Secretary to use alternative data in the
[[Page 19948]]
case where the Secretary determines that such alternative data are
available that are a better proxy for the costs of subsection (d)
hospitals for treating individuals who are uninsured.
In the course of considering how to determine Factor 3 during the
rulemaking process for FY 2014, we considered defining the amount of
uncompensated care for a hospital as the uncompensated care costs of
each hospital and determined that Worksheet S-10 of the Medicare cost
report potentially provides the most complete data regarding
uncompensated care costs for Medicare hospitals. However, because of
concerns regarding variations in the data reported on Worksheet S-10
and the completeness of these data, we did not propose to use data from
Worksheet S-10 to determine Factor 3 for FY 2014, the first year this
provision was in effect, or for FY 2015, 2016, or 2017. When we first
discussed using Worksheet S-10 to allocate hospitals' shares of
uncompensated care costs in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50638), we explained why we believed that it was premature to use
uncompensated care costs reported on Worksheet S-10 for FY 2014.
Specifically, at that time, the most recent available cost reports
would have been from FYs 2010 and 2011, which were submitted on or
after May 1, 2010, when the new Worksheet S-10 went into effect. We
believed that concerns about the standardization and completeness of
the Worksheet S-10 data could be more acute for data collected in the
first year of the Worksheet's use (78 FR 50635). In addition, we
believed that it would be most appropriate to use data elements that
have been historically publicly available, subject to audit, and used
for payment purposes (or that the public understands will be used for
payment purposes) to determine the amount of uncompensated care for
purposes of Factor 3 (78 FR 50635). At the time we issued the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we did not believe that the available data
regarding uncompensated care from Worksheet S-10 met these criteria
and, therefore, we believed they were not reliable enough to use for
determining FY 2014 uncompensated care payments. Accordingly, for FY
2014, we concluded that utilization of insured low-income patients
would be a better proxy for the costs of hospitals in treating the
uninsured. For FYs 2015, 2016, and 2017, the cost reports used for
calculating uncompensated care payments (that is, FYs 2011, 2012, and
2013) were also submitted prior to the time that hospitals were on
notice that Worksheet S-10 could be the data source for calculating
uncompensated care payments. Therefore, we believed it was also
appropriate to use proxy data to calculate Factor 3 for these years.
We stated in the preamble of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule that we believed that, for FY 2018, many of the above concerns
would no longer be relevant. That is, hospitals were on notice as of FY
2014 that Worksheet S-10 could eventually become the data source for
CMS to calculate uncompensated care payments. Furthermore, hospitals'
cost reports from FY 2014 had been publicly available for some time,
and CMS had analyses of Worksheet S-10 conducted both internally and by
stakeholders demonstrating that Worksheet S-10 accuracy had improved
over time. Specifically, as discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule (81 FR 25090), MedPAC has provided analyses that found
that current Worksheet S-10 data are a better proxy for predicting
audited uncompensated care costs than Medicaid/Medicare SSI days, and
that the data on Worksheet S-10 would improve over time as the data are
actually used to make payments. CMS has also undertaken an extensive
analysis of the Worksheet S-10 data, benchmarking it against the data
on uncompensated care costs reported to the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) on Form 990 by not-for-profit hospitals. (This analysis,
performed by Dobson DaVanzo & Associates, LLC, under contract to CMS,
was included in a report entitled ``Improvements to Medicare
Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Payments Report: Benchmarking S-
10 Data Using IRS Form 990 Data and Worksheet S-10 Trend Analyses,''
which is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/dsh.html
under the Downloads section.) The analysis determined a strong and
converging correlation between the amounts for Factor 3 derived using
the IRS Form 990 and Worksheet S-10 data suggesting that Worksheet S-10
uncompensated care data are becoming more stable over time. Given these
results and in light of the fact that hospitals have been on notice
since the FY 2014 rulemaking that CMS intended eventually to use
Worksheet S-10 as the data source for calculating uncompensated care
payments, we believed it would be appropriate to propose to begin
incorporating Worksheet S-10 data for purposes of calculating Factor 3
starting in FY 2018. In section IV.F.4.d. of the preamble of the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR 25090 through 25094), we
proposed a methodology and timeline for incorporating Worksheet S-10
data in the calculation of Factor 3 beginning in FY 2018 and invited
public comments on that proposal.
While some commenters, including MedPAC, were supportive of the
proposal, many other commenters expressed concerns about a perceived
lack of clarity in the Worksheet S-10 instructions and their belief in
the necessity of a strict audit mechanism to capture aberrant
uncompensated care costs reported on Worksheet S-10. Many commenters
also cited the report from Dobson DaVanzo, which concluded that
hospitals are doing a better job of reporting their uncompensated care
data on Worksheet S-10 than they did a few years ago. However, these
commenters disagreed with CMS about the significance of this
observation. One commenter stated that even if it is true in the
aggregate that hospitals are reporting data more accurately on
Worksheet S-10, the zero-sum nature of the calculation of uncompensated
care payments is such that the remaining inaccuracy and lack of
uniformity in the data reported can have a very large impact on
hospitals. The commenter asserted that if hospitals, for whatever
reason, over-report their uncompensated care, they benefit financially
from doing so, while those that do not aggressively report suffer
financial harm. The commenter concluded that, for this reason, the
possibility that some hospitals are generally ``doing better'' with
reporting data is not good enough. All hospitals must do better, and
until they do, the commenter believed that data from Worksheet S-10 are
not accurate enough for public policymaking purposes. Other commenters
asserted that the Dobson/DaVanzo study did not illustrate or even
evaluate whether data from Worksheet S-10 are a reasonable proxy for
the costs hospitals incur in providing care to the uninsured. These
commenters pointed to their own analyses, which indicated that the most
notable aberrations in Worksheet S-10 data reporting occur among public
hospitals, which do not file a Form 990 and are therefore missing from
the Dobson/DaVanzo analysis.
On balance, after considering all of the comments, we elected not
to finalize our proposal to begin to incorporate Worksheet S-10 into
the calculation of Factor 3 for FY 2018 in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule. We stated that we were postponing the decision regarding
when to begin incorporating
[[Page 19949]]
data from Worksheet S-10 and proceeding with certain additional quality
control and data improvement measures to the Worksheet S-10
instructions as commenters had requested. We indicated that we would
consider further whether the current Worksheet S-10 data or a proxy
should be used to calculate Factor 3 for FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal
years. We also expressed our intention to explore whether there is an
appropriate proxy for uncompensated care that could be used to
calculate Factor 3 until we determine that data from the revised
Worksheet S-10 can be used for this purpose. We stated that we would
undertake notice-and-comment rulemaking to address the issue of the
appropriate data to use to determine Factor 3 for FY 2018 and
subsequent years.
(2) Proposed Data Sources for FY 2018
Since the publication of the FY 2017 final rule and as part of our
ongoing quality control and data improvement measures for Worksheet S-
10, we have updated the benchmarking analysis described in the report
``Improvements to Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH)
Payments Report: Benchmarking S-10 Data Using IRS Form 990 Data and
Worksheet S-10 Trend Analyses'' posted with the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule. As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule,
the purpose of this analysis was to determine if Worksheet S-10
uncompensated care data are becoming more stable over time (81 FR
25090). In the report issued in conjunction with the FY 2017
rulemaking, we conducted an analysis of 2010, 2011, and 2012 Worksheet
S-10 data and IRS Form 990 data from the same years. Using IRS Form 990
data for tax years 2010, 2011, and 2012 (the latest available years at
that time) as a benchmark, we compared key variables derived from
Worksheet S-10 and IRS Form 990 data, such as charity care and bad
debt. The analysis was completed using data from hospitals that had
completed both Worksheet S-10 and IRS Form 990 across all study years,
yielding a sample of 788 not-for-profit hospitals (representing 668
unique Taxpayer Identification Numbers). Because Factor 3 is used to
determine the Medicare uncompensated care payment amount for each
hospital, we calculated the amounts for Factor 3 for the matched
hospitals using charity care and bad debt, and compared the Factor 3
distributions calculated using data from IRS Form 990 and Worksheet S-
10. Key findings indicated that the amounts for Factor 3 derived using
the IRS Form 990 and Worksheet S-10 data were highly correlated. In
addition, the correlation coefficient between the amounts for Factor 3
calculated from the IRS Form 990 and Worksheet S-10 had increased over
time, from 0.71 in 2010 to 0.77 in 2011 and 0.80 in 2012, demonstrating
an increasing convergence between the data sources.
In the updated analysis performed for this year's rulemaking, we
again compared Worksheet S-10 and IRS Form 990 data and assessed the
correlation in Factor 3s derived from each of the data sources. We
conducted an analysis of 2011, 2012, and 2013 Worksheet S-10 data and
IRS Form 990 data from the same years. (The previous analysis used data
from 2010 to 2012.) Using IRS Form 990 data for tax years 2011, 2012,
and 2013 (again, the latest available years) as a benchmark, we
utilized the same methodology as was used in the previous analysis,
which yielded a sample of 1,061 not-for-profit hospitals (representing
918 unique Taxpayer Identification Numbers) and found that the amounts
for Factor 3 derived using the IRS Form 990 and Worksheet S-10 data
continue to be highly correlated and that, within the larger sample in
the updated analysis, this correlation continues to increase over time,
from 0.80 in 2011 to 0.85 in 2013. (The highest correlation found in
the earlier analysis performed for the FY 2017 rulemaking was 0.80.)
The fact that this most recent analysis, which was performed after
the issuance of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, continues to
demonstrate a high correlation between the amounts for Factor 3 derived
using the IRS 990 data and the Worksheet S-10 data and that this
correlation continues to increase over time leads us to believe that we
have reached a tipping point with respect to the use of the Worksheet
S-10 data. Specifically, we can no longer conclude that alternative
data are available for FY 2014 that are a better proxy for the costs of
subsection (d) hospitals for treating individuals who are uninsured
than the data on uncompensated care costs reported on the Worksheet S-
10. However, we continue to believe that it is appropriate to use low-
income insured days as a proxy for uncompensated care costs for years
prior to FY 2014. Hospitals did not have notice that the Worksheet S-10
data from these years might be used for purposes of computing
uncompensated care payments and, as a result, may not have fully
appreciated the importance of reporting their uncompensated care costs
as completely and accurately as possible.
We found further evidence for this tipping point when we examined
changes to the FY 2014 Worksheet S-10 data submitted by hospitals since
the publication of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. In the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, as part of our ongoing quality control and
data improvement measures for the Worksheet S-10, we referred readers
to Change Request 9648, Transmittal 1681, titled ``The Supplemental
Security Income (SSI)/Medicare Beneficiary Data for Fiscal Year 2014
for Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) Hospitals, Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs), and Long Term Care Hospitals
(LTCH),'' issued on July 15, 2016 (available at: //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R1681OTN.pdf).
In this transmittal, as part of the process for ensuring complete
submission of Worksheet S-10 by all eligible DSH hospitals, we
instructed MACs to accept amended Worksheets S-10 for FY 2014 cost
reports submitted by hospitals (or initial submissions of Worksheet S-
10 if none had been submitted previously) and to upload them to the
Health Care Provider Cost Report Information System (HCRIS) in a timely
manner. The transmittal stated that, for revisions to be considered,
hospitals were required to submit their amended FY 2014 cost report
containing the revised Worksheet S-10 (or a completed Worksheet S-10 if
no data were included on the previously submitted cost report) to the
MAC no later than September 30, 2016.
We have examined hospitals' FY 2014 cost reports to see if the
Worksheet S-10 data on those cost reports have changed as a result of
the opportunity for hospitals to submit revised Worksheet S-10 data for
FY 2014. Specifically, we compared hospitals' FY 2014 Worksheet S-10
data as they existed in the first quarter of CY 2016 with data from the
fourth quarter of CY 2016. We found that the FY 2014 Worksheet S-10
data had changed over that time period for approximately one quarter of
hospitals that receive uncompensated care payments. The fact that the
Worksheet S-10 data changed for such a significant number of hospitals
following a review of the cost report data they originally submitted
and that the revised Worksheet S-10 information is available to be used
in determining uncompensated care costs contributes to our belief that
we can no longer conclude that alternative data are available that are
a better proxy than the Worksheet S-10 data for the costs of
[[Page 19950]]
subsection (d) hospitals for treating individuals who are uninsured.
Commenters have also provided equity arguments with respect to the
relationship between uncompensated care payments and the expansion of
Medicaid in certain States under the authority provided by the
Affordable Care Act. The commenters have made a twofold argument.
First, they have argued that hospitals in States that did not expand
Medicaid treat a higher number of uninsured patients compared to
hospitals in States that did expand Medicaid and, as a result, provide
more uncompensated care. However, since the implementation of the new
DSH payment methodology under section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act
in FY 2014, these hospitals have experienced reductions in the payments
for uncompensated care due to the national decline in the uninsured
rate driven in large part by Medicaid expansions in other States.
Second, they have argued that hospitals in non-expansion States will be
penalized a second time when Medicaid utilization is used as part of
the basis for determining Factor 3 because their Medicaid utilization
has not grown as much relative to hospitals in expansion States. We
note that, while CMS has not yet used data affected by Medicaid
expansion when determining Factor 3, commenters are concerned that they
will be penalized in future calculations when these data are used.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50639), we
recognized that, in using Medicaid days as part of the proxy for
uncompensated care, it would be possible for hospitals in States that
choose to expand Medicaid to receive higher uncompensated care payments
because they may have more Medicaid patient days than hospitals in a
State that does not choose to expand Medicaid. Because the earliest
Medicaid expansions under the Affordable Care Act began in 2014, the
2011, 2012, and 2013 Medicaid days data used to determine Factor 3 for
FY 2017 are the most recent available data on Medicaid utilization that
do not reflect the effects of these Medicaid expansions. Accordingly,
if we were to use only low-income insured days to estimate
uncompensated care in FY 2018, we would need to hold the time period of
these data constant and use data on Medicaid days from 2011, 2012, and
2013 in order to avoid the risk of any redistributive effects arising
from the decision to expand Medicaid in certain States. As a result, we
would be using older data that may provide a less accurate proxy for
the level of uncompensated care being furnished by hospitals in FY
2018, contributing to our growing concerns regarding the continued use
of low-income insured days as a proxy for uncompensated care costs in
FY 2018.
We also note that when weighing the new information that has become
available to us regarding the Worksheet S-10 and the low-income days
proxy since the FY 2018 rulemaking, we are not considering these
developments in isolation, but rather in the context of the information
that we previously considered as part our discussions of the Worksheet
S-10 data in prior rulemaking. Part of this background is provided by
the 2007 MedPAC analysis of data from the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) and the American Hospital Association (AHA), which
suggests that Medicaid days and low income Medicare days are not a good
proxy for uncompensated care costs (80 FR 49525). Additional analyses
performed by MedPAC showed that the correlation between audited
uncompensated care data from 2009 and the data from the FY 2011
Worksheet S-10 was over 0.80, as compared to a correlation of
approximately 0.50 between the audited uncompensated care data and 2011
Medicare SSI and Medicaid days. Based on this analysis, MedPAC
concluded that use of Worksheet S-10 data was already better than using
Medicare SSI and Medicaid days as a proxy for uncompensated care costs,
and that the data on Worksheet S-10 would improve over time as the data
are actually used to make payments (81 FR 25090). Furthermore, MedPAC
in the past has raised concerns about the low-income days proxy we have
used historically because it is an inpatient measure and much of the
uncompensated care provided by certain hospitals, including rural
hospitals, occurs in the emergency room or other outpatient areas. In
its comments on the FY 2017 proposed rule, MedPAC again recommended we
start using the Worksheet S-10 data with a phase-in (81 FR 56962).
In summary, when weighing the new information that has become
available to us since the FY 2017 rulemaking in conjunction with the
information regarding Worksheet S-10 data and the low-income days proxy
that we have analyzed as part of our consideration of this issue in
prior rulemaking, we can no longer conclude that alternative data to
the Worksheet S-10 are available for FY 2014 that are a better proxy
for the costs of subsection (d) hospitals for treating individuals who
are uninsured. We discuss below our proposed methodology for how we
would begin to incorporate Worksheet S-10 data for FY 2014 into the
calculation of Factor 3 of the uncompensated care payment methodology.
(3) Proposed Time Period for Calculating Factor 3 for FY 2018,
Including Methodology for Incorporating Worksheet S-10 Data
Section 1886(r)(2)(C) of the Act not only governs the selection of
the data to be used in calculating Factor 3, but also allows the
Secretary the discretion to determine the time periods from which we
will derive the data to estimate the numerator and the denominator of
the Factor 3 quotient. Specifically, section 1886(r)(2)(C)(i) of the
Act defines the numerator of the quotient as the amount of
uncompensated care for such hospital for a period selected by the
Secretary. Section 1886(r)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act defines the denominator
as the aggregate amount of uncompensated care for all subsection (d)
hospitals that receive a payment under section 1886(r) of the Act for
such period. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50638), we
adopted a process of making interim payments with final cost report
settlement for both the empirically justified Medicare DSH payments and
the uncompensated care payments required by section 3133 of the
Affordable Care Act. Consistent with that process, we also determined
the time period from which to calculate the numerator and denominator
of the Factor 3 quotient in a way that would be consistent with making
interim and final payments. Specifically, we must have Factor 3 values
available for hospitals that we estimate will qualify for Medicare DSH
payments and for those hospitals that we do not estimate will qualify
for Medicare DSH payments but that may ultimately qualify for Medicare
DSH payments at the time of cost report settlement.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in order to mitigate undue
fluctuations in the amount of uncompensated care payments to hospitals
from year to year and smooth over anomalies between cost reporting
periods, we finalized a policy of calculating a hospital's share of
uncompensated care based an average of data derived from three cost
reporting periods instead of one cost reporting period. As explained in
the preamble to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56957
through 56959), instead of determining Factor 3 using Medicaid days
from a single cost reporting period and the most recent available data
on Medicare SSI utilization, as we did in FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY
2016, we used Medicaid days from three cost reporting periods (FYs
2011, 2012, and 2013) and SSI days from the three most
[[Page 19951]]
recent available years of SSI utilization data (FYs 2012, 2013, and
2014) to compute Factor 3 for FY 2017. We continued to extract Medicaid
days data from the most recent update of HCRIS, which for FY 2017 was
the March 2016 update. Furthermore, instead of determining a single
Factor 3 as we have done since the first year of the uncompensated care
payment in FY 2014, we calculated an individual Factor 3 for each of
the three cost reporting periods, which we then averaged by the number
of cost reporting years with data to compute the final Factor 3 for a
hospital. Under this policy, if a hospital had merged, we would combine
data from both hospitals for the cost reporting periods in which the
merger was not reflected in the surviving hospital's cost report data
to compute Factor 3 for the surviving hospital. Moreover, to further
reduce undue fluctuations in a hospital's uncompensated care payments,
if a hospital filed multiple cost reports beginning in the same fiscal
year, we combined data from the multiple cost reports so that a
hospital could have a Factor 3 calculated using more than one cost
report within a cost reporting period. We codified these changes for FY
2017 by amending the regulations at Sec. 412.106(g)(1)(iii)(C).
For FY 2018, we are proposing to continue to use the methodology
finalized in FY 2017 and to compute Factor 3 using an average of data
from three cost reporting periods instead of one cost reporting period.
Consistent with the methodology used to calculate Factor 3 for FY 2017,
we are proposing to advance the time period of the data used in the
calculation of Factor 3 forward by one year and using data from FY
2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014 cost reports. For the reasons we described
earlier, we believe it would not be appropriate to use Worksheet S-10
data for periods prior to FY 2014. Rather, for cost reporting periods
prior to FY 2014, we believe it would be appropriate to continue to use
low-income insured days. Accordingly, with a time period that includes
three cost reporting years consisting of FY 2014, FY 2013, and FY 2012,
we are proposing to use Worksheet S-10 data for the FY 2014 cost
reporting period and the low-income insured day proxy data for the two
earlier cost reporting periods. In order to perform this calculation,
we will draw three sets of data (2 years of Medicaid utilization data
and 1 year of Worksheet S-10 data) from the most recent available HCRIS
extract, which for FY 2018 is the December 2016 update of HCRIS for the
proposed rule and the March 2017 update of HCRIS for the final rule.
Accordingly, for FY 2018, in addition to the Worksheet S-10 data for FY
2014, we are proposing to use Medicaid days from FY 2012 and FY 2013
cost reports and FY 2014 and FY 2015 SSI ratios. We also would continue
to use FY 2012 cost report data submitted to CMS by IHS and Tribal
hospitals to determine Medicaid days for those hospitals. (We note that
cost report data from IHS and Tribal hospitals are included in HCRIS
beginning in FY 2013 and are no longer submitted separately.) We also
are proposing to continue the policies that were finalized in the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50020) to address several specific
issues concerning the process and data to be employed in determining
Factor 3 in the case of hospital mergers as well as the policies
finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule concerning multiple
cost reports beginning in the same fiscal year (81 FR 56957).
We believe this approach, if we were to propose to continue it for
FY 2019 and FY 2020, would have the effect of transitioning the
incorporation of data from Worksheet S-10 into the calculation of
Factor 3. Starting with one year of Worksheet S-10 data in FY 2018, an
additional year of Worksheet S-10 data would be incorporated into the
calculation of Factor 3 in FY 2019, and the use of low-income insured
days would be phased out by FY 2020.
In addition, we acknowledge the concerns regarding IHS/Tribal
hospitals and subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospitals that some commenters
expressed in response to the FY 2017 proposal to begin using Worksheet
S-10 data to determine Factor 3 in FY 2018. According to some of these
commenters, the use of data from Worksheet S-10 to calculate
uncompensated care may jeopardize all of the IHS/Tribal hospitals'
uncompensated care payments due to their the unique funding structure.
With respect to Puerto Rico, other commenters asserted that the use of
Worksheet S-10 data may not be appropriate given the historical
treatment of subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospitals under the statutory
provisions governing payments under Medicaid and Medicare Part A and
its impact on the reporting of uncompensated care payments by these
hospitals. After consideration of the concerns, we believe that the
uncompensated care data reported by Puerto Rico and IHS/Tribal
hospitals needs to be further examined and should not be used for FY
2018. For the reasons described earlier related to the impact of the
Medicaid expansion beginning in FY 2014, we also do not believe it
would be appropriate to calculate a Factor 3 for these hospitals using
FY 2014 low-income insured days. Because we do not believe it is
appropriate to use the FY 2014 uncompensated care data for these
hospitals and we also do not believe it is appropriate to use the FY
2014 low-income insured days, we believe that the best proxy for the
costs of Puerto Rico and IHS/Tribal hospitals for treating the
uninsured is the low income-insured days data for FY 2012 and FY 2013.
Accordingly, we are proposing for these hospitals that when we compute
the individual Factor 3s for each of the three cost reporting periods
that are used to determine Factor 3, rather than computing a Factor 3
using Worksheet S-10 data from the hospital's FY 2014 cost report, we
would substitute the Factor 3 calculated using the hospital's FY 2013
low-income insured days. That is, in order to determine the Factor 3
for FY 2018, we would calculate an average of three individual Factor
3s using the Factor 3 calculated using FY 2013 cost report data twice
and the Factor 3 calculated using FY 2012 cost report data once. We
believe it is appropriate to double-weight the Factor 3 calculated
using FY 2013 data as it reflects the most recent available information
regarding the hospital's low-income insured days before any expansion
of Medicaid. We note that as we are not making any proposals with
respect to the calculation of Factor 3 for FY 2019 at this time, we
will reexamine the use of the Worksheet S-10 data for Puerto Rico and
IHS/Tribal hospitals as part of the FY 2019 rulemaking. In addition, we
are proposing to continue to use a proxy for SSI days consisting of 14
percent of a hospital's Medicaid days for Puerto Rico hospitals, as
finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56953 through
56956).
Therefore, for FY 2018, we are proposing to compute Factor 3 for
each hospital by--
Step 1: Calculating Factor 3 using the low-income insured
days proxy based on FY 2012 cost report data and the FY 2014 SSI ratio;
Step 2: Calculating Factor 3 using the insured low-income
days proxy based on FY 2013 cost report data and the FY 2015 SSI ratio;
Step 3: Calculating Factor 3 based on the FY 2014
Worksheet S-10 data (or using the Factor 3 calculated in Step 2 for
Puerto Rico and IHS/Tribal hospitals); and
Step 4: Averaging the Factor 3 values from Steps 1, 2, and
3; that is, adding the Factor 3 values from FY 2012, FY 2013, and FY
2014 for each
[[Page 19952]]
hospital, and dividing that amount by the number of cost reporting
periods with data to compute an average Factor 3.
We are inviting public comments on our proposed methodology for
calculating Factor 3 for FY 2018.
We note that if this proposed methodology is adopted for FY 2018,
we would expect to propose to use a similar methodology for calculating
Factor 3 for subsequent years, meaning that for FY 2019 we would expect
to incorporate data from the FY 2015 Worksheet S-10 into the
methodology and drop the FY 2012 low-income insured day proxy data.
However, we are not making any proposals with respect to the
calculation of Factor 3 for FY 2019 at this time.
For new hospitals that do not have data for any of the three cost
reporting periods used in the proposed Factor 3 calculation, we will
continue to apply the new hospital policy finalized in the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50643). That is, the hospital will not
receive either interim empirically justified Medicare DSH payments or
interim uncompensated care payments. However, if the hospital is later
determined to be eligible to receive empirically justified Medicare DSH
payments based on its FY 2018 cost report, the hospital will also
receive an uncompensated care payment calculated using a Factor 3,
where the numerator is the uncompensated care costs reported on
Worksheet S-10 of the hospital's FY 2018 cost report, and the
denominator is the sum of uncompensated care costs reported on
Worksheet S-10 of all DSH eligible hospitals' FY 2014 cost reports as
prospectively determined during rulemaking. We note that, given the
selected time period of the data used to calculate Factor 3, any
hospitals with a CCN established after October 1, 2014 would be
considered new and subject to this policy.
As we have done for every proposed and final rule beginning in FY
2014, in conjunction with both the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule
and final rule, we will publish on the CMS Web site a table listing
Factor 3 for all hospitals that we estimate would receive empirically
justified Medicare DSH payments in FY 2018 (that is, those hospitals
that would receive interim uncompensated care payments during the
fiscal year), and for the remaining subsection (d) hospitals and
subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospitals that have the potential of
receiving a Medicare DSH payment in the event that they receive an
empirically justified Medicare DSH payment for the fiscal year as
determined at cost report settlement. We note that, as of this proposed
rule, the FY 2015 SSI ratios are not yet available. Accordingly, for
modeling purposes, we computed Factor 3 using the most recent available
data regarding SSI days from the FY 2013 and FY 2014 SSI ratios.
However, we expect that the FY 2015 SSI ratios will be available to
calculate Factor 3 for the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
We also will publish a supplemental data file containing a list of
the mergers that we are aware of and the computed uncompensated care
payment for each merged hospital. Hospitals have 60 days from the date
of public display of this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule to review
the table and supplemental data file published on the CMS Web site in
conjunction with the proposed rule and to notify CMS in writing of any
inaccuracies. Comments can be submitted to the CMS inbox at
[email protected]. We will address these comments as
appropriate in the table and the supplemental data file that we publish
on the CMS Web site in conjunction with the publication of the FY 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. After the publication of the FY 2018 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, hospitals will have until August 31, 2017, to
review and submit comments on the accuracy of the table and
supplemental data file published in conjunction with the final rule.
Comments may be submitted to the CMS inbox at
[email protected] through August 31, 2017, and any changes to
Factor 3 will be posted on the CMS Web site prior to October 1, 2017.
(4) Methodological Considerations for Calculating Factor 3
Annualizing short cost reports. As we explained
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56957 through 56959), we
believe that for hospitals that file multiple cost reports beginning in
the same year, combining the data from these cost reports has the
benefit of supplementing the data of hospitals that filed cost reports
that are less than 12 months, such that the basis of their
uncompensated care payments and those of hospitals that filed full-year
12-month cost reports would be more equitable. In response to our
original proposal in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule to combine
data from multiple cost reports, many hospitals stated that while they
were appreciative of CMS' efforts to provide a more equitable playing
field for hospitals that filed short cost reports, they believed that
expanding the time period of the data used to calculate Factor 3 as
well as combining data across multiple cost reports would not remedy
the fact that some hospitals are still disadvantaged by having less
than 36 months of data in their Factor 3 calculation (81 FR 56959).
Other commenters opposed the use of multiple cost reporting periods if
it would result in a hospital having more than 12 months of data in the
Factor 3 calculation for a year, and recommended that CMS prorate the
data to a 12-month period. Similarly, other commenters recommended that
CMS annualize cost report data for any cost reporting period that is
less than 12 months. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we
acknowledged that, although we had not made any proposal in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule to annualize the cost reports used to
calculate Factor 3, the situations presented by commenters, including
both long and short cost reporting periods, pose unique challenges in
the context of estimating Factor 3. We stated that we intended to
consider the issue further and might address the issue in future
rulemaking.
For this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, taking into
consideration the feedback from hospitals that have been disadvantaged
in the Factor 3 calculation due to cost reports that do not span a full
year, we are proposing to annualize Medicaid data if a hospital's cost
report does not equal 12 months of data. We are not proposing to
annualize SSI days because we do not obtain these data from hospital
cost reports in HCRIS. Rather, we obtain these data from the latest
available SSI ratios posted on the Medicare DSH homepage (//
www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/
acuteinpatientpps/dsh.html), which are aggregated at the hospital level
and do not have the information needed to determine if the data should
be annualized.
Under this proposal, if the time between the start date of a
hospital's cost reporting year and the end date of its cost reporting
year is less than 12 months, we would annualize the Medicaid days so
that the hospital has 12 months of data included in its Factor 3
calculation. Conversely, if the time between the aforementioned start
date and the end date is greater than 12 months, we would annualize the
Medicaid days to achieve 12 months of Medicaid days data. If a hospital
files more than one cost report beginning in the same fiscal year, we
would first combine the data across the multiple cost reports before
determining the difference between the start date and the end date to
see if annualization is needed.
[[Page 19953]]
To annualize the Medicaid days for a long or short cost reporting
year, we would divide the length of a full year (365 or 366 calendar
days, as applicable) by the length of the cost reporting year (the
number of calendar days in the cost reporting year) and then multiply
the quotient by the number of Medicaid days in the cost reporting year.
For instance, a cost reporting year that is 285 calendar days long
with 1,200 Medicaid days would be annualized as follows: (365/285) *
1,200 = 1,537 days.
A cost reporting year that is 385 calendar days long with 1,200
Medicaid days would be annualized using the same formula: (365/385) *
1,200 = 1,137 days.
Likewise, because long and short cost reporting periods pose the
same challenges in the context of estimating Factor 3 using hospital
uncompensated care costs, we are proposing to annualize the
uncompensated care cost data reported on Worksheet S-10 for cost
reports that do not equal 12 months of data, by dividing the length of
a full year (365 or 366 calendar days, as applicable) by the length of
the cost reporting year (number of calendar days in the cost reporting
year) and then multiplying the quotient by the total reported
uncompensated care costs for the cost reporting year.
For instance, a cost reporting year that is 285 calendar days long
reporting $10,500,000 in uncompensated care costs would be annualized
as follows:
(365/285) * $10,500,000 = $13,447,368.
A cost reporting year that is 385 calendar days long reporting
$10,500,000 in uncompensated care costs would be annualized using the
same formula:
(365/385) * $10,500,000 = $9,954,545.
If a hospital files more than one cost report beginning in the same
fiscal year, we would first combine the data across the multiple cost
reports before determining the length of the cost reporting year to see
if annualization is needed.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to annualize the
cost reports used to calculate Factor 3 for FY 2018. In addition, as
noted earlier, our proposal to continue calculating a hospital's share
of uncompensated care payments using a time period that includes three
cost reporting years is also designed to mitigate undue fluctuations in
the amount of uncompensated care payments to hospitals from year to
year and smooth over anomalies between cost reporting periods. Given
that our proposal to annualize the costs reports used to calculate the
Factor 3 for FY 2018 would also mitigate fluctuations in the amount of
uncompensated care payments from year to year, we also are seeking
public comment on the degree to which the use of three cost reporting
years would still be necessary if we were to adopt our proposal to
annualize the cost reports used to calculate Factor 3, or if instead
the use of a single cost reporting year or two cost reporting years
would be appropriate. In order to facilitate public comments, we intend
to post on our Web site a data file containing information similar to
the information provided in section I.H.5., ``Effects of the Proposed
Changes to Medicare DSH and Uncompensated Care Payments for FY 2018''
of Appendix A of this proposed rule. However, instead of reflecting our
proposed approach of calculating Factor 3 using a time period that
includes three cost reporting years, it would reflect an alternative
approach of calculating Factor 3 using only the most recent year (FY
2014) of our proposed 3-year average. In all other respects, the
calculation of Factor 3 would remain the same.
Scaling Factor. Under the methodology adopted in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule and that we are proposing to apply
in FY 2018, if the hospital does not have data for one or more of the
three cost reporting periods, we will compute Factor 3 for the periods
available and average those. In other words, we will divide the sum of
the individual Factor 3s by the number of cost reporting periods with
data so as not to disadvantage hospitals that are missing data for one
or more cost reporting periods. Following the publication of the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, several hospitals noted that this aspect
of the methodology resulted in the Factor 3 values of DSH eligible
hospitals in Table 18 and the Medicare DSH Supplemental Data File
adding up to slightly greater than one, which resulted in total
uncompensated care payments somewhat exceeding the estimate published
in the FY 2017 final rule. Specifically, for hospitals that have fewer
than 3 cost reporting years with data, dividing the individual Factor
3s by the number of cost reporting years with data (that is, 2 cost
reporting years or 1 cost reporting year) results in a higher average
Factor 3 than if the individual Factor 3s were divided by the number of
cost reporting years, regardless of whether or not there is data (that
is, 3 cost reporting years). For example, a hospital with no data for
FY 2011 and a Factor 3 of 0.000051762 for FY 2012 and 0.000049852 for
FY 2013 would have an average Factor 3 of 0.000050807 if averaged by 2
but an average Factor 3 of only 0.000033871 if averaged by 3. After
reviewing the data in Table 18 and the Medicare DSH Supplemental Data
File, which were published in conjunction with the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule, we concluded that the hospitals' observations are
correct and that an adjustment is needed so that total uncompensated
care payments do not exceed the estimate published in section
V.G.4.b.(2) of the preamble of this proposed rule.
Accordingly, to address the effects of averaging Factor 3s
calculated for three separate fiscal years, we are proposing to apply a
scaling factor to the Factor 3 values of all DSH eligible hospitals so
that total uncompensated care payments are consistent with the
estimated amount available to make uncompensated care payments for FY
2018. Under this proposal, we would first compute the Factor 3 and
uncompensated care payments for all hospitals that we anticipate
qualifying for Medicare DSH payments in FY 2018. We would then divide 1
(the expected sum of all eligible hospitals' Factor 3) by the actual
sum of all eligible hospitals' Factor 3 values and multiply the
quotient by each hospital's total uncompensated care payment to obtain
scaled uncompensated care payment amounts whose sum is consistent with
the estimate of the total amount available to make uncompensated care
payments in section V.G.4.b.(2) of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The hospital-specific uncompensated care amount would then be divided
by a 3-year claims average to obtain the amount of the interim
uncompensated care payment the hospital will receive for each claim. As
an illustration of the calculation of the scaling factor, applying this
proposal to the FY 2017 uncompensated care payments would have resulted
in a scaling factor of 0.9992 (1/1.0008). We note that the FY 2017
uncompensated care payments as calculated for the FY 2017 IPPS final
rule exceeded the estimated amount by approximately $5 million due to
the lack of a scaling factor.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to apply a scaling
factor to all hospitals' Factor 3 values for FY 2018.
(5) Methodological Considerations for Incorporating Worksheet S-10 Data
Definition of uncompensated care. In the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS rulemaking, we considered three potential definitions of
uncompensated care: Charity care; charity care + bad debt; and charity
care + bad debt +
[[Page 19954]]
Medicaid shortfalls. As we explained in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50634), we considered proposing to define the amount of
uncompensated care for a hospital as the uncompensated care costs of
that hospital and considered potential data sources for those costs. We
examined the literature on uncompensated care and the concepts of
uncompensated care used in various public and private programs, and
considered input from stakeholders and public comments in various
forums, including the national provider call that we held in January
2013. Our review of the information from these sources indicated that
there is some variation in how different States, provider
organizations, and Federal programs define ``uncompensated care.''
However, a common theme of almost all these definitions is that they
include both ``charity care'' and ``bad debt'' as components of
``uncompensated care.'' Therefore, a definition that incorporates the
most commonly used factors within uncompensated care as reported by
stakeholders would include charity care costs and bad debt costs.
Worksheet S-10 employs the definition of charity care plus non-Medicare
bad debt. Specifically:
Cost of Charity Care (Line 23)
+ Cost of non-Medicare bad debt expanse (Line 29)
Cost of non-Medicare uncompensated care (Line 30)
Where:
Cost of charity care = Cost of initial obligation of
patients approved for charity care (line 21) minus partial payment
by patients approved for charity care (line 22).
Cost of non-Medicare bad debt expense = Cost to charge
ratio (line 1) times non-Medicare and nonreimbursable bad debt
expense (line 28).
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR 25092), we
proposed to adopt a definition of uncompensated care costs that
included charity care and non-Medicare bad debt. We explained that we
believe there are compelling arguments for excluding Medicaid
shortfalls from the definition of uncompensated care, including the
fact that several government agencies and key stakeholders do not
consider Medicaid shortfalls in their definition of uncompensated care
and that excluding Medicaid shortfalls from the uncompensated care
definition allows Medicare uncompensated care payments to target
hospitals that have a disproportionate share of uncompensated care for
patients with no insurance coverage. Although we did not finalize the
proposed definition of uncompensated care costs as part of the FY 2017
rulemaking, we continue to believe a definition that incorporates the
most commonly used factors within uncompensated care as reported by
stakeholders would include charity care costs and non-Medicare bad debt
costs, which correlates to Line 30 of Worksheet S-10. Therefore, we are
again proposing that, for purposes of calculating Factor 3 and
uncompensated care costs beginning in FY 2018, ``uncompensated care''
would be defined as the amount on line 30 of Worksheet S-10, which is
the cost of charity care (Line 23) and the cost of non-Medicare bad
debt (Line 29). We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
Trims to apply to CCRs on Line 1 of Worksheet S-
10. As we noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH proposed and final rules (81
FR 25093; 81 FR 56971), commenters have suggested that uncompensated
care costs reported on Worksheet S-10 should be audited due to
extremely high values consistently reported by some hospitals. In
response to these comments, we have reviewed the Worksheet S-10 data
and identified approximately 10 to 20 hospitals that have anomalous
uncompensated care costs. We note that many of these hospitals are
public hospitals, which can have charging practices that are distinct
from other hospital types. We believe that, just as we apply trims to
hospitals' CCRs to eliminate anomalies when calculating outlier
payments for extraordinarily high cost cases (Sec. 412.84(h)(3)(ii)),
it is appropriate to apply statistical trims to the CCRs on Worksheet
S-10, Line 1 that are considered anomalies. Specifically, Sec.
412.84(h)(3)(ii) states that the Medicare contractor may use a
statewide CCR for hospitals whose operating or capital CCR is in excess
of 3 standard deviations above the corresponding national geometric
mean (that is, the CCR ``ceiling''). This mean is recalculated annually
by CMS and published in the proposed and final IPPS rules each year. To
control for data anomalies, in the FY 2017 rulemaking, we considered
approaches that would trim hospitals' CCRs to ensure reasonable CCRs
are used to convert charges to costs for purposes of determining
uncompensated care costs.
After considering the comments received in response to the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, which were discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH final rule (81 FR 56971 through 56973), for FY 2018, we are
proposing the following alternative methodology for trimming CCRs:
Step 1: Remove Maryland hospitals. In addition, we will remove all-
inclusive rate providers, as they have charge structures that differ
from other IPPS hospitals, and providers that did not report a CCR on
Worksheet S-10, Line 1, and assign them the statewide average CCR in
step 5 below.
Step 2: For hospitals with multiple cost reports included in the
2014 HCRIS data, (a) combine the amounts from Worksheet C, Part I, Line
202, Column 3 from each cost report to calculate total costs, (b)
combine the amounts from Worksheet C, Part I, Line 202, Column 8 from
each cost report to calculate total charges, and (c) divide the total
costs by the total charges to arrive at a recalculated CCR.
Step 3: Calculate a CCR ``ceiling'' using the CCRs reported on
Worksheet S-10, Line 1, from all IPPS hospitals that were not removed
in Step 1 (including non-DSH eligible hospitals), or the recalculated
CCR described in Step 2. The ceiling is calculated as 3 standard
deviations above the national geometric mean CCR. This approach is
consistent with our calculation of the CCR ceiling used for high-cost
outliers. Remove all hospitals that exceed the ceiling so that these
aberrant CCRs do not skew the calculation of the statewide average CCR.
Based on the information currently available to us, this trim would
remove 9 hospitals that have CCRs above the calculated ceiling of
0.937.
Step 4: Using the CCRs for the remaining hospitals in Step 3,
determine the urban and rural statewide average CCRs using Line 1 of
Worksheet S-10 for hospitals within each State (including non-DSH
eligible hospitals), weighted by the sum of total inpatient discharges
and outpatient visits from Worksheet S-3, Part I, Line 14, Column 14.
Step 5: Assign the appropriate statewide average CCR (urban or
rural) calculated in Step 4 to all hospitals with a CCR greater than 3
standard deviations above the corresponding national geometric mean
(that is, the CCR ``ceiling''), as well as to all-inclusive rate
providers, and providers that did not report a CCR on Worksheet S-10,
Line 1. The statewide average CCR would therefore be applied to 140
hospitals, of which 14 did not report a CCR on Worksheet S-10, Line 1,
9 had a CCR that exceeded the calculated ceiling of 0.937, and 117 are
all-inclusive rate providers.
After applying the applicable trims to a hospital's CCR as
appropriate, we are proposing to calculate a hospital's uncompensated
care costs as being
[[Page 19955]]
equal to Line 30, which is the sum of Line 23 and Line 29, as follows:
Hospital Uncompensated Care Costs = Line 30 (Line 23 + Line 29),
which is equal to--
[(Line 1 CCR (as adjusted, if applicable) x charity care line 20)-
(Payments received for charity care Line 22)]
+
[(Line 1 CCR (as adjusted, if applicable) x Non-Medicare and non-
reimbursable Bad Debt Line 28)].
We are inviting public comments on our proposed trim methodology
for FY 2018.
Cost report revisions and Worksheet S-10 audits.
While not directly relevant to our proposal to use FY 2014 Worksheet S-
10 data beginning in FY 2018, we note that as part of our ongoing
quality control and data improvement measures to continue to improve
the Worksheet S-10 data over time, we have made revisions to the cost
report instructions and developed an audit process.
With respect to the cost reporting instructions, on November 18,
2016, we issued Transmittal 10 which updated the instructions for Form
2552-10. Specifically, we updated the instructions in Section 4012 of
Chapter 40 of the Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part II. The
instructions clarify the reporting of charges for charity care.
Transmittal 10 can be downloaded from the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/2016-Transmittals-Items/R10P240.html.
With respect to the audit process, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 56964), we stated that we intended to provide
standardized instructions to the MACs to guide them in determining when
and how often a hospital's Worksheet S-10 should be reviewed. We
indicated that we would not make the MACs' review protocol public as
all CMS desk review and audit protocols are confidential and are for
CMS and MAC use only. The instructions for the MACs are still under
development and will be provided to the MACs as soon as possible. We
refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for a complete
discussion concerning the issues that we are considering in developing
the instructions that will be provided to the MACs. We expect that cost
reports beginning in FY 2017 will be the first cost reports for which
the Worksheet S-10 data will be subject to a desk review. We do not
anticipate making any further modifications to the Worksheet S-10
instructions at this time so that hospitals can begin to review and
conform to the current instructions in Transmittal 10. Predictability
is an important part of the process for reporting data on Worksheet S-
10. As a result, we believe it is reasonable to wait until the
Worksheet S-10 data have been submitted, the audits have been
performed, and the data are available for review before we consider
making any further revisions to the Worksheet S-10 instructions.
H. Medicare-Dependent, Small Rural Hospital (MDH) Program (Sec.
412.108)
1. Background for the MDH Program
Section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act provides special payment
protections, under the IPPS, to a Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital (MDH). (For additional information on the MDH program and the
payment methodology, we refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (76 FR 51683 through 51684).) As discussed in section V.B.1.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, the MDH program provisions at
section 1886(d)(5)(G) of the Act will expire at the end of FY 2017.
Beginning with discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017, all
hospitals that previously qualified for MDH status will be paid based
on the Federal rate.
Since the extension of the MDH program through FY 2012 provided by
section 3124 of the Affordable Care Act, the MDH program had been
extended by subsequent legislation as follows: Section 606 of the ATRA
(Pub. L. 112-240) extended the MDH program through FY 2013 (that is,
for discharges occurring before October 1, 2013). Section 1106 of the
Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67) extended the MDH
program through the first half of FY 2014 (that is, for discharges
occurring before April 1, 2014). Section 106 of the PAMA (Pub. L. 113-
93) extended the MDH program through the first half of FY 2015 (that
is, for discharges occurring before April 1, 2015). Section 205 of the
MACRA (Pub. L. 114-10) extended the MDH program through FY 2017 (that
is, for discharges occurring before October 1, 2017). For additional
information on the extensions of the MDH program after FY 2012, we
refer readers to the following Federal Register documents: The FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53404 through 53405 and 53413 through
53414); the FY 2013 IPPS notice (78 FR 14689); the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (78 FR 50647 through 50649); the FY 2014 interim final
rule with comment period (79 FR 15025 through 15027); the FY 2014
notice (79 FR 34446 through 34449); the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 50022 through 50024); the August 2015 interim final rule
with comment period (80 FR 49596); and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 57054 through 57057).
b. Expiration of the MDH Program
Because section 205 of the MACRA extended the MDH program through
FY 2017 only, beginning October 1, 2017, the MDH program will no longer
be in effect. Because the MDH program is not authorized by statute
beyond September 30, 2017, beginning October 1, 2017, all hospitals
that previously qualified for MDH status under section 1886(d)(5)(G) of
the Act will no longer have MDH status and will be paid based on the
IPPS Federal rate.
When the MDH program was set to expire at the end of FY 2012, in
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53404 through 53405), we
revised our sole community hospital (SCH) policies to allow MDHs to
apply for SCH status in advance of the expiration of the MDH program
and be paid as such under certain conditions. We codified these changes
in the regulations at Sec. 412.92(b)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(v).
Specifically, the existing regulations at Sec. 412.92(b)(2)(i) and
(b)(2)(v) allow for an effective date of an approval of SCH status that
is the day following the expiration date of the MDH program. We note
that these same conditions apply to MDHs that intend to apply for SCH
status with the expiration of the MDH program on September 30, 2017.
Therefore, in order for an MDH to receive SCH status effective October
1, 2017, the MDH must apply for SCH status at least 30 days before the
expiration of the MDH program; that is, the MDH must apply for SCH
status by September 1, 2017. The MDH also must request that, if
approved as an SCH, the SCH status be effective with the expiration of
the MDH program; that is, the MDH must request that the SCH status, if
approved, be effective October 1, 2017, immediately after its MDH
status expires with the expiration of the MDH program on September 30,
2017. We emphasize that an MDH that applies for SCH status in
anticipation of the expiration of the MDH program would not qualify for
the October 1, 2017 effective date for SCH status if it does not apply
by the September 1, 2017 deadline. If the MDH does not apply by the
September 1, 2017 deadline, the hospital would instead be subject to
the usual effective date for SCH classification; that is, 30 days after
the date of CMS' written notification of approval as specified at Sec.
412.92(b)(2)(i).
We note that the regulations governing the MDH program are found
[[Page 19956]]
at Sec. 412.108 and the MDH program is also cited in the general
payment rules in the regulations at Sec. 412.90. As stated earlier,
under current law, the MDH program will expire at the end of FY 2017,
which is already reflected in Sec. 412.108. As such, we are not
proposing specific amendments to the regulations at Sec. 412.108 to
reflect the expiration of the MDH program. However, it has come to our
attention that, with the various extensions of the MDH program as noted
earlier, we neglected to make conforming changes to the regulation text
at Sec. 412.90. Therefore, we are proposing to revise the general
payment rules under Sec. 412.90 to reflect the expiration of the MDH
program. However, we are proposing that if the MDH program were to be
extended by law, similar to how it was extended through FY 2013, by the
ATRA (Pub. L. 112-240); through March 31, 2014, by the Pathway for SGR
Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-167); through March 31, 2015, by the
PAMA (Pub. L. 113-93); and most recently through FY 2017, by the MACRA
(Pub. L. 114-10), we would make conforming changes to the regulations
governing the MDH program at Sec. 412.108(a)(1) and (c)(2)(iii) and
the general payment rules at Sec. 412.90(j) to reflect such an
extension of the MDH program. These conforming changes would only be
made if the MDH program were to be extended by statute beyond September
30, 2017.
I. Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program: Proposed Updates and
Changes (Sec. Sec. 412.150 Through 412.154)
1. Statutory Basis for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
Section 3025 of the Affordable Care Act, as amended by section
10309 of the Affordable Care Act, added section 1886(q) to the Act,
which establishes the ``Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program''
effective for discharges from ``applicable hospitals'' beginning on or
after October 1, 2012. Under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program, payments to applicable hospitals may be reduced to account for
certain excess readmissions. We refer readers to section IV.E.1. of the
FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49530 through 49531) for a
detailed discussion and additional information on of the statutory
history of the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program.
On December 13, 2016, the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
was enacted. Section 15002 of that law added subparagraphs (D) and (E)
to section 1886(q)(3) of the Act, which directs the Secretary to assign
hospitals to peer groups, develop a methodology that allows for
separate comparisons for hospitals within these groups, and allows for
changes in the risk adjustment methodology. The 21st Century Cures Act
also directs the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) to
conduct a review of overall hospital readmissions and whether such
readmissions are related to any changes in outpatient and emergency
services furnished. A report on the study is required to be submitted
in the MedPAC's report to Congress no later than June 2018.
Specifically, section 1886(q)(3)(D) of the Act directs the
Secretary to develop a transitional methodology that accounts for the
percentage of full-benefit dual eligible patients treated by a hospital
to determine a hospital's payment adjustment factor. Section
1886(q)(3)(D)(i) of the Act sets forth the requirement that the
Secretary assign hospitals to groups and apply a methodology ``that
allows for separate comparison of hospitals within each such group.''
This applies to discharges that occur during and after FY 2019 and
before the application of section 1886(q)(3)(E)(i) of the Act, which
allows the Secretary to take into account the recommendations in the
reports required by the IMPACT Act (Pub. L. 113-185) related to risk
adjustment and social risk factors. The first of two reports required
in the IMPACT Act was released in December of 2016 (available at:
//aspe.hhs.gov/system/files/pdf/253971/ASPESESRTCfull.pdf), and
the second report is required to be completed by October 2019.
The hospital groups in section 1886(q)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act are
described as being ``based on their overall proportion, of the
inpatients who are entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits under
Medicare Part A and who are full-benefit dual eligible individuals (as
defined in section 1935(c)(6) [of the Act]).'' The Secretary is further
required to consult with MedPAC when defining groups and may consider
analysis done by MedPAC in preparation for its June 2013 report
submitted to Congress. Section 1886(q)(3)(D)(iii) of the Act prevents
the imposition of additional reporting requirements in order to carry
out subparagraph (D). Section 1886(q)(3)(D)(iv) of the Act requires
that the estimated total amount of reductions in payments using the
methodology should equal the estimated total amount of reductions in
payments if subparagraph (D) did not apply.
Section 1886(q)(3)(E) of the Act outlines the considerations the
Secretary may take into account with respect to the risk adjustment
methodology. Section 1886(q)(3)(E)(i) of the Act allows the Secretary
to take into account studies conducted and recommendations made by the
Secretary under section 2(d)(1) of the IMPACT Act in the application of
risk adjustment methodologies. This does not preclude the consideration
of the use of groupings of hospitals. The Secretary is also allowed
under section 1886(q)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act to consider the use of ``V''
or other ICD-related codes for removal of a readmission with respect to
discharges occurring after FY 2018. Section 1886(q)(3)(E)(iii) of the
Act outlines the considerations the Secretary may make in the removal
of certain readmissions. For discharges occurring after FY 2018, the
Secretary may consider the removal as a readmission of an admission
that is classified within one or more of the following: Transplants;
end-stage renal disease; burns, trauma; psychosis; or substance abuse.
2. Regulatory Background
We refer readers to the following past final rules for detailed
discussions of the regulatory background and descriptions of the
current policies for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program: The
FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51660 through 51676); the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53374 through 53401); the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50649 through 50676); the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50024 through 50048); the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (80 FR 49530 through 49543); and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 56973 through 56979). These policies describe the
general framework for the implementation of the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program, including: (1) The selection of and measures for the
applicable conditions; (2) the calculation of the excess readmission
ratio, which is used, in part, to calculate the readmissions adjustment
factor; (3) the current calculation of the hospital readmission payment
adjustment factor, specifically addressing the base operating DRG
payment amount, aggregate payments for excess readmissions, and
aggregate payments for all discharges; (4) the opportunity for
hospitals to review and submit corrections using a process similar to
what is currently used for posting results on Hospital Compare; (5) the
adoption of an extraordinary circumstances exception policy to address
hospitals that experience a disaster or other extraordinary
circumstance; (6) the clarification that the public reporting of excess
[[Page 19957]]
readmission ratios will be posted on an annual basis to the Hospital
Compare Web site as soon as is feasible following the preview period;
and (7) the specification that the definition of ``applicable
hospital'' does not include hospitals and hospital units excluded from
the IPPS, such as LTCHs, cancer hospitals, children's hospitals, IRFs,
IPFs, CAHs, and hospitals in Puerto Rico.
We also have codified certain requirements of the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program at 42 CFR 412.152 through 412.154.
3. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
We refer readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
50039) for a discussion of the maintenance of technical specifications
for quality measures for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program.
Technical specifications of the readmission measures are provided on
our Web site in the Measure Methodology Reports at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. Additional resources
about the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and measure technical
specifications are on the QualityNet Web site on the Resources page at:
//www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier3&cid=1228772412995.
4. Proposed Policies for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
In this proposed rule, we are proposing the following policies for
the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program: (1) The applicable time
period for FY 2018; (2) the calculation of aggregate payments for
excess readmissions for FY 2018; (3) changes to the payment adjustment
factor in accordance with section 15002 of the 21st Century Cures Act
for FY 2019; and (4) updates to the Extraordinary Circumstance
Exception policy beginning in FY 2018 as related to extraordinary
circumstances that occur on or after October 1, 2017. These proposals
are described in more detail below.
5. Proposed Applicable Period for FY 2018
Under section 1886(q)(5)(D) of the Act, the Secretary has the
authority to specify the applicable period with respect to a fiscal
year under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. In the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51671), we finalized our policy to use
3 years of claims data to calculate the readmission measures. In the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53675), we codified the definition
of ``applicable period'' in the regulations at 42 CFR 412.152 as the 3-
year period from which data is collected in order to calculate excess
readmissions ratios and adjustments for the fiscal year, which includes
aggregate payments for excess readmissions and aggregate payments for
all discharges used in the calculation of the payment adjustment.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56974 through
56975), for FY 2017, consistent with the definition specified at Sec.
412.152, we established an ``applicable period'' for the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program to be the 3-year period from July 1,
2012 through June 30, 2015. In other words, the excess readmissions
ratios and the payment adjustment (including aggregate payments for
excess readmissions and aggregate payments for all discharges) for FY
2017 are calculated using data from the 3-year time period of July 1,
2012 through June 30, 2015.
In this proposed rule, for FY 2018, consistent with the definition
specified at Sec. 412.152, we are proposing that the ``applicable
period'' for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program would be the
3-year period from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2016. In other words,
we are proposing that the excess readmissions ratios and the payment
adjustment (including aggregate payments for excess readmissions and
aggregate payments for all discharges) for FY 2018 would be calculated
using data from the 3-year time period of July 1, 2013 through June 30,
2016.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
6. Proposed Calculation of Aggregate Payments for Excess Readmissions
for FY 2018
Section 1886(q)(3)(B) of the Act specifies the ratio used to
calculate the adjustment factor under the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program. It states that the ratio is equal to 1 minus the
ratio of--(i) the aggregate payments for excess readmissions and (ii)
the aggregate payments for all discharges. For a detailed discussion on
the methodology for the calculation of aggregate payments for excess
readmissions, we refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(77 FR 53387 through 53397). We also have codified the definition of
``aggregate payments for excess readmissions'' and ``aggregate payments
for all discharges,'' as well as a current methodology for calculating
the numerator of the ratio (aggregate payments for excess readmissions)
and the denominator of the ratio (aggregate payments for all
discharges) at 42 CFR 412.152 through 412.154.
The Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program currently includes the
following six applicable conditions: Acute myocardial infarction (AMI);
heart failure (HF); pneumonia (PN); total hip arthroplasty/total knee
arthroplasty (THA/TKA); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD);
and Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Surgery.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56975 through
56977), we adopted the methodology to include CABG in the calculation
of the readmissions payment adjustment for FY 2017. Specifically, we
discussed how the addition of CABG applicable conditions would be
included in the calculation of the aggregate payments for excess
readmissions (the numerator of the readmissions payment adjustment). We
note that this policy did not alter our established methodology for
calculating aggregate payments for all discharges (that is, the
denominator of the ratio).
When calculating the numerator (aggregate payments for excess
readmissions), we determine the base operating DRG payments for the
applicable period. To determine the base operating DRG payment amount
for an individual hospital for such applicable period for such
condition, we use Medicare inpatient claims from the MedPAR file with
discharge dates that are within the same applicable period to calculate
the excess readmissions ratio. We use MedPAR claims data as our data
source for determining aggregate payments for excess readmissions and
aggregate payments for all discharges, as this data source is
consistent with the claims data source used in IPPS rulemaking to
determine IPPS rates.
For FY 2018, we are proposing to use MedPAR claims with discharge
dates that are on or after July 1, 2013, and no later than June 30,
2016, consistent with our historical use of a 3-year applicable period.
Under our established methodology, we use the update of the MedPAR file
for each Federal fiscal year, which is updated 6 months after the end
of each Federal fiscal year within the applicable period, as our data
source (that is, the March updates of the respective Federal fiscal
year MedPAR files) for the final rules.
In this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are proposing to determine
aggregate payments for excess readmissions and
[[Page 19958]]
aggregate payments for all discharges using data from MedPAR claims
with discharge dates that are on or after July 1, 2013, and no later
than June 30, 2016. However, we note that, for the purpose of modeling
the proposed FY 2018 readmissions payment adjustment factors for this
proposed rule, we used excess readmissions ratios for applicable
hospitals from the FY 2017 Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
applicable period. For the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, applicable
hospitals will have had the opportunity to review and correct data from
the proposed FY 2018 applicable period of July 1, 2013 to June 30,
2016, before they are made public under our policy regarding the
preview and reporting of hospital-specific information, which we
discussed in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53374 through
53401).
In this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are proposing to use MedPAR
data from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2016. Specifically, for this
proposed rule, we are using the following MedPAR files:
March 2014 update of the FY 2013 MedPAR file to identify
claims within FY 2013 with discharges dates that are on or after July
1, 2013;
March 2015 update of the FY 2014 MedPAR file to identify
claims within FY 2014;
March 2016 update of the FY 2015 MedPAR file to identify
claims within FY 2015;
December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file to
identify claims within FY 2016 with discharge dates no later than June
30, 2016.
For the final rule, we are proposing to use the same MedPAR files
as listed above for claims within FY 2013, FY 2014 and FY 2015, and for
claims within FY 2016, we are proposing to use the March 2017 update of
the FY 2016 MedPAR file.
For a discussion of how we identified the applicable conditions to
calculate the aggregate payments for excess readmissions for FY 2017,
we refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56975
through 56977).
Under our current methodology, in identifying the applicable
conditions to calculate the aggregate payments for excess readmissions,
we apply the same exclusions to the claims in the MedPAR file as are
applied in the measure methodology for each of the applicable
conditions. In this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are proposing to
continue to apply the same exclusions to the claims in the MedPAR file
as we applied for FY 2017 for the AMI, HF, PN, THA/TKA, CABG and COPD
applicable conditions. We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
and FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules (80 FR 49539; 81 FR 56976) for a
list of these exclusions. Updates to these exclusions will be posted on
the QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org > Hospital-
Inpatient > Claims-Based Measures > Readmission Measures > Measure
Methodology.
Furthermore, under our current methodology we only identify
Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) claims that meet the criteria described
above for each applicable condition to calculate the aggregate payments
for excess readmissions (that is, claims paid for under Medicare Part
C, Medicare Advantage, are not included in this calculation). This
policy is consistent with the methodology to calculate excess
readmissions ratios based solely on admissions and readmissions for
Medicare FFS patients. Therefore, consistent with our established
methodology, for FY 2018, we are proposing to continue to exclude
admissions for patients enrolled in Medicare Advantage as identified in
the Medicare Enrollment Database.
Under our existing policy, we identify eligible hospitalizations
and readmissions of Medicare patients discharged from an applicable
hospital having a principal diagnosis for the measured condition in an
applicable period (76 FR 51669). As described above, the proposed 3-
year applicable period for FY 2018 of July 1, 2013 through June 30,
2016 includes discharges occurring in four Federal FYs (FY 2013, FY
2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016). Diagnoses and procedure codes for
discharges occurring prior to October 1, 2015 were reported under the
ICD-9-CM code set. Effective with discharges occurring on or after
October 1, 2015 (FY 2016), diagnoses and procedure codes are reported
under the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets. Thus, for the proposed FY
2018 applicable period, the discharge diagnoses for each applicable
condition would be based on a list of specific ICD-9-CM or ICD-10-CM
and ICD-10-PCS code sets, as applicable, for that condition.
In this proposed rule, to identify the discharges for each
applicable condition for FY 2018 to calculate the aggregate payments
for excess readmissions for an individual hospital, we are proposing to
identify each applicable condition, using, for FY 2013, FY 2014 and FY
2015, the appropriate ICD-9-CM codes, and for FY 2016, the appropriate
ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets. This proposal is consistent with
our established policy for identifying the discharges for each
applicable condition to calculate the aggregate payments for excess
readmissions (76 FR 51673 through 51676). The ICD-9-CM codes for the
AMI, HF, PN, THA/TKA, COPD, and CABG applicable conditions can be found
on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org > Hospital-
Inpatient > Claims-Based Measures > Readmission Measures > Measure
Methodology. For a complete list of the ICD-9-CM codes we are proposing
to use to identify the applicable conditions, we refer readers to the
following tables of the measure methodology reports on the QualityNet
Web site:
2016 Measure Updates: AMI, HF, Pneumonia, COPD, Stroke
Readmission (AMI-Version 8.0, HF-Version 8.0, Pneumonia-Version 8.0,
COPD-Version 4.0, and Stroke-Version 4.0: 2016 Condition-Specific
Readmission Measures Updates and Specifications Report)--
++ Table D.1.1--ICD-9-CM Codes for AMI Cohort (page 79).
++ Table D.2.1--ICD-9-CM Codes for COPD Cohort (page 83).
++ Table D.3.1--ICD-9-CM Codes for Inclusion in HF Cohort (page
89).
++ Table D.4.1--ICD-9-CM Codes for Pneumonia Cohort (page 94).
2016 Measure Updates: THA/TKA and CABG Readmission (THA
and/or TKA-Version 4.0, CABG-Version 2.0: 2016 Procedure-Specific
Readmission Measures Updates and Specifications Report)--
++ Table D.1.1--ICD-9-CM Codes Used to Identify Eligible CABG
Procedures (page 49).
++ Table D.2.1--ICD-9-CM Codes Used to Identify Eligible THA/TKA
Procedures (page 58).
A detailed list of the condition-specific and procedure-specific
reports detailing the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets we are
proposing to use to identify the applicable conditions for the period
from October 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016 is not yet publicly available.
However, we anticipate the 2017 AMI, HF, Pneumonia, COPD, Stroke, THA/
TKA, and CABG Readmission Measures Updates and Specifications Report,
will be available by mid-April and can be accessed at: //www.QualityNet.org > Hospital-Inpatient > Claims-Based Measures >
Readmission Measures > Measure Methodology. We are currently making a
list of the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets used to identify the
applicable conditions for this proposed rule, titled ICD-10-CM Codes
for Inclusion in the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program Applicable
Conditions for FY 2018 Proposed Rule, available on the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program page on the CMS Web site at: //
[[Page 19959]]
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
AcuteInpatientPPS/Readmissions-Reduction-Program.html.
In summary, for FY 2018, we are proposing to calculate aggregate
payments for excess readmissions, using MedPAR claims from July 1, 2013
through June 30, 2016, to identify applicable conditions based on the
same ICD-9-CM codes or ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets, as
applicable, used to identify the conditions for the readmissions
measures, and to apply the proposed exclusions for the types of
admissions (as previously discussed). We are not proposing any changes
to our existing methodology for calculating ``aggregate payments for
excess readmissions'' for each hospital (the numerator of the ratio).
Specifically, to calculate aggregate payments for excess readmissions
for each hospital, we are proposing to calculate the base operating DRG
payment amounts for all claims in the 3-year applicable period for each
applicable condition (AMI, HF, PN, COPD, THA/TKA, and CABG) based on
the claims we have identified as described above. Once we have
calculated the base operating DRG amounts for all the claims for the
six applicable conditions, we are proposing to sum the base operating
DRG payments amounts by each condition, resulting in six summed
amounts, one amount for each of the six applicable conditions. We are
proposing to then multiply the amount for each condition by the
respective excess readmissions ratio minus 1 when that excess
readmissions ratio is greater than 1, which indicates that a hospital
has performed, with respect to readmissions for that applicable
condition, worse than the average hospital with similar patients. Each
product in this computation represents the payments for excess
readmissions for that condition. We are proposing to then sum the
resulting products which represent a hospital's proposed ``aggregate
payments for excess readmissions'' (the numerator of the ratio).
Because this calculation is performed separately for each of the six
conditions, a hospital's excess readmissions ratio must be less than or
equal to 1 on each measure to avoid CMS' determination that there were
payments made by CMS for excess readmissions (resulting in a payment
reduction under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program). In other
words, in order to avoid a payment reduction a hospital's excess
readmissions ratio must be less than or equal to 1 on each measure. We
note that we are not proposing any changes to our existing methodology
to calculate ``aggregate payments for all discharges'' (the denominator
of the ratio).
Section 1886(q)(3)(A) of the Act defines the ``adjustment factor''
for an applicable hospital for a fiscal year as equal to the greater
of: (i) The ratio described in subparagraph (B) for the hospital for
the applicable period (as defined in paragraph (5)(D)) for such fiscal
year; or (ii) the floor adjustment factor specified in subparagraph
(C). Section 1886(q)(3)(B) of the Act, in turn, describes the ratio
used to calculate the adjustment factor. Specifically, it states that
the ratio is equal to 1 minus the ratio of--(i) the aggregate payments
for excess readmissions and (ii) the aggregate payments for all
discharges. The calculation of this ratio is codified at Sec.
412.154(c)(1) of the regulations and the floor adjustment factor is
codified at Sec. 412.154(c)(2) of the regulations. Section
1886(q)(3)(C) of the Act specifies the floor adjustment factor at 0.97
for FY 2015 and subsequent fiscal years.
Consistent with section 1886(q)(3) of the Act, codified at Sec.
412.154(c)(2), for FY 2018, the adjustment factor is either the greater
of the ratio or the floor adjustment factor of 0.97. Under our
established policy, the ratio is rounded to the fourth decimal place.
In other words, for FY 2018, a hospital subject to the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program would have an adjustment factor that is
between 1.0 (no reduction) and 0.9700 (greatest possible reduction).
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
7. Background and Current Payment Adjustment Methodology
a. Background
As described above, section 1886(q)(3)(D) of the Act requires the
Secretary to group hospitals and apply a methodology that allows for
separate comparisons of hospitals within groups in determining a
hospital's adjustment factor for payments applied to discharges
beginning in FY 2019.
b. Current Payment Adjustment Methodology
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53374 through
53401), we finalized policies that relate to the portions of section
1886(q) of the Act that at that time addressed the calculation of the
hospital readmissions payment adjustment factor. Section 1886(q)(3)(A)
of the Act defines the ``adjustment factor'' for an applicable hospital
for a fiscal year as equal to the greater of: (i) The ratio described
in subparagraph (B) for the hospital for the applicable period (as
defined in paragraph (5)(D)) for such fiscal year; or (ii) the floor
adjustment factor specified in subparagraph (C). Section 1886(q)(3)(B)
of the Act, in turn, describes the ratio used to calculate the
adjustment factor. Specifically, it states that the ratio is equal to 1
minus the ratio of--(i) the aggregate payments for excess readmissions
and (ii) the aggregate payments for all discharges.
Consistent with section 1886(q)(3)(C) of the Act, codified at Sec.
412.154(c)(2), for FY 2015 and subsequent years, the adjustment factor
is either the greater of the ratio or the floor adjustment factor of
0.9700. In other words, a hospital subject to the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program will have an adjustment factor that is between 1.0000
(no reduction) and 0.9700 (greatest possible reduction). Under our
established policy, the ratio is rounded to the fourth decimal place.
8. Provisions for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology for FY
2019: Proposed Methodology for Calculating the Proportion of Dual
Eligible Patients
a. Background
As described above, section 1886(q)(3)(D) of the Act requires the
Secretary to group hospitals and apply a methodology that allows for
separate comparisons of hospitals within groups in determining a
hospital's adjustment factor for payments of discharges beginning in FY
2019. Furthermore, section 1886(q)(3)(D)(ii) of the Act directs the
Secretary to define groups of hospitals, based on their overall
proportion, of the inpatients who are entitled to, or enrolled for,
benefits under part A, and who are full-benefit dual eligible
individuals (as defined in section 1935(c)(6) of the Act).\38\ Under
these statutory requirements, hospitals are grouped based on the
proportion or ratio of full-benefit dual eligible patients (numerator)
to the hospital's Medicare inpatient stays (denominator). The Act
specifies that in defining groups, the Secretary shall consult the
MedPAC and may consider the analysis done by MedPAC in preparing the
portion of its
[[Page 19960]]
report submitted to Congress in June 2013 relating to readmissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Section 1935(c)(6)(A) of the Act defines ``full-benefit
dual eligible individual'' as, for a State for a month, an
individual who--(i) has coverage for the month for covered part D
drugs under a prescription drug plan under part D of title XVIII, or
under an MA-PD plan under part C of such title; and (ii) is
determined eligible by the State for medical assistance for full
benefits under this title for such month under section
1902(a)(10)(A) or 1902(a)(10)(C) [of the Act], by reason of section
1902(f) [of the Act], or under any other category of eligibility for
medical assistance for full benefits under this title, as determined
by the Secretary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Proposed Data Sources Used To Determine Dual Eligibility
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to identify full-benefit
dual status (numerator) using dual eligibility status data where the
original data source is the State Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) file
of dual eligibility which States submit to CMS monthly. The State MMA
file is considered the most current and most accurate source of data
for identifying dual eligible beneficiaries since it is also used for
operational purposes related to the administration of Part D benefits.
Under our proposal, an individual would be counted as a full-benefit
dual patient if the beneficiary was identified as full-benefit dual
status in the State MMA files for the month he/she was discharged from
the hospital.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
For this proposed rule, we considered two alternative definitions
of total number of Medicare patients (denominator) that could be used
to calculate each hospital's proportion of dual eligible patients. We
are proposing to define the proportion of full-benefit dual eligible
beneficiaries as the proportion of dual eligible patients among all
Medicare FFS and Medicare Advantage stays. This is our preferred
approach because using the proportion of dual eligible patients
calculated among all Medicare FFS and managed care patients more
accurately represents the proportion of dual eligible patients served
by the hospital, particularly for hospitals in States with high managed
care penetration rates. For example, Hospital A located in Arizona has
a high managed care penetration rate. When stratified based on the
proportion of dual eligibles, calculated among Medicare FFS and managed
care patients, Hospital A was assigned to the top quintile of
proportion of dual eligibles and its payment adjustment calculated
based on its ERR relative to the threshold for the top quintile. When
stratified based on the proportion of dual eligible among only Medicare
FFS patients, Hospital A was assigned to the second quintile and its
payment adjustment calculated relative to the threshold of the second
quintile. Its classification when managed care patients are included
more accurately identifies the social risk of the patients Hospital A
serves, compared to its classification if only the FFS population is
included.
However, because the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
payment adjustment is only applied to Medicare FFS payments, and is
based on excess readmissions among Medicare FFS patients only, we are
including an alternative to define the proportion of full-benefit dual
eligible beneficiaries as only Medicare FFS stays. Under both
approaches, we are proposing to use the MedPAR files, the same data
source used to calculate the payment adjustment factors, to identify
total hospital stays as this is the best available claims data that is
readily publicly available. However, in developing our proposal, we
also considered using other data sources such as the CMS integrated
data repository (IDR), which may incorporate managed care claims more
consistently to calculate total hospital stays, but it is currently not
readily available to the public. We are inviting stakeholder input on
the most appropriate data source to identify total hospital stays and
whether such stays should include all Medicare FFS and Medicare
Advantage stays or only Medicare FFS stays.
We are inviting public comment on our preferred proposals and
alternative considerations.
c. Proposed Data Period Used To Define Dual Eligibility
Consistent with the requirement of the statute, we are proposing to
group or stratify hospitals based on the proportion of full-benefit
dual eligible patients determined under the proposals discussed above
and are proposing to define the proportion of full-benefit dual
eligible beneficiaries as the number of dual eligible patients
discharged during the 3-year applicable period under the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program. For this proposed rule, we considered
two alternatives for the data period used to define dual eligibility, a
3-year period corresponding to the performance period, and a 1-year
period, which would be calculated over the most recent year for which
complete data is available.
While both data periods would include the most recently available
data to define dual eligibility, our proposal to use a 3-year period
accounts for the influence of social risk factors on the excess
readmissions ratio (ERR) because the proportion of dual eligible
patients is measured over the full period when they influenced the
likelihood of excess readmissions. However, the most recent 1-year
period would capture the most recent population served by the hospital
and may enable a more accurate stratification to calibrate the impact
of payment adjustments to the proportion of dual eligible patients that
the hospital currently serves.
We are inviting public comment on our preferred proposal and
alternative considerations.
9. Provisions for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology for FY
2019: Proposed Methodology for Assigning Hospitals to Peer Groups
For this proposed rule, we considered three alternative
methodologies for assigning hospitals to peer groups. For the reasons
discussed below, our preferred approach is to stratify hospitals into
quintiles (five peer groups). However, we are also seeking public
comment on stratifying hospitals into two and 10 peer groups.
To understand the impact on payment adjustments of stratifying
hospitals into different number of peer groups, we conducted an
analysis that estimated payment adjustments when stratifying hospitals
into two, five (quintiles), or 10 (deciles) peer groups. Two and 10
peer groups were considered to align with previous research conducted
by MedPAC and ASPE that assessed impacts from stratifying hospitals
into two or 10 groups. MedPAC's analysis stratified hospitals into 10
peer groups when setting the target rate used to compare hospital
performance. ASPE's analysis stratified hospitals into two and 10 peer
groups to calculate payment adjustments. Our analysis showed that using
five peer groups allows for more precisely defined peer groups than is
possible with a grouping of two, while ensuring that the number of
hospitals is sufficient to represent a peer group, even for measures,
like CABG, in which only a minority of hospitals are subject to a
payment adjustment.
We note, as the number of groupings increase, hospitals became more
similar within their peer groups with respect to proportion of dual
eligible patients in their patient population. Hence, payment
adjustments are more closely related to the proportion of dual
eligibles, and to the possible influence on the likelihood of
readmission resulting from small variations in patient populations. We
also observed that increasing the number of peer groups also increases
the likelihood that hospitals with similar exposure to dual eligible
patients will be compared to different thresholds in the payment
adjustment formula. Deciles cover a narrow range of dual eligible
patient proportions in each peer group, so small differences in
proportion are likely to result in differences in peer group assignment
and corresponding comparison thresholds used in the payment adjustment
formula. This
[[Page 19961]]
problem is compounded by the small number of hospitals in deciles. When
the number of hospitals is small, peer group thresholds or
distributions and the resulting payment adjustments are less
predictable.
Stratifying hospitals into two peer groups is a simpler method and
reduces the likelihood that similar hospitals are assigned different
payment adjustments. However, this approach yields peer groups with a
more heterogeneous mix of hospitals assigned to each group and weakens
the relationship between the payment adjustment and the hospital's
patient population. When the impact on payments of different peer group
definitions was tested using the various methods of incorporating
stratification into the payment formula, we found a substantial
reduction in penalties (measured as the share of payment adjustments as
a percentage of total payments) to safety-net hospitals, defined as
hospitals in the highest quintile for disproportionate share (DSH)
payments, from stratification into quintiles compared to stratification
into two groups. Furthermore, our analysis found a similar impact on
the share of total payments borne as payment adjustments by safety-net
hospitals from stratifying hospitals into quintiles and deciles,
suggesting that the benefit to safety-net hospitals from increasing the
number of strata would be small. For example, using the preferred
modified payment formula, proposed below, across the current set of six
conditions, we found that for safety-net hospitals, payment adjustment
as a proportion of total payments decreased from a baseline of 0.64
percent to 0.59 percent with two groups, 0.55 percent with quintiles
and 0.54 percent with deciles.
Based on the analysis described above, we are proposing to stratify
hospitals into quintiles (five peer groups) because it creates peer
groups that accurately reflect the relationship between the proportion
of dual eligibles in the hospital's population without the disadvantage
of establishing a larger number of peer groups.
We are inviting public comment on our preferred proposal and
alternative considerations.
10. Provisions for the Proposed Payment Adjustment Methodology for FY
2019: Proposed Payment Adjustment Formula Calculation Methodology
a. Background
As described above, section 1886(q)(3)(D)(iv) of the Act requires
the Secretary to design the methodology to implement this subparagraph
so that the estimated total amount of Medicare savings under this
subsection (stratified methodology) equals the estimated total amount
of Medicare savings that would otherwise occur under this subsection
(current methodology) if this subparagraph did not apply (that is,
maintain budget neutrality).
We analyzed several modifications of the payment adjustment formula
to assess payment reductions based on a hospital's performance compared
to performance of other hospitals in its peer group. The current
readmissions payment adjustment can be written as
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.000
where dx is AMI, HF, pneumonia, COPD, THA/TKA or CABG. In our analyses,
we modified the payment adjustment formula by replacing the current
threshold ERR of 1.0000 with a peer group specific threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ ``Payment'' refers to the base operating DRG payment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In adopting a methodology for achieving budget neutrality, our
priority is to adopt a simplified and well-known metric that allows us
to be more transparent in our methodology and reduces the penalty on
safety-net hospitals, while not disproportionality increasing the
penalty to non-safety-net hospitals. In developing policy options to
implement the budget neutrality requirement, we analyzed the following
alternatives to evaluate the financial impacts:
Using the median ERR for the hospital's peer group in
place of 1.0000 in the payment adjustment formula and applying a
uniform modifier to maintain budget neutrality;
Using the mean ERR for the hospital's peer group in place
of 1.0000 in the payment adjustment formula and applying a uniform
modifier to maintain budget neutrality;
Using the ``budget neutralizing'' ERR for each peer group
in place of 1.0000 in the payment adjustment formula. The budget
neutralizing ERR is defined as the ERR corresponding to the percentile
(for example, 52nd) of the peer group distributions that would maintain
budget neutrality for each peer group; and
Using a standardized ERR for each individual hospital's
ERR in place of the hospital's current calculated ERR and applying a
uniform modifier to maintain budget neutrality. Each hospital's ERR is
transformed to create a distribution of ERRs within each stratum with
the same mean and standard deviation as the original mean and standard
deviation across all hospitals.
b. Proposals
In this proposed rule, we are discussing four alternative budget
neutral methodologies for calculating the payment adjustment factor.
Our preferred approach is assessing performance compared to the peer
group median ERR, rather than the current threshold of 1.0000, and
scaling hospital payment adjustments by a neutrality modifier. However,
we are seeking public comment on three additional approaches--using the
mean ERR plus a neutrality modifier, a budget neutralizing ERR, and a
standardized ERR plus a neutrality modifier.
(1) Median ERR Plus a Neutrality Modifier
In this proposed rule, our preferred approach is using the median
ERR plus a neutrality modifier. We would use the median ERR for the
hospital's peer group in place of 1.0000, which is the approximate mean
and median of the baseline distribution, in the current payment
adjustment formula. The payment adjustment formula would then be:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.001
[[Page 19962]]
The payment reduction (1-P) resulting from use of the median ERR
for the peer group is scaled by a neutrality modifier (NMM)
to achieve budget neutrality. To calculate the neutrality modifier, we
estimate total Medicare savings across all hospitals under the current
method and under the proposed stratified method, in the absence of a
modifier. We then calculate a multiplicative factor that, when applied
to each hospital's adjustment calculated using the stratified method,
would equate total Medicare savings from that method to total Medicare
savings under the current method. Total Medicare savings and the
neutrality modifier will be calculated using the same payment data.
These data will consist of the most recently available full year of
MedPAR data. For example, if the payment reduction for a hospital (1-P)
equals 0.00748 when using the median threshold, then under the median
plus neutrality modifier method it would equal NM*0.00748 = 0.9545 *
0.00748 = 0.00714, where the neutrality modifier was equal to 0.9545.
Thus, the hospital's payment adjustment factor (P) would equal 0.9925
(1-0.00748) in the absence of the neutrality modifier, and 0.9929 (1-
0.00714) when the modifier is added.
(2) Mean ERR Plus a Neutrality Modifier
We also analyzed the use of the mean ERR plus a neutrality modifier
to calculate the readmissions adjustment factor. Just like the median
ERR plus neutrality modifier approach mentioned above, the mean ERR for
the hospital's peer group would be used in place of 1.0000 in the
payment adjustment formula. The payment adjustment formula would then
be:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.002
(3) Budget Neutralizing ERR
We also analyzed using a budget neutralizing ERR in which penalties
are assessed based on the difference between the hospital's ERR and the
budget neutralizing ERR. The payment adjustment formula would be:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.003
(4) Standardized ERR Plus a Neutrality Modifier
We also analyzed using a standardized ERR in which penalties are
assessed by determining the mean and standard deviation of the ERRs
across all hospitals. The payment adjustment formula would be
calculated by dividing hospitals into strata based on a hospital's
proportion of dual eligible patients. The current ERRs would then be
transformed to create a new standardized distribution of ERRs within
each stratum with the same mean and standard deviation as the original
mean and standard deviation across all hospitals.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.004
where Sp(dx) and [mu]p(dx) are the standard deviation and mean of the
current ERR distribution for a condition (dx), and Sp(dx) and [mu]p(dx)
are the standard deviation and mean of the peer group ERR distribution
for that dx. The standardized ERRs has a mean of 1 and a standard
deviation equal to the standard deviation of ERRs across all hospitals
in the peer group for that condition. The standardized ERRs are
compared to 1.0000 in the payment adjustment formula to determine
excess readmissions. The payment reduction (1-P) resulting from use of
the standardized ERR is then scaled by a neutrality modifier
(NMS) to achieve budget neutrality.
c. Analysis
As mentioned above, in adopting a methodology for achieving budget
neutrality, our priority is to adopt a simplified and well-known metric
that allows us to be more transparent in our methodology and reduces
the penalty on safety-net hospitals, while not disproportionality
increasing the penalty to non-safety-net hospitals. To assess the
expected impact on hospital payment adjustments resulting from the
changes to the formula, we simulated hospitals' readmission adjustment
factors under different stratified thresholds. Readmissions adjustment
factors were calculated using total base operating DRG payment amounts
for each hospital as well as total base DRG payment amounts for each of
the six measure cohorts (AMI, HF, pneumonia, COPD, CABG, THA/TKA)
included in the FY 2018 program. We used DRG payment information for
the period July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2015. Furthermore, to estimate
the dollar amount of the penalty and the share of payments the penalty
represents, we used total base operating DRG payments among Medicare
FFS claims from the FY 2015 MedPAR data file.
All four methods support the agency's efforts to reduce the payment
adjustment for safety-net hospitals. We are proposing to use the median
ERR plus a neutrality modifier because it creates a standard where a
hospital's ERR is subject to payment reduction when a hospital's
performance as measured by the ERR is worse than that of half the other
hospitals in its peer group. The median ERR plus neutrality modifier is
preferred to the mean ERR plus neutrality modifier because the median
represents a consistent standard (that is, 50th percentile) for the
hospital's rank within its peer group, while the rank corresponding to
the mean changes between years, cohorts and peer groups. The median ERR
plus neutrality modifier substantially reduces the penalty as a share
of total payments (from 0.64 percent to 0.55 percent with quintile peer
groups) and penalty per discharge (from $157 to $135) for safety-net
hospitals while not disproportionately increasing the payment reduction
amount for non-safety-net hospitals (from 0.61 percent
[[Page 19963]]
to 0.63 percent as share of total payments). The median ERR plus
neutrality modifier is also preferred because it achieves more precise
budget neutrality than the budget neutralizing ERR. Below we show the
estimated total Medicare savings under the current and stratified
methodology used to assess budget neutrality.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Difference difference
Estimated total between between
Method medicare savings stratified and stratified and
current current
methodology methodology
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current methodology.......................................... $532,948,318 N/A N/A
Mean plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier=1.0135 532,949,006 $688 <0.00
when using quintiles).......................................
Median plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier=0.9546 532,946,272 ($2,046) <0.00
when using quintiles).......................................
Budget neutralizing ERR...................................... 533,199,304 250,985 0.05
Standardized ERR plus neutrality modifier (neutrality 532,948,288 ($30) <0.00
modifier=0.9710 when using quintiles).......................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2017 Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program Final Rule Results. Results are based on July 1, 2012,
through June 30, 2015, discharges among subsection (d) and Maryland hospitals only. Although data from all
subsection (d) and Maryland hospitals are used in calculations of each hospital's Excess Readmission Ratio
(ERR), this table does not include results for Maryland hospitals. Hospital Characteristics are based on the
FY 2017 final rule Impact File. Hospitals are stratified into quintiles based on the proportion of dual-
eligible beneficiaries among Medicare fee-for-service and managed care patients discharged between July 1,
2012, through June 30, 2015.
When we analyzed the other options, we found that the mean
threshold permits a higher standard to be set if hospitals in the peer
group have performance well above the midpoint but not far below, or a
lower standard if hospitals are more likely to have very high rates. In
our testing, the mean plus modifier resulted in lower penalties for
safety-net hospitals (0.52 percent as a share of total payments
compared to 0.55 percent for the median plus modifier). However, our
preferred approach of the median is based on the judgment that the
standard reflected by the threshold should not be affected by hospitals
with unusually strong or weak performance in the peer group. Like the
median, the budget neutralizing ERR threshold approach imposes a
consistent rank-based standard across peer groups. However, this method
is not preferred since it is more complex, less intuitive and results
in greater divergence between total payment adjustments under the
stratified and current methodologies than approaches using a neutrality
modifier (differing from the current methodology by approximately 0.05
percent of total payments when simulated with quintile peer groups).
The median uses the original distribution of hospital ERR estimates,
based on their relationship to a national standard, and represents the
most precise possible measures of their performance under that
standard. Using a standardized ERR within each peer group compares a
hospital's performance to other hospitals in the peer group. In
contrast, using the mean or median threshold adjusts penalties based on
a hospital's relative performance within the peer group, but the
performance indicator of the ERR retains the comparison to the mean
performance of all hospitals across all peer groups. However, comparing
the ERR to the mean or median for each peer group is a more
straightforward methodology than re-standardizing ERRs. The median is
preferred to the standardized ERR because, as with the budget
neutralizing ERR, the median is less complex and more intuitive. Using
a less complex and well-known metric, will create a more transparent
methodology since it will be easier for hospitals and other
stakeholders to replicate the calculation of the median ERRs.
The impact of the proposed changes to the payment adjustment
formula for the budget neutral considered methods, by peer group
options, for safety-net and non-safety-net hospitals is shown in the
table below. The table includes three penalty metrics: Average payment
reduction, total Medicare savings, and share of payment adjustments as
a percentage of total payments. The average payment reduction shows the
average reduction in Medicare DRG payments for safety-net and non-
safety-net hospitals. The total Medicare savings column shows the total
estimated penalties borne by safety-net and non-safety-net hospitals
under each approach. Since the payment reduction is applied to
hospitals' base DRG payments, hospitals with more discharges will
contribute a larger amount of Medicare savings to the group total of
Medicare savings. Furthermore, since there are fewer safety-net than
non-safety-net hospitals, as safety-net is defined as hospitals in the
top quintile of DSH patient percentage, the total Medicare savings for
non-safety-net hospitals are inherently much larger than for safety-net
hospitals. Therefore, to compare the financial impact of the program on
hospitals in each group we calculated the payment adjustment as a
proportion of DRG payments. Using this metric allows comparison across
the different methodologies where the total base operating DRG payments
are different between different groups of hospitals and is a more
accurate indication of the financial impact on the group. For example,
under the current methodology, the payment adjustment as a proportion
of all DRG payments among safety-net hospitals is 0.64 percent.
[[Page 19964]]
Comparison of Penalty Metrics by Threshold Methods and Peer Group Options for All Hospitals, Safety-Net, and Non-
Safety-Net Hospitals
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payment
Average adjustment as
payment Total Medicare a proportion
Stratification approach and payment formula methodology reduction (1- savings of all DRG
P) \a\ payments
(percent) (percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current methodology:
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.62 $109,142,525 0.64
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.61 423,805,793 0.61
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approach 1: Two equal peer groups based on the proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Median plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier =
0.9558):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.56 100,205,115 0.59
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.61 432,741,958 0.62
Mean plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier = 1.0191):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.54 97,837,278 0.57
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.61 435,112,491 0.63
Budget neutralizing ERR:
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.55 98,208,670 0.58
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.61 435,216,961 0.63
Standardized ERR plus neutrality modifier (neutrality
modifier = 0.9796):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.55 98,468,430 0.58
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.61 434,478,852 0.63
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approach 2: Quintiles based on the proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Median plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier =
0.9546):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.52 93,878,536 0.55
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 439,067,736 0.63
Mean plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier = 1.0135):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.49 89,182,424 0.52
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 443,766,582 0.64
Budget neutralizing ERR:
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.49 88,510,157 0.52
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 444,689,147 0.64
Standardized ERR plus neutrality modifier (neutrality
modifier = 0.9710):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.50 91,686,964 0.54
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 441,261,324 0.64
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Approach 3: Deciles based on the proportion of dual-eligible beneficiaries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Median plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier =
0.9555):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.51 91,881,047 0.54
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 441,068,999 0.64
Mean plus neutrality modifier (neutrality modifier = 1.0148):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.48 87,289,962 0.51
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 445,653,065 0.64
Budget neutralizing ERR:
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.47 86,671,374 0.51
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 446,299,280 0.64
Standardized ERR plus neutrality modifier (neutrality
modifier = 0.9713):
Safety-net hospitals..................................... 0.49 90,058,433 0.53
Non-safety-net hospitals................................. 0.62 442,888,696 0.64
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes: Results based on July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2015 discharges among subsection (d) and Maryland
hospitals only. Although data from all subsection (d) and Maryland hospitals are used in calculations of each
hospital's ERR, this table does not include results for Maryland hospitals. Hospitals are stratified based on
the proportion of duals calculated among Medicare FFS and managed care patients for the FY 2017 performance
period. Safety-net hospitals are defined as hospitals in the top quintile of DSH patient percentage. DSH
patient percentage was calculated among all hospitals with a positive DSH value (including hospitals not
eligible for DSH payments). a. The payment reduction shows what percentage of DRG payments hospitals will lose
as a result of the program. This is slightly different than the adjustment factor that CMS applies, which is 1
minus the number reported here (that is, ranges from 0.97 to 1).
b. Total Medicare savings is estimated by multiplying the payment reduction by total base operating DRG payments
from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015.
c. The group share of payment adjustments as a percentage of all DRG payments is calculated as the sum of total
Medicare savings for the group of hospitals (that is, safety-net hospitals or non-safety-net hospitals)
divided by total base operating DRG payments from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015 for the group of
hospitals.
Our analysis also assesses the impact of the proposed changes to
the payment adjustment formula on additional groups of hospitals.
Variation in the impact of the proposed changes by hospital
characteristics on the share of payment adjustments as a percentage of
all DRG payments for the FY 2019 Hospital Readmissions Reduction
Program, is shown in the table below. The table is based on results
when hospitals are stratified into quintiles
[[Page 19965]]
based on the proportion of dual eligible beneficiaries among Medicare
FFS and managed care patients discharged between July 1, 2012, through
June 30, 2015, our preferred approaches. The table shows the average
share of payment adjustments as a percentage of all DRG payments for
each group of hospitals. The group average is calculated as the sum of
penalties for all hospitals with that characteristic over the sum of
all DRG payments for those hospitals between July 1, 2014 and June 30,
2015. For example, under the current methodology, the average share of
payment adjustments as a percentage of all DRG payments for urban
hospitals is 0.61 percent. This means that total penalties for all
urban hospitals is 0.61 percent of total payments for urban hospitals
(that is the ratio of total penalties to total DRG payments is 0.61
percent). This metric allows us to compare the financial impact of the
different methods for assessing penalties between hospitals with
different number of beds even though larger hospitals tend to generate
higher total Medicare savings since their payment reduction is applied
to more DRG payments. Measuring the financial impact on hospitals as a
proportion of total DRG payments allows us to account for differences
in the amount of DRG payments for hospitals when comparing the
financial impact of the program on different groups of hospitals, and
allows comparison across the different methodologies between groups of
hospitals with different numbers of eligible hospitals.
Average Share of Payment Adjustments as a Percentage of All DRG Payments for Considered Approaches for the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, by
Hospital Characteristic
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standardized
Median Plus Mean plus ERR plus
neutrality neutrality neutrality
Number of Current modifier modifier Budget modifier
Hospital characteristics hospitals with methodology (neutrality (neutrality neutralizing (neutrality
characteristic (percent) modifier = modifier = ERR (percent) modifier =
0.9546) 1.0135) 0.9710)
(percent) (percent) (percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Hospitals........................................... 3,096 0.62 0.62 0.62 0.62 0.62
Geographic Location:
Urban............................................... 2,304 0.61 0.62 0.62 0.62 0.62
Rural............................................... 792 0.65 0.62 0.60 0.60 0.60
Bed size:
1-99 beds........................................... 1,113 0.57 0.57 0.56 0.56 0.57
100-199 beds........................................ 886 0.70 0.70 0.70 0.70 0.70
200-299 beds........................................ 453 0.65 0.66 0.66 0.66 0.66
300-399 beds........................................ 278 0.64 0.63 0.63 0.63 0.63
400-499............................................. 155 0.53 0.54 0.54 0.54 0.54
500 or more beds.................................... 211 0.57 0.57 0.57 0.57 0.56
By DSH Payment Eligibility:
Not eligible........................................ 474 0.55 0.61 0.65 0.64 0.64
DSH payment eligible................................ 2,622 0.63 0.62 0.61 0.61 0.61
By Teaching Status:
Non-teaching........................................ 2,076 0.66 0.67 0.67 0.67 0.67
Teaching............................................ 1,020 0.59 0.58 0.58 0.58 0.58
Fewer than 100 residents............................ 772 0.59 0.60 0.60 0.61 0.60
100 or more residents............................... 248 0.57 0.55 0.54 0.54 0.55
By Type of Ownership:
Government.......................................... 490 0.54 0.53 0.53 0.53 0.53
Proprietary......................................... 779 0.79 0.79 0.80 0.80 0.79
Voluntary........................................... 1,827 0.59 0.59 0.59 0.59 0.59
DSH patient percentage:
1st................................................. 547 0.54 0.60 0.63 0.63 0.63
2nd................................................. 635 0.66 0.71 0.72 0.72 0.72
3rd................................................. 646 0.60 0.61 0.62 0.62 0.61
4th................................................. 642 0.61 0.60 0.59 0.59 0.59
5th................................................. 626 0.64 0.55 0.52 0.52 0.54
MCR Percent:
0-24................................................ 410 0.42 0.40 0.39 0.39 0.39
25-49............................................... 2,081 0.63 0.63 0.63 0.63 0.63
50 and over......................................... 590 0.72 0.73 0.74 0.74 0.74
Region:
New England......................................... 130 0.68 0.64 0.63 0.63 0.64
Middle Atlantic..................................... 354 0.86 0.83 0.83 0.83 0.83
South Atlantic...................................... 512 0.74 0.76 0.78 0.78 0.77
East North Central.................................. 482 0.63 0.63 0.63 0.63 0.63
East South Central.................................. 290 0.76 0.79 0.80 0.80 0.79
West North Central.................................. 252 0.39 0.41 0.41 0.41 0.41
West South Central.................................. 487 0.46 0.48 0.48 0.48 0.47
Mountain............................................ 223 0.36 0.39 0.40 0.40 0.39
[[Page 19966]]
Pacific............................................. 366 0.42 0.37 0.34 0.34 0.36
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2017 Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program Final Rule Results. Results are based on July 1, 2012, through June 30, 2015, discharges among
subsection (d) and Maryland hospitals only. Although data from all subsection (d) and Maryland hospitals are used in calculations of each hospital's
Excess Readmission Ratio (ERR), this table does not include results for Maryland hospitals. This table only includes results for hospitals who are
eligible for a penalty under the program on the basis of having at least 25 eligible discharges for at least one measure. Hospital Characteristics are
based on the FY 2017 final rule Impact File. There were 15 hospitals that did not have MCR percentages in the FY 2017 final rule Impact File. To
calculate the payment adjustment as a proportion of total base operating DRG payments, this analysis used MedPAR data to calculate the total base
operating DRG payments from July 1, 2014 through June 30, 2015. The group average share of payment adjustments as a percentage of all DRG payments is
calculated as the sum of all Medicare savings for the group of hospitals divided by total base operating DRG payments for all hospitals in that group.
We are inviting public comment on our preferred proposal and
alternative considerations.
11. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes, including reducing health disparities,
and we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with
social risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to
ensure that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \40\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based purchasing
and quality reporting programs, and considering options on how to
address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors in Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs, including the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program.\41\ The report also included
considerations for strategies to account for social risk factors in
these programs. In a January 10, 2017 report released by the National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided
various potential methods for measuring and accounting for social risk
factors, including stratified public reporting.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\41\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\42\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which certain new measures,
measures undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the
condition that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine
whether risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate
for these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion
of social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these
measures. At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue
recommendations on the future inclusion of social risk factors in risk
adjustment for these quality measures, and we will closely review its
findings.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in the
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and, if so, what method or
combination of methods would be most appropriate for accounting for
social risk factors. Examples of methods include: confidential
reporting of stratified measure rates to providers; public reporting of
stratified measure rates; risk adjustment of a particular measure as
appropriate based on data and evidence; developing readmission measures
or statistical approaches that are suitable for the reporting of
performance on readmissions; providing financial incentives for
achievement of low readmission rates for beneficiaries with social risk
factors; and using a hospital-wide readmissions measure. While we
consider whether and to what extent we currently have statutory
authority to implement one or more of the above-described methods, we
are seeking comments on whether any of these methods should be
considered, and if so, which of these methods or combination of methods
would best account for social risk factors in the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for stratifying measure scores
and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular
[[Page 19967]]
measure. Examples of social risk factors include, but are not limited
to, dual eligibility/low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and
geographic area of residence. We are seeking comments on which of these
factors, including current data sources where this information would be
available, could be used alone or in combination, and whether other
data should be collected to better capture the effects of social risk.
We will take commenters' input into consideration as we continue to
assess the appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social
risk factors in the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. We note
that any such changes would be proposed through future notice-and-
comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
12. Extraordinary Circumstance Exception (ECE) Policy
Many of our quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs
share a common process for requesting an exception from program
reporting due to an extraordinary circumstance not within a provider's
control. The Hospital IQR, Hospital OQR, IPFQR, Ambulatory Surgical
Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR), PCHQR Programs, as well as the HAC
Reduction Program, and the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program,
share common processes for ECE requests. In reviewing the policies for
these programs, we recognized that there are five areas in which these
programs have variance regarding ECE requests. These are: (1) Allowing
the facilities or hospitals to submit a form signed by the facility's
or hospital's CEO versus CEO or designated personnel; (2) requiring the
form be submitted within 30 days following the date that the
extraordinary circumstance occurred versus within 90 days following the
date the extraordinary circumstance occurred; (3) inconsistency
regarding specification of a timeline for us to provide our formal
response notifying the facility or hospital of our decision; (4)
inconsistency regarding specification of our authority to grant ECEs
due to CMS data system issues; and (5) referring to the program as
``extraordinary extensions/exemptions'' versus as ``extraordinary
circumstances exceptions.'' We believe addressing these five areas, as
appropriate, can improve administrative efficiencies for affected
facilities or hospitals.
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49542 through
49543), we adopted an ECE policy for the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program beginning in FY 2016. This policy was similar to the
ECE policy for the Hospital IQR Program, as finalized in the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51651), modified in the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50836) (designation of a non-CEO hospital
contact), and further modified in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(79 FR 50277) (amended 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2) to refer to ``extension or
exemption'' instead of the former ``extension or waiver'').
We are proposing to update these policies by: (1) Allowing the
facility to submit a form signed by the facility's CEO or designated
personnel; (2) clarifying that we will strive to provide our formal
response notifying the facility of our decision within 90 days of
receipt of the facility's request; and (3) allowing CMS to have the
authority to grant ECEs due to CMS data system issues which affect data
submission. These proposed policies generally align with policies in
the Hospital IQR Program (76 FR 51651 through 51652), (78 FR 50836
through 50837) and (81 FR 57181 through 57182), Hospital OQR Program
(77 FR 68489 and 81 FR 79795), as well as other quality reporting
programs. We are proposing that these policies would apply beginning in
FY 2018 as related to extraordinary circumstances that occur on or
after October 1, 2017.
We note that there may be circumstances in which it is not feasible
for a facility's CEO to sign the ECE request form. In these
circumstances, we believe that facilities affected by such
circumstances should be able to submit ECE forms regardless of the
CEO's availability to sign. This proposed change would allow hospitals
to designate an appropriate, non-CEO, contact at its discretion. This
individual would be responsible for the submission, and would be the
one signing the form. Therefore, we are proposing to accept ECE forms
which have been signed by designated personnel.
We also believe that it is important for facilities to receive
timely feedback regarding the status of ECE requests. We strive to
complete our review of each ECE request as quickly as possible.
However, we recognize that the number of requests we receive, and the
complexity of the information provided impacts the actual timeframe to
make ECE determinations. To improve transparency of our process, we
believe it is appropriate to clarify that we will strive to complete
our review of each request within 90 days of receipt.
Although we do not anticipate this situation will happen on a
regular basis, there may be times where CMS experiences issues with its
data systems that directly affects facilities' abilities to submit
data. In these cases, we believe it would be inequitable to require
facilities to report. Therefore, we are proposing to allow CMS to grant
ECEs to facilities if we determine that a systemic problem with one of
our data collection systems directly affected the ability of the
facilities to submit data. If we make the determination to grant ECEs,
we are proposing to communicate this decision through routine
communication channels.
We are inviting public comment on these proposed modifications to
the Extraordinary Circumstance Exception policy.
13. Timeline for Public Reporting of Excess Readmission Ratios on
Hospital Compare for the FY 2018 Payment Determination
Section 1886(q)(6) of the Act requires the Secretary to make
information available to the public regarding readmission rates of each
subsection (d) hospital under the program, and states that such
information shall be posted on the Hospital Compare Internet Web site
in an easily understandable format. Accordingly, in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53401), we indicated that public reporting
for excess readmission ratios could be available on the Hospital
Compare Web site as early as mid-October. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 56978 through 56979), we clarified that public
reporting of excess readmission ratios will be posted on an annual
basis to the Hospital Compare Web site as soon as is feasible following
the review period. This may occur as early as October, but it could
occur later for a particular year in order to streamline reporting and
align with other hospital quality reporting and performance programs.
[[Page 19968]]
J. Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program: Proposed Policy
Changes
1. Background
a. Statutory Background and Overview of Past Program Years
Section 1886(o) of the Act, as added by section 3001(a)(1) of the
Affordable Care Act, requires the Secretary to establish a hospital
value-based purchasing program (the Hospital VBP Program) under which
value-based incentive payments are made in a fiscal year (FY) to
hospitals that meet performance standards established for a performance
period for such fiscal year. Both the performance standards and the
performance period for a fiscal year are to be established by the
Secretary.
For more of the statutory background and descriptions of our
current policies for the Hospital VBP Program, we refer readers to the
Hospital Inpatient VBP Program final rule (76 FR 26490 through 26547);
the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51653 through 51660); the
CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74527 through
74547); the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53567 through
53614); the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50676 through
50707); the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule (78 FR 75120 through 75121);
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50048 through 50087); the
FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule with comment period (80 FR 49544
through 49570); the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56979
through 57011); and the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(81 FR 79855 through 79862).
We also have codified certain requirements for the Hospital VBP
Program at 42 CFR 412.160 through 412.167.
b. FY 2018 Program Year Payment Details
Section 1886(o)(7)(B) of the Act instructs the Secretary to reduce
the base operating DRG payment amount for a hospital for each discharge
in a fiscal year by an applicable percent. Under section 1886(o)(7)(A)
of the Act, the sum total of these reductions in a fiscal year must
equal the total amount available for value-based incentive payments for
all eligible hospitals for the fiscal year, as estimated by the
Secretary. We finalized details on how we would implement these
provisions in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53571 through
53573) and refer readers to that rule for further details.
Under section 1886(o)(7)(C)(iv) of the Act, the applicable percent
for the FY 2018 program year is 2.00 percent. Using the methodology we
adopted in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53571 through
53573), we estimate that the total amount available for value-based
incentive payments for FY 2018 is approximately $1.9 billion, based on
the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file. We intend to
update this estimate for the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule using the
March 2017 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file.
As finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53573
through 53576), we will utilize a linear exchange function to translate
this estimated amount available into a value-based incentive payment
percentage for each hospital, based on its Total Performance Score
(TPS). We will then calculate a value-based incentive payment
adjustment factor that will be applied to the base operating DRG
payment amount for each discharge occurring in FY 2018, on a per-claim
basis. We are publishing proxy value-based incentive payment adjustment
factors in Table 16 associated with this proposed rule (which is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site). The proxy factors are
based on the TPS from the FY 2017 program year. These FY 2017
performance scores are the most recently available performance scores
hospitals have been given the opportunity to review and correct. The
slope of the linear exchange function used to calculate those proxy
value-based incentive payment adjustment factors is 3.0692781725. This
slope, along with the estimated amount available for value-based
incentive payments, is also published in Table 16.
We intend to update this table as Table 16A in the final rule
(which will be available on the CMS Web site) to reflect changes based
on the March 2017 update to the FY 2016 MedPAR file. We also intend to
update the slope of the linear exchange function used to calculate
those updated proxy value-based incentive payment adjustment factors.
The updated proxy value-based incentive payment adjustment factors for
FY 2018 will continue to be based on historic FY 2017 program year TPSs
because hospitals will not have been given the opportunity to review
and correct their actual TPSs for the FY 2018 program year until after
the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule is published.
After hospitals have been given an opportunity to review and
correct their actual TPSs for FY 2018, we will add Table 16B (which
will be available via the Internet on the CMS Web site) to display the
actual value-based incentive payment adjustment factors, exchange
function slope, and estimated amount available for the FY 2018 program
year. We expect Table 16B will be posted on the CMS Web site in the
fall of 2017.
2. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital VBP Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes, including reducing health disparities,
and we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with
social risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to
ensure that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \43\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based purchasing
and quality reporting programs, and considering options on how to
address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a Report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors in Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs, including the Hospital VBP
Program.\44\ The report also included considerations for strategies to
account for social risk factors in these programs. In a January 10,
2017 report released by the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided various potential methods
for measuring and accounting for social risk factors, including
stratified public reporting.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\44\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\45\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19969]]
In the ASPE report noted above, there is an analysis of and focus
on the Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary (MSPB) measure, which was
adopted by the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY 2015 program
year.\46\ We note that the MSPB measure is currently undergoing
endorsement review for NQF, as part of the 2-year socioeconomic trial
period described below.\47\ ASPE's December 2016 Report to Congress did
not include an analysis of the effect of social risk factors on
hospital performance on any condition-specific payment measures that
are currently adopted for the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the
FY 2021 program year (Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-Care for Acute Myocardial
Infarction (AMI Payment) measure and Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized
Payment Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-Care for Heart Failure (HF
Payment) measure) (81 FR 56986 through 56990 and 81 FR 56990 through
56992, respectively). We look forward to ASPE's continued analyses in
this area, such as the role of frailty and disability in explaining
variation in hospital episode spending among Medicare beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation. 2016. Report to Congress: Social Risk Factors and
Performance Under Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Programs;
Chapter 7: The Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program (p. 141-176).
Available at: //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\47\ Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary (MSPB)--Hospital. See
Section 2b.4.5 in National Quality Forum--Measure Testing. Accessed
2/21/17 from: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMeasures.aspx?projectID=83458.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which certain new measures,
measures undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the
condition that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine
whether risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate
for these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion
of social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these
measures. At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue
recommendations on the future inclusion of social risk factors in risk
adjustment for these quality measures, and we will closely review its
findings.
We note that the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures adopted in the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56987 through 56990 and 81 FR
56990 through 56992, respectively), as well as the Hospital-Level,
Risk-Standardized Payment Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-Care for
Pneumonia (PN Payment) measure (prior to the expansion of the measure
cohort), recently underwent successful NQF re-endorsement following
enrollment in the NQF's trial. Based on its review of these measures
during the trial, the NQF re-endorsed these measures without
modifications to their risk adjustment methodologies for social risk
factors. We are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning
with the FY 2022 program year for the Hospital VBP Program (we refer
readers to section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule), and
we intend to submit the measure with the proposed expanded measure
cohort for NQF review during the measure's next re-endorsement review.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in the
Hospital VBP Program, and if so, what method or combination of methods
would be most appropriate for accounting for social risk factors.
Examples of methods include: adjustment of the payment adjustment
methodology under the Hospital VBP Program; adjustment of provider
performance scores (for instance, stratifying providers based on the
proportion of their patients who are dual eligible); confidential
reporting of stratified measure rates to providers; public reporting of
stratified measure rates; risk adjustment of a particular measure as
appropriate based on data and evidence; and redesigning payment
incentives (for instance, rewarding improvement for providers caring
for patients with social risk factors or incentivizing providers to
achieve health equity).
We note that in section V.I.9. of the preamble of this rule, we
discuss considerations for stratifying hospitals into peer groups for
purposes of assessing payment adjustments under the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program, as required under the 21st Century
Cures Act. We refer readers to that section for a detailed discussion
of these alternatives; while this discussion and corresponding proposal
are specific to the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, they
reflect the level of analysis we would undertake when evaluating
methods and combinations of methods for accounting for social risk
factors in CMS' other value-based purchasing programs, such as the
Hospital VBP Program. While we consider whether and to what extent we
currently have statutory authority to implement one or more of the
above-described methods, we are seeking comments on whether any of
these methods should be considered, and if so, which of these methods
or combination of methods would best account for social risk factors in
the Hospital VBP Program.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for stratifying measure scores
and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure. Examples of
social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual eligibility/
low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area of
residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors, including
current data sources where this information would be available, could
be used alone or in combination, and whether other data should be
collected to better capture the effects of social risk. We will take
commenters' input into consideration as we continue to assess the
appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social risk factors
in the Hospital VBP Program. We note that any such changes would be
proposed through future notice-and-comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
[[Page 19970]]
3. Retention and Removal of Quality Measures for the FY 2019 Program
Year
a. Retention of Previously Adopted Hospital VBP Program Measures
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53592), we finalized
a policy to retain measures from prior program years for each
successive program year, unless otherwise proposed and finalized. We
are not proposing any changes to this policy.
b. Proposed Removal of the PSI 90 Measure
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56979 through
56981), we finalized our proposal to shorten the performance period for
the current \48\ PSI 90 measure for the FY 2018 program year due to
concerns associated with combining measure performance data that use
both ICD-9 and ICD-10 data in calculating performance scores under the
measure. In that final rule, we explained our system requires an ICD-10
risk-adjusted version of the AHRQ PSI software \49\ in order to
calculate scores using ICD-10 codes, and AHRQ needs a full year of
nationally representative ICD-10 coded data before it can complete
development of risk-adjusted models based on a national reference
population for this software. This means the AHRQ PSI software will not
be available for us to calculate scores until late CY 2017. More
importantly, we noted an ICD-10 version of the current PSI 90 measure
is not being developed (81 FR 56980), nor will ICD-10 AHRQ QI software
be available to calculate performance scores for the FY 2019 program
year (81 FR 56981). As a result, we will not be able to calculate
performance scores for the current PSI 90 measure for the FY 2019
program year because these scores would include ICD-10 data. Based on
these concerns, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56981),
we signaled our intent to propose to remove the current PSI 90 measure
from the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY 2019 program year.
We are now proposing in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule to
remove the current PSI 90 measure from the Hospital VBP Program
beginning with the FY 2019 program year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ The ``current'' PSI 90 measure refers to the version of the
PSI 90 measure previously finalized for use in the Hospital VBP
Program in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50694).
\49\ The AHRQ QI Software is the software used to calculate PSIs
and the composite measure. More information is available at: //www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/Downloads/Resources/Publications/2015/Empirical_Methods_2015.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on this proposal. We also refer
readers to section V.J.4.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule where
we are proposing to adopt the modified version of the PSI 90 measure
for the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY 2023 program year.
c. Summary of Previously Adopted Measures and Proposed Measure for
Removal for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 Program Years
In summary, for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 program years, we have
finalized the following measure set and are proposing to remove the
current PSI 90 measure, as indicated:
Previously Adopted Measures and Proposed Measure for Removal for the FY
2019 and FY 2020 Program Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Domain/measure name NQF #
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement Domain*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCAHPS............................ Hospital Consumer 0166 (0228)
Assessment of
Healthcare
Providers and
Systems (HCAHPS) **
(including Care
Transition Measure).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI....................... Hospital 30-Day, All- 0230
Cause, Risk-
Standardized
Mortality Rate
(RSMR) Following
Acute Myocardial
Infarction (AMI)
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-HF........................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 0229
Cause, Risk-
Standardized
Mortality Rate
(RSMR) Following
Heart Failure (HF)
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-PN........................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 0468
Cause, Risk-
Standardized
Mortality Rate
(RSMR) Following
Pneumonia
Hospitalization.
THA/TKA........................... Hospital-Level Risk- 1550
Standardized
Complication Rate
(RSCR) Following
Elective Primary
Total Hip
Arthroplasty (THA)
and/or Total Knee
Arthroplasty (TKA).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safety Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI............................. National Healthcare 0138
Safety Network
(NHSN)
Catheter[dash]Assoc
iated Urinary Tract
Infection (CAUTI)
Outcome Measure.
CLABSI............................ National Healthcare 0139
Safety Network
(NHSN) Central
Line[dash]Associate
d Bloodstream
Infection (CLABSI)
Outcome Measure.
Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy American College of 0753
SSI. Surgeons--Centers
for Disease Control
and Prevention (ACS-
CDC) Harmonized
Procedure Specific
Surgical Site
Infection (SSI)
Outcome Measure.
MRSA Bacteremia................... National Healthcare 1716
Safety Network
(NHSN) Facility-
wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset
Methicillin-
resistant
Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA)
Bacteremia Outcome
Measure.
CDI............................... National Healthcare 1717
Safety Network
(NHSN)
Facility[dash]wide
Inpatient Hospital-
onset Clostridium
difficile Infection
(CDI) Outcome
Measure.
PSI 90 ***........................ Patient Safety for 0531
Selected Indicators
(Composite Measure).
PC-01............................. Elective Delivery... 0469
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19971]]
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB.............................. Payment-Standardized 2158
Medicare Spending
Per Beneficiary
(MSPB).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* In section IV.H.3.b. of the preamble of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 56984), we renamed this domain from Patient- and
Caregiver-Centered Experience of Care/Care Coordination domain to
Person and Community Engagement domain beginning with the FY 2019
program year.
** In section XIX.B.3. of the preamble of the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79855 through 79862), we finalized the
removal of the Pain Management dimension from the Hospital VBP Program
beginning with the FY 2018 program year.
*** Proposed for removal beginning with the FY 2019 program year as
discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
4. Proposed New Measures for the FY 2022 Program Year, FY 2023 Program
Year, and Subsequent Years
We consider measures for adoption based on the statutory
requirements, including specification under the Hospital IQR Program,
posting dates on the Hospital Compare Web site, and our priorities for
quality improvement as outlined in the current CMS Quality Strategy,
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/CMS-Quality-Strategy.html.
Due to the time necessary to adopt measures, we often adopt
policies for the Hospital VBP Program well in advance of the program
year for which they will be applicable.
a. Proposed New Measure for the FY 2022 Program Year and Subsequent
Years: Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized Payment Associated With a 30-
Day Episode-of-Care for Pneumonia (PN Payment)
(1) Measure Proposal
Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized Payment Associated with a 30-Day
Episode-of-Care for Pneumonia (PN Payment) is a measure assessing
hospital risk-standardized payment associated with a 30-day episode-of-
care for pneumonia. We adopted this measure in the Hospital IQR Program
in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50227 through 50231),
and we adopted an updated version of the measure, with an expanded
cohort and modified risk-adjustment model, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57125 through 57128). For purposes of describing this
measure, the ``cohort'' is the set of hospitalizations, or ``index
admissions,'' that meet all of the measure's inclusion and exclusion
criteria and, thus, are used to calculate the total payments Medicare
makes on behalf of these Medicare beneficiaries for a 30-day episode-
of-care. The cohort for the expanded version of the PN Payment measure
includes Medicare FFS patients aged 65 or older with: (1) A principal
hospital discharge diagnosis of pneumonia, including not only viral or
bacterial pneumonia but also aspiration pneumonia; or (2) a principal
discharge diagnosis of sepsis (but not severe sepsis) with a secondary
diagnosis of pneumonia (including viral or bacterial pneumonia and
aspiration pneumonia) coded as present on admission. The measure
calculates payments for these patients over a 30-day episode-of-care,
beginning with the index admission, using administrative claims data.
In general, the measure uses the same approach to risk-adjustment as
30-day outcome measures previously adopted for the Hospital VBP
Program, including the 30-day PN mortality measure, MORT-30-PN. Initial
measure data collected under the Hospital IQR Program for the expanded
PN Payment cohort and modified risk-adjustment model will be posted on
Hospital Compare in July 2017, and the full measure specifications are
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
Promoting high-value care is an essential part of our mission to
provide better health care for individuals, better health for
populations, and lower costs for health care. Our aim is to encourage
higher value care where there is the most opportunity for improvement,
the greatest number of patients to benefit from improvements, and the
largest sample size to ensure reliability. Pneumonia is one of the
leading causes of hospitalization for Americans aged 65 and over, and
pneumonia patients incur roughly $10 billion in aggregate health care
costs.\50\ There is evidence of variation in payments at hospitals for
pneumonia patients in the proposed PN Payment measure; median 30-day
risk-standardized payment among Medicare FFS patients aged 65 or older
hospitalized for pneumonia was $15,988 and ranged from $9,193 to
$26,546 for the July 2011 through June 2014 reporting period in the
Hospital IQR Program.\51\ This variation in payment suggests there is
opportunity for improvement. We believe it is important to adopt the PN
Payment measure for the Hospital VBP Program because variation in
payment may reflect differences in care decision-making and resource
utilization (for example, treatment, supplies, or services) for
patients with pneumonia both during hospitalization and immediately
post-discharge. The PN Payment measure specifically addresses the NQS
priority and CMS Quality Strategy goal to make quality care more
affordable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ Lindenauer PK, Lagu T, Shieh M, Pekow PS, Rothberg MB.
Association of diagnostic coding with trends in hospitalizations and
mortality of patients with pneumonia, 2003-2009. JAMA.
2012;307(13):1405-1413.
\51\ 2016 Reevaluation and Re-Specifications Report of the
Hospital-Level 30-Day Risk-Standardized Pneumonia Payment Measure.
AMI, HF, PN Payment Updates (zip file). Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We recognize high or low payments to hospitals are difficult to
interpret in isolation. Some high payment hospitals may produce better
clinical outcomes when compared with low payment hospitals, while other
high payment hospitals may not produce better outcomes. For this
reason, payment measure results viewed in isolation are not necessarily
an indication of quality. However, by viewing such information along
with quality measure results, consumers, payers, and providers would be
able to better assess the value of care. In order to incentivize
innovation that promotes high-quality care at high value, it is
important to examine measures of payment and patient outcomes
concurrently. The proposed PN Payment measure is intended to be paired
with the MORT-30-PN measure in the Hospital VBP Program,\52\ thereby
[[Page 19972]]
directly linking payment to quality by the alignment of comparable
populations and risk-adjustment methodologies to facilitate the
assessment of efficiency and value of care. We believe adopting the PN
Payment measure will create stronger incentives for appropriately
reducing practice pattern variation to achieve the aim of lowering the
cost of care and creating better coordinated care for Medicare
beneficiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ The Hospital VBP Program first adopted the MORT-30-PN
measure for the FY 2014 program year in the Hospital Inpatient
Value-Based Purchasing Program final rule (76 FR 26497 through
26511). We subsequently expanded the measure cohort beginning with
the FY 2021 program year in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 56994 through 56996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning with the
FY 2022 program year. The PN Payment measure would be added to the
Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain. The proposed measure fulfills all
of the statutory requirements for the Hospital VBP Program based on our
adoption of the measure in the Hospital IQR Program, and our
anticipated posting of measure data for the refined PN Payment measure,
with the expanded cohort and modified risk-adjustment model, on
Hospital Compare beginning July 2017, which would be at least one year
before the beginning of the proposed performance period of August 1,
2018. We refer readers to sections V.J.5.c.(3) through V.J.5.c.(5) of
the preamble of this proposed rule where we are proposing baseline
periods and performance periods for this measure if adopted for the
Hospital VBP Program.
The proposed PN Payment measure (MUC15-378) was reviewed by the MAP
in December 2015 and did not receive support for adoption into the
Hospital VBP Program.\53\ The result of the MAP vote was 31 percent
support, 15 percent conditional support, and 54 percent do not support.
The MAP's decision of ``do not support'' for the proposed PN Payment
measure was based on concerns that the measure may overlap with and
thereby double count services that are already captured in the MSPB
measure. In addition, some MAP members expressed a desire to have more
experience with the measure in the Hospital IQR Program to understand
whether there may be unintended consequences or a need to adjust for
social risk factors. We note some MAP members expressed support for the
proposed PN Payment measure and other condition-specific payment
measures, expressing that the increased granularity provided by
condition-specific payment measures will provide valuable feedback to
hospitals for targeted improvement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ ``2016 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS and
CMS'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367 and ``Process and Approach for
MAP Pre-Rulemaking Deliberations'' found at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/02/Process_and_Approach_for_MAP_Pre-Rulemaking_Deliberations.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to MAP stakeholder concerns that treatment- or
condition-specific payment measures may overlap and double count
services, we note that the proposed PN Payment measure addresses a
topic of critical importance to quality improvement in the inpatient
hospital setting. As discussed above, we selected the PN Payment
measure because we believe it is appropriate to provide stronger
incentives for hospitals to provide high-value and efficient care,
especially for a high-volume condition such as pneumonia. We
acknowledge that hospitals that do not perform well on the PN Payment
measure may also perform poorly on the MSPB measure and potentially
receive a lower incentive payment, depending upon their performance on
other measures. However, because admissions for pneumonia make up only
a part of all admissions included in the MSPB measure, a hospital's
results on the MSPB measure may not be the same as their result on the
PN Payment measure. In other words, a hospital's results for one
measure are not deterministic of its results of the other, so we cannot
state conclusively that if a hospital performs well (or poorly) on one
measure, that they will also perform well (or poorly) on the second
measure. Hospitals would perform differently on the MSPB and PN Payment
measures because these measures evaluate performance on different
metrics. For example, some hospitals with poorer results on the MSPB
measure may have better results on the PN Payment measure allowing them
to improve their overall score. In addition, the overlap between the
MSPB and PN Payment measures may result in some hospitals receiving an
increased benefit by performing well on both measures. Furthermore, if
a hospital does not perform as well on the MSPB measure relative to
other hospitals but performs very well with respect to its pneumonia
patients on the proposed PN Payment measure, that hospital would have
the opportunity to earn a higher score in the Efficiency and Cost
Reduction domain.
Regarding MAP stakeholder concerns for the need to adjust for
social risk factors, we note the proposed PN Payment measure already
incorporates a risk-adjustment methodology that accounts for age and
comorbidities. We understand the important role social risk factors
play in the care of patients, routinely monitor the impact of social
risk factors on hospitals' results on our measures, and will continue
to do so. In addition, as discussed in section V.J.3. of the preamble
of this proposed rule, the original PN Payment measure using the
previous measure cohort (Hospital-level, risk-standardized payment
associated with a 30-day episode-of-care for pneumonia (NQF #2579)), as
well as the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures adopted in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56987 through 56990 and 81 FR 56990
through 56992, respectively), which use the same measurement
methodology as the proposed PN Payment measure, recently underwent
successful NQF re-endorsement following enrollment in the NQF's trial.
The NQF re-endorsed these measures without requesting modifications to
their risk adjustment methodologies for adjustment by social risk
factors. The proposed PN Payment measure includes an updated risk-
adjustment model that accounts for patient comorbidities, and we intend
to submit to NQF that risk adjustment model as part of the overall
proposed PN Payment measure specifications during the next Cost and
Resource Use project.
As noted above, some MAP members expressed support for the proposed
PN Payment measure and other condition-specific payment measures,
agreeing the increased granularity provided by condition-specific
payment measures will provide valuable feedback to hospitals for
targeted improvement. In addition, a NQF-commissioned white paper also
supports the position that cost or payment measures should be
interpreted in the context of quality measures and that measures which
link cost and quality are the preferred method of assessing hospital
efficiency.\54\ The PN Payment measure, which directly pairs with the
MORT-30-PN measure in the Hospital VBP Program, follows this
recommended approach. Based on our analysis of the issues surrounding
condition-specific payment measures, we believe the benefits of
adopting the PN Payment measure outweigh any potential risks; however,
we also remain committed to monitoring for unintended consequences.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Ryan AM, Tompkins CP. Efficiency and Value in Healthcare:
Linking Cost and Quality Measures. Washington, DC: NQF; 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
(2) Proposed Scoring Methodology for the PN Payment Measure
We are proposing to calculate the PN Payment measure using the same
[[Page 19973]]
methodology we use to score the MSPB measure and, as finalized in the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56992 through 56993), the AMI
Payment and HF Payment measures so that all measures in the Efficiency
and Cost Reduction domain are scored in the same manner. We note for
these measures that lower values represent better performance.
For achievement points, we are proposing to calculate a spending
ratio of PN spending for each hospital to the median PN spending across
all hospitals during the performance period. We would then use each
hospital's PN spending ratio to calculate between 0 and 10 achievement
points. We are proposing to set the achievement threshold at the median
PN spending ratio across all hospitals during the performance period.
Because lower values represent better performance under the proposed PN
Payment measure, we are proposing to set the benchmark at the mean of
the lowest decile of the PN spending ratios during the performance
period. Therefore, if a hospital's individual PN spending ratio falls
above the achievement threshold, the hospital would score 0 achievement
points on the measure. If a hospital's individual PN spending ratio
falls at or below the benchmark, the hospital would score the maximum
10 achievement points on the measure. If a hospital's individual PN
spending ratio falls at or below the achievement threshold but above
the benchmark, the hospital would score between 1 and 9 points
according to the following formula:
[9 * ((achievement threshold-Hospital's performance period ratio)/
(achievement threshold-benchmark))] + 0.5
For improvement points, we are proposing to calculate a spending
ratio of PN spending for each hospital to the median PN spending across
all hospitals during the performance period. We would then use each
hospital's PN spending ratio to calculate between 0 and 9 improvement
points by comparing each hospital's ratio to its own performance during
the baseline period. Again, because lower values represent better
performance under the proposed PN Payment measure, we are proposing to
set the benchmark as the mean of the lowest decile of PN spending
ratios across all hospitals. Therefore, if a hospital's PN spending
ratio is equal to or higher than its baseline period ratio, the
hospital would score 0 improvement points on the measure. If a
hospital's score on the measure during the performance period is less
than its baseline period score but above the benchmark, the hospital
would receive a score of 0 to 9 according to the following formula:
[10 * ((Hospital baseline period ratio-Hospital performance period
ratio)/(Hospital baseline period ratio-benchmark))]-0.5
We note that if a hospital scores at or below the benchmark on the
achievement scoring methodology, that hospital will receive the maximum
10 points for this measure. As a result, the hospital would not receive
an improvement score for this measure.
For more information about the proposed scoring methodology for the
proposed PN Payment measure, we refer readers to section IV.B.3.b. of
the preamble of the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51654
through 51656) where we discuss the MSPB measure's identical scoring
methodology in detail.
We are inviting public comment on the proposed scoring methodology
for the proposed PN Payment measure.
b. Proposed New Measure for the FY 2023 Program Year and Subsequent
Years: Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) (NQF #0531)
The current PSI 90 measure previously adopted for the Hospital VBP
Program underwent NQF maintenance review and re-endorsement in 2015,
leading to several substantive measure changes.\55\ Due to statutory
requirements in the Hospital VBP Program,\56\ we were unable to adopt
the newly re-endorsed version of the PSI 90 measure in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56981), but stated our intent to
propose to adopt the modified version of the PSI 90 measure in future
rulemaking. In section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure from the Hospital
VBP Program beginning with the FY 2019 program year due to the
operational constraints associated with calculating measure scores for
the current measure for FY 2019 and subsequent years. Because of the
priority of improving patient safety and reducing adverse events during
inpatient stays, and with substantive refinements made to the measure
in response to feedback as further described below, we are now
proposing to adopt a modified version of the current PSI 90 measure,
entitled Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) (NQF #0531), for
the Hospital VBP Program for the FY 2023 program year and subsequent
years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ National Quality Forum QPS Measure Description for
``Patient Safety for Selected Indicators (modified version of PSI
90) (Composite Measure)'' found at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/MeasureDetails.aspx?standardID=321&print=0&entityTypeID=3; and
PSI 90 Fact Sheet found at: //www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/News/PSI90_Factsheet_FAQ_v2.pdf (we note that this fact sheet is
written from an all-payer perspective, and is therefore not limited
to the measure as used in the Medicare FFS population).
\56\ First, section 1886(o)(2)(A) of the Act requires the
Hospital VBP Program to select measures that have been specified for
the Hospital IQR Program. Second, section 1886(o)(2)(C)(i) of the
Act requires the Hospital VBP Program to refrain from beginning the
performance period for a new measure until data on the measure have
been posted on Hospital Compare for at least one year. Finally,
section 1886(o)(3)(C) of the Act requires that the Hospital VBP
Program establish performance standards for each measure not later
than 60 days prior to the beginning of the performance period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Hospital IQR Program adopted this measure in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57128 through 57133),\57\ beginning with the
FY 2018 payment determination, and we intend to publicly report initial
measure data on the measure on Hospital Compare on or around July 2017.
The full measure specifications are available at: //www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/Modules/PSI_TechSpec_ICD09_v60.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ We note that the HAC Reduction Program also adopted this
measure in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57013 through
57030).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure is a
weighted average of the reliability-adjusted, indirectly standardized,
observed-to-expected ratios for the following 10 individual PSI
component indicators
PSI 03 Pressure Ulcer Rate;
PSI 06 Iatrogenic Pneumothorax Rate;
PSI 08 In-Hospital Fall with Hip Fracture Rate; \58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Previously titled ``Postoperative Hip Fracture'' prior to
v6.0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSI 09 Perioperative Hemorrhage or Hematoma Rate;*
PSI 10 Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury Requiring
Dialysis Rate;* \59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Previously titled ``Postoperative Physiologic and Metabolic
Derangement'' prior to v6.0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSI 11 Postoperative Respiratory Failure Rate; *
PSI 12 Perioperative Pulmonary Embolism (PE) or Deep Vein
Thrombosis (DVT) Rate;
PSI 13 Postoperative Sepsis Rate;
PSI 14 Postoperative Wound Dehiscence Rate; and
PSI 15 Unrecognized Abdominopelvic Accidental Puncture/
Laceration Rate.60 61
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ Previously titled ``Accidental Puncture or Laceration
Rate'' prior to v6.0.
\61\ Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0531.
(* Denotes new component for the Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure)
[[Page 19974]]
The Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure no longer
includes PSI 07 Central Venous Catheter-Related Blood Stream Infection
Rate, because of potential overlap with the CLABSI measure (NQF #0139),
which has been included in the Hospital VBP Program since the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53597 through 53598).
The measure is calculated using administrative claims data. Like
the previously adopted PSI 90 measure, under the Patient Safety and
Adverse Events (Composite) measure, the predicted value for each case
is computed using a Generalized Estimating Equation hierarchical
modeling approach that adjusts for demographic and clinical
characteristics. The expected rate for each of the indicators is
computed as the sum of the predicted value for each case divided by the
number of cases for the unit of analysis of interest (that is, the
hospital). The risk-adjusted rate for each of the indicators is
computed using indirect standardization as the observed rate divided by
the expected rate, multiplied by the reference population rate.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ For more information regarding the Patient Safety and
Adverse Events (Composite) measure's risk adjustment methodology, we
refer readers to: //www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/Downloads/Resources/Publications/2015/Empirical_Methods_2015.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated above, the previously adopted eight-indicator version of
the PSI 90 measure underwent an extended NQF maintenance re-endorsement
in the 2014 NQF Patient Safety Committee due to concerns with the
underlying component indicators and their composite weights. In its
final report, the NQF Patient Safety Committee deferred their final
decision for the PSI 90 measure until the following measure evaluation
cycle.\63\ Following this report, AHRQ worked to address many of the
NQF stakeholders' concerns about the PSI 90 measure, and subsequently
completed NQF maintenance re-review and received re-endorsement on
December 10, 2015. As a result of this process, the current PSI 90
measure's NQF maintenance re-endorsement led to several changes to the
measure, specifically: A change to the measure name; the addition of
three indicators; the removal of one indicator; the re-specification of
two indicators; and a revision to the weighting of component
indicators.\64\ For more information on the proposed Patient Safety and
Adverse Events (Composite) measure and component indicators, we refer
readers to the Quality Indicators Empirical Methods available at:
www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ National Quality Forum. NQF-Endorsed Measures for Patient
Safety, Final Report. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2015/01/NQF-Endorsed_Measures_for_Patient_Safety,_Final_Report.aspx.
\64\ National Quality Forum QPS Measure Description for
``Patient Safety for Selected Indicators (modified version of PSI
90) (Composite Measure)'' found at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/MeasureDetails.aspx?standardID=321&print=0&entityTypeID=3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We continue to believe the PSI 90 measure is an important measure
of patient safety, addressing the NQS priority and CMS Quality Strategy
goal to make care safer, and that these modifications help broaden and
strengthen the measure. We expect inclusion of the Patient Safety and
Adverse Events (Composite) measure in the Hospital VBP Program will
encourage improvement in patient safety over the long-term for all
hospitals. Conditions such as central line-associated blood stream
infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections, pressure
ulcers, and other complications or conditions that arise after a
patient was admitted to the hospital for the treatment of another
condition are often preventable, and cost Medicare and the private
sector billions of dollars each year and take a significant toll on
patients and families. In most cases, hospitals can prevent these
conditions when they follow protocols, procedures, and evidence-based
guidelines. We anticipate the Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure will provide actionable information and specific
direction for prevention of patient safety events, because hospitals
can track and monitor individual PSI rates and develop targeted
improvements to patient safety using this measure data.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ For further guidance on PSI monitoring and strategies for
applying quality improvements to PSI data, we refer readers to the
Toolkit for Using the AHRQ quality indicators available at: //www.ahrq.gov/professionals/systems/hospital/qitoolkit/index.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to adopt the Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure for the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY
2023 program year because we believe the measure would continue to
create strong incentives for hospitals to ensure that patients are not
harmed by the medical care they receive, which is a critical
consideration in quality improvement. We also are proposing that the
measure would be added to the Safety domain, like the previously
adopted PSI 90 measure that we are proposing to remove in section
V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule. The Patient Safety and
Adverse Events (Composite) measure fulfills all statutory requirements
for the Hospital VBP Program based on our adoption of that measure in
the Hospital IQR Program and the anticipated posting of measure data on
Hospital Compare at least 1 year prior to the start of the proposed
measure performance period. The Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure (MUC15-604) was included on the ``List of Measures
Under Consideration for December 1, 2015'' \66\ and received support
from the MAP, which noted the importance of safety measures for the
Hospital VBP Program.\67\ Therefore, we are proposing to add the
Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure to the Safety
domain for the FY 2023 program year and subsequent years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ ``List of Measures Under Consideration for December 1,
2015.'' Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
\67\ National Quality Forum, Measure Applications Partnership,
``MAP 2016 Considerations for Implementing Measures in Federal
Programs: Hospitals'' Final Report, (February 2016). Available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/02/MAP_2016_Considerations_for_Implementing_Measures_in_Federal_Programs_-_Hospitals.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
5. Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and Performance Periods
a. Background
Section 1886(o)(4) of the Act requires the Secretary to establish a
performance period for the Hospital VBP Program that begins and ends
prior to the beginning of such fiscal year. We refer readers to the FY
2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49561 through 49562) for the
baseline and performance periods for the Clinical Care, Person and
Community Engagement, Safety, and Efficiency and Cost Reduction domains
that we have adopted for the FY 2018 program year. We refer readers to
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56998 through 57003) for
additional baseline and performance periods that we have adopted for
the FY 2018, FY 2019, FY 2020, FY 2021 and FY 2022 program years.
Although in past rulemaking we have proposed and adopted a new baseline
and performance period for each program year for each measure in each
final rule, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we finalized a
schedule for all future baseline and performance periods.
b. Person and Community Engagement Domain
Since the FY 2015 program year, we have adopted a 12-month baseline
[[Page 19975]]
period and 12-month performance period for measures in the Person and
Community Engagement domain (previously referred to as the Patient- and
Caregiver-Centered Experience of Care/Care Coordination domain) (77 FR
53598; 78 FR 50692; 79 FR 50072; 80 FR 49561). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 56998), we finalized our proposal to adopt a 12-
month performance period for the Person and Community Engagement domain
that runs on the calendar year two years prior to the applicable
program year and a 12-month baseline period that runs on the calendar
year four years prior to the applicable program year, for the FY 2019
program year and subsequent years.
We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
c. Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
(1) MSPB Measure
Since the FY 2016 program year, we have adopted a 12-month baseline
period and 12-month performance period for the MSPB measure in the
Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain (78 FR 50692; 79 FR 50072; 80 FR
49562). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we finalized our
proposal to adopt a 12-month performance period for the MSPB measure
that runs on the calendar year two years prior to the applicable
program year and a 12-month baseline period that runs on the calendar
year four years prior to the applicable program year for the FY 2019
program year and subsequent years (81 FR 56998).
We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
(2) AMI Payment and HF Payment Measures
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56999), we adopted a
24-month performance period and a 36-month baseline period for the AMI
Payment and HF Payment measures for the FY 2021 program year. We did so
in order to adopt the measures as early as feasible into the Hospital
VBP Program, and stated our belief that using a 24-month performance
period rather than a 36-month performance period for the first program
year of these measures would still enable us to accurately assess the
quality of care provided by hospitals and would not substantially
change a hospital's performance on the measure (81 FR 56998 through
56999). We are not proposing any changes to the length of these
performance or baseline periods for the FY 2021 program year.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we also adopted a 36-month
performance period and 36-month baseline period for the AMI Payment and
HF Payment measures for the FY 2022 program year (81 FR 57000). We are
not proposing any changes to the length of these performance or
baseline periods for the FY 2022 program year.
For the FY 2023 program year and subsequent years, we conclude it
would be appropriate to use a 36-month performance period and 36-month
baseline period for the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures as we have
adopted for the FY 2022 program year. Therefore, for the FY 2023
program year and subsequent years, we are proposing to adopt a 36-month
performance period that runs from July 1st five years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year to June 30th two years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year. We also are proposing to adopt a 36-
month baseline period that runs from July 1, 10 years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year, to June 30, 7 years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(3) Proposed PN Payment Measure in the FY 2022 Program Year
As discussed in section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning with
the FY 2022 program year. In order to adopt this measure as early as
feasible into the Hospital VBP Program, we are proposing to adopt a 36-
month baseline period and a 23-month performance period. We are
proposing to adopt a 23-month performance period because we anticipate
that the refined measure will not be posted on Hospital Compare for one
year until July 2017. Therefore, for the FY 2022 program year, we are
proposing to adopt a 23-month performance period that runs from August
1, 2018 to June 30, 2020 and a baseline period that runs from July 1,
2013 to June 30, 2016.
We believe that using a 23-month performance period for the
proposed PN Payment measure, rather than a 36-month performance period,
in the FY 2022 program year would accurately assess the quality of care
provided by hospitals and would not substantially change hospitals'
performance on the measure. To determine the viability of using a 23-
month performance period to calculate the proposed PN Payment measure's
scores, we compared the measure score reliability for a 24-month and
36-month performance period. We calculated the Intraclass Correlation
Coefficient (ICC) to determine the extent to which assessment of a
hospital using different but randomly selected subsets of patients
produces similar measures of hospital performance.\68\ We calculated
the risk-standardized payment (RSP) using a random split-sample of a
36-month performance period (we used July 1, 2013 through June 30,
2016) and a random split-sample of a 24-month performance period (we
used July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Shrout P, Fleiss J. Intraclass Correlations: Uses in
Assessing Rater Reliability. Psychol. Bull. Mar 1979;86(2):420-428.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For both the 36-month and 24-month performance period, we obtained
two RSPs for each hospital, using an entirely distinct set of patients
from the same time period. If the RSPs for both the 36-month and 24-
month performance periods agree, we can demonstrate that the measure
assesses the quality of the hospital rather than the types of patients
treated. To calculate agreement between these measure subsets, we
calculated the ICC (2,1) \69\ for both the 36-month and 24-month
performance periods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Shrout P, Fleiss J. Intraclass Correlations: Uses in
Assessing Rater Reliability. Psychol. Bull. Mar 1979;86(2):420-428.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the proposed PN Payment measure, there were 1,170,762 index
admissions and 3,242 hospitals that met the minimum case threshold for
reporting a measure result (at least 25 cases) in the 36-month
performance period. There were 787,817 index admissions and 3,218
hospitals that met the minimum case threshold for reporting a measure
result in the 24-month performance period.
For the 36-month performance period, the ICC for the two
independent assessments of each hospital was 0.868. For the 24-month
performance period, the ICC for the two independent assessments of each
hospital was 0.834. Therefore, the data subsets showcase
``substantial'' agreement of hospital performance, and we can
demonstrate that, even with a shortened performance period, the
proposed PN Payment measure assesses the quality of care provided at a
hospital rather than the types of patients that these hospitals
treat.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ Landis J, Joch G. The Measurement of Observer Agreement for
Categorical Data. Biometrics. Mar 1997;33(1):159-174.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To assess whether using fewer than 36 months of data change the
performance in the same hospital, we compared the percent change in a
hospital's predicted/expected (P/E) ratio using 24 months of data. For
hospitals that met the minimum case threshold in the 24-month
performance period, the median percent change was 0.11 percent (with an
interquartile range of -1.5 percent to 0.07 percent). These results
suggest minimal difference in same-hospital
[[Page 19976]]
performance when using a 24-month measurement period. Based on these
analyses, we are confident that using a 23-month performance period
will result in reliable measure scores because our analysis
demonstrates strong reliability at 24 months and we believe the change
in available data due to a one month difference in the performance
period is insufficient to substantially impact the measure's
reliability.
In summary, based on the analysis described above, we are confident
that using a 23-month performance period, rather than 36-month
performance period, for the initial performance period for this measure
would accurately assess the quality of care provided by that hospital
and would not substantially change the hospital's performance on that
measure.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(4) Proposed PN Payment Measure in the FY 2023 Program Year
We have stated in past rules that we would strive to adopt 36-month
performance periods and baseline periods when possible to accommodate
the time needed to process measure data and to ensure that we collect
enough measure data for reliable performance scoring for all mortality
measures (78 FR 50074; 79 FR 50057; and 80 FR 49588). While we cannot
adopt a 36-month performance period for the FY 2023 program year
because we anticipate that the refined measure will not be posted on
Hospital Compare for 1 year until July 2017, we could lengthen the PN
Payment measure performance period from 23 months to 35 months. As
demonstrated above, our analysis of the proposed PN Payment measure
indicates that the measure would produce reliable measure scores using
24 months of data as well as 36 months of data. As such, we are
confident they will also be reliable when calculated using 35 months of
data for the performance period for the FY 2023 program year.
Therefore, for the FY 2023 program year, we are proposing to adopt a
35-month performance period that runs from August 1, 2018 to June 30,
2021 and a 36-month baseline period that runs from July 1, 2013 to June
30, 2016.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(5) Proposed PN Payment Measure in the FY 2024 Program Year and
Subsequent Years
For the FY 2024 program year and subsequent years, we believe it
would be appropriate to use a 36-month performance period and 36-month
baseline period for the PN Payment measure. Therefore, for the FY 2024
program year and subsequent years, we are proposing to adopt a 36-month
baseline period and a 36-month performance period for the proposed PN
Payment measure. Specifically, we are proposing to adopt a 36-month
performance period that runs from July 1, 5 years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year, to June 30, 2 years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year and a 36-month baseline period that runs
from July 1, 10 years prior to the applicable fiscal program year, to
June 30, 7 years prior to the applicable fiscal program year.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
d. Safety Domain
(1) Previously Adopted Measures in the Safety Domain
Since the FY 2016 program year, we have adopted a 12-month baseline
period and 12-month performance period for all measures in the Safety
domain, with the exception of the PSI 90 measure (78 FR 50692; 79 FR
50071; 80 FR 49562). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we
finalized our proposal to adopt a performance period for all measures
in the Safety domain--with the exception of the PSI 90 measure, as
discussed in more detail below--that runs on the calendar year 2 years
prior to the applicable program year and a baseline period that runs on
the calendar year 4 years prior to the applicable program year for the
FY 2019 program year and subsequent program years (81 FR 57000).
We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
(2) Proposed Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) Measure in
the FY 2023 Program Year
As discussed above in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the currently adopted PSI 90
measure beginning with the FY 2019 program year, and in section
V.J.4.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to
adopt the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure
beginning with the FY 2023 program year. In order to adopt the Patient
Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure as early as feasible into
the Hospital VBP Program, we are proposing to adopt a 21-month baseline
period and 24-month performance period for the measure for the FY 2023
program year. Specifically, we are proposing to adopt a performance
period that runs from July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2021, and a baseline
period that runs from October 1, 2015 to June 30, 2017. The 21-month
baseline period would only apply to the FY 2023 program year and would
only use ICD-10 data.
Prior to deciding to propose an abbreviated baseline period for the
FY 2023 program year, we took several factors into consideration,
including the recommendations of the measure steward, the feasibility
of using a combination of ICD-9 and ICD-10 data without the
availability of the appropriate measure software, minimizing provider
burden, program implementation timelines, and the reliability of using
a shortened baseline period. We believe using a 21-month baseline
period for the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure
for the FY 2023 program year best serves the need to provide important
information on hospital patient safety and adverse events by allowing
sufficient time to process the claims data and calculate measure
scores, while minimizing reporting burden and program disruption. We
also believe that measure scores would continue to be reliable for the
above proposed baseline period because the NQF, which re-endorsed the
modified version of the measure that we are now proposing, found it to
be reliable using 12 months of data.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ ``Patient Safety 2015 Final Report'' is available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/02/Patient_Safety_2015_Final_Report.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(3) Proposed Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) Measure in
the FY 2024 Program Year and Subsequent Years
For the FY 2024 program year and subsequent years, we are proposing
to lengthen the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure
baseline period to 24 months and continue to adopt a 24-month
performance period because we believe the measure is most reliable with
a 24-month baseline period. For the FY 2024 program year, the baseline
period would run from July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2018. Therefore, we are
proposing to adopt a performance period that runs from July 1, 4 years
prior to the applicable fiscal program year, to June 30, 2 years prior
to the applicable fiscal program year, and a baseline period that runs
from July 1, 8 years prior to the applicable program year, to June 30,
6 years prior to the applicable program year.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
[[Page 19977]]
e. Clinical Care Domain
(1) Previously Adopted Measures in the Clinical Care Domain
For the FY 2019, FY 2020, and FY 2021 program years, we adopted a
36-month baseline period and 36-month performance period for measures
in the Clinical Care domain (78 FR 50692 through 50694; 79 FR 50073; 80
FR 49563).\72\ In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57000),
we finalized our proposal to adopt a 36-month performance period and
36-month baseline period for the FY 2022 program year for each of the
previously finalized measures in the Clinical Care domain--that is, the
MORT-30-AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30-COPD, THA/TKA, and MORT-30-CABG
measures. We are now proposing to adopt a 36-month performance period
and 36-month baseline period for these measures for the FY 2023 program
year and subsequent years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ The THA/TKA measure was added for the FY 2019 program year
with a 36-month baseline period and a 24-month performance period
(79 FR 50072), but we have since adopted 36-month baseline and
performance periods for the FY 2021 program year (80 FR 49563). We
intend to continue having 36-month baseline periods and 36-month
performance periods in the future for all measures in the Clinical
Care domain.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, for the mortality measures (MORT-30-AMI, MORT-30-HF,
MORT-30-COPD, and MORT-30-CABG), the performance period would run for
36 months from July 1, 5 years prior to the applicable fiscal program
year, to June 30, 2 years prior to the applicable fiscal program year,
and the baseline period would run for 36 months from July 1, 10 years
prior to the applicable fiscal program year, to June 30, 7 years prior
to the applicable fiscal program year. For the THA/TKA measure, the
performance period would run for 36 months from April 1, 5 years prior
to the applicable fiscal program year, to March 31, 2 years prior to
the applicable fiscal program year, and the baseline period would run
for 36 months from April 1, 10 years prior to the applicable fiscal
program year, to March 31, 7 years prior to the applicable fiscal
program year.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(2) MORT-30-PN (Updated Cohort) Measure
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57001), we adopted a
22-month performance period for the MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) measure
and a 36-month baseline period for the FY 2021 program year. In the
same final rule, we adopted a 34-month performance period and 36-month
baseline period for the MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) measure for the FY
2022 program year. We are not proposing any changes to the length of
these performance or baseline periods for the FY 2021 and FY 2022
program years.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57001), we also
stated our intent to lengthen the MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) measure
performance period to a full 36-month performance period beginning in
July, instead of September. Therefore, we are now proposing to adopt a
36-month performance period that would run from July 1, 5 years prior
to the applicable fiscal program year, to June 30, 2 years prior to the
applicable fiscal program year, and a 36-month baseline period that
would run from July 1, 10 years prior to the applicable fiscal program
year, to June 30, 7 years prior to the applicable fiscal program year
for the MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) measure for the FY 2023 program
year and subsequent years.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
f. Summary of Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and Performance
Periods for the FY 2019 through FY 2023 Program Years
The tables below summarize the baseline and performance periods
that we have previously adopted and are proposing to adopt in this
proposed rule.
Previously Adopted Baseline and Performance Periods for the FY 2019
Program Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain Baseline period Performance period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement:
HCAHPS Survey...... January January
1, 2015-December 1, 2017-December
31, 2015. 31, 2017.
Clinical Care:
Mortality (MORT-30-
AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30-
PN).
THA/TKA............ July 1, July 1,
2009-June 30, 2014-June 30,
2012. 2017.
July 1, January
2010-June 30, 1, 2015-June 30,
2013. 2017.
Safety: *
PC-01 and NHSN January January
measures (CAUTI, CLABSI, 1, 2015-December 1, 2017-December
SSI, CDI, MRSA). 31, 2015. 31, 2017.
Efficiency and Cost Reduction:
MSPB............... January January
1, 2015-December 1, 2017-December
31, 2015. 31, 2017.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning
with the FY 2019 program year. As a result, the previously finalized
performance and baseline periods for this measure are not included in
this table.
Previously Adopted Baseline and Performance Periods for the FY 2020
Program Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain Baseline period Performance period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement:
HCAHPS Survey...... January January
1, 2016-December 1, 2018-December
31, 2016. 31, 2018.
Clinical Care:
Mortality (MORT-30- July 1, July 1,
AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30- 2010-June 30, 2015-June 30,
PN). 2013. 2018.
THA/TKA............ July 1, July 1,
2010-June 30, 2015-June 30,
2013. 2018.
Safety: *
PC-01 and NHSN January January
measures (CAUTI, CLABSI, 1, 2016-December 1, 2018-December
SSI, CDI, MRSA). 31, 2016. 31, 2018.
[[Page 19978]]
Efficiency and Cost Reduction:
MSPB............... January January
1, 2016-December 1, 2018-December
31, 2016. 31, 2018.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning
with the FY 2019 program year. As a result, the previously finalized
performance and baseline periods for this measure are not included in
this table.
Previously Adopted Baseline and Performance Periods for the FY 2021
Program Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain Baseline period Performance period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement:
HCAHPS Survey...... January January
1, 2017-December 1, 2019-December
31, 2017. 31, 2019.
Clinical Care:
Mortality (MORT-30- July 1, July 1,
AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30- 2011-June 30, 2016-June 30,
COPD). 2014. 2019.
MORT-30-PN (updated July 1, September
cohort). 2012-June 30, 1, 2017-June 30,
2015. 2019.
THA/TKA............ April 1, April 1,
2011-March 31, 2016-March 31,
2014. 2019.
Safety: *
PC-01 and NHSN January January
measures (CAUTI, CLABSI, 1, 2017-December 1, 2019-December
SSI, CDI, MRSA). 31, 2017. 31, 2019.
Efficiency and Cost Reduction:
MSPB............... January January
1, 2017-December 1, 2019-December
31, 2017. 31, 2019.
Payment (AMI July 1, July 1,
Payment and HF Payment). 2012-June 30, 2017-June 30,
2015. 2019.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning
with the FY 2019 program year. As a result, the previously finalized
performance and baseline periods for this measure are not included in
this table.
Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and Performance Periods for the
FY 2022 Program Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain Baseline period Performance period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement:
HCAHPS Survey...... January January
1, 2018-December 1, 2020-December
31, 2018. 31, 2020.
Clinical Care:
Mortality (MORT-30- July 1, July 1,
AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30- 2012-June 30, 2017-June 30,
COPD, MORT-30-CABG). 2015. 2020.
MORT-30-PN (updated July 1, September
cohort). 2012-June 30, 1, 2017-June 30,
2015. 2020.
THA/TKA............ April 1, April 1,
2012-March 31, 2017-March 31,
2015. 2020.
Safety: *
PC-01 and NHSN January January
measures (CAUTI, CLABSI, 1, 2018-December 1, 2020-December
SSI, CDI, MRSA). 31, 2018. 31, 2020.
Efficiency and Cost Reduction:
MSPB............... January January
1, 2018-December 1, 2020-December
31, 2018. 31, 2020.
Payment (AMI July 1, July 1,
Payment, HF Payment). 2012-June 30, 2017-June 30,
2015. 2020.
PN Payment **...... July 1, August 1,
2013-June 30, 2018-June 30,
2016. 2020.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning
with the FY 2019 program year. As a result, the previously finalized
performance and baseline periods for this measure are not included in
this table.
** As discussed in section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning with
the FY 2022 program year.
Previously Adopted and Proposed Baseline and Performance Periods for the
FY 2023 Program Year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain Baseline period Performance period
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement:
HCAHPS Survey...... January January
1, 2019-December 1, 2021-December
31, 2019. 31, 2021.
Clinical Care:
Mortality (MORT-30- July 1, July 1,
AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30- 2013-June 30, 2018-June 30,
COPD, MORT-30-CABG, MORT-30- 2016. 2021.
PN (updated cohort).
THA/TKA............ April 1, April 1,
2013-March 31, 2018-March 31,
2016. 2021.
Safety:
PC-01 and NHSN January January
measures (CAUTI, CLABSI, 1, 2019-December 1, 2021-December
SSI, CDI, MRSA). 31, 2019. 31, 2021.
Patient Safety and October July 1,
Adverse Events (Composite) 1, 2015-June 30, 2019-June 30,
*. 2017. 2021.
Efficiency and Cost Reduction:
[[Page 19979]]
MSPB............... January January
1, 2019-December 1, 2021-December
31, 2019. 31, 2021.
Payment (AMI July 1, July 1,
Payment, HF Payment). 2013-June 30, 2018-June 30,
2016. 2021.
PN Payment **...... July 1, August 1,
2013-June 30, 2018-June 30,
2016. 2021.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As discussed in section V.J.4.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt the Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure beginning with the FY 2023 program year.
** As discussed in section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning with
the FY 2022 program year.
6. Proposed Performance Standards for the Hospital VBP Program
a. Background
Section 1886(o)(3)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish performance standards for the measures selected under the
Hospital VBP Program for a performance period for the applicable fiscal
year. The performance standards must include levels of achievement and
improvement, as required by section 1886(o)(3)(B) of the Act, and must
be established no later than 60 days before the beginning of the
performance period for the fiscal year involved, as required by section
1886(o)(3)(C) of the Act. We refer readers to the Hospital Inpatient
VBP Program final rule (76 FR 26511 through 26513) for further
discussion of achievement and improvement standards under the Hospital
VBP Program.
In addition, when establishing the performance standards, section
1886(o)(3)(D) of the Act requires the Secretary to consider appropriate
factors, such as: (1) Practical experience with the measures, including
whether a significant proportion of hospitals failed to meet the
performance standard during previous performance periods; (2)
historical performance standards; (3) improvement rates; and (4) the
opportunity for continued improvement.
We refer readers to the FY 2013, FY 2014, and FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rules (77 FR 53604 through 53605; 78 FR 50694 through 50698; and
79 FR 50077 through 50079, respectively) for a more detailed discussion
of the general scoring methodology used in the Hospital VBP Program.
We note that the performance standards for the following measures
are calculated with lower values representing better performance:
The NHSN measures (the CLABSI, CAUTI, CDI, Colon and the
Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI, and MRSA Bacteremia measures);
The THA/TKA measure;
The PC-01 measure;
The MSPB measure;
The HF and AMI Payment measures;
The proposed PN Payment measure; and
The proposed Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite)
measure.
This distinction is made in contrast to other measures for which
higher values indicate better performance.\73\ As discussed further in
the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50684), the performance
standards for the Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI measure are
computed separately for each procedure stratum, and we first award
achievement and improvement points to each stratum separately, then
compute a weighted average of the points awarded to each stratum by
predicted infections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ We note that the mortality measures in the Hospital VBP
Program use survival rates rather than mortality rates; as a result,
higher values indicate better performance on these measures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for the FY
2020 Program Year
In accordance with our finalized methodology for calculating
performance standards (discussed more fully in the Hospital Inpatient
VBP Program final rule (76 FR 26511 through 26513)), we are proposing
to adopt additional performance standards for the FY 2020 program year.
We note that the numerical values for the performance standards
displayed in this proposed rule, below, represented estimates based on
the most recently available data, and we intend to update the numerical
values in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. We note further that
the MSPB measure's performance standards are based on performance
period data; therefore, we are unable to provide numerical equivalents
for the standards at this time. These previously adopted and newly
proposed performance standards for the measures in the FY 2020 program
year are set out in the tables below.
Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for the FY 2020 Program Year: Safety, Clinical Care, and
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domains
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Achievement threshold Benchmark
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safety Domain [diams]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI *[dagger].................. 0.806................................. 0.000.
CLABSI *[dagger]................. 0.797................................. 0.000.
CDI *[dagger].................... 0.876................................. 0.090.
MRSA Bacteremia *[dagger]........ 0.794................................. 0.000.
Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy 0.784........................ 0.000.
SSI *[dagger]. 0.775........................ 0.000.
PC-01 *.......................... 0.005952.............................. 0.000000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI ......... 0.853715.............................. 0.875869.
[[Page 19980]]
MORT-30-HF .......... 0.881090.............................. 0.906068.
MORT-30-PN .......... 0.882266.............................. 0.909532.
THA/TKA *............ 0.032229.............................. 0.023178.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB *............... Median Medicare Spending Per Mean of the lowest decile Medicare
Beneficiary ratio across all Spending Per Beneficiary ratios
hospitals during the performance across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the current
PSI 90 measure beginning with the FY 2019 program year. As a result, the previously finalized performance
standards for this measure are not included in this table.
[diams] The performance standards displayed in this table for the Safety domain measures were calculated using
one quarter (Q4) CY 2015 data and three quarters (Q1, Q2, and Q3) CY 2016 data. We will update this table's
performance standards using four quarters of CY 2016 data in the final rule.
[dagger] In section III.F.2.e. of preamble of the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49544 thorough 49555),
we finalized our proposal to use the CDC's new standard population data to calculate performance standards for
the NHSN measures beginning with the FY 2019 program year. We refer readers to that final rule for additional
information regarding the NHSN measures' standard population data. In addition, we note that a technical
update was released for these measures for the FY 2019 program year in order to ensure that hospitals have the
correct performance standards for the applicable performance period.
* Lower values represent better performance.
Previously adopted performance standards.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR
79857), we discussed how the removal of the Pain Management dimension
of the HCAHPS Survey, beginning with the FY 2018 program year, affects
the scoring of the Person and Community Engagement domain. The eight
dimensions of the HCAHPS measure are calculated to generate the HCAHPS
Base Score. For each of the eight dimensions, Achievement Points (0-10
points) and Improvement Points (0-9 points) are calculated, the larger
of which is then summed across the eight dimensions to create the
HCAHPS Base Score (0-80 points). Each of the eight dimensions is of
equal weight, thus the HCAHPS Base Score ranges from 0 to 80 points.
HCAHPS Consistency Points are then calculated, which range from 0 to 20
points. The Consistency Points take into consideration the scores of
all eight Person and Community Engagement dimensions; as noted above,
the Pain Management dimension is not included in the scoring of this
Domain. The final element of the scoring formula is the summation of
the HCAHPS Base Score and the HCAHPS Consistency Points, which results
in the Person and Community Engagement Domain score that ranges from 0
to 100 points.
Proposed Performance Standards for the FY 2020 Program Year: Person and Community Engagement Domain *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Achievement
HCAHPS survey dimension Floor threshold Benchmark
(percent) (percent) (percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Communication with Nurses....................................... 49.26 78.99 87.17
Communication with Doctors...................................... 46.91 80.31 88.56
Responsiveness of Hospital Staff................................ 35.92 65.16 80.05
Communication about Medicines................................... 23.44 63.41 73.94
Hospital Cleanliness & Quietness................................ 37.21 65.81 79.29
Discharge Information........................................... 65.60 87.36 92.04
Care Transition................................................. 21.20 51.12 62.56
Overall Rating of Hospital...................................... 35.46 71.35 85.01
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* We renamed this domain from Patient- and Caregiver-Centered Experience of Care/Care Coordination domain to
Person and Community Engagement domain beginning with the FY 2019 program year, as discussed in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56984).
The performance standards displayed in this table were calculated using one quarter (Q4) CY 2015
data and three quarters (Q1, Q2, and Q3) CY 2016 data. We will update this table's performance standards using
four quarters of CY 2016 data in the final rule.
We are inviting public comments on these proposed performance
standards for the FY 2020 program year.
c. Previously Adopted Performance Standards for Certain Measures for
the FY 2021 Program Year
As discussed above, we have adopted certain measures for the
Clinical Care and Efficiency and Cost Reduction domains for future
program years in order to ensure that we can adopt baseline and
performance periods of sufficient length for performance scoring
purposes. In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49567), we
adopted performance standards for the FY 2021 program year for the
Clinical Care domain measures (THA/TKA, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30-AMI, and
MORT-30-COPD). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57008),
we adopted performance standards for the MORT-30-PN (updated cohort)
measure (81 FR 57008) and the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures for
the FY 2021 program year. We note that the performance standards for
the MSPB, AMI Payment, and HF Payment measures are based on performance
[[Page 19981]]
period data; therefore, we are unable to provide numerical equivalents
for the standards at this time. The previously adopted performance
standards for these measures are set out in the table below.
Previously Adopted Performance Standards for the FY 2021 Program Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Achievement threshold Benchmark
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI ......... 0.860355.............................. 0.879714.
MORT-30-HF .......... 0.883803.............................. 0.906144.
MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) 0.836122.............................. 0.870506.
[dagger].
MORT-30-COPD ........ 0.923253.............................. 0.938664.
THA/TKA *............ 0.031157.............................. 0.022418.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB *............... Median Medicare Spending Per Mean of the lowest decile Medicare
Beneficiary ratio across all Spending Per Beneficiary ratios
hospitals during the performance across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
AMI Payment *........ Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
HF Payment *......... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously adopted performance standards.
* Lower values represent better performance.
[dagger] After publication of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we determined there was a display error in
the performance standards for this measure. We have since undertaken a technical update for these performance
standards in order to ensure that hospitals have the correct performance standards for the applicable
performance period. The corrected performance standards are displayed here.
d. Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for Certain
Measures for the FY 2022 Program Year
As discussed above, we have adopted certain measures for the
Clinical Care and Efficiency and Cost Reduction domains for future
program years in order to ensure that we can adopt baseline and
performance periods of sufficient length for performance scoring
purposes. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57009), we
adopted performance standards for the FY 2022 program year for the
Clinical Care domain measures (THA/TKA, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30-AMI, MORT-
30-PN (updated cohort), MORT-30-COPD, and MORT-30-CABG) and the
Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain measures (AMI Payment and HF
Payment). In section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to add one measure, the PN Payment measure, beginning
with the FY 2022 program year. We note that the performance standards
for the MSPB, AMI Payment, HF Payment, and PN Payment measures are
based on performance period data; therefore, we are unable to provide
numerical equivalents for the standards at this time. The previously
adopted and newly proposed performance standards for these measures are
set out in the table below.
Previously Adopted and Proposed Performance Standards for the FY 2022 Program Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Achievement threshold Benchmark
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI ......... 0.861793.............................. 0.881305.
MORT-30-HF .......... 0.879869.............................. 0.903608.
MORT-30-PN (updated cohort) .
MORT-30-COPD ........ 0.920058.............................. 0.936962.
MORT-30-CABG [dagger] 0.968210.............................. 0.979000.
THA/TKA *............ 0.029833.............................. 0.021493.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19982]]
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB *............... Median Medicare Spending Per Mean of the lowest decile Medicare
Beneficiary ratio across all Spending Per Beneficiary ratios
hospitals during the performance across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
AMI Payment *........ Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30[dash]Day Episode-of-Care across Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
all hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
HF Payment *......... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30[dash]Day Episode-of-Care across Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
all hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
PN Payment *.................... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously adopted performance standards.
[dagger] After publication of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we determined there was a display error in
the performance standards for this measure. Specifically, the Achievement Threshold and Benchmark values,
while accurate, were presented in the wrong categories. We have corrected this issue in the table above, and
the correct performance standards are displayed here.
* Lower values represent better performance.
Scored the same as the MSPB, AMI Payment, and HF Payment measures, as discussed in section V.J.4.a.(2) of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
We are inviting public comment on the proposed PN Payment measure
performance standards for the FY 2022 program year.
e. Proposed Performance Standards for Certain Measures for the FY 2023
Program Year
As discussed above, we have adopted certain measures for the
Clinical Care and Efficiency and Cost Reduction domains for future
program years in order to ensure that we can adopt baseline and
performance periods of sufficient length for performance scoring
purposes. We are proposing the following performance standards for the
FY 2023 program year for the Clinical Care domain measures (THA/TKA,
MORT-30-AMI, MORT-30-HF, MORT-30-PN (updated cohort), MORT-30-COPD, and
MORT-30-CABG) and for the Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain measures
(MSPB, AMI Payment, HF Payment, and the proposed PN Payment measure).
Although we are proposing to adopt the Patient Safety and Adverse
Events (Composite) measure beginning with the FY 2023 program year, we
do not currently have data available to calculate the performance
standards; we therefore intend to propose the FY 2023 performance
standards for this measure in next year's rulemaking. We note that the
performance standards for the MSPB, AMI Payment, HF Payment, and PN
Payment measures are based on performance period data; therefore, we
are unable to provide numerical equivalents for the standards at this
time. These newly proposed performance standards for these measures are
set out in the table below.
Proposed Performance Standards for the FY 2023 Program Year
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Achievement threshold Benchmark
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI...................... 0.866548.............................. 0.885499.
MORT-30-HF....................... 0.881939.............................. 0.906798.
MORT-30-PN (updated cohort)...... 0.840138.............................. 0.871741.
MORT-30-COPD..................... 0.919769.............................. 0.936349.
MORT-30-CABG..................... 0.968747.............................. 0.979620.
THA/TKA *........................ 0.027428.............................. 0.019779.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19983]]
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB *........................... Median Medicare Spending Per Mean of the lowest decile Medicare
Beneficiary ratio across all Spending Per Beneficiary ratios
hospitals during the performance across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
AMI Payment *................... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
HF Payment *.................... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
PN Payment *.................... Median Hospital-Level, Risk- Mean of the lowest decile Hospital-
Standardized Payment Associated with Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
a 30-Day Episode-of-Care across all Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-
hospitals during the performance Care across all hospitals during the
period. performance period.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Lower values represent better performance.
Scored the same as the MSPB, AMI Payment, and HF Payment measures, as discussed in section V.J.4.a.(2) of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
We are inviting public comments on these proposed performance
standards for the FY 2023 program year.
7. Scoring Methodology and Data Requirements for the FY 2019 Program
Year and Subsequent Years
a. Proposed Domain Weighting for the FY 2020 Program Year and
Subsequent Years for Hospitals That Receive a Score on All Domains
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49568 through
49570), we adopted equal weight of 25 percent for each of the 4 domains
in the FY 2018 program year for hospitals that receive a score in all
domains. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57009 through
57010), for the FY 2019 program year, we retained this domain
weighting. We are not proposing any changes to the domain weights for
the FY 2018 and FY 2019 program years.
For the FY 2020 program year and subsequent years, we are proposing
to retain this same domain weighting for hospitals receiving a score on
all four domains. The previously adopted and newly proposed domain
weighting is summarized in the table below.
Domain Weights for the FY 2019 Program Year and Subsequent Years for
Hospitals Receiving a Score on All Domains
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Weight
Domain (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safety...................................................... 25
Clinical Care............................................... 25
Efficiency and Cost Reduction............................... 25
Person and Community Engagement *........................... 25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* We renamed this domain from Patient- and Caregiver-Centered Experience
of Care/Care Coordination domain to Person and Community Engagement
domain beginning with the FY 2019 program year, as discussed in
section IV.H.3.b. of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
56984).
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
b. Proposed Domain Weighting for the FY 2019 Program Year and
Subsequent Years for Hospitals Receiving Scores on Fewer Than Four
Domains
For the FY 2017 program year and subsequent years, we adopted a
policy that hospitals must receive domain scores on at least three of
four quality domains in order to receive a TPS, and hospitals with
sufficient data on only three domains will have their TPSs
proportionately reweighted (79 FR 50084 through 50085). We are not
proposing any changes to these domain weights for the FY 2019 program
year or subsequent years.
For a hospital to receive a TPS for the FY 2019 program year and
subsequent years:
Hospitals must report a minimum number of 100 completed
HCAHPS surveys for a hospital to receive a Person and Community
Engagement domain score.
Hospitals must receive a minimum of one measure score
within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain.
Hospitals must receive a minimum of two measure scores
within the Clinical Care domain.
Hospitals must receive a minimum of two measure scores
within the Safety domain.
We are proposing two changes to our domain scoring policies for the
FY 2019 program year and subsequent years. We are proposing to change
the minimum number of measures scores a hospital must receive to
receive a score on the Safety domain from three measures to two
measures. Second, we are proposing that hospitals must receive a
minimum of one measure score within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction
domain to receive a domain score rather than requiring that hospitals
meet the
[[Page 19984]]
requirements to receive a MSPB measure score.
The proposed change to the Safety domain minimum number of measure
scores is based on our proposal to remove the current PSI 90 measure
from the Hospital VBP Program beginning with the FY 2019 program year.
Based on our analyses, removing this measure but maintaining the
requirement that a hospital receive three measure scores in order to
receive a Safety Domain score would have a significant impact on the
number of hospitals eligible to receive a Safety domain score.
Therefore, in order to include the greatest number of hospitals in the
Hospital VBP Program possible while ensuring the need for TPSs to be
sufficiently reliable, we are proposing to reduce the minimum number of
required measure scores within the Safety domain from three measures to
two.
In addition, we note that we are not proposing to reduce the number
of measures a hospital must receive a score on in order to receive an
Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain score. Under the current program
requirements (79 FR 50086), a hospital must be eligible to receive a
score on the MSPB measure in order to receive a score for this domain.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56987 through 56990 and
81 FR 56990 through 56992), we adopted two condition-specific payment
measures, the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures, beginning with the
FY 2021 program year, and in section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this
proposed rule we are proposing to adopt one additional condition-
specific payment measure, the PN Payment measure. We are therefore
proposing to require that hospitals must be eligible to receive a score
on at least one measure within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction
domain, rather than on the MSPB measure specifically, to reflect this
expansion of the domain's measure set.
We believe these proposed changes reflect the evolution of the
Hospital VBP Program measure set, and we continue to believe that these
requirements appropriately balance our desire to enable as many
hospitals as possible to participate in the Hospital VBP Program and
the need for TPSs to be sufficiently reliable to provide meaningful
distinctions between hospitals' performance on quality measures.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
c. Minimum Numbers of Cases for Hospital VBP Program Measures for the
FY 2019 Program Year and Subsequent Years
(1) Background
Section 1886(o)(1)(C)(ii)(IV) of the Act requires the Secretary to
exclude for the fiscal year hospitals that do not report a minimum
number (as determined by the Secretary) of cases for the measures that
apply to the hospital for the performance period for the fiscal year.
Under section 1886(o)(1)(C)(iii) of the Act, in determining the minimum
number of reported cases for a given measure, the Secretary must
conduct an independent analysis of what minimum numbers would be
appropriate. For additional discussion of the previously finalized
minimum numbers of cases for measures under the Hospital VBP Program,
we refer readers to the Hospital Inpatient VBP Program final rule (76
FR 26527 through 26531); the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule (76 FR 74532
through 74534); the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53608
through 53609); the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50085); the
FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49570); and the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57011).
(2) Person and Community Engagement Domain
In the Hospital Inpatient VBP Program final rule (76 FR 26527
through 26531), we adopted a minimum number of 100 completed HCAHPS
Surveys for a hospital to receive a score on the HCAHPS measure.
We are not proposing any changes to this policy.
(3) Clinical Care Domain
In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74532
through 74534), we adopted a minimum number of 10 cases for the MORT-
30-AMI, MORT-30-HF, and MORT-30-PN measures beginning with the FY 2014
program year. In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53608
through 53609), we adopted a new minimum number of 25 cases for the
MORT-30-AMI, MORT-30-HF, and MORT-30-PN measures for the FY 2015
program year. We adopted the same 25-case minimum for the MORT-30-COPD
measure in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49570), and for
the MORT-30-CABG, MORT-30-PN (updated cohort), and THA/TKA measures in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57011).
We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
(4) Safety Domain
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53608 through
53609), we adopted a minimum of one predicted infection for NHSN-based
surveillance measures (that is, the CAUTI, CLABSI, CDI, MRSA, and SSI
measures) based on CDC's minimum case criteria. In the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50085), we adopted this case minimum for the
NHSN-based surveillance measures FY 2016 Hospital VBP Program and
subsequent years. In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
26530), we adopted a minimum of 10 cases for the PC-01 measure.\74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ We note that the PC-01 measure was previously included in
the Clinical Care--Process domain. In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (80 FR 49553 through 49554), we re-categorized this
measure as a Safety domain measure beginning with the FY 2018
program year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beginning with the FY 2023 program year, we are proposing that
hospitals must report a minimum of three eligible cases on any one
underlying indicator during the baseline period in order to receive an
improvement score and three eligible cases on any one underlying
indicator during performance period in order to receive an achievement
score on the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure. For
the purposes of the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite)
measure, a case is ``eligible'' for a given indicator if it meets the
criterion for inclusion in the indicator measure population. This
minimum number of cases is based on AHRQ's methodology for scoring
performance on the Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite)
measure. We note that these proposed minimum data requirements for the
Patient Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure are the same as
those previously finalized for the current PSI 90 measure.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal regarding the
minimum number of cases for the Patient Safety and Adverse Events
(Composite) measure.
(5) Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53609 through
53610), we adopted a minimum of 25 cases in order to receive a score
for the MSPB measure. In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
50085 through 50086), we retained the same MSPB measure case minimum
for the FY 2016 program year and subsequent years.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56987 through 56990
and 81 FR 56990 through 56992, respectively),
[[Page 19985]]
we adopted the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures in the Efficiency
and Cost Reduction domain for the FY 2021 program year and subsequent
years. In section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure in the Efficiency and
Cost Reduction domain for the FY 2022 program year and subsequent
years. For these condition-specific payment measures (namely, the AMI
Payment and HF Payment measures, as well as the proposed PN Payment
measure, if finalized), we are proposing that hospitals must report a
minimum number of 25 cases per measure in order to receive a measure
score for the FY 2021 program year, FY 2022 program year, and
subsequent years. We believe this minimum number of cases is
appropriate because it balances our interest in allowing the maximum
possible number of hospitals the opportunity to receive a score on the
measure and maintaining sufficiently reliable scores. As we noted in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56992), we expect this case
minimum will ensure that each hospital's payment measure rate is
sufficiently reliable to generate a score that meaningfully
distinguishes hospital performance on the measures. In addition, the
statistical model that CMS uses to calculate the payment measures
allows for the inclusion of hospitals with relatively few cases by
taking into account the uncertainty associated with sample size.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal regarding the
minimum number of cases for the AMI, HF, and PN Payment measures.
(6) Summary of Previously Adopted and Proposed Minimum Numbers of Cases
for the FY 2019 Program Year and Subsequent Years
These previously adopted and newly proposed minimum numbers of
cases for these measures are set forth in the table below.
Previously Adopted and Proposed Minimum Case Number Requirements for the
FY 2019 Program Year and Subsequent Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure short name Minimum number of cases
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Person and Community Engagement Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCAHPS....................... Hospitals must report a minimum number of
100 completed HCAHPS surveys.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Care Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI.................. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
MORT-30-HF................... Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
MORT-30-PN (updated cohort).. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
MORT-30-COPD................. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
MORT-30-CABG................. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
THA/TKA...................... Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safety Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI........................ Hospitals have a minimum of 1.000
predicted infections as calculated by
the CDC.
CLABSI....................... Hospitals have a minimum of 1.000
predicted infections as calculated by
the CDC.
Colon and Abdominal Hospitals have a minimum of 1.000
Hysterectomy SSI. predicted infections as calculated by
the CDC.
MRSA Bacteremia.............. Hospitals have a minimum of 1.000
predicted infections as calculated by
the CDC.
CDI.......................... Hospitals have a minimum of 1.000
predicted infections as calculated by
the CDC.
Patient Safety and Adverse Hospitals must report a minimum of three
Events (Composite) . eligible cases on any one underlying
indicator.
PC-01........................ Hospitals must report a minimum of 10
cases.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSPB......................... Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
AMI Payment.................. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
HF Payment................... Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
PN Payment *................. Hospitals must report a minimum number of
25 cases.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in section V.J.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning
with the FY 2019 program year. As discussed in section V.J.4.b. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to adopt the Patient
Safety and Adverse Events (Composite) measure beginning with the FY
2023 program year.
* As discussed in section V.J.4.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt the PN Payment measure beginning with
the FY 2022 program year.
d. Weighting Measures Within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction Domain
In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51618 through
51627), we adopted the MSPB measure for the Hospital VBP Program
beginning with the FY 2015 program year. MSPB is the only cost measure
in the Hospital VBP Program through the FY 2020 program year; as a
result, hospitals' Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain scores are
currently based solely on their MSPB measure scores. In the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we adopted two condition-specific cost
measures, the AMI Payment and HF Payment measures, beginning with the
FY 2021 program year (81 FR 56987 through 56990 and 81 FR 56990 through
56992, respectively). In addition, as discussed in section V.J.4.a. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to adopt an
additional condition-specific cost measure, the PN Payment measure,
beginning with the FY 2022 program year. Based on this evolution of the
Hospital VBP Program measure set, we believe it is appropriate to
address measure score weighting within the Efficiency and Cost
Reduction domain.
In determining how to weight measures in the Efficiency and Cost
Reduction domain, we took into consideration hospitals' experience with
the measures and the measures' ability to incentivize greater
coordination among hospitals, physicians, and providers of post-acute
care services to optimize the value of care they provide
[[Page 19986]]
to Medicare beneficiaries. Therefore, we are proposing to weight the
measures within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain such that the
MSPB measure comprises 50 percent of a hospital's domain score and the
other condition-specific payment measures, weighed equally, comprise
the remaining 50 percent of a hospital's domain score, beginning with
the FY 2021 program year and for subsequent years. We further are
proposing that:
If a hospital meets the case minimum to receive a score on
the MSPB measure but does not meet the minimum number of cases for any
other measures in the Efficiency and Cost Reduction domain, its domain
score will be based solely on its MSPB score;
If a hospital does not meet the case minimum to receive a
score on the MSPB measure but meets the minimum number of cases for any
other measure or measures within the Efficiency and Cost Reduction
domain, its domain score will be based on its scores on the other
payment measures, weighted equally (that is, the MSPB measure's weight
will be redistributed equally among the Efficiency and Cost Reduction
domain measures for which the hospital is eligible receive a score);
and
If a hospital meets the case minimum to receive a score on
the MSPB measure and one or more other measures within the Efficiency
and Cost Reduction domain, but not all measures within this domain, the
hospital's MSPB measure score will comprise 50 percent of its domain
score and the remaining 50 percent will be divided equally among the
measures for which the hospital is eligible to receive a score.
Under our proposed weighting scheme, a hospital's MSPB measure
score could constitute between 12.5 percent and 25 percent of the
hospital's TPS. We believe the proposed weighting is appropriate
because the MSPB measure is an overall spending measure and is
therefore more broadly applicable than the condition-specific payment
measures. In addition, hospitals have the most familiarity with this
measure because it has been in the program the longest. We also
considered proposing to weight all measures within the Efficiency and
Cost Reduction domain equally. However, we determined this weighting
may not reflect the broader applicability of the MSPB measure and its
importance in ensuring that hospitals monitor the overall costs of care
they provide to a larger subset of Medicare beneficiaries during an
inpatient hospitalization and are involved in the coordination of
beneficiaries' care immediately prior to hospitalization and post-
discharge.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
K. Proposed Changes to the Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction
Program
1. Background
We refer readers to section V.I.1.a. of the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (78 FR 50707 through 50708) for a general overview of the
HAC Reduction Program. For a detailed discussion of the statutory basis
of the HAC Reduction Program, we refer readers to section V.I.2. of the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50708 through 50709). For a
further description of our previously finalized policies for the HAC
Reduction Program, we refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50707 through 50729), the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(79 FR 50087 through 50104), the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80
FR 49570 through 49581), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57011 through 57026). These policies describe the general framework
for implementation of the HAC Reduction Program, including: (a) The
relevant definitions applicable to the program; (b) the payment
adjustment under the program; (c) the measure selection process and
conditions for the program, including a risk-adjustment and scoring
methodology; (d) performance scoring; (e) the process for making
hospital-specific performance information available to the public,
including the opportunity for a hospital to review the information and
submit corrections; and (f) limitation of administrative and judicial
review.
We also have codified certain requirements of the HAC Reduction
Program at 42 CFR 412.170 through 412.172.
2. Implementation of the HAC Reduction Program for FY 2018
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50717), we finalized
the following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National
Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) measures for Domain 2 for use in the
FY 2015 program and subsequent years: CLABSI, CAUTI, Colon and
Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI, MRSA Bacteremia, and CDI. In the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57020), we finalized the use of the
Patient Safety and Adverse Events Composite (PSI 90) measures for use
in the FY 2018 program and subsequent years for Domain 1. These
previously finalized measures are shown in the table below.
HAC Reduction Program Measures for FY 2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Measure name NQF #
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain 1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PSI 90............................ Patient Safety and 0531
Adverse Events
Composite.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domain 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI............................. NHSN Catheter- 0138
associated Urinary
Tract Infection
(CAUTI) Outcome
Measure.
CDI............................... NHSN Facility-wide 1717
Inpatient Hospital-
onset Clostridium
difficile Infection
(CDI) Outcome
Measure.
CLABSI............................ NHSN Central Line- 0139
Associated
Bloodstream
Infection (CLABSI)
Outcome Measure.
Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy American College of 0753
SSI. Surgeons--Centers
for Disease Control
and Prevention (ACS-
CDC) Harmonized
Procedure Specific
Surgical Site
Infection (SSI)
Outcome Measure.
MRSA Bacteremia................... NHSN Facility-wide 1716
Inpatient Hospital-
onset Methicillin-
resistant
Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA)
Bacteremia Outcome
Measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57022), we finalized
a 15-month performance period from July 1, 2014 through September 30,
2015, for the Domain 1 measure (PSI 90 Patient Safety and Adverse
Events Composite) and a 24-month performance period from January 1,
2015 through December 31, 2016 (CYs 2015 and 2016) for
[[Page 19987]]
Domain 2 measures (CLABSI, CAUTI, Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI,
MRSA Bacteremia, and CDI) for the FY 2018 HAC Reduction Program. We
anticipate we will be able to provide hospitals with their confidential
hospital-specific reports and discharge level information used in the
calculation of their FY 2018 Total HAC Score in late summer 2017 via
the QualityNet Secure Portal.\75\ In order to access their hospital-
specific reports, hospitals must register for a QualityNet Secure
Portal account. We did not make any changes to the review and
correction policies for FY 2017. Hospitals have a period of 30 days
after the information is posted to the QualityNet Secure Portal to
review and submit corrections for the calculation of their HAC
Reduction Program measure scores, domain scores, and Total HAC Score
for the fiscal year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Available at: //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetBasic&cid=1228773343598.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this proposed rule, for the HAC Reduction Program, we are: (1)
Proposing to specify the dates of the time period used to calculate
hospital performance for the FY 2020 HAC Reduction Program; (2)
requesting comments on additional measures for potential future
adoption; (3) requesting comments on social risk factors; (4)
requesting comments on accounting for disability and medical complexity
in the CDC NHSN measures in Domain 2; and (5) proposing to update the
Extraordinary Circumstance Exception policy beginning in FY 2018 as
related to extraordinary circumstances that occur on or after October
1, 2017. These proposals are described in more detail below.
3. Proposed Data Collection Time Periods for the FY 2020 HAC Reduction
Program
Section 1886(p)(4) of the Act gives the Secretary the statutory
authority to determine the ``applicable period'' during which data are
collected for the HAC Reduction Program. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (78 FR 50717), we finalized and codified at 42 CFR 412.170
that we would use a 2-year time period of performance data to calculate
the Total HAC Score. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57020), we finalized a truncated data collection period for Domain 1,
shorter than the previous 2-year data collection period for calculating
the Total HAC Score for the FY 2018 and FY 2019 HAC Reduction Programs,
in order to accommodate the transition to the ICD-10 classification
system. We also changed the definition of ``applicable period,'' in 42
CFR 412.170, to reflect this change.
For the FY 2020 program, we are proposing to return to a two-year
time period for the calculation of HAC Reduction Program measure
results. We believe that using 2 years of data for both domains
balances the needs of the program and allows for sufficient time to
process the claims data and calculate the measure results. The 2-year
time period allows time to complete the complex calculation process for
the measures, to perform comprehensive quality assurance to enhance the
accuracy of measure results, and to disseminate confidential reports on
hospital-level results to individual hospitals. For the Domain 1
measure (Patient Safety and Adverse Events Composite), we are proposing
to use the 24-month period from July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2018. The
claims for all Medicare Fee-for-Service beneficiaries discharged during
this period would be included in the calculations of measure results
for Domain 1 for the FY 2020 program. For the CDC NHSN measures in
Domain 2 (CLABSI, CAUTI, Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI, MRSA
Bacteremia, and CDI), we are proposing to use data from CYs 2017 and
2018, that is January 1, 2017--December 31, 2018, for the FY 2020
program.
4. Request for Comments on Additional Measures for Potential Future
Adoption
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81 FR 25123), we
welcomed public comment and suggestions for additional HAC Reduction
Program measures. We believe that our continued efforts to reduce HACs
are vital to improving patients' quality of care and reducing
complications and mortality, while simultaneously decreasing costs. The
reduction of HACs is an important marker of quality of care and has a
positive impact on both patient outcomes and cost of care. Our goal for
the HAC Reduction Program is to heighten the awareness of HACs and
reduce the number of incidences that occur.
As part of our ongoing efforts to evaluate and strengthen the HAC
Reduction Program, we are conducting a review of patient safety
measures to include in Domain 1. We seek to adopt outcomes-focused
patient-safety measures that focus on topic areas including but not
limited to: Falls with injury, adverse drug events (ADEs), glycemic
events and ventilator associated events (VAEs). NQF identified these as
gap areas for the HAC Reduction Program.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ The National Quality Forum. NQF: MAP hospital Workgroup--
materials. October 18, 2016 //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75369.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that falls are frequent in the inpatient setting. An
estimated 700,000 to 1 million inpatients fall each year in U.S.
hospitals.\77\ These falls can result in further health care
complications for patients, and add costs by increasing the need for
expensive imaging, like head computed-tomography scans.\78\ Risk
assessment is the primary tool for preventing falls \79\ and research
has indicated that inpatient fall prevention programs with patient
education components are effective in reducing fall rates.\80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ Sonnad, S. S., S. Mascioli, J. Cunningham, and J. Goldsack.
``Do Patients Accurately Perceive their Fall Risk?'' Nursing, vol.
44, no. 11, 2014, pp. 58-62.
\78\ Fields, J., T. Alturkistani, N. Kumar, A. Kanuri, D. N.
Salem, S. Munn, and D. Blazey-Martin. ``Prevalence and cost of
imaging in inpatient falls: the rising cost of falling.''
ClinicoEconomics and Outcomes Research, vol. 7, 2015, pp. 281-286.
\79\ Callis, N. ``Falls Prevention: Identification of Predictive
Fall Risk Factors.'' Applied Nursing Research, vol. 29, 2016, pp.
53-58.
\80\ Lee, D.A., E. Pritchard, F. McDermott, and T. P. Haines.
``Falls Prevention Education for Older Adults during and After
Hospitalization: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.'' Health
Education Journal, vol. 73, no. 5, 2014, pp. 530-544.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADEs are a frequent and preventable occurrence among hospital
inpatients. They pose serious threats to patient safety and can result
in prolonged hospitalization, increased morbidity and higher health
care costs.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ Martins, A. C., F. Giordani, and S. Rozenfeld. ``Adverse
Drug Events among Adult Inpatients: A Meta-Analysis of Observational
Studies.'' Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, vol. 39,
no. 6, 2014, pp. 609-620.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Glycemic events, a common occurrence among inpatients, are
associated with a greater risk of negative health outcomes.\82\ Many
guidelines exist to support glycemic control in hospitalized patients.
The most common guideline recommendations include documenting diabetes
diagnosis, obtaining a hemoglobin A1C on admission, use of the ``basal-
bolus'' method for insulin delivery, discontinuation of noninsulin
agents for non-ICU patients with type 2 diabetes, and use of
standardized order sets.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Kilpatrick, C. R., M. B. Elliott, E. Pratt, S. J. Schafers,
M. C. Blackburn, K. Heard, J. B. Mcgill, M. Thoelke, and G. S.
Tobin. ``Prevention of Inpatient Hypoglycemia with a Real-Time
Informatics Alert.'' Journal of Hospital Medicine, vol. 9, no. 10,
2014, pp. 621-626.
\83\ Maynard, G., K. Kulasa, P. Ramos, D. Childers, B. Clay, M.
Sebasky, E. Fink, A. Field, M. Renvall, P. S. Juang, C. Choe, D.
Pearson, B. Serences, and S. Lohnes. ``Impact of a hypoglycemia
reduction bundle and a systems approach to inpatient glycemic
management.'' Endocrine Practice, vol. 21, no. 4, 2015, pp. 355-367.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 19988]]
Mechanically ventilated patients are at greater risk for VAEs,
which can result in morbidity and death.\84\ VAEs include ventilator
associated pneumonia (VAP) and preventable adverse events, such as
pulmonary edema and acute respiratory distress syndrome. VAP continues
to rank among the most common HACs and effective prevention strategies
for VAP include early removal of invasive devices and strict infection
control and prevention efforts should target these high-risk
groups.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ Resetar, E., K. M. McMullen, A. J. Russo, J. A. Doherty, K.
A. Gase, and K. F. Woeltje. Development, ``Implementation and Use of
Electronic Surveillance for Ventilator Associated Events (VAE) in
Adults.'' AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings, 2014, pp. 1010-1017.
\85\ Mendoza, C., and S. Patel. ``Antimicrobial Therapy for
Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia.'' U.S. Pharmacist, vol. 41, no. 7,
2016, pp. HS11-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our overarching purpose is to support the National Quality
Strategy's three-part aim of better health care for individuals, better
health for populations, and lower costs for health care.\86\ To the
extent practicable, HAC Reduction Program measures should be nationally
endorsed by a multi-stakeholder organization. Measures should be
aligned with best practices among other payers and the needs of the end
users of the measures. Measures should take into account widely
accepted criteria established in medical literature.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ About the National Quality Strategy, //www.ahrq.gov/workingforquality/about.htm#aims.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We welcome public comments and suggestions on these measure areas,
as well as additional outcome-based patient-safety measures that will
help achieve the program goals.
5. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the HAC Reduction Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes, including reducing health disparities,
and we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with
social risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to
ensure that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \87\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based purchasing
and quality reporting programs, and considering options on how to
address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors in Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs, including the HAC Reduction
Program.\88\ The report also included considerations for strategies to
account for social risk factors in these programs. In a January 10,
2017 report released by the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided various potential methods
for measuring and accounting for social risk factors, including
stratified public reporting.\89\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\88\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\89\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which certain new measures,
measures undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the
condition that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine
whether risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate
for these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion
of social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these
measures. At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue
recommendations on the future inclusion of social risk factors in risk
adjustment for these quality measures, and we will closely review its
findings.
We note that measures in the HAC Reduction Program, generally,
represent never events,\90\ and are often preventable conditions like
central line associated bloodstream infections, catheter associated
urinary tract infections, and other complications or conditions that
arise after a patient was admitted to the hospital for the treatment of
another condition. We believe these events should not be influenced by
social risk factors; instead, they are risk-adjusted for factors listed
in specifications for the AHRQ and CDC. Currently, risk factors such as
the patient's age, gender, comorbidities, and complications are
considered in the calculation of the measure rates so that they account
for the clinical differences in the patients served by hospitals. Our
measures continually undergo maintenance to determine the need for
updated specifications, and to monitor for trends and any relevant
risk-adjustment changes needed for the measures. We remind readers
that, beginning for payments made in FY 2018, we adopted the modified
PSI 90: Patient Safety and Adverse Events Composite (NQF #0531); the
composite was revised to reflect the relative importance and harm
associated with each component indicator, and to provide a more
reliable and valid signal of patient safety events (81 FR 57020). We
also adopted a continuous scoring approach in the HAC Reduction Program
that brings our scoring domains into alignment each other, essentially
eliminates ties in Total HAC Scores, reduces effects on outliers, and
enhances the ability to distinguish among hospitals of varying quality
(81 FR 57025).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ The term ``Never Event'' was first introduced in 2001 by
Ken Kizer, MD, former CEO of the National Quality Forum (NQF), in
reference to particularly shocking medical errors (such as wrong-
site surgery) that should never occur. Over time, the list has been
expanded to signify adverse events that are unambiguous (clearly
identifiable and measurable), serious (resulting in death or
significant disability), and usually preventable. The NQF initially
defined 27 such events in 2002. The list has been revised since
then, most recently in 2011, and now consists of 29 events grouped
into 6 categories: surgical, product or device, patient protection,
care management, environmental, radiologic, and criminal. Never
Events, //psnet.ahrq.gov/primers/primer/3/never-events,
accessed on February 22, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we
[[Page 19989]]
continue to seek public comment on whether we should account for social
risk factors in the HAC Reduction Program, and if so, what method or
combination of methods would be most appropriate for accounting for
social risk factors. Examples of methods include: Adjustment of the
payment adjustment methodology under the HAC Reduction Program;
adjustment of provider performance scores (for instance, stratifying
providers based on the proportion of their patients who are dual
eligible); confidential reporting of stratified measure rates to
providers; public reporting of stratified measure rates; risk
adjustment of a particular measure as appropriate based on data and
evidence; and redesigning payment incentives (for instance, rewarding
improvement for providers caring for patients with social risk factors
or incentivizing providers to achieve health equity).
We note that in section V.I.9. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we discuss considerations for stratifying hospitals into peer
groups for purposes of assessing payment adjustments under the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program, as required under the 21st Century
Cures Act. We refer readers to that section for a detailed discussion
of these alternatives; while this discussion and corresponding proposal
are specific to the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, they
reflect the level of analysis we would undertake when evaluating
methods and combinations of methods for accounting for social risk
factors in CMS' other value-based purchasing programs, such as the HAC
Reduction Program. While we consider whether and to what extent we
currently have statutory authority to implement one or more of the
above-described methods, we are seeking comments on whether any of
these methods should be considered, and if so, which of these methods
or combination of methods would best account for social risk factors in
the HAC Reduction Program.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for stratifying measure scores
and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure. Examples of
social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual eligibility/
low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area of
residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors, including
current data sources where this information would be available, could
be used alone or in combination, and whether other data should be
collected to better capture the effects of social risk. We will take
commenters' input into consideration as we continue to assess the
appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social risk factors
in the HAC Reduction Program. We note that any such changes would be
proposed through future notice-and-comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
6. Request for Comments on Inclusion of Disability and Medical
Complexity for CDC NHSN Measures
The intent of the HAC Reduction Program is to encourage all
hospitals to reduce the incidence of HACs. We continue to believe that
there is room for improvement in the incidence of HACs, regardless of
the institution or hospital. The measures adopted in the HAC Reduction
Program, which are risk-adjusted to account for the different patient
populations that hospitals service, target important quality
improvement areas. In its IMPACT Act report,\91\ ASPE suggested payment
strategies to improve the HAC Reduction Program. ASPE noted that it is
well-proven that higher levels of medical risk are associated with a
higher risk for many (although not all) patient safety events,
particularly infections.\92\ For example, diabetes is associated with
roughly 70 percent higher odds of surgical site infections and
diabetes, pulmonary disease, renal failure, and exposure to nursing
homes are associated with a higher risk of MRSA.\93\ Many of the same
medical factors also confer a higher risk of C. diff. infection, as
well as CAUTI and CLABSI.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ ASPE, ``Report to Congress: Social Risk Factors and
Performance Under Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Programs.'' 21
Dec 2016. Available at: //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\92\ Ibid. 102.
\93\ Ibid. 102.
\94\ Ibid. 102.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASPE suggested that patient-level clinical data from the CDC
healthcare-associated infection (HAI) measures should be examined and
considered for additional risk adjustment.\95\ ASPE also noted that the
clinical risk-adjustment of the patient safety and hospital-acquired
infection measures should be improved to ensure the measures adequately
adjust for differences in patients' clinical risk, so that fair
comparisons for hospital accountability and performance assessment can
be made to hold providers to the same fair standard.\96\ ASPE
recommended additional analyses for measure developers such as AHRQ and
CDC to determine whether adjusting key components of the patient safety
or HAI measures (for example frailty, functional limitations, prior
hospitalizations or nursing home residence, or other markers of immune
system deficiencies or unmeasured medical complexity) may better
account for susceptibility to infection and patient safety events.\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ Ibid. 135.
\96\ Ibid. 136.
\97\ Ibid. 136.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on ASPE's analysis and considerations, we are requesting
stakeholder feedback on risk-adjusting the CDC NHSN measures for
disability or medical complexity. Although we are not proposing any
specific changes to the measures at this time, we will consider all
comments as a guide to potential future action.
7. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
Technical specifications for Patient Safety and Adverse Events
Composite Measure in Domain 1 can be found at AHRQ's Web site at:
//qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/Modules/PSI_TechSpec.aspx. Technical
specifications for the CDC NHSN HAI measures in Domain 2 can be found
at CDC's NHSN Web site at: //www.cdc.gov/nhsn/acute-care-hospital/index.html. Both Web sites provide measure updates and other
information necessary to guide hospitals participating in the
collection of HAC Reduction Program data.
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50100), we described
a policy under which we use a subregulatory process to make
nonsubstantive updates to measures used for the HAC Reduction Program.
We are not proposing any changes to this policy at this time.
[[Page 19990]]
8. Extraordinary Circumstance Exception (ECE) Policy for the HAC
Reduction Program
Many of our quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs
share a common process for requesting an exception from program
reporting due to an extraordinary circumstance not within a provider's
control. The Hospital IQR, Hospital OQR, IPFQR, ASCQR, and PCHQR
Programs, as well as the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program, share
common processes for Extraordinary Circumstance Exception (ECE)
requests. In reviewing the policies for these programs, we recognized
that there are five areas in which these programs have variance
regarding ECE requests. These are: (1) Allowing the facilities or
hospitals to submit a form signed by the facility's or hospital's CEO
versus CEO or designated personnel; (2) requiring the form be submitted
within 30 days following the date that the extraordinary circumstance
occurred versus within 90 days following the date the extraordinary
circumstance occurred; (3) inconsistency regarding specification of a
timeline for us to provide our formal response notifying the facility
or hospital of our decision; (4) inconsistency regarding specification
of our authority to grant ECEs due to CMS data system issues; and (5)
referring to the program as ``extraordinary extensions/exemptions''
versus as ``extraordinary circumstances exceptions.'' We believe
addressing these five areas, as appropriate, can improve administrative
efficiencies for affected facilities or hospitals.
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49579 through
49581), we adopted an ECE policy for the HAC Reduction Program
beginning in FY 2016. This policy was similar to the ECE policy for the
Hospital IQR Program, as finalized in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (76 FR 51651), modified in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(78 FR 50836) (designation of a non-CEO hospital contact), and further
modified in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50277) (amended
42 CFR 412.140(c)(2) to refer to ``extension or exemption'' instead of
the former ``extension or waiver''). In section IX.A.15. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to amend the Hospital
IQR Program regulations at 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2) to refer to
``extraordinary circumstances exceptions'' and we will continue to use
this nomenclature for the HAC Reduction Program.
We are proposing to modify the ECE policy for the HAC Reduction
Program by: (1) Allowing the facility to submit a form signed by the
facility's CEO or designated personnel; (2) specifying that we will
strive to provide our formal response notifying the facility of our
decision within 90 days of receipt of the facility's request; and (3)
specifying that CMS may grant ECEs due to CMS data system issues which
affect data submission. These proposed modifications generally align
with policies in the Hospital IQR Program (76 FR 51651 through 51652;
78 FR 50836 through 50837; and 81 FR 57181 through 57182), the Hospital
OQR Program (77 FR 68489 and 81 FR 79795), as well as other quality
reporting programs. We are proposing that these modifications would
apply beginning in FY 2018 as related to extraordinary circumstances
that occur on or after October 1, 2017.
We note that there may be circumstances in which it is not feasible
for a facility's CEO to sign the ECE request form. In these
circumstances, we believe that facilities affected by such
circumstances should be able to submit ECE forms regardless of the
CEO's availability to sign. Therefore, the first proposed modification
would allow any hospital to designate an appropriate, non-CEO, contact
at its discretion. This individual would be responsible for the
submission, and would be the one signing the form. We would accept ECE
forms which have been signed by designated personnel.
We also believe that it is important for facilities to receive
timely feedback regarding the status of ECE requests. We strive to
complete our review of each ECE request as quickly as possible.
However, we recognize that the number of requests we receive, and the
complexity of the information provided impacts the actual timeframe to
make ECE determinations. To improve transparency of our process, we
believe it is appropriate to clarify that we will strive to provide our
response within 90 days of receipt.
Although we do not anticipate this situation will happen on a
regular basis, there may be times where CMS experiences issues with its
data systems that directly affects facilities' abilities to submit
data. In these cases, we believe it would be inequitable to require
facilities to report. Therefore, we are proposing to allow CMS to grant
ECEs to facilities if we determine that a systemic problem with one of
our data collection systems directly affected the ability of the
facilities to submit data. If we make the determination to grant ECEs,
we are proposing to communicate this decision through routine
communication channels.
We are inviting public comment on these proposed modifications to
the HAC Reduction Program's ECE policy.
L. Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
1. Introduction
The Rural Community Hospital Demonstration was originally
authorized for a 5-year period by section 410A of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA)
(Pub. L. 108-173), and extended for another 5-year period by sections
3123 and 10313 of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148).
Subsequently, section 15003 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-
255), enacted December 13, 2016, amended section 410A of Public Law
108-173 to require a 10-year extension period (in place of the 5-year
extension required by the Affordable Care Act, as further discussed
below). Section 15003 also requires that no later than 120 days after
enactment of Public Law 114-255 the Secretary issue a solicitation for
applications to select additional hospitals to participate in the
demonstration program for the second 5 years of the 10-year extension
period so long as the maximum number of 30 hospitals stipulated by the
Affordable Care Act is not exceeded. In this proposed rule, we provide
a summary of the previous legislative provisions and their
implementation; a description of the provisions of section 15003 of
Public Law 114-255 and our proposals for implementation; and our
proposals for budget neutrality, including a discussion of the budget
neutrality methodology used in previous final rules, the proposed
budget neutrality methodology for the extension period authorized by
section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, and the proposed reconciliation of
actual and estimated costs of the demonstration for previous years
(2011, 2012, and 2013).
2. Background
Section 410A(a) of Public Law 108-173 required the Secretary to
establish a demonstration program to test the feasibility and
advisability of establishing ``rural community'' hospitals to furnish
covered inpatient hospital services to Medicare beneficiaries. The
demonstration pays rural community hospitals under a reasonable cost-
based methodology for Medicare payment purposes for covered inpatient
hospital services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries. A rural
community hospital, as defined in section 410A(f)(1), is a hospital
that--
[[Page 19991]]
Is located in a rural area (as defined in section
1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act) or is treated as being located in a rural
area under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act;
Has fewer than 51 beds (excluding beds in a distinct part
psychiatric or rehabilitation unit) as reported in its most recent cost
report;
Provides 24-hour emergency care services; and
Is not designated or eligible for designation as a CAH
under section 1820 of the Act.
Section 410A(a)(4) of Public Law 108-173 specified that the
Secretary was to select for participation no more than 15 rural
community hospitals in rural areas of States that the Secretary
identified as having low population densities. Using 2002 data from the
U.S. Census Bureau, we identified the 10 States with the lowest
population density in which rural community hospitals were to be
located in order to participate in the demonstration: Alaska, Idaho,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Utah, and Wyoming (Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of
the United States: 2003).
CMS originally solicited applicants for the demonstration in May
2004; 13 hospitals began participation with cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2004. In 2005, 4 of these 13 hospitals
withdrew from the demonstration program and converted to CAH status.
This left 9 hospitals participating at that time. In 2008, we announced
a solicitation for up to 6 additional hospitals to participate in the
demonstration program. Four additional hospitals were selected to
participate under this solicitation. These 4 additional hospitals began
under the demonstration payment methodology with the hospitals' first
cost reporting period starting on or after July 1, 2008. At that time,
13 hospitals were participating in the demonstration.
Five hospitals (3 of the hospitals were among the 13 hospitals that
were original participants in the demonstration program and 2 of the
hospitals were among the 4 hospitals that began the demonstration
program in 2008) withdrew from the demonstration program during CYs
2009 and 2010. In CY 2011, one hospital that was among the original set
of hospitals that participated in the demonstration withdrew from the
demonstration. These actions left 7 of the originally participating
hospitals (that is, hospitals that were selected to participate in
either 2004 or 2008) participating in the demonstration program as of
June 1, 2011.
Sections 3123 and 10313 of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-
148) amended section 410A of Public Law 108-173, changing the rural
community hospital demonstration program in several ways. First, the
Secretary was required to conduct the demonstration program for an
additional 5-year period, to begin on the date immediately following
the last day of the initial 5-year period. Further, the Affordable Care
Act required, in the case of a rural community hospital participating
in the demonstration program as of the last day of the initial 5-year
period, the Secretary to provide for the continued participation of
such rural community hospital in the demonstration program during the
5-year extension period, unless the hospital made an election to
discontinue participation.
In addition, the Affordable Care Act required that, during the 5-
year extension period, the Secretary shall expand the number of States
with low population densities determined by the Secretary to 20.
Further, the Secretary was required to use the same criteria and data
that the Secretary used to determine the States for purposes of the
initial 5-year period. The Affordable Care Act also allowed not more
than 30 rural community hospitals in such States to participate in the
demonstration program during the 5-year extension period.
We published a solicitation for applications for additional
participants in the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration program in
the Federal Register on August 30, 2010 (75 FR 52960). The 20 States
with the lowest population density that were eligible for the
demonstration program were: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho,
Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming (Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United
States: 2003). Sixteen new hospitals began participation in the
demonstration with the first cost reporting period beginning on or
after April 1, 2011.
In addition to the 7 hospitals that were selected in either 2004 or
2008, the new selection led to a total of 23 hospitals in the
demonstration. During CY 2013, one additional hospital among the set
selected in 2011 withdrew from the demonstration, which left 22
hospitals participating in the demonstration, effective July 1, 2013,
all of which continued their participation through December 2014.
Starting from that date and extending through the end of FY 2015, the 7
``originally participating'' hospitals, that is, hospitals that were
selected in either 2004 or 2008, ended on a rolling basis their
scheduled 5-year periods of performance authorized by the Affordable
Care Act (referred to hereafter as ``Cohort 1'' hospitals). Likewise,
the participation period for the 14 hospitals that entered the
demonstration following the mandate of the Affordable Care Act and that
were still participating (referred to as ``Cohort 2'' hospitals) ended
their scheduled periods of performance on a rolling basis according to
the end dates of the hospitals' cost report periods, respectively, from
April 30, 2016 through December 31, 2016. (One hospital among the
Cohort 2 hospitals closed in October 2015.)
3. Provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255) and
Proposals for Implementation
a. Statutory Provisions
As stated earlier, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 further
amended section 410A of Public Law 108-173 to require the Secretary to
conduct the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration for a 10-year
extension period (in place of the 5-year extension period required by
the Affordable Care Act), beginning on the date immediately following
the last day of the initial 5-year period under section 410A(a)(5) of
Public Law 108-173. Thus, the Secretary is required to conduct the
demonstration for an additional 5-year period. Specifically, section
15003 of Public Law 114-255 amended section 410A(g)(4) of Public Law
108-173 to require that, for hospitals participating in the
demonstration as of the last day of the initial 5-year period, the
Secretary shall provide for continued participation of such rural
community hospitals in the demonstration during the 10-year extension
period, unless the hospital makes an election, in such form and manner
as the Secretary may specify, to discontinue participation. In
addition, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 amended section
410A(g)(4)(B) (and thereby (b)(1)(A)) of Public Law 108-173) to provide
that in calculating the amount of payment under the demonstration
program to the rural community hospital for covered inpatient hospital
services furnished by the hospital during each 5-year period of such 10
year extension period, the amount of payment (for the first cost
reporting period) is the reasonable costs of providing such services
for discharges occurring in the first cost reporting period beginning
on or after the first day of each applicable 5-year
[[Page 19992]]
period in the 10-year extension period. Furthermore, section 15003 of
Public Law 114-255 added subsection (g)(5) to section 410A of Public
Law 108-173 to require that, during the second 5 years of the 10-year
extension period, the Secretary shall apply the provisions of section
410A(g)(4) of Public Law 108-173 to rural community hospitals that are
not described in subsection (g)(4) but that were participating in the
demonstration as of December 30, 2014, in a similar manner as such
provisions apply to hospitals described in subsection (g)(4). We
interpret this as providing for participation in and payment under the
demonstration during the second 5 years of the 10 year extension period
for hospitals that are not described in section 410A(g)(4) of Public
Law 108-173 (as amended) but that were participating in the
demonstration as of December 30, 2014, in a similar manner as such
extension and payment applies to hospitals described in section
410A(g)(4) of Public Law 108-173 (as amended), unless a hospital makes
an election, in such form and manner as the Secretary may specify, to
discontinue participation.
In addition, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 amended section
410A of Public Law 108-173 to add paragraph (g)(6)(A) which requires
that, no later than 120 days after enactment of paragraph (g)(6), the
Secretary shall issue a solicitation for applications to select
additional rural community hospitals located in any State to
participate in the demonstration program for the second 5 years of the
10-year extension period, without exceeding the maximum number of
hospitals (that is, 30) permitted under section 410A(g)(3) of Public
Law 108-173 (which was added by the Affordable Care Act). Section 15003
also amended section 410A of Public Law 108-173 to add paragraph
(g)(6)(B) which provides that, in determining which hospitals
submitting an application pursuant to this solicitation are to be
selected for participation in the demonstration, the Secretary shall
give priority to rural community hospitals located in one of the 20
States with the lowest population densities, as determined using the
2015 Statistical Abstract of the United States. In addition, in
determining which among the hospitals submitting an application
pursuant to this solicitation are to be selected for participation in
the demonstration, section 410A(g)(6)(B) specifies that the Secretary
may consider closures of hospitals located in rural areas in the State
in which an applicant hospital is located during the 5-year period
immediately preceding the date of enactment of section 410A(g)(6) of
Public Law 108-173, as well as the population density of the State in
which the rural community hospital is located.
b. Proposed Terms of Continuation for Previously Participating
Hospitals
As discussed earlier, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 (the 21st
Century Cures Act) amended section 410A of Public Law 108-173 to
provide for a 10-year extension of the demonstration (in place of the
5-year extension required by the Affordable Care Act) beginning on the
date immediately following the last day of the initial 5-year period
under section 410A(a)(5) of Public Law 108-173. Thus, section 15003 of
Public Law 114-255 requires an additional 5-year extension of the
demonstration beyond the extension required by the Affordable Care Act.
Given the timing of the enactment of Public Law 114-255, for most of
the previously participating hospitals, there is a gap between the end
date of each hospital's participation in the first 5-year extension
period and enactment of Public Law 114-255 on December 13, 2016. For
these hospitals, this gap is for a period of between 2 to 23 months.
Section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 does not address how the second 5
years of the 10-year extension is to be implemented in the event of a
gap between the end of the first 5 years of the 10-year extension
period for a participating hospital and the enactment of Public Law
114-255 authorizing the second 5 years of the 10-year extension period.
Given this gap and the lack of specific direction in the statute
regarding how to implement the extension in this situation for these
previously participating hospitals, and the mandate under section 15003
of Public Law 114-255 to issue a solicitation for additional
participants for the second 5-years of the 10 year extension, we
considered how to implement the second 5 years of the 10-year extension
period. For the reasons discussed below, we believe that it would be
reasonable and consistent with the statute to implement the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period in a way that recognizes a gap in
participation for the previously participating hospitals between the
end of the first 5 years and the start of the second 5 years of the
extension period, and that provides for alignment of the periods of
performance under the extension among all participating hospitals.
Thus, for each previously participating hospital that decides to
participate in the second 5 years of the 10-year extension period, we
are proposing that the start date for the period of performance under
the second 5-year extension period would be the start of the first cost
reporting period on or after October 1, 2017 following upon the
announcement of the selection of the additional hospitals for the
demonstration. In this manner, we are proposing to align the periods of
performance for the previously participating hospitals that decide to
participate in the second 5-year extension period with the periods of
performance for the additional hospitals authorized by section 15003 of
Public Law 114-255. An additional reason for our proposal that the
second 5-year period of performance start no earlier than October 1,
2017 for any of the hospitals (previously participating or newly
selected) is to align the start of the periods of performance with FY
2018 for purposes of estimating the costs of the demonstration and thus
determining the budget neutrality offset amount for the demonstration
(discussed later in this section) for FY 2018. (The FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule is effective October 1, 2017.)
We believe the approach we are proposing above is consistent with
section 410A of Public Law 108-173, as amended by Public Law 114-255.
As discussed earlier, the statutory language does not specifically
address how the 10-year extension period is to be implemented in the
event of a gap between the end of the first 5-year extension of the
demonstration for a participating hospital and the enactment of Public
Law 114-255 authorizing the second 5-year extension of the
demonstration. Furthermore, we believe that the payment methodology set
forth in section 410A(b)(1)(A) and (g)(4) of Public Law 108-173, as
amended by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, contemplates that the
first 5 years and the second 5 years of the 10-year extension period be
treated as separate periods, in that, as discussed above, it provides
for payment of reasonable costs for discharges occurring in the first
cost reporting period beginning on or after the first day of ``each
applicable 5-year period in the 10-year extension period.'' We believe
that our proposed approach, which provides for a gap in participation
between the end of the first 5 years and the start of the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period, is reasonable, given that most
of the hospitals that participated in the first 5-year extension under
the Affordable Care Act had already ended their participation under the
demonstration when Public Law 114-255 was enacted, and that all
hospitals now have been
[[Page 19993]]
paid under other payment methodologies outside the demonstration for a
significant period of time (anywhere from 3 months to more than 2 years
as of the publication of this proposed rule).
In addition, we note that certain types of administrative actions
are generally required in order to implement a demonstration program
that administers Medicare payment according to a methodology that
differs from the methodology that would otherwise apply under the
statute. These include development of participation agreements,
formulating direction to MACs, and the procurement of audit and
evaluation contracts. We believe that implementing the second 5-year
extension for each participating hospital beginning with the start of
its first cost reporting period on or after October 1, 2017, following
upon the announcement of the selection of the additional hospitals for
the demonstration, gives us the time necessary to implement such
administrative actions.
Furthermore, we believe that it is reasonable and preferable to
provide, to the extent possible, for alignment of the periods of
participation of the previously participating hospitals with any newly
selected hospitals during the second 5 years of the 10-year extension
period. Under our proposed implementation approach, all previously
participating hospitals would begin their periods of performance under
the 5-year extension in FY 2018 on the same basis as the newly selected
hospitals (the start of the first cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2017, following upon the announcement of the selection
of the new hospitals). We believe that aligning the participation
periods for all hospitals in this manner would be more conducive to
testing the feasibility and advisability of the payment methodology
required by section 410A of Public Law 108-173 because, for all
hospitals, the demonstration payment methodology would be applicable
and its effect evaluated for similar time periods. In addition, we
believe our proposed approach would allow for streamlined and
administratively feasible budget neutrality calculations for the second
5-year extension period because the costs of the demonstration would be
estimated for periods of performance beginning in the same fiscal year.
We are inviting public comments on the proposed approach discussed
above for implementing the second 5-year period of the 10-year
extension required under section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 for the
previously participating hospitals. In addition, we are inviting public
comments on alternative approaches under the statute for implementing
the extension, particularly with respect to the commencement of the
second 5-year period of the extension for previously participating
hospitals.
One potential alternative approach that we considered is for each
previously participating hospital to begin the second 5 years of the
10-year extension period and the cost-based payment methodology under
section 410A of Public Law 108-173 (as amended by section 15003 of Pub.
L. 114-255), on the date immediately after the date the period of
performance under the first 5-year extension period ended. For example,
for a hospital whose 5-year period of performance authorized by the
Affordable Care Act ended June 30, 2015, the extension period under
section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 would be effective July 1, 2015,
and it would extend through June 30, 2020. Likewise, for a hospital
whose 5-year period of performance ended June 30, 2016, the extension
period under section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 would be effective
July 1, 2016, and it would extend through June 30, 2021. The
methodology we considered for calculating the budget neutrality offset
amount under this alternative approach is described in section V.L.4.d.
of the preamble of this proposed rule. Although we believe that this
alternative approach would also be consistent with the language of
section 410A of Public Law 108-173 (as amended) and, unlike the
proposed approach, would not provide for a gap in the reasonable cost
payment methodology between the end of the first and start of the
second 5-year periods of the 10-year extension period, for the reasons
discussed below, we believe that our proposed approach outlined above
would be more appropriate. First, we note that applying the extension
in this alternative manner would result in hospitals being paid under
the cost-based payment methodology provided for under section 410A of
Public Law 108-173 (as amended) for a period of time during which the
hospitals were not actively participating in the demonstration. We
believe that it would be more appropriate to conduct both the
implementation and evaluation of the demonstration for a period of time
for which the hospitals have actively agreed to participate.
Furthermore, we note that applying the demonstration payment
methodology starting at the end of each previously participating
hospital's participation in the first 5-year extension period under the
Affordable Care Act (as far back as cost reporting years beginning in
FY 2015), in addition to implementing a new selection of hospitals, is
likely to create a situation whereby the periods of participation for
demonstration hospitals under the new extension period would be
starting across 4 different fiscal years, because hospitals could have
periods of performance that start as early as January 1, 2015, and as
late as July 1, 2018. We believe that such a structure for the
demonstration would not be as conducive to the goal of testing the
feasibility and advisability of the cost-based payment methodology
under section 410A of Public Law 108-173, as amended. Implementing a
payment methodology that is different from that which would otherwise
apply under the statute requires coordination among MACs and audit,
quality monitoring, and evaluation contractors. Administering the
second 5-year extension period so that the extension begins over a span
of time to include several years would add substantial complexity to
these contractual arrangements. In addition, methodologies for
evaluating the effects of a payment methodology enacted under a
demonstration program often involve examination of the experience of
nonparticipating providers. Conducting such an analysis over different
time periods might reduce the usefulness of such an evaluation approach
because metrics assessed in relation to participating hospitals and
nonparticipating hospitals, respectively, would not apply to uniform
time periods.
Nevertheless, we are seeking public comments on this alternative
approach to implementing the extension to the demonstration under
section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 and the corresponding alternative
budget neutrality calculation described in section V.L.4.d. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
c. Solicitation for Additional Participants
As required under section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, we will
issue a solicitation for additional hospitals to participate in the
demonstration. We expect that this solicitation will be released in
April 2017, and eligible hospitals will have 30 days to submit
applications. Among other things, the solicitation will ask hospitals
to describe challenges experienced with the current method of Medicare
payment, the impact of rural hospital closures within the State or
surrounding
[[Page 19994]]
area, and a strategy for financial viability and improving the health
care of the population.
Section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 provides that, in determining
which rural community hospitals that submitted an application pursuant
to the solicitation under subparagraph (A) to select for participation
in the demonstration program, the Secretary shall give priority to
rural community hospitals located in one of the 20 States with the
lowest population densities (as determined by the Secretary using the
2015 Statistical Abstract of the United States). We note that the U.S.
Census Bureau ceased publishing the Statistical Abstract of the United
States in 2011, and that in the years since then, ProQuest, LLC, a
private vendor, has produced a volume intended to serve the same
function as a comprehensive collection of national statistics,
compiling data from different sources including published reports from
the Census Bureau. Thus, we are using ProQuest Statistical Abstract of
the United States, 2015 in determining which States to give priority in
selecting additional participants for the demonstration. We believe
that in the absence of a volume produced by the Census Bureau, using
this compendium is consistent with the intent of the statute, and is
appropriate for the purpose of designating States to which priority is
to be given under section 410A(g)(6)(B)(i) of Public Law 108-173.
We note that the table in this compendium presenting information on
State population density includes separate sets of statistics for 2010
and 2013. Both of the data sources are available on the Census Bureau
Web site. The source for the 2010 statistics is ``2010 Census Briefs,
Population Distribution and Change: 2000 to 2010, March 2011'' (//www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-01.pdf); the source for 2013
is ``Annual Estimates of the Population for the United States, Regions,
States, and Puerto Rico: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2013'' (//www.census.gov/popest/data/state/totals/2013/index.html). Consistent
with our policy for the previous solicitations, we are choosing the
more recent data source to identify the 20 States to which priority is
to be given. These States are: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont,
and Wyoming.
We note that section 410A(g)(6)(B)(ii)(II) of Public Law 108-173 as
added by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 also states that, in
selecting additional participants, the Secretary may consider the
population density of the State in which the rural community hospital
is located. As a result, we will consider the population density of the
State in which the hospital is located. We believe that this
consideration is reasonable given that the demonstration may have
differing effects for health care services and populations depending on
State population density. In addition, as permitted by section
410A(g)(6)(B)(ii)(I) of Public Law 108-173, in selecting additional
participants under this solicitation, we will consider the impact of
closures of hospitals located in rural areas in the State in which the
hospital is located during the 5-year period immediately preceding the
date of enactment of this paragraph. We believe that this consideration
is reasonable, given the possibility that enhanced Medicare payment
through the demonstration may increase access to health care services
for populations thus affected by hospital closures.
Our goal is to finalize this selection by June 2017, in time to
include in the FY 2018 IPPS final rule an estimate of the costs of the
demonstration during FY 2018 and the resulting budget neutrality offset
amount for these newly participating hospitals (referred to as ``Cohort
3'' hospitals), as well as for those hospitals among the previously
participating hospitals that decide to participate in the extension
period (Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals). Upon announcing the selection of
new participants, we will confirm the start dates for the periods of
performance for these newly selected hospitals. In accordance with our
proposed implementation approach discussed in section V.L.3.b. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, if the selection is announced by June
2017, we expect that we would determine the periods of performance for
all of the participating hospitals to begin with the first cost
reporting period on or after October 1, 2017, and we would include an
estimate of the costs for the demonstration for FY 2018 for Cohorts 1,
2, and 3 hospitals in the FY 2018 final rule. As previously discussed,
under our proposal, the periods of performance for the hospitals
(Cohorts 1, 2, and 3) would not start earlier than October 1, 2017.
If final selection of the Cohort 3 hospitals does not occur by June
2017, under our proposed approach, we would not be able to include an
estimate of the costs of the demonstration or an estimate of the budget
neutrality offset amount for FY 2018 for either these Cohort 3
hospitals or the previously participating Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals in
the FY 2018 IPPS final rule. Considering that periods of performance
for the Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals would not be determined until after
the selection of the Cohort 3 hospitals, we would not know precisely
when the periods of performance would begin for the Cohorts 1 and 2
hospitals, or to what extent they would overlap with the 12 months in
FY 2018 until the Cohort 3 hospitals are selected. Therefore, if the
announcement of the final selection of the Cohort 3 hospitals does not
occur by June 2017, we would not be able to include an estimate of the
demonstration costs or budget neutrality offset amount for FY 2018 for
the Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals in the FY 2018 IPPS final rule. As a
result, if the announcement of the final selection of the Cohort 3
hospitals does not occur by June 2017, we would specify the dates on
which all participating hospitals would start in the second 5 years of
the 10-year extension period at the time the selection is announced in
accordance with our proposal. We are proposing that if the selection of
the Cohort 3 hospitals is not announced in June 2017, we would include
the estimated costs of the demonstration for all participating
hospitals for FY 2018 in the budget neutrality offset amount to be
calculated in the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final rules.
According to our proposal, regardless of whether the final
selection of the Cohort 3 hospitals occurs by June 2017, no period of
performance in the second 5 years of the 10-year extension period for
any of the hospitals (Cohorts 1, 2, and 3) would start earlier than
October 1, 2017. Our goal is, to the greatest extent possible, to align
the start of the periods of performance with FY 2018 for purposes of
estimating the costs of the demonstration and thus determining the
budget neutrality offset amount for FY 2018. (We refer readers to
section V.L.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule for our proposed
calculation methodology for the budget neutrality offset amount for FY
2018.)
4. Budget Neutrality
a. Statutory Budget Neutrality Requirement
Section 410A(c)(2) of Public Law 108-173 requires that, in
conducting the demonstration program under this section, the Secretary
shall ensure that the aggregate payments made by the Secretary do not
exceed the amount which the Secretary would have paid if the
demonstration program under this section was not implemented. This
requirement is commonly referred to as ``budget neutrality.''
Generally, when
[[Page 19995]]
we implement a demonstration program on a budget neutral basis, the
demonstration program is budget neutral on its own terms; in other
words, the aggregate payments to the participating hospitals do not
exceed the amount that would be paid to those same hospitals in the
absence of the demonstration program. Typically, this form of budget
neutrality is viable when, by changing payments or aligning incentives
to improve overall efficiency, or both, a demonstration program may
reduce the use of some services or eliminate the need for others,
resulting in reduced expenditures for the demonstration program's
participants. These reduced expenditures offset increased payments
elsewhere under the demonstration program, thus ensuring that the
demonstration program as a whole is budget neutral or yields savings.
However, the small scale of this demonstration program, in conjunction
with the payment methodology, makes it extremely unlikely that this
demonstration program could be viable under the usual form of budget
neutrality--that is, cost-based payments to participating small rural
hospitals are likely to increase Medicare outlays without producing any
offsetting reduction in Medicare expenditures elsewhere. In addition, a
rural community hospital's participation in this demonstration program
would be unlikely to yield benefits to the participants if budget
neutrality were to be implemented by reducing other payments for these
same hospitals. Therefore, in the 12 IPPS final rules spanning the
period from FY 2005 through FY 2016, we adjusted the national inpatient
PPS rates by an amount sufficient to account for the added costs of
this demonstration program, thus applying budget neutrality across the
payment system as a whole rather than merely across the participants in
the demonstration program. (In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57034), we described a different methodology which we specify
below.) As we discussed in the FYs 2005 through 2017 IPPS final rules
(69 FR 49183; 70 FR 47462; 71 FR 48100; 72 FR 47392; 73 FR 48670; 74 FR
43922, 75 FR 50343, 76 FR 51698, 77 FR 53449, 78 FR 50740, 77 FR 50145;
80 FR 49585; and 81 FR 57034, respectively), we believe that the
language of the statutory budget neutrality requirements permits the
agency to implement the budget neutrality provision in this manner.
b. Methodology Used in Previous Final Rules
We generally incorporated two components into the budget neutrality
offset amounts identified in the final IPPS rules in previous years.
First, we estimated the costs of the demonstration for the upcoming
fiscal year, generally determined from historical, ``as submitted''
cost reports for the hospitals participating in that year. Update
factors representing nationwide trends in cost and volume increases
were incorporated into these estimates, as specified in the methodology
described in the final rule for each fiscal year. Second, as finalized
cost reports became available, we determined the amount by which the
actual costs of the demonstration for an earlier, given year differed
from the estimated costs for the demonstration set forth in the final
IPPS rule for the corresponding fiscal year, and we incorporated that
amount into the budget neutrality offset amount for the upcoming fiscal
year. If the actual costs for the demonstration for the earlier fiscal
year exceeded the estimated costs of the demonstration identified in
the final rule for that year, this difference was added to the
estimated costs of the demonstration for the upcoming fiscal year when
determining the budget neutrality adjustment for the upcoming fiscal
year. Conversely, if the estimated costs of the demonstration set forth
in the final rule for a prior fiscal year exceeded the actual costs of
the demonstration for that year, this difference was subtracted from
the estimated cost of the demonstration for the upcoming fiscal year
when determining the budget neutrality adjustment for the upcoming
fiscal year. (We note that we have calculated this difference for FYs
2005 through 2010 between the actual costs of the demonstration as
determined from finalized cost reports once available, and estimated
costs of the demonstration as identified in the applicable IPPS final
rules for these years.)
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57036), we finalized
a different methodology as compared to previous years for analyzing the
costs attributable to the demonstration for FY 2017. We noted in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that, in accordance with the extension
mandated by the Affordable Care Act, the demonstration would have
substantially phased out by the beginning of FY 2017. In addition to
the 7 originally participating hospitals (Cohort 1 hospitals) having
ended their scheduled period of performance in the 5-year extension
period prior to the start of FY 2016, we noted that the participation
periods for the 14 hospitals that entered the demonstration following
the extension mandated by the Affordable Care Act (Cohort 2 hospitals)
that were still participating were to end on a rolling basis according
to the end dates of the hospitals' cost report periods, respectively,
from April 30, 2016 through December 31, 2016. (As noted earlier, 1
hospital among the Cohort 2 hospitals closed in October 2015.) Of these
14 hospitals, 10 ended participation on or before September 30, 2016,
leaving 4 hospitals participating for the last 3 months of CY 2016
(that is, the first 3 months of FY 2017). We stated that, given the
small number of participating hospitals and the limited time of
participation for such hospitals during FY 2017, a revised methodology
was appropriate for determining the costs of the demonstration during
this period. We noted that, for the 4 hospitals that would end their
participation in the demonstration effective December 31, 2016, the
financial experience of the last 3 months of the calendar year (that
is, the first 3 months of FY 2017) would be included in the finalized
cost reports for FY 2016. We stated that examining the finalized cost
reports for FY 2016 for these hospitals would lead to a more accurate
and administratively feasible calculation of budget neutrality for the
demonstration in FY 2017 than conducting an estimate of the costs of
the demonstration for this 3-month period based on ``as submitted cost
reports'' (as would occur according to the budget neutrality
methodology used prior to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule).
Thus, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57037), we
finalized the proposal to forego the process of estimating the costs
attributable to the demonstration for FY 2017, and to instead calculate
the costs of the demonstration and the resulting budget neutrality
adjustment factor for the demonstration for FY 2017 once the finalized
cost reports for cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2016 become
available.
c. Proposed Budget Neutrality Methodology for Extension Period
Authorized by the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
For the implementation approach that we are proposing in section
V.L.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing that a
budget neutrality offset methodology similar to previous years (prior
to FY 2017) would be applied to the periods of performance under the
second 5 years of the 10-year
[[Page 19996]]
extension period authorized by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255.
With the potential exception of the demonstration costs for FY 2018 as
discussed below, for the periods of performance under the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period, an estimate of the costs of the
demonstration, generally determined from historical, ``as submitted''
cost reports for the participating hospitals and the appropriate update
factors, would be incorporated into a budget neutrality offset amount
to be applied to the national IPPS rates for the upcoming fiscal year.
We would implement this adjustment through the corresponding proposed
and final IPPS rules. In addition, we would include as a second
component to the budget neutrality offset amount, the amount by which
the actual costs of the demonstration for an earlier, given year (as
determined from finalized cost reports when available) differed from
the estimated costs for the demonstration set forth in the final IPPS
rule for the corresponding fiscal year.
Regarding demonstration costs specifically for FY 2018, as
described earlier, we are proposing that if the selection of additional
hospitals pursuant to section 410A(g)(6) of Public Law 108-173 (as
added by section 15003 of Pub. L. 114-255) is announced by June 2017,
we would include in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule an estimate of
the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018 and the resulting estimated
budget neutrality offset amount for the newly selected hospitals
(Cohort 3 hospitals) and for the previously participating hospitals
(Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals). As discussed earlier, if the final
selection of the additional hospitals does not occur by June 2017, we
would not be able to include an estimate of the costs of the
demonstration for any participating hospitals or an estimated budget
neutrality adjustment for FY 2018 in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule. In that situation, we are proposing to include the estimated
costs of the demonstration for FY 2018 for all participating hospitals
(Cohorts 1, 2 and 3 hospitals) in the budget neutrality offset
adjustment in the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final rules. The
budget neutrality offset adjustment for the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules would also include the estimated costs of the
demonstration for FY 2019 for all participating hospitals based on
historical, ``as submitted'' cost reports and the appropriate update
factors.
As described earlier, if the selection of the newly participating
hospitals authorized by section 410A(g)(6) of Public Law 108-173 (as
added by section 15003 of Pub. L. 114-255) is announced by June 2017,
we are proposing that the periods of performance under the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period for each of the participating
hospitals (Cohorts 1, 2, and 3) would start with the hospital's first
cost report year on or after October 1, 2017. Thus, the start dates for
the periods of performance for the entire set of participating
hospitals would occur during FY 2018.
If the selection of the new hospitals is announced by June 2017,
under our proposed implementation approach as described in section
V.L.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we would continue to
use the general methodology finalized in previous final rules (prior to
FY 2017) to calculate the estimated budget neutrality adjustment factor
to be applied to the FY 2018 national IPPS rates. (We note that the
same general methodology would be used if the announcement of the
selection of additional hospitals does not occur by June 2017, and thus
the budget neutrality offset amount reflecting the costs of the
demonstration for hospitals participating in FY 2018 would be applied
to the national IPPS rates for FY 2019.)
Consistent with the approach adopted in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule, we are proposing a specific calculation to account for the
fact that the periods of performance for the participating hospitals
would start at different points of time during FY 2018. That is, we are
proposing to prorate estimated reasonable cost amounts and amounts that
would be paid without the demonstration for FY 2018 according to the
fraction of the number of months that the hospital would be
participating out of the 12 months within FY 2018. For example, if a
hospital would be starting this second 5-year period of the 10-year
extension period on January 1, 2018, we would multiply the estimated
cost and payment amounts, derived as described below, by a factor of
0.75. (In this discussion of how the overall calculations are
conducted, this factor is referred to as ``the hospital-specific
prorating factor''.) Our proposed methodology for calculating the
budget neutrality offset amount proceeds in several steps, as set forth
below:
Step 1: For each of the participating hospitals, we are proposing
to identify the reasonable cost amount calculated under the reasonable
cost methodology for covered inpatient hospital services, as indicated
on the ``as submitted'' cost report for the most recent cost reporting
period available. (We expect that for most of the hospitals these ``as
submitted'' cost reports will be those with cost report period end
dates in CY 2015. In the solicitation for additional participants, we
will be requesting applicants to submit cost report information from
the most recent year available. For the selected additional hospitals
(that is, Cohort 3), we would be using the submitted information for
the calculation of the budget neutrality offset amount for FY 2018.) We
believe the most recent available cost reports to be an accurate
predictor of the costs of the demonstration in FY 2018 because they
would give us a recent picture of the participating hospitals' costs.
Because section 410A of Public Law 108-173 stipulates swing-bed
services are to be included among the covered inpatient hospital
services for which the demonstration payment methodology applies, we
are proposing to include the cost of these services, as reported on the
cost reports for the hospitals that provide swing-bed services, in
estimating the total reasonable cost amount for covered inpatient
hospital services under the demonstration. Similar to what is stated
above, we are proposing to use the most recently available ``as
submitted'' cost reports for this calculation.
For each hospital, we are proposing to sum the two above-referenced
amounts, and then multiply this sum by the hospital-specific prorating
factor (described above), to obtain an unadjusted hospital-specific
amount, calculated for each hospital prior to applying adjustments for
increases in cost or volume, as described below. (In the discussion
below, we refer to this amount as the ``unadjusted hospital-specific
amount''.) We are proposing to sum these unadjusted hospital-specific
amounts for all participating hospitals to obtain an unadjusted total
estimated reasonable cost amount for covered inpatient hospital
services (for all participating hospitals) to which update factors
representing increases in costs and volume would be applied.
Accordingly, we are proposing to multiply this sum (that is, the
unadjusted total estimated reasonable cost amount for covered inpatient
hospital services for all participating hospitals) by the FY 2016, FY
2017, and final FY 2018 IPPS market basket percentage increases, which
are formulated by the CMS Office of the Actuary. We are proposing to
use the market basket percentage increases for these particular years
because we expect that most of the ``as submitted'' cost reports that
would be used in determining the unadjusted hospital-specific amounts
will end in FY 2015. If a majority of these ``as submitted''
[[Page 19997]]
cost reports end in FY 2016, we would apply only the FY 2017 and final
FY 2018 market basket percentage increases. We recognize that applying
the set of FY 2016, FY 2017, and FY 2018 market basket percentage
increases to a sum that may include information from ``as submitted''
cost reports ending in FY 2016 (or, conversely, applying these update
factors for FY 2017 and FY 2018 to a sum that may include information
from ``as submitted'' cost reports ending in FY 2015) might appear to
lessen the precision of the estimate. However, we believe that the
potential margin of error in estimating the total costs for the
demonstration hospitals inherent in using a uniform set of update
factors is justifiable for purposes of streamlining and applying a
consistent calculation method for all participating hospitals. In
addition, we note that, as in previous years, we are proposing to
reconcile the actual costs of the demonstration as determined from
finalized cost reports when available with the estimate of the costs of
the demonstration in FY 2018 as included in the budget neutrality
offset amount, which would ultimately address any potential error in
estimating the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018, thereby
enhancing the accuracy of the calculation.
In this proposed rule, the current estimate of the FY 2018 IPPS
market basket percentage increase provided by the CMS Office of the
Actuary is specified in section V.B.1. of the preamble of this proposed
rule. We also are proposing to then multiply the product of the
unadjusted general total estimated reasonable cost amount for all
participating hospitals and the market basket percentage increases
applicable to the years involved by a 3-percent annual volume
adjustment for each of FYs 2016 through 2018 (or only FYs 2017 and
2018, in accordance with the discussion above). The result would be the
general total estimated FY 2018 reasonable cost amount for covered
inpatient hospital services for all participating hospitals.
We are proposing to apply the IPPS market basket percentage
increases applicable for FYs 2016 through 2018 (or FYs 2017 and 2018,
in accordance with the discussion above) to the applicable general
total reasonable cost amount described above to model the estimated FY
2018 reasonable cost amount under the demonstration. We are proposing
to use the IPPS market basket percentage increases because we believe
that these update factors appropriately indicate the trend of increase
in inpatient hospital operating costs under the reasonable cost
methodology for the years involved. The 3-percent annual volume
adjustment was stipulated by the CMS Office of the Actuary and is being
proposed because it is intended to accurately reflect the tendency of
hospitals' inpatient caseloads to increase. We acknowledge the
possibility that inpatient caseloads for small hospitals may fluctuate,
and thus are proposing to incorporate into the estimate of
demonstration costs a factor to allow for a potential increase in
inpatient hospital services.
Step 2: For each of the participating hospitals, we are proposing
to identify the general estimated amount that would otherwise be paid
in FY 2018 under applicable Medicare payment methodologies for covered
inpatient hospital services (as indicated on the same set of ``as
submitted'' cost reports as in Step 1) if the demonstration was not
implemented. Similarly, as in Step 1, for the hospitals that provide
swing-bed services, we are proposing to identify the estimated amount
that generally would otherwise be paid for these services (using the
same ``as submitted'' cost reports as in Step 1) and include it in
estimating the total FY 2018 general amount that would otherwise be
paid for covered inpatient hospital services without the demonstration.
Similar to Step 1, we are proposing to multiply this sum for each
participating hospital by the hospital-specific prorating factor. We
are then proposing to add together the resulting amounts for all
participating hospitals to obtain an estimate of the amount that would
otherwise be paid for covered inpatient hospital services for all
participating hospitals without the demonstration, to which update
factors representing increases in costs and volume would be applied.
Accordingly, we are proposing to then multiply this amount by the
FYs 2016 through 2018 (or only FYs 2017 and 2018, in accordance with
the discussion above) IPPS applicable percentage increases, depending
on whether the majority of the ``as submitted'' cost reports end in FY
2015 or FY 2016, as discussed in Step 1. This methodology differs from
Step 1, in which we are proposing to apply the market basket percentage
increases to the sum of the hospitals' applicable general total
estimated reasonable cost amount for covered inpatient hospital
services. We believe that the IPPS applicable percentage increases are
appropriate factors to update the estimated amounts that generally
would otherwise be paid without the demonstration. This is because IPPS
payments would constitute the majority of payments that would otherwise
be made without the demonstration and the applicable percentage
increase is the factor used under the IPPS to update the inpatient
hospital payment rates. Most of the hospitals participating in the
demonstration would be paid under the IPPS payment methodology if they
were not in the demonstration. Then, for the same reasons discussed in
Step 1, we are proposing to multiply the product of the applicable
estimated total payments that generally would otherwise be made without
the demonstration and the IPPS applicable percentage increases
applicable to the years involved by the 3-percent annual volume
adjustment for each of FYs 2016 through 2018 (or FYs 2017 and 2018, in
accordance with the discussion above). The result would be the general
total estimated payment amount that would otherwise be paid without the
demonstration for FY 2018 to participating hospitals for covered
inpatient hospital services.
Step 3: We are proposing to subtract the amount derived in Step 2
(representing the sum of estimated amounts that generally would
otherwise be paid to the participating hospitals for covered inpatient
hospital services for FY 2018 if the demonstration were not
implemented) from the amount derived in Step 1 (representing the sum of
the estimated reasonable cost amounts that generally would be paid
under the demonstration to all participating hospitals for covered
inpatient hospital services for FY 2018). We are proposing that the
resulting difference would be the estimated amount of the costs of the
demonstration for FY 2018, which would be incorporated into an
adjustment to the national IPPS rates.
Similar to previous years, in order to meet the budget neutrality
requirement in section 410A(c)(2) of Public Law 108-173, we are
proposing that when finalized cost reports for each of the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period become available, we would
determine the difference between the actual costs of the demonstration
as determined from these finalized cost reports and the estimated cost
indicated in the corresponding fiscal year IPPS final rule, and include
that difference either as a positive or negative adjustment in the
upcoming year's final rule.
Specifically for FY 2018, when the finalized cost reports beginning
in FY 2018 are available, we would determine the difference between the
actual costs of the demonstration as determined from these finalized
cost reports and the estimated cost indicated in the FY 2018 (or FY
2019, as discussed above) IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, and include that
difference either as a positive or
[[Page 19998]]
negative adjustment in the applicable year's final rule.
Thus, in keeping with the methodologies used in previous final
rules, we would continue to use a methodology for calculating the
budget neutrality offset amount for the second 5-years of the 10-year
extension period consisting of two components: (1) The estimated
demonstration costs in the upcoming fiscal year (as described above);
and (2) the amount by which the actual demonstration costs
corresponding to an earlier, given year (which would be known once
finalized cost reports became available for that year) differed from
the budget neutrality offset amount finalized in the corresponding
year's IPPS final rule.
We are inviting public comments on the budget neutrality
calculation methodology proposed above. In addition, we are inviting
comments on other approaches that would be consistent with section
410A(c)(2) of Public Law 108-173, and that would provide a reasonable
determination of budget neutrality for the demonstration.
d. Alternative Budget Neutrality Approach Considered
In section V.L.3.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
described an alternative approach that we considered for implementing
the extension of the demonstration pursuant to section 15003 of Public
Law 114-255, and we invited public comments on this alternative
approach. Under this alternative approach, for each previously
participating hospital that decides to participate in the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period, the cost-based payment
methodology under section 410A of Public Law 108-173 (as amended by
section 15003 of Pub. L. 114-255) would begin on the date immediately
following the end date of its period of performance for the first 5-
year extension period.
Under this alternative approach that we considered, depending on
which among the Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals choose to participate in this
second 5-year extension period, the demonstration's cost-based payment
methodology would be applied to dates as far back as January 1, 2015
and as late as January 1, 2017. This would require reconciling the
reasonable costs associated with furnishing Medicare covered inpatient
hospital services as reported on cost reports with the amounts already
paid under the other Medicare payment methodologies applied since the
end of their periods of performance for the first 5-year extension.
Under this alternative approach, any additional amounts associated with
the cost-based payment methodology for this period would need to be
paid to the hospitals.
Although we considered this alternative implementation approach and
budget neutrality methodology, for the reasons discussed in section
V.L.3.b. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we are instead
proposing the implementation approach (according to which the periods
of performance for previously participating hospitals for the second 5-
year extension period would begin with the hospital's first cost
reporting period on or after October 1, 2017, following the
announcement of the selection of additional hospitals) and budget
neutrality methodology described in sections V.L.3.b. and V.L.4.c. of
the preamble of this proposed rule. Nevertheless, we are inviting
public comments on the budget neutrality methodology that we describe
below for the alternative approach.
In general, the methodology that we considered for calculating a
budget neutrality offset under this alternative approach would involve
the following steps:
To reflect the costs of the demonstration for fiscal years
before FY 2018, for the previously participating hospitals (Cohorts 1
and 2) that decide to participate in the 5-year extension period
authorized by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, when finalized cost
reports become available, we would determine the actual costs of the
demonstration for cost report periods beginning on the day after the
last day of the hospitals' periods of performance in the first 5-year
extension period and extending through the last day of the cost report
periods ending in FY 2018 (or FY 2017 for hospitals with an October 1
cost report start date, as explained below), and incorporate these
amounts in the budget neutrality offset amount to be included in a
future IPPS final rule. Thus, we would determine the actual costs for
the previously participating hospitals for the period prior to the
start of FY 2018. Similar to our proposed approach for implementation
and budget neutrality, as described in sections V.L.3.b. and V.L.4.c.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, under the alternative
methodology we considered, we would seek to begin our estimation of the
costs of the demonstration for all hospitals in the same fiscal year
(that is, in FY 2018, with each hospital's first cost reporting period
beginning on or after October 1, 2017). (The methodology for estimating
the costs for FY 2018 for this alternative implementation approach that
we considered is described below.)
Thus, under the alternative approach we considered, for a Cohort 1
hospital whose period of performance in the first extension period
ended June 30, 2015, we would determine the actual costs of the
demonstration for the cost reporting periods from July 1, 2015 through
June 30, 2016, from July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2017, and from July
1, 2017 through June 30, 2018. For a Cohort 2 hospital whose period of
performance in the first extension period ended June 30, 2016, under
this alternative approach that we considered, we would determine the
actual costs of the demonstration for the cost reporting periods from
July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2017, and from July 1, 2017 through June
30, 2018. We note that for both of these Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals,
this last cost report period would encompass services occurring since
the enactment of Public Law 114-255, which authorizes the second
extension period. However, we believe that applying a uniform method
for determining costs across a cost report year would be more
reasonable from the standpoint of operational feasibility and
consistent application of cost determination principles. (We note that,
for hospitals (either Cohort 1 or 2) with an October 1 start date, the
estimation of costs for FY 2018 would apply for the period starting
October 1, 2017, that is, the first day of FY 2018. Therefore, for
these hospitals, we would determine actual costs from finalized cost
reports when available for the period starting from the day after the
last day of the period of performance under the first 5-year extension
period and concluding with the last day of FY 2017.) For all hospitals,
under this alternative approach that we considered, we would
incorporate these amounts into a single amount to be included in the
calculation of the budget neutrality offset amount to the national IPPS
rates in a future final rule after such finalized cost reports become
available.
To reflect the costs of the demonstration for the upcoming
fiscal year (that is, FY 2018) for Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals that have
decided to participate in the second 5-years of the 10-year extension
period, we would estimate the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018,
based on historical ``as submitted'' cost reports, applying prorating
factors and updates as appropriate, as described below. Similar to the
proposed methodology described in section V.L.4.c. of the preamble of
this proposed rule for estimating the costs of the demonstration for FY
2018, the alternative methodology we considered for estimating the
costs of
[[Page 19999]]
the demonstration for FY 2018 would follow 3 steps:
Step 1: We would determine the total estimated reasonable cost
amount for covered inpatient hospital services (as indicated on the
``as submitted'' cost reports for the most recent cost reporting period
available) for all participating hospitals for FY 2018 calculated under
the demonstration's reasonable cost-based payment methodology. These
calculations would be identical to those described for our proposed
methodology in section V.L.4.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
with the exception that the formulation of the ``hospital-specific
prorating factor,'' to be applied to each participating hospital's
reasonable cost amounts as derived from its most recently available
``as submitted'' cost report, would be different. Under this
alternative methodology that we considered, for hospitals with a cost
report start date other than October 1, the hospital-specific prorating
factor would be the ratio of the number of months between the end of
the cost reporting period ending in FY 2018, on the basis of which
actual costs are determined (as described above), and the end of the
fiscal year, out of the total number of months in the fiscal year.
Therefore, for a hospital (either Cohort 1 or 2) for which the end of
the period on which we would determine actual costs (that is, the end
date of the hospital's cost report year) would be June 30, 2018, there
would be 3 months remaining in FY 2018, and the hospital-specific
prorating factor would be .25. (Hospitals with an October 1 cost report
start date would participate in the demonstration for the full 12
months of FY 2018 and thus would have a hospital-specific prorating
factor of 1.0.) We would then follow the same calculations as in our
proposed budget neutrality calculation described in section V.L.4.c. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, including application of the same
update factors to reflect increases in cost and volume.
Step 2: We would estimate the amount that would otherwise be paid
for Medicare covered inpatient hospital services to all participating
hospitals in FY 2018 without the demonstration. These calculations
would be identical to those described for our proposed methodology in
section V.L.4.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule, except for the
difference that the hospital-specific prorating factor, to be applied
to the estimated amount that the hospital would be paid without the
demonstration, as derived from its most recently available ``as
submitted'' cost report, would be formulated in the same manner as
described in Step 1 above under the alternative methodology.
Step 3: We would then subtract the amount derived in Step 2
(representing the estimated amount that would otherwise be paid to the
participating hospitals for covered inpatient hospital services for FY
2018 if the demonstration were not implemented) from the amount derived
in Step 1 (representing the estimated reasonable cost amounts that
generally would be paid under the demonstration to all participating
hospitals for covered inpatient hospital services for FY 2018). The
resulting difference would be the estimated amount of the costs of the
demonstration for FY 2018, which would be incorporated into an
adjustment to the national IPPS rates.
For the Cohort 3 hospitals, we would follow the identical
methodology for estimating the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018
as described for the proposed budget neutrality methodology under the
proposed implementation approach. Similar to the description above for
the proposed approach, if the selection of additional participants
under the solicitation authorized by Public Law 114-255 is announced by
June 2017, we would be able to incorporate the estimates of the costs
of the demonstration for the Cohort 3 hospitals for FY 2018 within a
budget neutrality offset adjustment to be included in the FY 2018 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule. However, we note that if this selection is not
announced by that time, we would not be able to include the estimates
of the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018 for the Cohort 3
hospitals in the budget neutrality offset adjustment for FY 2018, and
similar to our proposed methodology in that situation, we would
incorporate this estimate in the budget neutrality offset adjustment in
the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. The budget neutrality offset
adjustment for the FY 2019 IPPS proposed and final rules would also
include the estimated costs of the demonstration for FY 2019 for these
Cohort 3 hospitals based on historical, ``as submitted'' cost reports
and the appropriate update factors.
Consistent with our approach in previous final rules, when
the finalized cost reports for cost reporting periods beginning in FY
2018 are available, we would determine the difference between the
actual costs of the demonstration as determined from these finalized
cost reports and the estimated cost indicated in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (or the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, as explained
above), and include that difference either as a positive or negative
adjustment in the upcoming year's final rule.
For future years, we would continue to incorporate the
estimated costs of the demonstration for all participating hospitals
for the upcoming fiscal year in the budget neutrality offset adjustment
in the IPPS final rule of the corresponding fiscal year. For these
hospitals, we also would determine the actual costs of the
demonstration when finalized cost reports become available, and include
the difference between the estimated and actual costs of the
demonstration in the calculation of the budget neutrality offset amount
to the national IPPS rates in the final rule for a future year.
We note that, under the alternative approach we considered,
although we would not be able to include an estimate of the costs of
the demonstration for FY 2018 Cohort 3 hospitals in the budget
neutrality offset adjustment in the FY 2018 final rule if we were not
able to announce the selection of additional hospitals by June 2017, we
would do so for the Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals. However, we note the
overall complexity of the methodology for budget neutrality under this
alternative implementation methodology, involving various differing
methods for either determining or estimating the costs of the
demonstration over several different fiscal years, potentially to be
applied to budget neutrality offset adjustment amounts for IPPS final
rules for different fiscal years. We believe our proposed
implementation approach and budget neutrality calculation (described in
sections V.L.3.b. and V.L.4.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule)
are more reasonable and appropriate for the reasons discussed
previously, and because of the complexity inherent in meeting the
budget neutrality requirement, and the administrative burden involved
in tracking payments and associated calculations over multiple years
under the alternative methodology.
Nevertheless, we are inviting public comments on the alternative
budget neutrality calculation methodology we considered, as discussed
above.
e. Reconciling Actual and Estimated Costs of the Demonstration for
Previous Years (2011, 2012, and 2013)
As described earlier, we have calculated the difference for FYs
2005 through 2010 between the actual costs of the demonstration, as
determined from finalized cost reports once available, and estimated
costs of the demonstration as identified in the applicable IPPS final
rules for these years. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
[[Page 20000]]
final rule (81 FR 57037), we finalized a proposal to reconcile the
budget neutrality offset amounts identified in the IPPS final rules for
FYs 2011 through 2016 with the actual costs of the demonstration for
those years, considering the fact that the demonstration was scheduled
to end December 31, 2016. In that final rule, we stated that we
believed it would be appropriate to conduct this analysis for FYs 2011
through 2016 at one time, when all of the finalized cost reports for
cost reporting periods beginning in FYs 2011 through 2016 are
available. We stated that such an aggregate analysis encompassing the
cost experience through the end of the period of performance of the
demonstration would represent an administratively streamlined method,
allowing for the determination of any appropriate adjustment to the
IPPS rates and obviating the need for multiple, fiscal year-specific
calculations and regulatory actions. Given the general lag of 3 years
in finalizing cost reports, we stated that we expected any such
analysis would be conducted in FY 2020.
With the extension of the demonstration for another 5-year period,
as authorized by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, we are proposing
to modify the plan outlined in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule,
and instead return to the general procedure in previous final rules;
that is, as finalized cost reports become available, to determine the
amount by which the actual costs of the demonstration for an earlier,
given year differ from the estimated costs for the demonstration set
forth in the IPPS final rule for the corresponding fiscal year, and
then incorporate that amount into the budget neutrality offset amount
for an upcoming fiscal year. If the actual costs of the demonstration
for the earlier fiscal year exceed the estimated costs of the
demonstration identified in the final rule for that year, this
difference would be added to the estimated costs of the demonstration
for the upcoming fiscal year when determining the budget neutrality
adjustment for the final rule. Conversely, if the estimated costs of
the demonstration set forth in the final rule for a prior fiscal year
exceed the actual costs of the demonstration for that year, this
difference would be subtracted from the estimated cost of the
demonstration for the upcoming fiscal year when determining the budget
neutrality adjustment for an upcoming fiscal year. However, given that
this adjustment for specific years could be positive or negative, we
are proposing to combine this reconciliation for multiple prior years
into one adjustment to be applied to the budget neutrality offset
amount for a single fiscal year, thus lessening the possibility of both
positive and negative adjustments to be applied in consecutive years,
and enhancing administrative feasibility. Specifically, we are
proposing that when finalized cost reports for FYs 2011, 2012, and 2013
are available, we would include this difference for these years in the
budget neutrality offset adjustment to be applied to the national IPPS
rates in a future final rule. We expect that this would occur in FY
2019. We also are proposing that when finalized cost reports for FYs
2014 through 2016 are available, we would include the difference
between the actual costs as reflected on these cost reports and the
amounts included in the budget neutrality offset amounts for these
fiscal years in a future final rule. We plan to provide an update in a
future final rule regarding the year that we would expect that this
analysis would occur.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
M. Payment for Services in Inpatient and Outpatient Hospital Settings
1. Adjustment to IPPS Rates Resulting From 2-Midnight Policy for FY
2018
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50906 through
50954), we adopted the 2-midnight policy, effective for dates of
admission on or after October 1, 2013. As discussed in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57058 through 57060), under the 2-
midnight policy, an inpatient admission is generally appropriate for
Medicare Part A payment if the physician (or other qualified
practitioner) admits the patient as an inpatient based upon the
reasonable expectation that the patient will need hospital care that
crosses at least 2 midnights. In assessing the expected duration of
necessary care, the physician (or other qualified practitioner) may
take into account outpatient hospital care received prior to inpatient
admission. If the patient is expected to need less than 2 midnights of
care in the hospital, the services furnished should generally be billed
as outpatient services. We note that revisions were made to this policy
in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70545).
Our actuaries estimated that the 2-midnight policy would increase
expenditures by approximately $220 million in FY 2014 due to an
expected net increase in inpatient encounters. We used our authority
under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act to make a reduction of 0.2
percent to the standardized amount, the Puerto Rico standardized
amount, and the hospital-specific payment rates, and we used our
authority under section 1886(g) of the Act to make a reduction of 0.2
percent to the national capital Federal rate and the Puerto Rico-
specific capital rate, in order to offset this estimated $220 million
in additional IPPS expenditures in FY 2014.
For the reasons outlined in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and
final rules (81 FR 25136 through 25138 and 81 FR 57058 through 57060),
we used our authority under sections 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) and 1886(g) of
the Act to prospectively remove, beginning in FY 2017, the 0.2 percent
reduction to the rates put in place beginning in FY 2014. The 0.2
percent reduction was implemented by including a factor of 0.998 in the
calculation of the FY 2014 standardized amount, hospital-specific
payment rates, and the national capital Federal rate, permanently
reducing the rates for FY 2014 and future years until the 0.998 is
removed. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57281 and
57294), we permanently removed the 0.998 reduction beginning in FY 2017
by including a factor of (1/0.998) in the calculation of the FY 2017
standardized amount, the hospital-specific payment rates, and the
national capital Federal rate.
We also stated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final
rules that, for the reasons outlined in those rules, we believe it
would be appropriate to use our authority under sections
1886(d)(5)(I)(i) and 1886(g) of the Act to temporarily increase the
rates, only for FY 2017, to address the effect of the 0.2 percent
reduction to the rates in effect for FY 2014, the 0.2 percent reduction
to the rates in effect for FY 2015 (recall the 0.998 factor included in
the calculation of the FY 2014 rates permanently reduced the rates for
FY 2014 and future years until it is removed), and the 0.2 percent
reduction to the rates in effect for FY 2016. We stated that we believe
the most transparent, expedient, and administratively feasible method
to accomplish this was a temporary one-time prospective increase to the
FY 2017 rates of 0.6 percent (= 0.2 percent + 0.2 percent + 0.2
percent). Specifically, we finalized our proposal to include a factor
of 1.006 in the calculation of the standardized amount, the hospital-
specific payment rates, and the national capital Federal rate in FY
2017 and then to remove this temporary one-time prospective increase by
including a factor of (1/1.006) in the calculation of the rates for FY
2018. We stated that while we generally did not believe it is
appropriate in a prospective
[[Page 20001]]
system to retrospectively adjust rates, we took this action in the
specific context of this unique situation.
In summary, for the reasons described in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed and final rules, we finalized our proposal to include a
permanent factor of (1/0.998) and a temporary one-time factor of
(1.006) in the calculation of the FY 2017 standardized amount,
hospital-specific payment rates, and national capital Federal rate and
to include a factor of (1/1.006) in the calculation of the FY 2018
standardized amount, hospital-specific payment rates, and national
capital Federal rate to remove the temporary one-time factor of 1.006.
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are including a
factor of (1/1.006) in the calculation of the FY 2018 standardized
amount, hospital-specific payment rates, and national capital Federal
rate to remove the temporary one-time factor of 1.006, as explained in
detail in section II. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.
We note that, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in our
response to public comments, we recognized that for closed, converted,
or new hospitals, our prospective method generally may have had a
differential positive or negative impact compared to hospitals that
were IPPS hospitals for all of the FY 2014 through FY 2017 time period.
We stated that we generally believe that, given the prospective nature
of our method and our goal to adopt a transparent, expedient, and
administratively feasible approach, these differential impacts would be
an appropriate consequence. However, after consideration of the public
comments received, we agreed that we should provide a process to
address the situation of closed or converted hospitals. Due to the
small number of hospitals impacted, we stated that we will address
closed and converted hospitals as part of the cost report settlement
process. We stated that these hospitals should identify themselves to
their MACs so that the appropriate cost report adjustment can be
applied.
2. Eliminating Inappropriate Medicare Payment Differentials for Similar
Services in the Inpatient and Outpatient Settings
CMS is committed to eliminating inappropriate Medicare payment
differentials for similar services in the inpatient and outpatient
settings in order to execute our responsibility to taxpayers to
prudently pay for high quality care. As MedPAC has previously noted,
``The high profitability of one-day stays under the inpatient
prospective payment system (IPPS) and the generally lower payment rates
for similar care under the outpatient prospective payment system (OPPS)
have heightened concern about the appropriateness of inpatient one-day
stays'' (Medicare and the Health Care Delivery System Report to
Congress, June 2015).
In the past, CMS has requested public comment on potential payment
policy options to address the issue of payment differentials between
services provided in the inpatient and outpatient settings. However,
our most recent solicitation occurred in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rulemaking (80 FR 70549). Since that time, both hospitals and CMS have
had the opportunity to gain experience under the various policy changes
that have occurred with respect to short inpatient hospital stays. In
this context, we believe it is an appropriate time to seek public
comment on transparent ways to identify and eliminate inappropriate
payment differentials for similar services provided in the inpatient
and outpatient settings.
N. Provider-Based Status of Indian Health Service and Tribal Facilities
and Organizations
Since the beginning of the Medicare program, some providers, which
we refer to as ``main providers,'' have functioned as a single entity
while owning and operating multiple departments, locations, and
facilities. We have maintained that having clear criteria for provider-
based status is important because a provider-based status designation
can result in additional Medicare payments under the OPPS for services
provided at the provider-based facility, as well as increased
beneficiary coinsurance liability for Medicare beneficiaries.
The Medicare criteria for provider-based status are set forth in
our regulations at 42 CFR 413.65. In the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule
(65 FR 18507), CMS (then HCFA), responded to several commenters who
were concerned that the implementation of the proposed provider-based
regulations would have the effect of denying Medicare participation as
provider-based entities to a number of Indian Health Service (IHS)
facilities that were being operated by Indian Tribes under the auspices
of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (Pub. L.
93-638). Other commenters were concerned that the regulations would
jeopardize statutorily authorized contracting and compacting
relationships and would severely restrict a number of IHS and Tribal
clinics from receiving payments for outpatient services. The IHS itself
strongly recommended that the proposed regulations not apply to IHS and
the Tribal health system. In response to these concerns, we stated in
that final rule (68 FR 18507): ``We recognize that the provision of
health services to members of Federally recognized Tribes is based on a
special and legally recognized relationship between Indian Tribes and
the United States Government. To address this relationship, the IHS has
developed an integrated system to provide care that has its foundation
in IHS hospitals. Because of these special circumstances, not present
in the case of private, non-Federal facilities and organizations that
serve patients generally, we agree that it would not be appropriate to
apply the provider-based criteria to IHS facilities or organizations or
to most tribal facilities or organizations.''
In the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule (65 FR 18507), we finalized a
policy at Sec. 413.65(m) of our regulations under which facilities and
organizations operated by the IHS or Tribes would be considered to be
``departments of hospitals operated by the IHS or Tribes,'' and thereby
grandfathered from application of the provider-based rules, if on or
before April 7, 2000, they furnished only services that were billed as
if they had been furnished by a department of a hospital operated by
the IHS or a Tribe and they are: (1) owned and operated by the IHS; (2)
owned by the Tribe but leased from the Tribe by the IHS under the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act in accordance
with applicable regulations and policies of the IHS in consultation
with Tribes; or (3) owned by the IHS but leased and operated by the
Tribe under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act
in accordance with applicable regulations and policies of the IHS in
consultation with Tribes.
In order to qualify for grandfathering under Sec. 413.65(m), we
required that the services be furnished by the facility or organization
on or before April 7, 2000 because of our concern that, without such a
date limitation, this provision would create an incentive for IHS or
Tribal hospitals to establish new outpatient departments that were not
sufficiently integrated with the main provider to support payment under
the OPPS for the services that they furnished. Our intent was to
implement a policy that both addressed a primary concern (that is, the
rapid growth of off-campus provider-based clinics) that necessitated
the provider-based regulations and recognized longstanding and complex
IHS and Tribal
[[Page 20002]]
arrangements. Since we finalized the policy at Sec. 413.65(m), we have
issued guidance on circumstances that would and would not result in a
facility or organization losing its grandfathered status. In
particular, we recognized the special relationship between Tribes and
the IHS under the Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act and
stated that changes in the status of a hospital or a facility from IHS
to Tribal operation, or vice versa, or the realignment of a facility
from one IHS or Tribal hospital to another IHS or Tribal hospital,
would not be a basis for losing such a grandfathered status, so long as
the resulting configuration is one that would have qualified for
grandfathering under Sec. 413.65(m) had it been in effect on April 7,
2000.
In the years since we implemented Sec. 413.65(m) and issued the
guidance described earlier, we have considered whether it remains
necessary to require that facilities and organizations be furnishing
the services on or before April 7, 2000 in order to qualify for
grandfathering. We have concluded that it does not because IHS policies
and procedures (for example, as specified in the Indian Health Manual
available on the IHS Web site at: //ihs.gov/aboutihs/indianhealthmanual/) regarding the planning, operation, and funding of
such facilities and organizations are resulting in appropriate Medicare
payments to them. Therefore, after further consideration of the
position CMS has set out in prior guidance, the special and legally
recognized relationship between Indian Tribes and the U.S. Government,
as well as current IHS policies and procedures, we are proposing to
remove the date limitation in Sec. 413.65(m) that restricted the
grandfathering provision to IHS or Tribal facilities and organizations
furnishing services on or before April 7, 2000.
We also are proposing to make a technical change to the billing
reference in Sec. 413.65(m) by replacing ``were billed'' with ``are
billed using the CCN of the main provider and with the consent of the
main provider.'' We believe this proposed change will make the
regulation text more consistent with our current rules that require
these facilities to comply with all applicable Medicare conditions of
participation that apply to the main provider. We are not proposing to
otherwise change the requirement that the only services furnished at
the facility or organization must be hospital outpatient services, or
to change the other requirements for grandfathering in paragraphs
(m)(1) through (3) of Sec. 413.65. Therefore, under our proposal, a
facility or organization operated by the IHS or a Tribe will be
considered to be a department of a hospital operated by the IHS or a
Tribe if it furnishes only hospital outpatient services that are billed
using the CMS Certification Number (CCN) of the main provider with the
consent of the main provider, and it also meets one of the conditions
in Sec. 413.65(m)(1) through (3).
We welcome public comments on our proposals.
O. Request for Information Regarding Physician-Owned Hospitals
We are seeking public comments on the appropriate role of
physician-owned hospitals in the delivery system. We are also seeking
public comments on how the current scope of and restrictions on
physician-owned hospitals affects healthcare delivery. In particular,
we are interested in comments on the impact on Medicare beneficiaries.
VI. Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Capital-Related Costs
A. Overview
Section 1886(g) of the Act requires the Secretary to pay for the
capital-related costs of inpatient acute hospital services in
accordance with a prospective payment system established by the
Secretary. Under the statute, the Secretary has broad authority in
establishing and implementing the IPPS for acute care hospital
inpatient capital-related costs. We initially implemented the IPPS for
capital-related costs in the FY 1992 IPPS final rule (56 FR 43358). In
that final rule, we established a 10-year transition period to change
the payment methodology for Medicare hospital inpatient capital-related
costs from a reasonable cost-based payment methodology to a prospective
payment methodology (based fully on the Federal rate).
FY 2001 was the last year of the 10-year transition period that was
established to phase in the IPPS for hospital inpatient capital-related
costs. For cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2002, capital IPPS
payments are based solely on the Federal rate for almost all acute care
hospitals (other than hospitals receiving certain exception payments
and certain new hospitals). (We refer readers to the FY 2002 IPPS final
rule (66 FR 39910 through 39914) for additional information on the
methodology used to determine capital IPPS payments to hospitals both
during and after the transition period.)
The basic methodology for determining capital prospective payments
using the Federal rate is set forth in the regulations at 42 CFR
412.312. For the purpose of calculating capital payments for each
discharge, the standard Federal rate is adjusted as follows:
(Standard Federal Rate) x (DRG Weight) x (Geographic Adjustment
Factor (GAF)) x (COLA for hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii) x (1
+ Capital DSH Adjustment Factor + Capital IME Adjustment Factor, if
applicable).
In addition, under Sec. 412.312(c), hospitals also may receive
outlier payments under the capital IPPS for extraordinarily high-cost
cases that qualify under the thresholds established for each fiscal
year.
B. Additional Provisions
1. Exception Payments
The regulations at 42 CFR 412.348 provide for certain exception
payments under the capital IPPS. The regular exception payments
provided under Sec. 412.348(b) through (e) were available only during
the 10-year transition period. For a certain period after the
transition period, eligible hospitals may have received additional
payments under the special exceptions provisions at Sec. 412.348(g).
However, FY 2012 was the final year hospitals could receive special
exceptions payments. For additional details regarding these exceptions
policies, we refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76
FR 51725).
Under Sec. 412.348(f), a hospital may request an additional
payment if the hospital incurs unanticipated capital expenditures in
excess of $5 million due to extraordinary circumstances beyond the
hospital's control. Additional information on the exception payment for
extraordinary circumstances in Sec. 412.348(f) can be found in the FY
2005 IPPS final rule (69 FR 49185 and 49186).
2. New Hospitals
Under the capital IPPS, the regulations at 42 CFR 412.300(b) define
a new hospital as a hospital that has operated (under previous or
current ownership) for less than 2 years and lists examples of
hospitals that are not considered new hospitals. In accordance with
Sec. 412.304(c)(2), under the capital IPPS, a new hospital is paid 85
percent of its allowable Medicare inpatient hospital capital-related
costs through its first 2 years of operation, unless the new hospital
elects to receive full prospective payment based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate. We refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(76 FR 51725) for additional information on payments to new hospitals
under the capital IPPS.
[[Page 20003]]
3. Payments for Hospitals Located in Puerto Rico
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57061), we revised
the regulations at 42 CFR 412.374 relating to the calculation of
capital IPPS payments to hospitals located in Puerto Rico beginning in
FY 2017 to parallel the change in the statutory calculation of
operating IPPS payments to hospitals located in Puerto Rico, for
discharges occurring on or after January 1, 2016, made by section 601
of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-113). Section
601 of Public Law 114-113 increased the applicable Federal percentage
of the operating IPPS payment for hospitals located in Puerto Rico from
75 percent to 100 percent and decreased the applicable Puerto Rico
percentage of the operating IPPS payments for hospitals located in
Puerto Rico from 25 percent to zero percent, applicable to discharges
occurring on or after January 1, 2016. As such, under revised Sec.
412.374, for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2016, capital
IPPS payments to hospitals located in Puerto Rico are based on 100
percent of the capital Federal rate.
C. Proposed Annual Update for FY 2018
The proposed annual update to the national capital Federal rate, as
provided for at Sec. 412.308(c), for FY 2018 is discussed in section
III. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50906 through
50954), we adopted the 2-midnight policy effective for dates of
admission on or after October 1, 2013, under which an inpatient
admission is generally appropriate for Medicare Part A payment if the
physician (or other qualified practitioner) admits the patient as an
inpatient based upon the reasonable expectation that the patient will
need hospital care that crosses at least 2 midnights. At that time, our
actuaries estimated that the 2-midnight policy would increase
expenditures by approximately $220 million in FY 2014 due to an
expected net increase in inpatient encounters. Using our authority
under section 1886(g) of the Act, and consistent with the approach
taken for the operating IPPS standardized amount, the Puerto Rico-
specific standardized amount and the hospital-specific payment rates,
we made a reduction of 0.2 percent (an adjustment factor of 0.998) to
the national capital Federal rate and the Puerto Rico-specific capital
rate to offset the estimated increase in capital IPPS expenditures
associated with the projected increase in inpatient encounters that was
expected to result from the new inpatient admission guidelines (78 FR
50746 through 50747). (As explained in section V.B.3. of the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we discontinued use of the Puerto Rico
capital rate in the calculation of capital IPPS payments to hospitals
located in Puerto Rico beginning in FY 2017.)
For the reasons discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and
final rules (81 FR 25136 through 25138 and 57058 through 57060) and
consistent with our approach for the operating IPPS rates, we used our
authority under section 1886(g) of the Act to permanently remove the
0.2 percent reduction to the national capital Federal rate beginning in
FY 2017. Specifically, we made an adjustment of (1/0.998) to the
national capital Federal rate to remove the 0.2 percent reduction,
consistent with the adjustment to the operating IPPS standardized
amount and the hospital-specific payment rates.
In addition, consistent with our approach for the operating IPPS
standardized amount and hospital-specific payment rates, and for the
reasons discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final
rules, we finalized our proposal to use our authority under section
1886(g) of the Act to adjust the FY 2017 national capital Federal rate
to address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction to the national
capital Federal rates in effect for FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016 by
making a one-time prospective adjustment of 1.006 in FY 2017 to the
national capital Federal rate and, for FY 2018, to remove the effects
of this one-time prospective adjustment through an adjustment of (1/
1.006) to the national capital Federal rate. Therefore, consistent with
our finalized policy, for FY 2018, we are including a factor of (1/
1.006) in the calculation of the FY 2018 operating IPPS standardized
amount, the hospital-specific payment rates, and the national capital
Federal rate to remove the temporary one-time factor of 1.006. (For
additional details, we refer readers to section IV.P. of the preamble
of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57058 through 57060 and
57062 through 57063) and to section V.M. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.)
In section II.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we present
a discussion of the MS-DRG documentation and coding adjustment,
including previously finalized policies and historical adjustments, as
well as the adjustment to the standardized amount under section 1886(d)
of the Act that we are proposing for FY 2018 in accordance with the
amendments made to section 7(b)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-90 by section
414 of the MACRA and section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act.
Because these provisions require us to make an adjustment only to the
operating IPPS standardized amount, we are not proposing a similar
adjustment to the national capital Federal rate (or to the hospital-
specific rates).
VII. Proposed Changes for Hospitals Excluded From the IPPS
A. Proposed Rate-of-Increase in Payments To Excluded Hospitals for FY
2018
Certain hospitals excluded from a prospective payment system,
including children's hospitals, 11 cancer hospitals, and hospitals
located outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico (that is, hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa) receive payment for
inpatient hospital services they furnish on the basis of reasonable
costs, subject to a rate-of-increase ceiling. A per discharge limit
(the target amount as defined in Sec. 413.40(a) of the regulations) is
set for each hospital based on the hospital's own cost experience in
its base year, and updated annually by a rate-of-increase percentage.
For each cost reporting period, the updated target amount is multiplied
by total Medicare discharges during that period and applies as an
aggregate upper limit (the ceiling as defined in Sec. 413.40(a)) of
Medicare reimbursement for total inpatient operating costs for a
hospital's cost reporting period. In accordance with Sec. 403.752(a)
of the regulations, religious nonmedical health care institutions
(RNHCIs) also are subject to the rate-of-increase limits established
under Sec. 413.40 of the regulations discussed previously.
As explained in the FY 2006 IPPS final rule (70 FR 47396 through
47398), beginning with FY 2006, we have used the percentage increase in
the IPPS operating market basket to update the target amounts for
children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, and RNHCIs. Consistent with
Sec. Sec. 412.23(g), 413.40(a)(2)(ii)(A), and 413.40(c)(3)(viii), we
also have used the percentage increase in the IPPS operating market
basket to update the target amounts for short-term acute care hospitals
located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands,
and American Samoa. In the FYs 2014 and 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules
(78 FR 50747 through 50748 and 79 FR 50156 through 50157,
respectively), we adopted a policy of using the percentage increase in
the FY
[[Page 20004]]
2010-based IPPS operating market basket to update the target amounts
for FY 2014 and subsequent fiscal years for children's hospitals,
cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term acute care hospitals located
in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and
American Samoa. However, as discussed in section IV. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise and rebase the IPPS
operating market basket to a 2014 base year. Therefore, we are
proposing to use the percentage increase in the 2014-based IPPS
operating market basket to update the target amounts for children's
hospitals, the 11 cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term acute care
hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa for FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal
years. Accordingly, for FY 2018, the rate-of-increase percentage to be
applied to the target amount for these children's hospitals, cancer
hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term acute care hospitals located in the
U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American
Samoa would be the FY 2018 percentage increase in the 2014-based IPPS
operating market basket. Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s 2016
fourth quarter forecast, for this proposed rule, we estimate that the
2014-based IPPS operating market basket update for FY 2018 would be 2.9
percent (that is, the estimate of the market basket rate-of-increase).
We are proposing that if more recent data become available for the
final rule, we would use them to calculate the IPPS operating market
basket update for FY 2018.
In addition, as discussed in section VIII.J. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, as originally enacted section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of
the Act established an IPPS-excluded category of hospitals that
experience extended average inpatient length-of-stays, which are known
as LTCHs under the Medicare program. Historically, section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act consisted of two subclauses (I) and (II)
(that is, sections 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) and (d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the
Act), and the two categories of hospitals were generally referred to as
``subclause (I)'' and ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs. Section 15008 of the
21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255) amended section 1886(d)(1)(B)
of the Act by redesignating the ``subclause (II) LTCH'' provision in
section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act to section 1886(d)(1)(B)(vi)
of the Act. In addition, subsection (b) of section 15008 of Public Law
114-255 specifies that, for cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2015, hospitals classified under section
1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act are not subject to section 1886(m) of the
Act, which sets forth the LTCH PPS. Section 15008(c) further specifies
that, for cost reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2015,
payment for inpatient operating costs for such hospitals is to be made
as described in 42 CFR 412.526(c)(3), and payment for capital costs is
to be made as described in 42 CFR 412.526(c)(4). In order to implement
these requirements, we are proposing to amend Sec. 412.23 to codify
the redesignation of such hospitals from section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II)
of the Act to new section 1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act (which we are
now referring to as ``long-term care neoplastic disease hospitals'')
and the statutory payment requirements for inpatient operating and
capital costs. (For additional information on ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs,
including the statutory criteria and the establishment of the payment
adjustment under Sec. 412.526, and our proposed changes to Sec.
412.23 to implement the provisions of section 15008 of Public Law 114-
255, we refer readers to section VIII.J. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.)
Under the redesignation of subclause (II) LTCHs to long-term care
neoplastic disease hospitals provided by section 15008 of Public Law
114-255 (described above), the statute specifies that payment for
inpatient operating costs shall continue to be made on a reasonable
cost basis in the manner provided in Sec. 412.526(c)(3) of the
regulations. Section 412.526(c)(3) provides that the hospital's
Medicare allowable net inpatient operating costs for that period are
paid on a reasonable cost basis, subject to that hospital's ceiling, as
determined under Sec. 412.526(c)(1), for that period. Under section
412.526(c)(1), for each cost reporting period, the ceiling was
determined by multiplying the updated target amount, as defined in
Sec. 412.526(c)(2), for that period by the number of Medicare
discharges paid during that period. Section 412.526(c)(2)(i) describes
the method for determining the target amount for cost reporting periods
beginning during FY 2015. Section 412.526(c)(2)(ii) specifies that, for
cost reporting periods beginning during fiscal years after FY 2015, the
target amount will equal the hospital's target amount for the previous
cost reporting period updated by the applicable annual rate-of-increase
percentage specified in Sec. 413.40(c)(3) for the subject cost
reporting period (79 FR 50197).
For FY 2018, in accordance with proposed Sec. 412.23(j)(2) and
existing Sec. 412.526(c)(2)(ii) of the regulations, we are proposing
that, for cost reporting periods beginning during FY 2018, the update
to the target amount for long-term care neoplastic disease hospitals
(that is, hospitals described under proposed Sec. 412.23(j)) would be
the applicable annual rate-of-increase percentage specified in Sec.
413.40(c)(3) for FY 2018, which would be equal to the percentage
increase projected by the hospital market basket index, which, in this
proposed rule, is estimated to be the percentage increase in the
proposed 2014-based IPPS operating market basket (that is, the estimate
of the market basket rate-of-increase). Accordingly, for this proposed
rule, the proposed update to a long-term care neoplastic disease
hospital's target amount for FY 2018 is 2.9 percent, which is based on
IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s 2016 fourth quarter forecast. Furthermore,
we are proposing that if more recent data become available for the
final rule, we would use that updated data to calculate the IPPS
operating market basket update for FY 2018.
B. Proposed Changes to Hospital-Within-Hospital Regulations
On September 1, 1994, we published regulations governing hospitals-
within-hospitals (HwHs) to address inappropriate Medicare payments to
LTCHs that were effectively units of other hospitals (59 FR 45330).
There was concern that the LTCH HwH model was being used by some acute
care hospitals paid under the IPPS as a way of inappropriately
receiving higher payments for a subset of their cases. Moreover, we
stated that the IPPS-exclusion of long-term care ``units'' may be
inconsistent with the statutory scheme, which does not provide for the
exclusion from the IPPS of long-term care units.
Therefore, we codified the HwH regulations at 42 CFR 412.23
(currently at Sec. 412.22(e)) for an LTCH HwH that is co-located with
another hospital. A co-located hospital is a hospital that occupies
space in a building also used by another hospital or in one or more
separate buildings located on the same campus as buildings used by
another hospital. The regulations at Sec. 412.22(e) required that, to
be excluded from the IPPS, long-term care HwHs must have a separate
governing body, a chief medical officer, medical staff, and a chief
executive officer from that of the hospital with which it is co-
located. In addition, the long-term care HwH must have met either of
the following two criteria: The HwH must perform certain specified
basic hospital functions on its
[[Page 20005]]
own and not receive them from the host hospital or a third entity that
controls both hospitals; or the HwH must receive at least 75 percent of
its inpatients from sources other than the co-located hospital. A third
option was added to the regulations on September 1, 1995 (60 FR 45778)
that allowed long-term care HwHs to demonstrate their separateness by
showing that the cost of the services that the hospital obtains under
contracts or other agreements with the co-located hospital or a third
entity that controls both hospitals is no more than 15 percent of the
hospital's total inpatient operating cost. In 1997, we extended
application of the HwH regulations at Sec. 412.22 to all
classifications of IPPS-excluded hospitals. Therefore, effective for
cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 1997,
psychiatric, rehabilitation, cancer, and children's hospitals that are
co-located with another hospital also are generally required to meet
the ``separateness'' criteria at Sec. 412.22(e). In addition, a
``grandfathering'' provision (that is, hospitals that were IPPS-
excluded HwHs before October 1, 1995 are not required to comply with
the separateness and control regulations so long as they continue to
operate under the same terms and conditions) was added to the
regulations at Sec. 412.22(f). We later modified the grandfathering
provision to allow for a grandfathered hospital to make specified
changes (for example increasing the number of beds) during particular
timeframes, which vary depending on the change the hospital had made.
Below we discuss our FY 2018 proposals to make several changes to our
HwH regulations.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise our HwH
regulations so that the separateness and control requirements would
only apply to IPPS-excluded HwHs that are co-located with IPPS
hospitals. Under this proposal, any hospital that occupies a building
also used by another hospital, or in one or more separate buildings
located on the same campus as buildings used by another hospital would
remain, by definition, an HwH. However, the separateness and control
requirements for IPPS-excluded HwHs would apply only when the IPPS-
excluded hospital is co-located with an IPPS hospital. This proposal is
premised on the belief that the policy concerns that underlie our
existing HwH regulations (that is, inappropriate patient shifting and
hospitals acting as illegal de facto units) are sufficiently moderated
in situations where IPPS-excluded hospitals are co-located with each
other but not IPPS hospitals, in large part due to the payment system
changes that have occurred over the intervening years for IPPS-excluded
hospitals. For example, LTCHs, inpatient rehabilitation facilities
(IRFs) and inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs) are no longer paid
on a reasonable cost-basis as was the case when HwH regulations were
adopted. Currently, LTCHs, IRFs, and IPFs are each paid under their own
respective PPS, and those payment systems include policies based on the
types of patients they admit for treatment. For example, to be
classified for payment under Medicare's IRF PPS, at least 60 percent of
a facility's total inpatient population must require inpatient
hospital-level treatment for one or more of 13 conditions listed in 42
CFR 412.29(b)(2), and recent statutory changes require that specified
patient-level criteria be met for LTCH discharges to be paid based on
the standard Federal payment rate under the LTCH PPS. For these
reasons, we are proposing to revise our HwH regulations so that the
separateness and control requirements would only apply to IPPS-excluded
HwHs that are co-located with IPPS hospitals; we are proposing to
revise the introductory language of Sec. 412.22(e) to reflect this
proposed change. That is, the introductory language of Sec. 412.22(e)
would state that, beginning on or after October 1, 2017, an HwH that is
excluded from the IPPS that occupies space in a building also used by
an IPPS hospital, or in one or more separate buildings located on the
same campus as buildings used by an IPPS hospital, must meet the
criteria specified in Sec. 412.22 (e)(1) through (e)(3) in order to be
excluded from the IPPS. While we are not proposing changes to our HwH
regulations for co-located IPPS and IPPS-excluded hospitals, we are
seeking public comments on the issue of whether the separateness and
control requirements are still necessary for IPPS-excluded HwHs that
are co-located with IPPS hospitals, which we would consider for
potential future rulemaking.
In this proposed rule, we also are proposing to revise the
requirements at Sec. 412.22(e)(1)(v), which outlines performance of
basic hospital functions, to make them effective for fiscal years prior
to FY 2018. We believe that the requirements in paragraph (e)(1)(v)(A)
are generally duplicative of CMS' interpretative guidance that relate
to a number of hospital conditions of participation (CoPs) that are in
the regulations (for example, 42 CFR 482.21 through 482.27, 482.30,
482.42, 482.43, and 482.45). As such, we are proposing to remove the
overlap between the HwH regulations and the CoP Interpretative Guidance
from the regulations by sunsetting the requirements in paragraph
(e)(1)(v)(A) of Sec. 412.22. (The COP Interpretive Guidance for
hospitals can be found in Appendix A of the State Operations Manual
(CMS Pub. 100-07).) In addition, we are proposing to remove the
requirements in paragraph (e)(1)(v)(B) of Sec. 412.22 because we
believe these payment requirements could be interpreted to conflict
with the requirements under the hospital CoPs, which do not provide for
a minimum cost threshold regarding the services the HwH obtains from
the hospital with which it is occupying space. We do not believe that
this proposed revision would result in a practical change to how HwHs
are currently operated because the performance of basic hospital
functions requirements at Sec. 412.22(e)(1)(v) are currently addressed
under CMS' Interpretative Guidance for the hospital CoPs. In addition,
we do not believe, at this time, that there are payment policy concerns
that would justify imposition of regulatory requirements on the
performance of basic hospital functions for HwHs that are more
stringent than what is addressed under the Interpretative Guidance for
the hospital CoPs.
We welcome public comment on these proposals.
C. Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
1. Background
Section 1820 of the Act provides for the establishment of Medicare
Rural Hospital Flexibility Programs (MRHFPs), under which individual
States may designate certain facilities as critical access hospitals
(CAHs). Facilities that are so designated and meet the CAH conditions
of participation under 42 CFR part 485, subpart F, will be certified as
CAHs by CMS. Regulations governing payments to CAHs for services to
Medicare beneficiaries are located in 42 CFR part 413.
2. Frontier Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP) Demonstration
Section 123 of the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers
Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110-275), as amended by section 3126 of the
Affordable Care Act, authorizes a demonstration project to allow
eligible entities to develop and test new models for the delivery of
health care services in eligible counties in order to improve access to
and better integrate the delivery of acute care, extended care
[[Page 20006]]
and other health care services to Medicare beneficiaries. The
demonstration is titled ``Demonstration Project on Community Health
Integration Models in Certain Rural Counties,'' and is commonly known
as the Frontier Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP)
demonstration.
The authorizing statute states the eligibility criteria for
entities to be able to participate in the demonstration. An eligible
entity, as defined in section 123(d)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-275, as
amended, is an MRHFP grantee under section 1820(g) of the Act (that is,
a CAH); and is located in a State in which at least 65 percent of the
counties in the State are counties that have 6 or less residents per
square mile.
The authorizing statute stipulates several other requirements for
the demonstration. Section 123(d)(2)(B) of Public Law 110-275, as
amended, limits participation in the demonstration to eligible entities
in not more than 4 States. Section 123(f)(1) of Public Law 110-275
requires the demonstration project to be conducted for a 3-year period.
In addition, section 123(g)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-275 requires that
the demonstration be budget neutral. Specifically, this provision
states that in conducting the demonstration project, the Secretary
shall ensure that the aggregate payments made by the Secretary do not
exceed the amount which the Secretary estimates would have been paid if
the demonstration project under the section were not implemented.
Furthermore, section 123(i) of Public Law 110-275 states that the
Secretary may waive such requirements of titles XVIII and XIX of the
Act as may be necessary and appropriate for the purpose of carrying out
the demonstration project, thus allowing the waiver of Medicare payment
rules encompassed in the demonstration.
In January 2014, CMS released a request for applications (RFA) for
the FCHIP demonstration. Using 2013 data from the U.S. Census Bureau,
CMS identified Alaska, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, and Wyoming as
meeting the statutory eligibility requirement for participation in the
demonstration. The RFA solicited CAHs in these five States to
participate in the demonstration, stating that participation would be
limited to CAHs in four of the States. To apply, CAHs were required to
meet the eligibility requirements in the authorizing legislation, and,
in addition, to describe a proposal to enhance health-related services
that would complement those currently provided by the CAH and better
serve the community's needs. In addition, in the RFA, CMS interpreted
the eligible entity definition in the statute as meaning a CAH that
receives funding through the MHRFP. The RFA identified four
interventions, under which specific waivers of Medicare payment rules
would allow for enhanced payment for telehealth, skilled nursing
facility/nursing facility beds, ambulance services, and home health
services, respectively. These waivers were formulated with the goal of
increasing access to care with no net increase in costs.
Ten CAHs were selected for participation in the demonstration,
which started on August 1, 2016. These CAHs are located in Montana,
Nevada and North Dakota, and they are participating in three of the
four interventions identified in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
Eight CAHs are participating in the telehealth intervention, three CAHs
are participating in the skilled nursing facility/nursing facility bed
intervention, and two CAHs are participating in the ambulance services
intervention. Each CAH is allowed to participate in more than one of
the interventions. None of the selected CAHs are participants in the
home health intervention, which was the fourth intervention proposed in
the RFA.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57064 through
57065), we finalized a policy to address the budget neutrality
requirement for the demonstration. As explained in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, we based our selection of CAHs for participation
with the goal of maintaining the budget neutrality of the demonstration
on its own terms (that is, the demonstration will produce savings from
reduced transfers and admissions to other health care providers, thus
offsetting any increase in payments resulting from the demonstration).
However, because of the small size of this demonstration and
uncertainty associated with projected Medicare utilization and costs,
we adopted a contingency plan to ensure that the budget neutrality
requirement in section 123 of Public Law 110-275 is met. If analysis of
claims data for Medicare beneficiaries receiving services at each of
the participating CAHs, as well as from other data sources, including
cost reports for these CAHs, shows that increases in Medicare payments
under the demonstration during the 3-year period are not sufficiently
offset by reductions elsewhere, we will recoup the additional
expenditures attributable to the demonstration through a reduction in
payments to all CAHs nationwide. Because of the small scale of the
demonstration, we indicated that we did not believe it would be
feasible to implement budget neutrality by reducing payments to only
the participating CAHs. Therefore, in the event that this demonstration
is found to result in aggregate payments in excess of the amount that
would have been paid if this demonstration were not implemented, we
will comply with the budget neutrality requirement by reducing payments
to all CAHs, not just those participating in the demonstration. We
stated that we believe it is appropriate to make any payment reductions
across all CAHs because the FCHIP demonstration is specifically
designed to test innovations that affect delivery of services by the
CAH provider category. We explained our belief that the language of the
statutory budget neutrality requirement at section 123(g)(1)(B) of
Public Law 110-275 permits the agency to implement the budget
neutrality provision in this manner. The statutory language merely
refers to ensuring that aggregate payments made by the Secretary do not
exceed the amount which the Secretary estimates would have been paid if
the demonstration project was not implemented, and does not identify
the range across which aggregate payments must be held equal.
Based on actuarial analysis using cost report settlements for FYs
2013 and 2014, the demonstration is projected to satisfy the budget
neutrality requirement and likely yield a total net savings. For the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we estimated that the total impact of
the payment recoupment would be no greater than 0.03 percent of CAHs'
total Medicare payments within one fiscal year (that is, Medicare Part
A and Part B). The final budget neutrality estimates for the FCHIP
demonstration will be based on the demonstration period, which is
August 1, 2016 through July 31, 2019.
The demonstration is projected to impact payments to participating
CAHs under both Medicare Part A and Part B. As stated in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in the event the demonstration is found not
to have been budget neutral, any excess costs will be recouped over a
period of 3 cost reporting years, beginning in CY 2020. The 3-year
period for recoupment will allow for a reasonable timeframe for the
payment reduction and to minimize any impact on CAHs' operations.
Therefore, because any reduction to CAH payments in order to recoup
excess costs under the demonstration will not begin until CY 2020, this
policy will have no
[[Page 20007]]
impact for any national payment system for FY 2018.
3. Physician Certification Requirement for Payment of Inpatient CAH
Services Under Medicare Part A
a. Background
For inpatient CAH services to be payable under Medicare Part A,
section 1814(a)(8) of the Act requires that a physician certify that
the individual may reasonably be expected to be discharged or
transferred to a hospital within 96 hours after admission to the CAH.
The regulations implementing this statutory requirement are located at
42 CFR 424.15.
We most recently addressed the 96-hour certification requirement in
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50163 through 50165). In
that rule, we finalized a policy regarding the timing of this physician
certification requirement. We revised the regulations such that all
physician certification requirements must be completed, signed, and
documented in the medical record no later than 1 day before the date on
which the claim for payment for the inpatient CAH service is submitted.
This policy change was effective October 1, 2014. Prior to that
revision, our policy, which was in effect during FY 2014, had been that
the certification began with the order for inpatient admission and was
required to be completed, signed, and documented in the medical record
prior to discharge.
In addition to this change regarding the timing of the 96-hour
certification requirement, we also provided a general review of this
certification requirement in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79
FR 50165). We stated that because the statutory requirement at section
1814(a)(8) of the Act is based on an expectation, if a physician
certifies, in good faith, that an individual may reasonably be expected
to be discharged or transferred to a hospital within 96 hours after
admission to the CAH and then something unforeseen occurs that causes
the individual to stay longer at the CAH, Medicare will pay for the
costs of treating that patient and there would not be a problem with
regard to the CAH designation as long as that individual's stay does
not cause the CAH to exceed its 96-hour annual average CoP requirement
under 42 CFR 485.620(b) (which we note is separate and distinct from
the 96-hour physician certification requirement). However, if a
physician cannot in good faith certify that an individual may
reasonably be expected to be discharged or transferred within 96 hours
after admission to the CAH, the CAH will not receive Medicare Part A
payment for any portion of that individual's inpatient stay (79 FR
50165). We further noted that time as an outpatient at the CAH is not
included in applying the 96-hour requirement, nor does time in a CAH
swing bed, which is being used to provide skilled nursing services,
count towards the 96-hour requirement. The clock for the 96 hours only
begins once the individual is admitted to the CAH as an inpatient.
b. Notice Regarding Changes to Instructions for the Review of the CAH
96-Hour Certification Requirement
Based on feedback from stakeholders, we have reviewed the CAH 96-
hour certification requirement to determine if there are ways to reduce
its burden on providers. The requirement is statutory and cannot be
modified through regulation. However, we do have discretion to
determine how CMS will prioritize monitoring and enforcement of the
policy. In order to minimize the burden of documentation submission
requirements for CAHs with respect to the 96-hour certification
requirement, in this proposed rule, we are providing notice that CMS
will direct Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs), Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs), the Supplemental Medical Review
Contractor (SMRC), and Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs) to make the
CAH 96-hour certification requirement a low priority for medical record
reviews conducted on or after October 1, 2017. This means that, absent
concerns of probable fraud, waste, or abuse with respect to the 96-hour
certification requirement, these contractors will not conduct medical
record reviews. Reviews by other entities, including, but not limited
to, Zone Program Integrity Contractors (ZPICs), the Office of Inspector
General, and the Department of Justice will continue as appropriate.
Quality reviews and automated reviews (for example, those reviews that
do not involve medical records) will also continue as appropriate.
In the past, RACs have never performed medical record reviews for
CAH claims, and we will not approve medical record review of CAHs for
only the 96-hour certification requirement. We are providing notice
that, beginning October 1, 2017, CMS will direct the QIOs, MACs, and
the SMRC to make medical record review of CAHs for only the 96-hour
certification requirement a low priority. QIOs and MACs may continue to
conduct medical record review of CAH claims for the purposes of
verifying compliance with other requirements, such as beneficiary
complaints, quality of care reviews, higher weighted DRG reviews,
readmission reviews, and the requirement that procedures be medically
necessary.
Under the revised instructions to contractors, CAHs will not
receive any medical record requests from MACs, RACs, QIO, or SMRCs
related to the 96-hour certification unless CMS or its contractors find
evidence of gaming or a failure to comply with CMS' provider screening
and revalidation requirements or if medical review is needed for other
issues. If this occurs, the MACs, RACs, QIO, or SMRCs could also review
the 96-hour certification requirement. In addition, if data analysis or
other information indicates that possible fraud exists, CAHs may also
receive medical record requests for the 96-hour certification
requirement.
VIII. Proposed Changes to the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective
Payment System (LTCH PPS) for FY 2018
A. Background of the LTCH PPS
1. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
Section 123 of the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP (State Children's
Health Insurance Program) Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA)
(Pub. L. 106-113) as amended by section 307(b) of the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000
(BIPA) (Pub. L. 106-554) provides for payment for both the operating
and capital-related costs of hospital inpatient stays in long-term care
hospitals (LTCHs) under Medicare Part A based on prospectively set
rates. The Medicare prospective payment system (PPS) for LTCHs applies
to hospitals that are described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the
Act, effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October
1, 2002.
Section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) of the Act originally defined an LTCH
as a hospital which has an average inpatient length of stay (as
determined by the Secretary) of greater than 25 days. Section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act also provided an alternative
definition of LTCHs: specifically, a hospital that first received
payment under section 1886(d) of the Act in 1986 and had an average
inpatient length of stay (as determined by the Secretary of Health and
Human Services (the Secretary)) of greater than 20 days and had 80
percent or more of its annual Medicare inpatient discharges with a
principal diagnosis that reflected a finding of neoplastic disease in
the 12-month cost reporting period ending in FY 1997. However, as
discussed below, section 15008 of the 21st Century Cures
[[Page 20008]]
Act (Pub. L. 114-255) amended section 1886 of the Act to exclude former
``subclause II'' LTCHs from payment under the LTCH PPS and created a
new category of IPPS-excluded hospitals (long-term Care neoplastic
disease hospitals) for hospitals that were formally classified as
``subclause (II)'' LTCHs.
Section 123 of the BBRA requires the PPS for LTCHs to be a ``per
discharge'' system with a diagnosis-related group (DRG) based patient
classification system that reflects the differences in patient
resources and costs in LTCHs.
Section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA, among other things, mandates that
the Secretary shall examine, and may provide for, adjustments to
payments under the LTCH PPS, including adjustments to DRG weights, area
wage adjustments, geographic reclassification, outliers, updates, and a
disproportionate share adjustment.
In the August 30, 2002 Federal Register, we issued a final rule
that implemented the LTCH PPS authorized under the BBRA and BIPA (67 FR
55954). For the initial implementation of the LTCH PPS (FYs 2003
through FY 2007), the system used information from LTCH patient records
to classify patients into distinct long-term care diagnosis-related
groups (LTC-DRGs) based on clinical characteristics and expected
resource needs. Beginning in FY 2008, we adopted the Medicare severity
long-term care diagnosis-related groups (MS-LTC-DRGs) as the patient
classification system used under the LTCH PPS. Payments are calculated
for each MS-LTC-DRG and provisions are made for appropriate payment
adjustments. Payment rates under the LTCH PPS are updated annually and
published in the Federal Register.
The LTCH PPS replaced the reasonable cost-based payment system
under the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA)
(Pub. L. 97-248) for payments for inpatient services provided by an
LTCH with a cost reporting period beginning on or after October 1,
2002. (The regulations implementing the TEFRA reasonable cost-based
payment provisions are located at 42 CFR part 413.) With the
implementation of the PPS for acute care hospitals authorized by the
Social Security Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98-21), which added section
1886(d) to the Act, certain hospitals, including LTCHs, were excluded
from the PPS for acute care hospitals and were paid their reasonable
costs for inpatient services subject to a per discharge limitation or
target amount under the TEFRA system. For each cost reporting period, a
hospital-specific ceiling on payments was determined by multiplying the
hospital's updated target amount by the number of total current year
Medicare discharges. (Generally, in this section of the preamble of
this proposed rule, when we refer to discharges, we describe Medicare
discharges.) The August 30, 2002 final rule further details the payment
policy under the TEFRA system (67 FR 55954).
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we provided for a 5-year
transition period from payments under the TEFRA system to payments
under the LTCH PPS. During this 5-year transition period, an LTCH's
total payment under the PPS was based on an increasing percentage of
the Federal rate with a corresponding decrease in the percentage of the
LTCH PPS payment that is based on reasonable cost concepts, unless an
LTCH made a one-time election to be paid based on 100 percent of the
Federal rate. Beginning with LTCHs' cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2006, total LTCH PPS payments are based on 100
percent of the Federal rate.
In addition, in the August 30, 2002 final rule, we presented an in-
depth discussion of the LTCH PPS, including the patient classification
system, relative weights, payment rates, additional payments, and the
budget neutrality requirements mandated by section 123 of the BBRA. The
same final rule that established regulations for the LTCH PPS under 42
CFR part 412, subpart O, also contained LTCH provisions related to
covered inpatient services, limitation on charges to beneficiaries,
medical review requirements, furnishing of inpatient hospital services
directly or under arrangement, and reporting and recordkeeping
requirements. We refer readers to the August 30, 2002 final rule for a
comprehensive discussion of the research and data that supported the
establishment of the LTCH PPS (67 FR 55954).
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49601 through
49623), we implemented the provisions of the Pathway for Sustainable
Growth Rate (SGR) Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67), which mandated
the application of the ``site neutral'' payment rate under the LTCH PPS
for discharges that do not meet the statutory criteria for exclusion
beginning in FY 2016. For cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2015, discharges that do not meet certain statutory criteria
for exclusion are paid based on the site neutral payment rate.
Discharges that do meet the statutory criteria continue to receive
payment based on the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate. For more
information on the statutory requirements of the Pathway for SGR Reform
Act of 2013, we refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(80 FR 49601 through 49623).
Section 231 of Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-
113) amended section 1886(m)(6) of the Act by revising subparagraph
(A)(i) and adding new subparagraph (E), which established a temporary
exception to the site neutral payment rate for certain severe wound
care discharges occurring prior to January 1, 2017, from LTCHs
identified by the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 that are located in a rural area (as defined in
section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the Act) or treated as being so located in
accordance with section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act.
We implemented the provisions of section 231 of Public Law 114-113,
and amended our regulations at 42 CFR 412.522 to reflect those
policies, in an interim final rule with comment period (IFC) that
appeared in the Federal Register on April 21, 2016 (81 FR 23428 through
23438). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57068), we
finalized the provisions of the April 21, 2016 IFC and made limited
modifications of those policies set forth in the April 21, 2016 IFC by
revising the definitions of a ``wound with morbid obesity'' and an
``infected wound,'' and adding additional ICD-10 diagnosis codes to our
list of such codes to identify cases that meet the established
definition of a ``severe wound'' for the six severe wound categories
other than the categories of a ``wound with morbid obesity'' and an
``infected wound.'' The provisions implementing section 231 of Public
Law 114-113 were effective for LTCH discharges from qualifying LTCHs
for discharges on or after April 21, 2016, through December 31, 2016.
For a full discussion of these provisions, we refer readers to the
April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23428) and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 57068 through 57075).
The 21st Century Cures Act (``the Cures Act'') (Pub. L. 114-255)
contains several provisions that affect the LTCH PPS. Section 15004 of
Public Law 114-255 contains provisions that change the moratorium on
increasing the number of beds in existing LTCHs and LTCH satellite
facilities. We discuss our implementation of the provisions of section
15004 in section VIII.H. of the preamble of this proposed rule. The
provisions of section 15004 also included a change to the payment
methodology for high-cost outlier payments made to LTCHs. We discuss
our proposals related to high-cost
[[Page 20009]]
outlier payments in section V.D. of the Addendum of this proposed rule.
The provisions of section 15006 of Public Law 114-255 extended various
moratoria on the implementation of the 25-percent payment adjustment
threshold policy. We discuss our proposals related to the provisions of
section 15006 in section VIII.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The provisions of section 15007 of Public Law 114-255 revised the
requirements of the average length-of-stay criterion for LTCH
classification. We discuss our proposals related to the provisions of
section 15007 in section VIII.I. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The provisions of section 15008 of Public Law 114-255 changed the
classification of certain hospitals. We discuss our proposals related
to the provisions of section 15008 in section VIII.J. of the preamble
of this proposed rule. The provisions of section 15009 of Public Law
114-255 contain a temporary exception to the site neutral payment rate
for certain spinal cord hospitals. We discuss our proposals related to
the provisions of section 15009 in section VIII.E. of the preamble of
this proposed rule. The provisions of section 15010 of Public Law 114-
255 contain a temporary exception to the site neural payment rate for
certain wound care discharges from certain LTCHs. We discuss our
proposals related to the provisions of section 15010 in section VIII.F.
of the preamble of this proposed rule. In addition, we are proposing to
amend 42 CFR 412.500 to include Public Law 114-255 as one of the bases
and scope of subpart O of part 412.
2. Criteria for Classification as an LTCH
a. Classification as an LTCH
Under the regulations at Sec. 412.23(e)(1), to qualify to be paid
under the LTCH PPS, a hospital must have a provider agreement with
Medicare. Furthermore, Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i), which implements section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act, requires that a hospital have an average
Medicare inpatient length of stay of greater than 25 days to be paid
under the LTCH PPS. Alternatively, existing Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii)
states that, for cost reporting periods beginning on or after August 5,
1997, a hospital that was first excluded from the PPS in 1986 and can
demonstrate that at least 80 percent of its annual Medicare inpatient
discharges in the 12-month cost reporting period ending in FY 1997 have
a principal diagnosis that reflects a finding of neoplastic disease
must have an average inpatient length of stay for all patients,
including both Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients, of greater than 20
days (referred to as ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs). Under our proposed
changes to Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii) of the regulations to implement the
provisions of section 15008 of Public Law 114-255, we are proposing to
add a sunset date to subclause (II) LTCHs (which have become a new
category of IPPS-excluded hospitals known as long-term care neoplastic
disease hospitals). Long-term care neoplastic disease hospitals are
discussed in greater detail in section VIII.J. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. In addition, in section VIII.I. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss the proposed changes to the calculation of
the greater than 25-day average length-of-stay requirement provided by
the provisions of section 15008 of Pub. L. 114-255.)
b. Hospitals Excluded From the LTCH PPS
The following hospitals are paid under special payment provisions,
as described in Sec. 412.22(c) and, therefore, are not subject to the
LTCH PPS rules:
Veterans Administration hospitals.
Hospitals that are reimbursed under State cost control
systems approved under 42 CFR part 403.
Hospitals that are reimbursed in accordance with
demonstration projects authorized under section 402(a) of the Social
Security Amendments of 1967 (Pub. L. 90-248) (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1),
section 222(a) of the Social Security Amendments of 1972 (Pub. L. 92-
603) (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1 (note)) (Statewide all-payer systems, subject
to the rate-of-increase test at section 1814(b) of the Act), or section
3201 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148
(42 U.S.C. 1315a).
Nonparticipating hospitals furnishing emergency services
to Medicare beneficiaries.
3. Limitation on Charges to Beneficiaries
In the August 30, 2002 final rule, we presented an in-depth
discussion of beneficiary liability under the LTCH PPS (67 FR 55974
through 55975). This discussion was further clarified in the RY 2005
LTCH PPS final rule (69 FR 25676). In keeping with those discussions,
if the Medicare payment to the LTCH is the full LTC-DRG payment amount,
consistent with other established hospital prospective payment systems,
Sec. 412.507 currently provides that an LTCH may not bill a Medicare
beneficiary for more than the deductible and coinsurance amounts as
specified under Sec. Sec. 409.82, 409.83, and 409.87 and for items and
services specified under Sec. 489.30(a). However, under the LTCH PPS,
Medicare will only pay for days for which the beneficiary has coverage
until the short-stay outlier (SSO) threshold is exceeded. If the
Medicare payment was for a SSO case (Sec. 412.529), and that payment
was less than the full LTC-DRG payment amount because the beneficiary
had insufficient remaining Medicare days, the LTCH is currently also
permitted to charge the beneficiary for services delivered on those
uncovered days (Sec. 412.507). In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(80 FR 49623), we amended our regulations to expressly limit the
charges that may be imposed on beneficiaries whose discharges are paid
at the site neutral payment rate under the LTCH PPS.
In section VII.G. of the preamble of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57102), we also amended the existing regulations
relating to the limitation on charges to expressly address beneficiary
charges for LTCH services provided by subclause (II) LTCHs as part of
our refinement of the payment adjustment for subclause II LTCHs under
Sec. 412.526. We also amended the regulations under Sec. 412.507 to
clarify our existing policy that blended payments made to an LTCH
during its transitional period (that is, payment for discharges
occurring in cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2016 or 2017) are
considered to be site neutral payment rate payments.
4. Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) and Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Compliance
Claims submitted to Medicare must comply with both the
Administrative Simplification Compliance Act (ASCA) (Pub. L. 107-105),
and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA) (Pub. L. 104-191). Section 3 of the ASCA generally requires
that the Medicare Program deny payment under Part A or Part B for any
expenses incurred for items or services for which a claim is submitted
other than in an electronic form specified by the Secretary. Section
1862(h) of the Act (as added by section 3(a) of the ASCA) provides that
the Secretary shall waive such denial in two specific types of cases,
and may also waive such denial in such unusual cases as the Secretary
finds appropriate (68 FR 48805). Section 3 of the ASCA operates in the
context of the HIPAA regulations, which include, among other
provisions, the transactions and code sets standards requirements
codified under 45 CFR parts 160 and 162 (generally known as the
Transactions Rule). The Transactions Rule requires covered
[[Page 20010]]
entities, including covered health care providers, to conduct certain
electronic health care transactions according to the applicable
transactions and code sets standards.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has a number of
initiatives designed to encourage and support the adoption of health
information technology (health IT) and promote nationwide health
information exchange to improve health care. The Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) leads these efforts
in collaboration with other agencies, including CMS and the Office of
the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE). Through a
number of activities, including several open government initiatives,
HHS is promoting the adoption of health IT products, including
electronic health record (EHR) technology certified under the ONC
Health IT Certification Program (//www.healthit.gov/policy-researchers-implementers/about-onc-health-it-certification-program)
developed to support secure, interoperable, health information
exchange. We believe that the use of certified EHRs by LTCHs (and other
types of providers that are ineligible for the Medicare and Medicaid
EHR Incentive Programs) can effectively and efficiently help providers
improve internal care delivery practices, support the exchange of
important information across care partners and during transitions of
care, and enable the reporting of electronically specified clinical
quality measures (eCQMs) (as described elsewhere in this proposed
rule). In 2015, ONC released a document entitled ``Connecting Health
and Care for the Nation: A Shared Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap''
(available at: //www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/hie-interoperability/nationwide-interoperability-roadmap-final-version-1.0.pdf). In the near term, the Roadmap focuses on actions that will
enable individuals and providers across the care continuum to send,
receive, find, and use a common set of electronic clinical information
at the nationwide level by the end of 2017. The Roadmap's goals also
align with the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of
2014 (Pub. L. 113-185) (IMPACT Act), which requires assessment data to
be standardized and interoperable to allow for exchange of the data.
Moreover, the vision described in the Roadmap significantly expands the
types of electronic health information, information sources, and
information users well beyond clinical information derived from EHRs.
The Roadmap identifies four critical pathways that health IT
stakeholders should focus on now in order to create a foundation for
long-term success: (1) Improve technical standards and implementation
guidance for priority data domains and associated elements; (2) rapidly
shift and align Federal, State, and commercial payment policies from
fee-for-service to value-based models to stimulate the demand for
interoperability; (3) clarify and align Federal and State privacy and
security requirements that enable interoperability; and (4) align and
promote the use of consistent policies and business practices that
support interoperability and address those that impede
interoperability, in coordination with stakeholders.
In support of the goals of the Roadmap, ONC released the 2017
Interoperability Standards Advisory (ISA) (available at: //www.healthit.gov/standards-advisory), a coordinated catalog of
standards and implementation specifications developed and used to meet
specific interoperability needs. The ISA is intended to serve as an
industry resource to further the use of interoperable electronic health
information exchange.
B. Proposed Medicare Severity Long-Term Care Diagnosis-Related Group
(MS-LTC-DRG) Classifications and Relative Weights for FY 2018
1. Background
Section 123 of the BBRA required that the Secretary implement a PPS
for LTCHs to replace the cost-based payment system under TEFRA. Section
307(b)(1) of the BIPA modified the requirements of section 123 of the
BBRA by requiring that the Secretary examine the feasibility and the
impact of basing payment under the LTCH PPS on the use of existing (or
refined) hospital DRGs that have been modified to account for different
resource use of LTCH patients.
When the LTCH PPS was implemented for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2002, we adopted the same DRG patient
classification system utilized at that time under the IPPS. As a
component of the LTCH PPS, we refer to this patient classification
system as the ``long-term care diagnosis-related groups (LTC-DRGs).''
Although the patient classification system used under both the LTCH PPS
and the IPPS are the same, the relative weights are different. The
established relative weight methodology and data used under the LTCH
PPS result in relative weights under the LTCH PPS that reflect the
differences in patient resource use of LTCH patients, consistent with
section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA (Pub. L. 106-113).
As part of our efforts to better recognize severity of illness
among patients, in the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72
FR 47130), the MS-DRGs and the Medicare severity long-term care
diagnosis-related groups (MS-LTC-DRGs) were adopted under the IPPS and
the LTCH PPS, respectively, effective beginning October 1, 2007 (FY
2008). For a full description of the development, implementation, and
rationale for the use of the MS-DRGs and MS-LTC-DRGs, we refer readers
to the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47141 through
47175 and 47277 through 47299). (We note that, in that same final rule,
we revised the regulations at Sec. 412.503 to specify that for LTCH
discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2007, when applying the
provisions of 42 CFR part 412, subpart O applicable to LTCHs for policy
descriptions and payment calculations, all references to LTC-DRGs would
be considered a reference to MS-LTC-DRGs. For the remainder of this
section, we present the discussion in terms of the current MS-LTC-DRG
patient classification system unless specifically referring to the
previous LTC-DRG patient classification system that was in effect
before October 1, 2007.)
The MS-DRGs adopted in FY 2008 represent an increase in the number
of DRGs by 207 (that is, from 538 to 745) (72 FR 47171). The MS-DRG
classifications are updated annually. There are currently 757 MS-DRG
groupings. For FY 2018, there would be 754 MS-DRG groupings based on
the proposed changes discussed in section II.F. of the preamble of this
FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule. Consistent with section 123 of the
BBRA, as amended by section 307(b)(1) of the BIPA, and Sec. 412.515 of
the regulations, we use information derived from LTCH PPS patient
records to classify LTCH discharges into distinct MS-LTC-DRGs based on
clinical characteristics and estimated resource needs. We then assign
an appropriate weight to the MS-LTC-DRGs to account for the difference
in resource use by patients exhibiting the case complexity and multiple
medical problems characteristic of LTCHs.
In this section of the proposed rule, we provide a general summary
of our existing methodology for determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights under the LTCH PPS.
[[Page 20011]]
In this proposed rule, in general, for FY 2018, we are proposing to
continue to use our existing methodology to determine the proposed MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights (as discussed in greater detail in section
VIII.B.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule). As we established
when we implemented the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure codified
under Sec. 412.522, which began in FY 2016, we are again proposing
that the annual recalibration of the MS-LTC-DRG relative weights would
be determined: (1) Using only data from available LTCH PPS claims that
would have qualified for payment under the new LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate if that rate had been in effect at the time of
discharge when claims data from time periods before the dual rate LTCH
PPS payment structure applies are used to calculate the relative
weights; and (2) using only data from available LTCH PPS claims that
qualify for payment under the new LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate when claims data from time periods after the dual rate LTCH PPS
payment structure applies are used to calculate the relative weights
(80 FR 49624). That is, under our current methodology, our MS-LTC-DRG
relative weight calculations would not use data from cases paid at the
site neutral payment rate under Sec. 412.522(c)(1) or data from cases
that would have been paid at the site neutral payment rate if the dual
rate LTCH PPS payment structure had been in effect at the time of that
discharge. For the remainder of this discussion, we use the phrase
``applicable LTCH cases'' or ``applicable LTCH data'' when referring to
the resulting claims data set used to calculate the relative weights
(as described later in greater detail in section VIII.B.3.c. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). In addition, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to continue to exclude the data from all-inclusive rate
providers and LTCHs paid in accordance with demonstration projects, as
well as any Medicare Advantage claims from the MS-LTC-DRG relative
weight calculations for the reasons discussed in section VIII.B.3.c. of
the preamble of this proposed rule.
Furthermore, for FY 2018, in using data from applicable LTCH cases
to establish MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, we are proposing to continue
to establish low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs (that is, MS-LTC-DRGs with less
than 25 cases) using our quintile methodology in determining the MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights because LTCHs do not typically treat the full
range of diagnoses as do acute care hospitals. Therefore, for purposes
of determining the relative weights for the large number of low-volume
MS-LTC-DRGs, we group all of the low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs into five
quintiles based on average charges per discharge. Then, under our
existing methodology, we account for adjustments made to LTCH PPS
standard Federal payments for short-stay outlier (SSO) cases (that is,
cases where the covered length of stay at the LTCH is less than or
equal to five-sixths of the geometric average length of stay for the
MS-LTC-DRG), and we make adjustments to account for nonmonotonically
increasing weights, when necessary. The methodology is premised on more
severe cases under the MS-LTC-DRG system requiring greater expenditure
of medical care resources and higher average charges such that, in the
severity levels within a base MS-LTC-DRG, the relative weights should
increase monotonically with severity from the lowest to highest
severity level. (We discuss each of these components of our MS-LTC-DRG
relative weight methodology in greater detail in section VIII.B.3.g. of
the preamble of this proposed rule.)
2. Patient Classifications Into MS-LTC-DRGs
a. Background
The MS-DRGs (used under the IPPS) and the MS-LTC-DRGs (used under
the LTCH PPS) are based on the CMS DRG structure. As noted previously
in this section, we refer to the DRGs under the LTCH PPS as MS-LTC-DRGs
although they are structurally identical to the MS-DRGs used under the
IPPS.
The MS-DRGs are organized into 25 major diagnostic categories
(MDCs), most of which are based on a particular organ system of the
body; the remainder involve multiple organ systems (such as MDC 22,
Burns). Within most MDCs, cases are then divided into surgical DRGs and
medical DRGs. Surgical DRGs are assigned based on a surgical hierarchy
that orders operating room (O.R.) procedures or groups of O.R.
procedures by resource intensity. The GROUPER software program does not
recognize all ICD-10-PCS procedure codes as procedures affecting DRG
assignment. That is, procedures that are not surgical (for example,
EKGs), or minor surgical procedures (for example, a biopsy of skin and
subcutaneous tissue (procedure code 0JBH3ZX)) do not affect the MS-LTC-
DRG assignment based on their presence on the claim.
Generally, under the LTCH PPS, a Medicare payment is made at a
predetermined specific rate for each discharge that varies based on the
MS-LTC-DRG to which a beneficiary's discharge is assigned. Cases are
classified into MS-LTC-DRGs for payment based on the following six data
elements:
Principal diagnosis;
Additional or secondary diagnoses;
Surgical procedures;
Age;
Sex; and
Discharge status of the patient.
Currently, for claims submitted using version ASC X12 5010 format,
up to 25 diagnosis codes and 25 procedure codes are considered for an
MS-DRG assignment. This includes one principal diagnosis and up to 24
secondary diagnoses for severity of illness determinations. (For
additional information on the processing of up to 25 diagnosis codes
and 25 procedure codes on hospital inpatient claims, we refer readers
to section II.G.11.c. of the preamble of the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (75 FR 50127).)
Under the HIPAA transactions and code sets regulations at 45 CFR
parts 160 and 162, covered entities must comply with the adopted
transaction standards and operating rules specified in Subparts I
through S of Part 162. Among other requirements, by January 1, 2012,
covered entities were required to use the ASC X12 Standards for
Electronic Data Interchange Technical Report Type 3--Health Care Claim:
Institutional (837), May 2006, ASC X12N/005010X223, and Type 1 Errata
to Health Care Claim: Institutional (837) ASC X12 Standards for
Electronic Data Interchange Technical Report Type 3, October 2007, ASC
X12N/005010X233A1 for the health care claims or equivalent encounter
information transaction (45 CFR 162.1102(c)).
HIPAA requires covered entities to use the applicable medical data
code set requirements when conducting HIPAA transactions (45 CFR
162.1000). Currently, upon the discharge of the patient, the LTCH must
assign appropriate diagnosis and procedure codes from the most current
version of the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision,
Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) for diagnosis coding and the
International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Procedure
Coding System (ICD-10-PCS) for inpatient hospital procedure coding,
both of which were required to be implemented October 1, 2015 (45 CFR
162.1002(c)(2) and (3)). For additional information on the
implementation of the ICD-10 coding system, we refer readers to section
II.F.1. of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56787 through
56790) and section II.F.1. of the preamble of
[[Page 20012]]
this proposed rule. Additional coding instructions and examples are
published in the AHA's Coding Clinic for ICD-10-CM/PCS.
To create the MS-DRGs (and by extension, the MS-LTC-DRGs), base
DRGs were subdivided according to the presence of specific secondary
diagnoses designated as complications or comorbidities (CCs) into one,
two, or three levels of severity, depending on the impact of the CCs on
resources used for those cases. Specifically, there are sets of MS-DRGs
that are split into 2 or 3 subgroups based on the presence or absence
of a CC or a major complication or comorbidity (MCC). We refer readers
to section II.D. of the FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period for
a detailed discussion about the creation of MS-DRGs based on severity
of illness levels (72 FR 47141 through 47175).
MACs enter the clinical and demographic information submitted by
LTCHs into their claims processing systems and subject this information
to a series of automated screening processes called the Medicare Code
Editor (MCE). These screens are designed to identify cases that require
further review before assignment into a MS-LTC-DRG can be made. During
this process, certain cases are selected for further explanation (74 FR
43949).
After screening through the MCE, each claim is classified into the
appropriate MS-LTC-DRG by the Medicare LTCH GROUPER software on the
basis of diagnosis and procedure codes and other demographic
information (age, sex, and discharge status). The GROUPER software used
under the LTCH PPS is the same GROUPER software program used under the
IPPS. Following the MS-LTC-DRG assignment, the MAC determines the
prospective payment amount by using the Medicare PRICER program, which
accounts for hospital-specific adjustments. Under the LTCH PPS, we
provide an opportunity for LTCHs to review the MS-LTC-DRG assignments
made by the MAC and to submit additional information within a specified
timeframe as provided in Sec. 412.513(c).
The GROUPER software is used both to classify past cases to measure
relative hospital resource consumption to establish the MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights and to classify current cases for purposes of
determining payment. The records for all Medicare hospital inpatient
discharges are maintained in the MedPAR file. The data in this file are
used to evaluate possible MS-DRG and MS-LTC-DRG classification changes
and to recalibrate the MS-DRG and MS-LTC-DRG relative weights during
our annual update under both the IPPS (Sec. 412.60(e)) and the LTCH
PPS (Sec. 412.517), respectively.
b. Proposed Changes to the MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018
As specified by our regulations at Sec. 412.517(a), which require
that the MS-LTC-DRG classifications and relative weights be updated
annually, and consistent with our historical practice of using the same
patient classification system under the LTCH PPS as is used under the
IPPS, we are proposing to update the MS-LTC-DRG classifications
effective October 1, 2017, through September 30, 2018 (FY 2018),
consistent with the proposed changes to specific MS-DRG classifications
presented in section II.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
Accordingly, the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018 presented in this
proposed rule are the same as the proposed MS-DRGs that are being
proposed for use under the IPPS for FY 2018. In addition, because the
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018 are the same as the proposed MS-DRGs
for FY 2018, the other proposed changes that affect MS-DRG (and by
extension MS-LTC-DRG) assignments under proposed GROUPER Version 35 as
discussed in section II.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
including the proposed changes to the MCE software and the ICD-10-CM/
PCS coding system, also would be applicable under the LTCH PPS for FY
2018.
3. Development of the Proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG Relative Weights
a. General Overview of the Development of the MS-LTC-DRG Relative
Weights
One of the primary goals for the implementation of the LTCH PPS is
to pay each LTCH an appropriate amount for the efficient delivery of
medical care to Medicare patients. The system must be able to account
adequately for each LTCH's case-mix in order to ensure both fair
distribution of Medicare payments and access to adequate care for those
Medicare patients whose care is more costly (67 FR 55984). To
accomplish these goals, we have annually adjusted the LTCH PPS standard
Federal prospective payment rate by the applicable relative weight in
determining payment to LTCHs for each case. In order to make these
annual adjustments under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure,
beginning with FY 2016, we recalibrate the MS-LTC-DRG relative
weighting factors annually using data from applicable LTCH cases (80 FR
49614 through 49617). Under this policy, the resulting MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights would continue to be used to adjust the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate when calculating the payment for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases.
The established methodology to develop the MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights is generally consistent with the methodology established when
the LTCH PPS was implemented in the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final rule
(67 FR 55989 through 55991). However, there have been some
modifications of our historical procedures for assigning relative
weights in cases of zero volume and/or nonmonotonicity resulting from
the adoption of the MS-LTC-DRGs, along with the change made in
conjunction with the implementation of the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure beginning in FY 2016 to use LTCH claims data from only LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases (or LTCH PPS cases that would
have qualified for payment under the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate if the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure had been in effect at
the time of the discharge). (For details on the modifications to our
historical procedures for assigning relative weights in cases of zero
volume and/or nonmonotonicity, we refer readers to the FY 2008 IPPS
final rule with comment period (72 FR 47289 through 47295) and the FY
2009 IPPS final rule (73 FR 48542 through 48550).) For details on the
change in our historical methodology to use LTCH claims data only from
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases (or cases that would have
qualified for such payment had the LTCH PPS dual payment rate structure
been in effect at the time) to determine the MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights, we refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80
FR 49614 through 49617). Under the LTCH PPS, relative weights for each
MS-LTC-DRG are a primary element used to account for the variations in
cost per discharge and resource utilization among the payment groups
(Sec. 412.515). To ensure that Medicare patients classified to each
MS-LTC-DRG have access to an appropriate level of services and to
encourage efficiency, we calculate a relative weight for each MS-LTC-
DRG that represents the resources needed by an average inpatient LTCH
case in that MS-LTC-DRG. For example, cases in an MS-LTC-DRG with a
relative weight of 2 would, on average, cost twice as much to treat as
cases in an MS-LTC-DRG with a relative weight of 1.
[[Page 20013]]
b. Development of the Proposed MS-LTC-DRG Relative Weights for FY 2018
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57078 through
57079), we presented our policies for the development of the MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights for FY 2017.
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are proposing to
continue to use our current methodology to determine the proposed MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights for FY 2018, including the continued
application of established policies related to: The hospital-specific
relative value methodology, the treatment of severity levels in the
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs, proposed low-volume and no-volume MS-LTC-DRGs,
proposed adjustments for nonmonotonicity, the steps for calculating the
proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weights with a proposed budget neutrality
factor, and only using data from applicable LTCH cases (which includes
our policy of only using cases that would meet the criteria for
exclusion from the site neutral payment rate (or, for discharges
occurring prior to the implementation of the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure, would have met the criteria for exclusion had those criteria
been in effect at the time of the discharge)).
In this section, we present our proposed application of our
existing methodology for determining the proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights for FY 2018, and we discuss the effects of our proposals
concerning the data used to determine the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights on the various components of our existing methodology
in the discussion that follows.
c. Data
For this proposed rule, consistent with our proposals regarding the
calculation of the proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weights for FY 2018, we
obtained total charges from FY 2016 Medicare LTCH claims data from the
December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file, which are the best
available data at this time, and we are proposing to use proposed
Version 35 of the GROUPER to classify LTCH cases. Consistent with our
historical practice, we are proposing that if more recent data become
available, we would use those data and the finalized Version 35 of the
GROUPER in establishing the FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights in the
final rule. To calculate the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure, we are
proposing to continue to use applicable LTCH data, which includes our
policy of only using cases that meet the criteria for exclusion from
the site neutral payment rate (or would have met the criteria had they
been in effect at the time of the discharge) (80 FR 49624).
Specifically, we began by first evaluating the LTCH claims data in the
December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file to determine which LTCH
cases would meet the criteria for exclusion from the site neutral
payment rate under Sec. 412.522(b) had the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure been in effect at the time of discharge. (We note that while
the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure began to be phased in during
FY 2016, due to the statutory requirement that individual LTCHs begin
to receive payment under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure based
on their individual cost reporting periods, there are LTCH discharges
that occurred in FY 2016 that would not have been paid under that
structure.) We identified the FY 2016 LTCH cases that were not assigned
to MS-LTC-DRGs 876, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 894, 895,
896, 897, 945 and 946, which identify LTCH cases that do not have a
principal diagnosis relating to a psychiatric diagnosis or to
rehabilitation; and that either--
The admission to the LTCH was ``immediately preceded'' by
discharge from a subsection (d) hospital and the immediately preceding
stay in that subsection (d) hospital included at least 3 days in an
ICU, as we define under the ICU criterion; or
The admission to the LTCH was ``immediately preceded'' by
discharge from a subsection (d) hospital and the claim for the LTCH
discharge includes the applicable procedure code that indicates at
least 96 hours of ventilator services were provided during the LTCH
stay, as we define under the ventilator criterion. Claims data from the
FY 2016 MedPAR file that reported ICD-10-PCS procedure code 5A1955Z
were used to identify cases involving at least 96 hours of ventilator
services in accordance with the ventilator criterion. We note that, for
purposes of developing the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights
using our current methodology, we did not make any proposals regarding
the identification of cases that would have been excluded from the site
neutral payment rate under the statutory provisions that provided for
temporary exception from the site neutral payment rate under the LTCH
PPS for certain severe wound care discharges from certain LTCHs or for
certain spinal cord specialty hospitals provided by sections 15009 and
15010 of Pub. L. 114-255, respectively, had our implementation of that
law and the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure been in effect at the
time of the discharge. At this time, it is uncertain how many LTCHs and
how many cases in the claims data we are using for this proposed rule
would have met the criteria to be excluded from the site neutral
payment rate under those exceptions (had the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure been in effect at the time of the discharge). Therefore, for
the remainder of this section, when we refer to LTCH claims only from
cases that meet the criteria for exclusion from the site neutral
payment rate (or would have met the criteria had the applicable
statutes been in effect at the time of the discharge), such data do not
include any discharges that would have been paid based on the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate under the provisions of sections 15009
and 15010 of Pub. L. 114-255, had the exception been in effect at the
time of the discharge.
Furthermore, consistent with our historical methodology, we are
excluding any claims in the resulting data set that were submitted by
LTCHs that are all-inclusive rate providers and LTCHs that are paid in
accordance with demonstration projects authorized under section 402(a)
of Pub. L. 90-248 or section 222(a) of Pub. L. 92-603. In addition,
consistent with our historical practice and our proposals, we are
excluding any Medicare Advantage (Part C) claims in the resulting data.
Such claims were identified based on the presence of a GHO Paid
indicator value of ``1'' in the MedPAR files. The claims that remained
after these three trims (that is, the applicable LTCH data) were then
used to calculate the proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weights for FY 2018.
In summary, in general, we identified the claims data used in the
development of the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights in this
proposed rule, as we are proposing, by trimming claims data that would
have been paid the site neutral rate had the dual payment rate
structure been in effect (except for discharges which would have been
excluded from the site neutral payment under the temporary exception
for certain severe wound care discharges from certain LTCHs and under
the temporary exception for certain spinal cord specialty hospitals),
as well as the claims data of 9 all-inclusive rate providers reported
in the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file and any Medicare
Advantage claims data. (We note that there were no data from any LTCHs
that are paid in accordance with a demonstration project reported in
the December 2016
[[Page 20014]]
update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file. However, had there been we would
trim the claims data from those LTCHs as well, in accordance with our
established policy.) We are proposing to use the remaining data (that
is, the applicable LTCH data) to calculate the proposed relative
weights for FY 2018.
d. Hospital-Specific Relative Value (HSRV) Methodology
By nature, LTCHs often specialize in certain areas, such as
ventilator-dependent patients. Some case types (MS-LTC-DRGs) may be
treated, to a large extent, in hospitals that have, from a perspective
of charges, relatively high (or low) charges. This nonrandom
distribution of cases with relatively high (or low) charges in specific
MS-LTC-DRGs has the potential to inappropriately distort the measure of
average charges. To account for the fact that cases may not be randomly
distributed across LTCHs, consistent with the methodology we have used
since the implementation of the LTCH PPS, in this FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule, we are proposing to continue to use a hospital-specific
relative value (HSRV) methodology to calculate the proposed MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights for FY 2018. We believe that this method removes this
hospital-specific source of bias in measuring LTCH average charges (67
FR 55985). Specifically, under this methodology, we are proposing to
reduce the impact of the variation in charges across providers on any
particular MS-LTC-DRG relative weight by converting each LTCH's charge
for an applicable LTCH case to a relative value based on that LTCH's
average charge for such cases.
Under the HSRV methodology, we standardize charges for each LTCH by
converting its charges for each applicable LTCH case to hospital-
specific relative charge values and then adjusting those values for the
LTCH's case-mix. The adjustment for case-mix is needed to rescale the
hospital-specific relative charge values (which, by definition, average
1.0 for each LTCH). The average relative weight for an LTCH is its
case-mix; therefore, it is reasonable to scale each LTCH's average
relative charge value by its case-mix. In this way, each LTCH's
relative charge value is adjusted by its case-mix to an average that
reflects the complexity of the applicable LTCH cases it treats relative
to the complexity of the applicable LTCH cases treated by all other
LTCHs (the average LTCH PPS case-mix of all applicable LTCH cases
across all LTCHs).
In accordance with our established methodology, for FY 2018, we are
continuing to standardize charges for each applicable LTCH case by
first dividing the adjusted charge for the case (adjusted for SSOs
under Sec. 412.529 as described in section VIII.B.3.g. (Step 3) of the
preamble of this proposed rule) by the average adjusted charge for all
applicable LTCH cases at the LTCH in which the case was treated. SSO
cases are cases with a length of stay that is less than or equal to
five-sixths the average length of stay of the MS-LTC-DRG (Sec. 412.529
and Sec. 412.503). The average adjusted charge reflects the average
intensity of the health care services delivered by a particular LTCH
and the average cost level of that LTCH. The resulting ratio is
multiplied by that LTCH's case-mix index to determine the standardized
charge for the case.
Multiplying the resulting ratio by the LTCH's case-mix index
accounts for the fact that the same relative charges are given greater
weight at an LTCH with higher average costs than they would at a LTCH
with low average costs, which is needed to adjust each LTCH's relative
charge value to reflect its case-mix relative to the average case-mix
for all LTCHs. By standardizing charges in this manner, we count
charges for a Medicare patient at an LTCH with high average charges as
less resource intensive than they would be at an LTCH with low average
charges. For example, a $10,000 charge for a case at an LTCH with an
average adjusted charge of $17,500 reflects a higher level of relative
resource use than a $10,000 charge for a case at an LTCH with the same
case-mix, but an average adjusted charge of $35,000. We believe that
the adjusted charge of an individual case more accurately reflects
actual resource use for an individual LTCH because the variation in
charges due to systematic differences in the markup of charges among
LTCHs is taken into account.
e. Treatment of Severity Levels in Developing the Proposed MS-LTC-DRG
Relative Weights
For purposes of determining the MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, under
our historical methodology, there are three different categories of MS-
DRGs based on volume of cases within specific MS-LTC-DRGs: (1) MS-LTC-
DRGs with at least 25 applicable LTCH cases in the data used to
calculate the relative weight, which are each assigned a unique
relative weight; (2) low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs (that is, MS-LTC-DRGs that
contain between 1 and 24 applicable LTCH cases that are grouped into
quintiles (as described later in this section of the proposed rule) and
assigned the relative weight of the quintile); and (3) no-volume MS-
LTC-DRGs that are cross-walked to other MS-LTC-DRGs based on the
clinical similarities and assigned the relative weight of the cross-
walked MS-LTC-DRG (as described in greater detail below). For FY 2018,
we are proposing to continue to use applicable LTCH cases to establish
the same volume-based categories to calculate the FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights.
In determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights,
when necessary, as is our longstanding practice, we are proposing to
make adjustments to account for nonmonotonicity, as discussed in
greater detail later in Step 6 of section VIII.B.3.g. of the preamble
of this proposed rule. We refer readers to the discussion in the FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule for our rationale for including
an adjustment for nonmonotonicity (74 FR 43953 through 43954).
f. Proposed Low-Volume MS-LTC-DRGs
In order to account for proposed MS-LTC-DRGs with low-volume (that
is, with fewer than 25 applicable LTCH cases), consistent with our
existing methodology, we are proposing to continue to employ the
quintile methodology for proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs, such that we
group the proposed ``low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs'' (that is, proposed MS-
LTC-DRGs that contain between 1 and 24 applicable LTCH cases into one
of five categories (quintiles) based on average charges (67 FR 55984
through 55995; 72 FR 47283 through 47288; and 81 FR 25148)). In cases
where the initial assignment of a proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRG to a
quintile results in nonmonotonicity within a base-DRG, we are proposing
to make adjustments to the resulting low-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRGs to
preserve monotonicity, as discussed in detail in section VIII.B.3.g.
(Step 6) of the preamble of this proposed rule.
In this proposed rule, based on the best available data (that is,
the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR files), we identified
261 proposed MS-LTC-DRGs that contained between 1 and 24 applicable
LTCH cases. This list of proposed MS-LTC-DRGs was then divided into one
of the proposed 5 low-volume quintiles, each containing at least 52
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs (261/5 = 52 with a remainder of 1). We assigned
the proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs to specific proposed low-volume
quintiles by sorting the proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs in ascending
order by average charge in accordance with our established methodology.
Based on the
[[Page 20015]]
data available for the proposed rule, the number of proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs with less than 25 applicable LTCH cases was not evenly divisible
by 5 and, therefore, we are proposing to employ our historical
methodology for determining which of the proposed low-volume quintiles
contain the additional proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRG. Therefore, we
are proposing to use our historical methodology for determining which
of the low-volume quintiles should contain the additional proposed low-
volume MS-LTC-DRG. Specifically for this proposed rule, after
organizing the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs by ascending order by average
charge, we would assign the first 52 (1st through 52nd) of proposed
low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs (with the lowest average charge) into Quintile
1. The 52 proposed MS-LTC-DRGs with the highest average charge cases
would be assigned into Quintile 5. Because the average charge of the
105th proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRG in the sorted list was closer to
the average charge of the 104th proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRG
(assigned to Quintile 2) than to the average charge of the 106th
proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRG (assigned to Quintile 3), we assigned it
to Quintile 2 (such that Quintile 2 contains 53 proposed low-volume MS-
LTC-DRGs before any adjustments for nonmonotonicity, as discussed
below). This results in 4 of the 5 proposed low-volume quintiles
containing 52 proposed MS-LTC-DRGs (Quintiles 1, 3, 4, and 5) and 1
proposed low-volume quintile containing 53 proposed MS-LTC-DRGs
(Quintile 2). Table 13A, listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule and available via the Internet, lists the composition of
the proposed low-volume quintiles for MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018.
In order to determine the proposed FY 2018 relative weights for the
proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs, consistent with our historical
practice, we are proposing to use the five low-volume quintiles
described previously. We determined a proposed relative weight and
(geometric) average length of stay for each of the five proposed low-
volume quintiles using the proposed methodology described in section
VIII.B.3.g. of the preamble of this proposed rule. We are proposing to
assign the same proposed relative weight and average length of stay to
each of the proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs that make up an individual
low-volume quintile. We note that, as this system is dynamic, it is
possible that the number and specific type of MS-LTC-DRGs with a low-
volume of applicable LTCH cases will vary in the future. Furthermore,
we note that we continue to monitor the volume (that is, the number of
applicable LTCH cases) in the low-volume quintiles to ensure that our
quintile assignments used in determining the MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights result in appropriate payment for LTCH cases grouped to
proposed low-volume MS-LTC-DRGs and do not result in an unintended
financial incentive for LTCHs to inappropriately admit these types of
cases.
g. Steps for Determining the Proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG Relative
Weights
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to continue to use our
current methodology to determine the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights.
In summary, to determine the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights, we are proposing to group applicable LTCH cases to the
appropriate proposed MS-LTC-DRG, while taking into account the proposed
low-volume quintiles (as described above) and cross-walked proposed no-
volume MS-LTC-DRGs (as described later in this section). After
establishing the appropriate proposed MS-LTC-DRG (or proposed low-
volume quintile), we are proposing to calculate the FY 2018 relative
weights by first removing cases with a length of stay of 7 days or less
and statistical outliers (Steps 1 and 2 below). Next, we are proposing
to adjust the number of applicable LTCH cases in each proposed MS-LTC-
DRG (or proposed low-volume quintile) for the effect of SSO cases (Step
3 below). After removing applicable LTCH cases with a length of stay of
7 days or less (Step 1 below) and statistical outliers (Step 2 below),
which are the SSO-adjusted applicable LTCH cases and corresponding
charges (step 3 below), we are proposing to calculate proposed
``relative adjusted weights'' for each proposed MS-LTC-DRG (or proposed
low-volume quintile) using the HSRV method.
Step 1--Remove cases with a length of stay of 7 days or less.
The first step in our proposed calculation of the proposed FY 2018
MS-LTC-DRG relative weights is to remove cases with a length of stay of
7 days or less. The MS-LTC-DRG relative weights reflect the average of
resources used on representative cases of a specific type. Generally,
cases with a length of stay of 7 days or less do not belong in an LTCH
because these stays do not fully receive or benefit from treatment that
is typical in an LTCH stay, and full resources are often not used in
the earlier stages of admission to an LTCH. If we were to include stays
of 7 days or less in the computation of the FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights, the value of many proposed relative weights would decrease
and, therefore, payments would decrease to a level that may no longer
be appropriate. We do not believe that it would be appropriate to
compromise the integrity of the payment determination for those LTCH
cases that actually benefit from and receive a full course of treatment
at an LTCH by including data from these very short stays. Therefore,
consistent with our existing relative weight methodology, in
determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, we are
proposing to remove LTCH cases with a length of stay of 7 days or less
from applicable LTCH cases. (For additional information on what is
removed in this step of the relative weight methodology, we refer
readers to 67 FR 55989 and 74 FR 43959.)
Step 2--Remove statistical outliers.
The next step in our proposed calculation of the proposed FY 2018
MS-LTC-DRG relative weights is to remove statistical outlier cases from
the LTCH cases with a length of stay of at least 8 days. Consistent
with our existing relative weight methodology, we are proposing to
continue to define statistical outliers as cases that are outside of
3.0 standard deviations from the mean of the log distribution of both
charges per case and the charges per day for each MS-LTC-DRG. These
statistical outliers are removed prior to calculating the proposed
relative weights because we believe that they may represent aberrations
in the data that distort the measure of average resource use. Including
those LTCH cases in the calculation of the proposed relative weights
could result in an inaccurate relative weight that does not truly
reflect relative resource use among those MS-LTC-DRGs. (For additional
information on what is removed in this step of the proposed relative
weight methodology, we refer readers to 67 FR 55989 and 74 FR 43959.)
After removing cases with a length of stay of 7 days or less and
statistical outliers, we are left with applicable LTCH cases that have
a length of stay greater than or equal to 8 days. In this proposed
rule, we refer to these cases as ``trimmed applicable LTCH cases.''
Step 3--Adjust charges for the effects of SSOs.
As the next step in the proposed calculation of the proposed FY
2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, consistent with our historical
approach, we are proposing to adjust each LTCH's charges per discharge
for those
[[Page 20016]]
remaining cases (that is, trimmed applicable LTCH cases) for the
effects of SSOs (as defined in Sec. 412.529(a) in conjunction with
Sec. 412.503). Specifically, we are proposing to make this adjustment
by counting an SSO case as a fraction of a discharge based on the ratio
of the length of stay of the case to the average length of stay for the
MS-LTC-DRG for non-SSO cases. This has the effect of proportionately
reducing the impact of the lower charges for the SSO cases in
calculating the average charge for the MS-LTC-DRG. This process
produces the same result as if the actual charges per discharge of an
SSO case were adjusted to what they would have been had the patient's
length of stay been equal to the average length of stay of the MS-LTC-
DRG.
Counting SSO cases as full LTCH cases with no adjustment in
determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights would
lower the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weight for affected MS-
LTC-DRGs because the relatively lower charges of the SSO cases would
bring down the average charge for all cases within a MS-LTC-DRG. This
would result in an ``underpayment'' for non-SSO cases and an
``overpayment'' for SSO cases. Therefore, we are proposing to continue
to adjust for SSO cases under Sec. 412.529 in this manner because it
would result in more appropriate payments for all LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases. (For additional information on this step of
the relative weight methodology, we refer readers to 67 FR 55989 and 74
FR 43959.)
Step 4--Calculate the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights
on an iterative basis.
Consistent with our historical relative weight methodology, we are
proposing to calculate the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights
using the HSRV methodology, which is an iterative process. First, for
each SSO-adjusted trimmed applicable LTCH case, we calculate a
hospital-specific relative charge value by dividing the charge per
discharge after adjusting for SSOs of the LTCH case (from Step 3) by
the average charge per SSO-adjusted discharge for the LTCH in which the
case occurred. The resulting ratio is then multiplied by the LTCH's
case-mix index to produce an adjusted hospital-specific relative charge
value for the case. We used an initial case-mix index value of 1.0 for
each LTCH.
For each proposed MS-LTC-DRG, we calculated the proposed FY 2018
relative weight by dividing the SSO-adjusted average of the hospital-
specific relative charge values for applicable LTCH cases for the
proposed MS-LTC-DRG (that is, the sum of the hospital-specific relative
charge value from above divided by the sum of equivalent cases from
Step 3 for each proposed MS-LTC-DRG) by the overall SSO-adjusted
average hospital-specific relative charge value across all applicable
LTCH cases for all LTCHs (that is, the sum of the hospital-specific
relative charge value from above divided by the sum of equivalent
applicable LTCH cases from Step 3 for each proposed MS-LTC-DRG). Using
these recalculated MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, each LTCH's average
relative weight for all of its SSO-adjusted trimmed applicable LTCH
cases (that is, its case-mix) was calculated by dividing the sum of all
the LTCH's MS-LTC-DRG relative weights by its total number of SSO-
adjusted trimmed applicable LTCH cases. The LTCHs' hospital-specific
relative charge values (from previous) are then multiplied by the
hospital-specific case-mix indexes. The hospital-specific case-mix
adjusted relative charge values are then used to calculate a new set of
proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weights across all LTCHs. This iterative
process continued until there was convergence between the relative
weights produced at adjacent steps, for example, when the maximum
difference was less than 0.0001.
Step 5--Determine a proposed FY 2018 relative weight for MS-LTC-
DRGs with no applicable LTCH cases.
Using the trimmed applicable LTCH cases, consistent with our
historical methodology, we identified the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for
which there were no claims in the December 2016 update of the FY 2016
MedPAR file and, therefore, for which no charge data was available for
these proposed MS-LTC-DRGs. Because patients with a number of the
diagnoses under these proposed MS-LTC-DRGs may be treated at LTCHs,
consistent with our historical methodology, we are generally proposing
to assign a proposed relative weight to each of the proposed no-volume
MS-LTC-DRGs based on clinical similarity and relative costliness (with
the exception of ``transplant'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs, ``error''
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs, and proposed MS-LTC-DRGs that indicate a
principal diagnosis related to a psychiatric diagnosis or
rehabilitation (referred to as the ``psychiatric or rehabilitation''
MS-LTC-DRGs), as discussed later in this section of this proposed
rule). (For additional information on this step of the proposed
relative weight methodology, we refer readers to 67 FR 55991 and 74 FR
43959 through 43960.)
We are proposing to cross-walk each proposed no-volume MS-LTC-DRG
to another proposed MS-LTC-DRG for which we calculated a proposed
relative weight (determined in accordance with the methodology
described above). Then, the ``no-volume'' proposed MS-LTC-DRG was
assigned the same proposed relative weight (and average length of stay)
of the proposed MS-LTC-DRG to which it was cross-walked (as described
in greater detail in this section of this proposed rule).
Of the 754 proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018, we identified 351 MS-
LTC-DRGs for which there are no trimmed applicable LTCH cases (the
number identified includes the 8 ``transplant'' MS-LTC-DRGs, the 2
``error'' MS-LTC-DRGs, and the 15 ``psychiatric or rehabilitation'' MS-
LTC-DRGs, which are discussed below). We are proposing to assign
proposed relative weights to each of the 351 no-volume proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs that contained trimmed applicable LTCH cases based on clinical
similarity and relative costliness to 1 of the remaining 403 (754-351 =
403) proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for which we calculated proposed relative
weights based on the trimmed applicable LTCH cases in the FY 2016
MedPAR file data using the steps described previously. (For the
remainder of this discussion, we refer to the ``cross-walked'' proposed
MS-LTC-DRGs as the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs to which we cross-walked 1 of
the 351 ``no volume'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs.) Then, we are generally
proposing to assign the 351 no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRGs the proposed
relative weight of the cross-walked proposed MS-LTC-DRG. (As explained
below in Step 6, when necessary, we made adjustments to account for
nonmonotonicity.)
We cross-walked the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG to a proposed MS-
LTC-DRG for which we calculated proposed relative weights based on the
December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file, and to which it is
similar clinically in intensity of use of resources and relative
costliness as determined by criteria such as care provided during the
period of time surrounding surgery, surgical approach (if applicable),
length of time of surgical procedure, postoperative care, and length of
stay. (For more details on our process for evaluating relative
costliness, we refer readers to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final
rule (73 FR 48543).) We believe in the rare event that there would be a
few LTCH cases grouped to one of the no-volume MS-LTC-DRGs in FY 2017,
the relative weights assigned
[[Page 20017]]
based on the cross-walked MS-LTC-DRGs would result in an appropriate
LTCH PPS payment because the crosswalks, which are based on clinical
similarity and relative costliness, would be expected to generally
require equivalent relative resource use.
We then assigned the proposed relative weight of the cross-walked
proposed MS-LTC-DRG as the proposed relative weight for the no-volume
proposed MS-LTC-DRG such that both of these proposed MS-LTC-DRGs (that
is, the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG and the cross-walked proposed MS-
LTC-DRG) have the same proposed relative weight (and average length of
stay) for FY 2018. We note that, if the proposed cross-walked MS-LTC-
DRG had 25 applicable LTCH cases or more, its proposed relative weight
(calculated using the methodology described in Steps 1 through 4 above)
is assigned to the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG as well. Similarly, if
the proposed MS-LTC-DRG to which the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG was
cross-walked had 24 or less cases and, therefore, is designated to 1 of
the proposed low-volume quintiles for purposes of determining the
proposed relative weights, we assigned the proposed relative weight of
the applicable proposed low-volume quintile to the no-volume proposed
MS-LTC-DRG such that both of these proposed MS-LTC-DRGs (that is, the
no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG and the cross-walked proposed MS-LTC-DRG)
have the same proposed relative weight for FY 2018. (As we noted
previously, in the infrequent case where nonmonotonicity involving a
no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRG resulted, additional adjustments as
described in Step 6 are required in order to maintain monotonically
increasing proposed relative weights.)
For this proposed rule, a list of the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs and the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs to which each was cross-walked (that
is, the proposed cross-walked MS-LTC-DRGs) for FY 2018 is shown in
Table 13B, which is listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule and is available via the Internet on the CMS Web site.
To illustrate this methodology for determining the proposed
relative weights for the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRGs with no
applicable LTCH cases, we are providing the following example, which
refers to the no-volume proposed MS-LTC-DRGs crosswalk information for
FY 2018 provided in Table 13B.
Example: There were no trimmed applicable LTCH cases in the FY 2016
MedPAR file that we are proposing to use for this proposed rule for
proposed MS-LTC-DRG 061 (Acute Ischemic Stroke with Use of Thrombolytic
Agent with MCC). We determined that proposed MS-LTC-DRG 070
(Nonspecific Cerebrovascular Disorders with MCC) is similar clinically
and based on resource use to proposed MS-LTC-DRG 061. Therefore, we
assigned the same proposed relative weight (and average length of stay)
of proposed MS-LTC-DRG 70 of 0.8890 for FY 2018 to proposed MS-LTC-DRG
061 (we refer readers to Table 11, which is listed in section VI. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule and is available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site).
Again, we note that, as this system is dynamic, it is entirely
possible that the number of MS-LTC-DRGs with no volume will vary in the
future. Consistent with our historical practice, we are proposing to
use the most recent available claims data to identify the trimmed
applicable LTCH cases from which we determined the proposed relative
weights in this proposed rule.
For FY 2018, consistent with our historical relative weight
methodology, we are proposing to establish a relative weight of 0.0000
for the following transplant MS-LTC-DRGs: Heart Transplant or Implant
of Heart Assist System with MCC (MS-LTC-DRG 001); Heart Transplant or
Implant of Heart Assist System without MCC (MS-LTC-DRG 002); Liver
Transplant with MCC or Intestinal Transplant (MS-LTC-DRG 005); Liver
Transplant without MCC (MS-LTC-DRG 006); Lung Transplant (MS-LTC-DRG
007); Simultaneous Pancreas/Kidney Transplant (MS-LTC-DRG 008);
Pancreas Transplant (MS-LTC-DRG 010); and Kidney Transplant (MS-LTC-DRG
652). This is because Medicare only covers these procedures if they are
performed at a hospital that has been certified for the specific
procedures by Medicare and presently no LTCH has been so certified. At
the present time, we include these eight transplant proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs in the GROUPER program for administrative purposes only. Because
we use the same GROUPER program for LTCHs as is used under the IPPS,
removing these MS-LTC-DRGs would be administratively burdensome. (For
additional information regarding our treatment of transplant MS-LTC-
DRGs, we refer readers to the RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR
43964).) In addition, consistent with our historical policy, we are
proposing to establish a relative weight of 0.0000 for the 2 ``error''
MS-LTC-DRGs (that is, MS-LTC-DRG 998 (Principal Diagnosis Invalid as
Discharge Diagnosis) and MS-LTC-DRG 999 (Ungroupable)) because
applicable LTCH cases grouped to these MS-LTC-DRGs cannot be properly
assigned to an MS-LTC-DRG according to the grouping logic.
In this proposed rule, consistent with our practice in FYs 2016 and
2017, we are proposing to establish a proposed relative weight for FY
2018 equal to the respective FY 2015 relative weight of the MS-LTC-DRGs
for the following ``psychiatric or rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs: proposed MS-LTC-DRG 876 (O.R. Procedure with Principal Diagnoses
of Mental Illness); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 880 (Acute Adjustment Reaction
& Psychosocial Dysfunction); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 881 (Depressive
Neuroses); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 882 (Neuroses Except Depressive);
proposed MS-LTC-DRG 883 (Disorders of Personality & Impulse Control);
proposed MS-LTC-DRG 884 (Organic Disturbances & Mental Retardation);
proposed MS-LTC-DRG 885 (Psychoses); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 886
(Behavioral & Developmental Disorders); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 887 (Other
Mental Disorder Diagnoses); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 894 (Alcohol/Drug Abuse
or Dependence, Left Ama); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 895 (Alcohol/Drug Abuse
or Dependence, with Rehabilitation Therapy); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 896
(Alcohol/Drug Abuse or Dependence, without Rehabilitation Therapy with
MCC); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 897 (Alcohol/Drug Abuse or Dependence,
without Rehabilitation Therapy without MCC); proposed MS-LTC-DRG 945
(Rehabilitation with CC/MCC); and proposed MS-LTC-DRG 946
(Rehabilitation without CC/MCC). As we discussed when we implemented
the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure, LTCH discharges that are
grouped to these 15 ``psychiatric and rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs do not meet the criteria for exclusion from the site neutral
payment rate. As such, under the criterion for a principal diagnosis
relating to a psychiatric diagnosis or to rehabilitation, there are no
applicable LTCH cases to use in calculating a proposed relative weight
for the ``psychiatric and rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs. In
other words, any LTCH PPS discharges grouped to any of the 15
``psychiatric and rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs would always be
paid at the site neutral payment rate, and, therefore, those proposed
MS-LTC-DRGs would never include any LTCH cases that meet the criteria
for exclusion from the site
[[Page 20018]]
neutral payment rate. However, section 1886(m)(6)(B) of the Act
establishes a transitional payment method for cases that would be paid
at the site neutral payment rate for LTCH discharges occurring in cost
reporting periods beginning during FY 2016 or FY 2017. Under the
transitional payment method for site neutral payment rate cases, for
LTCH discharges occurring in cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2016, and on or before September 30, 2017, site
neutral payment rate cases are paid a blended payment rate, calculated
as 50 percent of the applicable site neutral payment rate amount for
the discharge and 50 percent of the applicable LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate. Because the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate is based on the relative weight of the MS-LTC-DRG, in order to
determine the transitional blended payment for site neutral payment
rate cases grouped to one of the ``psychiatric or rehabilitation''
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs in FY 2018, we assigned a proposed relative weight
to these proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for FY 2018 that is the same as the FY
2015 relative weight (which is also the same as the FY 2016 relative
weight). We believe that using the respective FY 2015 relative weight
for each of the ``psychiatric or rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs
results in appropriate payments for LTCH cases that are paid at the
site neutral payment rate under the transition policy provided by the
statute because there are no clinically similar proposed MS-LTC-DRGs
for which we were able to determine proposed relative weights based on
applicable LTCH cases in the FY 2016 MedPAR file data using the steps
described above. Furthermore, we believe that it would be
administratively burdensome and introduce unnecessary complexity to the
proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weight calculation to use the LTCH
discharges in the MedPAR file data to calculate a proposed relative
weight for those 15 ``psychiatric and rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-
DRGs to be used for the sole purpose of determining half of the
transitional blended payment for site neutral payment rate cases during
the transition period (80 FR 49631 through 49632).
In summary, for FY 2018, we are proposing to establish a proposed
relative weight (and average length of stay thresholds) equal to the
respective FY 2015 relative weight of the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs for the
15 ``psychiatric or rehabilitation'' proposed MS-LTC-DRGs listed
previously (that is, proposed MS-LTC-DRGs 876, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884,
885, 886, 887, 894, 895, 896, 897, 945, and 946). Table 11, which is
listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule and is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site, reflects this proposed
policy.
Step 6--Adjust the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights to
account for nonmonotonically increasing relative weights.
The MS-DRGs contain base DRGs that have been subdivided into one,
two, or three severity of illness levels. Where there are three
severity levels, the most severe level has at least one secondary
diagnosis code that is referred to as an MCC (that is, major
complication or comorbidity). The next lower severity level contains
cases with at least one secondary diagnosis code that is a CC (that is,
complication or comorbidity). Those cases without an MCC or a CC are
referred to as ``without CC/MCC.'' When data do not support the
creation of three severity levels, the base MS-DRG is subdivided into
either two levels or the base MS-DRG is not subdivided. The two-level
subdivisions may consist of the MS-DRG with CC/MCC and the MS-DRG
without CC/MCC. Alternatively, the other type of two-level subdivision
may consist of the MS-DRG with MCC and the MS-DRG without MCC.
In those base MS-LTC-DRGs that are split into either two or three
severity levels, cases classified into the ``without CC/MCC'' MS-LTC-
DRG are expected to have a lower resource use (and lower costs) than
the ``with CC/MCC'' MS-LTC-DRG (in the case of a two-level split) or
both the ``with CC'' and the ``with MCC'' MS-LTC-DRGs (in the case of a
three-level split). That is, theoretically, cases that are more severe
typically require greater expenditure of medical care resources and
would result in higher average charges. Therefore, in the three
severity levels, relative weights should increase by severity, from
lowest to highest. If the relative weights decrease as severity
increases (that is, if within a base MS-LTC-DRG, an MS-LTC-DRG with CC
has a higher relative weight than one with MCC, or the MS-LTC-DRG
``without CC/MCC'' has a higher relative weight than either of the
others), they are nonmonotonic. We continue to believe that utilizing
nonmonotonic relative weights to adjust Medicare payments would result
in inappropriate payments because the payment for the cases in the
higher severity level in a base MS-LTC-DRG (which are generally
expected to have higher resource use and costs) would be lower than the
payment for cases in a lower severity level within the same base MS-
LTC-DRG (which are generally expected to have lower resource use and
costs). Therefore, in determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights, consistent with our historical methodology, we are
proposing to continue to combine MS-LTC-DRG severity levels within a
base MS-LTC-DRG for the purpose of computing a relative weight when
necessary to ensure that monotonicity is maintained. For a
comprehensive description of our existing methodology to adjust for
nonmonotonicity, we refer readers to the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS
final rule (74 FR 43964 through 43966). Any adjustments for
nonmonotonicity that were made in determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights in this proposed rule by applying this
methodology are denoted in Table 11, which is listed in section VI. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule and is available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site.
Step 7--Calculate the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG reclassification
and recalibration budget neutrality factor.
In accordance with the regulations at Sec. 412.517(b) (in
conjunction with Sec. 412.503), the annual update to the MS-LTC-DRG
classifications and relative weights is done in a budget neutral manner
such that estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments would be unaffected,
that is, would be neither greater than nor less than the estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments that would have been made without the MS-
LTC-DRG classification and relative weight changes. (For a detailed
discussion on the establishment of the budget neutrality requirement
for the annual update of the MS-LTC-DRG classifications and relative
weights, we refer readers to the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
26881 and 26882).)
The MS-LTC-DRG classifications and relative weights are updated
annually based on the most recent available LTCH claims data to reflect
changes in relative LTCH resource use (Sec. 412.517(a) in conjunction
with Sec. 412.503). To achieve the budget neutrality requirement at
Sec. 412.517(b), under our established methodology, for each annual
update, the MS-LTC-DRG relative weights are uniformly adjusted to
ensure that estimated aggregate payments under the LTCH PPS would not
be affected (that is, decreased or increased). Consistent with that
provision, we are proposing to update the MS-LTC-DRG classifications
and relative weights for FY 2018 based on the most recent available
LTCH data for applicable LTCH cases, and continue to apply a budget
neutrality adjustment in
[[Page 20019]]
determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights.
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, to ensure budget
neutrality in the update to the MS-LTC-DRG classifications and relative
weights under Sec. 412.517(b), we are proposing to continue to use our
established two-step budget neutrality methodology.
To calculate the proposed normalization factor for FY 2018, we
grouped applicable LTCH cases using the proposed FY 2018 Version 35
GROUPER, and the recalibrated proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights to calculate the average case-mix index (CMI); we grouped the
same applicable LTCH cases using the FY 2017 GROUPER Version 34 and MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights and calculated the average CMI; and computed
the ratio by dividing the average CMI for FY 2017 by the average CMI
proposed for FY 2018. That ratio is the proposed normalization factor.
Because the calculation of the proposed normalization factor involves
the proposed relative weights for the proposed MS-LTC-DRGs that
contained applicable LTCH cases to calculate the average CMIs, any low-
volume proposed MS-LTC-DRGs are included in the calculation (and the
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs with no applicable LTCH cases are not included in
the calculation).
To calculate the proposed budget neutrality adjustment factor, we
simulated estimated total FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate payments for applicable LTCH cases using the proposed FY 2018
normalized relative weights and proposed GROUPER Version 35; simulated
estimated total FY 2017 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments
for applicable LTCH cases using the FY 2017 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights
and the FY 2017 GROUPER Version 34; and calculated the ratio of these
estimated total payments by dividing the simulated estimated total LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate payments for FY 2017 by the simulated
estimated total LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments for FY
2018. The resulting ratio is the proposed budget neutrality adjustment
factor. The calculation of the proposed budget neutrality factor
involves the proposed relative weights for the LTCH cases used in the
payment simulation, which includes any cases grouped to low-volume
proposed MS-LTC-DRGs or to proposed MS-LTC-DRGs with no applicable LTCH
cases, and generally does not include payments for cases grouped to a
proposed MS-LTC-DRG with no applicable LTCH cases. (Occasionally, a few
LTCH cases (that is, those with a covered length of stay of 7 days or
less, which are removed from the proposed relative weight calculation
in step 2) that are grouped to a proposed MS-LTC-DRG with no applicable
LTCH cases are included in the payment simulations used to calculate
the proposed budget neutrality factor. However, the number and payment
amount of such cases have a negligible impact on the proposed budget
neutrality factor calculation).
In this proposed rule, to ensure budget neutrality in the update to
the MS-LTC-DRG classifications and relative weights under Sec.
412.517(b), we are proposing to continue to use our established two-
step budget neutrality methodology. Therefore, in this proposed rule,
in the first step of our proposed MS-LTC-DRG budget neutrality
methodology, for FY 2018, we are proposing to calculate and apply a
proposed normalization factor to the recalibrated proposed relative
weights (the result of Steps 1 through 6 discussed previously) to
ensure that estimated payments are not affected by changes in the
composition of case types or the proposed changes to the classification
system. That is, the proposed normalization adjustment is intended to
ensure that the recalibration of the proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative
weights (that is, the process itself) neither increases nor decreases
the average case-mix index.
To calculate the proposed normalization factor for FY 2018 (the
first step of our proposed budget neutrality methodology), we used the
following three steps: (1.a.) used the most recent available applicable
LTCH cases from the most recent available data (that is, LTCH
discharges from the FY 2016 MedPAR file) and grouped them using the
proposed FY 2018 GROUPER (that is, proposed Version 35 for FY 2018) and
the recalibrated proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights
(determined in Steps 1 through 6 above) to calculate the average case-
mix index; (1.b.) grouped the same applicable LTCH cases (as are used
in Step 1.a.) using the FY 2017 GROUPER (Version 34) and FY 2017 MS-
LTC-DRG relative weights and calculated the average case-mix index; and
(1.c.) computed the ratio of these average case-mix indexes by dividing
the average CMI for FY 2017 (determined in Step 1.b.) by the average
case-mix index for FY 2018 (determined in Step 1.a.). As a result, in
determining the proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weights for FY 2018, each
recalibrated proposed MS-LTC-DRG relative weight is multiplied by the
proposed normalization factor of 1.28875 (determined in Step 1.c.) in
the first step of the proposed budget neutrality methodology, which
produced ``normalized relative weights.''
In the second step of our proposed MS-LTC-DRG budget neutrality
methodology, we calculate a second proposed budget neutrality factor
consisting of the ratio of estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate payments for applicable LTCH cases (the
sum of all calculations under Step 1.a. mentioned previously) after
reclassification and recalibration to estimated aggregate payments for
FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments for applicable
LTCH cases before reclassification and recalibration (that is, the sum
of all calculations under Step 1.b. mentioned previously).
That is, for this proposed rule, for FY 2018, under the second step
of the proposed budget neutrality methodology, we are proposing to
determine the proposed budget neutrality adjustment factor using the
following three steps: (2.a.) simulated estimated total FY 2018 LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate payments for applicable LTCH cases
using the proposed normalized relative weights for FY 2018 and proposed
GROUPER Version 35 (as described above); (2.b.) simulated estimated
total FY 2017 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments for
applicable LTCH cases using the FY 2017 GROUPER (Version 34) and the FY
2017 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights in Table 11 of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule available on the Internet, as described in section VI.
of the Addendum of that final rule; and (2.c.) calculated the ratio of
these estimated total payments by dividing the value determined in Step
2.b. by the value determined in Step 2.a. In determining the proposed
FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights, each normalized proposed relative
weight is then multiplied by a budget neutrality factor of 0.9866449
(the value determined in Step 2.c.) in the second step of the proposed
budget neutrality methodology to achieve the budget neutrality
requirement at Sec. 412.517(b).
Accordingly, in determining the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG
relative weights in this proposed rule, consistent with our existing
methodology, we are proposing to apply a normalization factor of
1.28875 and a budget neutrality factor of 0.9866449. Table 11, which is
listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule and is
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site, lists the proposed MS-
[[Page 20020]]
LTC-DRGs and their respective proposed relative weights, geometric mean
length of stay, and five-sixths of the geometric mean length of stay
(used to identify SSO cases under Sec. 412.529(a)) for FY 2018.
C. Proposed Changes to the LTCH PPS Payment Rates and Other Proposed
Changes to the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
1. Overview of Development of the LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment
Rates
The basic methodology for determining LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rates is currently set forth at 42 CFR 412.515 through 412.536.
In this section, we discuss the factors that we are proposing to use to
update the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018, that is,
effective for LTCH discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017
through September 30, 2018. Under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure required by statute, beginning with discharges in cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2016, only LTCH discharges that meet
the criteria for exclusion from the site neutral payment rate are paid
based on the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate specified at Sec.
412.523. (For additional details on our finalized policies related to
the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure required by statute, we refer
readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49601 through
49623).)
Prior to the implementation of the dual payment rate system in FY
2016, all LTCHs were paid similarly to those now exempt from the site
neutral payment rate. That legacy payment rate was called the standard
Federal rate. For details on the development of the initial standard
Federal rate for FY 2003, we refer readers to the August 30, 2002 LTCH
PPS final rule (67 FR 56027 through 56037). For subsequent updates to
the standard Federal rate (FYs 2003 through 2015)/LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate (FY 2016 through present) as implemented under
Sec. 412.523(c)(3), we refer readers to the following final rules: RY
2004 LTCH PPS final rule (68 FR 34134 through 34140); RY 2005 LTCH PPS
final rule (68 FR 25682 through 25684); RY 2006 LTCH PPS final rule (70
FR 24179 through 24180); RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR 27819
through 27827); RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR 26870 through
27029); RY 2009 LTCH PPS final rule (73 FR 26800 through 26804); FY
2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 44021 through 44030); FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50443 through 50444); FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51769 through 51773); FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (77 FR 53479 through 53481); FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50760 through 50765); FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79
FR 50176 through 50180); FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49634
through 49637); and FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57296
through 57310).
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we present our
proposals related to the proposed annual update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018, which include certain
statutory requirements as discussed below.
The application of the proposed update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate for FY 2018 is presented in section V.A. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule. The components of the proposed annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018 are
discussed below, including the statutory reduction to the annual update
for LTCHs that fail to submit quality reporting data for FY 2018 as
required by the statute (as discussed in section VIII.C.2.c. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). In addition, we are proposing to make
an adjustment to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate to account
for the estimated effect of the changes to the area wage level
adjustment for FY 2018 on estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments, in
accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(4) (as discussed in section V.B. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule), a proposed budget neutrality
adjustment stemming from our proposed change to the SSO payment
methodology (as discussed in VIII.D. of the preamble of this proposed
rule).
2. Proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate Annual
Market Basket Update
a. Overview
Historically, the Medicare program has used a market basket to
account for input price increases in the services furnished by
providers. The market basket used for the LTCH PPS includes both
operating and capital related costs of LTCHs because the LTCH PPS uses
a single payment rate for both operating and capital-related costs. We
adopted the 2013-based LTCH-specific market basket for use under the
LTCH PPS beginning in FY 2017 (81 FR 57101 through 57102). For
additional details on the historical development of the market basket
used under the LTCH PPS, we refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53467 through 53476), and for a complete discussion
of the LTCH market basket and a description of the methodologies used
to determine the operating and capital-related portions of the 2013-
based LTCH market basket, we refer readers to section VII.D. of the
preamble of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final rules.
Section 3401(c) of the Affordable Care Act provides for certain
adjustments to any annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate and refers to the timeframes associated with such
adjustments as a ``rate year'' (which are discussed in more detail in
section VIII.C.2.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule.) We note
that because the annual update to the LTCH PPS policies, rates, and
factors now occurs on October 1, we adopted the term ``fiscal year''
(FY) rather than ``rate year'' (RY) under the LTCH PPS beginning
October 1, 2010, to conform with the standard definition of the Federal
fiscal year (October 1 through September 30) used by other PPSs, such
as the IPPS (75 FR 50396 through 50397). Although the language of
sections 3004(a), 3401(c), 10319, and 1105(b) of the Affordable Care
Act refers to years 2010 and thereafter under the LTCH PPS as ``rate
year,'' consistent with our change in the terminology used under the
LTCH PPS from ``rate year'' to ``fiscal year,'' for purposes of
clarity, when discussing the annual update for the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate, including the provisions of the Affordable Care
Act, we use ``fiscal year'' rather than ``rate year'' for 2011 and
subsequent years.
b. Proposed Annual Update to the LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
for FY 2018
Section 1886(m)(3)(A) of the Act, provides that beginning in FY
2010, any annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
is reduced by the adjustments specified in clauses (i) and (ii) of
subparagraph (A). Clause (i) of section 1886(m)(3)(A) provides for a
reduction, for FY 2012 and each subsequent rate year, by the
productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of
the Act (that is, ``the multifactor productivity (MFP) adjustment'').
Clause (ii) of section 1886(m)(3)(A) provides for a reduction, for each
of FYs 2010 through 2019, by the ``other adjustment'' described in
section 1886(m)(4)(F) of the Act.
Section 411(e) of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act
(MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10), enacted on April 16, 2015, amended section
1886(m)(3) of
[[Page 20021]]
the Act by amending subparagraph (A) to be ``subject to subparagraph
(C)'' and by adding new subparagraph (C), which specifies an additional
special rule for FY 2018. Specifically, section 1886(m)(3)(C) of the
Act states for FY 2018, the annual update under subparagraph (A) for
the fiscal year, after application of clauses (i) and (ii) of
subparagraph (A), shall be 1 percent. That is, the annual update for FY
2018, after applications of the reductions for the MFP adjustment
(under clause (i) of section 1886(m)(3)(A)) and the ``other
adjustment'' (under clause (ii) of section 1886(m)(3)(A)) is 1 percent.
Historically, CMS has used an estimated market basket increase to
update the LTCH PPS. Under the authority of section 123 of the BBRA as
amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA, we adopted a newly created 2013-
based LTCH-specific market basket for use under the LTCH PPS beginning
in FY 2017. The 2013-based LTCH-specific market basket is based solely
on the Medicare cost report data submitted by LTCHs and, therefore,
specifically reflects the cost structures of only LTCHs. For additional
details on the development of the 2013-based LTCH-specific market
basket, we refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57101 through 57102). For FYs 2010 through 2017, the estimated market
basket update under the LTCH PPS was reduced by the MFP adjustment and
``other adjustment'' as applicable. However, as described above,
section 411(e) of the MACRA subsequently amended section 1886(m)(3)(A)
of the Act so that, after the adjustments above, the FY 2018 annual
update is set at 1 percent.
c. Proposed Adjustment to the LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
Under the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
In accordance with section 1886(m)(5) of the Act, as added by
section 3004(a) of the Affordable Care Act, the Secretary established
the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP).
Failure to report quality data under the LTCH QRP for FY 2014 and
subsequent fiscal years results in a 2.0 percentage point reduction in
the annual update as codified under Sec. 412.523(c)(4) of the
regulations. (As previously noted, although the language of section
3004(a) of the Affordable Care Act refers to years 2011 and thereafter
under the LTCH PPS as ``rate year,'' consistent with our change in the
terminology used under the LTCH PPS from ``rate year'' to ``fiscal
year,'' for purposes of clarity, when discussing the annual update for
the LTCH PPS, including the provisions of the Affordable Care Act, we
use ``fiscal year'' rather than ``rate year'' for 2011 and subsequent
years.) The LTCH QRP, as required for FY 2014 and subsequent fiscal
years by section 1886(m)(5)(A)(i) of the Act, applies a 2.0 percentage
point reduction to any update under Sec. 412.523(c)(3) for an LTCH
that does not submit quality reporting data to the Secretary in
accordance with section 1886(m)(5)(C) of the Act with respect to such a
year (that is, in the form and manner and at the time specified by the
Secretary under the LTCH QRP) (Sec. 412.523(c)(4)(i)). Section
1886(m)(5)(A)(ii) of the Act provides that the application of the 2.0
percentage points reduction may result in an annual update that is less
than 0.0 for a year, and may result in LTCH PPS payment rates for a
year being less than such LTCH PPS payment rates for the preceding year
(Sec. 412.523(c)(4)(iii)). Furthermore, section 1886(m)(5)(B) of the
Act specifies that the 2.0 percentage points reduction is applied in a
noncumulative manner, such that any reduction made under section
1886(m)(5)(A) of the Act shall apply only with respect to the year
involved, and shall not be taken into account in computing the LTCH PPS
payment amount for a subsequent year (Sec. 412.523(c)(4)(ii)). We
discuss the application of the 2.0 percentage point reduction under
Sec. 412.523(c)(4)(i) in our discussion of the proposed annual update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018 in section
VIII.C.2.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule. (For additional
information on the history of the LTCH QRP, including the statutory
authority and the selected measures, we refer readers to section
VIII.C.2.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule.)
d. Proposed Annual Update Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
Consistent with the amendments to section 1886(m)(3)(C) of the Act
provided by section 411 of the MACRA, we are proposing an update to the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of 1 percent for FY 2018.
For FY 2018, section 1886(m)(5) of the Act requires that, for LTCHs
that do not submit quality reporting data as required under the LTCH
QRP, any annual update to an LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate,
after application of the adjustments required by section 1886(m)(3) of
the Act, shall be further reduced by 2.0 percentage points. For LTCHs
that fail to submit quality reporting data under the LTCH QRP, under
Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(xiv) in conjunction with Sec. 412.523(c)(4), we
are proposing to further reduce the proposed annual update to the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate by 2.0 percentage points in
accordance with section 1886(m)(5) of the Act. As such, the proposed
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018 for
LTCHs that fail to submit quality reporting data under the LTCH QRP
will be the proposed 1-percent annual rate increase for FY 2018 reduced
by 2.0 percentage points. For this proposed rule, we are proposing to
establish a proposed annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate of -1 percent (that is, 1 percent minus 2.0 percentage
points) for FY 2018 for LTCHs that fail to submit quality reporting
data as required under the LTCH QRP. As provided in Sec.
412.523(c)(4)(iii) and as noted above, the application of the 2.0
percentage points reduction may result in an annual update that is less
than 0.0 for a year, and may result in LTCH PPS payment rates for a
year being less than such LTCH PPS payment rates for the preceding
year. (We note that, consistent with historical practice, in
determining the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate, we are also applying a proposed area wage level budget neutrality
factor in accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(4) (as discussed in section
V.B. of the Addendum to this proposed rule) and a proposed budget
neutrality adjustment stemming from our proposed change to the SSO
payment methodology (as discussed in VIII.D. of the preamble of this
proposed rule).
Absent the special provisions for FY 2018 required by section
1886(m)(3)(C) of the Act, we note the proposed annual market basket
update would have been based on the FY 2018 full market basket increase
of 2.8 percent (based on IGI's fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the
2013-based LTCH market basket) reduced by the proposed FY 2018 MFP
adjustment of 0.4 percentage point (also based on IGI's fourth quarter
2016 forecast). Following application of the productivity adjustment,
the adjusted proposed market basket update of 2.4 percent (2.8 percent
minus 0.4 percentage point) would have then been further reduced by
0.75 percentage point, as required by sections 1886(m)(3)(A)(ii) and
1886(m)(4)(F) of the Act. This would have resulted in a proposed annual
market basket update under to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate for FY 2018 of 1.65 percent (that is, 2.8 percent, less the
proposed MFP adjustment of 0.4 percentage point, and less the 0.75
percentage point required under section
[[Page 20022]]
1886(m)(4)(F) of the Act). (For additional information on the
application of the MFP adjustment and ``other adjustment'' in
developing the annual market based update under our historical
approach, refer to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57296
through 57310).)
D. Proposed Changes to the Short-Stay Outlier Adjustment Policy (Sec.
412.529)
In the FY 2003 LTCH PPS final rule (67 FR 55954) that implemented
the LTCH PPS, under Sec. 412.529, we established a special payment
policy for short-stay outlier (SSO) cases; that is, cases with a
covered length of stay that is less than or equal to five-sixths of the
geometric average length of stay for each LTC-DRG. When we established
the SSO policy, we explained that a short-stay outlier case may occur
when a beneficiary receives less than the full course of treatment at
the LTCH before being discharged (67 FR 55995). Also, in the FY 2003
LTCH PPS final rule, we stated that when we first described the policy
in the proposed rule, we based the proposed policy on the belief that
many of these patients could have been treated more appropriately in an
acute hospital subject to the acute care hospital inpatient prospective
payment system (67 FR 55995). Therefore, under the LTCH PPS, we
implemented a special payment adjustment for SSO cases. Under the
original SSO policy, for LTCH PPS discharges with a covered length of
stay of up to and including five-sixths the geometric average length of
stay for the LTC-DRG, we adjusted the per discharge payment amount
under the LTCH PPS as the least of 120 percent of the estimated cost of
the case, 120 percent of the LTC-DRG specific per diem amount
multiplied by the covered length of stay of that discharge, or the full
LTC-DRG payment amount (67 FR 55995 through 56000).
As noted previously, generally LTCHs are defined by statute as
having an average length of stay of greater than 25 days. In the FY
2003 LTCH PPS final rule, we stated that we believed that the SSO
payment adjustment results in more appropriate payments because these
SSO cases most likely did not receive a full course of treatment at a
LTCH level in such a short period of time, and the full LTC-DRG payment
would generally not be appropriate. Payment-to-cost ratio analyses at
that time indicated that if LTCHs received a full LTC-DRG payment for
those cases, they would have been significantly ``overpaid'' for the
resources they actually expended in treating those patients (67 FR
55995 through 56000). Furthermore, in establishing the SSO policy, we
stated that we believed that providing a reduced payment for SSO cases
would discourage hospitals from admitting these patients. We also
believed that the policy did not severely penalize providers that, in
good faith, had admitted a patient and provided some services before
realizing that the beneficiary could receive more appropriate treatment
at another site of care. As we further explained in the FY 2003 LTCH
PPS final rule, establishing a SSO payment adjustment for these types
of cases addresses the incentives inherent in a discharge-based PPS for
LTCHs for treating patients with a short length of stay (67 FR 55995
through 56000). We have made several changes to our SSO policy since it
was first introduced. For a full discussion of those historic changes,
we refer readers to the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR 26904
through 26919).
During our FY 2016 and FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS rulemaking cycles, we
received public comments that we determined were outside the scope of
the FY 2016 and FY 2017 proposed rules that expressed concern with our
existing SSO policy. Commenters stated that our SSO payment adjustment
appears to result in an incentive to improperly hold patients beyond
the SSO threshold (five-sixths the geometric average length of stay for
the MS-LTC-DRG). Specifically, as SSO cases are paid the ``lesser of''
various payment options, while non-SSO cases are paid the full MS-LTC-
DRG payment, there is an economic incentive to hold a patient beyond
the SSO threshold in order to increase (and in some cases dramatically
increase) the LTCH PPS payment for that case. In its comment in
response to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, MedPAC stated that
its analysis of LTCH discharge patterns have shown that LTCHs respond
to that incentive. Analyses of lengths-of-stay by MS-LTC-DRG have
consistently shown that the frequency of discharges rises sharply
immediately after the SSO threshold is met. This pattern holds true
across MS-LTC-DRGs and for every category of LTCHs. We believe that
these analyses strongly suggest that LTCHs' discharge decisions are
influenced at least as much by this financial incentive as by clinical
considerations. Our own analysis of LTCH claims data showed similar
findings.
In light of these concerns, in this proposed rule, we are proposing
to address this financial incentive and discourage such delay in the
discharge of LTCH patients by proposing to revise our SSO policy. We
note that, under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure, our existing
SSO policy only applies to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate.
Accordingly, the proposed changes to our SSO policy presented in this
section would only apply to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases (or, for cost reporting periods beginning before October 1, 2017,
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate portion of the blended rate
payment under Sec. 412.522(c)(3)(ii)).
Under our proposed policy, the SSO definition would remain
unchanged, but the current payment adjustment options would be replaced
with a single graduated per diem payment adjustment calculated using a
blended payment rate that, as the length of stay increases, consists of
a decreasing portion of the payment amount paid at the IPPS per diem
amount (referred to as the ``IPPS comparable amount'') and an
increasing portion paid at 120 percent of the MS-LTC-DRG per diem
payment amount (referred to as the ``LTCH PPS per diem amount''), with
a maximum payment amount set at the full LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate. Specifically, beginning with discharges occurring on or
after October 1, 2017, we are proposing to pay SSO cases solely on the
``blended'' option in the current SSO payment adjustment formula
described at Sec. 412.529(c)(2)(iv); that is, a SSO case would be paid
based on a blend of the IPPS comparable amount (determined under Sec.
412.529(d)(4)(i)) and the MS-LTC-DRG per diem amount (determined under
Sec. 412.529(d)(1) in conjunction with Sec. 412.503).
Under this blended payment method at existing Sec.
412.529(c)(2)(iv), as the length of stay of a SSO case increases, the
percentage of the per diem payment amounts based on the full MS-LTC-DRG
standard Federal payment rate would increase, and the percentage of the
payment based on the IPPS comparable amount would decrease. This
blended per diem payment rate adjustment would result in paying LTCH
cases with a very short length of stay more like an IPPS case, and LTCH
cases with relatively longer lengths-of-stay more like a non-short-stay
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate case. Therefore, as the length
of stay of a LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate case increases, the
treatment resources and costs associated with the stay are more
comparable with typical LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments
and less comparable to payments for the same stay at an acute care
hospital under the IPPS.
If adopted, this policy would result in payment amounts becoming
more commensurate with the LTCH PPS
[[Page 20023]]
standard Federal payment rate as the case begins to resemble a more
characteristic LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate case. We believe
that, by paying SSO cases on this basis, we would reduce, if not
eliminate, the payment ``cliffs'' (or payment differentials) inherent
in our current payment methodology, as well as the financial incentives
that appear to have resulted in potentially improper delays in patient
discharges other than solely for medical reasons. In addition, we
believe that this proposed per diem ``blended'' approach would provide
an appropriate balance between the 1-day marginal payment and the 1-day
marginal incurred cost.
Under this proposal, we are proposing to codify the change to the
SSO policy described above by revising Sec. 412.529 of the regulation.
Specifically, we are proposing to add paragraph (c)(4) to provide that,
for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017, SSO cases will be
paid according to the blended payment option at existing Sec.
412.529(c)(2)(iv) and corresponding changes to Sec. 412.529(c)(3) by
sunsetting the previous SSO payment formula as of October 1, 2017.
The goal of this proposed revision to the SSO policy is to remove
the incentive to delay patient discharges for payment reasons. In
assessing the potential impact of this proposed policy change, we found
two different impacts on Medicare LTCH spending: One would increase
spending while the other would decrease spending.
First, we expect this proposed SSO payment adjustment methodology
would result in increased payments to SSO cases. Based on data and FY
2018 payment estimates used for this proposed rule, we estimate that,
under this proposal, Medicare payments to SSO cases would increase
approximately 30 percent, or approximately $145 million (without taking
into account any assumptions on changes to LTCHs' discharge practices).
These increased payments for SSO cases would produce a somewhat
substantial increase in aggregate Medicare spending for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases (that is, an approximate 4.6-
percent increase to current projected LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate case payments).
At the same time, without the economic incentive to delay discharge
until the SSO threshold is met, under our proposal, we expect LTCHs
would discharge some patients sooner, even while the length of stay of
the patient is still within the SSO period. Therefore, in the absence
of the proposed policy, these cases would not have previously been SSO
cases. We believe the proposed policy would result in some reduction in
Medicare spending due to an expected decrease in Medicare payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases that, under the current
SSO policy, were not receiving the SSO payment adjustment (because
discharges were delayed until the SSO threshold was met).
However, while we expect this behavior change by LTCHs would reduce
Medicare expenditures, we do not believe that the decrease in
expenditures from fewer delayed discharge cases would offset the
estimated increase in expenditures under the proposed SSO payment
adjustment methodology. As such, we project that this proposed change
to the payment formula for SSOs would result in a net increase in
aggregate Medicare LTCH payments compared to aggregate Medicare
payments under the current methodology.
The goal of the proposed policy is to remove the incentive to delay
patient discharges for payment reasons, not to increase aggregate
Medicare LTCH PPS payments. Therefore, we believe the appropriate
policy approach is to propose to implement this proposed change to the
SSO payment methodology on a budget neutral basis; that is, to
implement the proposed SSO payment adjustment methodology by adjusting
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate so that our projection of
aggregate FY 2018 payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases made under our proposed SSO payment adjustment methodology would
be equal to our projection of aggregate FY 2018 payments paid for LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases under our existing SSO payment
adjustment methodology.
We further note that, based on most recent claims data, we believe
the effects of a budget neutral approach would primarily occur within
each LTCH and, therefore, result in minimal redistribution between
different LTCHs. Specifically, FY 2015 claims data show that nearly all
LTCHs treated at least one SSO case, and those that did not treat any
SSO cases, on average, had very few LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases. In addition, for over 90 percent of all LTCHs, at least 20
percent of their LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases were SSO
cases. Therefore, we expect that, for most LTCHs, the increase in
payments for their SSO cases under this proposed change to the SSO
payment methodology would generally offset any SSO budget neutrality-
related decrease in payment to their non-SSO LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases.
In implementing the proposed SSO payment methodology, we are
proposing to use a budget neutrality adjustment to offset the projected
net increase in Medicare spending, which accounts for both the
estimated decrease in Medicare payments resulting from LTCHs no longer
holding patients until the SSO threshold is met and the larger
estimated increase in spending to SSO cases described earlier. We
believe that our proposal to incorporate a projection of the expected
decrease in spending resulting from behavior change to not hold
patients beyond the SSO threshold appropriately reflects the net impact
of the proposed change. Further, this lessens the impact of any budget
neutrality adjustment estimated without accounting for these expected
behavioral changes--in other words, if the budget neutrality adjustment
only adjusted for the increased payments to SSO cases.
To do so, we are proposing to amend Sec. 412.523 by adding a new
paragraph (d)(5), which would specify that the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate will be adjusted by a one-time, permanent factor
that accounts for the projected change in estimated aggregate payments
to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases in FY 2018 due to the
change in the payment methodology for SSO cases described at Sec.
412.529(c)(4). (As noted earlier, this budget neutrality adjustment
would only affect the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate.) This
factor would ensure that the proposed change to the SSO payment
methodology in FY 2018 does not affect aggregate LTCH PPS payments;
that is, this proposed policy change is budget neutral. Specifically,
we are proposing to use the following methodology to determine the
proposed budget neutrality factor that would be applied to the proposed
FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate using the 2016 LTCH
standard Federal payment rate payment cases used for this proposed
rule. These estimates are based upon the most recently available data
(for example, the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file), and
consistent with historical practice, if more recent data become
available, we are proposing to use such data for the final rule.
Step 1--Simulate estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate payments using the existing SSO payment
methodology at Sec. 412.529(c)(3). (For the remainder of this
discussion, we refer to this amount as ``estimated FY 2018 payments
under the existing SSO payment
[[Page 20024]]
methodology''.) Under this step, our estimated FY 2018 payments under
the existing SSO payment methodology is $3.177 billion.
Step 2--Simulate estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate payments using the proposed SSO payment
methodology at proposed Sec. 412.529(c)(4), after accounting for
expected changes in LTCHs' discharge behavior (as discussed earlier),
which is determined as follows in Step 2a through Step 2d. (A
discussion and supporting details for the assumptions for expected
changes in LTCHs' discharge behavior used in this step are provided
after Step 2c. For the remainder of this discussion, we refer to this
amount as the ``estimated FY 2018 payments under the proposed SSO
payment methodology''.)
Step 2a--Simulate estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate payments under the proposed SSO payment
methodology without accounting for expected changes in LTCHs' discharge
behavior. (For the remainder of this discussion, we refer to this
amount as the ``estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments under the
proposed SSO payment methodology.'' We note that this estimate is
comprised of estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments under the proposed
SSO payment methodology for non-SSO cases and for SSO cases.) This
estimate represents the proposed change in the SSO payment methodology
alone in the absence of any behavioral assumptions. We note that, in
addition to estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments under the proposed
SSO payment methodology for SSO cases, this estimate includes estimated
unadjusted FY 2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology
for non-SSO cases (which are the same as the estimated FY 2018 payments
under the existing SSO payment methodology in Step 1 for non-SSO cases
because there would be no change in which cases would be subject to an
SSO payment adjustment under our proposal). Based on data used for this
proposed rule (which is described in section I.J.1. of the Regulatory
Impact Analysis in Appendix A to this proposed rule), we estimate that,
in the absence of any behavioral assumptions, under our SSO policy
proposal, FY 2018 Medicare payments to SSO cases would increase
approximately 4.6 percent, or approximately $145 million. This amount
reflects the first of the two different impacts on Medicare LTCH
spending that we would expect under the proposed change to the SSO
policy (as discussed earlier), which would, without incorporating the
second impact discussed above, increase Medicare spending under the
LTCH PPS to $3.322 billion.
Step 2b--Determine the estimated amount of aggregate FY
2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments that would reflect
the projected decrease in non-SSO cases under the proposed changes to
the SSO policy. Under this step, we use the estimated unadjusted FY
2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology for non-SSO
cases (simulated in Step 2a) and our actuarial projection (described in
detail below) of a 10-percent decrease in non-SSO cases under the
proposed change to the SSO policy. Therefore, under this step, we would
subtract an amount equal to 10 percent of our estimated unadjusted FY
2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology for non-SSO
cases from the amount determined in Step 2a. (In other words, after
applying Step 2b, under our actuarial assumptions, estimated FY 2018
unadjusted payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology for non-
SSO cases are projected to be 90 percent of the corresponding estimate
for such cases from Step 2a to reflect the expected decrease in non-SSO
cases under the proposed changes to the SSO policy.) Based on data used
for this proposed rule, we estimate that 10 percent of our estimated
unadjusted FY 2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology
for non-SSO cases is approximately $272 million. (In Step 2d below,
this estimated $272 million is subtracted from our estimated FY 2018
unadjusted payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology to
account for the projected decrease in non-SSO cases under the proposed
changes to the SSO policy.)
Step 2c--Determine the estimated amount of aggregate FY
2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments that reflect the
projected increase in SSO cases under the proposed changes to the SSO
policy. Under our actuarial assumptions (used in Step 2b above and
described in detail below), we project SSO cases under the proposed
change to the SSO policy to increase at the same level as the projected
decrease in non-SSO cases (that is, by 10 percent of the non-SSO
cases). That is, under the proposed change to the SSO policy, our
actuaries estimate that there would be a 10-percent shift in LTCH cases
from non-SSO cases to SSO cases and, therefore, we project a resulting
aggregate increase in payments to SSO cases. (In Step 2d below, this
estimated increase is added to our estimated FY 2018 unadjusted
payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology to account for the
projected increase in SSO cases under the proposed changes to the SSO
policy.)
To incorporate our actuarial estimate of this case shifting in our
estimated FY 2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology,
we again determined the estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments for all
non-SSO cases but now paid as if all such cases were SSO cases under
our proposed SSO policy. (For readability, we use the term ``aggregate
SSO comparable amount'' below to refer to this amount.) In other words,
we estimate payments for non-SSO cases as if all factors of each case
remained the same, but the length of stay decreased to less than the
SSO threshold. (The basis for the decrease in the length of stay is
discussed in greater detail below.) This 10 percent of the ``aggregate
SSO comparable amount'' represents our estimate of the aggregate
increase in SSO payments under our proposed SSO policy for those cases
that are expected to shift to SSO cases from non-SSO cases because we
are projecting that 10 percent of non-SSO cases would become SSO cases
as a result of our proposal.
Therefore, under this step, we would add an amount equal to 10
percent of the ``aggregate SSO comparable amount'' to the amount
determined in Step 2a. (In other words, under our actuarial assumptions
and after applying Step 2c, our estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments
under the proposed SSO payment methodology would be increased to
reflect the expected increase in SSO cases.)
To estimate proposed SSO payments based on non-SSO cases under this
step, because our proposed payment adjustment for SSO cases depends on
the length of stay, these estimated payments depend on where, relative
to the SSO threshold, the shifts from non-SSO cases to SSO cases occur.
As we discuss in greater detail below, our actuaries estimate the
majority of the increase in SSO cases resulting from this proposed
policy would occur within 1 to 3 days prior to the SSO threshold. As
such, we based our estimated payment amount in this step on our
actuarial assumption (discussed in greater detail below) that the
length of stay shifts would occur only between 1 and 3 days prior to
the SSO threshold. We then performed three payment simulations to
estimate proposed SSO payments if all of the non-SSO cases would have a
length of stay of 1 day, 2 days, and 3 days prior to the SSO threshold.
To determine the estimated SSO payments for the non-SSO cases,
[[Page 20025]]
we took an average of those three aggregate estimates: payments where
non-SSO cases moved 1 day prior to the SSO threshold; payments where
non-SSO cases moved 2 days prior to the SSO threshold; and payments
where non-SSO cases moved 3 days prior to the SSO threshold. This
amount is the ``aggregate SSO comparable amount'' described above. Then
we took 10 percent of the ``aggregate SSO comparable amount'' as the
estimated increase in aggregate SSO payments expected to result from
the expected increase in SSO cases under our proposal.
Based on data used for this proposed rule, using the calculation
described above, we estimate that 10 percent of the ``aggregate SSO
comparable amount'' is approximately $229 million. (In Step 2d below,
this estimated $229 million is added to our estimated FY 2018
unadjusted payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology to
account for the projected increase in SSO cases under the proposed
changes to the SSO policy.)
Step 2d--Adjust the original estimated unadjusted FY 2018 payments
under the proposed SSO payment methodology ($272 million from Step 2a)
to account for the projected decrease in non-SSO cases under the
proposed changes to the SSO policy (by subtracting the amount
determined in Step 2b) and for the projected increase in SSO cases
under the proposed changes to the SSO policy (by adding the $229
million from Step 2c). The resulting amount is the estimated FY 2018
payments under the proposed SSO payment methodology (which is used in
Step 3 below). As such, we estimate FY 2018 payments under the proposed
SSO payment methodology is $3.279 billion (that is, $3.322 billion from
Step 2a minus the $272 million from Step 2b plus the $229 million from
Step 2c.) Therefore, we estimate that our proposed change to the SSO
payment methodology would result in an increase in payments of
approximately $102 million (that is, the $3.177 billion as calculated
in Step 1 minus the $3.279 billion as calculated here in Step 2).
Actuarial Assumptions for Shifts in Cases Used under Steps 2b and
2c: Our actuarial assumptions for LTCHs' discharge behavior under our
proposed SSO policy were estimated based on a comparative analysis of
distributions of LTCH discharges relative to the SSO thresholds in FY
2003 and FY 2015 using data from FY 2002 (the year before the LTCH PPS
was implemented and the final year prior to a SSO payment adjustment)
to LTCH discharges in FY 2015 (the most recent complete year of data
available at the time the comparative analysis was performed in
preparation for this proposed rule). (We note that, for FY 2002,
because there was no applicable SSO threshold, we used the SSO
thresholds from FY 2003 (LTC-DRG Version 23) based on the billed LTC-
DRG (LTC-DRG Version 22) on the FY 2002 claim.)
The FY 2002 distribution shows a nearly continuous distribution of
LTCH discharges relative to what would become the SSO threshold in FY
2003, and approximate symmetry before and after the SSO threshold. In
other words, for FY 2002, the distribution of discharges just after
what would become the FY 2003 threshold looks similar to the
distribution of discharges just before that threshold, and there is a
corresponding similarity between discharges well after and well before
what would become the SSO threshold.
While the FY 2015 distribution of LTCH discharges relative to the
SSO threshold shows the same symmetry among discharges well before and
well after the threshold, there are significantly fewer discharges just
before the SSO threshold and significantly more discharges just after
the SSO threshold (instead of a symmetry among discharges just before
and just after the SSO threshold). For FY 2015, this lack of symmetry
is concentrated in the 3 days leading up to the SSO threshold. (We note
that, in our analysis of LTCH discharge patterns relative to the
applicable SSO threshold, we found similar patterns for FYs 2003
through 2014 as those observed for FY 2015, as well as for FY 2016 LTCH
discharges.)
In particular, the FY 2015 LTCH discharges have, as a proportion of
total FY 2015 LTCH discharges, approximately 20 percent more discharges
occurring just after the SSO threshold when compared to FY 2002
discharges. However, due to other substantial changes in Medicare
payments to LTCHs, including the introduction of the LTCH PPS in FY
2003, we do not believe the entire 20-percent shift in discharges is
attributable to only the introduction and subsequent revisions to the
LTCH PPS SSO payment adjustment. Moreover, this shift is not uniform
across all SSO discharges because the majority of shifting past the SSO
threshold occurs within 3 days of the SSO threshold. Based on this, our
actuaries estimate that the elimination of the payment cliff would
result in a 10-percent reduction in non-SSO cases, resulting in an
increase in SSO cases by 10 percent of our non-SSO cases. For these
non-SSO cases that shift, our actuaries estimate the discharges to
occur within 3 days prior to the SSO threshold based on the analysis of
LTCH discharge patterns relative to the applicable SSO threshold
described earlier.
As stated above, the net result of the amounts determined in Steps
2b and 2c of an approximately $43 million decrease (approximately -$272
million from Step 2b plus approximately $229 million from Step 2c)
reflects the second of the two different impacts on Medicare LTCH
spending we would expect under the proposed change to the SSO policy
(as discussed earlier), which would decrease Medicare spending under
the LTCH PPS.
Step 3--Calculate the ratio of the estimated aggregate FY
2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments under the existing
and proposed SSO policies to determine the adjustment factor that would
need to be applied to the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate to achieve budget neutrality (that is, where the estimated
aggregate payments calculated in Step 2 are estimated to be equal to
the estimated aggregate payments calculated in Step 1). This ratio is
calculated by dividing the estimated FY 2018 payments under the
existing SSO payment methodology ($3.177 billion as calculated in Step
1) by the estimated FY 2018 payments under the proposed SSO payment
methodology ($3.279 billion as calculated in Step 2). We note that,
under this step, an iterative process is used to determine the
adjustment factor that would need to be applied to the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate to achieve budget neutrality
because the portion of estimated FY 2018 payments under the proposed
SSO payment methodology that is not based on LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate (that is, the IPPS comparable amount portion under the
proposed SSO payment methodology) is not affected by the application of
this budget neutrality factor.
We also note that, under this step, the proposed budget neutrality
factor for the proposed change in the SSO payment methodology is
applied to the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
after the application of the proposed FY 2018 annual update and the
proposed FY 2018 area wage level adjustment budget neutrality factor
(discussed in section V. of the Addendum to this proposed rule).
Based on the claims data used for this proposed rule, we estimate
that our proposed change to the SSO payment methodology would result in
an increase in payments of approximately $102 million (that is, the
$3.177 billion
[[Page 20026]]
as calculated in Step 1 minus the $3.279 billion as calculated in Step
2) which reflects the approximate $43 million decrease that accounts
for our actuarial assumptions for expected changes in LTCHs' discharge
behavior under the proposed changes to the SSO policy). For this
proposed rule, using the steps in the proposed methodology described
earlier, we have determined a proposed budget neutrality factor for the
proposed change to the SSO payment methodology of 0.9672. (We are
proposing, consistent with historical practice, that if more recent
data become available and if finalized, we would use such data to
determine a budget neutrality factor for the proposed change to the SSO
payment methodology in the final rule.) Accordingly, in section V.A. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule, to determine the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate, we are proposing to apply a
one-time, permanent budget neutrality factor of 0.9672 for the proposed
change in the SSO payment methodology. The proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate shown in Table 1E in section VI. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule reflects this proposed adjustment.
E. Temporary Exception to the Site Neutral Payment Rate for Certain
Spinal Cord Specialty Hospitals
Section 15009 of Public Law 114-255 added new subparagraph (F) to
section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, which provides for a temporary exception
to the site neutral payment rate for certain spinal cord specialty
hospitals. Under this provision, discharges occurring in cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2018 and FY 2019 for LTCHs that meet the
specified statutory criteria are excepted from the site neutral payment
rate (that is, all discharges from such LTCHs during this period would
be paid at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate). Clauses (i)
through (iii) of section 1886(m)(6)(F) of the Act state that, in order
for an LTCH to qualify for this temporary exception, the LTCH must: (1)
Have been a not-for-profit LTCH on June 1, 2014, as determined by cost
report data; (2) of the discharges in calendar year 2013 from the LTCH
for which payment was made under the LTCH PPS, at least 50 percent were
classified under MS-LTC-DRGs 28, 29, 52, 57, 551, 573, and 963; and (3)
have discharged inpatients (including both individuals entitled to, or
enrolled for, Medicare Part A benefits and individuals not so entitled
or enrolled) during FY 2014 who had been admitted from at least 20 of
the 50 States, determined by the States of residency of such inpatients
and based on such data submitted by the hospital to the Secretary as
the Secretary may require. The statute further provides authority for
the Secretary to implement the third criterion (set forth at section
1886(m)(6)(F)(iii) of the Act and referred to as the ``significant out-
of-state admissions criterion'') by program instruction or otherwise,
and exempts the policy initiatives from any information collection
requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act (Chapter 35 of Title 44
of the United States Code). Given this express authority, we plan to
provide further details regarding the implementation of the significant
out-of-state admissions criterion through subregulatory guidance.
However, in this proposed rule, we are proposing to codify the
requirements of the temporary exception to the site neutral payment
rate for certain spinal cord specialty hospitals specified under
section 1886(m)(6)(F) of the Act, as added by section 15009 of Public
Law 114-255. Specifically, we are proposing to codify the requirements
of this provision at new Sec. 412.522(b)(4), by providing for an
exception from the site neutral payment rate for discharges occurring
in cost reporting periods beginning during FYs 2018 and 2019 for LTCHs
that meet the specified statutory criteria. We are seeking public
comments on this proposal. Based on information currently available, we
believe that two hospitals may qualify for this exception.
F. Temporary Exception to the Site Neutral Payment Rate for Certain
Discharges With Severe Wounds From Certain LTCHs
Section 15010 of Public Law 114-255 added a new subparagraph (G) to
section 1886(m)(6) of the Act, which creates a temporary exception to
the site neutral payment rate for certain severe wound discharges from
certain LTCHs during such LTCHs' cost reporting periods beginning
during FY 2018 (that is, for cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2017 and on or before September 30, 2018). Under the
provisions of section 15010 of Public Law 114-255, in order for an
LTCH's discharge to be excluded from the site neutral payment rate
under this exception during its FY 2018 cost reporting period, the
discharge must be: (1) From an LTCH ``identified by the last sentence
of subsection (d)(1)(B)'' of the Act; (2) classified under MS-LTC-DRG
602, 603, 539, or 540; and (3) with respect to an individual treated by
an LTCH, for a severe wound. The statute defines a ``severe wound,''
for the purposes of the exception, as ``a wound which is a stage 3
wound, stage 4 wound, unstageable wound, non-healing surgical wound, or
fistula as identified in the claim from the long-term care hospital.''
The statute further defines a ``wound'' as ``an injury involving
division of tissue or rupture of the integument or mucous membrane with
exposure to the external environment.''
Much of this language is identical or substantially similar to the
language for the previous temporary exception for discharges for the
treatment of severe wounds provided for under the amendments made by
section 231 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-
113), except for three key differences. First, the previous temporary
exception for severe wound discharges applied to LTCHs that are
grandfathered hospitals-within-hospitals (HwHs) (that is, hospitals
that are described under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) that meet the criteria
of Sec. 412.22(f)) and are located in a rural area or treated as rural
(Sec. 412.522(b)(2)(ii)(B)), while the new temporary exception for
severe wound discharges only requires that LTCHs are grandfathered HwHs
(and does not require the LTCH to also be located in a rural area or
treated as rural). Second, under this new temporary exception for
severe wound discharges, the definition of a ``severe wound'' includes
only five of the eight categories (stage 3 wound, stage 4 wound,
unstageable wound, non-healing surgical wound, and fistula) included in
the definition of a ``severe wound'' under the original temporary
exception for severe wound discharges (and does not include the
categories of infected wound, osteomyelitis, and wound with morbid
obesity). Finally, this new temporary exception for severe wound
discharges is limited to discharges that meet the definition of a
severe wound and are grouped to certain specified MS-LTC-DRGs, while
the previous temporary exception for severe wound discharges only
required the discharge to meet the definition of a severe wound (and
did not include the requirement for the discharge to also be grouped to
certain specified MS-LTC-DRGs). Additional details of the new temporary
exception for payment for severe wound discharges provided by Public
Law 114-255, including further discussion of the likenesses to and
differences from the original temporary exception for payment for
severe wound discharges provided by Public Law 114-113 are discussed
below.
We implemented the original temporary exception for payment for
discharges for the treatment of severe wounds that was provided by the
[[Page 20027]]
amendments made by section 231 of Public Law 114-113 in an interim
final rule with comment period (IFC) that appeared in the Federal
Register on April 21, 2016 (81 FR 23428 through 23438) (referred to as
the ``April 21, 2016 IFC'') and finalized concurrently in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57070). Therefore, to the extent
applicable, we are implementing this provision in an identical manner
to our implementation of the amendments made by section 231 of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, which is codified in the LTCH PPS
regulations at Sec. 412.522(b)(2). Specifically, Sec.
412.522(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) refers to LTCHs ``identified by the last
sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B)'' of the Act as LTCHs ``[d]escribed in
Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) and meets the criteria of Sec. 412.22(f).'' We
are proposing to codify the requirements of this ``new'' temporary
exception for severe wounds at new Sec. 412.522(b)(3), by providing
for an exception for discharges meeting the statutory criteria that
occur in a cost reporting period that begins during FY 2018 for LTCHs
described in Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) and meets the criteria of Sec.
412.22(f).
Clauses (ii) and (iii) of section 1886(m)(6)(G) of the Act,
respectively, as added by section 15010 of Public Law 114-255, includes
definitions of ``severe wound'' and ``wound'' for purposes of this
``new'' temporary exception for discharges for the treatment of severe
wounds. We are proposing to incorporate the definitions of ``wound''
and ``severe wound'' at Sec. 412.522(b)(3)(i) as they are defined in
the statute. We note that the definition of a ``wound'' in section
15010 is nearly identical to CMS' definition of ``wound'' at existing
Sec. 412.522(b)(2)(i). We further note that the definition of a
``severe wound'' is nearly identical to the definition used in section
231 of Public Law 114-113 with the exception that three categories
included in the latter (that is, infected wound, osteomyelitis, and
wound with morbid obesity) are not included in the definition set forth
in section 15010 of Public Law 114-255. The five remaining categories
of stage 3 wound, stage 4 wound, unstageable wound, non-healing
surgical wound, and fistula are identified by the list of ICD-10-CM
codes posted to the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/LongTermCareHospitalPPS/download.html
under the ``Severe Wound Diagnosis Codes by Category for Implementation
of Section 231 of Public Law 114-113'' download file. For more
information on our interpretation of these terms, we refer readers to
the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23428 through 23438) and the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57070). Therefore, this information on
how CMS interpreted the meanings of these categories of a ``severe
wound'' for Public Law 114-113 was available at the time Public Law
114-255 was enacted. As such, we are implementing the ``new'' temporary
exception for discharges for the treatment of severe wounds provided
for by section 15010 using the same list of ICD-10-CM codes to identify
the five categories of severe wounds enumerated in that section of
Public Law 114-255. In addition, as provided by section
1886(m)(6)(G)(i)(III) of the Act as added by section 15010 of Public
Law 114-255, we are proposing at new Sec. 412.522(b)(3)(ii) that the
patient must be treated for a severe wound that meets the statutory
definition of a ``severe wound'' at proposed Sec. 412.522(b)(3)(i) in
order for the LTCH discharge to meet this ``new'' temporary exception
for discharges for the treatment of severe wounds.
We believe that the requirement under the ``new'' temporary
exception for discharges for the treatment of severe wounds set forth
under section 1886(m)(6)(G)(i)(II) of the Act as added by section 15010
of Public Law 114-255 for an LTCH discharge be classified under MS-LTC-
DRG 602, 603, 539, or 540 is self-implementing. Accordingly, we are
proposing to codify this requirement at new Sec. 412.522(b)(3)(ii)(C)
by listing the applicable MS-LTC-DRGs.
Section 1886(m)(6)(G)(i)(I) of the Act, as added by section 15010
of Public Law 114-255, specifies that, for purposes of this ``new''
temporary exception for discharges for the treatment of severe wounds,
the LTCH discharge must be from an LTCH ``identified by the last
sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B)''. The phrase ``identified by the last
sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B) [of the Act]'' is equivalent to the
phrase ``identified by the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997'' used in section 231 of Public Law 114-
113, because the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 added the last sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B) to
the Act. As discussed in the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23428), the
phrase ``identified by the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997'' (which as previously discussed is
equivalent to ``identified by the last sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B)
of the Act'') has been interpreted by CMS to mean hospitals-within-
hospitals (HwHs) that were participating in Medicare, but excluded from
the hospital IPPS on or before September 30, 1995 (that is, hospitals
which are described under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i)) that meet the criteria
of Sec. 412.22(f) (81 FR 23430 through 23432). As further discussed in
the April 21, 2016 IFC, Sec. 412.22(f) generally requires that, in
order to have grandfathered status, an HwH must continue to operate
under the same terms and conditions, including, but not limited to, the
number of beds. A limited exception to this general policy allowed
eligible hospitals to increase the number of beds between October 1,
1995, and September 30, 2003, without loss of their grandfathered
status. A second exception allows grandfathered HwHs to increase square
footage or decrease the number of beds for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, while still retaining
grandfathered status. Because this phrase had already been interpreted
in this manner, the April 21, 2016 IFC adopted the same meaning of the
phrase for purposes of implementing section 231 of Public Law 114-113.
For additional information on hospitals ``identified by the amendment
made by section 4417(a) of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997,'' we refer
readers to the April 21, 2016 IFC (81 FR 23431 through 23432).
Therefore, for the purposes of the new temporary exception for LTCH
discharges for the treatment of severe wounds, ``identified by the last
sentence of subsection (d)(1)(B) of the Act'' means HwHs that were
participating in Medicare, but excluded from the hospital IPPS on or
before September 30, 1995 (that is, hospitals which are described under
Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i)) that meet the criteria of Sec. 412.22(f). We
finalized this policy without modification in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57069). Because we have already finalized our
interpretation of this phrase, we believe that the requirement at
section 1886(m)(6)(G)(i)(I) of the Act is self-implementing.
Accordingly, we are proposing to codify this requirement at new Sec.
412.522(b)(3)(ii)(B). LTCHs that believe they meet the requirements to
be a grandfathered HwH should contact their MACs. MACs will verify that
the LTCH meets these requirements.
G. Moratorium and Proposed Regulatory Delay of the Full Implementation
of the ``25-Percent Threshold Policy'' Adjustment (Sec. 412.538)
The ``25-percent threshold policy'' is a per discharge payment
adjustment in the LTCH PPS that is applied to payments for Medicare
patient discharges from an LTCH when the number of such patients
originating from any single referring hospital is in
[[Page 20028]]
excess of the applicable threshold for a given cost reporting period
(such threshold is generally set at 25 percent, with exceptions for
rural and urban single or MSA-dominant hospitals). If an LTCH exceeds
the applicable threshold during a cost reporting period, payment for
the discharge that puts the LTCH over its threshold and all discharges
subsequent to that discharge in the cost reporting period from the
referring hospital are adjusted at cost report settlement (discharges
not in excess of the threshold are unaffected by the 25-percent
threshold policy). The 25-percent threshold policy was originally
established in the FY 2005 IPPS final rule for LTCH HwHs and satellites
(69 FR 49191 through 49214). We later expanded the 25-percent threshold
policy in the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule to include all LTCHs and LTCH
satellite facilities (72 FR 26919 through 26944). Several laws have
mandated delayed implementation of the policy, including, most
recently, section 1206 of the Pathway for Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR)
Reform Act (Pub. L. 113-67). Section 1206(b)(1)(B) provides a permanent
exemption from the application of the 25-percent threshold policy for
LTCHs identified by the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (Pub. L. 105-33). As explained more fully
in section VIII.H. of the preamble of this proposed rule, LTCHs
``identified by the amendment made by section 4417(a) of the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997'' are HwHs that were participating in Medicare, but
excluded from the hospital IPPS on or before September 30, 1995 (that
is, hospitals which are described under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i)) that
meet the criteria of Sec. 412.22(f). LTCHs that believe they meet the
requirements to be a grandfathered HwH should contact their MACs. MACs
will verify that the LTCH meets these requirements. Section
1206(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 113-67 extended prior moratoria on the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy until cost reporting
periods beginning on or after either July 1, 2016 (for LTCHs subject to
42 CFR 412.534) or October 1, 2016 (for LTCHs subject to 42 CFR
412.536). For more details on the various laws that delayed the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy, we refer readers to
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50356 through 50357). In
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we consolidated the 25-percent
threshold policy by sunsetting Sec. Sec. 412.534 and 412.536 and
establishing provisions under new section Sec. 412.538.
Section 15006 of Public Law 114-255 further amended section
114(c)(1)(A) of the MMSEA (as amended) by striking ``for a 9-year
period'' and inserting ``through June 30, 2016, and for discharges
occurring on or after October 1, 2016 and before October 1, 2017'',
which provides for an extension of the moratorium on the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy. In addition, section
15006(b) of Public Law 114-255 further amended section 114(c)(2) of the
MMSEA (as amended) by inserting ``or any similar provision,'' after
``Regulations,'' in subparagraphs (A) and (B). (We note that the
functional result of the extension of the moratorium under section
15006(a) of Public Law 114-255 only extends to discharges on or after
October 1, 2016 and before October 1, 2017.)
To implement the provisions of section 15006 of Public Law 114-255,
we are proposing to make conforming amendments to the regulations that
currently govern the application of the 25-percent threshold policy.
Section 114(c)(1) of the MMSEA, from its inception, precluded CMS from
implementing either Sec. Sec. 412.534 or 412.536 (as applicable), as
well as any similar provision to hospitals described in the provision
of the MMSEA. Section 15006 of Public Law 114-255 amended section
114(c)(2) of the MMSEA by adding the words ``or any similar
provisions'' to both (A) and (B). Section 412.538 of the regulations is
a similar provision to the provisions of both Sec. Sec. 412.534 and
412.536 (we adopted the payment policy under Sec. 412.538 to create a
consolidated and streamlined 25-percent threshold policy to replace the
policies under Sec. Sec. 412.534 and 412.536, which were sunset).
Therefore, in order to implement the moratorium on the implementation
of the 25-percent threshold policy provided under section 15006 of
Public Law 114-255, we are proposing to amend Sec. 412.538 to account
for these statutory changes. We note that, similar to the July 1, 2012
through September 30, 2012 ``gap'' period discussed in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53484 through 53486), this extension of
the moratorium on the full application of the 25-percent threshold
policy results in a ``gap'' period where LTCHs are required to comply
with the fully-implemented 25-percent threshold policy for their cost
reporting periods beginning on or after July 1, 2016, and before
October 1, 2016, for any discharges occurring on or before September
30, 2016. For the same reasons discussed in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53485 through 53486), although those LTCHs with cost
reporting periods beginning on or after July 1 and before October 1
2016 are ``technically'' subject to the 25-percent threshold policy
until October 1, 2016, we believe that very few, if any, LTCHs will
actually receive a payment adjustment because these LTCHs would rarely,
if ever, admit more than 25 percent of their discharges from any one
referring hospital during the limited period of 1 to 3 months
(depending on the LTCH's cost reporting beginning date) that the 25-
percent threshold policy was technically in effect.)
In addition, we are proposing to adopt a 1-year regulatory
moratorium on the implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy;
that is, we are proposing to impose a regulatory moratorium on our
implementation of Sec. 412.538 until October 1, 2018. This proposal is
made in response to the further statutory delays and our continued
consideration of public comments received in response to our proposal
to consolidate and streamline the 25-percent threshold policy in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule. In response to that proposed rule,
several commenters stated that the new site neutral payment rate would
alleviate the policy concerns underlying the 25-percent threshold
policy. As we stated in more detail in our response to those comments
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57106), we are not
convinced that this is the case.
However, given this additional statutory moratorium, we believe
that it is appropriate at this time to propose to establish a
regulatory moratorium on the implementation of the 25-percent threshold
policy until we can examine data under the application of the site
neutral payment rate to further evaluate, when more data are available,
whether the policy is in fact still necessary. While we are not
convinced that the application of the site neutral payment rate removes
the need for the 25-percent threshold policy, we believe that
evaluating the impact of the application of the site neutral payment
rate on LTCH admission practices would be premature at this time. The
statute provides that the site neutral payment rate be phased-in,
effective with LTCH cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2015 and before October 1, 2017 (that is, LTCH cost
reporting periods beginning in FYs 2016 and 2017). LTCH claims data for
discharges that occurred in FY 2016 is currently the best available
data, and given that phase-in of the site neutral payment rate is based
on LTCHs' cost reporting period start dates, many LTCH discharges that
occurred during FY 2016
[[Page 20029]]
were not yet subject to the site neutral payment rate because they
occurred in a LTCH cost reporting period that had begun prior to
October 1, 2016. Consequently, at this time we only have a partial year
of LTCH claims data under the period where the site neural payment rate
was in effect, which may not be fully reflective of any changes in LTCH
admission practices under the new dual rate LTCH PPS. Proposing an
additional regulatory moratorium on the 25-percent threshold policy
through FY 2018 would allow CMS the opportunity to do an analysis of
LTCH admission practices under the new dual payment rate LTCH PPS based
on more complete data and would avoid creating any additional confusion
by having the 25-percent threshold policy become effective for a period
of time when future analysis of LTCH claims data may indicate the
policy concerns underlying the 25-percent threshold policy have been
moderated.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise the
effective date of Sec. 412.538 so that the 25-percent threshold policy
would apply to discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2018.
Further, we are proposing that if, in response to public comments, we
do not finalize this proposed additional 1-year regulatory moratorium,
we would revise Sec. 412.538 so that the 25-percent threshold policy
would apply to discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017,
consistent with the provisions of section 15006 of Public Law 114-255.
We are seeking public comments on our proposals.
H. Revision to Moratorium on Increasing Beds in Existing LTCH or LTCH
Satellite Locations Under the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
(Sec. 412.23)
Section 1206(b)(2) of Public Law 113-67, as amended by section
112(b) of the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA) (Pub. L.
113-93), established ``new'' statutory moratoria on the establishment
of new LTCHs and LTCH satellite facilities and on the increase in the
number of hospital beds in existing LTCHs and LTCH satellite
facilities, effective April 1, 2014 through September 30, 2017, by
amending section 114(d)(1) of the MMSEA (as amended). In addition, the
statute also provided an exception under the ``new'' moratorium under
section 114(d)(7) of the MMSEA (as amended) to establish a new LTCH or
LTCH satellite facility during the period between April 1, 2014, and
September 30, 2017, if a hospital or entity meets criteria, which
mirror the expired provisions of section 114(d)(2)(A). For a discussion
on our implementation of these moratoria, we refer readers to the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50189 through 50193).
Section 15004(a) of Public Law 114-255 further amended section
114(d)(7) of the MMSEA (as amended) by striking ``The moratorium under
paragraph (1)(A)'' and inserting ``[a]ny moratorium under paragraph
(1)'' and specified that such amendment shall take effect as if
included in the enactment of section 112 of the PAMA. Under this
amendment, all existing LTCHs or LTCH satellite locations are no longer
subject to a moratorium on an increase in LTCH beds set forth in
paragraph (1)(B) if they meet certain criteria. In order to implement
this statutory change, we are proposing to amend Sec. 412.23(e)(7) by
revising paragraph (e)(7)(iii) to specify that the moratorium on
increasing the number of beds in existing LTCHs and existing LTCH
satellites does not apply if one or more or the exceptions described in
Sec. 412.23(e)(6)(ii) is met in accordance with the provisions of
section 15004(a) of Public Law 114-255. (We note that section 15004(b)
of Public Law 114-255 provides for a modification to LTCH high-cost
outlier payments. Our proposals to implement this provision are
discussed in section V.D. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.) We
are seeking public comments on this proposal.
I. Proposed Change to the Average Length of Stay Criterion Under the
21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
Under the requirements at sections 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) and
1861(ccc) of the Act, in order for a hospital to be classified as an
LTCH, the hospital had to maintain an average length of stay of greater
than 25 days as calculated by the Secretary. Section 1206(a)(3) of the
Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67) excluded Medicare
Advantage plans' and site neutral payment rate discharges from this
calculation for hospitals that were classified as LTCHs as of December
10, 2013. We implemented this provision in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (80 FR 49638). Section 15007 of Public Law 114-255 amended
section 1206(a)(3) of the Pathway for SGR Reform Act by extending the
exclusion of Medicare Advantage plans' and site neutral payment rate
discharges from the calculation of the average length of stay to all
LTCHs, for discharges occurring in cost reporting periods beginning on
or after October 1, 2015. In order to implement this provision, we are
proposing to remove the final sentence of our regulations at 42 CFR
412.23(e)(2)(vi), which included site neutral payment rate and Medicare
Advantage discharges in the calculation of the average length of stay
for LTCHs which were classified as such after December 10, 2013. We are
seeking public comments on our proposal.
J. Change in Medicare Classification for Certain Hospitals (Sec.
412.23)
When enacted, section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act established a
category of hospitals that experience extended average inpatient length
of stays, which are known as LTCHs under the Medicare program. Clause
(iv) of section 1886(d)(1)(B) consisted of two subclauses (I) and (II)
(that is, section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(I) and section
1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act) which corresponded to two categories
of hospitals that were generally referred to as ``subclause (I)'' and
``subclause (II)'' LTCHs. ``Subclause (I)'' LTCHs were required to have
an average inpatient length of stay that is greater than 25 days.
``Subclause (II)'' LTCHs were only required to have an average
inpatient length of stay of greater than 20 days. The ``subclause
(II)'' LTCH definition further limited the classification of a
``subclause (II)'' LTCH by including the requirement that the LTCH must
have been first excluded from the IPPS in CY 1986, and treated a
Medicare inpatient population in which 80 percent of the discharges in
the 12-month reporting period ending in Federal FY 1997 had a principal
diagnosis that reflected a finding of neoplastic disease as defined in
subsection (f)(1)(iv) section 1886 of the Act. This statutory
requirement was implemented under 42 CFR 412.23(e)(2)(ii).
As part of our FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS rulemaking cycle, under the
authority provided by section 1206(d)(2) of the Pathway to SGR Reform
Act (Pub. L. 113-67), we adopted an adjustment to the LTCH PPS payment
for LTCHs classified under section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) of the Act
(``subclause (II)'' LTCHs). Under this payment adjustment, ``subclause
(II)'' LTCHs receive payment under the LTCH PPS that is generally
equivalent to an amount determined under the reasonable cost-based
payment rules for both operating and capital-related costs under 42 CFR
part 413 (that is, an amount generally equivalent to an amount
determined under the TEFRA payment system methodology). This payment
adjustment for ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs is specified at Sec. 412.526.
For more information on this payment adjustment, we refer readers to
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50193 through 50197). As
initially adopted, the ``TEFRA-like'' reasonable
[[Page 20030]]
cost-based payment adjustment for ``subclause (II)'' LTCHs did not
incorporate the limitation on charges to Medicare beneficiaries
policies under the TEFRA payment system. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57109 through 57110), we amended the regulations at
Sec. 412.507 relating to the limitation on charges to address
beneficiary charges for LTCH services provided by ``subclause (II)''
LTCHs as part of our refinement of the payment adjustment for
``subclause II'' LTCHs under Sec. 412.526. Under this refinement,
``subclause (II)'' LTCHs are treated the same as IPPS-excluded
hospitals paid under the TEFRA payment system for purposes of the
limitation on charges to beneficiaries and related billing
requirements.
Section 15008 of Public Law 114-225 provides for a change in
Medicare classification for ``subclause (II)'' LTCH by redesignating
such hospitals from section 1886(d)(1)(B)(iv)(II) to section
1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act. In addition, subsection (b) of section
15008 specifies that, for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2015, such hospitals classified under section
1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act are not subject to section 1886(m) of the
Act, which sets forth the LTCH PPS. Section 15008 further specifies
that, for cost reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2015,
payment for inpatient operating costs is to be made as described in 42
CFR 412.526(c)(3), including any subsequent modifications, and payment
for capital costs is to be made as described in 42 CFR 412.526(c)(4) as
in effect on January 1, 2015. (We note that there have been no
revisions to the regulations at 42 CFR 512.526, including Sec.
412.526(c)(3) and Sec. 412.526(c)(4), since January 1, 2015.)
In order to implement these requirements, we are proposing to
revise Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii) so that the definition in that paragraph
would apply to hospitals in cost reporting periods beginning on or
after August 5, 1997 and on or before December 31, 2014. In addition,
we are proposing to add a new paragraph (j) to Sec. 412.23 that would
establish a new classification of IPPS-excluded hospital (``long-term
care neoplastic disease hospitals'') that would identify hospitals
classified under new section 1886(d)(1)(B)(vi) of the Act. Proposed new
paragraph (j) would further specify in paragraph (j)(2) that payment
for inpatient operating costs for these hospitals is made as described
in Sec. 412.526(c)(3) and payment for capital costs for these
hospitals is made as described in Sec. 412.526(c)(4). (We note that we
are not proposing to make changes to Subpart O by removing references
to ``subclause (II) LTCHs'' due to the proposed sunset date we are
adding to Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(ii).) We are seeking public comments on
our proposal.
IX. Quality Data Reporting Requirements for Specific Providers and
Suppliers
We seek to promote higher quality and more efficient healthcare for
Medicare beneficiaries. This effort is supported by the adoption of
widely agreed-upon quality measures. We have worked with stakeholders
to define quality measures for most settings and to measure various
aspects of care for most Medicare beneficiaries. These measures assess
structural aspects of care, clinical processes, care coordination, and
improving patient outcomes (including patient experiences with care).
We have implemented quality reporting programs for multiple care
settings, including, for example:
Hospital inpatient services under the Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting (IQR) Program (formerly referred to as the Reporting
Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment Update (RHQDAPU) Program);
Prospective Payment System (PPS)-exempt cancer hospitals
under the PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program;
Long-term care hospitals under the Long-Term Care Hospital
Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP) (also referred to as the LTCHQR
Program);
Inpatient psychiatric facilities under the Inpatient
Psychiatric Facilities Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program;
Hospital outpatient services under the Hospital Outpatient
Quality Reporting (OQR) Program (formerly referred to as the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Data Reporting Program (HOP QDRP));
Ambulatory surgical centers under the Ambulatory Surgical
Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program;
Inpatient rehabilitation facilities under the Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility Quality Reporting Program (IRF QRP);
Care furnished by physicians and other eligible
professionals under the Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS). We
note that beginning in CY 2018 PQRS will be replaced by the Quality
Payment Program (QPP);
Skilled nursing facilities under the Skilled Nursing
Facility Quality Reporting Program (SNF QRP);
Home health agencies under the Home Health Quality
Reporting Program (HH QRP); and
Hospices under the Hospice Quality Reporting Program
(HQRP).
We have also implemented programs which link payment to performance
including: The Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program; the Hospital
Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program (described further below); the
Hospital-Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program; the End-Stage
Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program (ESRD QIP); and the Quality
Payment Program.
In implementing the Hospital IQR Program and other quality
reporting programs, we have focused on measures which have high impact
and support CMS and HHS priorities for improved quality and efficiency
of care for Medicare beneficiaries. Our goal for the future is to align
the clinical quality measure requirements of the Hospital IQR Program
with various other Medicare and Medicaid programs, including those
authorized by the Health Information Technology for Economic and
Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, so the reporting burden on providers will
be reduced. As appropriate, we will consider the adoption of clinical
quality measures with electronic specifications so the electronic
collection of performance information is a seamless component of care
delivery. Establishing such a system will require interoperability
between electronic health records (EHR) and CMS data collection
systems, additional infrastructure development on the part of hospitals
and CMS, and adoption of standards for capturing, formatting, and
transmitting the data elements that make up the measures. However, once
these activities are accomplished, adoption of measures which rely on
data obtained directly from EHRs will enable us to expand the Hospital
IQR Program measure set with less cost and reporting burden to
hospitals. We believe that, in the near future, collection and
reporting of data elements through EHRs will greatly simplify and
streamline reporting for various CMS quality reporting programs, and
hospitals will have decreased burden as they are able to switch
primarily to EHR-based data reporting for many measures that are
currently manually chart-abstracted and submitted to CMS for the
Hospital IQR Program.
We also have implemented a Hospital VBP Program under section
1886(o) of the Act, described in the FY 2013 Hospital Inpatient VBP
Program final rule (76 FR 26490 through 26547); the FY 2014 the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50676 through 50707); the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50048 through 50087); the FY
[[Page 20031]]
2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49544 through 49570); the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56979 through 57011); and the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule (81 FR 79855 through 79862). Under the Hospital VBP
Program, performance standards are set and applied to a performance
period for the applicable FY. Hospitals receive value based incentive
payments based on these performance standards. The measures under the
Hospital VBP Program must be selected from current measures (other than
readmission measures) specified under the Hospital IQR Program as
required by section 1886(o)(2)(A) of the Act.
In selecting measures for the Hospital IQR Program, we are mindful
of the conceptual framework we have developed for the Hospital VBP
Program. Because measures adopted for the Hospital VBP Program must
first have been adopted and reported under the Hospital IQR Program,
these two programs are linked. We view the Hospital VBP Program as the
next step in promoting higher quality care for Medicare beneficiaries
by transforming Medicare from a passive payer of claims into an active
purchaser of quality healthcare for its beneficiaries. Value-based
purchasing is an important step to revamping how care and services are
paid for, moving increasingly toward rewarding better value, outcomes,
and innovations.
We also view the HAC Reduction Program, authorized by section
1886(p) of the Act, and the Hospital VBP Program as related but
separate efforts to reduce HACs. The Hospital VBP Program is an
incentive program that awards payments to hospitals based on quality
performance on a wide variety of measures (scoring performance on each
measure on the greater of improvement or achievement), while the HAC
Reduction Program creates a payment adjustment resulting in payment
reductions for hospitals with scores in the lowest performing quartile
based on their rates of HACs.
In the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing changes to
the following Medicare quality reporting systems:
In section IX.A., the Hospital IQR Program.
In section IX.B., the PCHQR Program.
In section IX.C., the LTCH QRP.
In section IX.D., the IPFQR Program.
In addition, in section IX.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing changes to the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs for eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals
(CAHs).
A. Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
1. Background
a. History of the Hospital IQR Program
We seek to promote higher quality and more efficient health care
for Medicare beneficiaries. This effort is supported by the adoption of
widely-agreed upon quality measures. We have worked with relevant
stakeholders to define measures of quality in almost every setting and
currently measure some aspect of care for almost all Medicare
beneficiaries. These measures assess structural aspects of care,
clinical processes, patient experiences with care, and outcomes. We
have implemented quality measure reporting programs for multiple
settings of care. To measure the quality of hospital inpatient
services, we implemented the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR)
Program, previously referred to as the Hospital Quality Data for Annual
Payment Update (RHQDAPU) Program. We refer readers to the FY 2010 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (74 FR 43860 through 43861) and the FY 2011 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50180 through 50181) for detailed
discussions of the history of the Hospital IQR Program, including the
statutory history, and to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
50217 through 50249), the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49660
through 49692), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57148
through 57150) for the measures we have adopted for the Hospital IQR
Program measure set through the FY 2019 payment determination and
subsequent years.
b. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
The technical specifications for chart-abstracted clinical process
of care measures used in the Hospital IQR Program, or links to Web
sites hosting technical specifications, are contained in the CMS/The
Joint Commission (TJC) Specifications Manual for National Hospital
Inpatient Quality Measures (Specifications Manual). This Specifications
Manual is posted on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.qualitynet.org/. We generally update the Specifications Manual on a
semiannual basis and include in the updates detailed instructions and
calculation algorithms for hospitals to use when collecting and
submitting data on required chart-abstracted clinical process of care
measures.
The technical specifications for electronic clinical quality
measures (eCQMs) used in the Hospital IQR Program are contained in the
CMS Annual Update for Hospital Quality Reporting Programs (Annual
Update). This Annual Update is posted on the eCQI Resource Center Web
site at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/. We generally update the measure
specifications on an annual basis through the Annual Update, which
includes code updates, logic corrections, alignment with current
clinical guidelines, and additional guidance for hospitals and EHR
vendors to use in order to collect and submit data on eCQMs from
hospital EHRs.
In addition, we believe that it is important to have in place a
subregulatory process to incorporate nonsubstantive updates to the
measure specifications for measures we have adopted for the Hospital
IQR Program so that these measures remain up-to-date. We refer readers
to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53504 through 53505) and
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50203) for our policy for
using a subregulatory process to make nonsubstantive updates to
measures used for the Hospital IQR Program.
We recognize that some changes made to measures undergoing
maintenance review are substantive in nature and might not be
appropriate for adoption using a subregulatory process. We will
continue to use rulemaking to adopt substantive updates made to
measures we have adopted for the Hospital IQR Program. We refer readers
to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57111) for additional
discussion of the maintenance of technical specifications for quality
measures for the Hospital IQR Program. We also refer readers to the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50202 through 50203) for
additional details on the measure maintenance process.
In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to our
policies on the measures maintenance process, including the maintenance
of nonsubstantive updates to measures used for the Hospital IQR
Program.
c. Public Display of Quality Measures
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act was amended by the
Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005. Section 5001(a) of the DRA
requires that the Secretary establish procedures for making information
regarding measures submitted available to the public after ensuring
that a hospital has the opportunity to review its data before they are
made public. Our current
[[Page 20032]]
policy is to report data from the Hospital IQR Program as soon as it is
feasible on CMS Web sites such as the Hospital Compare Web site, //www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare after a 30-day preview period (78
FR50776 through 50778).
Information is available to the public on the Hospital Compare Web
site. Hospital Compare is an interactive web tool that assists
beneficiaries by providing information on hospital quality of care to
those who need to select a hospital. The Hospital IQR Program currently
includes process of care measures, risk-adjusted outcome measures, the
HCAHPS patient experience-of-care survey measure, structural measures,
Emergency Department throughput measures, patient safety and adverse
event measures, immunization measures, hospital-acquired infection
measures, and payment measures, all of which are featured on the
Hospital Compare Web site. For more information on measures reported to
Hospital Compare, we refer readers to the Web site at: //www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare.
Other information that may not be as relevant to or easily
understood by beneficiaries and information for which there are
unresolved display issues or design considerations are not reported on
Hospital Compare and may be made available on other CMS Web sites, such
as //data.medicare.gov.
In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to these
policies.
d. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the Hospital IQR Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes including reducing health disparities, and
we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with social
risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to ensure
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \98\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of measuring and accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based
purchasing and quality reporting programs, and considering options on
how to address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a Report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors of Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs.\99\ The report also included
considerations for strategies to account for social risk factors in
these programs. In a January 10, 2017 report released by the National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided
various potential methods for measuring and accounting for social risk
factors, including stratified public reporting.\100\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\99\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\100\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which new measures, measures
undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the condition
that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine whether
risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate for
these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion of
social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these measures.
At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue recommendations on the
future inclusion of social risk factors in risk adjustment for these
quality measures, and we will closely review its findings.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in the
Hospital IQR Program, and if so, what method or combination of methods
would be most appropriate for accounting for social risk factors.
Examples of methods include: Confidential reporting to providers of
measure rates stratified by social risk factors; public reporting of
stratified measure rates; and potential risk adjustment of a particular
measure as appropriate based on data and evidence.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for reporting stratified measure
scores and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure.
Examples of social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual
eligibility/low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area
of residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors,
including current data sources where this information would be
available, could be used alone or in combination, and whether other
data should be collected to better capture the effects of social risk.
We will take commenters' input into consideration as we continue to
assess the appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social
risk factors in the Hospital IQR Program. We note that any such changes
would be proposed through future notice-and-comment rulemaking.
We refer readers to section IX.A.13. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, where we discuss the potential future confidential
reporting of stratified measure data for the Hospital 30-day, All-
Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate Following Pneumonia
Hospitalization (NQF #0506) and the Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk
Standardized Mortality Rate (RSMR) for Pneumonia measures. Our goal is
to provide examples from several domains for the same issue
(pneumonia). We want the reader to understand the approaches from as
many perspectives as possible. In addition we are seeking comments on
options for publicly displaying stratified rates using social risk
factors as well as which other social risk factors besides dual
eligibility should be used.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
[[Page 20033]]
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
2. Retention of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures for
Subsequent Payment Determinations
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53512 through 53513) for our finalized measure retention policy.
Pursuant to this policy, when we adopt measures for the Hospital IQR
Program beginning with a particular payment determination, we
automatically re-adopt these measures for all subsequent payment
determinations unless we propose to remove, suspend, or replace the
measures. In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to
this policy.
3. Removal and Suspension of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program
Measures
As discussed above, we generally retain measures from the previous
year's Hospital IQR Program measure set for subsequent years' measure
sets except when we specifically propose to remove, suspend, or replace
a measure. We refer readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75
FR 50185) and the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50203 through
50204) for more information on the criteria we consider for removing
quality measures. We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (80 FR 49641 through 49643) for more information on the additional
factors we consider in removing quality measures and the factors we
consider in order to retain measures. We note in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (79 FR 50203 through 50204), we clarified the criteria
for determining when a measure is ``topped-out.'' In this proposed
rule, we are not proposing any changes to these policies.
We refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57112 through 57120) for the list of 15 measures finalized for removal
for the FY 2019 payment determination and subsequent years. In this FY
2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are not proposing any measures for
removal.
4. Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures for the FY 2019
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
The Hospital IQR Program has previously finalized 62 measures for
the FY 2019 payment determination and subsequent years as outlined in
the table below:
Hospital IQR Program Measures for the FY 2019 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Measure name NQF #
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Healthcare-Associated Infection Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI........................ National Healthcare 0138
Safety Network (NHSN)
Catheter-associated
Urinary Tract Infection
(CAUTI) Outcome Measure.
CDI.......................... National Healthcare 1717
Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset
Clostridium difficile
Infection (CDI) Outcome
Measure.
CLABSI....................... National Healthcare 0139
Safety Network (NHSN)
Central Line-Associated
Bloodstream Infection
(CLABSI) Outcome Measure.
Colon and Abdominal American College of 0753
Hysterectomy SSI. Surgeons--Centers for
Disease Control and
Prevention (ACS-CDC)
Harmonized Procedure
Specific Surgical Site
Infection (SSI) Outcome
Measure.
HCP.......................... Influenza Vaccination 0431
Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel.
MRSA Bacteremia.............. National Healthcare 1716
Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) Bacteremia
Outcome Measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Patient Safety Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hip/knee complications....... Hospital-Level Risk- 1550
Standardized
Complication Rate (RSCR)
Following Elective
Primary Total Hip
Arthroplasty (THA) and/
or Total Knee
Arthroplasty (TKA).
PSI 04....................... Death Rate among Surgical 0351
Inpatients with Serious
Treatable Complications.
PSI 90....................... Patient Safety for 0531
Selected Indicators
Composite Measure,
Modified PSI 90 (Updated
Title: Patient Safety
and Adverse Events
Composite).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Mortality Outcome Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0230
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Acute
Myocardial Infarction
(AMI) Hospitalization.
MORT-30-CABG................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 2558
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Coronary
Artery Bypass Graft
(CABG) Surgery.
MORT-30-COPD................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 1893
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD)
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-HF................... Hospital 30-Day, All- 0229
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Heart Failure
(HF) Hospitalization.
MORT-30-PN................... Hospital 30-Day, All- 0468
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following
Pneumonia
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-STK.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- N/A
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following
Acute Ischemic Stroke.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Coordination of Care Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
READM-30-AMI................. Hospital 30-Day All-Cause 0505
Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Acute
Myocardial Infarction
(AMI) Hospitalization.
READM-30-CABG................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 2515
Cause, Unplanned, Risk-
Standardized Readmission
Rate (RSRR) Following
Coronary Artery Bypass
Graft (CABG) Surgery.
[[Page 20034]]
READM-30-COPD................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 1891
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD)
Hospitalization.
READM-30-HF.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0330
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Heart Failure
(HF) Hospitalization.
READM-30-HWR................. Hospital-Wide All-Cause 1789
Unplanned Readmission
Measure (HWR).
READM-30-PN.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0506
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Pneumonia
Hospitalization.
READM-30-STK................. 30-Day Risk Standardized N/A
Readmission Rate
Following Stroke
Hospitalization.
READM-30-THA/TKA............. Hospital-Level 30-Day, 1551
All-Cause Risk-
Standardized Readmission
Rate (RSRR) Following
Elective Primary Total
Hip Arthroplasty (THA)
and/or Total Knee
Arthroplasty (TKA).
AMI Excess Days.............. Excess Days in Acute Care 2881
after Hospitalization
for Acute Myocardial
Infarction.
HF Excess Days............... Excess Days in Acute Care 2880
after Hospitalization
for Heart Failure.
PN Excess Days............... Excess Days in Acute Care 2882
after Hospitalization
for Pneumonia.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Payment Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMI Payment.................. Hospital-Level, Risk- 2431
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day
Episode-of-Care for
Acute Myocardial
Infarction (AMI).
HF Payment................... Hospital-Level, Risk- 2436
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day
Episode-of-Care For
Heart Failure (HF).
PN Payment................... Hospital-Level, Risk- 2579
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-day
Episode-of-Care For
Pneumonia.
THA/TKA Payment.............. Hospital[hyphen]Level, N/A
Risk[hyphen]Standardized
Payment Associated with
an Episode-of-Care for
Primary Elective Total
Hip Arthroplasty and/or
Total Knee Arthroplasty.
MSPB......................... Payment-Standardized 2158
Medicare Spending Per
Beneficiary (MSPB).
Cellulitis Payment........... Cellulitis Clinical N/A
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
GI Payment................... Gastrointestinal N/A
Hemorrhage Clinical
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
Kidney/UTI Payment........... Kidney/Urinary Tract N/A
Infection Clinical
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
AA Payment................... Aortic Aneurysm Procedure N/A
Clinical Episode-Based
Payment Measure.
Chole and CDE Payment........ Cholecystectomy and N/A
Common Duct Exploration
Clinical Episode-Based
Payment Measure.
SFusion Payment.............. Spinal Fusion Clinical N/A
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chart-Abstracted Clinical Process of Care Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ED-1*........................ Median Time from ED 0495
Arrival to ED Departure
for Admitted ED Patients.
ED-2*........................ Admit Decision Time to ED 0497
Departure Time for
Admitted Patients.
Imm-2........................ Influenza Immunization... 1659
PC-01*....................... Elective Delivery........ 0469
Sepsis....................... Severe Sepsis and Septic 0500
Shock: Management Bundle
(Composite Measure).
VTE-6........................ Incidence of Potentially +
Preventable Venous
Thromboembolism.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EHR-Based Clinical Process of Care Measures (that is, Electronic
Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs))
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMI-8a....................... Primary PCI Received +
Within 90 Minutes of
Hospital Arrival.
CAC-3........................ Home Management Plan of +
Care Document Given to
Patient/Caregiver.
ED-1*........................ Median Time from ED 0495
Arrival to ED Departure
for Admitted ED Patients.
ED-2*........................ Admit Decision Time to ED 0497
Departure Time for
Admitted Patients.
EHDI-1a...................... Hearing Screening Prior 1354
to Hospital Discharge.
PC-01*....................... Elective Delivery........ 0469
PC-05........................ Exclusive Breast Milk 0480
Feeding.
STK-02....................... Discharged on 0435
Antithrombotic Therapy.
STK-03....................... Anticoagulation Therapy 0436
for Atrial Fibrillation/
Flutter.
STK-05....................... Antithrombotic Therapy by 0438
the End of Hospital Day
Two.
STK-06....................... Discharged on Statin 0439
Medication.
STK-08....................... Stroke Education......... +
STK-10....................... Assessed for 0441
Rehabilitation.
VTE-1........................ Venous Thromboembolism 0371
Prophylaxis.
VTE-2........................ Intensive Care Unit 0372
Venous Thromboembolism
Prophylaxis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Experience of Care Survey Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCAHPS....................... Hospital Consumer 0166
Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems.
(including Care (0228)
Transition Measure
(CTM[dash]3)).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Structural Patient Safety Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Safety Culture....... Hospital Survey on N/A
Patient Safety Culture.
Safe Surgery Checklist....... Safe Surgery Checklist N/A
Use.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Measure listed twice, as both chart-abstracted and electronic clinical
quality measure.
+ NQF endorsement has been removed.
[[Page 20035]]
5. Considerations in Expanding and Updating Quality Measures
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53510 through 53512) for a discussion of the considerations we use to
expand and update quality measures under the Hospital IQR Program. In
this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to these policies.
6. Refinements to Existing Measures in the Hospital IQR Program for the
FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In this proposed rule, we are proposing refinements to two
measures. First, we are proposing refinements to the Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) Survey (NQF
#0166) measure for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years. Second, we are proposing refinements to the Stroke 30-Day
Mortality Rate (MORT-30-STK) measure for the FY 2023 payment
determination and subsequent years. We discuss these refinements in
more detail below.
a. Refining the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers
and Systems (HCAHPS) Survey (NQF #0166) Measure for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
For the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years, we are
proposing to refine the existing Hospital Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) Survey by refining the
current Pain Management questions (HCAHPS Q12, Q13, and Q14) to focus
on the hospital's communications with patients about the patients' pain
during the hospital stay. In accord with this new focus, we are
proposing to update the name of the composite measure from ``Pain
Management'' to ``Communication About Pain.''
(1) Background
The HCAHPS Survey (NQF #0166) was adopted in the Reporting Hospital
Quality Data Annual Payment Update Program in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC
final rule (71 FR 68201), beginning with the FY 2008 payment
determination and for subsequent years. This Survey includes three Pain
Management questions, Q12, Q13 and Q14. In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53513 through 53516), we added the Care Transition
Measure (CTM-3) (NQF #0228) to the existing HCAHPS Survey, NQF #0166.
The HCAHPS Survey, combining both NQF #0166 for the original survey and
NQF #0228 for the Care Transition Measure adopted into The HCAHPS
Survey in 2013, is the first national, standardized, publicly reported
survey of patients' experience of hospital care. The HCAHPS Survey asks
discharged patients 32 questions about their recent hospital stay.
Survey results have been publicly reported on the Hospital Compare Web
site since 2008. We refer readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (75 FR 50220), the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51641
through 51643), the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53537
through 53538), and the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50819
through 50820) for details on previously-adopted HCAHPS requirements.
We also refer hospitals and HCAHPS Survey vendors to the official
HCAHPS Web site at: //www.hcahpsonline.org for new information and
program updates regarding the HCAHPS Survey, its administration,
oversight, and data adjustments.
The HCAHPS Survey (OMB control number 0938-0981) is administered to
a random sample of adult patients who receive medical, surgical, or
maternity care between 48 hours and 6 weeks (42 calendar days) after
discharge and is not restricted to Medicare beneficiaries. Hospitals
must survey patients throughout each month of the year. The HCAHPS
Survey is available in official English, Spanish, Chinese, Russian,
Vietnamese, and Portuguese versions. The HCAHPS Survey and its
protocols for sampling, data collection and coding, and file submission
can be found in the current HCAHPS Quality Assurance Guidelines, which
is available on the official HCAHPS Web site at: //www.hcahpsonline.org/qaguidelines.aspx. AHRQ carried out a rigorous,
scientific process to develop and test the HCAHPS instrument. This
process entailed multiple steps, including: a public call for measures;
literature reviews; cognitive interviews, consumer focus groups;
multiple opportunities for additional stakeholder input; a 3-State
pilot test; small-scale field tests; and notice and comment
rulemaking.\101\ We refer readers to the CY 2007 OPPS final rule (71 FR
68201) for a more in-depth discussion about this process. The HCAHPS
Survey was endorsed by the NQF on August 5, 2005 (#0166).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\101\ ``Development, Implementation, and Public Reporting of the
HCAHPS Survey.'' L.A. Giordano, M.N. Elliott, E. Goldstein, W.G.
Lehrman and P.A. Spencer. Medical Care Research and Review, 67 (1):
27-37. 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Pain Management questions currently included in the HCAHPS
Survey are as follows:
[[Page 20036]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.005
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period in the
context of the Hospital VBP Program (81 FR 79856), we stated that we
received feedback that some stakeholders are concerned about the Pain
Management dimension questions being used in a program where there is
any link between scoring well on the questions and higher hospital
payments (81 FR 79856). The Pain Management dimension used in the
Hospital VBP Program is identical in composition to the Pain Management
measure used in the Hospital IQR Program, questions Q12, Q13 and Q14
with one difference: The HCAHPS dimension score in the Hospital VBP
program is based on the percentage of patients who chose the most
positive response option (``top-box'' response). For more information
about the Hospital VBP Program scoring methodology, we refer readers to
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57006).
Some stakeholders believed that the linkage of the Pain Management
dimension questions to the Hospital VBP Program payment incentives
created pressure on hospital staff to prescribe more opioids in order
to achieve higher scores on this dimension (81 FR 79856). We stated
that we continue to believe that pain control is an appropriate part of
routine patient care that hospitals should manage and is an important
concern for patients, their families, and their caregivers (81 FR
79856). Further, we stated that it is important to note that the HCAHPS
Survey does not specify any particular type of pain control method (81
FR 79856). We added that appropriate pain management includes
communication with patients about pain-related issues, setting
expectations about pain, shared decision-making, and proper
prescription practices (81 FR 79856). Furthermore, we stated that
although we were not aware of any scientific studies that support an
association between scores on the Pain Management dimension questions
and opioid prescribing practices, we were developing alternative
questions for the Pain Management dimension in order to remove any
potential ambiguity in the HCAHPS Survey. We noted that we believe that
removing the Pain Management dimension from the Hospital VBP Program
scoring calculations would address potential confusion about the
appropriate use of the Pain Management dimension, and provide us with
an opportunity to further refine the pain management questions used in
the HCAHPS Survey (81 FR 79859).
In the same final rule, we stated we would follow our standard
survey development processes, which included drafting alternative
questions, cognitive interviews and focus group evaluation, field
testing, statistical analysis, stakeholder input, the Paperwork
Reduction Act, and NQF endorsement (81 FR 79856).
In that final rule, numerous commenters supported the development
of modified questions regarding pain management for the HCAHPS Survey
and some commenters expressed particular support for modified pain
management questions that focused on effective communication with
patients about pain management-related issues (81 FR 79859 through
79860).
[[Page 20037]]
Specifically, a number of commenters recommended modified pain
management questions focused on shared decision-making, discussion of
treatment options, including non-opioid pain management therapies,
patient understanding of pain management options, and patient
engagement in their care (81 FR 79860).
Therefore, for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years, we are proposing to update and refine the existing HCAHPS Survey
questions (HCAHPS Q12, Q13, and Q14) to focus more directly on
communication with patients about their pain during the hospital stay.
These proposed revised questions will be used to form the composite
measure ``Communication about Pain.'' The ``Communication about Pain''
composite measure would be a part of the HCAHPS Survey and would be
publicly reported in the Hospital IQR Program. More information about
the revised questions/composite measure is included below.
In compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act, measures
proposed for the Hospital IQR Program were included in a publicly
available document: ``List of Measures under Consideration for December
1, 2016'' available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf.
The Measure Applications Partnership (MAP), a multi-stakeholder
group convened by the NQF, reviews the measures under consideration for
the Hospital IQR Program, among other Federal programs, and provides
input on those measures to the Secretary. The MAP's 2017
recommendations for quality measures under consideration are captured
in the following documents: ``2016-2017 Process and Approach for MAP
Pre Rulemaking Deliberations'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84455 and ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet
of Final Recommendations to HHS and CMS'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84452. We considered the input and
recommendations provided by the MAP.
The Communication About Pain (MUC16-263) composite measure was
reviewed by the MAP in December 2016. The MAP recommended that this
composite measure be refined and resubmitted prior to rulemaking. The
MAP emphasized the need to include non-pharmacological options used to
treat pain. The MAP recommended that the testing results demonstrate
reliability and validity for the Hospital IQR Program. The MAP also
recommended that the measure be submitted to NQF for review and
endorsement.\102\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS
and CMS'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84452.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We plan to resubmit the ``Communication About Pain'' composite
measure to the MAP at the next opportunity. As we discuss in more
detail below, the Communication About Pain composite measure underwent
field testing in 2016. Results were not yet available for the MAP's
review in December 2016, but are now complete and will be posted on the
official HCAHPS On-Line Web site, www.HCAHPSonline.org. We believe the
measure is now fully developed and tested and we intend to provide
feedback to the MAP Hospital Workgroup for review of testing results.
In early 2016, we empirically tested as part of the field test the
reliability and validity of the Communication About Pain questions in a
large-scale experiment that involved patients from 50 hospitals across
the nation. Our analyses suggest the Communication About Pain composite
measure, which includes two substantive items regarding how often staff
talked about pain and how often staff discussed how to treat pain while
in the hospital (Q13 and Q14), as well as a screener item (Q12), have
strong reliability (evidence that scores for hospitals are precisely
measured) and validity (evidence that the measure does measure the
intended construct of patient experience).\103\ These properties of the
individual questions used in the proposed Communication About Pain
composite measure are as good as or better than the current Pain
Management questions. The new questions are not subject to floor or
ceiling effects (which would occur if almost all responses were in the
lowest or highest response category), have excellent hospital-level
reliability (here 0.88 or higher, where 0.70 or higher is the
conventional standard) at recommended sample sizes, are not redundant
with other current questions, are related in a predictable manner with
the standard patient-mix characteristics, positively correlate with the
two HCAHPS questions that assess overall patient experience (rating and
recommendation) with the hospital, providing evidence of validity and
do not vary systematically by survey mode, patient race/ethnicity, or
hospital characteristics after adjusting for patient mix. They also
have higher internal consistency as a composite measure (Cronbach's
alpha = 0.81), with 0.70 or higher being the conventional standard,
providing further evidence of reliability.\104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ Judd, C. M., & McClelland, G.H. (1998). Measurement. In D.
T. Gilbert, S. T. Fiske, & G. Lindzey (Eds.), The handbook of social
psychology (4th ed., Vol. 1, pp. 180-232). New York: McGraw-Hill.
\104\ Cronbach, L.J. (1984). Essentials of psychological testing
(4th ed.). New York: Harper.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated above, the MAP recommended the proposed Communication
About Pain composite measure be submitted to the NQF for review and
endorsement once testing has been completed.\105\ The proposed
Communication About Pain composite measure is not yet NQF endorsed;
however, we intend to submit the measure to the NQF for endorsement
when the Person and Family Centered Care Project has a call for
measures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures
Hospitals--Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Whenever feasible, we adopt measures that are NQF-endorsed, but
note sometimes there are important areas of clinical concern for which
NQF endorsed measures do not exist. Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(IX)(bb) of
the Act provides that in the case of a specified area or medical topic
determined appropriate by the Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been endorsed by the entity with a contract
under section 1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary may specify a measure
that is not so endorsed as long as due consideration is given to
measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary. (The NQF currently holds this contract.)
We considered other existing measures which have been endorsed by the
NQF and other consensus organizations, but we were unable to identify
any NQF-endorsed (or other consensus organization endorsed) measures
that were feasible and practical.
While we consider MAP recommendations and NQF endorsement status as
part of our decision-making process for which measures to include in
the Hospital IQR Program, we believe it is important to adopt this
proposed Communication About Pain composite measure because
communicating with patients about their pain is an integral part of
delivering high quality, person-centered care.\106\ In developing the
proposed
[[Page 20038]]
Communication About Pain composite measure, we followed our standard
survey development processes,\107\ which included drafting alternative
questions, cognitive interviews, focus group evaluation, field testing,
statistical analysis, and stakeholder input. We believe the
Communication About Pain composite measure has been sufficiently
tested, demonstrating high levels of reliability and validity, as noted
above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ ``A Special Contribution from the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services: Valuing Patient Experience While Addressing the
Prescription Opioid Epidemic.'' L. Tefera, W.G. Lehrman, E.G.
Goldstein and S. Agrawal. Annals of Emergency Medicine. 2016.
Published online, 7-19-16. //www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(16)30367-5/fulltext.
\107\ ``Development, Implementation, and Public Reporting of the
HCAHPS Survey.'' L.A. Giordano, M.N. Elliott, E. Goldstein, W.G.
Lehrman and P.A. Spencer. Medical Care Research and Review, 67 (1):
27-37. 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, we have consistently received feedback from some
stakeholders expressing concern that the current Pain Management
questions encourage overprescribing of opioids as discussed in the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79856). As a
result, we believe it is important to refine the existing Pain
Management measure. We note that if our proposal to revise the current
Pain Management measure questions with those in the proposed
Communication About Pain composite measure is not finalized, we would
continue to use the Pain Management questions as previously finalized.
The Communication About Pain composite measure is discussed below.
We are proposing to revise the current Pain Management questions (Q12,
Q13, and Q14) in the HCAHPS Survey for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years by adopting the Communication About
Pain composite measure in the HCAHPS Survey beginning with the FY 2020
payment determination, which would be applicable to surveys
administered to patients beginning with January 1, 2018 discharges and
for subsequent years.
In compliance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(VII) of the Act, we
calculate and publicly report HCAHPS measures from four consecutive
quarters of data. From that point and forward, the oldest quarter of
data is rolled off, the newest quarter is rolled on, and the measure
scores are calculated for this unique set of four quarters and are
publicly reported on Hospital Compare and available for payment
determination. Data submitted for the current Pain Management measure
in CY 2017 for the FY 2019 payment determination will be publicly
reported on Hospital Compare in October 2018. If our proposal to revise
the HCAHPS Pain Management measure with the HCAHPS Communication About
Pain composite measure is finalized, we would begin to use the new Pain
Management items on the HCAHPS Survey in January of 2018. Once we have
collected four consecutive quarters of the HCAHPS Communication About
Pain composite measure questions, we will create scores for the
Communication About Pain composite measure.
We will be unable to report or use for payment determination either
the original or new Pain Management measure unless and until we have
collected 4 quarters of data for the measure. The CY 2017 reporting
period/2019 payment determination will be the last period for which we
have four quarters of the original Pain Management measure data which,
as stated above, will be publicly reported on Hospital Compare in
October 2018. We will be unable to publicly report either the original
or new Communication About Pain composite measure on Hospital Compare
in December 2018, April 2019, or July 2019 because there will be fewer
than 4 quarters of data for both the original and the new measure. The
CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination will be the
first period for which we have four quarters of the new Communication
About Pain composite measure. Therefore, the Communication About Pain
composite measure would be publicly reported for the first time on
Hospital Compare in October 2019. From this point forward, the new
Communication About Pain composite measure could be used for payment
determinations.
(2) Overview of Measure
The refined questions that comprise the proposed Communication
About Pain composite measure closely mirror the structure and style of
the existing Pain Management questions; however, the new questions
address how providers communicate with patients about pain while
removing any ambiguities in the wording or intent of the questions.
This refinement is consistent with the HCAHPS Survey's original design,
development, and NQF endorsement (NQF #0166). Further, we designed the
Communication About Pain composite measure to be consistent and
compatible with existing HCAHPS questions and HCAHPS sampling and
survey administration protocols. The three Communication About Pain
composite measure questions are as follows:
[[Page 20039]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP28AP17.006
As stated above, in light of the ongoing opioid epidemic, we
believe it is important the Communication About Pain composite measure
is abundantly clear in its focus on communication about pain between
providers and their patients and be applicable to all patients who
experienced pain during their hospital stay.
(3) Data Collection
The revised Communication About Pain composite measure questions
would be administered and data collected in exactly the same manner as
the current Pain Management measure questions; there would be no
changes to HCAHPS patient eligibility or exclusion criteria. Detailed
information on HCAHPS data collection protocols can be found in the
current HCAHPS Quality Assurance Guidelines, located at: //www.hcahpsonline.org/qaguidelines.aspx. We reiterate that other than
the revision of the HCAHPS Pain Management questions, the HCAHPS Survey
and its administration and data collection protocols would be
unchanged. The survey adjustment and patient-mix adjustment for the new
Communication About Pain composite measure would be made available on
the official HCAHPS On-Line Web site at: //www.hcahpsonline.org/modeadjustment.aspx.
(4) Public Reporting
The scoring of the new Communication About Pain composite measure
would be the same as the current Pain Management measure. Detailed
information on how the measure would be scored for purposes of public
reporting can be found on the HCAHPS Web site at: //www.hcahpsonline.org/Files/Calculation%20of%20HCAHPS%20Scores.pdf.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to revise the
current Pain Management questions (Q12, Q13, and Q14) in the HCAHPS
Survey for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years by
adopting the proposed Communication About Pain composite measure in the
HCAHPS Survey beginning with the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years, which would be applicable to surveys administered to
patients beginning with January 1, 2018 discharges and for subsequent
years as discussed above.
b. Refinement of the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR) Following Acute Ischemic Stroke Hospitalization
Measure for the FY 2023 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
(1) Background
For the FY 2023 payment determination and subsequent years, we are
proposing a refinement of the CMS Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-
Standardized Mortality Rate (RSMR) Following Acute Ischemic Stroke
Hospitalization Measure (hereafter referred to as the Stroke 30-Day
[[Page 20040]]
Mortality Rate measure) by changing the measure's risk adjustment to
include stroke severity (Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate with the refined
risk adjustment) obtained from International Classification of Disease,
Tenth Edition Clinical Modifier (ICD-10-CM) codes in the administrative
claims. The current Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure was finalized
in the Hospital IQR Program in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78
FR 50798). The previously adopted measure includes 42 risk variables,
but does not include an assessment of stroke severity because,
previously, it has not been available in claims data and was not
routinely performed by all providers. For more details on the measure
as currently adopted and implemented, we refer readers to its measure
methodology report and measure risk-adjustment statistical model in the
AMI, HF, PN, COPD, and Stroke Mortality Update zip file on our Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57161), we
considered potential inclusion of the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) Stroke Scale for the Hospital 30-Day Mortality Following Acute
Ischemic Stroke Hospitalization measure beginning as early as the FY
2022 payment determination. Commenters generally supported the
inclusion of the NIH Stroke Scale score in the Stroke 30-Day Mortality
Rate measure for future inclusion in the Hospital IQR Program. We refer
readers to FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57161 through 57163)
for a complete discussion of the considered potential measure, public
comments, and our responses.
Initial assessment of stroke severity, such as the NIH Stroke Scale
score, is one of the strongest predictors of mortality in ischemic
stroke patients,108 109 110 and is part of the national
guidelines on stroke care.\111\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ Fonarow GC, Saver JL, Smith EE, et al. Relationship of
national institutes of health stroke scale to 30-day mortality in
medicare beneficiaries with acute ischemic stroke. J Am Heart Assoc.
Feb 2012;1(1):42-50.
\109\ Nedeltchev K, Renz N, Karameshev A, et al. Predictors of
early mortality after acute ischemic stroke. Swiss Medical Weekly.
2010;140(17-18):254-259.
\110\ Smith EE, Shobha N, Dai D, et al. Risk score for in-
hospital ischemic stroke mortality derived and validated within the
Get With the Guidelines-Stroke Program. Circulation. Oct 12
2010;122(15):149615041496-1504.
\111\ Jauch EC, Saver JL, Adams HP, Jr., et al. Guidelines for
the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke: a
guideline for healthcare professionals from the American Heart
Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. Mar 2013;44(3):870-
947.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This measure refinement was developed in collaboration with the
American Heart Association (AHA) and American Stroke Association (ASA).
We are seeking to update the current measure to include an assessment
of stroke severity, because it has become feasible to do so due to both
the increased use of the NIH Stroke Scale related to the AHA/ASA
guidelines that recommend administering the NIH Stroke Scale on all
stroke patients, as well as due to the recent ability to obtain the
scores through claims data by incorporation into ICD-10. The proposed
refinement would create a more parsimonious risk model by reducing the
total number of risk adjustment variables from 42 to 20 and includes
the NIH Stroke Scale \112\ in the risk-adjustment model as a measure of
stroke severity. These refinements result in a modestly higher c-
statistic compared with the risk-adjustment model in the current Stroke
30-Day Mortality Rate, which means that the updated measure model
better differentiates the risk of mortality among patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ NIH Stroke Scale. Available at: //www.nihstrokescale.org/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mortality following stroke is an important adverse outcome which
can be measured reliably and objectively and is influenced by both the
severity of the stroke as well as the quality of care provided to
patients during their initial hospitalization; therefore, mortality is
an appropriate measure of quality of care following stroke
hospitalization.113 114 Specifically, post-stroke mortality
rates have been shown to be influenced by critical aspects of care such
as response to complications, speediness of delivery of care,
organization of care, and appropriate
imaging.115 116 117 118
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ Weir NU, Sandercock PA, Lewis SC, Signorini DF, Warlow CP.
Variations between countries in outcome after stroke in the
International Stroke Trial (IST). Stroke. Jun 2001;32(6):1370-1377.
\114\ DesHarnais SI, Chesney JD, Wroblewski RT, Fleming ST,
McMahon LF, Jr. The Risk-Adjusted Mortality Index. A new measure of
hospital performance. Med Care. Dec 1988;26(12):1129-1148.
\115\ Hong KS, Kang DW, Koo JS, et al. Impact of neurological
and medical complications on 3-month outcomes in acute ischaemic
stroke. European journal of neurology: the official journal of the
European Federation of Neurological Societies. Dec 2008;15(12):1324-
1331.
\116\ Lingsma HF, Dippel DW, Hoeks SE., et al. Variation between
hospitals in patient outcome after stroke is only partly explained
by differences in quality of care: results from the Netherlands
Stroke Survey. [Reprint in Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2008 Sep
27;152(39):2126-32; PMID: 18856030]. Journal of Neurology,
Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 2008;79(8):888-894.
\117\ Reeves MJ, Smith E, Fonarow G, Hernandez A, Pan W, Schwamm
LH. Off-hour admission and in- hospital stroke case fatality in the
get with the guidelines-stroke program. Stroke. Feb 2009;40(2):569-
576.
\118\ Smith MA, Liou JI, Frytak JR, Finch MD. 30-day survival
and rehospitalization for stroke patients according to physician
specialty. Cerebrovascular diseases (Basel, Switzerland).
2006;22(1):21-26.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing a refinement to the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate
for several reasons. First, the proposed, refined measure would allow
for more rigorous risk adjustment by incorporating the NIH Stroke
Scale, discussed in more detail below, as an assessment of stroke
severity.\119\ Second, the inclusion of the NIH Stroke Scale is aligned
with and supportive of clinical guidelines, as use of the NIH Stroke
Scale to assess stroke severity when patients first present with acute
ischemic stroke is Class I recommended in the AHA and ASA
guidelines.\120\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ NIH Stroke Scale. Available at: //www.nihstrokescale.org/.
\120\ Jauch EC, Saver JL, Adams HP, Jr., et al. Guidelines for
the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke: a
guideline for healthcare professionals from the American Heart
Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. Mar 2013;44(3):870-
947.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, in October 2016, the ICD-10-CM codes for the NIH Stroke
Scale were implemented. As of that date, hospitals can record the NIH
Stroke Scale as a representation of stroke severity in Medicare claims
by using ICD-10-CM codes, and we can use this information as a variable
in the risk-adjustment model for the refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality
Rate measure and other claims-based measures with minimal data
collection burden for hospitals.\121\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting.
Available at: //www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd/10cmguidelines_2017_final.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fourth, clinicians and stakeholders, including AHA, ASA, and other
professional organizations, highlight the importance of including an
assessment of stroke severity in risk-adjustment models of stroke
mortality.\122\ In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50798
through 50802), commenters emphasized that the medical literature and
their own experience suggest that stroke severity is the dominant
predictor of mortality in stroke patients; individuals and
organizations expressed concern that the measure might be misleading,
limited, or inaccurate without adjustment for stroke severity, and four
comments suggested risk
[[Page 20041]]
adjusting using the NIH Stroke Scale or a similar index (78 FR 50800).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ Jauch EC, Saver JL, Adams HP, Jr., et al. Guidelines for
the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke: a
guideline for healthcare professionals from the American Heart
Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. Mar 2013;44(3):870-
947.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Members of the Technical Expert Panel convened by the measure
developer also suggested risk-adjusting for stroke severity. In
addition, during the 2012 Neurology Endorsement Maintenance Consensus
Development Project, the NQF Neurology Steering Committee specifically
identified the lack of the NIH Stroke Scale score in the risk-
adjustment model as a concern (78 FR 50800). Therefore, the refined
Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate is responsive to public comments from a
broad array of stakeholder groups, including clinical societies and
clinical experts, and to feedback received from the Technical Expert
Panel convened by the measure developer (81 FR 57162).
Fifth, in addition to a modestly higher c-statistic, which
evaluates the measure's ability to differentiate between patients at
different risk of mortality following an acute ischemic stroke, the
refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate includes a more parsimonious risk
model than the stroke mortality measure as previously adopted and
specified, with a total of 20 risk adjustment variables including the
NIH Stroke Scale, compared to the current use of 42 risk adjustment
variables.
In compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act, the Stroke 30-
Day Mortality Rate (MUC15-294) with the refined risk adjustment (using
the NIH Stroke Scale) was included on a publicly available document
entitled ``List of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2015''
(available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367. Select ``2015 Measures Under
Consideration List.''). The MAP reviewed and conditionally supported
the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate (MUC15-294) with the refined risk
adjustment pending NQF review and endorsement, and asked that we
consider a phased approach in regards to implementation, to avoid
multiple versions of the same measure.\123\ The MAP also noted that
outcomes other than mortality may be more meaningful for stroke
patients and to consider cognitive or functional outcomes such as
impaired capacity. We considered the input and recommendations provided
by the MAP and note that the NIH Stroke Scale incorporates cognitive
functions in assessing severity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ 2016 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS & CMS
Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To avoid implementing multiple versions of the same measure, we
intend for the Hospital IQR Program FY 2023 payment determination
measure set either to include the 30-day stroke mortality measure as
currently implemented or this modified version that includes the NIH
stroke severity scale in the measures risk-adjustment model.
The Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate with the refined risk adjustment
was submitted to NQF for endorsement in the neurology project on
January 15, 2016, and did not obtain endorsement. NQF endorsement was
not granted primarily due to the inability to test the validity of NIH
Stroke Scale data elements derived from Medicare claims prior to
implementation of the new ICD-10-CM codes in October 2016.\124\ The NQF
Consensus Standards Advisory Committee (CSAC) supported the concern of
the NQF committee regarding our inability to test the measure using
ICD-10-CM codes since the codes were not implemented until October
2016. While we provided risk-standardized mortality rates using data
from Medicare administrative claims and data from the Get with the
Guidelines-Stroke Registry, the Committee noted that we could not
validate the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIH Stroke
Scale) against ICD-10-CM codes at the time the measure was considered
for endorsement. The CSAC also acknowledged that the primary reason for
upholding the Committee's decision was based on the lack of testing
using ICD-10-CM codes. This measure went through the same rigorous
development process as the other publicly reported outcomes measures
and involved extensive input by stakeholders and clinical experts. It
follows the same scientific approach to evaluate hospital performance
as other Hospital IQR Program outcome measures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\124\ The memo regarding the CSAC's decision is available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=83217.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the NQF committee considered the scientific acceptability of
the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure, 19 of 22 members voted that
the measure met the NQF's evidence criterion, 19 members voted that the
measure met the high or moderate standard for the Performance Gap, 18
members voted that the measure met high or moderate standard for
reliability, 19 members voted that the measure met the high or moderate
standard for feasibility, and 18 members voted that the measure met the
moderate standard for Use and Usability.\125\ We tested and validated
the measure using NIH Stroke Scale data derived from medical record
review done by the Get With The Guidelines (GWTG)-Stroke registry data
supplied by AHA/ASA. The NQF committee ultimately determined that the
validity testing was not sufficient for endorsement.\126\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ The memo regarding the CSAC's decision is available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=83217.
\126\ Schwartz J, Wang Y, et al. Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause,
Risk-Standardized Mortality Rate (RSMR) Following Acute Ischemic
Stroke Hospitalization with Claims-Based Risk Adjustment for Stroke
Severity Technical Report. 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, we believe that the inclusion of the NIH Stroke Scale
score in the measure's risk-adjustment model improves upon the Stroke
30-Day Mortality Rate measure which is currently publicly reported on
Hospital Compare and has been implemented in the Hospital IQR Program
since FY 2016 (78 FR 50802). This is supported by the improved risk-
adjustment model performance. For example, the c-statistic, which is a
measure of the ability to discriminate between patients at low and high
risk of mortality following ischemic stroke, associated with the new,
modified risk-adjustment model was 0.81 in the measure development
sample,\127\ compared with a c-statistic of 0.75 in the most recent
measurement period for the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure that is
currently implemented in the Hospital IQR Program.\128\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\127\ Schwartz J, Wang Y, et al. Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause,
Risk-Standardized Mortality Rate (RSMR) Following Acute Ischemic
Stroke Hospitalization with Claims-Based Risk Adjustment for Stroke
Severity Technical Report. 2016.
\128\ 2017 Condition-Specific Mortality Measures Updates and
Specifications Report. Available at: www.qualitynet.org
Hospitals-Inpatient Claims-Based Measures
Mortality Measures Measure Methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The new refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure also has
increased face validity which is supported by the comments received
from stakeholders. For example, we received comments that the more
rigorous risk adjustment facilitated by the NIH Stroke Scale would help
ensure that the measure accurately risk adjusts for different hospital
populations without unfairly penalizing high-performance providers, and
that the NIH Stroke Scale is well validated, highly reliable, widely
used, and a strong predictor of mortality and short- and long-term
functional outcomes. However, we were not able to test the ICD-10 CM
codes for NIH Stroke Scale score in claims during measure development
because those codes were
[[Page 20042]]
not available for hospitals to use in their claims until October 2016.
Therefore, we are proposing this measure now to inform hospitals that
they should begin to include the NIH stroke severity scale codes in the
claims they submit for patients with a discharge diagnosis of ischemic
stroke. Once hospitals have submitted these data, it will be possible
for us to examine the completeness of these data in reevaluation of the
new refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure before the proposed
measure dry run and before the proposed implementation in the Hospital
IQR Program. Once that testing is complete we will submit the retested
measure to the NQF for endorsement prior to implementation.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(IX)(bb) of the Act provides that in the case
of a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a measure that is not so endorsed as
long as due consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed
or adopted by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary.
Although the proposed measure and the existing Stroke 30-Day mortality
measure are not currently NQF-endorsed, we considered other available
measures which have been endorsed or adopted by the NQF, and were
unable to identify any other NQF-endorsed measures that assess stroke
mortality with a standard period of follow-up. We also are not aware of
any other 30-day stroke mortality measures that have been endorsed or
adopted by a consensus organization.
However, we are proposing this measure now because we believe that
the modifications to the measure's risk-adjustment model represent a
substantial improvement over the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure
that is currently publicly reported and implemented in the Hospital IQR
Program and which does not include an assessment of stroke severity in
the risk-adjustment model. In addition, by announcing our intention to
include the Refined 30-Day Stroke Mortality Rate measure in the
Hospital IQR Program in advance of implementation for FY 2023 payment
determination and subsequent years, and by describing the proposed
additional testing, dry run, and our intent to re-submit the measure to
NQF once the NIH Stroke Scale data become available in claims, we are
providing information that hospitals require to plan and begin to alter
clinical workflows and billing processes in order to capture the NIH
Stroke Scale score and include it in Medicare claims. Further, this
notice will allow hospitals to complete collecting NIH Stroke Scale
data over the three-year time period needed for measure calculation and
implementation prior to any payment adjustment. The measure, as
refined, is described in more detail below.
(2) Overview of Refined Measure
The measure cohort is aligned with the currently adopted Stroke 30-
Day Mortality Rate measure. In addition, the data sources (Medicare
Fee-For-Service (FFS) claims), three-year reporting period, inclusion
and exclusion criteria, as well as the assessment of the outcome of
mortality (assessed using Medicare enrollment data) would all align
with the currently adopted measure (78 FR 50798). Only the measures'
risk-adjustment models differ, as described in detail below. For the
new refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure, we are proposing that
the first measurement period would include discharges between July 1,
2018 and June 30, 2021 for public reporting in FY 2022 and for the FY
2023 payment determination.
(3) Risk Adjustment
The Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure that is currently adopted
in the Hospital IQR Program adjusts for differences in patients' level
of risk for death in one hospital relative to patients receiving care
in another hospital but not for stroke severity. For details about the
risk-adjustment model for the currently adopted measure, we refer
readers to the Technical Report (78 FR 50798).\129\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\129\ Bernheim S WC, Want Y, et al. Hospital 30-Day Mortality
Following Acute Ischemic Stroke Hospitalization Measure Methodology
Report. 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, in developing the proposed, refined Stroke 30-Day
Mortality Rate measure, we re-selected risk variables, resulting in a
final model with 20 risk-adjustment variables, including the NIH Stroke
Scale risk variable as an assessment of stroke severity. The NIH Stroke
Scale is a 15-item neurologic examination stroke scale used to provide
a quantitative measure of stroke-related neurologic deficit. The NIH
Stroke Scale evaluates the effect of acute ischemic stroke on a
patient's level of consciousness, language, neglect, visual-field loss,
extra-ocular movement, motor strength, ataxia (the loss of full control
of bodily movements), dysarthria (difficult or unclear articulation of
speech), and sensory loss. The NIH Stroke Scale was designed to be a
simple, valid, and reliable assessment tool that can be administered at
the bedside consistently by neurologists, physicians, nurses, or
therapists, and is Class I recommended in the AHA/ASA guidelines.\130\
The NIH Stroke Scale is a publicly available standardized tool, the
results of which should be assessed by a clinician when first examining
a patient presenting to the hospital with a stroke and then documented
in the patient's medical record. Once this information has been
documented by a clinician, it can then be recorded in the claim for
that hospital admission using ICD-10-CM codes through the hospital's
normal coding practices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ Jauch EC, Saver JL, Adams HP, Jr., et al. Guidelines for
the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke: a
guideline for healthcare professionals from the American Heart
Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. Mar 2013;44(3):870-
947.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We sought to develop a risk-adjustment model that included the NIH
Stroke Scale variable and other key variables which we believe are
clinically relevant and demonstrate a strong statistical association
with 30-day mortality. To select candidate variables, we considered
those 42 risk-adjustment variables in the currently adopted measure,
plus the NIH Stroke Scale as candidate variables. We then performed a
bootstrapping simulation method for variable selection. This
bootstrapping simulation method is a means of creating multiple samples
to determine which risk variables are most important to include in a
model. We selected the best model using the logistic regression model
with the stepwise selection method based on 1,000 bootstrapping samples
for each copy of the multiple imputed (MI) data. Variable selection
rate for all the variables selected into the best model was calculated
for each copy of the MI data, and variables were included into the
final model if the minimum variable selection rate among the 5 copies
of MI was 90 percent or more. This method resulted in 20 risk-
adjustment variables that were included more than 90 percent of the
time for all the copies of the imputed data were retained in the final
model, including the NIH Stroke Scale. For more details on the risk-
adjustment variable selection process, we refer readers to the measure
methodology report and measure risk-adjustment statistical model in the
AMI, HF, PN, COPD, and Stroke Mortality Update zip file on our Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
Refining the risk adjustment model of the Stroke 30-Day Mortality
Rate created
[[Page 20043]]
a modestly higher c-statistic with fewer risk variables, meaning that
the proposed, refined measure's risk-adjustment model better
distinguishes among patients with a low risk and high risk of mortality
following ischemic stroke compared with the Stroke 30-Day Mortality
Rate measure that is currently implemented in the Hospital IQR Program.
Including the NIH Stroke Scale in the risk-adjustment model allows the
measure to more accurately account for patients' status upon arrival at
the hospital, which is responsive to clinical guidelines and feedback
from the medical community and other stakeholders, as discussed above.
In order to use the NIH Stroke Scale data in the proposed, refined
Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure, many hospitals that have not
routinely captured these data on patients with ischemic stroke will
need to implement new workflows to ensure that their clinicians measure
and record stroke severity. In addition, hospital coders will need to
include the appropriate ICD-10 code for the clinician's documented NIH
Stroke Scale score in the Medicare claim. By proposing this measure, we
are providing hospitals the information and advanced notice that they
would be required to submit this information in their Medicare claims
for this proposed, refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure.
(4) Effect of ICD-10
New ICD-10 codes for the NIH Stroke Scale were implemented on
October 1, 2016; these codes were included so that hospitals could
characterize the severity of their patients' strokes using a rigorously
validated and standardized approach and include that information in
claims and for quality measurement purposes.\131\ However, because
there were previously no ICD-9 or ICD-10 CM codes for the NIH Stroke
Scale scores, hospitals have not previously included this information
on claims they submit to CMS. In order to have information on the
severity of patients' ischemic stroke included in the calculation
Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate, some hospitals that do not currently
capture or record the NIH Stroke Scale would have to create workflows
and processes to do this. This additional work, however, is consistent
with current clinical guidelines for the care of ischemic stroke
patients, and are consistent with the standard of care. Implementation
of the proposed, refined Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate with the refined
risk adjustment would require hospitals to document in the medical
record the first NIH Stroke Scale on every eligible patient who is
admitted for treatment of acute ischemic stroke and provide that
information among the ICD-10-CM code recorded on the claim. The new
ICD-10-CM code representing the NIH Stroke Scale will be included in
the risk adjustment model for the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate measure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\131\ ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting.
Available at: //www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/icd/10cmguidelines_2017_final.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because many hospitals would have to create new clinical workflows
to assess and document the NIH Stroke Scale in patients' medical
records as well as include the appropriate ICD-10 CM code for the
documented NIH Stroke Scale score in the claim they submit, we would
provide hospitals with dry-run results of this proposed, refined
measure in their confidential hospital-specific feedback reports prior
to implementation of the proposed, refined measure for the FY 2023
payment determination. For example, we anticipate using claims data,
which would include ICD-10 CM codes for the NIH Stroke Scale, for
discharges occurring between October 1, 2017 through June 1, 2020, to
calculate measure results for the dry-run anticipated in CY 2021. The
data in the confidential hospital-specific feedback reports would not
be publicly reported.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt a
refinement of the Stroke 30-Day Mortality Rate in the Hospital IQR
Program for the FY 2023 payment determination and subsequent years as
discussed above.
c. Summary of Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures for the
FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
The table below outlines the Hospital IQR Program measure set
(including previously adopted measures and proposed refinements from
this proposed rule) for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years. The proposed, refined measures, as discussed above,
are denoted with a superscript as defined in the legend below the
table.
Previously Adopted Hospital IQR Program Measures for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Measure name NQF #
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Healthcare-Associated Infection Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI........................ National Healthcare 0138
Safety Network (NHSN)
Catheter-associated
Urinary Tract Infection
(CAUTI) Outcome Measure.
CDI.......................... National Healthcare 1717
Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset
Clostridium difficile
Infection (CDI) Outcome
Measure.
CLABSI....................... National Healthcare 0139
Safety Network (NHSN)
Central Line-Associated
Bloodstream Infection
(CLABSI) Outcome Measure.
Colon and Abdominal American College of 0753
Hysterectomy SSI. Surgeons--Centers for
Disease Control and
Prevention (ACS-CDC)
Harmonized Procedure
Specific Surgical Site
Infection (SSI) Outcome
Measure.
HCP.......................... Influenza Vaccination 0431
Coverage Among
Healthcare Personnel.
MRSA Bacteremia.............. National Healthcare 1716
Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) Bacteremia
Outcome Measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Patient Safety Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hip/knee complications....... Hospital-Level Risk- 1550
Standardized
Complication Rate (RSCR)
Following Elective
Primary Total Hip
Arthroplasty (THA) and/
or Total Knee
Arthroplasty (TKA).
PSI 04....................... Death Rate among Surgical 0351
Inpatients with Serious
Treatable Complications.
[[Page 20044]]
PSI 90....................... Patient Safety for 0531
Selected Indicators
Composite Measure,
Modified PSI 90 (Updated
Title: Patient Safety
and Adverse Events
Composite).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Mortality Outcome Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MORT-30-AMI.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0230
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Acute
Myocardial Infarction
(AMI) Hospitalization.
MORT-30-CABG................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 2558
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Coronary
Artery Bypass Graft
(CABG) Surgery.
MORT-30-COPD................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 1893
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD)
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-HF................... Hospital 30-Day, All- 0229
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSMR)
Following Heart Failure
(HF) Hospitalization.
MORT-30-PN................... Hospital 30-Day, All- 0468
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following
Pneumonia
Hospitalization.
MORT-30-STK.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- N/A
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following
Acute Ischemic Stroke
***.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Coordination of Care Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
READM-30-AMI................. Hospital 30-Day All-Cause 0505
Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Acute
Myocardial Infarction
(AMI) Hospitalization.
READM-30-CABG................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 2515
Cause, Unplanned, Risk-
Standardized Readmission
Rate (RSRR) Following
Coronary Artery Bypass
Graft (CABG) Surgery.
READM-30-COPD................ Hospital 30-Day, All- 1891
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD)
Hospitalization.
READM-30-HF.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0330
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Heart Failure
(HF) Hospitalization.
READM-30-HWR................. Hospital-Wide All-Cause 1789
Unplanned Readmission
Measure (HWR).
READM-30-PN.................. Hospital 30-Day, All- 0506
Cause, Risk-Standardized
Readmission Rate (RSRR)
Following Pneumonia
Hospitalization.
READM-30-STK................. 30-Day Risk Standardized N/A
Readmission Rate
Following Stroke
Hospitalization.
READM-30-THA/TKA............. Hospital-Level 30-Day, 1551
All-Cause Risk-
Standardized Readmission
Rate (RSRR) Following
Elective Primary Total
Hip Arthroplasty (THA)
and/or Total Knee
Arthroplasty (TKA).
AMI Excess Days.............. Excess Days in Acute Care 2881
after Hospitalization
for Acute Myocardial
Infarction.
HF Excess Days............... Excess Days in Acute Care 2880
after Hospitalization
for Heart Failure.
PN Excess Days............... Excess Days in Acute Care 2882
after Hospitalization
for Pneumonia.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based Payment Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMI Payment.................. Hospital-Level, Risk- 2431
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day
Episode-of-Care for
Acute Myocardial
Infarction (AMI).
HF Payment................... Hospital-Level, Risk- 2436
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day
Episode-of-Care For
Heart Failure (HF).
PN Payment................... Hospital-Level, Risk- 2579
Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-day
Episode-of-Care For
Pneumonia.
THA/TKA Payment.............. Hospital[hyphen]Level, N/A
Risk[hyphen]Standardized
Payment Associated with
an Episode-of-Care for
Primary Elective Total
Hip Arthroplasty and/or
Total Knee Arthroplasty.
MSPB......................... Payment-Standardized 2158
Medicare Spending Per
Beneficiary (MSPB).
Cellulitis Payment........... Cellulitis Clinical N/A
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
GI Payment................... Gastrointestinal N/A
Hemorrhage Clinical
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
Kidney/UTI Payment........... Kidney/Urinary Tract N/A
Infection Clinical
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
AA Payment................... Aortic Aneurysm Procedure N/A
Clinical Episode-Based
Payment Measure.
Chole and CDE Payment........ Cholecystectomy and N/A
Common Duct Exploration
Clinical Episode-Based
Payment Measure.
SFusion Payment.............. Spinal Fusion Clinical N/A
Episode-Based Payment
Measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chart-Abstracted Clinical Process of Care Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ED-1 *....................... Median Time from ED 0495
Arrival to ED Departure
for Admitted ED Patients.
ED-2 *....................... Admit Decision Time to ED 0497
Departure Time for
Admitted Patients.
Imm-2........................ Influenza Immunization... 1659
PC-01 *...................... Elective Delivery........ 0469
Sepsis....................... Severe Sepsis and Septic 0500
Shock: Management Bundle
(Composite Measure).
VTE-6........................ Incidence of Potentially \+\
Preventable Venous
Thromboembolism.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EHR-Based Clinical Process of Care Measures (that is, Electronic
Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs))
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMI-8a....................... Primary PCI Received \+\
Within 90 Minutes of
Hospital Arrival.
CAC-3........................ Home Management Plan of \+\
Care Document Given to
Patient/Caregiver.
[[Page 20045]]
ED-1 *....................... Median Time from ED 0495
Arrival to ED Departure
for Admitted ED Patients.
ED-2 *....................... Admit Decision Time to ED 0497
Departure Time for
Admitted Patients.
EHDI-1a...................... Hearing Screening Prior 1354
to Hospital Discharge.
PC-01 *...................... Elective Delivery........ 0469
PC-05........................ Exclusive Breast Milk 0480
Feeding.
STK-02....................... Discharged on 0435
Antithrombotic Therapy.
STK-03....................... Anticoagulation Therapy 0436
for Atrial Fibrillation/
Flutter.
STK-05....................... Antithrombotic Therapy by 0438
the End of Hospital Day
Two.
STK-06....................... Discharged on Statin 0439
Medication.
STK-08....................... Stroke Education......... \+\
STK-10....................... Assessed for 0441
Rehabilitation.
VTE-1........................ Venous Thromboembolism 0371
Prophylaxis.
VTE-2........................ Intensive Care Unit 0372
Venous Thromboembolism
Prophylaxis.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Experience of Care Survey Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCAHPS....................... Hospital Consumer 0166
Assessment of Healthcare (0228)
Providers and Systems **.
(including Care
Transition Measure
(CTM[dash]3) and
Communication About Pain
composite measure).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Structural Patient Safety Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Safety Culture....... Hospital Survey on N/A
Patient Safety Culture.
Safe Surgery Checklist....... Safe Surgery Checklist N/A
Use.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Measure listed twice, as both chart-abstracted and electronic clinical
quality measure.
** Proposed measure refinement of the HCAHPS measure's Pain Management
questions for the FY 2020 payment determination and for subsequent
years, as described in section IX.A.6.a. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
*** Proposed measure refinement of the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-
Standardized Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic Stroke, for the
FY 2023 payment determination and for subsequent years, as described
in section IX.A.6.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
\+\ NQF endorsement has been removed.
7. Proposed Voluntary Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure With
Claims and Electronic Health Record Data (NQF #2879)
a. Background
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49698), we stated
that we are considering the use of a set of core clinical data elements
extracted from hospital EHRs for each hospitalized Medicare FFS
beneficiary over the age of 65 years. The core clinical data elements
are data which are routinely collected on hospitalized adults,
extraction from hospital EHRs is feasible, and can be utilized as part
of specific quality outcome measures. One way in which we envisioned
using core clinical data elements in conjunction with other sources of
data, such as administrative claims, is to calculate ``hybrid'' outcome
measures, which are quality measures that utilize more than one source
of data. For more detail about core clinical data elements, we refer
readers to our discussion in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80
FR 49698 through 49704). In addition, we note an important
distinguishing factor about core clinical data elements and the hybrid
measures: hybrid measure results must be calculated by CMS to determine
hospitals' risk-adjusted rates relative to national rates used in
public reporting. With a hybrid measure, hospitals can submit data
extracted from the EHR, and we can perform the measure calculations.
This was the approach that was finalized for the calculation of the
Hybrid Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Mortality Rate
(RSMR) Following Acute Myocardial Infarction (NQF #2473), which was
incorporated into the Advancing Care Coordination Through Episode
Payment Models as a voluntary measure for patients admitted for AMI in
the AMI Model (82 FR 354 through 356).
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we stated that we
developed two hybrid measures: (1) Hospital 30-Day Risk-Standardized
Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) Mortality eMeasure (NQF #2473) (now
called the Hybrid Hospital 30-Day All Cause Risk-Standardized Mortality
Rate Following Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) (NQF #2473)); and (2)
a hybrid hospital-wide 30-day readmission measure now called the Hybrid
Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure with Claims and Electronic Health
Record Data (NQF #2879). Although the Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission
Measure with Claims and Electronic Health Record Data (NQF #2879)
(hereinafter referred to as Hybrid HWR measure) had not been endorsed
when the MAP considered the measure, it encouraged further development
(80 FR 49698),\132\ and the measure has since been endorsed by the NQF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ National Quality Forum. Measure Application Partnership,
MAP Hospital Programmatic Deliverable--Final Report. Available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2015/02/MAP_Hospital_Programmatic_Deliverable_-_Final_Report.aspx. Accessed
on March 10, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49702), commenters
noted either outright or conditional support for the development of
hybrid measures, and for the collection of additional administrative
linkage variables to merge data from EHRs with claims. A few commenters
noted collection of the core clinical data elements would not impose
additional burden on hospitals (80 FR 49702). A few commenters
recommended the hybrid measures should go through NQF review or be
endorsed by NQF prior to inclusion in a quality reporting program,
which we have done, as the Hybrid HWR measure was endorsed by NQF on
December 9, 2016. Other commenters recommended that before we require
the submission of the core clinical data elements, we should conduct
further testing and analysis to ensure the accuracy and completeness of
the data being submitted; specifically, one commenter suggested a
testing period (80 FR 49703). We conducted further testing,
[[Page 20046]]
which is further described below. We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49702 through 49704) for a full discussion
of all public comments and our responses related to core clinical data
elements.
Since the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in keeping with our
goal to move toward greater use of data from EHRs for quality
measurement, and in response to stakeholder feedback to include
clinical data in outcome measures (80 FR 49702 through 49703), we have
further developed the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure. This
measure would incorporate a combination of claims data and EHR data
submitted by hospitals, and because of these combined data sources, it
is referred to as a hybrid measure. The Hybrid HWR measure cohort and
outcome are identical to those in the Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned
Readmission measure (NQF #1789), which was adopted into the Hospital
IQR Program for the FY 2015 payment determination and subsequent years
(77 FR 53521).
The Hybrid HWR measure was presented on the List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2014. The MAP encouraged further
development of the Hybrid HWR measure in December 2014.\133\ The Hybrid
HWR measure (NQF #2879) was endorsed by NQF on December 9, 2016. This
measure aligns with the National Quality Strategy (NQS) priorities of
making care safer by reducing harm caused in the delivery of care and
promoting effective communication and coordination of care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ National Quality Forum. Measure Application Partnership,
MAP Hospital Programmatic Deliverable--Final Report. Available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2015/02/MAP_Hospital_Programmatic_Deliverable_-_Final_Report.aspx. Accessed
on March 10, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure development followed the same scientific approach and
rigorous process as other Hospital IQR Program outcome measures. To
align the core clinical data elements with other measures that utilize
EHR data, we developed and tested a Measure Authoring Tool and
identified value sets for extraction of the core clinical data
elements. As stated in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the core
clinical data elements use existing value sets where possible in an
effort to harmonize with other measures and reporting requirements and
we completed testing of the electronic specifications for the core
clinical data elements used in the Hybrid HWR measure (80 FR 49703).
The electronic specifications were tested in four separate health
systems that used three separate EHR systems. During Hybrid HWR measure
development and testing we demonstrated that the core clinical data
elements were feasibly extracted from hospital EHRs for nearly all
adult patients admitted. We also demonstrated that the use of the core
clinical data elements to risk-adjust the Hybrid HWR measure improves
the discrimination of the measure, or the ability to distinguish
patients with a low risk of readmission from those at high risk of
readmission, as assessed by the c-statistic.134 135 136 In
addition, inclusion of clinical information from patient EHRs is
responsive to stakeholders who find it preferable to use clinical
information that is available to the clinical care team at the time
treatment is rendered to account for patients' severity of illness
rather than relying solely on data from claims (80 FR 49702). The
Hybrid HWR measure is now fully developed and tested and NQF-endorsed
(NQF #2879).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ Hybrid 30-day Risk-standardized Acute Myocardial
Infarction Mortality Measure with Electronic Health Record Extracted
Risk Factors (Version 1.1). Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
\135\ Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure with Electronic
Health Record Extracted Risk Factors (Version 1.1). Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
\136\ 2013 Core Clinical Data Elements Technical Report (Version
1.1). Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Proposal for Voluntary Reporting of Electronic Health Record Data
for the Hybrid HWR Measure (NQF #2879)
In accordance with, and to the extent permitted by, the HIPAA
Privacy Rule and other applicable law, we are proposing the Hybrid HWR
measure as a voluntary measure for the reporting of data on discharges
over a 6-month period in the first two quarters of CY 2018 (January 1,
2018 through June 30, 2018). A hospital's annual payment determination
would not be affected by this voluntary measure. As we stated when we
adopted the Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned Readmission measure (NQF
#1789) that is currently used in the Hospital IQR Program, a hospital's
readmission rate is affected by complex and critical aspects of care
such as communication between providers or between providers and
patients; prevention of, and response to, complications; patient
safety; and coordinated transitions to the outpatient environment, such
that a hospital-wide, all-condition readmission measure could portray a
broader sense of the quality of care in hospitals and promote hospital
quality improvement (77 FR 53522). We believe this would also be the
case with using the Hybrid HWR measure (NQF #2879) that is being
proposed for voluntary data collection in this proposed rule.
Hospitals that voluntarily submit data for this measure would
receive confidential hospital-specific reports that detail submission
results from the performance reporting period, as well as the Hybrid
HWR measure results assessed from merged files created by our merging
of the EHR data elements submitted by each participating hospital with
claims data from the same set of index admission. We note that in this
proposal we are only seeking to collect data for the Hybrid HWR measure
that are in accordance with the measure's electronic specifications,
available on the CMS Web site at: //cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. Hospitals that volunteer to submit data would
also increase their familiarity with submitting data for hybrid quality
measures from their EHR systems. Participating hospitals would receive
information and instruction on the use of the electronic specifications
for this measure, would have an opportunity to test extraction and
submission of data to CMS, and would receive reports from CMS,
downloadable from QualityNet, with details on the success of their
submission, such as the completeness and accuracy of the data. This
would allow us to refine this measure if necessary to provide
meaningful information on outcomes for hospitalizations for Medicare
FFS beneficiaries with the intent to propose this as a required measure
in future rulemaking. For example, we would consider feedback from
hospitals when making refinements to improve the utility of the measure
specifications. In addition, we would examine the completeness and
accuracy of the data received to determine its adequacy for calculation
of the measure's risk adjustment model and measure results.
EHR data or measure results for this proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR
measure would not be publicly reported. However, if we propose to
require mandatory reporting of the Hybrid HWR measure in future
rulemaking, such a proposal would include public reporting of the
measure results. Consistent with estimates for previous voluntary
measure reporting, such as the Hospital IQR Program eCQM voluntary
reporting (79 FR 50346), we
[[Page 20047]]
believe up to approximately 100 hospitals would voluntarily submit data
for the Hybrid HWR measure. Details about the measure and our proposal
for voluntary reporting certain data elements for this measure are
discussed below.
c. Data Sources
We are proposing to use two sources of data for the calculation of
the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure: Medicare Part A claims and
core clinical data elements for Medicare FFS beneficiaries who are 65
years or older, comprising the measure cohort. Claims data would be
used to identify index admissions included in the measure cohort, to
create a risk-adjustment model, and to assess the 30-day unplanned
readmission outcome. This data would be merged with core clinical data
elements from each participant hospital's EHRs collected at
presentation (discussed in more detail below) and used for risk-
adjustment of patients' severity of illness (for Medicare Fee-For-
Service beneficiaries who are 65 years or older), in addition to data
from claims. Medicare enrollment data, from the Medicare Enrollment
Database, are used to confirm Medicare enrollment for at least 30 days
post hospital discharge for the unplanned readmission outcome
assessment.
For this proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure, in accordance with,
and to the extent permitted by, the HIPAA Privacy Rule and other
applicable law, the EHR data submission process would align as much as
possible with existing electronic Clinical Quality Measure (eCQM)
standards and data reporting procedures for hospitals, as further
discussed below. The electronic specifications for the proposed
voluntary Hybrid HWR measure, which include the electronic
specifications for extraction of the core clinical data elements from
hospital EHRs (the Measure Authoring Tool output and value sets) for
all included data elements, are available on the CMS Web site at:
//cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
d. Outcome
As stated above, the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure outcome
is aligned with the currently adopted, publicly reported, Hospital-Wide
All-Cause Unplanned Readmission measure (NQF #1789), which was adopted
into the Hospital IQR Program for the FY 2015 payment determination and
subsequent years (77 FR 53521 through 53528). The proposed voluntary
Hybrid HWR measure outcome assesses unplanned readmissions for any
cause within 30 days of discharge from the index admission. It does not
consider planned readmissions as part of the readmission outcome and
identifies them by using the CMS Planned Readmission Algorithm, which
is a set of criteria for classifying readmissions as planned using
Medicare claims, and is currently used in the previously adopted,
Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned Readmission measure (77 FR
53521).\137\ This algorithm identifies admissions that are typically
planned and may occur within 30 days of discharge from the
hospital.\138\ The algorithm was most recently refined in the FY 2015
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50211 through 50216) for the previously
adopted, claims-based measure. That same algorithm is used for this
proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure.\139\ A complete description of
the CMS Planned Readmission Algorithm, which includes lists of planned
diagnoses and procedures, can be found on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ 2017 All-Cause Hospital-Wide Measure Updates and
Specifications Report. Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
\138\ Ibid.
\139\ Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure with Electronic
Health Record Extracted Risk Factors (Version 1.1). Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Cohort
As noted above, the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure cohort is
aligned with the currently adopted, Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned
Readmission measure.\140\ The measure cohort consists of Medicare FFS
beneficiaries, aged 65 years or older, discharged from non-Federal
acute care hospitals. Hospitals would only submit data for this cohort,
and the measure would only be calculated for this cohort. The proposed
voluntary Hybrid HWR measure includes admissions for nearly all
Medicare FFS beneficiaries over the age of 65 years who are discharged
alive from acute care non-federal hospitals. However, during measure
calculation, a small number of these admissions are excluded under the
measure specifications. Excluded admissions include those for principal
discharge diagnoses indicating some psychiatric disorders. These
exclusions are only a small proportion of all index admissions and are
identified during the measure calculation process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\140\ 2017 All-Cause Hospital-Wide Measure Updates and
Specifications Report. Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
The proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure inclusion and exclusion
criteria are also aligned with the currently adopted Hospital-Wide All-
Cause Unplanned Readmission measure.\141\ For both measures, the index
admission is the hospitalization to which the readmission outcome is
attributed. Both the claims-based, Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned
Readmission measure and the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure
include the following index admissions for patients:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ 2017 All-Cause Hospital-Wide Measure Updates and
Specifications Report. Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enrolled in Medicare FFS Part A for the 12 months prior to
the date of admission and during the index admission.
Aged 65 or older.
Discharged alive from a non-Federal acute care hospital.
Not transferred to another acute care facility.
This measure excludes the following index admissions for patients:
Admitted to prospective payment system (PPS)-exempt cancer
hospitals.
Without at least 30 days of post-discharge enrollment in
Medicare FFS.
Discharged against medical advice.
Admitted for primary psychiatric diagnoses.
Admitted for rehabilitation.
Admitted for medical treatment of cancer.
For both measures, each index admission is assigned to one of five
mutually exclusive specialty cohort groups: Medicine; surgery/
gynecology; cardiorespiratory; cardiovascular; and neurology. The
cohorts reflect how care for patients is organized within hospitals. To
assign admissions to cohorts, admissions are first screened for the
presence of an eligible Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) \142\ surgical procedure
category. Admissions with an eligible surgical procedure category are
assigned
[[Page 20048]]
to the surgical cohort, regardless of the principal discharge diagnosis
code of the admission. All remaining admissions are assigned to cohorts
based on the AHRQ CCS diagnosis category of the principal discharge
diagnosis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\142\ Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) for ICD-9-CM Fact
Sheet. Accessed at: //www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs/ccsfactsheet.jsp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
g. Risk-Adjustment
The proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure adjusts both for case mix
differences (clinical status of the patient, accounted for by adjusting
for age and comorbidities, and the core clinical data elements from
patients' EHRs) and service-mix differences (the types of conditions
and procedures cared for and procedures conducted by the hospital,
accounted for by adjusting for the discharge condition category).
Patient comorbidities are based on the index admission, the admission
included in the measure cohort, and a full year of prior history. The
core clinical data elements are derived from information captured in
the EHR during the index admission only, and are listed below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Time window for
Data elements Units of measurement first captured
values
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Heart Rate.................... Beats per minute...... 0-2
Systolic Blood Pressure....... mmHg.................. 0-2
Respiratory Rate.............. Breath per minute..... 0-2
Temperature................... Degrees Fahrenheit.... 0-2
Oxygen Saturation............. Percent............... 0-2
Weight........................ Pounds................ 0-24
Hematocrit.................... % red blood cells..... 0-24
White Blood Cell Count........ Cells/mL.............. 0-24
Potassium..................... mEq/L................. 0-24
Sodium........................ mEq/L................. 0-24
Bicarbonate................... mmol/L................ 0-24
Creatinine.................... mg/dL................. 0-24
Glucose....................... mg/dL................. 0-24
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The risk-adjustment variables included in the development and
testing of the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure are derived from
both claims and clinical EHR data. The variables are: (1) 13 core
clinical data elements derived from hospital EHRs; (2) the Clinical
Classification Software (CCS) categories for the principal discharge
diagnosis associated with each index admission derived from ICD-10
codes in administrative claims data; and (3) comorbid conditions of
each patient identified from inpatient claims in the 12 months prior to
and including the index admission derived from ICD-10 codes and grouped
into the CMS condition categories (CC).
All 13 core clinical data elements were shown to be statistically
significant predictors of readmission in one or more risk-adjustment
models of the five specialty cohort groups used to calculate the
proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR measure.\143\ The proposed voluntary
Hybrid HWR measure specialty cohort groups are further defined in
section IX.A.7.e. of the preamble of this proposed rule, below. The
testing results demonstrate that the core clinical data elements
enhanced the discrimination (assessed using the c-statistic) when used
in combination with administrative claims data.\144\ For additional
details regarding the risk-adjustment model, we refer readers to the
proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR Measure technical report, which is posted
on the CMS Web site at: //cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure with Electronic
Health Record Extracted Risk Factors (Version 1.1). Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
\144\ Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure with Electronic
Health Record Extracted Risk Factors (Version 1.1). Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that this measure was developed using claims coded in ICD-
9. However, we have identified and tested ICD-10 specifications for all
information used in the measure derived from Medicare claims for both
the claims-based, Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned Readmission measure
and for the proposed voluntary Hybrid HWR Measure. The ICD-10
specifications are identical for both measures. Only the use of the
core clinical data elements in the risk-adjustment models differ
between the two measures. Those data elements are not affected by ICD-
10 implementation. For additional details regarding the measure
specifications that accommodate ICD-10-coded claims, we refer readers
to the 2017 All-Cause Hospital-Wide Measure Updates and Specifications
Report, which is posted on the CMS Web site at: //cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
h. Calculating the Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate (RSRR)
The methods used for calculation of the proposed voluntary Hybrid
HWR measure align with the methods used to calculate the currently
adopted, Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned Readmission measure. Index
admissions are assigned to one of five mutually exclusive specialty
cohort groups consisting of related conditions or procedures. The five
specialty cohort groups are: Surgery/gynecology; general medicine;
cardiorespiratory; cardiovascular; and neurology. For each specialty
cohort group, the standardized readmission ratio (SRR) is calculated as
the ratio of the number of ``predicted'' readmissions to the number of
``expected'' readmissions at a given hospital. For each hospital, the
numerator of the ratio is the number of readmissions within 30 days
predicted based on the hospital's performance with its observed case
mix and service mix, and the denominator is the number of readmissions
expected based on the nation's performance with that hospital's case
mix and service mix. This approach is analogous to a ratio of
``observed'' to ``expected'' used in other types of statistical
analyses.
The specialty cohort SRRs are then pooled for each hospital using a
volume-weighted geometric mean to create a hospital-wide composite SRR.
[[Page 20049]]
The composite SRR is multiplied by the national observed readmission
rate to produce the RSRR. For additional details regarding the measure
specifications to calculate the RSRR, we refer readers to the 2017 All-
Cause Hospital-Wide Measure Updates and Specifications Report, which is
posted on the CMS Web site at: //cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
i. Data Submission and Reporting Requirements
We are proposing that hospitals use QRDA I files for each Medicare
Fee-For-Service beneficiary who is 65 years and older. Submission of
data using QRDA I files is the current EHR data and measure reporting
standard adopted for electronic clinical quality measures (eCQMs)
implemented in the Hospital IQR Program. This same standard would be
used for reporting the core clinical data elements to the CMS data
receiving system. We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (80 FR 49706) where we have previously discussed QRDA I standards
for use in the Hospital IQR Program. We also refer readers to section
IX.A.10.e. of the preamble of this proposed rule for additional
proposals related to data submission and reporting requirements for the
Hybrid HWR measure.
We also are proposing to use the following criteria to determine if
a hospital has successfully submitted voluntary Hybrid HWR measure
data:
Submission of only the first-captured values, which are
data collected routinely on each Medicare FFS beneficiary who is 65
years or older upon presentation to the hospital, for each of the 13
core clinical data elements used in risk adjustment to assess the
patient's severity of illness.
Hospitals would be expected to successfully submit data
values from hospital EHRs for vital signs (heart rate, respiratory
rate, temperature, systolic blood pressure, oxygen saturation, weight),
and six linking variables required to merge with the CMS claims data
(CCN, HIC Number or Medicare Beneficiary Identifier, date of birth,
sex, admission date, and discharge date). When we tested the electronic
specifications for extraction of the core clinical data elements in
hospital systems, we also tested the use of these linking variables to
merge data from claims and from hospitals' EHRs from several health
systems, and achieved match rates over 90 percent accounting for
missing or erroneous data. In order to calculate results for the Hybrid
HWR measure, hospitals would need to submit these data on more than 95
percent of on all Medicare FFS patients who are 65 years and older
discharged from the hospital.
Participating hospitals would be requested to submit
values for laboratory test results (hematocrit, white blood cell count,
sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, creatinine, and glucose) for Medicare
FFS beneficiaries, 65 years or older, included in the measure cohort.
In order to calculate measure results for the Hybrid HWR measure,
hospitals would need to submit these data elements on more than 80
percent of these beneficiaries. However, for the proposed voluntary
measure for the CY 2018 reporting period (January 1, 2018 through June
30, 2018) we would request the data elements on at least 50 percent of
these patients discharged over the same time period. Data reporting to
the CMS data receiving system would occur in the fall of 2018.
The measurement period would include discharges occurring
over a 6-month period in the first two quarters of CY 2018 (January 1,
2018 through June 30, 2018). However, for hospitals that choose to
report this measure, we would request submission of these data elements
on at least 50 percent of these patients. As we noted above, in our
proposal for voluntary data collection of the Hybrid HWR measure, we
are only seeking to collect data for this measure on applicable
Medicare FFS beneficiaries in accordance with the measure's electronic
specifications, available on the CMS Web site at: //cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
j. Confidential Hospital-Specific Reports
Hospitals that voluntarily submit data for this measure would
receive confidential hospital-specific reports that detail submission
results from the reporting period, including detailed information about
the completeness and accuracy of the EHR data they submit, as well as
the Hybrid HWR measure results assessed from merged files created by
our merging of the EHR data elements submitted by each participating
hospital with claims data from the same set of index admission. We
would calculate and provide each participating hospital with their
risk-standardized readmission rate for the voluntary Hybrid HWR
measure. This would provide each hospital with an indication of their
performance relative to the other hospitals that participate in the
voluntary measure. In addition, we would create a hospital-specific
report for each participating hospital which would include detailed
information about their Medicare FFS beneficiaries who are 65 and older
who had an unplanned readmission within 30 days of hospital discharge,
including the patients' clinical risk factors from claims and EHR data.
This information would allow hospitals to identify the factors that
increase patients' risk of readmission and would inform quality
improvement strategies to reduce unplanned readmissions. In addition,
the reports would include the match rate between the hospital's
submitted EHR data and corresponding claims data, as well as the
proportion of patient data submitted relative to all qualifying
admissions for each of the 13 core clinical data elements.
We note that we are considering proposing the Hybrid HWR (NQF
#2879) measure as a required measure as early as the CY 2021 reporting
period/FY 2023 payment determination and requiring hospitals to submit
the core clinical data elements and linking variables used in the
measure as early as CY 2020 to support a dry run of the measure during
which hospitals would receive a confidential preview of their results
in 2021. We would propose to require reporting on this measure in
future rulemaking after we collect and analyze information from
voluntary reporting.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt the Hybrid
HWR measure (NQF #2879) for the Hospital IQR Program as a voluntary
measure for the CY 2018 reporting period as described above.
8. Proposed Changes to Policies on Reporting of eCQMs
a. Background
For a discussion of our previously finalized eCQMs and policies, we
refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50807
through 50810; 50811 through 50819), the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 50241 through 50253; 50256 through 50259; and 50273 through
50276), the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49692 through
49698; and 49704 through 49709), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 57150 through 57161; and 57169 through 57172). In the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57172), we finalized that
hospitals must submit eCQM data by the end of two months following the
close of the calendar year for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019
payment determination and subsequent years.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing two modifications to our
[[Page 20050]]
finalized eCQM reporting policies for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY
2019 payment determination and the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination. Specifically, we are proposing to: (1) Decrease
the number of eCQMs for which hospitals must submit data; and (2)
decrease the number of calendar quarters for which hospitals are
required to submit data, as further detailed below. These proposals are
made in conjunction with our proposals discussed in sections IX.E.2.b.
of the preamble of this proposed rule to align requirements for the
Hospital IQR Program and the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs for hospitals and CAHs.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57150 through
57159), we finalized a policy to require hospitals to submit one full
calendar year of data (consisting of four quarterly data reporting
periods) for 8 self-selected eCQMs out of the available eCQMs for both
the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination and the CY
2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination.
Since the conclusion of the public comment period for the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we have continued to receive frequent
feedback (via email, webinar questions, help desk questions, and
conference call discussions) from hospitals and EHR vendors about
ongoing challenges of implementing eCQM reporting. A summary of the
main concerns identified by these data submitters were as follows:
The timing of the transition to a new EHR system during
2017 (or system upgrades or new EHR vendor) affects hospitals' ability
to report on an increased number of measures in a timely manner;
There is a need for at least one year between new EHR
requirements due to the varying 6- to 24-month cycles needed for
vendors to code new measures, test and institute measure updates, train
hospital staff, and rollout other upgraded features;
Hospitals have had difficulty identifying applicable
measures that reflect their patient population, given the reduction in
the number of available eCQMs (from 28 to 15) for CY 2017 reporting;
and
Hospitals have had challenges with data mapping (aligning
the information available in an electronic health record (EHR),
particularly if the information is not located in a structured field
(for example, PDF attachment, free text section) to the required fields
in a QRDA Category I (QRDA I) file), and workflow (the process of
extrapolating the pertinent patient data from an EHR, transferring that
data to a QRDA I file, and submission of the QRDA I file to CMS)
because hospitals still need to collect CY 2017 data while still
reporting CY 2016 data.
In response to these issues, we are proposing to modify the eCQM
reporting requirements for both the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019
payment determination and the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination as discussed in more detail below.
b. Proposed Modifications to the eCQM Reporting Requirements for the
Hospital IQR Program for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019 Payment
Determination
For the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, we
are proposing to modify our policies to require hospitals to: (1)
report on at least six of the available eCQMs, instead of eight as
previously finalized, and (2) submit two self-selected quarters of
data, instead of one full calendar year of data as previously
finalized. We believe that reducing the number of eCQMs required to be
reported from eight to six and reducing the quarters of data to be
reported from four quarters to any two quarters will ease the burden on
data submitters, allowing them to shift resources to support system
upgrades, data mapping, and staff training related to eCQMs. We also
believe that the reduction in the number of required eCQMs will lessen
the burden of identifying measures to report on and vendor coding of
new measures; under the modified policy, hospitals will only be
required to identify two additional measures between CY 2016 and CY
2017, as opposed to four additional measures. Further, successful
reporting in CY 2016 should streamline CY 2017 reporting because
hospitals can re-use the same measures submitted to satisfy the CY 2016
reporting requirements.
Although the publication of the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
will not occur until on or about August 1, 2017, the data submission
deadline for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination
is not until February 28, 2018, giving hospitals ample time to adjust
to these proposed modified policies. Any hospital that was prepared to
submit one full calendar year of data for eight eCQMs in accordance
with the previously finalized CY 2017 reporting requirements should be
able to submit two self-selected quarters of data for six eCQMs in
accordance with the proposed modifications to the CY 2017 reporting
requirements. Reducing the number of data reporting periods to two
quarters, rather than four, and allowing hospitals to select which two
quarters of CY 2017 to report also will offer greater reporting
flexibility and allow hospitals and their vendors more time to plan for
reporting and to account for and schedule hospital-specific scenarios,
such as EHR upgrades or system transitions. We believe these modified
reporting requirements directly address stakeholder concerns while
remaining consistent with our goal to incrementally transition to
electronic reporting (80 FR 49694).
We note that we are making similar proposals in the EHR Incentive
Program and refer readers to section IX.E.2.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. Our proposals to modify the CY 2017 reporting period
eCQM requirements in the Hospital IQR Program would continue to be
fully aligned with the requirements of the CQM electronic reporting
option in the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and
CAHs to reduce confusion and reporting burden. In addition, we are not
proposing any changes to the February 28, 2018 submission deadline for
CY 2017 reporting (81 FR 57172) to ensure that APU determinations for
FY 2019 are not affected and to maintain the established alignment with
the Medicare EHR Incentive Program's submission deadline (81 FR 57255).
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to modify the eCQM
reporting requirements for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment
determination for the Hospital IQR Program as described above.
c. Proposed Modifications to the eCQM Reporting Requirements for the
Hospital IQR Program for the CY 2018 Reporting Period/FY 2020 Payment
Determination
As stated above, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57150 through 57159), we finalized a policy requiring submission of 8
self-selected eCQMs out of the available eCQMs in the Hospital IQR
Program for both the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment
determination and CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination. In addition for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination, hospitals are required to submit the data by
February 28, 2019 (the end of two months following the close of the
calendar year, as set out in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57172)). For the same reasons as discussed above, we are proposing
similar modifications for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination. Specifically, we are proposing to require hospitals to
report on at least six of the available eCQMs for the CY 2018 reporting
period/FY 2020 payment determination, instead of
[[Page 20051]]
eight as previously finalized. These six eCQMs may be the same or a
different set of six eCQMs a hospital reports for the CY 2017 reporting
period. In addition, we are proposing to decrease the number of
required reporting periods, from four quarters as previously finalized,
to the first three quarters of the CY 2018 reporting period (that is,
Q1, Q2, and Q3 of CY 2018). We note that this differs from our proposal
for the CY 2017 reporting period as discussed above, which would only
require two self-selected quarters of data.
In crafting this proposal, we considered several alternatives.
Specifically, we considered aligning the CY 2018 reporting period
requirements with the proposed CY 2017 reporting period requirements,
such that hospitals would report on at least six of the available eCQMs
and submit two self-selected quarters of data for both years. We also
considered retaining the reporting requirements finalized in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57150 through 57159), such that
hospitals would submit one full calendar year of data for 8 self-
selected eCQMs for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination. Ultimately, we believe that our proposals as stated
above balance our goal to progressively shift towards electronic
reporting of quality measure data with hospitals' concerns of the
burden this increase may cause. In addition, hospitals will have had
several years to report data electronically for the Hospital IQR and
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. Therefore, we believe
that hospitals will be better prepared to submit an additional quarter
of data for the CY 2018 reporting period compared to the number of
quarterly reporting periods we are proposing for the CY 2017 reporting
period. We also believe that hospitals will be better prepared to
submit additional eCQMs in the future, since hospitals will have had a
sufficient number of cycles of eCQM reporting.
Our proposals for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination are being made in conjunction with proposals discussed in
section IX.E.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule that fully align
requirements for the Hospital IQR Program with the requirements for the
CQM electronic reporting option in the Medicare EHR Incentive Program
for eligible hospitals and CAHs. We note that the deadline for
submission would be the same as previously finalized, two months
following the end of the reporting period calendar year, specifically
February 28, 2019 (81 FR 57172).
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to modify the CY
2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination eCQM reporting
requirements for the Hospital IQR Program as described above.
The proposed modifications to the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019
payment determination and CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination requirements, if finalized as proposed, would also have
implications for eCQM validation in the Hospital IQR Program.
Validation of eCQM data under the Hospital IQR Program is set to begin
using CY 2017 reported data as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57153 through 57181). We refer readers to section
IX.A.11. of the preamble of this proposed rule where we discuss our
proposal to modify those requirements in order to align the eCQM
validation process with these proposals.
9. Possible New Quality Measures and Measure Topics for Future Years
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53510 through
53512), we outlined considerations to guide us in selecting new quality
measures to adopt into the Hospital IQR Program. Specifically, we seek
to adopt measures for the Hospital IQR Program that would: (1) Promote
better, safer, more efficient care; (2) expand the pool of measures to
include measures that aim to improve patient safety; (3) support the
NQS' three-part aim of better health care for individuals, better
health for populations, and lower costs for health care by creating
transparency around the quality of care at inpatient hospitals to
support patient decision-making and quality improvement; (4) collect
data in a manner that balances the need for information related to the
full spectrum of quality performance and the need to minimize the
burden of data collection and reporting; (5) weigh the relevance and
utility of the measures compared to the burden on hospitals in
submitting data under the Hospital IQR Program; (6) to the extent
practicable, consider measures that have been nationally endorsed by a
multi-stakeholder organization, developed with the input of providers,
purchasers/payers, and other stakeholders, and aligned with best
practices among other payers and the needs of the end users of the
measures; (7) in the case of a specified area or medical topic
determined appropriate by the Secretary for which a feasible and
practical measure has not been endorsed, give due consideration to
measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus organization
identified by the Secretary; (8) give priority to measures that assess
performance on conditions that result in the greatest mortality and
morbidity in the Medicare population, are high volume and high cost for
the Medicare program, and for which wide cost and treatment variations
in the Medicare population have been reported across populations or
geographic areas despite established clinical guidelines; (9) focus on
selecting measures that will also meet the Hospital VBP Program measure
inclusion criteria and advance the goals of the Hospital VBP Program by
targeting hospitals' ability to improve patient care and patient
outcomes; and (10) align with the HHS Strategic Plan and Initiatives
\145\ and the CMS Strategic Plan.\146\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ HHS Strategic Plan, available at: //www.hhs.gov/about/strategic-plan/.
\146\ CMS Strategy: The Road Forward 2013-2017, available at:
//www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/CMS-Strategy/Downloads/CMS-Strategy.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In keeping with these considerations, we are inviting public
comment on the potential future inclusion of the following seven
measures in the Hospital IQR Program (one measure related to the
quality of informed consent documents, four measures that evaluate end-
of-life processes and outcomes for cancer patients, and two measures
that evaluate nursing skill mix):
Quality of Informed Consent Documents for Hospital-
Performed, Elective Procedures measure;
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Receiving
Chemotherapy in the Last 14 Days of Life measure (NQF #0210);
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Not Admitted
to Hospice measure (NQF #0215);
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to
the ICU in the Last 30 Days of Life measure (NQF #0213);
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to
Hospice for Less Than Three Days measure (NQF #0216);
Skill Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed Vocational/
Practical Nurse [LVN/LPN], Unlicensed Assistive Personnel [UAP], and
contract) (Nursing Skill Mix) Measure (NQF #0204); and
Nursing Hours per Patient Day Measure (NQF #0205).
We also are considering newly specified eCQMs for possible
inclusion in future years of the Hospital IQR and Medicare and Medicaid
EHR Incentive Programs. These measures are listed and these topics are
further discussed below.
[[Page 20052]]
Safe Use of Opioids--Concurrent Prescribing;
Completion of a Malnutrition Screening within 24 Hours of
Admission;
Completion of a Nutrition Assessment for Patients
Identified as At-Risk for Malnutrition within 24 Hours of a
Malnutrition Screening;
Nutrition Care Plan for Patients Identified as
Malnourished after a Completed Nutrition Assessment;
Appropriate Documentation of a Malnutrition Diagnosis;
Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1);
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2)/Tobacco
Use Treatment (TOB-2a);
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered at Discharge
(TOB-3)/Tobacco Use Treatment at Discharge (TOB-3a);
Alcohol Use Screening (SUB-1);
Alcohol Use Brief Intervention Provided or Offered (SUB-
2)/Alcohol Use Brief Intervention (SUB-2a); and
Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder Treatment Provided or
Offered at Discharge (SUB-3)/Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder
Treatment at Discharge (SUB-3a).
a. Potential Inclusion of the Quality of Informed Consent Documents for
Hospital-Performed, Elective Procedures Measure
(1) Background
The process and documentation of informed consent for surgical
procedures is an ethical obligation and legal mandate intended to
uphold patient autonomy. It is also a standard part of clinical
practice performed prior to most procedures and therapies with material
risks. This process provides information to patients about the
associated risks and benefits, alternative treatment options, and what
to expect during and after the procedure. As described in the
literature and reported by patients, comprehensive informed consent
documents can improve patient comprehension and satisfaction, and
support patients in making decisions that are aligned with their
expectations, preferences, and
goals.147 148 149 150 151 152 153
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\147\ Arnold SV, Decker C, Ahmad H, et al. Converting the
informed consent from a perfunctory process to an evidence-based
foundation for patient decision making. Circ Cardiovasc Qual
Outcomes. 2008;1(1):21-28.
\148\ Zuckerman MJ, Shen B, Harrison ME, et al. Informed consent
for GI endoscopy. Gastrointestinal endoscopy. 2007;66(2):213-218.
\149\ Wu HW, Nishimi RY, Page-Lopez CM, Kizer KW. Improving
Patient Safety Through Informed Consent for Patients with Limited
Health Literacy. An implementation report. National Quality Forum;
2005. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2005/09/Improving_Patient_Safety_Through_Informed_Consent_for_Patients_with_Limited_Health_Literacy.aspx. Accessed: July 5, 2016.
\150\ Schenker Y, Fernandez A, Sudore R, Schillinger D.
Interventions to improve patient comprehension in informed consent
for medical and surgical procedures: a systematic review. Medical
decision making: an international journal of the Society for Medical
Decision Making. 2011;31(1):151-173.
\151\ Tait AR, Voepel-Lewis T, Malviya S, Philipson SJ.
Improving the readability and processability of a pediatric informed
consent document: effects on parents' understanding. Archives of
pediatrics & adolescent medicine. 2005;159(4):347-352.
\152\ Kinnersley P, Phillips K, Savage K, et al. Interventions
to promote informed consent for patients undergoing surgical and
other invasive healthcare procedures. The Cochrane database of
systematic reviews. 2013;7:Cd009445.
\153\ Lorenzen B, Melby CE, Earles B. Using principles of health
literacy to enhance the informed consent process. AORN journal.
2008;88(1):23-29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite their importance, and our regulations in the Conditions for
Participation Guidelines,\154\ informed consent documents are
frequently generic, lack information that is relevant to the procedure,
and include illegible, hand-written information. Moreover, patients are
often given and asked to sign the informed consent document minutes
before the start of a procedure when they are most vulnerable and least
likely to ask questions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\154\ Sec. 482.24, Sec. 482.51, Sec. 482.90, Sec. 482.98,
Sec. 482.102.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, we developed the Measure of Quality of Informed Consent
Documents for Hospital-Performed, Elective Procedures (hereinafter
referred to as, Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure). This
measure was developed in conjunction with feedback from patients and
patient advocates convened by the measure developers, all of whom
affirmed that the measure captured the most salient elements of
informed consent documents, and represented a minimum, though
significant, standard all hospitals should meet. We recognize the
Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure does not capture all
aspects of the informed consent process or all aspects of quality
related to patient engagement in shared decision making. However, we
view the Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure as a critical
first step to incentivize hospitals to improve the informed consent
process and to ensure patients receive basic information in a written
format which is understandable, legible and presented with sufficient
time allowed for questions and deliberation. The members of the patient
workgroup involved in measure development also agreed with this
determination and supported the measure.
We are considering including the Quality of Informed Consent
Documents measure in the Hospital IQR Program in future rulemaking.
(2) Overview of Measure
Improving the quality of informed consent documents is fundamental
step for advancing patient-centered decision
making.155 156 157 158 159 160 The written quality of
informed consent documents is a critical component of the informed
consent process, and hospitals have a role in ensuring their patients
have the information they need in a readable form and with time to
consider their options. We expect the Quality of Informed Consent
Documents measure will help to pave the way for future measures which
evaluate other components of the informed consent process, including
shared decision-making.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\155\ Spatz ES, Krumholz HM, Moulton BW. The new era of informed
consent: Getting to a reasonable-patient standard through shared
decision making. JAMA. 2016;315(19):2063-2064.
\156\ Kinnersley P, Phillips K, Savage K, et al. Interventions
to promote informed consent for patients undergoing surgical and
other invasive healthcare procedures. The Cochrane database of
systematic reviews. 2013;7:Cd009445.
\157\ Robb WJ, Carroll C, Kuo C. Orthopaedic Surgical Consent:
The First Step in Safety. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
(AAOS) Now. 2015;9(9).
\158\ Arnold SV, Decker C, Ahmad H, et al. Converting the
informed consent from a perfunctory process to an evidence-based
foundation for patient decision making. Circ Cardiovasc Qual
Outcomes. 2008;1(1):21-28.
\159\ The Joint Commission. Quick Safety: An advisory on safety
and quality issues. Informed consent: More than getting a signature.
February 2016. Available at: //www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/23/Quick_Safety_Issue_Twenty-One_February_2016.pdf. Accessed: July
5, 2016.
\160\ Krumholz HM. Informed consent to promote patient-centered
care. JAMA. 2010;303(12):1190-1191.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The measure focuses on the quality of informed consent documents
for elective procedures. Further, with a focus on ensuring that each
person and family is engaged as partners in their care, this measure
addresses the NQS priority of promoting effective communication and
coordination of care. Elective procedures were chosen as the focus of
the measure because all elective procedures have informed consent
documents as standard practice. In addition, we believe patients
undergoing elective, rather than emergent surgery, will benefit from a
measure aimed at optimizing communications about the risk, benefits,
and purpose of the procedure because there are typically reasonable
alternatives to elective procedures and different patients may choose
different options depending on their preferences,
[[Page 20053]]
values, and goals. Further, elective procedures usually allow ample
decision time and do not require expedited explanations and decisions
due to life threatening situations.
The measure would require hospitals to evaluate a sample of their
informed consent documents from elective procedures performed among
Medicare FFS patients aged 18 years and older hospitalized at acute
care hospitals. The measure uses administrative claims to select a
stratified random sample of elective procedures across specialties that
are performed in hospitals. The informed consent documents associated
with these procedures are reviewed and abstracted by trained personnel
using a validated Abstraction Tool. Abstractors are trained using
standard instructions, videos, and test documents with audit review we
have developed. For additional information about the training materials
and procedures, see the measure methodology report on our Web site
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
After completing this training, we estimate the abstraction time is
approximately four minutes per document and the interrater reliability
is high. The tool captures 10 items which are fundamental to informed
consent document quality. Documents are scored on a scale of 0 to 20,
with 20 representing better quality. Document scores are then
aggregated to calculate hospital-level performance on the measure. The
measure is not risk adjusted because patient characteristics should not
impact informed consent document quality. We are inviting public
comment on how the measure would be reported and implemented.
We developed the Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure in 8
hospitals, and demonstrated the measure to be valid, reliable, feasible
and of minimal hospital burden. We then tested the measure among a
sample of 25 additional hospitals, which also showed feasibility and
low burden on hospitals. In both the development and testing samples,
we observed overall low performance on the measure, with intra-hospital
and inter-hospital variation in the quality of consent documents. The
Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure aligns with our goal to
increase opportunities for shared decision making with patients and the
NQS priorities of: (1) Ensuring person- and family-centered care; and
(2) promoting effective communication and coordination of care. For
details on development and testing, we refer readers to the measure
methodology report on our Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
(3) Data Sources
The measure uses two sources of data to calculate the Quality of
Informed Consent Documents measure: Medicare Part A administrative
claims, specified below, to generate a random sample of qualified
elective procedures performed at each hospital; and a sample of each
hospital's informed consent documents and the first page of the
procedure/operative report for those elective procedures. Basing the
sample selection on administrative data to identify medical records of
elective procedures ensures a diversity of informed consent documents
on a range of procedures will be reviewed, and minimizes selection
bias.
(4) Outcome
The outcome for the Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure
is a quality score which is calculated by aggregating the scores for
individual informed consent documents from each hospital assessed with
the Abstraction Tool. The items selected for inclusion in the
Abstraction Tool were important to patients, supported by evidence in
the literature and published standards and guidelines, applicable to
the cohort of elective procedures, easily abstracted from medical
records without undue burden on patients and hospitals, and feasibly
and reliably measured. These elements are also meaningful components of
informed consent document quality from the patient perspective.
Further, we received consistent feedback from all participating
hospitals during testing of this measure that this information was
useful for hospitals' efforts to improve their informed consent
documents and processes by identifying important gaps in existing
documentation. Quality scores on each informed consent document will be
aggregated to derive a hospital-level performance score.
The measure outcome does not overlap with our current regulations
holding hospitals accountable for informed consent pursuant to our
Conditions of Participation or The Joint Commission 2009 Requirements
Related to the Provision of Culturally Competent Patient-Centered Care
Hospital Accreditation Program (HAP),\161\ and fully aligns with State
laws within the few States which have more specified informed consent
rules. Current Conditions of Participation regulations focus on whether
informed consent occurred and emphasize informed consent documents
should include the name of the hospital, procedure, and practitioner
performing the procedure along with a statement certifying the
procedure, anticipated benefits, material risks, and alternative
treatment options were explained to the patient or the patient's legal
representative.\162\ The Joint Commission offers additional guidance
for best practices.\163\ However, there are no regulations to ensure
hospitals provide patients with adequate written information about the
procedure. We believe the use of this measure would supplement and
augment existing standards by incentivizing hospitals to provide a
minimum set of critical information about an elective procedure to the
patient within a reasonable time before the patient undergoes the
procedure and to enable the patient to receive and process the
information prior to signing and providing informed consent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\161\ The Joint Commission. Quick Safety: An advisory on safety
and quality issues. Informed consent: More than getting a signature.
February 2016. Available at: //www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/23/Quick_Safety_Issue_Twenty-One_February_2016.pdf. Accessed: July
5, 2016.
\162\ Department of Health & Human Services. Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS Manual System. Regulations
and Interpretive Guidelines for Hospitals--Condition of
Participation: Medical Record Services. Sections 482.13(b),
482.24(b), 482.51(b)(2). 2008. Available at: //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/downloads/R37SOMA.pdf. Accessed: July 5, 2016.
\163\ //www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/23/Quick_Safety_Issue_Twenty-One_February_2016.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Cohort
The cohort for the Quality of Informed Consent Documents measure
includes informed consent documents for a randomly selected sample of
qualifying elective surgical procedures performed within non-federal
acute care hospitals performed on Medicare FFS beneficiaries, aged 18
years and over who are enrolled in Part A at the time of the procedure.
The list of qualifying elective procedures includes procedures for
which informed consent is standard practice. The list of qualifying
procedures is broad, capturing 10 specialties and various levels of
invasiveness. For example, electively-performed knee replacements and
coronary artery bypass surgeries are both included. For more
information about the list of qualifying procedures, we refer readers
to the measure methodology report on our Web site available at: //
www.cms.gov/
[[Page 20054]]
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/
HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
(6) Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
Qualifying electively-performed procedures were identified using
the AHRQ Clinical Classification Software (CCS) codes \164\ from the
list of potentially planned procedures and the list of acute discharge
diagnosis AHRQ CCS codes in the CMS Planned Readmission Algorithm. The
Planned Readmission Algorithm used for existing CMS readmission
measures was refined in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
50211 through 50216). A complete description of the CMS Planned
Readmission Algorithm, which includes lists of potentially planned
procedures and acute discharge diagnoses, can be found on the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) for ICD-9-CM Fact
Sheet. Accessed at: //www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs/ccsfactsheet.jsp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CMS Planned Readmission Algorithm identifies a list of
potentially planned procedures and a list of acute discharge diagnosis
codes. Admissions that have a potentially planned procedure without an
acute discharge diagnosis code are considered planned according to the
CMS Planned Readmission Algorithm. The Quality of Informed Consent
Documents measure does not use the Planned Readmission Algorithm to
identify planned versus unplanned readmissions. The measure builds upon
the established approach of the Planned Readmission Algorithm to
identify only electively-performed procedures because planned
procedures are also commonly electively-performed. We used clinical
expert review to further narrow the list of potentially planned
procedures from the Planned Readmission Algorithm to those which are
consistently elective-performed and likely to have informed consent
obtained prior to every procedure.
The measure excludes highly specialized procedures, such as organ
transplantation because they typically use unique informed consent
processes; non-invasive radiographic diagnostic tests because informed
consent standards may be different than standards for invasive
procedures and surgeries; and procedures that are conducted over
several encounters since informed consent is likely only conducted
prior to the first procedure. For more information about the list of
qualifying procedures and excluded procedures, we refer readers to the
measure methodology report on our Web site available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
(7) Abstraction Tool
The Abstraction Tool is an instrument used to evaluate the quality
of a hospitals' informed consent documents based on a score of 0-20; a
higher score indicates better quality. The Abstraction Tool is a
checklist evaluating the presence of the following items in the consent
document: A description of the procedure; how the procedure will be
performed; the rationale for why the procedure will be performed; and
the risks, benefits, and alternatives to the procedure. The Abstraction
Tool also includes an item to assess whether patients received the
document at least one calendar day in advance of the procedure date.
Inclusion of the timing item ensures informed consent documents are not
shared for the first time with patients on the day of the procedure.
The abstraction tool provides an option for hospitals to note if a
patient chose to opt out of signing their informed consent document 24
or more hours before surgery, enabling full credit to be given to the
hospital for this item in that scenario. In addition, the tool gives
credit for sharing the document prior to the day of the procedure, even
if the patient does not sign the document until the day of the
procedure. These aspects were raised with the patient and patient
advocate workgroup and deemed to be more flexible to a range of
scenarios and contexts, and therefore more patient-sensitive. To assess
the reliability of the Abstraction Tool, we examined the inter-rater
reliability (the degree of agreement among abstractors) of each item on
the Abstraction Tool as well as the document scores produced by the
Abstraction Tool for 80 of the 800 documents tested from the pilot
project hospitals. For additional information about testing refer to
our Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
Abstractors enter responses for each item evaluated in each
informed consent document. We would provide comprehensive standardized
training materials including an instruction manual with guidance and
examples of what meets criteria for each item in the Abstraction Tool,
a training video, and sample test documents. This process has
previously been piloted and found to be effective and efficient. For
more information about the Abstraction Tool and instructions manual, we
refer readers to our Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
(8) Calculating the Measure Score
The measure will be calculated by aggregating the scores of the
sample of hospitals' informed consent documents, as assessed using the
Abstraction Tool. Based on input from stakeholders during the measure
development stage, including the Technical Expert Panel convened by the
measure developer, and feedback from patients and patient advocates, we
are considering reporting the proportion of a hospital's sampled
informed consent documents that achieve a pre-specified threshold
score. For example, the proportion of a hospital's sampled informed
consent documents which meet a minimum, patient-centered standard. We
are considering setting the threshold score at 10 (out of 20 total
points), and increasing the threshold over time. The stakeholders we
sought input from during the measure development process agreed with
incrementally increasing the threshold score over time. This would
establish an initial target that hospitals could feasibly meet in a
short period of time, and allow for further informed consent
improvement. Ultimately, we envision this measure would either evolve
to include additional components or could complement a measure of
shared decision making when an appropriate measure becomes available
for potential use in the Hospital IQR Program.
Using this scoring approach, performance scores among the 25
hospitals in the testing sample were poor. The median hospital level
score, based on evaluation of 100 informed consent documents, ranged
from 0 (95 percent CI: 0-5) to 12 (95 percent CI: 10-12) out of a total
of 20 points. The proportion of documents achieving a threshold score
of at least 10 (out of 20 points) per hospital, ranged from 0 percent
to 70 percent, demonstrating that the quality of informed consent
documents varies both within and between hospitals.
(9) Implementation
We are considering two implementation approaches. One approach
implements the measure in a
[[Page 20055]]
centralized fashion where hospitals send their sample of informed
consent documents directly to CMS or to an entity contracted by us for
central abstraction and measure score calculation. Another approach is
local; hospitals abstract their own informed consent documents and
transmit the abstraction results to CMS for measure calculation.
During measure development, we worked closely with hospitals to
evaluate the burden associated with each approach. The greatest burden
was associated with copying and electronically sending informed consent
documents, making centralized abstraction a more burdensome option for
hospitals. Using a brief formal training process and materials to
prepare abstractors, we found hospital abstractors can reliably
abstract documents at a rate of 15-20 documents per hour or 3-4 minutes
per document. The final sample size required for measure reporting has
not been determined but will not exceed 100 documents and may be
substantially fewer than 100 documents per hospital.
Implementation would entail identifying a hospital's elective
procedures which meet eligibility for the Quality of Informed Consent
Documents measure using administrative claims data. We would then
provide hospitals with a list of procedures and encounter dates
selected from a hospital's eligible elective procedures, along with the
HIC number and date of birth of the patient who had the procedure in
order to identify the medical record, the qualifying procedure, and the
corresponding informed consent document and operative report. Hospitals
would then locally evaluate the informed consent documents for these
procedures using the Abstraction Tool and transmit the results of the
abstraction through a secure data file transfer or similar process,
such as the QualityNet Secure Portal or the External File Online Tool.
We would then calculate and report the results as the proportion of a
hospital's sampled informed consent documents achieving the threshold
score of 10 out of 20. Hospitals could submit data on the prior year's
informed consent documents on an annual basis or more frequently, such
as quarterly or every six months, allowing for more rapid cycle
improvements in measure performance. If we were to pursue a local
abstraction approach, we would also consider expanding the data
validation process in the Hospital IQR Program to ensure that
hospitals' abstraction work was accurate, requiring hospitals to submit
select informed consent documents to us or an entity contracted by us
via a secure mechanism for review and validation.
The Quality of Informed Consent Documents for Hospital-Performed,
Elective Procedures (MUC16-262) measure is included in a publicly
available document entitled ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final
Recommendations to HHS and CMS,'' which is available on the NQF Web
site.\165\ The MAP did not support this measure, indicating concern
about the lack of evidence that implementation will affect hospital
practices and the complexity of existing guidelines, regulations and
State laws related to informed consent. Further, the MAP noted that
this measure captures the quality of informed consent documents rather
than the quality of communication between patients and their
providers.\166\ However, the MAP noted that this measure concept is
critical for shared decision making, and recommended that future
measures on informed consent be patient-centered. In addition, the MAP
noted that this measure should demonstrate reliability and validity, at
the facility level, in the hospital setting, prior to being suitable
for inclusion in the Hospital IQR Program measure set. Lastly, the MAP
recommended that the measure be submitted to NQF for review and
endorsement.\167\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\165\ ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS
and CMS, available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
\166\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures
Hospitals--Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
\167\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on multiple aspects of the measure.
Specifically, we are seeking public comment on the potential scoring
approach described above, reporting the proportion of a hospital's
sampled informed consent documents, and setting a threshold score of 10
out of 20. In addition, we are seeking input on how the measure should
be implemented, either through local abstraction where hospitals
provide us with the results of their own abstraction work or by
transmitting informed consent documents to us for centralized
abstraction. We also are seeking public comment on the frequency of
measure reporting for this measure, whether annually, quarterly or at
some other interval. More frequent reporting updates would require
hospitals to abstract documents and submit the results more often than
less frequent reporting. Finally, we are seeking input on a potential
validation process for the Quality of Informed Consent Documents
measure.
b. Potential Inclusion of Four End-of-Life (EOL) Measures for Cancer
Patients
(1) Background
The quality of palliative and end-of-life care has been identified
as a measurement gap in the Hospital IQR Program.\168\ End-of-life care
may be defined as ``comprehensive care that addresses medical,
emotional, spiritual, and social needs during the last stages of a
person's terminal illness.'' \169\ While end-of-life care may include
palliative care, palliative care is generally defined as multi-faceted,
holistic care that anticipates, prevents, and alleviates
suffering.\170\ Both palliative and end-of-life care can be provided
when a patient is receiving hospice services, but it is not necessary
for a patient to be admitted to hospice to receive such care. Hospitals
are encouraged to counsel patients about palliative and end-of-life
care; however, the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) of the National
Academies has noted that ``too few patients and families receive this
help [palliative and end-of life care] in a timely manner,'' \171\
despite evidence that this care improves patient quality of life. In
the same report, the NAM proposed a number of core components of
quality palliative and end-of-life care. These proposals included
offering a referral to hospice if a patient ``has a prognosis of 6
months or less'' and regular revision of a patient's care plan to
address the patient's changing needs, as well as the changing needs of
the patient's caregivers.\172\ The four palliative and end-of-life
measures described below seek to improve the quality of care for cancer
patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ National Quality Forum, Final Report. Palliative and End-
of-Life Care 2015-2016, available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_Project_2015-2016.aspx.
\169\ Ibid.
\170\ Ibid.
\171\ Committee on Approaching Death: Addressing Key End of Life
Issues, Institute of Medicine: Dying in America: Improving Quality
and Honoring Individual Preferences Near the End of Life. Washington
DC, National Academies Press, 2015.
\172\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Overview of Measures
All four of these end-of-life measures seek to assess the quality
of end-of-life care for patients who died of cancer in order to improve
the quality of end-of-life care for future cancer patients. As such,
the four palliative and end-of-life measures all address the NQS
priority of communication and care coordination. The Proportion of
Patients Who Died from Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy in the Last 14
Days of Life (EOL-Chemo) (NQF #0210) measure evaluates the
[[Page 20056]]
proportion of patients who died from cancer who received chemotherapy
in the last 14 days of life. This measure was finalized for CY 2017 for
the Merit Based Incentive Payment Program (MIPS) (81 FR 77672). The
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Not Admitted to Hospice
(EOL-Hospice) (NQF #0215) measure assesses the proportion of patients
who died from cancer who were not admitted to hospice and evaluates
whether or not patients were admitted to hospice. The Proportion of
Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to Hospice for Less Than Three
Days (EOL-3DH) (NQF #0216) measure evaluates whether patients who were
admitted to hospice were admitted to hospice late in the course of
their illness, defined as within three days of their death. The
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to the ICU in the
Last 30 Days of Life (EOL-ICU) (NQF #0213) measure assesses whether
cancer patients were admitted to the ICU in the last 30 days of their
lives.
These measures were reviewed by the MAP in December of 2016 for the
PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program (MUC16-
271, MUC16-273, MUC16-274, and MUC16-275).\173\ The MAP Hospital
Workgroup supported the inclusion of these measures in the PCHQR
Program. Specifically, the MAP stressed the importance of end-of-life
care as an area of cancer care that needs improvement and noted that
these measures could help improve the patient and caregiver experience.
The MAP also noted these measures could help encourage the use of
hospice care and help avoid aggressive treatment in the last days of
life, as unnecessary treatment at the end of life has been found to
negatively impact a person's quality of life.\174\ We note that prior
to implementation in the Hospital IQR Program, these measures would
require a subsequent review from the MAP to assess appropriateness for
programmatic inclusion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\173\ 2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS and
CMS, Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
\174\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures Hospitals-
Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe that these measures would be suitable for the Hospital
IQR Program because they provide insight on the quality of end-of-life
care for cancer patients provided in inpatient settings other than at
PPS-exempt cancer hospitals. Currently, the Hospital IQR Program
measure set does not contain any measure that assesses end-of-life
care. As such, the future inclusion of these measures could promote the
expansion of the Hospital IQR Program measure set to include a more
robust set of measures that evaluate end-of-life care and address the
NQS priority of improving person and family engagement. In addition,
because these measures are specific to cancer patients, future
inclusion would promote programmatic alignment between the Hospital IQR
and PCHQR Programs should these measures be finalized as proposed in
section IX.B.4.b.of the preamble of this proposed rule for inclusion in
the PCHQR Program.
Additional information on these measures is available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/12/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_2015-2016.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
one or more of these end-of-life measures in the Hospital IQR Program.
c. Potential Inclusion of Two Nurse Staffing Measures
(1) Background
Nursing care is a core service of hospitals, and accordingly,
hospital nurse staffing practices are increasingly recognized as a tool
to improve the quality and value of care.\175\ Studies have shown there
is a link between nurse staffing and care quality and patient outcomes.
For example, the AHRQ conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis
examining the relationship between nurse staffing and patient outcomes.
The review of 96 studies, published between 1990 and 2006, found that
increased nurse staffing is associated with a reduction in hospital-
related mortality and adverse patient events, such as respiratory
failure, cardiac arrest, and hospital-acquired conditions.\176\ A
review of studies examining the impact of nurse staffing on hospital
costs and patient length of stay found that an increased level of
registered nurse (RN) staffing may result in reduced patient length of
stay and hospital costs.\177\ Further, more recent literature has
demonstrated that nursing skill mix (licensure level) and increased RN
nursing hours are associated with decreased rates of patient falls,
pressure ulcers, urinary tract infections, and bloodstream
infections.178 179 180
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\175\ Institute of Medicine. (2011). The future of nursing:
Leading change, advancing health. Washington, DC: National Academies
Press.
\176\ Kane, R. L., Shamliyan, T. A., Mueller, C., Duval, S., &
Wilt, T. J. (2007). The association of registered nurse staffing
levels and patient outcomes: systematic review and meta-analysis.
Medical Care, 45(12), 1195-1204.
\177\ Thungiaroenjul, P., Cummings, G.G., Embleton, A. (2007).
The impact of nurse staffing on hospital costs and patient length of
stay: A systematic review. Nursing Economics, 25(5).
\178\ Tzeng, H.-M., Titler, M. G., Ronis, D. L., & Yin, C.-Y.
(2012). The contribution of staff call light response time to fall
and injurious fall rates: an exploratory study in four US hospitals
using archived hospital data. BMC Health Services Research, 12, 84.
Available at: //doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-84.
\179\ Esparza, S. J., Zoller, J. S., White, A. W., & Highfield,
M. E. F. (2012). Nurse staffing and skill mix patterns: Are there
differences in outcomes? Journal of Healthcare Risk Management: The
Journal of the American Society for Healthcare Risk Management,
31(3), 14-23. Availab le at: //doi.org/10.1002/jhrm.20092.
\180\ Yang, P.-H., Hung, C.-H., Chen, Y.-M., Hu, C.-Y., & Shieh,
S.-L. (2012). The impact of different nursing skill mix models on
patient outcomes in a respiratory care center. Worldviews on
Evidence-Based Nursing/Sigma Theta Tau International, Honor Society
of Nursing, 9(4), 227-233. Available at: //doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-6787.2012.00246.x.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe there is an opportunity for hospitals to develop nurse
staffing strategies to improve quality and the value of care. The
inclusion of nurse staffing measures in the Hospital IQR Program would
allow hospitals to assess how their nurse staffing and skill mix
compare to similar hospitals and State and national levels, as well as
encourage hospitals to develop optimal nurse staffing plans that meet
the needs of their patients and improve quality of care. Because of the
important role of nursing in providing high value care, we are seeking
public comment on including two nurse staffing measures in the Hospital
IQR Program: (1) Skill Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed Vocational/
Practical Nurse [LVN/LPN], Unlicensed Assistive Personnel [UAP], and
Contract) (Nursing Skill Mix) Measure (NQF #0204); and (2) Nursing
Hours per Patient Day Measure (NQF #0205).
These two measures (Skill Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed
Vocational/Practical Nurse [LVN/LPN], Unlicensed Assistive Personnel
[UAP], and Contract) (Nursing Skill Mix) Measure (NQF #0204) (MUCE0204)
and Nursing Hours per Patient Day Measure (NQF #0205) (MUCEO205)), are
included in a publicly available document entitled ``Spreadsheet of MAP
2015 Final Recommendations,'' which is available on the NQF Web
site.\181\ These measures address the NQS priority of effective
prevention and treatment, and were reviewed by the MAP in 2014. The MAP
noted the need for resolution of data issues, specifically that
hospitals participating in the National Database of Nursing Quality
Indicators[supreg] (NDNQI[supreg]) program can have
[[Page 20057]]
their data directly shared with CMS while those that do not currently
participate in that program have the opportunity to send their data
directly to CMS. In addition, the MAP noted that, at the time, there
was no gold standard for these measures, and thus it is difficult to
access relative performance on these measures.\182\ The final
recommendation from that review was to conditionally support the
inclusion of these measures, contingent upon review and endorsement
from the NQF. We note that these measures initially obtained NQF
endorsement on August 5, 2009, and after subsequent review by NQF for
aggregation at the hospital level, the measures retained their
endorsement as of December 10, 2015.\183\ Further, we note that
approximately half of hospitals are already reporting this information
to the NDNQI[supreg],\184\ founded by the American Nurses Association
(ANA).\185\ NDNQI[supreg] data are not publicly reported.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\181\ Spreadsheet of MAP 2015 Final Recommendations, available
at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
\182\ MAP 2014-2015 Preliminary Recommendations, available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
\183\ NQF Measures Database, ``Quality Positioning System,''
available at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/204 and //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0205.
\184\ NDNQI[supreg] database is one of the nation's largest
repositories of data on nurse-sensitive quality and safety measure.
Approximately 2000 hospitals participate in the program.
\185\ Press Ganey Nursing Quality (NDNQI), available at: //www.pressganey.com/solutions/clinical-quality/nursing-quality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Skill Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed Vocational/Practical
Nurse [LVN/LPN], Unlicensed Assistive Personnel [UAP], and Contract)
(Nursing Skill Mix) Measure (NQF #0204)
(a) Overview of Measure
The NQF-endorsed Nursing Skill Mix measure assesses the percentage
of productive nursing care hours worked by nursing staff with direct
patient care responsibilities for each nursing licensure category (RN,
LPN/LVN, and UAP) and staff employment status (contract/agency versus
employee), by eligible hospital unit. The intent of this measure is to
enable hospitals to track and assess their nursing skill mix, given
that research demonstrates a relationship between skill mix and certain
quality outcomes.\186\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\186\ Kane, R. L., Shamliyan, T. A., Mueller, C., Duval, S., &
Wilt, T. J. (2007). The association of registered nurse staffing
levels and patient outcomes: systematic review and meta-analysis.
Medical Care, 45(12), 1195-1204.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The measure focuses on the structure of care quality and includes
the skill mix for adult and pediatric medical-surgical hospital units.
Medical-surgical hospital units include hospitals areas for the
evaluation of patients with medical and/or surgical conditions.
Eligible adult and pediatric medical-surgical units can be mapped to
the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Healthcare Service
locations codes as defined in the NHSN Patient Safety Component
Manual.\187\ Additional unit types, such as adult and pediatric
critical-care, step-down, medical, and surgical units could be
included, but at this time, we believe that limiting the measure to
adult and pediatric medical-surgical units would allow hospitals to
become accustomed to collecting and reporting staffing data while also
providing important staffing information to consumers. However, we are
seeking public comment on how many inpatient units to include and which
units should be prioritized.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\187\ NHSN Patient Safety Component Manual //www.cdc.gov/nhsn/about-nhsn/index.html [under ``Related Links''].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Productive nursing care hours are defined as the hours worked by
nursing staff (RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) with direct patient care
responsibilities, including unbudgeted overtime or scheduled hours.
Direct patient care responsibilities are nursing activities performed
by unit-based staff in the presence of the patients and activities that
occur away from the patient that are patient related, such as the
following:
Medication administration.
Nursing treatments.
Nursing rounds.
Admission, transfer, and discharge activities.
Patient education.
Patient communication.
Coordination of patient care.
Documentation time.
Treatment planning.
Patient screening and assessment.
Unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) are defined as individuals
trained to function in an assistive role to nursing in the provision of
patient care, as delegated by and under the supervision of a registered
nurse. UAPs include nursing assistants, patient care technicians/
assistants, and graduate nurses not yet licensed who have completed
orientations.
The measure includes: All nursing staff employed by the hospital;
temporary staff who are not employed by the hospital (contract or
agency); and float staff who are hospital employees temporarily
assigned to provide direct patient care on an eligible unit other than
their usual unit of employment.
(b) Data Source
Data collection for this structural measure would occur quarterly
for each eligible unit from January 1 through December 31 of each
calendar year, with data submission occurring 4.5 months after the end
of each reporting quarter. An eligible unit must be open, with patients
present, at least one month during the reporting period to be included.
These data would be collected via a web-based tool available on the
QualityNet Web site.
(c) Measure Calculation
For staff with direct patient care responsibilities, the measure
assesses the percentage of total productive nursing hours worked by
either employee or contract RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs, as well as at the
percentage of total productive nursing hours worked for contract or
agency staff. Accordingly, four rates (percentages) are determined for
each eligible hospital unit, one for each type of nursing staff, and
one for contract and agency nursing staff. The four separate rates are
as follows: (1) RN hours--Productive nursing care hours worked by RNs
(employee and contract) with direct patient care responsibilities for
each eligible inpatient unit/the total number of productive hours
worked by employee or contract nursing staff with direct patient care
responsibilities (RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) for each eligible inpatient
unit; (2) LPN/LVN hours--Productive nursing care hours worked by LPNs/
LVNs (employee and contract) with direct patient care responsibilities
for each eligible inpatient unit/the total number of productive hours
worked by employee or contract nursing staff with direct patient care
responsibilities (RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) for each eligible inpatient
unit; (3) UAP hours--Productive nursing care hours worked by UAP
(employee and contract) with direct patient care responsibilities for
each eligible inpatient unit/the total number of productive hours
worked by employee or contract nursing staff with direct patient care
responsibilities (RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) for each eligible inpatient
unit; and (4) Contract or agency hours--Productive nursing care hours
worked by contract or agency staff nursing staff (RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP)
with direct patient care responsibilities for each eligible inpatient
unit/the total number of productive hours worked by employee or
contract nursing staff with direct patient care responsibilities (RN,
LPN/LVN, and UAP) for each eligible inpatient unit. The data collected
and the rates calculated are aggregate nursing care hours worked by
each licensure category, by unit type. Hospital rates are weighted for
patient volume (patient days) to account for differences in unit sizes.
[[Page 20058]]
(d) Cohort
Employee, contract, or agency RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs with direct
patient care responsibilities are included in the numerator and
denominator statements. The measure numerator and denominator include
nursing staff assigned to the eligible unit who have direct patient
care responsibilities for greater than 50 percent of their shift who
are counted in an eligible unit's staffing matrix, are replaced if they
call in sick, and whose work hours are charged to the unit's cost
center. The measure numerator and denominator exclude the following:
Nursing staff with no direct patient care responsibilities whose
primary responsibility is administrative in nature; specialty teams
(for example, wound care), patient educators, or case managers who are
not assigned to a specific unit; unit clerks, monitor technicians, and
secretaries with no direct patient care responsibilities; sitters not
providing routine UAP activities; therapy assistants; student nurses
fulfilling educational requirements; and nursing staff undergoing
orientation who are not included in the eligible units staffing matrix.
For more information regarding the Nursing Skill Mix measure, we refer
readers to the NQF measure information page available at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0204.
We are inviting public comment on the future inclusion of the Skill
Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed Vocational/Practical Nurse [LVN/
LPN], Unlicensed Assistive Personnel [UAP], and Contract) (Nursing
Skill Mix) measure for the Hospital IQR Program. Specifically, we are
seeking public comments on narrowing the number of hospital units
included in the measures' calculation, which units we should consider
for inclusion, and the burden of data collection on hospitals.
(3) Nursing Hours per Patient Day Measure (NQF #0205)
(a) Overview of Measure
The NQF-endorsed Nursing Hours per Patient Day measure assesses the
number of productive hours worked by both RNs and all nursing staff
(RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) with direct patient care responsibilities per
patient day, by eligible hospital inpatient unit. The intent of this
measure is to enable hospitals to track and assess the ratio of hours
worked by nursing staff per patient day, given that research
demonstrates a relationship between increased nursing hours and certain
quality outcomes.
The measure focuses on the structure of care quality and includes
Nursing Hours per Patient Day for eligible adult and pediatric medical-
surgical inpatient hospital units. Medical-surgical hospital units
include hospitals areas for the evaluation of patients with medical
and/or surgical conditions. Eligible adult and pediatric medical-
surgical units can be mapped to the CDC's National Healthcare Safety
Network (NHSN) Healthcare Service locations codes as defined in the
NHSN Patient Safety Component Manual. Similar to the Nursing Skill Mix
Measure, additional unit types, such as adult and pediatric critical-
care, step-down, medical, and surgical units could be included, but at
this time, we believe that limiting the measure to adult and pediatric
medical-surgical units would allow hospitals to become accustomed to
collecting and reporting staffing data while also providing important
staffing information to consumers. However, we are seeking comment on
how many inpatient units to include and which units should be
prioritized.
Productive hours are defined as the hours worked by nursing staff
(RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP) with direct patient care responsibilities,
including overtime, not budgeted, or scheduled hours. Direct patient
care responsibilities are nursing activities performed by unit-based
staff in the presence of the patients and activities that occur away
from the patient that are patient related, such as the following:
Medication administration
Nursing treatments
Nursing rounds
Admission, transfer, and discharge activities
Patient education
Patient communication
Coordination of patient care
Documentation time
Treatment planning
Patient screening and assessment
UAP are individuals trained to function in an assistive role to
nursing staff in the provision of patient care, as delegated by and
under the supervision of a registered nurse. UAPs include nursing
assistants, patient care technicians/assistants, and graduate nurses
not yet licensed who have completed orientations.
The measure includes all nursing staff employed by the hospital;
temporary staff who are not employed by the hospital (contract or
agency); and float staff who are hospital employees temporarily
assigned to provide direct patient care on an eligible unit other than
their usual unit of employment.
(b) Data Source
Data collection for this structural measure for hospitals occur
quarterly, for each eligible unit, from January 1 through December 31
of each calendar year, with data submission occurring 4.5 months after
the end of each reporting quarter. These data would be collected via a
web-based tool available on the QualityNet Web site.
(c) Measure Calculation
For staff with direct patient care responsibilities, the measure
assesses the number of productive hours per patient day worked by both
RNs and by total nursing staff (RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs). Accordingly,
two rates are determined for each eligible hospital unit. The two
separate rates are as follows: (1) RN hours per patient day--Total
number of productive hours worked by RN nursing staff (contract and
employee) with direct patient care responsibilities for each eligible
inpatient unit/total number of patient days for each eligible inpatient
unit; and (2) Total nursing care hours per patient day--Total number of
productive hours worked by RN, LPN/LVN, and UAP nursing staff (contract
and employee) with direct patient care responsibilities for each
eligible inpatient unit/total number of patient days for each eligible
inpatient unit. Patient days must be from the same unit in which
nursing care hours are reported. The data collected and the rates
calculated are aggregate nursing hours per patient day, by unit type.
Hospital rates are weighted for patient volume (patient days) to
account for differences in unit sizes.
(d) Cohort
RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs with direct patient care responsibilities
are included in the numerator and denominator statement. The measure
numerator includes nursing staff assigned to the eligible inpatient
unit who have direct patient care responsibilities for greater than 50
percent of their shift, who are counted in an eligible unit's staffing
matrix, are replaced if they call in sick, and work hours are charted
to the unit's cost center. The numerator excludes the following:
Nursing staff with no direct patient care responsibilities whose
primary responsibility is administrative in nature; specialty teams
(for example, wound care), patient educators, or case managers who are
not assigned to a specific unit; unit clerks, monitor technicians, and
secretaries with no direct patient care responsibilities; sitters not
providing routine UAP activities; therapy assistants; student
[[Page 20059]]
nurses fulfilling educational requirements; and nursing staff
undergoing orientation who are not included in the eligible units
staffing matrix. The measure denominator excludes patient days from
ineligible units. For more information regarding the Nursing Hours Per
Day measure, we refer readers to the National Quality Forum measure
information page available at: //www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0205.
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
the Nursing Hours per Patient Day measure for the Hospital IQR Program.
Specifically, we are seeking comments on narrowing the number of
hospital units included in the measures' calculation, which units we
should consider for inclusion, and the burden of data collection on
hospitals.
d. Potential Inclusion of Additional Electronic Clinical Quality
Measures (eCQMs) in the Hospital IQR and Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs
As we previously indicated in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule,
EHR technology continues to evolve and additional infrastructure is
being put in place to afford us the capacity to accept enhanced
electronic reporting of many of the clinical chart-abstracted measures
that are currently part of the Hospital IQR Program (77 FR 53534). We
continue to believe that electronic reporting of quality measure data
derived from the EHR will, in the long run, reduce the burden on
hospitals to collect and submit data for the Hospital IQR Program.
In keeping with this goal, we are soliciting feedback on the
potential inclusion of additional eCQMs in the Hospital IQR and
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. These measures assess
opioid prescribing practices, malnutrition, tobacco use, and substance
use among the adult, inpatient population. As we continue to make
strides with electronic reporting, we want to ensure that we provide
hospitals with a robust selection of eCQMs. As we state in section
IX.A.8. of the preamble of this proposed rule, hospitals have expressed
concerns with identifying applicable measures that reflect their
patient population; thus, we believe that the addition of new eCQMs in
the future will offer more clinically relevant eCQMs with meaningful
data that help drive quality improvement.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57116 through
57120), we removed 13 eCQMs from the Hospital IQR Program measure set,
beginning with the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment
determination, in order to enable hospitals to focus on a smaller, more
specific subset of eCQMs. In that same rule, we indicated that we are
considering behavioral health measures for inclusion in the Hospital
IQR Program to address an important gap in understanding the quality of
care given to inpatient psychiatric patients treated in the acute care
hospital setting rather than a distinct psychiatric unit or IPF (81 FR
57166 through 51767). The future inclusion of measures assessing opioid
prescribing practices, tobacco use, and substance use will help to
inform how we can improve the quality of care in these clinical
domains, and help to fill this identified gap area. The table below
lists the eCQMs being considered for future inclusion in the Hospital
IQR and Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and for which we
are seeking public feedback.
Electronic Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs) for Future Consideration in
the Hospital IQR and Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure name NQF #
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safe Use of Opioids--Concurrent Prescribing............. N/A
Completion of a Malnutrition Screening within 24 Hours N/A
of Admission...........................................
Completion of a Nutrition Assessment for Patients N/A
Identified as At-Risk for Malnutrition within 24 Hours
of a Malnutrition Screening............................
Nutrition Care Plan for Patients Identified as N/A
Malnourished after a Completed Nutrition Assessment....
Appropriate Documentation of a Malnutrition Diagnosis... N/A
Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1)........................... N/A
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2)/ N/A
Tobacco Use Treatment (TOB-2a).........................
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered at Discharge N/A
(TOB-3)/Tobacco Use Treatment at Discharge (TOB-3a)....
Alcohol Use Screening (SUB-1)........................... N/A
Alcohol Use Brief Intervention Provided or Offered (SUB- N/A
2)/Alcohol Use Brief Intervention (SUB-2a).............
Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder Treatment Provided or N/A
Offered at Discharge (SUB-3)/Alcohol & Other Drug Use
Disorder Treatment at Discharge (SUB-3a)...............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Safe Use of Opioids-Concurrent Prescribing Measure
(a) Background
Unintended opioid overdose fatalities have reached epidemic
proportions in the last 20 years and are a major public health concern
in the United States.\188\ Reducing the number of unintended opioid
overdoses has become a priority for numerous HHS agencies. Concurrent
prescriptions of opioids or opioids and benzodiazepines put patients at
greater risk of unintended opioid overdose due to increased risk of
respiratory depression.189 190 Despite this risk, studies of
multiple claims and prescription databases have shown that between 5 to
15 percent of patients receive concurrent opioid prescriptions, and 5
to 20 percent of patients receive concurrent opioid and benzodiazepine
prescriptions across various settings.191 192 193 In
addition, an analysis
[[Page 20060]]
of more than 1 million hospital admissions in the United States found
that over 43 percent of all patients with nonsurgical admissions were
exposed to multiple opioids during their hospitalization.\194\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\188\ Rudd, R., Aleshire, N., Zibbell, J., et al. ``Increases in
Drug and Opioid Overdose Deaths--United States, 2000-2014.'' MMWR,
Jan 2016. 64(50);1378-82 //www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6450a3.htm.
\189\ Dowell, D., Haegerich, T., Chou, R. ``CDC Guideline for
Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain--United States, 2016.'' MMWR
Recomm Rep 2016;65. Available at: //www.cdc.gov/media/dpk/2016/dpk-opioid-prescription-guidelines.html.
\190\ Jena, A., et al. ``Opioid prescribing by multiple
providers in Medicare: retrospective observational study of
insurance claims,'' BMJ 2014; 348:g1393 doi: 10.1136/bmj.g1393.
Available at: //www.bmj.com/content/348/bmj.g1393.
\191\ Liu, Y., Logan, J., Paulozzi, L., et al. ``Potential
Misuse and Inappropriate Prescription Practices Involving Opioid
Analgesics.'' Am J Manag Care. 2013 Aug;19(8):648-65. Available at:
//www.ajmc.com/journals/issue/2013/2013-1-vol19-n8/Potential-Misuse-and-Inappropriate-Prescription-Practices-Involving-Opioid-Analgesics/ Analgesics/.
\192\ Mack, K., Zhang, K., et al. ``Prescription Practices
involving Opioid Analgesics among Americans with Medicaid, 2010,'' J
Health Care Poor Underserved. 2015 Feb; 26(1): 182-198. Available
at: //www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4365785/.
\193\ Park, T., et al. ``Benzodiazepine Prescribing Patterns and
Deaths from Drug Overdose among US Veterans Receiving Opioid
Analgesics: Case-cohort Study,'' BMJ 2015; 350:h2698. Available at:
//www.bmj.com/content/350/bmj.h2698.
\194\ Herzig, S., Rothberg, M., Cheung, M., et al. ``Opioid
utilization and opioid-related adverse events in nonsurgical
patients in US hospitals.'' Nov 2013. DOI: 10.1002/jhm.2102.
Available at: //onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jhm.2102/abstract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Overview of Measure
The Safe Use of Opioids--Concurrent Prescribing (MUC16-167) measure
assesses patients (excluding cancer patients or patients receiving
palliative care), ages 18 years and older with active, concurrent
prescriptions for opioids, or opioids and benzodiazepines, at
discharge.\195\ This measure addresses the following NQS priorities:
(1) Making care safer by reducing harm caused in the delivery of care;
(2) promoting effective communication and coordination of care; and (3)
promoting the most effective prevention and treatment practices for the
leading causes of mortality, starting with cardiovascular disease.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\195\ 2016 Measures Under Consideration List (PDF), available
at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This measure was reviewed by the MAP in December 2016 and received
the recommendation to refine and resubmit for consideration for
programmatic inclusion. MAP stakeholders acknowledged the significant
health risks associated with concurrent prescribing of opioids, and
opioids and benzodiazepines, but expressed concern with the measure
specifications, indicating the need for a stronger evidence base for
clinical guidelines and refinement of the measure exclusions to reduce
the risk of unintended consequences.\196\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures Hospitals-
Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information on this measure can be found in the 2016
Measures Under Consideration Spreadsheet, available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
this opioid prescribing measure in the Hospital IQR Program.
(2) Malnutrition Measures
(a) Background
Malnutrition is associated with many adverse outcomes including
depression of the immune system, impaired wound healing, muscle
wasting, and increased mortality.197 198 Patients who are
malnourished during a hospital stay have an increased risk of
complications, readmissions, and length of stay. In addition, evidence
demonstrates an association between malnutrition risk and increased
inpatient costs. One study found that patients identified with
undernutrition risk and high undernutrition risk experience increased
costs by 28.8 percent and 21.1 percent, respectively, when compared to
non-malnourished patients.\199\ Malnutrition risk screening, using a
validated screening tool, can be useful in predicting certain patient
outcomes including length of stay, mortality, and post-operative
complications.\200\ Nutrition assessments for patients identified as
at-risk for malnutrition have been associated with improved patient
outcomes including less weight loss, reduced length of stay, improved
muscle function, better nutritional intake, and fewer
readmissions.\201\ Further, there is evidence of a performance gap with
regard to nutrition screening and assessment. A national survey of
hospital-based professionals in the United States focused on nutrition
screening and assessment practices demonstrated that out of 1,777
unique respondents, only 36.7 percent reported completing nutrition
screening at admission and 50.8 percent reported doing so within 24
hours.\202\ Thus, there is an opportunity for hospitals to improve
nutrition screening and assessment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\197\ Corkins MR, Guenter P, Dimaria-ghalili RA, et al.
Malnutrition diagnoses in hospitalized patients: United States,
2010. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2014;38(2):186-95.
\198\ Barker LA, Gout BS, Crowe TC. Hospital malnutrition:
prevalence, identification and impact on patients and the healthcare
system. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2011;8(2):514-27.
\199\ Guerra RS, Sousa AS, Fonseca I, et al. Comparative
analysis of undernutrition screening and diagnostic tools as
predictors of hospitalization costs. J Hum Nutr Diet.
2016;29(2):165-73.
\200\ Mueller C, Compher C & Druyan ME and the American Society
for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (A.S.P.E.N.) Board of
Directors. A.S.P.E.N. Clinical Guidelines: Nutrition Screening,
Assessment, and Intervention in Adults. J Parenter Enteral Nutr.
2011;35: 16-24.
\201\ Mueller C, Compher C & Druyan ME and the American Society
for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (A.S.P.E.N.) Board of
Directors. A.S.P.E.N. Clinical Guidelines: Nutrition Screening,
Assessment, and Intervention in Adults. J Parenter Enteral Nutr.
2011;35: 16-24.
\202\ Patel V, Romano M, Corkins MR, et al. Nutrition Screening
and Assessment in Hospitalized Patients: A Survey of Current
Practice in the United States. Nutr Clin Pract. 2014;29(4):483-490.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Overview of Measures
The malnutrition measure set consists of the following four
measures:
Completion of a Malnutrition Screening within 24 Hours of
Admission (MUC16-294);
Completion of a Nutrition Assessment for Patients
Identified as At-Risk for Malnutrition within 24 Hours of a
Malnutrition Screening (MUC16-296);
Appropriate Documentation of a Malnutrition Diagnosis
(MUC16-344); and
Nutrition Care Plan for Patients Identified as
Malnourished after a Completed Nutrition Assessment (MUC16-372).
These malnutrition measures are new eCQMs that collectively
evaluate the quality of care rendered to adult patients that are
identified as malnourished. These measures address the NQS priorities
of: (1) Making care safer by reducing harm caused in the delivery of
care; and (2) promoting effective communication and coordination of
care. The Completion of a Malnutrition Screening within 24 Hours of
Admission measure (MUC16-294) assesses whether patients age 18 years or
older are screened for malnutrition within 24 hours of admission to the
hospital. The Completion of a Nutrition Assessment for Patients
Identified as At-Risk for Malnutrition measure (MUC16-296) assesses
whether patients age 65 years or older, who screen positive for being
at-risk for malnutrition, have a nutrition assessment documented in the
medical record within 24 hours of the most recent malnutrition
screening. The Appropriate Documentation of a Malnutrition Diagnosis
measure (MUC16-344) assesses whether patients age 65 years and older,
who are found to be malnourished on the nutrition assessment, have
adequate documentation of a malnutrition diagnosis in their medical
record. This measure is important because there is often a disconnect
between screening for malnutrition and documentation of a diagnosis of
malnutrition, which is necessary for appropriate follow-up after
hospital discharge. Data analyzed from the Healthcare Cost and
Utilization Project (HCUP), a nationally-representative data set
describing U.S. hospital discharges, indicated that approximately 3.2
percent of hospital discharges in 2010 included malnutrition as a
diagnosis. However, this same research article notes that the
prevalence of a malnutrition diagnosis may be significantly higher as
past
[[Page 20061]]
researchers, using validated screening tools, indicate a significantly
higher prevalence of undiagnosed malnutrition in the hospital, ranging
from 33 to 54 percent.\203\ Lastly, the Nutrition Care Plan for
Patients Identified as Malnourished after a Completed Nutrition
Assessment measure (MUC16-372) assesses whether patients age 65 years
and older, who are found to be malnourished on a completed nutrition
assessment, have a nutrition care plan documented in their medical
record.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\203\ Corkins, M.R., Guenter, P., DiMaria-Ghalili, R.A., Jensen,
G.L., Malone, A., Miller, S., Patel, V., Plogsted, S. and Resnick,
H.E., 2014. Malnutrition diagnoses in hospitalized patients: United
States, 2010. Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 38(2),
pp.186-195.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These measures were reviewed by the MAP in December 2016 and
received mixed support. The Nutrition Care Plan for Patients Identified
as Malnourished after a Completed Nutrition Assessment (MUC16-372),
Completion of a Malnutrition Screening within 24 Hours of Admission
(MUC16-294), and Completion of a Nutrition Assessment for Patients
Identified as At-Risk for Malnutrition within 24 Hours of a
Malnutrition Screening (MUC16-296) measures were recommended to be
refined and resubmitted for consideration for programmatic inclusion.
For these three measures, the MAP encouraged providing more evidence to
prove clinical importance and recommended that the exclusions continue
to be tested for validity.\204\ The Appropriate Documentation of a
Malnutrition Diagnosis measure (MUC16-344) was not supported because
there was concern that there was insufficient evidence to support the
link between documenting a malnutrition diagnosis and improved patient
outcomes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\204\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures Hospitals-
Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MAP concluded that completing a malnutrition assessment
provided the most potential value to the measure set and quality of
care. The MAP also encouraged the measure developer to test the
individual malnutrition measures as a composite in an effort to balance
the number of measures in the Hospital IQR Program with the need to
fill the measure gap addressing malnutrition.\205\ We note that we
received written support (formal letters addressed to CMS) of these
measures from other stakeholders who noted that addressing malnutrition
among beneficiaries is an important clinical issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\205\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information on these measures is available at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMeasures.aspx?projectID=80741.
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
one or more of these malnutrition measures in the Hospital IQR Program.
In addition, we are inviting public comment on the possible future
inclusion of a composite measure comprised of all or a subset of these
individual malnutrition measures in the Hospital IQR Program.
(3) Tobacco Use Measures
(a) Background
Tobacco use is the single greatest cause of disease in the United
States today and accounts for more than 480,000 deaths each year.\206\
Tobacco use creates a heavy cost to society as well as to individuals.
Smoking is a known cause of multiple cancers, heart disease, stroke,
complications of pregnancy, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
other respiratory problems, poorer wound healing, and many other
diseases.\207\ Smoking-attributable health care expenditures are
estimated to cost at least $130 billion per year in direct medical
expenses for adults and over $150 billion in lost productivity.\208\
There is strong and consistent evidence that tobacco dependence
interventions, if delivered in a timely and effective manner,
significantly reduce the user's risk of suffering from tobacco-related
disease and improve outcomes for those already suffering from a
tobacco-related disease.209 210 211 212 Effective, evidence-
based tobacco dependence interventions have been clearly identified and
include brief clinician advice, individual, group, or telephone
counseling, and use of FDA-approved medications. Tobacco cessation
treatments are clinically effective and extremely cost-effective
relative to other commonly used disease prevention interventions and
medical treatments.\213\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\206\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Current
Cigarette Smoking Among Adults--United States, 2005-2013. Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) 2014. 63(47); 1108-1112.
Available at: //www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6347a4.htm?s_cid=mm6347a4.
\207\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The health
consequences of smoking--50 years of progress: a report of the
Surgeon General. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, CDC; 2014. Available at: //www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/reports/50-years-of-progress/full-report.pdf.
\208\ Ibid.
\209\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Reducing
tobacco use: a report of the Surgeon General. Atlanta, GA, U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health, 2000.
\210\ Baumeister SE., Schumann A, Meyer C, et al. Effects of
smoking cessation on health care use: is elevated risk of
hospitalization among former smokers attributable to smoking-related
morbidity? Drug Alcohol Depend. 2007 May 11;88(2-3):197-203. Epub
2006 Nov 21.
\211\ Lightwood JM. The economics of smoking and cardiovascular
disease. Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 2003 Jul-Aug;46(1):39-78.
\212\ Rigotti, et al. Interventions for smoking cessation in
hospitalized patients. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.
2012. Available from: //onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD001837.pub3/abstract.
\213\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Performance on the chart-abstracted versions of these measures, as
reported by The Joint Commission, yields that the Tobacco Use Screening
(TOB-1) measure had a screening rate of 98.15 percent, based on a
reporting period of July 2015-June 2016.\214\ TOB-1 is necessary to
operationalize Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2)/
Tobacco Use Treatment (TOB-2a) and Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or
Offered at Discharge (TOB-3)/Tobacco Use Treatment at Discharge (TOB-
3a) measures. The goal of TOB-1 is to achieve 100 percent screening so
that all tobacco users are consistently identified and offered
appropriate interventions, which are evaluated by TOB-2/2a and TOB-3/
3a. As noted in the table \215\ below, the performance rates for the
chart-abstracted versions of TOB-2/2a and TOB-3/3a measures suggest
that there is an opportunity for hospitals to improve tobacco use
treatment during the hospital stay and at discharge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\214\ Joint Commission Quality Check Data, available at: //www.qualitycheck.org/. (Data download.)
\215\ Joint Commission Quality Check Data available at: //www.qualitycheck.org/.
Tobacco Use Measures Screening Results July 2015-June 2016
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Screening
Measure name rate (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2).......... 66.41
Tobacco Use Treatment (TOB-2a)............................. 32.97
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered at Discharge (TOB- 46.20
3)........................................................
Tobacco Use Treatment at Discharge (TOB-3a)................ 10.71
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Overview of Measures
The tobacco use measure set consists of the following three
measures:
Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1) (MUC16-50);
[[Page 20062]]
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered (TOB-2)/Tobacco
Use Treatment (TOB-2a) (MUC16-51); and
Tobacco Use Treatment Provided or Offered at Discharge
(TOB-3)/Tobacco Use Treatment at Discharge (TOB-3a) (MUC16-52).
The TOB measures are eCQMs that assess tobacco use screening and
treatment for patients age 18 years or older during the hospital stay
and at discharge. We note that these measures were derived from the
chart-abstracted versions in use by The Joint Commission. The Joint
Commission has been using the chart-abstracted versions of these
measures for voluntary reporting since January 1, 2012.\216\ In
addition, the chart-abstracted versions of these measures (TOB-1, TOB-
2/TOB-2a, and TOB-3/TOB-3a) are also part of the IPFQR Program measure
set (81 FR 57246). These measures address the NQS priority of promoting
the most effective prevention and treatment practices for the leading
causes of mortality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\216\ The Joint Commission, Substance Use Measures overview,
available at: //www.jointcommission.org/core_measure_sets.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOB-1 assesses the proportion of hospitalized patients who are
screened, or refuse screening, within the three days prior to admission
through 1 day after admission, for tobacco use during the 30 days prior
to the screening. TOB-2 assesses the proportion of patients who are
light tobacco users who received or refused practical counseling to
quit within 3 days prior to or anytime during admission. TOB-2 also
assesses the proportion of heavy tobacco users who received or refused
practical counseling to quit and received, had a medical reason not to
receive, or refused FDA-approved cessation medications within 3 days
prior to or anytime during admission. The subset measure TOB-2a only
assesses light tobacco users who received practical counseling to quit
within 3 days prior to or anytime during admission, and heavy tobacco
users who received practical counseling to quit and received, or had a
medical reason not to receive, FDA-approved cessation medications
within 3 days prior to or anytime during admission. TOB-3 assesses the
proportion of patients who are light tobacco users who were referred to
or refused counseling within 3 days prior to admission through 1 day
after discharge. TOB-3 also assesses the proportions of heavy tobacco
users who were referred to or refused evidence-based counseling and
received, had a medical reason not to receive, or refused a
prescription for FDA-approved cessation medication upon discharge. The
subset measure TOB-3a assesses light tobacco users who were referred to
counseling within 3 days prior to admission through one day after
discharge, and heavy tobacco users who were referred to evidence-based
counseling and received, or had a medical reason not to receive, a
prescription for FDA-approved cessation medication upon discharge.
We note that we previously solicited comments on the future
inclusion of electronically-specified versions of the tobacco use
measures TOB-1, TOB-2/2a and TOB-3/3a, previously referred to as TAM-1,
TAM-2, and TAM-3, respectively, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(77 FR 53535). Commenters equally supported and opposed the future
inclusion of the tobacco use measures in the Hospital IQR Program.
Commenters highlighted the importance of high validation rates such as
95 percent, across the electronic data capture method and manual chart-
abstraction (77 FR 53535). We note that at the time we sought public
comments on these measure concepts related to tobacco use,
electronically-specified measures were not yet developed.
In the most recent MAP deliberations in December 2016, only the
Tobacco Use Screening (TOB-1) eCQM (MUC16-50) was reviewed. The TOB-2/
TOB-2a (MUC16-51) and TOB-3/TOB-3a (MUC16-52) eCQMs were on the
December 2016 MUC List, but were not submitted for MAP review because
they were still undergoing field testing. We anticipate that these
measures should be ready for review by the MAP in the winter of CY
2017.
The TOB-1 eCQM was recommended to be refined and resubmitted for
consideration for programmatic inclusion.\217\ The MAP indicated that
the measure should be tested to ensure that it returns accurate,
reliable results. In addition, the MAP Hospital Workgroup noted that it
will be important to carefully assess feasibility and burden of data
collection.\218\ As previously stated, the chart-abstracted versions of
the Tobacco Use Screening measures (TOB-1, TOB-2/TOB-2a, and TOB-3/TOB-
3a) are part of the IPFQR Program measure set (81 FR 57246); thus,
future inclusion of the eCQM versions of these measures in the Hospital
IQR Program measure set would promote programmatic alignment across
these quality reporting programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\217\2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS and
CMS, available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
\218\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information on the chart-abstracted version of these
measures is available at: //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier3&cid=1228775749207.
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
one or more of the eCQM versions of these tobacco use measures (TOB-1,
TOB-2/2a and TOB-3/3a) in the Hospital IQR Program. In addition, we are
inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of a composite
measure comprised of all or a subset of these individual tobacco use
measures in the Hospital IQR Program.
(4) Substance Use Measures
(a) Background
Excessive alcohol consumption and drug misuse or abuse have a
significant impact on the health of the U.S. population.\219\ Excessive
alcohol consumption is a leading cause of preventable death and
disability resulting in approximately 88,000 deaths per year with an
estimated economic cost of $249 billion, including $28 billion (2010
dollars) in direct health care costs.\220\ In 2015, approximately 20.8
million individuals were classified as having a substance use disorder.
Of those individuals with substance use disorders, 13.1 million had an
alcohol use disorder, 5.1 million had an illicit drug use disorder, and
2.7 million had an alcohol and illicit drug use disorder.\221\
Excessive alcohol consumption and substance use disorders can increase
the risk of preventable injury, worsen existing chronic diseases, such
as mental illness, and lead to the development of diseases, such as
heart disease, cancer, and liver
[[Page 20063]]
disease.\222\ Studies show the majority of individuals who consume
alcohol excessively do not meet the clinical criteria for diagnosis of
a substance use disorder; yet evidence demonstrates screening and brief
interventions, especially prior to the onset of a substance use
disorder, can improve health and reduce costs.\223\ Similar benefits
have been observed for individuals with substance use disorders who are
identified and referred to treatment.224 225 The table below
provides performance rates based on the July 2015-June 2016 reporting
period for the chart-abstracted versions of these measures, as reported
by The Joint Commission.\226\ The results show that there is an
opportunity for hospitals to improve substance use screening, brief
intervention, and treatment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\219\ Excessive alcohol consumption includes binge drinking,
heavy drinking, and any drinking by pregnant women or people younger
than age 21. Definitions are available from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention at: //www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/alcohol-use.htm.
\220\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Alcohol and
Public Health: Alcohol-Related Disease Impact available at: //nccd.cdc.gov/DPH_ARDI/Default/Report.aspx?T=AAM&P=f6d7eda7-036e-4553-9968-9b17ffad620e&R=d7a9b303-48e9-4440-bf47-070a4827e1fd&M=8E1C5233-5640-4EE8-9247-1ECA7DA325B9&F=&D= ; Sacks
JJ, Gonzales KR, Bouchery EE, Tomedi LE, Brewer RD. 2010 national
and state costs of excessive alcohol consumption. American journal
of preventive medicine. 2015 Nov 30;49(5): e73-9.; Stahre M, Roeber
J, Kanny D, Brewer RD, Zhang X. Contribution of Excessive Alcohol
Consumption to Deaths and Years of Potential Life Lost in the United
States. Prev Chronic Dis 2014;11:130293. DOI: //dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd11.130293.
\221\ Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) Key Substance Use and Mental Health Indicators in the
United States: Results from the 2015 National Survey on Drug Use and
Health available at: //www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUH-FFR1-2015/NSDUH-FFR1-2015/NSDUH-FFR1-2015.pdf.
\222\ Excessive alcohol consumption includes binge drinking.
heavy drinking, and any drinking by pregnant women or people younger
than age 21. Definitions are available from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention at: //www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/alcohol-use.htm.
\223\ Esser MB, Hedden SL, Kanny D, Brewer RD, Gfroerer JC,
Naimi TS. Prevalence of Alcohol Dependence Among US Adult Drinkers,
2009-2011. Prev Chronic Dis 2014;11:140329. DOI: //dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd11.140329; American Psychiatric Association. (1994).
Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-IV) (4th
ed.). Washington, DC.
\224\ Maciosek MV, Coffield AB, Edwards NM, Flottemesch TJ,
Goodman MJ, Solberg LI. Priorities among effective clinical
preventive services results of a systematic review and analysis. Am
J Prev Med Jul 2006;31(1):52-61.
\225\ Saitz R, Palfai TP, Cheng DM, Horton NJ, Freedner N, Dukes
K, et al. Brief intervention for medical inpatients with unhealthy
alcohol use: a randomized, controlled trial. Ann Intern Med. 2007;
146:167-76.
\226\ Joint Commission Quality Check Data, available at: //www.qualitycheck.org/. (Data download.)
Substance Use Measures Screening Results July 2015-June 2016
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Screening
Measure name rate (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alcohol Use Screening (SUB-1).............................. 85.30
Alcohol Use Brief Intervention Provided or Offered (SUB-2). 62.68
Alcohol Use Brief Intervention (SUB-2a).................... 57.43
Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder Treatment Provided or 65.46
Offered at Discharge (SUB-3)..............................
Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder Treatment at Discharge 54.27
(SUB-3a)..................................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Overview of Measures
The substance use measure set consists of the following three
measures:
Alcohol Use Screening (SUB-1) (MUC16-179);
Alcohol Use Brief Intervention Provided or Offered (SUB-
2)/Alcohol Use Brief Intervention (SUB-2a) (MUC16-178); and
Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder Treatment Provided or
Offered at Discharge (SUB-3)/Alcohol & Other Drug Use Disorder
Treatment at Discharge (SUB-3a) (MUC16-180).
The SUB-1, SUB-2/2a and SUB-3/3a measures address the NQS priority
of promoting the most effective prevention and treatment practices for
the leading causes of mortality. These measures are intended to be used
as part of a linked set. Specifically, the SUB-2/2a and SUB-3/3a
measures will ensure hospitals are not only screening patients for
excessive alcohol use, but also offering evidence-based interventions
to improve the quality of care for patients with excessive alcohol use
or other use disorders. The SUB-1 Alcohol Use Screening measure
assesses whether hospital patients 18 years of age and older are
screened for alcohol use using a validated screening questionnaire for
excessive drinking during their inpatient stay. A validated screening
questionnaire is defined as an instrument that has been
psychometrically tested for reliability (the ability of the instrument
to produce consistent results), validity (the ability of the instrument
to produce true results), and sensitivity (the probability of correctly
identifying a patient with the condition).
As previously noted, these measures are intended to be implemented
as a set. As such, it would be necessary to adopt the SUB-1 measure in
order to implement the other two measures. The SUB-2/2a measure
assesses whether hospital patients age 18 years of age or older who
screened positive for excessive alcohol use or an alcohol use disorder
receive or refuse a brief intervention during the hospital stay (SUB-
2). Subset measure SUB-2a includes only those patients who receive a
brief intervention. A brief intervention is defined as a single session
or multiple sessions conducted by a qualified healthcare professional
or trained peer support person, which includes motivational discussion
focused on increasing patient insight and awareness regarding alcohol
use and motivating behavioral change. The SUB-3/3a measures assess
whether hospitals patients 18 years of age or older with a substance
use disorder (alcohol or drug) receive or refuse at discharge a
medication prescription for treatment or receive or refuse a referral
for substance use disorder treatment (SUB-3). Subset measure SUB-3a
includes only those patients who receive a medication prescription or
treatment referral at discharge.
The chart-abstracted versions of these three measures, not the eCQM
versions, were added to the MUC List in the summer of 2016,\227\ and
reviewed by the MAP in December 2016 as discussed in the MAP Pre-
Rulemaking Report and Spreadsheet entitled ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet of
Final Recommendations to HHS and CMS.'' \228\ The MAP recommended that
the SUB-1 measure (MUC16-179) be refined and resubmitted. The MAP noted
that the measure encourages hospitals to screen patients for excessive
alcohol use and can prevent life-threatening alcohol withdrawal
syndrome, but recommended that the measure be paired with an
appropriate intervention and follow-up measure. The MAP did not support
the SUB-2/2a measure (MUC16-178) for adoption into the Hospital IQR
Program. Proponents of the SUB-2/2a measure supported the incorporation
of behavioral health measures into the Hospital IQR Program and noted
that hospitalization is a prime opportunity to discuss harmful
substance use because patients may be more amenable to a brief
intervention during a hospital stay. Other stakeholders acknowledged
the significant health impact of screening and brief intervention for
substance use, but cited the burden of chart-abstracted data collection
and encouraged the continued development of an electronic measure. MAP
stakeholders also expressed concern the use of the measure in the
hospital inpatient setting, rather than a primary care setting, was not
strongly linked to improved patient outcomes. The MAP also did not
support SUB-3/3a (MUC16-180) due to similar concerns as identified with
the SUB-2/2a measure regarding the measure's link to improved
outcomes.\229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\227\ 2016 Measures Under Consideration Spreadsheet, available
at: //www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75367.
\228\2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final Recommendations to HHS and
CMS, available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
\229\ ``2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures
Hospitals--Final Report,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/map/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to MAP stakeholder concerns regarding the evidence
supporting the use of the measures in the inpatient setting, we note
such supporting evidence, including the evidence of the
generalizability of studies to the acute inpatient setting, was
included as part of the endorsement
[[Page 20064]]
process and these measures received NQF endorsement. Sufficient
evidence exists linking the measures to improved patient outcomes
230 231 in the inpatient setting.\232\ In addition, in light
of the significant health impact of harmful substance use, and its
associated healthcare costs, we believe the benefits of collecting
these measure data from hospitals and publicly reporting the
information outweigh the burden, and address a critical topic impacting
a patient's quality of care and health outcomes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\230\ Kaner EF, Dickinson HO, Beyer FR, Campbell F, Schlesinger
C, Heather N, Saunders JB, Burnand B, Pienaar ED. Effectiveness of
brief alcohol interventions in primary care populations. Cochrane
Database of Systematic Reviews 2007, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD004148.
DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD004148.pub3.
\231\ Whitlock EP, Polen MA, Green CA, Orleans CT, Klein J.
Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care to Reduce Risky/
Harmful Alcohol Use by Adults: A Summary of the Evidence for the U.S
Preventive Services Task Force. Ann Intern Med. 2004; 140:558-569.
\232\ McQueen J, Howe TE, Allan L, Mains D, Hardy V. Brief
interventions for heavy alcohol users admitted to general hospital
wards. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jan 1;8(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that The Joint Commission has been using these chart-
abstracted measures for optional reporting since January 1, 2012.\233\
The chart-abstracted versions of the Substance Use measures (SUB-1,
SUB-2/2a and SUB-3/3a) are also part of the IPFQR Program measure set
(81 FR 57246); thus, future inclusion of the eCQM versions of these
measures in the Hospital IQR Program measure set would promote
programmatic alignment across these quality reporting programs. Lastly,
we note that electronic versions of these measures are in development
by SAMHSA; we anticipate that the eCQM versions will be ready for
review within the next 18-24 months.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\233\ The Joint Commission, Substance Use Measures overview,
available at: //www.jointcommission.org/core_measure_sets.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information on the chart-abstracted versions of these
measures is available in TJC's Specification Manual for National
Hospital Inpatient Quality Measures at: //www.jointcommission.org/specifications_manual_for_national_hospital_inpatient_quality_measures.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of
one or more of the eCQM versions of the Substance Use measures (SUB-1,
SUB-2/2a and SUB-3/3a) in the Hospital IQR Program. In addition, we are
inviting public comment on the possible future inclusion of a composite
measure comprised of all of these individual substance use measures in
the Hospital IQR Program.
10. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission
a. Background
Sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)(I) and (b)(3)(B)(viii)(II) of the Act
state that the applicable percentage increase for FY 2015 and each
subsequent year shall be reduced by one-quarter of such applicable
percentage increase (determined without regard to sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix), (xi), or (xii) of the Act) for any subsection (d)
hospital that does not submit data required to be submitted on measures
specified by the Secretary in a form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary. Previously, the applicable percentage
increase for FY 2007 and each subsequent fiscal year until FY 2015 was
reduced by 2.0 percentage points for subsection (d) hospitals failing
to submit data in accordance with the description above. In accordance
with the statute, the FY 2018 payment determination will begin the
fourth year that the Hospital IQR Program will reduce the applicable
percentage increase by one-quarter of such applicable percentage
increase.
In order to participate in the Hospital IQR Program, hospitals must
meet specific procedural, data collection, submission, and validation
requirements. For each Hospital IQR Program payment determination, we
require that hospitals submit data on each specified measure in
accordance with the measure's specifications for a particular period of
time. The data submission requirements, Specifications Manual, and
submission deadlines are posted on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org/. The annual update of electronic clinical quality
measure (eCQM) specifications and implementation guidance documents are
available on the eCQI Resource Center Web site at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/. Hospitals must register and submit quality data
through the secure portion of the QualityNet Web site. There are
safeguards in place in accordance with the HIPAA Security Rule to
protect patient information submitted through this Web site.
b. Procedural Requirements for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
The Hospital IQR Program's procedural requirements are codified in
regulation at 42 CFR 412.140. We refer readers to these codified
regulations for participation requirements, as further explained by the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50810 through 50811) and the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57168). We are not proposing any
changes to these procedural requirements.
c. Data Submission Requirements for Chart-Abstracted Measures
We refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51640 through 51641), the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53536
through 53537), and the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50811)
for details on the Hospital IQR Program data submission requirements
for chart-abstracted measures. We are not proposing any changes to the
data submission requirements for chart-abstracted measures.
d. Proposed Changes to the Reporting and Submission Requirements for
eCQMs
In this proposed rule, we are proposing changes to the Hospital IQR
Program eCQM reporting and submission requirements to align them with
the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs.
(1) Background
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57157 through
57159), we finalized policies to require hospitals to submit a full
calendar year (four quarterly reporting periods) of data on at least
eight self-selected eCQMs from the available eCQMs in the Hospital IQR
Program for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 payment determinations. However, in
this proposed rule, we are proposing to modify: (1) The CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination eCQM reporting
requirements so that hospitals would be required to report on six eCQMs
and submit two, self-selected, calendar quarters of CY 2017 data; and
(2) for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination eCQM
reporting requirements so that hospitals would be required to report on
six eCQMs and to submit the first three calendar quarters of CY 2018
data. We refer readers to section IX.A.8. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for more detail on these proposals. In order to fully
align the Hospital IQR Program with the requirements for the CQM
electronic reporting option in the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for
the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination and the CY
2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination, we are proposing
similar policies for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for eligible
hospitals and CAHs. We are proposing these changes to assist hospitals
in their efforts to transition towards reporting more eCQMs and towards
reporting four full
[[Page 20065]]
quarters of eCQM data. We refer readers to section IX.E.3. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, where we are proposing aligned policies
for the CQM electronic reporting option in the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs.
(2) Proposed Changes to the Reporting and Submission Requirements for
eCQMs for the FY 2019 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to our file
format requirements or reporting deadlines. However, we are proposing
changes to our requirements related to eCQM electronic specification
and certification. These are discussed in more detail below.
(a) File Format
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49705 through
49708), we finalized that hospitals must submit eCQM data via the
Quality Reporting Document Architecture Category I (QRDA I) file format
for the CY 2016 reporting period/FY 2018 payment determination. In
addition, we finalized that for the CY 2016 reporting period/FY 2018
payment determination, hospitals may use third parties to submit QRDA I
files on their behalf and can either use abstraction or pull the data
from non-certified sources in order to then input these data into CEHRT
for capture and reporting QRDA I (80 FR 49706). In the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57170), we finalized our proposal to
continue these eCQM reporting policies for the CY 2017 reporting
period/FY 2019 payment determination and subsequent years. These
finalized requirements align with those of the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs (81 FR 57255 through 57257). We
are not proposing any changes to these requirements in this proposed
rule.
(b) Proposed Changes to the Certification Requirements for eCQM
Reporting
(i) Background
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57170 through
57171), we finalized policies that hospitals must: (1) Report eCQM data
using EHR technology certified to either the 2014 or 2015 Edition for
the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination; and (2)
report eCQM data using EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition
beginning with the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years. As we discuss in further detail in
section IX.G.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule where the same
considerations are discussed in detail for the Medicare and Medicaid
EHR Incentive Programs, based on our past experience with the
transition from the 2011 Edition to the 2014 Edition and concerns
expressed by stakeholders, we understand that transitioning to
technology certified to a new Edition can be complex and can require
more resources and time than anticipated, including the time necessary
to effectively deploy the upgraded system and make the necessary
patient safety, staff training, and workflow investments. We understand
and appreciate these concerns, and are working in cooperation with our
federal partners at ONC to monitor progress on the 2015 Edition
upgrade. Furthermore, we believe that there are many benefits for
switching to EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition. We will work
with ONC to monitor the status of EHR technology certified to the 2015
Edition and the deployment and implementation of such technology. If we
identify a change in the current trends and significant issues with the
certification and deployment of the 2015 Edition, we will consider
additional methods to offer flexibility in CY 2018 for those hospitals
that are not able to implement 2015 Edition of CEHRT. One possibility
is the flexibility to use technology certified to the 2014 Edition or
the 2015 Edition in CY 2018. Another option is allowing a combination
of EHR technologies certified to the 2014 Edition and 2015 Edition to
be used in CY 2018, for those hospitals that are not able to fully
implement EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition. We invite
public comment on these options for offering flexibility in CY 2018
with regard to EHR certification requirements.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing two changes related to
certification requirements with regard to eCQM reporting: (1) To
require EHR technology certified to all eCQMs that are available to
report; and (2) to note that certified EHR technology does not need to
be recertified each time it is updated to a more recent version of the
eCQM specifications, to align with the Medicare EHR Incentive Program
requirements for eligible hospitals and CAHs. These proposals are
discussed in more detail below.
(ii) Proposal To Require EHR Technology To Be Certified to All eCQMs
That Are Available To Report for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019
Payment Determination and the CY 2018 Reporting Period/FY 2020 Payment
Determination
We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR
49705) where we noted that although we require CEHRT, eligible
hospitals were not required to ensure that their CEHRT products were
recertified to the most recent version of the electronic specifications
for the clinical quality measures. In this proposed rule, we are
proposing new policies regarding the Hospital IQR Program eCQM
specification requirements to align with the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program requirements.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57256) for the
Medicare EHR Incentive Program, we finalized the continuation of a
policy that electronic submission of CQMs will require the use of the
most recent version of the electronic specification for each eCQM to
which the EHR is certified. For the Medicare EHR Incentive Program, we
finalized that in the event an eligible hospital or CAH has EHR
technology that is certified to the 2014 Edition and not certified to
all of the eCQMs that are available to electronically report for the CY
2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, we require that a
hospital needs to have its EHR technology certified to all such eCQMs
in order to meet the reporting requirements for the CY 2017 reporting
period/FY 2019 payment determination (81 FR 57256). Further, for the
Medicare EHR Incentive Program, we stated that for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, eligible hospitals and
CAHs be required to use the Spring 2016 version of the eCQM
specifications available on the eCQI Resource Center Web site at:
//ecqi.healthit.gov/.
In order to align with the Medicare EHR Incentive Program
requirements for eligible hospitals and CAHs, in this proposed rule, we
are proposing that for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment
determination, a hospital using EHR technology certified to the 2014 or
2015 Edition, but for which such EHR technology is not certified to all
15 available eCQMs, would be required to have its EHR technology
certified to all 15 eCQMs that are available to report under the
Hospital IQR Program for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment
determination in order to meet the eCQM reporting requirements for the
CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019
[[Page 20066]]
payment determination. We further propose that for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, hospitals would be
required to use the most recent version of the eCQM electronic
specifications (in other words, the Spring 2016 version of the eCQM
specifications and any applicable addenda) available on the eCQI
Resource Center Web site at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/.
For the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination, we
are proposing to continue our policy regarding the reporting of eCQMs,
which would require the use of the most recent version of the eCQM
specifications for each eCQM to which the EHR is certified. For the CY
2018 eCQM reporting period, this means hospitals would be required to
use the most recent version of the eCQM electronic specifications (in
other words, the Spring 2017 version of the CQM electronic
specifications and any applicable addenda) available on the eCQI
Resource Center Web page //ecqi.healthit.gov/. In addition, we
are proposing to require that a hospital would need to have its EHR
technology certified to all 15 available eCQMs in order to meet the
reporting requirements for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination. As described in the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs final
rule (80 FR 62767) and as previously finalized for the Hospital IQR
Program's eCQM reporting requirements, starting with the CY 2018
reporting period, hospitals are required to use EHR technology
certified to the 2015 Edition. Furthermore, we are proposing that an
EHR certified for eCQMs under the 2015 Edition certification criteria
would not need to be recertified each time it is updated to a more
recent version of the eCQMs. We believe it is not necessary for EHRs
certified for eCQMs under the 2015 Edition certification criteria to be
recertified each time it is updated to the most recent version of the
eCQMs. This is because the EHR technology continues to meet the 2015
Edition certification criteria and any updates to the eCQM
specifications would not impact any elements regarding certification.
Therefore, we are proposing that recertification would not be necessary
and would reduce the burden associated with recertification. For
further discussion regarding EHR certification requirements, we refer
readers to section IX.G.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(c) Electronic Submission Deadlines for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
50256 through 50259) and the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR
49705 through 49708) for our previously adopted policies to align eCQM
data reporting periods and submission deadlines for both the Hospital
IQR Program and the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for eligible
hospitals and CAHs.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57172), we
established eCQM submission deadlines for the Hospital IQR Program. We
are not proposing any changes to the eCQM submission deadlines for the
FY 2020 payment determination or subsequent years.
(d) Summary
As noted in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49759) and
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57257), we continue to
encourage health IT developers to test any updates on an annual basis,
including any updates to the eCQMs and eCQM reporting requirements for
the Hospital IQR and Medicare EHR Incentive Programs based on the CMS
Implementation Guide for Quality Reporting Document Architecture [QRDA]
Category I and Category III Eligible Professional Programs and Hospital
Quality Reporting (HQR) (CMS Implementation Guide for QRDA). The CMS
Implementation Guide for QRDA, program specific performance calculation
guidance, and eCQM electronic specifications and guidance documents are
available on the eCQI Resource Center Web site at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/.
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57172), we
also continue to encourage all hospitals and vendors to submit QRDA I
files early, and to use one of the pre-submission testing tools for
electronic reporting, such as the CMS Pre-Submission Validation
Application (PSVA), to allow additional time for testing and to make
sure all required data files are successfully submitted by the
deadline. The PSVA can be downloaded from the Secure File Transfer
(SFT) section of the QualityNet Secure Portal at: //cportal.qualitynet.org/QNet/pgm_select.jsp.
In summary, in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, for the CY
2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, we are proposing
for the Hospital IQR Program that: (1) A hospital using EHR technology
certified to the 2014 or 2015 Edition of CEHRT, but for which such EHR
technology is not certified to all available eCQMs, would be required
to have its EHR technology certified to all eCQMs that are available to
report; and (2) EHR technology that is certified to all available eCQMs
would not need to be recertified each time the eCQMs are updated to a
more recent version of the eCQM specifications.
For the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination, we
are proposing for the Hospital IQR Program that: (1) A hospital using
EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition of CEHRT, but for which
such EHR technology is not certified to all available eCQMs, would be
required to have its EHR technology certified to all eCQMs that are
available to report; and (2) EHR technology that is certified to all
available eCQMs would not need to be recertified each time the eCQMs
are updated to a more recent version of the eCQM specifications.
Further, we are proposing that: (1) For the CY 2017 reporting period,
hospitals would be required to use the most recent version of the eCQM
electronic specifications (in other words, the Spring 2016 version of
the eCQM specifications, and any applicable addenda); and (2) for the
CY 2018 reporting period, hospitals would be required to use the most
recent version of the eCQM electronic specifications (in other words,
the Spring 2017 version of the eCQM specifications, and any applicable
addenda). eCQM specifications are available on the eCQI Resource Center
Web site at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals related to the
reporting and submission requirements of eCQM data for the Hospital IQR
Program. We refer readers to section IX.E.3.c. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, where similar policies are described for the Medicare
EHR Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs.
e. Proposed Submission Form and Method for the Proposed Voluntary
Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission Measure With Claims and Electronic
Health Record Data (NQF #2879)
(1) Background
In section IX.A.7. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing voluntary reporting of the Hybrid Hospital-Wide Measure with
Claims and Electronic Health Record Data. In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (80 FR 49701 through 49704), we signaled our intent to use
core clinical data elements in the Hospital IQR Program and
[[Page 20067]]
requested comment on the use of the QRDA Category I (QRDA I) file
format for this purpose. In that rule, we noted that many commenters
supported submitting the core clinical data elements using an EHR
technology certified by the ONC. In addition, some commenters were
supportive of our suggested use of QRDA I specifically for reporting
core clinical data elements and recommended aligning the standards for
data transmission requirements with those used in other reporting
programs.
(2) Proposed Certification and File Format Requirements for Core
Clinical Data Element Submissions
We are proposing that hospitals that voluntary report data for the
Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission measure use EHR technology certified
to the 2015 Edition. We also refer readers to our discussion of EHR
certification requirements for eCQM reporting above and in section
IX.G.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule where the same proposed
requirements are discussed in detail for the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs. In addition, we are proposing
that the 13 core clinical data elements and six linking variables for
the Hybrid Hospital-Wide Readmission measure be submitted using the
QRDA I file format.
In order to ensure that the data have been appropriately connected
to the encounter, the core clinical data elements specified for risk
adjustment need to be captured in relation to the start of an inpatient
encounter. The QRDA I standard enables the creation of an individual
patient-level quality report that contains quality data for one patient
for one or more quality measures. We note that as described in section
IX.A.7. of the preamble of this proposed rule, participating hospitals
are expected to successfully submit data values for vital signs and six
linking variables required to merge with the CMS claims data on more
than 95 percent of all Medicare FFS patients who are 65 years and older
discharged from the hospital during the voluntary data collection
period. In addition, participating hospitals are expected to
successfully submit values for laboratory test results on more than 50
percent of these patients discharged over the same time period. For
further detail on QRDA I, the most recently available QRDA I
specifications can be found at: //www.hl7.org/implement/standards/product_brief.cfm?product_id=35.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals related to the
reporting and submission requirements of core clinical data elements
and linking variables for the proposed, voluntary Hybrid Hospital-Wide
Readmission measure as discussed above.
f. Sampling and Case Thresholds for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR
50221), the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51641), the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53537), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50819), and the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR
49709) for details on our sampling and case thresholds for the FY 2016
payment determination and subsequent years. We are not proposing any
changes to our sampling and case threshold policies.
g. HCAHPS Administration and Submission Requirements for the FY 2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR
50220), the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51641 through
51643), the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53537 through
53538), and the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50819 through
50820) for details on previously-adopted HCAHPS requirements. We also
refer hospitals and HCAHPS Survey vendors to the official HCAHPS Web
site at: //www.hcahpsonline.org for new information and program
updates regarding the HCAHPS Survey, its administration, oversight, and
data adjustments. We refer readers to section IX.A.6.a. of the preamble
of this proposed rule for details on our proposal to refine the three
questions of the Pain Management measure in the HCAHPS Survey. While we
are proposing to refine the survey with respect to the questions about
pain management in section IX.A.6.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are not proposing any changes to the HCAHPS administration nor
the HCAHPS submission requirements.
h. Data Submission Requirements for Structural Measures for the FY 2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51643 through 51644) and the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53538 through 53539) for details on the data submission requirements
for structural measures. We are not proposing any changes to data
submission requirements for structural measures.
i. Data Submission and Reporting Requirements for HAI Measures Reported
via NHSN
For details on the data submission and reporting requirements for
HAI measures reported via the CDC's NHSN Web site, we refer readers to
the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51629 through 51633; 51644
through 51645), the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53539), the
FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50821 through 50822), and the
FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50259 through 50262). The data
submission deadlines are posted on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org org/. We are not proposing any changes to data
submission and reporting requirements for HAI measures reported via the
NHSN.
11. Proposed Modifications to the Validation of Hospital IQR Program
Data
a. Background
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53539 through
53553), we finalized the processes and procedures for validation of
chart-abstracted measures in the Hospital IQR Program for the FY 2015
payment determination and subsequent years; the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule also contains a comprehensive summary of all procedures
finalized in previous years that are still in effect. We refer readers
to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50822 through 50835),
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50262 through 50273), and
the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49710 through 49712) for
detailed information on the modifications to these processes finalized
for the FY 2016, FY 2017, and FY 2018 payment determinations and
subsequent years.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57173 through
57181), we finalized our proposal to update the validation procedures
in order to incorporate a process for validating eCQM data for the FY
2020 payment determination and subsequent years. Specifically, we
finalized a policy to: (1) Validate eCQM data submitted by up to 200
hospitals selected via random sample; (2) exclude any hospital selected
for chart-abstracted measure validation as well as any hospital that
has been granted a Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary Circumstances
Exemption for the applicable eCQM reporting period; and (3) randomly
select 32 cases from the QRDA I files submitted by each hospital
selected for eCQM validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years. As described in the FY 2017
[[Page 20068]]
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57176), we will not conduct the first
validation of eCQM data until spring of 2018 to validate data from the
CY 2017 reporting period. Validation of CY 2017 data during spring of
2018 affects the FY 2020 payment determination (81 FR 57177).
Accordingly, below we refer to the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination for validation of data for encounters occurring
during CY 2017 and the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2021 payment
determination for validation of data for encounters during CY 2018.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to modify policies for eCQM
validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years.
First, for hospitals selected to participate in validation of eCQMs, we
are proposing that we will select eight cases per quarter for the CY
2017 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years. We note that this proposal is contingent upon whether or not our
proposed modifications to eCQM reporting requirements for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination and CY 2018 reporting
period/FY 2020 payment determination, as described in section IX.A.8.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, are finalized as proposed.
Second, we are proposing to add additional exclusion criteria to our
hospital and case selection process for eCQM validation for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years.
Third, we are proposing to continue our previously finalized medical
record submission requirements for the FY 2021 payment determination
and subsequent years as well as to provide clarification of our
finalized policy.
For validation of chart-abstracted measures data, we are proposing
to update our educational review process for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years. These proposals are discussed in
more detail below.
b. Proposed Changes to the Existing Processes for Validation of
Hospital IQR Program eCQM Data for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
(1) Number of Cases
We finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that we would
select eight cases per quarter, for four quarters, for a total of 32
cases (individual patient-level reports), from the QRDA I files
submitted by each hospital selected for eCQM validation (81 FR 57178).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to modify that requirement and
are proposing that we will select eight cases per quarter, (the number
of quarters required will vary by specific FY payment determination) to
complete eCQM validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years, instead of 32 cases, over all four quarters, as
previously finalized. This proposal is being made in conjunction with
our proposals to modify the number of quarters required for eCQM data
submission from: (1) Four to two quarters for CY 2017 (with validation
of these data affecting the FY 2020 payment determination); and (2)
four to three quarters for CY 2018 (with validation of these data
affecting the FY 2021 payment determination) as discussed in section
IX.A.8. of the preamble of this proposed rule. If all of these
proposals are finalized as proposed, hospitals participating in eCQM
validation would be required to submit: (1) 16 cases over two calendar
quarters (eight cases x two quarters) for the CY 2017 reporting period/
FY 2020 payment determination; and (2) 24 cases over three quarters
(eight cases x three quarters) for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2021
payment determination.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals as discussed
above.
(2) Selection of Hospitals and Cases
In this proposed rule, for the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years, we are proposing changes to
our policies related to the selection of hospitals and cases for eCQM
validation to: (1) Expand the types of hospitals that could be
excluded; and (2) expand the types of cases excluded from selection.
These proposals are discussed in more detail below.
(a) Selection of Hospitals
As previously finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57174-57178), we will validate eCQM data submitted by up to 200
hospitals selected via random sample. Further, we finalized that the
following hospitals may be excluded from this random sample of 200
hospitals selected for eCQM validation (81 FR 57178):
Any hospital selected for chart-abstracted measure
validation; and
Any hospital that has been granted a Hospital IQR Program
Extraordinary Circumstances Exemption for the applicable eCQM reporting
period.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to expand the types of
hospitals that could be excluded. For the FY 2020 payment determination
and subsequent years, we are proposing to also exclude any hospital
that does not have at least five discharges for at least one reported
eCQM included among their QRDA I file submissions. In addition, we are
proposing that the three exclusions described above would be applied
before the random selection of 200 hospitals for eCQM validation, so
that hospitals meeting any of these exclusions would not be eligible
for selection. We believe that these proposals improve the likelihood
that there would be sufficient data for validation obtained from the
hospitals selected for eCQM data validation.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to: (1) Exclude any
hospital that does not have at least five discharges for at least one
reported eCQM included among their QRDA I file submissions in eCQM
validation; and/or (2) to exclude from selection hospitals meeting
either of the two exclusion criteria finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57178) as discussed above.
(b) Selection of Cases
We have not previously specified processes for the selection of
cases for eCQM validation. For the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years, we are proposing to exclude the following cases from
validation for those hospitals selected to participate in eCQM
validation:
Episodes of care that are longer than 120 days; and
Cases with a zero denominator for each measure.
We believe that excluding episodes of care that are longer than 120
days will reduce the reporting burden on hospitals selected for eCQM
validation, as the volume of data reported for longer cases is greater.
Further, we believe that excluding cases with zero denominators for
each measure would ensure that we perform validation on cases with
applicable measure data. We note that this proposed exclusion applies
to cases, rather than measures. However, a measure would not be
validated if a hospital did not have any applicable cases for the
measure.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to exclude: (1)
Episodes of care that are longer than 120 days; and (2) cases with a
zero denominator for each measure from eCQM validation for the FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years as discussed above.
(3) Medical Record Submission Requirements and Scoring
(a) Medical Record Submission Requirements
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57179), we finalized
that hospitals participating in eCQM
[[Page 20069]]
validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years
are required to: (1) Submit data by 30 calendar days following the
medical records request date listed on the CDAC request form; (2)
provide sufficient patient level information necessary to match the
requested medical record to the original Hospital IQR Program submitted
eCQM measure data record; and (3) submit records in PDF file format
through QualityNet using the Secure File Transfer (SFT). We also
finalized, for the FY 2020 payment determination only, that for
hospitals selected for eCQM validation, that: (1) We require submission
of at least 75 percent of sampled eCQM measure medical records in a
timely and complete manner; and (2) the accuracy of eCQM data submitted
for validation would not affect a hospital's validation score (81 FR
57180). In this proposed rule, we are not making any changes related to
these operational procedures. However, we are proposing to continue
these policies for the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent
years.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to extend to the FY 2021
payment determination and subsequent years our previously finalized
medical record submission policy for eCQM validation, as finalized in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57181), requiring
submission of at least 75 percent of sampled eCQM measure medical
records in a timely and complete manner. We are proposing to extend to
the FY 2021 payment determination our previously finalized medical
record submission policy for eCQM validation, as finalized in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57181), that the accuracy of eCQM
data submitted for validation would not affect a hospital's validation
score. We note that if our proposals in section IX.A.8. of the preamble
of this proposed rule to require two quarters of data for CY 2017 eCQM
data submission and eight cases per quarter for hospitals selected for
validation (16 total cases for the entire data collection period), are
finalized as proposed, and hospitals selected for eCQM validation are
required to submit complete information for 75 percent of requested
cases as previously finalized, then those hospitals would be required
to submit information for at least 12 records, or 75 percent of the
requested 16 records for the FY 2020 payment determination. Similarly,
if our proposals: (1) To continue our medical record submission
policies for the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent years;
(2) to require three quarters of data for CY 2018 eCQM data submission
and eight cases per quarter for hospitals selected for validation (24
total cases for the entire data collection period) as detailed in
section IX.A.8. of the preamble of this proposed rule; and (3) that
hospitals selected for eCQM validation are required to submit complete
information for 75 percent of requested cases are all finalized as
proposed, then those hospitals would be required to submit complete
information for at least 18 records, or 75 percent of the requested 24
records for the FY 2021 payment determination.
Furthermore, as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(81 FR 57180) for the FY 2020 payment determination, we are proposing
for the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent years that any
hospital that fails any validation requirement, such as submission of
records in PDF file format within 30 days of the date listed on the
CDAC medical records request, and/or submission of complete information
for at least 75 percent of the requested records, would be considered
not to have met the eCQM validation requirements and would be subject
to a one-quarter reduction of the applicable percentage increase for
not meeting all Hospital IQR Program requirements.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal as discussed above.
(b) Scoring
As finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57178)
for the FY 2020 payment determination only, the accuracy of eCQM data
(the extent to which eCQM data reported for validation matches the data
previously reported in the QRDA I files for eCQM reporting) submitted
for validation will not affect a hospital's validation score. In this
proposed rule, we are proposing the continuation of this policy for the
FY 2021 payment determination, such that the accuracy of eCQM data
submitted for validation would not affect a hospital's validation
score. We intend for the accuracy of eCQM validation to affect
validation scores in the future and would propose any changes related
to this in future rulemaking. The data submission deadlines and
additional details about the eCQM validation procedures will be posted
on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org/.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal as discussed above.
c. Proposed Modifications to the Educational Review Process for Chart-
Abstracted Measures Validation
(1) Background
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we stated that we rely on
hospitals to request an educational review or appeal cases to identify
any potential CDAC or CMS errors (79 FR 50260). We also noted that a
hospital may request from CMS at any time an educational review to
better understand whether or not we reached a correct conclusion during
validation; hospitals that fail to meet Hospital IQR Program validation
requirements have 30 days to appeal after this determination (79 FR
50260). We have described our processes for educational review on the
QualityNet Web site.\234\ We note that historically this process
functioned as an outreach opportunity we provided hospitals, but based
on our experience, and more robust validation requirements, we believe
that it would beneficial to hospitals to propose formalizing this
process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\234\ QualityNet: Validation- Educational Review. //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier3&cid=1228775419006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the current process, if the results of an educational review
indicate that CDAC or CMS has incorrectly scored a hospital, those
scores are not changed unless and until the hospital submits a
reconsideration request. Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are
proposing: (1) To formalize this process; and (2) to update the process
to specify that if the results of an educational review indicate that
we incorrectly scored a hospital, the corrected score would be used to
compute the hospital's final validation score whether or not the
hospital submits a reconsideration request. These proposals are
discussed in more detail below.
Stakeholder feedback, provided via email, has indicated that while
the educational review process is helpful to participating hospitals,
it is limited in its impact, given that a hospital's score is not
corrected even after an educational review determines that CMS reached
an incorrect conclusion regarding a hospital's validation score for a
given quarter. Based on this feedback, we are proposing to change the
Hospital IQR Program's chart-abstracted measure validation educational
review process. Our goal is to reduce the number of reconsideration
requests by identifying and correcting errors before the final yearly
validation score is derived. By identifying and correcting any mistakes
early on, this process could help decrease the burden
[[Page 20070]]
during the annual reconsideration process, both for hospitals and CMS.
(2) Proposed Educational Review Process Modifications for the FY 2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
(a) Request for Educational Review
Under this proposal, the educational review request process, as
well as our procedures for responding to requests, remain the same.
Specifically, under the current process, hospitals may request an
educational review if they believe they have been scored incorrectly or
if they have questions about their score. We would provide the results
of the educational review, outlining the findings of whether the scores
were correct or incorrect, to the requesting hospital through secure
file transfer.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to formalize this process.
In formalizing our current procedures, the educational review request
process, as well as our procedures for responding to requests, would
remain the same. First, we are proposing that, for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years, a hospital may request from CMS an
educational review to better understand whether or not CDAC or CMS
reached a correct conclusion during validation for the first three
quarters of validation. Specifically, upon receipt of an unsatisfactory
score, a hospital would have 30 calendar days to contact the Validation
Support Contractor (VSC) to solicit a written explanation of the
provided score. We note that currently hospitals receive validation
results on a quarterly basis, and that would not change under this
proposed process. Accordingly, under this proposal, an educational
review could be requested on a quarterly basis for the first three
quarters of validation. Results of the educational review would be
provided to hospitals via secure file transfer.
Second, we are proposing that the process used to evaluate whether
or not validation results are correct would be the same in both an
educational review and a reconsideration request. Specifically, as
finalized in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for the Hospital IQR
Program's reconsideration request process, we are proposing that upon
receipt of an educational review request, we would review the data
elements that were labeled as mismatched, as well as the written
justifications provided by the hospitals, and make a decision on the
educational review request.
(b) Scoring Update
For the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years, we are
proposing that if an educational review, that is requested for any of
the first 3 quarters of validation, yields incorrect CMS validation
results for chart-abstracted measures, we would use the corrected
quarterly score, as recalculated during the educational review process,
to compute the final confidence interval (CI). These corrected scores
would be applicable to the corresponding quarter, within the first 3
quarters of validation, for which a request was submitted. We note that
under this proposal, the quarterly validation reports issued to
hospitals would not be changed to reflect the updated score due to the
burden associated with reissuing corrected reports. Beginning with the
FY 2020 payment determination, we are proposing to use the revised
score identified through an educational review when determining whether
or not a hospital failed validation. Further, under this proposal, as
with the current educational review process, corrected scores
identified through the educational review would only be used if they
indicate that the hospital performed more favorably than previously
determined.
Under this proposal, the educational review request process, as
well as our procedures for responding to requests, remain the same. We
also note that, in accordance with our previously established policies,
a hospital may still request reconsideration even if an educational
review determined that a hospital was scored correctly. Hospitals that
fail Hospital IQR Program requirements, which include validation, can
request reconsideration at the end of the year after the annual payment
update has been made. We refer readers to section IX.A.14. of the
preamble of this proposed rule for a discussion about our
reconsideration and appeals process. We note that under this proposal,
corrected scores identified through the educational review would only
be used if they indicate that the hospital performed more favorably
than previously determined.
In addition, we note that for the last quarter of validation,
because of the need to calculate the confidence interval in a timely
manner and the insufficient time available to conduct educational
reviews, the existing reconsideration process would be used to dispute
an unsatisfactory validation result. If a hospital does not fail
validation they still would have the opportunity to request an
educational review within 30 days of receiving the results.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to formalize the
educational review process and use this process to correct scores for
the first three quarters of chart-abstracted measure validation as
discussed above.
12. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement (DACA) Requirements
for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53554) for previously-adopted details on DACA requirements. We are not
proposing any changes to the DACA requirements.
13. Public Display Requirements for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
a. Background
We refer readers to the FY 2008 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (72 FR
47364), the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50230), the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51650), the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53554), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50836),
the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50277), and the FY 2016
final rule (80 FR 49712 through 49713) for details on public display
requirements. The Hospital IQR Program quality measures are typically
reported on the Hospital Compare Web site at: //www.medicare.gov/hospitalcompare, but on occasion are reported on other CMS Web sites
such as: //data.medicare.gov.
In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to public
display requirements. However, we are soliciting public comment on
potential options for confidential and public reporting measures
stratified by patient dual eligibility status as early as the summer of
2018 using data from the FY 2019 reporting period (July 1, 2014 through
June 30, 2017). In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57167
through 57168), we previously sought public comment on the potential
public reporting of quality measures data stratified by SES factors and
future hospital quality measures that incorporate health equity. In
this proposed rule, we are seeking additional public comment on the
potential confidential and public reporting of Hospital 30-day, All-
Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate Following Pneumonia
Hospitalization (NQF #0506), (the Pneumonia Readmission measure), and
the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized
[[Page 20071]]
Mortality Rate Following Pneumonia Hospitalization (NQF #0468), (the
Pneumonia Mortality measure), data stratified specifically by patient
dual eligibility status.
b. Potential Options for Confidential and Public Reporting of Hospital
IQR Measures Stratified by Patient Dual Eligibility Status
(1) Background
In section IX.A.1.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the importance of improving beneficiary outcomes including
reducing health disparities, and our commitment to ensuring that
medically complex patients, as well as those with social risk factors,
receive excellent care. As we note in section IX.A.1.d. of the preamble
of this proposed rule, studies show that social risk factors, such as
earning a low-income, belonging to a racial or ethnic minority group,
or living with a disability, to be associated with poor health outcomes
and some of this disparity is related to the quality of health
care.\235\ One of our core objectives is to improve health outcomes for
all beneficiaries, and ensure that complex patients as well as those
with social risk factors receive excellent care. Within this context,
recent reports by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation (ASPE) and the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine have examined the influence of social risk
factors in CMS value-based purchasing programs.\236\ In addition, as
noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57185), the NQF
has undertaken a 2-year trial period in which certain new measures and
measures undergoing maintenance review have been assessed to determine
if risk adjustment for social risk factors is appropriate for these
measures.\237\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ See, for example, United States Department of Health and
Human Services. ``Healthy People 2020: Disparities. 2014,'' //www.healthypeople.gov/2020/about/foundation-health-measures/Disparities or National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in Medicare Payment:
Identifying Social Risk Factors. Washington, DC: National Academies
of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 2016.
\236\ Department of Health and Human Services Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), ``Report to
Congress: Social Risk Factors and Performance Under Medicare's
Value-Based Purchasing Programs.'' December 2016, //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\237\ //www.qualityforum.org/SES_Trial_Period.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As part of this effort, we are soliciting feedback on which social
risk factors provide information that is most valuable to stakeholders.
We also are seeking public comment on confidential reporting and future
public reporting of some of our measures, specifically the Pneumonia
Readmission measure (NQF #0506) and the Pneumonia Mortality measure
(NQF #0468), stratified by patient dual eligibility. There are two
potential purposes for providing information on hospital results
stratified by dual eligibility. The approach we are considering would
illuminate differences in outcome rates among patient groups within a
hospital and would also allow for a comparison of those differences, or
disparities, across hospitals. We also considered an alternative
approach that would measure outcome rates for subgroups of patients,
such as the dual eligible patients, across hospitals. However, this
alternative would not allow for an examination of the difference in
rates between groups (for example dual eligible compared to non-dual
eligible).
The goal of measuring and monitoring disparities in patient
outcomes for specific sub-groups of patients within hospitals is to
reduce health inequities, improve health care quality for vulnerable
populations, and promote greater transparency for health care
consumers. This is in alignment with the CMS Quality Strategy \238\ and
the ASPE report \239\ to Congress, which stated performance rates
including readmission rates stratified by social risk should be
developed and considered for hospital specific confidential preview
reports and public reporting in places such as Hospital Compare, so
hospitals, health systems, policymakers, and consumers can see and
address important disparities in care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\238\ //www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-initiatives-patient-
assessment-instruments/qualityinitiativesgeninfo/cms-quality-
strategy.html.
\239\ Department of Health and Human Services Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), ``Report to
Congress: Social Risk Factors and Performance Under Medicare's
Value-Based Purchasing Programs.'' December 2016. Available at:
//aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many levers exist for addressing and improving disparities in care
and outcomes. The 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255) addresses
payment penalty scoring in the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
by identifying hospitals based on their proportion of dual eligible
patients and supporting improvement efforts for hospitals caring for
patients with social risk factors by setting penalty thresholds among
similar peer hospitals.\240\ As discussed in sections V.I.7. through
V.I.10. of the preamble of this proposed rule, the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program, as required by the statute, is
proposing to use dual eligibility as a marker of poverty, one key
patient social risk factor, and we would like to move in that direction
for the Hospital IQR Program as well in the future. In the Hospital IQR
Program, we are exploring methods to distinguish vulnerable patients
with social risk factors, such as poverty. As such, we intend to use
dual eligible status among the over 65 year old patients included in
the measures as a marker of poverty.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\240\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dual eligible status describes whether Medicare beneficiaries are
also enrolled in Medicaid. We use dual enrollment in Medicare and
Medicaid as a marker for a beneficiary having low income and/or few
assets. The recent report to Congress by ASPE has shown that dual
eligibility was the most powerful predictor of poor health care
outcomes among the social risk factors they tested.\241\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Hospital Compare Web site currently displays readmission rates
for each hospital's patients together, but does not specifically
highlight hospitals' quality of care for vulnerable populations. We
believe stratifying data by social risk factors would supplement the
current reporting of the Pneumonia Readmission and Pneumonia Mortality
measures by highlighting disparities, that is, differences in outcomes,
within hospitals that are not simply due to differences in illness
level, to the extent that such disparities exist for any given
hospital. To do so, we developed a method to quantify the disparities
of readmission and mortality, between these groups within each hospital
after accounting for patient case mix. The disparities indicator used
in the hospital specific confidential preview reports would provide
information assessing the increased odds, or rates, of readmission for
dual eligible patients admitted to the same hospital, after accounting
for differences in age and comorbidities.
For the Hospital IQR Program, we are considering options to improve
health disparities among patient groups within hospitals by increasing
the transparency of disparities among patients within hospitals and the
ability to compare these disparities across hospitals. This would be
accomplished by the methods described below. Our alternative approach,
also described below, to measure outcome rates for subgroups of
patients, such as the dual eligible patients, across hospitals, would
examine the performance of hospitals
[[Page 20072]]
on the subgroup of dual eligible patients.
We previously sought public comment on the potential public
reporting of quality measures data stratified by race, ethnicity, sex,
and disability and future hospital quality measures that incorporate
health equity in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57167
through 57168). In general, commenters supported the development of
health equity measures and their inclusion in the Hospital IQR Program
(81 FR 57167). In particular, stakeholders noted that stratified
measures could serve as tools for hospitals to identify gaps in
outcomes for different groups of patients, improve the quality of
health care for all patients, empower consumers to make informed
decisions about health care, and encouraged us to stratify measures by
other social risk factors such as age, income, and educational
attainment (81 FR 57167). However, commenters raised concerns about the
small denominator sample size associated with measure stratification by
social risk factors, which would skew the reliability of stratified
quality measures. Commenters also were concerned that it may not be a
simple task to stratify measures by race, ethnicity, sex, and
disability because specific considerations are required for every
measure and each reporting mechanism to implement such a requirement
(81 FR 57168). For more details on the public comments, we refer the
readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57167 through
57168).
We acknowledge the complexity of interpreting stratified outcome
measures. Due to this complexity, prior to publicly reporting
stratified outcome measure data, as early as the summer of 2018 using
data from the FY 2019 reporting period (July 1, 2014 through June 30,
2017), we are considering first providing hospitals with confidential
results showing outcomes stratified by patient dual eligibility within
the hospital, or more specifically, differences in outcome rates for
the dual eligible and non-dual eligible patients in the measures. This
would allow us to obtain feedback on reporting options and to ensure
the information is reliable, valid, and understandable prior to any
future public display on Hospital Compare.
Our goal in producing stratified results is to provide information
about disparities in patient outcomes within hospitals to the extent
that they exist for a given hospital. This information would supplement
the assessment of overall hospital quality provided through the current
measures of readmission and mortality rates; these measures would
remain unchanged. We discuss below the methods and results of
stratification for the current Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk-
Standardized Readmission Rate Following Pneumonia Hospitalization (NQF
#0506) (the READM-30-PN or Pneumonia Readmission measure).
The stratified results would provide hospitals with confidential
reporting with information that could illuminate any disparities in
care and outcome that can be targeted through quality improvement
efforts. Then for the future, we are considering publicly posting both
of these results on Hospital Compare to allow consumers and other
stakeholders to view critical information about the care and outcomes
of subgroups of patients, particularly those with social risk factors.
This information could drive consumer choice and spark improvement
efforts targeting dual eligible patients. In the future, we would also
consider expanding this approach to other social risk factors and other
measures.
We are inviting public comment on: (1) Which social risk factors
provide information that is most valuable to stakeholders; (2)
providing hospitals with confidential preview reports containing
stratified results for certain Hospital IQR Program measures,
specifically the Pneumonia Readmission measure and the Pneumonia
Mortality (MORT-30-PN) measure; (3) a potential methodology for
illuminating differences in outcomes rates among patient groups within
a hospital that would also allow for a comparison of those differences,
or disparities, across hospitals; (4) an alternative methodology that
compares performance for patient subgroups across hospitals but does
not provide information on hospital disparities and any additional
suggested methodologies for calculating stratified results by patient
dual eligible status; and (5) future public reporting of these same
measures stratified by patient dual eligibility status on Hospital
Compare. These are discussed in more detail below.
(2) Hospital Specific Confidential Preview Reports Prior to Publicly
Reporting Stratified Data
We are seeking public comment on the possibility of providing
hospitals specific confidential preview reports containing the results
of the Pneumonia Readmission (NQF #0506) and Pneumonia Mortality (NQF
#0468) measures stratified by patient dual eligibility, as early as the
summer of 2018 using data from the FY 2019 reporting period (July 1,
2014 through June 30, 2017), prior to any future potential public
reporting of this data. The current publicly reported measures used in
the Hospital IQR Program and reported on the Hospital Compare Web site
would remain unchanged. Following the time period during which
hospitals received confidential preview reports, we may display
stratified results on Hospital Compare solely for the purpose of
``stratification,'' that is, producing results to describe differences
between subgroups within the hospital.
(3) Potential Methodology for Calculating Stratified Results by Patient
Dual Eligibility Status
(a) Background
Under any future option to stratify measure results by patient dual
eligibility status, we intend to focus on disparities between dual
eligible and non-dual eligible patients because dual eligibility is an
important social risk factor among the Medicare Fee-for-Service
population and is feasible to measure.\242\ In order to provide
information about differences in readmission outcomes for dual eligible
and non-dual eligible patients within a hospital that may be due to
quality differences, we need a methodology that accounts for any
differences in comorbidities, age, and other risk factors between these
groups of patients. Such a methodology ensures that differences in
outcomes are not simply due to differences in clinical severity and
comorbid conditions among the patient groups. Therefore, any approach
to identifying within-hospital disparities for readmission measures by
patients' dual eligibility would build on the methodology used to
calculate the currently implemented RSRRs.\243\ As the Pneumonia
Readmission measure (NQF #0506) is currently specified, risk-adjusted
rates are estimated using a hierarchical logistic regression to account
for the clustering of observations within hospitals and differences in
the number of admissions across hospitals.\244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\242\ Department of Health and Human Services Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE), ``Report to
Congress: Social Risk Factors and Performance Under Medicare's
Value-Based Purchasing Programs.'' December 2016, //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\243\ //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?cid=1219069855841&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier4&c=Page.
\244\ Krumholz H, Normand SL, Keenan P, et al. Hospital 30-Day
Pneumonia Readmission Measure Methodology: Report prepared for the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2008, //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?cid=1219069855841&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier4&c=Page.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20073]]
(b) Option To Measure Difference in Outcomes by Adding Three Additional
Factors to Current Statistical Models
There is both a hospital and patient-level effect of dual
eligibility on readmission risk. We have considered the hospital fixed
effect in our approaches to stratifications (described in the preceding
section IX.A.13.b.(3)(a) of the preamble of this proposed rule) because
without it, we will introduce bias in the patient-level dual
eligibility, which would produce misleading results. The statistical
approach we may employ in the future would use current statistical
models and add three additional factors to the statistical model for
the purposes of measuring differences in outcomes: (1) An indicator for
patient-level dual eligibility; (2) a hospital-level dual eligible
factor \245\ (for example, percentage of dual eligible patients in each
hospital); and (3) a hospital-specific indicator (random coefficient)
for dual eligibility. This third factor, the hospital-specific random
coefficient for dual eligibility, assesses the disparity or difference
in readmissions for dual eligible patients within a specific hospital
after accounting for other factors, such as differences in clinical
disease or comorbid conditions. The first two factors, (the patient-
level dual eligibility coefficient, which represents the overall
difference between dual and non-dual groups in the entire country, and
the hospital-level dual eligible factor, which reflects the difference
in readmission rate between hospitals with different proportions of
dual eligible patients) are only included in order to be able to
interpret the third factor random coefficient and ensure it is specific
to a particular hospital. It is the third factor, the hospital-specific
indicator, which would be used to calculate the differences in
readmission rates between the dual and non-dual eligible patients
within the hospital.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ We note that although hospital-level dual eligible effect
was not of interest, it often mixed with patient-level effect.
Therefore, by breaking down the dual eligible effect into patient-
level and hospital-level components, we were able to better assess
of relationship between readmission and patient-level dual
eligibility.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using this method, within-hospital disparities in readmissions
between dual eligible and non-dual eligible patients would be included
in confidential hospital specific preview reports in addition to the
currently calculated and displayed Pneumonia Readmission (NQF #0506)
and Pneumonia Mortality (NQF #0468) measures. For ease of
interpretation, we would provide information in the form of odds ratios
(that is, the increased odds of readmission for dual eligible patients
at a given hospital) or, alternatively, the average difference in
readmission rates between dual and non-dual patients after accounting
for differences in other risk-factors.
To calculate odds ratios, we would convert hospital-specific
coefficients for dual eligibility into odds ratios. Odds ratios compare
dual eligible patients relative to non-dual eligible patients in terms
of their risk of readmission, assuming that the two groups have the
same case mix (that is, comorbidities). If the readmission rate is the
same in both groups, the odds ratio is 1. If the odds ratio is greater
than 1, it would mean that dual eligible patients have worse
readmission rates, and vice versa. To estimate the average difference
of readmission rates between dual and non-dual beneficiaries for each
hospital, we would first calculate the predicted probabilities of being
readmitted by assuming all patients are dual eligible or all patients
are non-dual eligible in a hospital. The difference between the two
predicted probabilities is the average difference in the readmission
rate between the two groups of patients at each hospital.
Rather than assuming a uniform impact of dual eligible and non-dual
eligible status across hospitals, this approach would assess the impact
of dual eligibility across all hospitals separately, recognizing that
socioeconomic disparities of patients may be greater or lesser at some
hospitals as compared with others. Therefore, this approach would allow
quantification of the difference in readmissions between dual and non-
dual eligible patients within each hospital, as long as a hospital has
a sufficient number of cases to produce a reliable estimate for both
groups.
In summary, this statistical model would uniquely identify
disparities in readmission rates for dual eligible beneficiaries
compared to non-dual eligible beneficiaries, after controlling for
patients' prior medical history and age for each hospital. This random
coefficient for dual eligibility within the statistical model would
indicate how much readmission rates at the same hospital would differ
between two patients at that hospital with exactly the same age and
underlying risk factors (those comorbid clinical conditions included in
the statistical model), but differ with respect to dual eligibility.
(c) Option To Measure Difference in Outcomes Using Current Statistical
Models
Depending on the information that is most useful to stakeholders,
an alternative approach to examining readmission rates among dual
eligible patients could be considered. To examine the relative
performance of hospitals on readmission rates for their dual eligible
patients, rather than to compare hospitals on within-hospital
disparities in rates, we could calculate the current measures'
statistical model (without the additional factors mentioned above) and
include only dual eligible patients. Similarly, this could be done for
non-dual eligible patients. This approach of using two separate models
for the separate patient subgroups would produce information on
readmission rates for dual eligible patients at one hospital compared
to another (or non-dual eligible patients across hospitals). There is a
trade-off; because of the use of two separate statistical models, this
approach would not ensure consistent treatment of risk factors across
patient groups and could not be used to compare readmission rates for
two groups within a hospital.
(d) Summary of Statistical Method Options
We intend to provide information on the difference in readmission
rates of dual or non-dual beneficiaries within hospitals and also
provide information for hospitals and consumers on the relative
disparities across hospitals. We are soliciting public comment on the
information that stakeholders would find most useful and any additional
suggested methodologies for calculating stratified results by patient
dual eligible status.
The hospital specific confidential preview reports containing data
stratified by patient dual eligibility would be modelled after current
hospital specific confidential preview reports and include patient-
level data for hospitalizations included in the measure. The current
hospital specific confidential preview reports would be supplemented by
information for each patient on their dual eligible status and a
summary of the difference in readmission rates for dual eligible
patients in the hospital as compared to other hospitals in the state
and nation.
We are inviting public comment on both methodologies, as described
above, to produce stratified results by determining the differences in
readmission and mortality by dual eligible status within a hospital,
and a comparison of those disparities across
[[Page 20074]]
hospitals, accounting for differences in comorbidities, age, and other
risk factors between dual eligible and non-dual eligible patients.
(4) Data Sources
To provide an example of the statistical approach we could apply,
below we describe stratified results by patient dual eligibility for
the Pneumonia Readmission measure (NQF #0506), using the first
calculation method described in section IX.A.13.b.(3)(b) of the
preamble of this proposed rule, above. To calculate the example rate,
we used the CMS administrative claims data from each index pneumonia
hospitalization, as well as from inpatient and outpatient Medicare
claims from the 12 months prior to the hospitalization from July 2012
to June 2015 to calculate the publicly reported RSRRs following
pneumonia hospitalization (NQF #0506) in the July 2016 Hospital Compare
update. Both the cohort and the risk-adjustment approach remain
unchanged. For more details on the publicly reported RSRRs following
pneumonia as currently implemented, we refer readers to its measure
methodology report and measure update zip file on our Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. The data was
then linked to CMS denominator files \246\ (2012 to 2015) to derive the
indicator of dual eligibility for each patient admission (1.3 percent
index admissions were excluded because there is no information
available in the denominator files).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\246\ //www.cms.gov/research-statistics-data-and-systems/files-for-order/limiteddatasets/denominatorlds.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We conducted preliminary analyses on the Pneumonia Readmission
measure (NQF #0506) \247\ and determined that there is a total of 3,851
hospitals that have a least 25 included index hospitalizations overall,
and at least 10 dual eligible and 10 non-dual eligible index
hospitalizations for which we could report outcome disparity (82
percent of hospitals). The minimum sample size for 25 hospitalizations
is consistent with the current publicly reported measures. We imposed
an additional requirement of at least 10 dual eligible and 10 non-dual
eligible index hospitalizations for this example to ensure we had
adequate numbers to observe any meaningful differences in outcome. We
used this requirement because if a hospital has fewer than 10 patients
in one subgroup of patients, it is not clear that readmission rates for
that group as compared to others would be reliable, nor that it is
meaningful or has face validity to measure stratified rates for
hospitals with very few of one of the categories of patients. We
welcome public comment on this sample size determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\247\ 1,456,289 hospitalizations (98.7 percent) were linked to
the denominator data and 24.4 percent of those hospitalizations are
from dual eligible patients.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The observed readmission rate within 30-days of index discharge for
all patients was 17.1 percent when we did not adjust for patients'
prior medical history, and dual eligible beneficiaries had an
approximately 3 percent higher readmission rate. Results from the
hierarchical model \248\ indicate that there is a statistically
significant association between dual eligibility and pneumonia
readmission (adjusted odds ratio, 1.07; 95 percent CI, 1.06-1.08). In
addition, there is substantial variation in the relationship between
dual eligibility and readmission across hospitals (Median odd ratio,
1.06; Min., 0.95; Max., 1.22). Findings also revealed that dual
eligible patients are more likely to get readmitted in 95 percent of
hospitals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\248\ Our hierarchical model is described in our measure
methodology reports. See, for example, Krumholz H, Normand SL,
Keenan P, et al. Hospital 30-Day Pneumonia Readmission Measure
Methodology: Report prepared for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, 2008, //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?cid=1219069855841&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier4&c=Page.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Future Potential Public Display
We are inviting public comment on the potential future public
reporting of certain outcomes measures, such as the Pneumonia
Readmission (NQF #0506) and Pneumonia Mortality measures (NQF #0468),
stratified by social risk factors, specifically dual eligible status,
to illuminate within-hospital disparities. If we decide to display
measure data stratified by dual eligible status on the Hospital Compare
Web site, we would clearly differentiate between the measure
information we currently display and the measure information that is
stratified by patients' dual eligible status. In addition, as discussed
above, if we decide to display measure data stratified by dual eligible
status on the Hospital Compare Web site, hospitals would receive
information about their stratified readmission rates for a certain
period of time through hospital specific confidential preview reports
prior to the public reporting of any information.
We are inviting public comment on this future consideration to
display the stratified measure results, in addition to the current
measure results, for certain Hospital IQR Program measures, in future
reporting years. We note that public display of measure data stratified
by social risk factors such as dual eligible status would not occur
until after a period of confidential reporting.
(6) Summary
To summarize, we are inviting public comment on: (1) Which social
risk factors provide the most valuable information to stakeholders; (2)
providing hospitals with confidential preview reports containing
stratified results for certain Hospital IQR Program measures,
specifically the Pneumonia Readmission measure and the Pneumonia
Mortality measure; (3) a potential methodology for illuminating
differences in outcomes rates among patient groups within a hospital
and would also allow for a comparison of those differences, or
disparities, across hospitals; (4) an alternative methodology that
compares performance for patient subgroups across hospitals but does
not provide information on within hospital disparities and any
additional suggested methodologies for calculating stratified results
by patient dual eligibility status; and (5) future public reporting of
these same measures stratified by patient dual eligibility status on
Hospital Compare as discussed above.
14. Reconsideration and Appeal Procedures for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51650 through 51651), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50836), and 42 CFR 412.140(e) for details on reconsideration and appeal
procedures for the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years.
We are not proposing any changes to the reconsideration and appeals
procedures in this proposed rule.
15. Proposed Change to the Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary
Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy
a. Background
We refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51651 through 51652), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50836
through 50837), the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50277), the
FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49713), the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57181 through 57182), and 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2)
for details on the current Hospital IQR Program ECE policy. We also
refer readers to the
[[Page 20075]]
QualityNet Web site at: //www.QualityNet.org/ for our current
requirements for submission of a request for an extension or exemption.
In this proposed rule, we are making one proposal and a clarification
in order to align the ECE policy across CMS quality programs. We are
also proposing updates to 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2) to reflect our ECE
policy.
Many of our quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs
share common processes for requesting an exception from program
reporting due to an extraordinary circumstance not within a provider's
control. The Hospital IQR Program, Hospital OQR Program, IPFQR Program,
ASCQR Program, and PCHQR Program, as well as the Hospital VBP Program,
HAC Reduction Program, and the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program,
share common processes for ECE requests. We refer readers to the
Hospital IQR Program (76 FR 51651 through 51652, 78 FR 50836 through
50837, 79 FR 50277, 81 FR 57181 through 57182, and 42 CFR
412.140(c)(2)), Hospital OQR Program (77 FR 68489, 78 FR 75119 through
75120, 79 FR 66966, and 80 FR 70524), and ASCQR Program (77 FR 53642
through 53643 and 78 FR 75140 through 75141) along with the HAC Program
(80 FR 49579 through 49581), Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
(80 FR 49542 through 49543), IPFQR (77 FR 53659 through 53660 and 79 FR
45978), and PCHQR Program (78 FR 50848) for program specific
information about extraordinary circumstances exceptions requests.
In reviewing the policies for these programs, we recognized that
there are five areas in which these programs have variance regarding
ECE requests. These are: (1) Allowing the facilities or hospitals to
submit a form signed by the facility's or hospital's CEO versus CEO or
designated personnel; (2) requiring the form be submitted within 30
days following the date that the extraordinary circumstance occurred
versus within 90 days following the date the extraordinary circumstance
occurred; (3) inconsistency regarding specification of a timeline for
us to provide our formal response notifying the facility or hospital of
our decision; (4) inconsistency regarding specification of our
authority to grant ECEs due to CMS data system issues; and (5)
referring to the program as ``extraordinary extensions/exemptions''
versus as ``extraordinary circumstances exceptions.'' We believe
addressing these five areas across programs, can improve administrative
efficiencies for affected facilities or hospitals.
b. Proposals To Align the Hospital IQR Program ECE Policy With Other
CMS Quality Programs
With the exception of the timeline for us to provide our formal
response (item 3 above) and the nomenclature used to refer to the ECE
process (item 5 above), the Hospital IQR Program is aligned with the
ECE policies across the other CMS quality programs described above. In
this proposed rule, we are proposing to: (1) Update the nomenclature to
align with the ECE policies across the other CMS quality programs and
update the regulatory text to reflect this change; and (2) update our
regulatory text to reflect other existing ECE policies. Also, we are
clarifying the timing of our response to ECE requests. These proposals
are discussed in more detail below.
(1) ECE Policy Nomenclature
We have observed that while all quality programs listed above have
developed similar policies to provide exceptions from program
requirements to facilities that have experienced extraordinary
circumstances, such as natural disasters, these programs refer to these
policies using inconsistent terminology. Some programs refer to these
policies as ``extraordinary circumstances extensions/exemptions'' while
others refer to the set of policies as ``extraordinary circumstances
exceptions.'' Several programs (specifically, the Hospital VBP Program,
HAC Reduction Program, and the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program)
are not able to grant extensions to required data reporting timelines
due to their reliance on data external to their program, and thus the
term, ``extraordinary circumstances extensions/exemptions'' is not
applicable to all programs. However, all of the described programs are
able to offer exceptions from their reporting requirements. Therefore,
we are proposing to change the name of this policy from ``extraordinary
circumstances extensions/exemptions'' to ``extraordinary circumstances
exceptions'' for the Hospital IQR Program, beginning October 1, 2017,
and to revise section 412.140(c)(2) of our regulations to reflect this
change. We note that changing the name of this policy does not change
the availability for a hospital to request an extension under the
Hospital IQR Program.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal as discussed above.
(2) Timeline for CMS Response to ECE Requests
We strive to provide our formal response notifying the facility of
our decision within 90 days of receipt of the facility's ECE request.
We believe that it is important for facilities to receive timely
feedback regarding the status of ECE requests. We strive to complete
our review of each ECE request as quickly as possible. However, we
recognize that the number of requests we receive and the complexity of
the information provided impacts the actual timeframe to make ECE
determinations. To improve transparency of our process, we believe it
is appropriate to clarify that we will strive to complete our review of
each request within 90 days of receipt.
(3) Updates to CFR
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to make conforming changes
to the regulations at 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2) to reflect our previously
finalized policy that the ECE request form be submitted within 90 days
following the date the extraordinary circumstance occurred (81 FR 57181
through 57182). In addition, we are proposing to make conforming
changes to the regulations to codify our other existing policies in the
Hospital IQR Program: (1) At 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2)(i), that a separate
submission deadline of April 1 following the end of the reporting
calendar year in which the extraordinary circumstance occurred and
applies to a hospital that wishes to request an extraordinary
circumstances exception with respect to the reporting of electronic
clinical quality measure data (81 FR 57182); (2) at 42 CFR
412.140(c)(2)(ii), that at the discretion of CMS, an exception may be
granted to a hospital if a systemic problem arises with CMS data
collection systems which directly affected the ability of a hospital to
submit data (78 FR 50837), and that CMS may also grant exceptions to
hospitals that have not requested them if an extraordinary circumstance
affects an entire region or locale (76 FR 51651).
We are inviting public comments on these proposals as discussed
above.
B. PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program
1. Background
Section 3005 of the Affordable Care Act added new sections
1866(a)(1)(W) and (k) to the Act. Section 1866(k) of the Act
establishes a quality reporting program for hospitals described in
section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act (referred to as ``PPS-Exempt Cancer
Hospitals'' or ``PCHs'') that specifically
[[Page 20076]]
applies to PCHs that meet the requirements under 42 CFR 412.23(f).
Section 1866(k)(1) of the Act states that, for FY 2014 and each
subsequent fiscal year, a PCH must submit data to the Secretary in
accordance with section 1866(k)(2) of the Act with respect to such
fiscal year. For additional background information, including
previously finalized measures and other policies for the PCHQR Program,
we refer readers to the following final rules: FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (77 FR 53556 through 53561); the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50838 through 50846); the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(79 FR 50277 through 50288); the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80
FR 49713 through 49723); and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57182 through 57193).
2. Criteria for Removal and Retention of PCHQR Program Measures
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57182 through
57183), we adopted policies for measure retention and removal. We
generally retain measures from the previous year's PCHQR Program
measure set for subsequent years' measure sets, except when we
specifically propose to remove or replace a measure. We adopted the
following measure removal criteria for the PCHQR Program, which are
based on criteria established in the Hospital IQR Program (80 FR 49641
through 49642):
Measure performance among PCHs is so high and unvarying
that meaningful distinctions and improvements in performance can no
longer be made (``topped-out'' measures);
A measure does not align with current clinical guidelines
or practice;
The availability of a more broadly applicable measure
(across settings or populations) or the availability of a measure that
is more proximal in time to desired patient outcomes for the particular
topic;
Performance or improvement on a measure does not result in
better patient outcomes;
The availability of a measure that is more strongly
associated with desired patient outcomes for the particular topic;
Collection or public reporting of a measure leads to
negative unintended consequences other than patient harm; and
It is not feasible to implement the measure
specifications.
For the purposes of considering measures for removal from the
program, we consider a measure to be ``topped-out'' if there is
statistically indistinguishable performance at the 75th and 90th
percentiles and the truncated coefficient of variation is less than or
equal to 0.10.
However, we recognized that there are times when measures may meet
some of the outlined criteria for removal from the program, but
continue to bring value to the program. Therefore, we adopted the
following criteria for consideration in determining whether to retain a
measure in the PCHQR Program, which also are based on criteria
established in the Hospital IQR Program (80 FR 49641 through 49642):
Measure aligns with other CMS and HHS policy goals;
Measure aligns with other CMS programs, including other
quality reporting programs; and
Measure supports efforts to move PCHs towards reporting
electronic measures.
We are not proposing any changes to these policies in this proposed
rule.
3. Retention and Proposed Removal of Previously Finalized Quality
Measures for PCHs Beginning With the FY 2020 Program Year
a. Background
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53556 through
53561), we finalized five quality measures for the FY 2014 program year
and subsequent years. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50837 through 50847), we finalized one new quality measure for the FY
2015 program year and subsequent years and 12 new quality measures for
the FY 2016 program year and subsequent years. In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (79 FR 50278 through 50280), we finalized one new
quality measure for the FY 2017 program year and subsequent years. In
the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49713 through 49719), we
finalized three new CDC NHSN measures for the FY 2018 program year and
subsequent years, and finalized the removal of six previously finalized
measures for fourth quarter (Q4) 2015 discharges and subsequent years.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57183 through 57184), FY
2019 program year, we finalized one additional quality measure and
updated the Oncology: Radiation Dose Limits to Normal Tissues (NQF
#0382) measure.
We refer readers to the final rules referenced in section IX.B.1.
of the preamble of this proposed rule for more information regarding
these previously finalized measures.
b. Proposed Removal of Measures From the PCHQR Program Beginning With
the FY 2020 Program Year
Based on a review of the above criteria, we are proposing to remove
the following clinical process/cancer specific treatment measures from
the PCHQR Program beginning with the FY 2020 program year because they
are topped-out:
Adjuvant Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered Within
4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis to Patients Under the Age of 80 with
AJCC III (Lymph Node Positive) Colon Cancer (PCH-01/NQF #0223);
Combination Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered
Within 4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis for Women Under 70 with AJCC
T1c, or Stage II or III Hormone Receptor Negative Breast Cancer (PCH-
02/NQF #0559); and
Adjuvant Hormonal Therapy (PCH-03/NQF #0220).
We first adopted these three Clinical Process/Cancer Specific
Treatment Measures for the FY 2014 program year in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53556 through 53561). We refer readers to
that rule for a detailed discussion of the measures. However, based on
an analysis of data from January 1, 2014 through September 30, 2015, we
have determined that these three measures meet our topped-out criteria.
This analysis, performed by the HCQIS Reports and Analytics Team,
evaluated data sets provided from Program Data Management and
calculated the 5th, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, and 95th percentiles
of national facility performance for each measure. For measures where
higher values indicate better performance, the percent relative
difference (PRD) between the 75th and 90th percentiles were obtained by
taking their absolute difference divided by the average of their values
and result multiplied by 100. To calculate the truncated coefficient of
variation (TCV), the lowest 5 percent and the highest 5 percent of
hospital rates were discarded before calculating the mean and standard
deviation for reach measure.
The following criteria were applied to the results:
For measures ranging from 0-100 percent, with 100 percent
being best, national measure data for the 75th and 90th percentiles
have a relative difference of <=5 percent, or for measures ranging from
0-100 percent, with 100 percent being the best, performance achieved by
the median hospital is >=95 percent, and national
[[Page 20077]]
measure data have a truncated coefficient of variation <=0.10.
For measures ranging from 0-100 percent, with 0 percent
being best, national measure data for the complement of the 10th and
25th percentiles have a relative difference of <=5 percent, or for
measures ranging from 0-100 percent, with 0% being best, national
measure data for the median hospital is <=5 percent, or for other
measures with a low number indicating good performance, national
measure data for the 10th and 25th percentiles have a relative
difference of <=5 percent, and national measure data have a truncated
coefficient of variation <=0.10.
The results for 2014 and 2015 are set out in the tables below.
Topped-Out Analysis Results for PCHQR Measures (2014)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
75th 90th Relative
Measure Mean Median percentile percentile difference (%) TCV Topped out
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PCH-01........................... .9680 .9800 1.0000 1.0000 0.0000 .0313 Yes.
PCH-02........................... .9501 .9595 .9821 1.0000 1.8018 .0358 Yes.
PCH-03........................... .9714 .9682 .9823 .9930 1.0807 .0149 Yes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Topped-Out Analysis Results for PCHQR Measures (2015)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
75th 90th Relative
Measure Mean Median percentile percentile difference (%) TCV Topped out
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PCH-01........................... .9824 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000 0.0000 .0169 Yes.
PCH-02........................... .9389 .9434 .9750 1.0000 2.532 .0431 Yes.
PCH-03........................... .9383 .9449 .9556 .9703 1.535 .0232 Yes.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this analysis, we have concluded that these three measures
are topped out and, as discussed below, we believe that collecting PCH
data on these measures does not further program goals.
We believe that continuing to collect PCH data on these measures
does not further program goals of improving quality, given that measure
performance is so high and unvarying that meaningful distinctions and
improvements in performance can no longer be made. We believe that
these measures also do not meet the criteria for retention of an
otherwise topped-out measure, as they do not align with other HHS and
CMS policy goals, such as moving toward outcome measures; do not align
with other CMS programs; and do not support the movement to electronic
clinical quality measures due to the chart extraction required to
collect the data for these measures. If we determine at a subsequent
point in the future that hospital adherence to these practices has
unacceptably declined, we may propose to readopt these measures in
future rulemaking.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to remove these
three measures from the PCHQR Program beginning with the FY 2020
program year.
4. Proposed New Quality Measures Beginning With the FY 2020 Program
Year
a. Considerations in the Selection of Quality Measures
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53556), the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50837 through 50838), and the FY 2015
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50278), we indicated that we take a
number of principles into consideration when developing and selecting
measures for the PCHQR Program, and that many of these principles are
modeled on those we use for measure development and selection under the
Hospital IQR Program. In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any
changes to the principles we consider when developing and selecting
measures for the PCHQR Program.
Section 1866(k)(3)(A) of the Act requires that any measure
specified by the Secretary must have been endorsed by the entity with a
contract under section 1890(a) of the Act (the NQF is the entity that
currently holds this contract). Section 1866(k)(3)(B) of the Act
provides an exception under which, in the case of a specified area or
medical topic determined appropriate by the Secretary for which a
feasible and practical measure has not been endorsed by the entity with
a contract under section 1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary may specify
a measure that is not so endorsed as long as due consideration is given
to measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization.
Using the principles for measure selection in the PCHQR Program, we
are proposing four new measures, described below.
b. Proposed New Quality Measures Beginning With the FY 2020 Program
Year
For the FY 2020 PCHQR program year, we are proposing to adopt two
clinical process measures and two intermediate clinical outcome quality
measures. These measures meet the requirement under section
1866(k)(3)(A) of the Act that measures specified for the PCHQR Program
generally be endorsed by the entity with a contract under section
1890(a) of the Act (currently the NQF). Although there is no financial
incentive or penalty associated with the PCHQR Program, we encourage
participation to further the goal of improving the quality of care for
the PCH patient population. The proposed measures are:
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Receiving
Chemotherapy in the Last 14 Days of Life (NQF #0210);
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to
the ICU in the Last 30 Days of Life (NQF #0213);
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Not Admitted
to Hospice (NQF #0215); and
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to
Hospice for Less Than Three Days (NQF #0216).
In compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act, the proposed
[[Page 20078]]
measures were included on a publicly available document entitled ``List
of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016,'' \249\ a list of
quality and efficiency measures under consideration for use in various
Medicare programs, and were reviewed by the MAP Hospital Workgroup. The
MAP Hospital Workgroup supported the inclusion of these measures in the
PCHQR Program in final recommendations it made in its February 2017
report to HHS and CMS for 2016 to 2017.\250\ Additional details on MAP
discussions of these measures may be found in the ``MAP Pre-Rulemaking
Report: 2016 Recommendations on Measures Under Consideration by HHS,''
with additional discussion in the ``MAP 2017 Considerations for
Implementing Measures in Federal Programs: Hospitals (Draft Report).''
\251\ The sections below outline our rationale for proposing these
measures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\249\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, List of
Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016. Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf.
\250\ National Quality Forum. Measures Application Partnership
Hospital Workgroup. MAP 2016-2017 Spreadsheet of Final
Recommendations to HHS and CMS. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/MAP_Hospital_Workgroup.aspx.
\251\ National Quality Forum. Measures Application Partnership
Hospital Workgroup. MAP 2016-2017 Preliminary Recommendations.
Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/MAP_Hospital_Workgroup.aspx. National Quality Forum. Measures
Application Partnership Hospital Workgroup. Draft for Comment, MAP
2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures in Federal Programs:
Hospitals. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Project_Pages/MAP_Hospital_Workgroup.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Background
The quality of end-of-life care has been identified by the NQF as
an area of care that continues to need improvement.\252\ End-of-life
care may be defined as ``comprehensive care that addresses medical,
emotional, spiritual, and social needs during the last stages of a
person's terminal illness,'' \253\ and may include palliative care.
Palliative care is generally defined as multi-faceted, holistic care
that anticipates, prevents, and alleviates suffering.\254\ Both
palliative and end-of-life care can be provided when a patient is
receiving hospice services, but it is not necessary to be admitted to
hospice to receive such care. The NQF notes that hospice is both a type
of care team and a care philosophy, and is intended to enable patients
to prepare for death while living as fully as possible.\255\ The
Institute of Medicine of the National Academies (IOM) has noted that
while clinicians are encouraged to counsel patients about palliative
care, which betters chances of maintaining a high quality of life when
dying, ``too few patients and families receive this help in a timely
manner.'' \256\ In the same report, the IOM proposed a number of core
components of quality end-of-life care. These proposals included
offering a referral to hospice if a patient ``has a prognosis of 6
months or less'' and regular revision of a patient's care plan to
address the patient's changing needs, as well as the changing needs of
the family.\257\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\252\ National Quality Forum, Technical Report. Palliative and
End-of-Life Care 2015-2016. (December 23, 2016).
\253\ National Quality Forum, Technical Report. Palliative and
End-of-Life Care 2015-2016. (December 23, 2016).
\254\ National Quality Forum, Technical Report. Palliative and
End-of-Life Care 2015-2016. (December 23, 2016).
\255\ National Quality Forum, Technical Report. Palliative and
End-of-Life Care 2015-2016. (December 23, 2016).
\256\ Committee on Approaching Death: Addressing Key End of Life
Issues, Institute of Medicine: Dying in America: Improving Quality
and Honoring Individual Preferences Near the End of Life.
Washington, DC, National Academies Press, 2015.
\257\ Committee on Approaching Death: Addressing Key End of Life
Issues, Institute of Medicine: Dying in America: Improving Quality
and Honoring Individual Preferences Near the End of Life.
Washington, DC, National Academies Press, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to all of the quality of care benefits of end-of-life
care to patients and caregivers, there are financial cost benefits as
well. In its Technical Report on palliative and end-of-life care, the
NQF cited research indicating that the use of palliative care,
including end-of-life care, results in various positive outcomes,
including a reduction of costs.\258\ For example, one study evaluated
the impact of hospice enrollment at different time periods on Medicare
expenditures, and found that regardless of when a patient was enrolled
in hospice, such patients' subsequent Medicare costs were significantly
lowered.\259\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\258\ NQF. Final Report, National Voluntary Consensus Standards:
Palliative Care and End-of-Life Care--A Consensus Report. 2012.
\259\ Kelley AS et al., Hospice Enrollment Saves Money for
Medicare and Improves Care Quality Across a Number of Different
Lengths-of-Stay, Health Affairs (March 2013)32:3;552-561.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite the benefits attributed to the use of palliative and end-
of-life services and the increase in their availability, the NQF and
others have noted that such services remain underutilized. By proposing
to include two process measures and two intermediate clinical outcome
measures related to end-of-life care in the PCHQR Program, our intent
is to assess the quality of end-of-life care provided to patients in
the PCH setting. We recognize that these measures may also be used in
the broader population of all hospitals providing cancer care;
therefore, as discussed in section IX.A.9.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are inviting public comment on the future inclusion
of these measures in the Hospital IQR Program. These four measures are
described in more detail below.
(2) Proportion of Patients Who Died From Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy
in the Last 14 Days of Life (EOL-Chemo) Measure (NQF #0210)
Chemotherapy is typically used to treat cancer, but in patients
with incurable cancer it may also be used with the goal of easing
symptoms and improving survival.\260\ One study estimated that 6.2
percent of cancer patients continue receiving chemotherapy close to the
end of their lives (defined as within 2 weeks of death).\261\ However,
studies have shown that administering palliative chemotherapy to
terminally ill cancer patients may not be beneficial, as it may be
associated with higher rates of interventions such as cardiopulmonary
resuscitation in the last week of life without any difference in
survival.\262\ Such patients may also be more likely to die in the
intensive care unit (ICU), and less likely to die either at home or in
the place where they had expressed preference to die.\263\ In addition,
research has shown that some patients may receive chemotherapy for
treatment instead of palliative care at the end of life, even when
treatment has been determined to be unnecessary.\264\ While the impetus
for continuing treatment may vary from case to case,\265\ the available
evidence indicates continuing to receive chemotherapy--for palliation
[[Page 20079]]
or treatment--toward the end of a patient's illness is associated with
increased hospitalization and may be associated decreased experience of
care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\260\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\261\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\262\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\263\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\264\ Mack JW et al., Patient Beliefs that Chemotherapy May be
Curative and Care Received at the End of Life Among Patients with
Metastatic Lung and Colorectal Cancer, Cancer (June 1,
2015)121:11;1891-1897.
\265\ Mack JW et al., Patient Beliefs that Chemotherapy May be
Curative and Care Received at the End of Life Among Patients with
Metastatic Lung and Colorectal Cancer, Cancer (June 1,
2015)121:11;1891-1897.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Researchers have also observed that patients receiving chemotherapy
late into the course of a terminal illness tended to be referred to
hospice later, resulting in lower quality of life, distress for
caregivers, and increased cost.\266\ They noted that their results
could suggest that either less use chemotherapy at the end of life or
more frequent end-of-life discussions could improve the quality of
those patients' end-of-life care.\267\ Another study of early
engagement in palliative care in patients diagnosed with metastatic
lung cancer found that patients who received palliative care and less
chemotherapy survived longer, in addition to experiencing improvement
in quality of life.\268\ In this study, palliative care was integrated
into standard oncologic care, and included an assessment of physical
and psychosocial symptoms as well as care decision assistance.\269\
Results from this study showed significantly higher quality of life in
the patient cohort receiving palliative care compared to those
receiving only the standard oncologic care.\270\ In particular,
clinically meaningful improvements in quality of life and mood were
noted.\271\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\266\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\267\ Wright A et al., Associations Between Palliative
Chemotherapy and Adult Cancer Patients' End of Life Care and Place
of Death: Prospective Cohort Study, BMJ 2014;348:g1219.
\268\ Committee on Approaching Death: Addressing Key End of Life
Issues, Institute of Medicine: Dying in America: Improving Quality
and Honoring Individual Preferences Near the End of Life.
Washington, DC, National Academies Press, 2015 (citing Temel JC et
al. Early Palliative Care for Patients with Metastatic Non-Small-
Cell Lung Cancer. NEJM. 2010; 363:733-742).
\269\ Temel JC et al. Early Palliative Care for Patients with
Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. NEJM. 2010; 363:733-742.
\270\ Temel JC et al. Early Palliative Care for Patients with
Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. NEJM. 2010; 363:733-742.
\271\ Temel JC et al. Early Palliative Care for Patients with
Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer. NEJM. 2010; 363:733-742.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed EOL-Chemo measure addresses the NQS Communication and
Care Coordination and Affordable Care domains, and aligns with the CMS
Quality Strategy goals of strengthening person and family engagement as
partners in their care, and promoting effective communication and
coordination of care. The proposed measure is a process measure that
evaluates the proportion of patients who died from cancer who received
chemotherapy in the last 14 days of life. Similar to the other three
end-of-life measures we are proposing, this proposed measure seeks to
assess the use of chemotherapy at the end-of-life, a practice advanced
with the intent to alleviate disease symptoms but which has been shown
to also be associated with reduced quality of life and increased costs.
This measure was finalized for use in the Merit-based Incentive Payment
System (MIPS) in the FY 2017 MIPS final rule with comment period (81 FR
77672). By introducing this measure here, we are seeking to evaluate
how often chemotherapy is administered near the end of life in PCHs.
The proposed EOL-Chemo measure cohort includes all Medicare
beneficiaries who died of cancer and who received chemotherapy at a PCH
within the last 14 days of their lives. The proposed measure uses
Medicare administrative claims data to derive the numerator and
denominator. The numerator for this measure is defined as cancer
patients who received chemotherapy (regardless of whether for treatment
or palliative purposes) in the last fourteen days of life. The
denominator is defined as patients who died from cancer. Patients for
whom numerator or denominator data cannot be identified will not be
included in the calculation. The measure specifications contain no
exclusions, risk adjustments or risk stratifications because the
measure is intended to evaluate the quality of care provided to all
cancer patients at the end of life. The measure will be calculated as
the numerator divided by the denominator. Measure specifications for
the proposed EOL-Chemo measure can be accessed on the NQF's Web site
at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/12/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_2015-2016.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt the
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy in
the Last 14 Days of Life (NQF #0210) measure for the FY 2020 program
year and subsequent years.
(3) Proportion of Patients Who Died From Cancer Admitted to the ICU in
the Last 30 Days of Life (EOL-ICU) Measure (NQF #0213)
A number of research studies have determined that cancer care can
become more aggressive at the end of life, which can result in a lower
quality of care and lower quality of life.\272\ Care defined as
``aggressive'' may include the ``possible misuse of treatment resulting
in high rates of emergency room visits, hospitalization, or ICU stays
for terminal patients'' in addition to overuse of chemotherapy close to
death and the underuse of hospice.\273\ In a retrospective study of
patients with advanced lung cancer, researchers found that between 1993
and 2002, the number of patients being admitted to the ICU near death
increased, and while in the ICU, one in four of those patients received
mechanical ventilation, despite the likelihood that neither
intervention would necessarily have effect on the advanced cancer.\274\
In this study, two-thirds of the patients died within a month of their
admission to the ICU, which the authors interpreted as demonstrating
that ICU admission in the context of advanced lung cancer was
potentially ineffective.\275\ The authors noted other studies that
showed that in-hospital mortality during ICU admissions exact a toll on
patients and families in terms of ``financial cost, emotional burden,
and failed expectations.'' \276\ The impact of ICU admission at the end
of life is also observed amongst caregivers, who report excellent end-
of-life care less often for patients admitted to the ICU within 30 days
of death compared to those who are not.\277\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\272\ Barbera L et al., Quality of End-of-Life Cancer Care in
Canada: A Retrospective Four-Province Study Using Administrative
Health Care Data, Oncology (October 2015)22:5;341-355; Earle CC et
al. Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the End of Life: Is It a
Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical Oncology. 2008; 26:23,
3860-3866.
\273\ Earle CC et al. Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the End
of Life: Is It a Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical
Oncology. 2003; 26:23, 3860-3866.
\274\ Sharma G et al., Trends in End-of-Life ICU Use Among Older
Adults with Advanced Lung Cancer, Chest (January 2008)133:1;72-78.
\275\ Sharma G et al., Trends in End-of-Life ICU Use Among Older
Adults with Advanced Lung Cancer, Chest (January 2008)133:1;72-78.
\276\ Sharma G et al., Trends in End-of-Life ICU Use Among Older
Adults with Advanced Lung Cancer, Chest (January 2008)133:1;72-78.
\277\ Wright AA et al., Family Perspectives on Aggressive Cancer
Care Near the End of Life, JAMA (2016)315:3;284-292.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patients who are not admitted to the ICU or involved in other
aggressive mechanisms of care in their final week of life have been
shown to experience a higher quality of life via less physical and
emotional distress.\278\ Researchers have theorized that while patients
who die at home are able to have care that focuses on symptom
management and
[[Page 20080]]
comfort; hospitals and ICUs focus instead on keeping the patient
alive.\279\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\278\ Zhang B et al., Factors Important to Patients' Quality-of-
Life at the End-of-Life, Arch. Intern. Med (August 13,
2012)172:15;1133-1142; Wright AA et al., Place of Death:
Correlations with Quality of Life of Patients with Cancer and
Predictors of Bereaved Caregivers' Mental Health, J Clin Oncol
(October 10, 2010)28:29;4457-4464.
\279\ Wright AA et al., Place of Death: Correlations with
Quality of Life of Patients with Cancer and Predictors of Bereaved
Caregivers' Mental Health, J Clin Oncol (October 10,
2010)28:29;4457-4464.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ICU admission at the end of life is also costly,\280\ with ICU
admissions identified as one of the ``key drivers of resource use and
expenditures.'' \281\ Studies of claims data indicate that
aggressiveness of care given to Medicare beneficiaries with cancer at
the end of life continues to increase, with nearly 25 percent of
Medicare expenditures in the last month of such beneficiaries' lives,
despite limited evidence that such an intervention improves patient
outcomes.\282\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\280\ Wright AA et al., Place of Death: Correlations with
Quality of Life of Patients with Cancer and Predictors of Bereaved
Caregivers' Mental Health, J Clin Oncol (October 10,
2010)28:29;4457-4464.
\281\ Langton JL et al., Retrospective Studies of End-of-Life
Resource Utilization and Costs in Cancer Care Using Health
Administrative Data: A Systematic Review, Palliative Medicine
(2014)28:10;1167-1196.
\282\ Wright AA et al. Place of Death: Correlations with Quality
of Life of Patients with Cancer and Predictors of Bereaved
Caregivers' Mental Health. Journal of Clinical Oncology.
(2010)28:4457-4464.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed EOL-ICU measure addresses the NQS Communication and
Care Coordination and Affordable Care domains, and addresses several
CMS Quality Strategy goals: Making care safer by reducing harm caused
in the delivery of care; strengthening person and family engagement as
partners in their care; and promoting effective communication and
coordination of care. The proposed EOL-ICU measure is an intermediate
clinical outcome measure that assesses whether cancer patients were
admitted to the ICU in the last 30 days of their lives. As with the
other three proposed end-of-life measures discussed in section
IX.B.4.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, this proposed measure
seeks to evaluate the end-of-life care provided to patients at PCHs. In
particular, we seek to assess the frequency of end-of-life admissions
to the ICU in this setting, as the research has shown that
interventions provided in the ICU to patients with irreversible disease
can be futile and may negatively impact patients' quality of life. We
recognize, however, that in some cases ICU admissions may be
appropriate, and note that this measure broadly assesses how many
patients are admitted to the ICU close to death, without excluding
admissions for specific reasons.
The proposed EOL-ICU measure cohort includes Medicare beneficiaries
who are PCH patients who died of cancer and who were admitted to the
ICU within the last thirty days of their lives. This proposed measure
uses Medicare administrative claims data to derive the numerator and
denominator. The numerator for this measure is defined as the number of
patients who died from cancer and who were admitted to the ICU in the
last 30 days of life. The denominator is defined as patients who died
from cancer. The measure specifications do not contain exclusions from
the denominator and do not provide for risk adjustment or risk
stratification in order to assess the quality of care provided to all
cancer patients at the end of life. The rate of ICU admissions in the
last 30 days of life will be calculated from the numerator divided by
the denominator. Measure specifications for the proposed EOL-ICU
measure can be accessed on the NQF's Web site at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/12/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_2015-2016.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt the
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to the ICU in the
Last 30 Days of Life (NQF #0213) measure for the FY 2020 program year
and subsequent years.
(4) Proportion of Patients Who Died From Cancer Not Admitted to Hospice
(EOL-Hospice) Measure (NQF #0215)
A number of research studies have determined that cancer care can
become more aggressive at the end of life, which can result in a lower
quality of care and lower quality of life.\283\ Such aggressive care
has been identified to include the underutilization of hospice,\284\
which is either lack of referral or late referral to hospice
services.\285\ Patients with advanced cancer who die while admitted to
the hospital have been shown to have lower quality of life than those
who die at home with hospice services.\286\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\283\ Barbera L et al., Quality of End-of-Life Cancer Care in
Canada: A Retrospective Four-Province Study Using Administrative
Health Care Data, Oncology (October 2015)22:5;341-355; Earle CC et
al., Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the End of Life: Is It a
Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical Oncology. 2008; 26:23,
3860-3866.
\284\ Earle CC et al. Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the End
of Life: Is It a Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical
Oncology. 2003; 26:23, 3860-3866.
\285\ Earle CC et al., Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the
End of Life: Is It a Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical
Oncology. 2003; 26:23, 3860-3866.
\286\ Wright AA et al., Place of Death: Correlations with
Quality of Life of Patients with Cancer and Predictors of Bereaved
Caregivers' Mental Health, J Clin Oncol (October 10,
2010)28:29;4457-4464.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, studies have shown that cancer patients enrolled in
hospice were hospitalized less frequently and received fewer procedures
than those who were not receiving hospice care.\287\ In addition,
cancer patients who were enrolled in hospice 5 to 8 weeks prior to
their deaths demonstrated significant cost savings, with savings
decreasing as the time period enrolled shortens.\288\ Researchers
theorize that one reason aggressive or ``injudicious'' treatment occurs
at the end of life is that end-of-life discussions are not being held
with patients, and note that it is ``the physician's responsibility to
counsel patients and their families and . . . focus on the need for
effective palliative care as patients approach the end of life.'' \289\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\287\ Obermeyer Z et al., Association Between the Medicare
Hospice Benefit and Health Care Utilization and Costs for Patients
with Poor-Prognosis Cancer, JAMA (2014)312:18;1888-1896.
\288\ Obermeyer Z et al., Association Between the Medicare
Hospice Benefit and Health Care Utilization and Costs for Patients
with Poor-Prognosis Cancer, JAMA (2014)312:18;1888-1896.
\289\ Earle CC et al., Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the
End of Life: Is It a Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical
Oncology. 2003; 26:23, 3860-3866.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed EOL-Hospice measure addresses the NQS Communication
and Care Coordination and Affordable Care domains, as well as the CMS
Quality Strategy goals of strengthening person and family engagement as
partners in their care and promoting effective communication and
coordination of care. The proposed measure is a process measure that
assesses the proportion of patients who died from cancer who were not
admitted to hospice. This measure evaluates whether or not patients
were admitted to hospice, and then ties in to the following measure
(EOL-3DH), which evaluates whether patients who were admitted to
hospice were admitted to hospice late in the course of their illness,
defined as within 3 days of their death. We discuss this proposed
follow-on measure, EOL-3DH, in more detail in section IX.B.4.b.(5) of
the preamble of this proposed rule. In summary, EOL-Hospice seeks to
evaluate, simply, whether patients were admitted to hospice or not; the
proposed follow-on measure EOL-3DH will then assess whether those
patients admitted to hospice were admitted in a timely fashion to
derive maximum benefit from hospice services. We do not expect PCHs to
achieve perfect rates on the EOL-Hospice measure because we understand
that some patients may refuse hospice, or that there may be additional
intervening events or circumstances that impact whether or not a
patient is admitted to hospice.
The proposed EOL-Hospice measure cohort includes Medicare
beneficiaries who are PCH patients who died of cancer. The proposed
measure uses
[[Page 20081]]
Medicare administrative claims data to derive the numerator and
denominator. The numerator in this proposed measure is defined as the
proportion of PCH patients not enrolled in hospice. The denominator is
defined as patients who died from cancer. The measure specifications
contain no denominator exclusions nor any risk adjustment or risk
stratification. The proposed measure is calculated by dividing the
numerator by the denominator. Measure specifications for the proposed
EOL-Hospice measure can be accessed on the NQF's Web site at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/12/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_2015-2016.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt the
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Not Admitted to Hospice
(NQF #0215) measure for the FY 2020 program year and subsequent years.
(5) Proportion of Patients Who Died From Cancer Admitted to Hospice for
Less Than 3 Days (EOL-3DH) Measure (NQF #0216)
Older studies of patient cohorts from the mid-1990s have shown
that, though there was an increasing trend to admit cancer patients to
hospice, the number of patients admitted close to death was also
increasing, about which the authors surmised that hospice care was not
being used to mitigate symptoms but only to manage death.\290\ Patients
with cancer have been identified as the largest users of hospice, but
are also the cohort with the highest rates of hospice stays of less
than 3 days.\291\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\290\ Earle CC et al., Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the
End of Life: Is It a Quality-of-Care Issue? Journal of Clinical
Oncology. August 2008; 26:23; 3860-3866; Earle CC. et al., Trends in
the Aggressiveness of Cancer Care Near the End of Life, Journal of
Clinical Oncology 22 no. 2 (January 2004) 315-321.
\291\ Obermeyer Z et al., Association Between the Medicare
Hospice Benefit and Health Care Utilization and Costs for Patients
with Poor-Prognosis Cancer, JAMA (2014)312:18;1888-1896.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In one study involving cancer patients' family members, patients'
loved ones were more likely to report that the patients received
excellent end-of-life care when hospice was initiated earlier than
three days prior to death.\292\ The researchers indicated that
enhancing counseling of patients and families and early referral to
palliative care services could result in more ``preference-sensitive
care for patients'' and overall improvement in the quality of care
cancer patients receive at the end of life.\293\ Because this and other
research indicates that earlier discussion with patients about
palliative care can positively impact the care received at the end of
life, including timely admission to hospice, we believe including the
proposed EOL-3DH measure in the measure set will incentivize timely
discussions and admissions to hospice within the PCH setting. We
believe that the emphasis on timely admission to hospice may lead to
improving the quality of care for cancer patients at PCHs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\292\ Wright AA et al., Family Perspectives on Aggressive Cancer
Care Near the End of Life, JAMA (2016)315:3;284-292.
\293\ Wright AA et al., Family Perspectives on Aggressive Cancer
Care Near the End of Life, JAMA (2016)315:3;284-292.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed EOL-3DH measure addresses the NQS Communication and
Care Coordination domain. It also addresses two CMS Quality Strategy
goals: Strengthening person and family engagement as partners in their
care and promoting effective communication and coordination of care.
The proposed EOL-3DH measure is an intermediate clinical outcome
measure that assesses the proportion of patients who died from cancer
who were admitted to hospice late in the course of their illness,
within 3 days of their death. The measure ties in to the proposed
process measure (EOL-Hospice) we discuss in section IX.B.4.b.(4) of the
preamble of this proposed rule, above, and assesses whether, if
patients were admitted to hospice, they were admitted prior to or when
death was immediately imminent. As discussed, research has shown that
the longer patients receive hospice services before the end of life,
the more improvements in their quality of life and mood are observed.
The proposed EOL-3DH measure cohort includes Medicare beneficiaries
who are PCH patients that died of cancer and were admitted to hospice
within the last 3 days of their lives. The proposed measure uses
Medicare administrative claims data to derive the numerator and
denominator. The numerator is defined as the number of patients who
died from cancer and spent fewer than 3 days in hospice. The
denominator is defined as the number of patients who died from cancer
who were admitted to hospice. There are no exclusions from the
denominator in the measure specifications, nor risk adjustment or risk
stratification, because the goal of the measure is to assess the
quality of care provided to all cancer patients at the end of life.
Measure specifications for the proposed EOL-3DH measure can be accessed
on the NQF's Web site at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/12/Palliative_and_End-of-Life_Care_2015-2016.aspx.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to adopt the
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to Hospice for
Less Than 3 Days (NQF #0216) measure for the FY 2020 program year and
subsequent years.
c. Summary of Previously Finalized and Newly Proposed PCHQR Program
Measures for the FY 2020 Program Year and Subsequent Years
In summary, the previously finalized and newly proposed measures
for the PCHQR Program for the FY 2020 program year and subsequent years
are listed in the table below.
Previously Finalized and Newly Proposed PCHQR Measures for the FY 2020
Program Year and Subsequent Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name NQF No. Measure name
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Safety and Healthcare-Associated Infection (HAI)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLABSI............................ 0139 National Healthcare
Safety Network
(NHSN) Central Line-
Associated
Bloodstream
Infection Outcome
Measure.
CAUTI............................. 0138 National Healthcare
Safety Network
(NHSN) Catheter-
Associated Urinary
Tract Infections
Outcome Measure.
SSI............................... 0753 American College of
Surgeons--Centers
for Disease Control
and Prevention (ACS-
CDC) Harmonized
Procedure Specific
Surgical Site
Infection (SSI)
Outcome Measure
[currently includes
SSIs following
Colon Surgery and
Abdominal
Hysterectomy
Surgery].
CDI............................... 1717 National Healthcare
Safety Network
(NHSN)
Facility[dash]wide
Inpatient Hospital-
onset Clostridium
difficile Infection
(CDI) Outcome
Measure.
[[Page 20082]]
MRSA.............................. 1716 National Healthcare
Safety Network
(NHSN)
Facility[dash]wide
Inpatient Hospital-
onset
Methicillin[dash]re
sistant
Staphylococcus
aureus Bacteremia
Outcome Measure.
HCP............................... 0431 Influenza
Vaccination
Coverage Among
Healthcare
Personnel.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Process/Oncology Care Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
N/A............................... 0382 Oncology: Radiation
Dose Limits to
Normal Tissues*.
N/A............................... 0383 Oncology: Plan of
Care for Pain--
Medical Oncology
and Radiation
Oncology.
N/A............................... 0384 Oncology: Medical
and Radiation--Pain
Intensity
Quantified.
N/A............................... 0390 Prostate Cancer:
Adjuvant Hormonal
Therapy for High
Risk Prostate
Cancer Patients.
N/A............................... 0389 Prostate Cancer:
Avoidance of
Overuse of Bone
Scan for Staging
Low Risk Prostate
Cancer Patients.
EOL-Chemo......................... 0210 Proportion of
Patients Who Died
from Cancer
Receiving
Chemotherapy in the
Last 14 Days of
Life.\y\
EOL-Hospice....................... 0215 Proportion of
Patients Who Died
from Cancer Not
Admitted to
Hospice.\y\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Intermediate Clinical Outcome Measures
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EOL-ICU........................... 0213 Proportion of
Patients Who Died
from Cancer
Admitted to the ICU
in the Last 30 Days
of Life.\y\
EOL-3DH........................... 0216 Proportion of
Patients Who Died
from Cancer
Admitted to Hospice
for Less Than Three
Days.\y\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patient Engagement/Experience of Care
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HCAHPS............................ 0166 HCAHPS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical Effectiveness Measure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EBRT.............................. 1822 External Beam
Radiotherapy for
Bone Metastases.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims Based Outcome Measure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
N/A............................... N/A Admissions and
Emergency
Department (ED)
Visits for Patients
Receiving
Outpatient
Chemotherapy.**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that the previously finalized measures proposed for
removal in this proposed rule are not included in this table. These
measures are: (1) Adjuvant Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered
Within 4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis to Patients Under the Age of
80 with AJCC II (Lymph Node Positive) Colon Cancer; (2) Combination
Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered Within 4 Months (120 Days)
of Diagnosis for Women Under 70 with AJCC T1c, or Stage II or III
Hormone Receptor Negative Breast Cancer; and (3) Adjuvant Hormonal
Therapy.
* Finalized update in FY 2019 program year.
** Finalized for FY 2019 program year.
*** This measure was previously titled ``Combination Chemotherapy is
Considered or Administered Within 4 months (120 days) of Diagnosis for
Women Under 70 with AJCC T1c, or Stage II or III Hormones Receptor
Negative Breast Cancer.'' This name change, which we used in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57191), is consistent with NQF
updates to the measure name and reflects an update in the AJCC
staging, does not reflect a change in the measure inclusion criteria,
and is not considered substantive.
\y\ This measure is proposed for adoption for the FY 2020 program year.
5. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the PCHQR Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes including reducing health disparities, and
we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with social
risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to ensure
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \294\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of measuring and accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based
purchasing and quality reporting programs, and considering options on
how to address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a Report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors of Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs.\295\ The report also included
considerations for strategies to account for social risk factors in
these programs. In a January 10, 2017 report released by the National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided
various potential methods for measuring and accounting
[[Page 20083]]
for social risk factors, including stratified public reporting.\296\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\294\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\295\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\296\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which new measures, measures
undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the condition
that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine whether
risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate for
these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion of
social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these measures.
At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue recommendations on the
future inclusion of social risk factors in risk adjustment for these
quality measures, and we will closely review their findings.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF pilot on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in the
PCHQR Program, and if so, what method or combination of methods would
be most appropriate for accounting for social risk factors. Examples of
methods include: Confidential reporting to providers of measure rates
stratified by social risk factors; public reporting of stratified
measure rates; and potential risk adjustment of a particular measure as
appropriate based on data and evidence.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for reporting stratified measure
scores and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure.
Examples of social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual
eligibility/low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area
of residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors,
including current data sources where this information would be
available, could be used alone or in combination, and whether other
data should be collected to better capture the effects of social risk.
We will take commenters' input into consideration as we continue to
assess the appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social
risk factors in the PCHQR Program. We note that any such changes would
be proposed through future notice-and-comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
6. Possible New Quality Measure Topics for Future Years
a. Background
We discussed future quality measure topics and quality measure
domain areas in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50280), the
FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR4979), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 25211). Specifically, we discussed public comment
and suggestions for measure topics addressing the following CMS Quality
Strategy domains: (1) Making care affordable; (2) communication and
care coordination; and (3) working with communities to promote best
practices of healthy living. We welcome public comment and specific
suggestions for measure topics that we should consider for future
rulemaking, including considerations related to risk adjustment and the
inclusion of social risk factors in risk adjustment for any individual
performance measures.
We are also seeking public comment on six measures for potential
future inclusion in the PCHQR Program:
Localized Prostate Cancer: Vitality;
Localized Prostate Cancer: Urinary Incontinence;
Localized Prostate Cancer: Urinary Frequency, Obstruction,
and/or Irritation;
Localized Prostate Cancer: Sexual Function;
Localized Prostate Cancer: Bowel Function; and
30-Day Unplanned Readmissions for Cancer Patients.
These measures are discussed in more detail below.
b. Localized Prostate Cancer: Vitality; Localized Prostate Cancer:
Urinary Incontinence; Localized Prostate Cancer: Urinary Frequency,
Obstruction, and/or Irritation; Localized Prostate Cancer: Sexual
Function; and Localized Prostate Cancer: Bowel Function
The Localized Prostate Cancer measures are five related, patient-
reported outcome measures drawn from the Expanded Prostate Inventory
Composite (EPIC), which is a survey intended to gather input from
patients on their experience. The survey questions are intended to be
administered to all non-metastatic prostate cancer patients undergoing
radiation or surgical treatment for prostate cancer at the reporting
facility (denominator); the numerator is patients with clinically
significant changes in each of the listed areas from baseline to
follow-up. The goal of the measurement is to identify issues of
variation, suboptimal performance, and disparities in care. This
measurement aligns with recent initiatives to include patient-reported
outcomes and experience of care into quality reporting programs, as
well as to incorporate more outcome measures generally. Patient-
centered experience measures are also a component of the 2016 CMS
Quality Strategy, which emphasizes patient-centered care by rating
patient experience as a means for empowering patients and improving the
quality of their care and care experience.\297\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\297\ CMS Quality Strategy 2016. Available at: //www.cms.gov/medicare/quality-initiatives-patient-assessment-instruments/qualityinitiativesgeninfo/downloads/cms-quality-strategy.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These measures were included on the publicly available document
entitled ``List of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016''
\298\ but were not reviewed by the MAP. We anticipate that they will be
included on a future list of measures under consideration for MAP
review. For further information on these measures, we refer readers to
the discussion from the Measures Application Partnership's Hospital
Workgroup Discussion at: //public.qualityforum.org/MAP/
MAP%20Hospital%20Workgroup/2016-2017%20Hospital%20MAP/
MAP_Hospital_Workgroup_Discussion_
[[Page 20084]]
Guide.html#MUC16-375PCHQ. We are requesting public comment on the
possible inclusion of these measures in future years of the program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\298\ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, List of
Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016. Available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. 30-Day Unplanned Readmissions for Cancer Patients
The 30-Day Unplanned Readmissions for Cancer Patients measure would
measure the number of hospital-specific 30-day unscheduled and
potentially avoidable readmissions following hospitalization among
diagnosed malignant cancer patients. The measure numerator is the total
number of unscheduled readmissions within 30 days of index admission.
The measure denominator is total PCH admissions within the reporting
year for patients, aged 18 years or older, who were discharged alive
from the facility with an active malignant cancer diagnosis.
For further information on this measure, we refer readers to the
AHRQ National Quality Measure Clearinghouse at: //www.qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov/summaries/summary/50490/cancer-30day-unplanned-readmission-rate-for-cancer-patients. We are requesting
public comment on the possible inclusion of this measure in future
years of the program.
7. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
We maintain technical specifications for the PCHQR Program
measures, and we periodically update those specifications. The
specifications may be found on the QualityNet Web site at: //qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=1228774479863.
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50281), we adopted a
policy under which we use a subregulatory process to make
nonsubstantive updates to measures used for the PCHQR Program. We are
not proposing any changes to this policy in this proposed rule.
8. Public Display Requirements
a. Background
Under section 1866(k)(4) of the Act, we are required to establish
procedures for making the data submitted under the PCHQR Program
available to the public. Such procedures must ensure that a PCH has the
opportunity to review the data that are to be made public with respect
to the PCH prior to such data being made public. Section 1866(k)(4) of
the Act also provides that the Secretary must report quality measures
of process, structure, outcome, patients' perspective on care,
efficiency, and costs of care that relate to services furnished in such
hospitals on the CMS Web site. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(81 FR 57191 through 57192), we listed our finalized public display
requirements. The measures we have finalized for public display are
shown in the table below.
Previously Finalized Public Display Requirements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measures Public reporting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary of Previously Finalized Public Display Requirements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adjuvant Chemotherapy is Considered or 2014 and subsequent
Administered Within 4 Months (120 days) of years.
Diagnosis to Patients Under the Age of 80 with
AJCC III (lymph node positive) Colon Cancer
(NQF #0223) \x\.
Combination Chemotherapy is Considered
or Administered Within 4 Months (120 days) of
Diagnosis for Women Under 70 with AJCC T1cN0M0,
or Stage IB--III Hormone Receptor Negative
Breast Cancer (NQF #0559) \x\.
Adjuvant Hormonal Therapy (NQF #0220) 2015 and subsequent
\x\. years.
Oncology: Radiation Dose Limits to
Normal Tissues (NQF #0382) *.
Oncology: Plan of Care for Pain--
Medical Oncology and Radiation Oncology (NQF
#0383).
Oncology: Medical and Radiation--Pain
Intensity Quantified (NQF #0384).
Prostate Cancer: Adjuvant Hormonal
Therapy for High Risk Prostate Cancer Patients
(NQF #0390).
Prostate Cancer: Avoidance of Overuse
of Bone Scan for Staging Low Risk Prostate
Cancer Patients (NQF #0389).
HCAHPS (NQF #0166)..................... 2016 and subsequent
years.
CLABSI (NQF #0139) **..................
CAUTI (NQF #0138) **................... Deferred.
External Beam Radiotherapy for Bone Beginning at the first
Metastases (NQF #1822) ***. opportunity in 2017
and for subsequent
years.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Update newly finalized for display for the FY 2019 program year and
subsequent years in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57192)--expanded cohort will be displayed as soon as feasible.
** Deferral finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57192).
*** Measure newly finalized for public display in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57192).
\x\ Measure proposed for removal beginning the FY 2020 program year.
As we strive to publicly display data as soon as possible on a CMS
Web site, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57191 through
57192), we finalized an update to our public display polices. We
believe it is best to not specify in rulemaking the exact timeframe
during the year for publication as doing so may prevent earlier
publication. Therefore, we finalized our policy to make these data
available as soon as it is feasible during the year, starting with the
first year for which we are publishing data for each measure. We will
continue to propose in rulemaking the first year for which we intend to
publish data for each measure. We intend to make the data available on
at least a yearly basis.
As stated above, we are required to give PCHs an opportunity to
review their data before the data are made public. Because we will make
the data for this program available as soon as possible, and the
timeframe for this publication may change year to year, we will not
propose to specify in rulemaking the exact dates for review. However,
in that final rule, we stated that the time period for review would be
approximately 30 days in length. We will announce the exact timeframes
on a CMS Web site and/or on our applicable listservs. We are not
proposing any changes to this policy in this proposed rule.
b. Deferment of Public Display of Two Measures
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50281 through
50282), we finalized public display of the CLABSI
[[Page 20085]]
and CAUTI measures beginning no later than 2017 and subsequent years.
However, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57192), we
finalized a proposal to continue to defer public reporting of the
CLABSI and CAUTI measures pending ongoing collaboration with the CDC to
identify an appropriate timeframe for public reporting and the analytic
methods that will be used to summarize the CLABSI and CAUTI data for
public reporting purposes. We continue to collaborate with the CDC on
these issues and continue to defer the public reporting of these two
measures accordingly.
9. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submission
a. Background
Section 1866(k)(2) of the Act requires that, beginning with the FY
2014 PCHQR program year, each PCH must submit to the Secretary data on
quality measures specified under section 1866(k)(3) of the Act in a
form and manner, and at a time, as specified by the Secretary. There
are no financial incentives or penalties associated with the PCHQR
Program.
Data submission requirements and deadlines for the PCHQR Program
are generally posted on the QualityNet Web site at: //www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier3&cid=1228772864228.
In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any changes to
previously finalized data submission requirements.
b. Proposed Reporting Requirements for the Proposed New Measures
As further described above, we are proposing four new measures
beginning with the FY 2020 program year: Proportion of Patients Who
Died from Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy in the Last 14 Days of Life
(NQF #0210); Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to
the ICU in the Last 30 Days of Life (NQF #0213); Proportion of Patients
Who Died from Cancer Not Admitted to Hospice (NQF #0215); and
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to Hospice for
Less Than Three Days (NQF #0216). All four measures are claims-based
measures. Therefore, there will be no data submission requirements for
PCHs related to these measures. As these measures use Medicare
administrative claims data, we are proposing to calculate these
measures on a yearly basis. Specifically, we are proposing that the
data collection period will be from July 1 from the year 3 years prior
to the program year to June 30 from the year 2 years prior to the
program year. Thus, for the FY 2020 program year, we would collect data
from July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
10. Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy Under the PCHQR
Program
a. Background
In our experience with other quality reporting and performance
programs, we have noted occasions when providers have been unable to
submit required quality data due to extraordinary circumstances that
are not within their control (for example, natural disasters). We do
not wish to increase their burden unduly during these times. Therefore,
in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50848), we finalized our
policy that, for the FY 2014 program year and subsequent years, PCHs
may request and we may grant exceptions (formerly referred to as
waivers) \299\ with respect to the reporting of required quality data
when extraordinary circumstances beyond the control of the PCH warrant.
The PCH may request a reporting extension or a complete exception from
the requirement to submit quality data for one or more quarters. Under
our current policy, PCHs can submit a request form to CMS with the
following information:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\299\ ECEs were originally referred to as ``waivers.'' This term
was changed to ``exceptions'' in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 50286).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The PCH's CCN;
The PCH's name;
Contact information for the PCH's CEO and any other
designated personnel, including name, email address, telephone number,
and mailing address (the address must be a physical address, not a post
office box);
The PCH's reason for requesting an extension or exception;
Evidence of the impact of extraordinary circumstances,
including but not limited to photographs, newspaper and other media
articles; and
A date when the PCH will again be able to submit PCHQR
Program data, and a justification for the proposed date.
In addition, we finalized that the form must be signed by the PCH's
CEO or designee and submitted within 30 days of the date that the
extraordinary circumstances occurred. Lastly, we finalized that
following the receipt of the request form, we would: (1) provide a
written acknowledgement; and (2) provide a formal response notifying
the PCH of our decision.
We also clarified that the above policy does not preclude us from
granting exceptions (including extensions) to PCHs that have not
requested them when we determine that an extraordinary circumstance has
affected an entire region or locale. We stated that if we make the
determination to grant such an exception, we would communicate this
decision through routine communication channels.
b. Proposed Modifications to the ECE Policy
We are proposing to modify the ECE policy for the PCHQR Program by:
(1) Extending the deadline for a PCH to submit a request for an
extension or exception from 30 days following the date that the
extraordinary circumstance occurred to 90 days following the date that
the extraordinary circumstance occurred; and (2) allowing CMS to grant
an exception or extension due to CMS data system issues which affect
data submission. These proposed modifications will better align our ECE
policy with that adopted for the Hospital IQR Program (76 FR 51651
through 51652, 78 FR 50836 through 50837, and 81 FR 57181 through
57182), the Hospital OQR Program (77 FR 68489 and 81 FR 79795), as well
as other quality reporting programs that already have such policies in
place or are proposing to modify their policies to achieve alignment.
We are proposing that these modifications would apply beginning in FY
2018 as related to extraordinary circumstances that occur on or after
October 1, 2017.
We also believe that it is important for facilities to receive
timely feedback regarding the status of ECE requests. We strive to
complete our review of each ECE request as quickly as possible.
However, we recognize that the number of requests we receive, and the
complexity of the information provided impacts the actual timeframe to
make ECE determinations. Therefore, to ensure transparency and
understanding of our process, we are also taking this opportunity to
clarify that we will strive to provide our response to an ECE request
within 90 days of receipt.
(1) Proposal To Extend the ECE Request Deadline
In the past, we have allowed facilities to submit an ECE request
form within 30 calendar days following the occurrence of an
extraordinary circumstance that causes hardship and prevents them from
providing data. In certain circumstances, however, it may be difficult
for facilities to timely evaluate the impact of a certain extraordinary
circumstance within 30 calendar days.
[[Page 20086]]
We believe that extending the deadline to 90 calendar days would allow
PCHs more time to determine whether it is necessary and appropriate to
submit an ECE request and to provide a more comprehensive account of
the extraordinary circumstance in their ECE request form to CMS. For
example, if a PCH has suffered damage due to a hurricane on June 1, it
would have until August 30 to submit an ECE form via the QualityNet
Secure Portal, mail, email, or secure fax as instructed on the ECE
form.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
(2) Proposal To Grant Exceptions or Extensions Due to CMS Data System
Issues
Although we do not anticipate this situation will happen often,
there may be times where CMS experiences issues with its data systems
that directly affects facilities' abilities to submit data. In these
circumstances, we are proposing to grant exceptions or extensions to
one or more data reporting requirements. If we make the determination
to grant exceptions or extensions to PCHs on this basis, we are
proposing to communicate this decision through routine communication
channels.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
C. Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
1. Background and Statutory Authority
Section 3004(a) of the Affordable Care Act amended section 1886(m)
of the Act by adding paragraph (5), requiring the Secretary to
establish the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH
QRP). This program applies to all hospitals certified by Medicare as
LTCHs. Beginning with the FY 2014 LTCH QRP, the Secretary is required
to reduce any annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for
discharges occurring during such fiscal year by 2 percentage points for
any LTCH that does not comply with the requirements established by the
Secretary. Specifically, section 1886(m)(5) of the Act requires that
beginning with the FY 2014 LTCH QRP, each LTCH submit data on quality
measures specified by the Secretary in a form and manner, and at a
time, specified by the Secretary. For more information on the statutory
history of the LTCH QRP, we refer readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (79 FR 50286).
Please note that term ``FY [year] LTCH QRP'' refers to the fiscal
year for which the LTCH QRP requirements applicable to that fiscal year
must be met for an LTCH to receive the full annual update when
calculating the payment rates applicable to it for that fiscal year.
The Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act of 2014
(IMPACT Act) (Pub. L. 113-185) amended Title XVIII of the Act, in part,
by adding a new section 1899B of the Act, entitled ``Standardized Post-
Acute Care (PAC) Assessment Data for Quality, Payment and Discharge
Planning,'' that enacts new data reporting requirements for certain
post-acute care (PAC) providers, including LTCHs. Specifically, new
sections 1899B(a)(1)(A)(ii) and (iii) of the Act require LTCHs,
inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), skilled nursing facilities
(SNFs) and home health agencies (HHAs), under each of their respective
quality reporting program (which, for LTCHs, is found at section
1886(m)(5) of the Act), to report data on quality measures specified
under section 1899B(c)(1), with respect to at least five domains, and
data on resource use and other measures specified under section
1899B(d)(1) of the Act with respect toat least three domains. Section
1899B(a)(1)(A)(i) of the Act further requires each of these PAC
providers to report under their respective quality reporting program
standardized patient assessment data in accordance with subsection (b)
for at least the quality measures specified under subsection (c)(1) and
that is with respect to five specific categories: functional status;
cognitive function and mental status; special services, treatments, and
interventions; medical conditions and co-morbidities; and impairments.
All of the data that must be reported in accordance with section
1899B(a)(1)(A) of the Act must be standardized and interoperable so as
to allow for the exchange of the information among PAC providers and
other providers and the use of such data in order to enable access to
longitudinal information and to facilitate coordinated care. We refer
readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49723 through
49724) for additional information on the IMPACT Act and its
applicability to LTCHs.
2. General Considerations Used for Selection of Quality Measures for
the LTCH QRP
a. Background
We refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR
49728) for a detailed discussion of the considerations we apply in
measure selection for the LTCH QRP, such as alignment with the CMS
Quality Strategy,\300\ which incorporates the three broad aims of the
National Quality Strategy.\301\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\300\ //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/CMS-Quality-Strategy.html.
\301\ //www.ahrq.gov/workingforquality/nqs/nqs2011annlrpt.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As part of our consideration for measures for use in the LTCH QRP,
we review and evaluate measures that have been implemented in other
programs and take into account measures that have been endorsed by NQF
for provider settings other than the LTCH setting. We have previously
adopted measures with the term ``Application of'' in the names of those
measures. We have received questions pertaining to the term
``application'' and want to clarify that when we refer to a measure as
an ``application of'' the measure, it means that the measure will be
used in the LTCH setting, rather than the setting for which it was
endorsed by the NQF. For example, in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (80 FR 49736 through 49739) we adopted an Application of Percent
of Residents Experiencing One or More Falls With Major Injury (Long
Stay) (NQF #0674), which is endorsed for the nursing home setting but
not for the LTCH setting. For such measures, we intend to seek NQF
endorsement for the LTCH setting, and if the NQF endorses one or more
of them, we will update the title of the measure to remove the
reference to ``application.''
b. Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the LTCH QRP
We consider related factors that may affect measures in the LTCH
QRP. We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes including reducing health disparities, and
we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with social
risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to ensure
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
[[Page 20087]]
(ASPE) \302\ and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine on the issue of measuring and accounting for social risk
factors in CMS' value-based purchasing and quality reporting programs,
and considering options on how to address the issue in these programs.
On December 21, 2016, ASPE submitted a Report to Congress on a study it
was required to conduct under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare
Post-Acute Care Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed
the effects of certain social risk factors of Medicare beneficiaries on
quality measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of
nine Medicare value-based purchasing programs.\303\ The report also
included considerations for strategies to account for social risk
factors in these programs. In a January 10, 2017 report released by The
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, that body
provided various potential methods for measuring and accounting for
social risk factors, including stratified public reporting.\304\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\302\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\303\ //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\304\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which new measures, measures
undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the condition
that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine whether
risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate for
these measures. Measures from the LTCH QRP are being addressed in this
trial. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion of social risk
factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these measures. At the
conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue recommendations on the future
inclusion of social risk factors in risk adjustment for quality
measures.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in
measures in the LTCH QRP, and if so, what method or combination of
methods would be most appropriate for accounting for social risk
factors. Examples of methods include: confidential reporting to
providers of measure rates stratified by social risk factors; public
reporting of stratified measure rates; and potential risk adjustment of
a particular measure as appropriate based on data and evidence.
In addition, we are also seeking public comment on which social
risk factors might be most appropriate for reporting stratified measure
scores and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure.
Examples of social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual
eligibility/low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area
of residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors,
including current data sources where this information would be
available, could be used alone or in combination, and whether other
data should be collected to better capture the effects of social risk.
We will take commenters' input into consideration as we continue to
assess the appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social
risk factors in the LTCH QRP. We note that any such changes would be
proposed through future notice and comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
3. Proposed Collection of Standardized Patient Assessment Data Under
the LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Definition of Standardized Patient Assessment Data
Section 1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act requires that, for fiscal year
2019 and each subsequent year, LTCHs report standardized patient
assessment data required under section 1899B(b)(1) of the Act. For
purposes of meeting this requirement, section 1886(m)(5)(F)(iii) of the
Act requires an LTCH to submit the standardized patient assessment data
required under section 1899B(b)(1) of the Act using the standard
instrument in a time, form, and manner specified by the Secretary.
Section 1899B(b)(1)(B) of the Act describes standardized patient
assessment data as data required for at least the quality measures
described in section 1899B(c)(1) of the Act and that is with respect to
the following categories:
Functional status, such as mobility and self-care at
admission to a PAC provider and before discharge from a PAC provider;
Cognitive function, such as ability to express ideas and
to understand and mental status, such as depression and dementia;
Special services, treatments and interventions such as the
need for ventilator use, dialysis, chemotherapy, central line placement
and total parenteral nutrition;
Medical conditions and comorbidities such as diabetes,
congestive heart failure and pressure ulcers;
Impairments, such as incontinence and an impaired ability
to hear, see or swallow; and
Other categories deemed necessary and appropriate.
As required under section 1899B(b)(1)(A) of the Act, the
standardized patient assessment data must be reported at least with
respect to LTCH admissions and discharges, but the Secretary may
require the data to be reported more frequently.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to define the standardized
patient assessment data that LTCHs must report to comply with section
1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act, as well as the requirements for the
reporting of these data. The collection of standardized patient
assessment data is critical to our efforts to drive improvement in
health care quality across the four PAC settings to which the IMPACT
Act applies. We intend to use these data for a number of purposes,
including facilitating their exchange and
[[Page 20088]]
longitudinal use among health care providers to enable high quality
care and outcomes through care coordination, as well as for quality
measure calculation and identifying comorbidities that might increase
the medical complexity of a particular admission.
LTCHs are currently required to report patient assessment data
through the Long-Term Care Hospital Continuity Assessment Record and
Evaluation Data Set (LTCH CARE Data Set or LCDS) by responding to an
identical set of assessment questions using an identical set of
response options (we refer to each solitary question/response option as
a data element and we refer to a group of questions/responses as data
elements), both of which incorporate an identical set of definitions
and standards. The primary purpose of the identical questions and
response options is to ensure that we collect a set of standardized
data elements across LTCHs which can then be used for a number of
purposes, including LTCH payment and measure calculation for the LTCH
QRP.
SNFs, IRFs, and HHAs are also required to report patient assessment
data through their applicable PAC assessment instruments, and they do
so by responding to identical assessment questions developed for their
respective settings using an identical set of response options (which
incorporate an identical set of definitions and standards). Like the
LCDS, the questions and response options for each of these other PAC
assessment instruments are standardized across the PAC provider type to
which the PAC assessment instrument applies. However, the assessment
questions and response options in the four PAC assessment instruments
are not currently standardized with each other. As a result, questions
and response options that appear on the LCDS cannot be readily compared
with questions and response options that appear, for example, on the
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility-Patient Assessment Instrument (IRF-
PAI), the PAC assessment instrument used by IRFs. This is true even
when the questions and response options are similar. This lack of
standardization across the four PAC providers has limited our ability
to compare one PAC provider type with another for purposes such as care
coordination and quality improvement.
To achieve a level of standardization across SNFs, LTCHs, IRFs, and
HHAs that enables us to make comparisons between them, we are proposing
to define ``standardized patient assessment data'' as patient
assessment questions and response options that are identical in all
four PAC assessment instruments, and to which identical standards and
definitions apply. Standardizing the questions and response options
across the four PAC assessment instruments will also enable the data to
be interoperable, allowing it to be shared electronically, or
otherwise, between PAC provider types. It will enable the data to be
comparable for various purposes, including the development of cross-
setting quality measures and to inform payment models that take into
account patient characteristics rather than setting, as described in
the IMPACT Act.
We are inviting public comment on this proposed definition.
b. General Considerations Used for the Selection of Proposed
Standardized Patient Assessment Data
As part of our effort to identify appropriate standardized patient
assessment data for purposes of collecting under the LTCH QRP, we
sought input from the general public, stakeholder community, and
subject matter experts on items that would enable person-centered, high
quality health care, as well as access to longitudinal information to
facilitate coordinated care and improved beneficiary outcomes.
To identify optimal data elements for standardization, our data
element contractor organized teams of researchers for each category,
and each team worked with a group of advisors made up of clinicians and
academic researchers with expertise in PAC. Information-gathering
activities were used to identify data elements, as well as key themes
related to the categories described in section 1899B(b)(1)(B) of the
Act. In January and February 2016, our data element contractor also
conducted provider focus groups for each of the four PAC provider
types, and a focus group for consumers that included current or former
PAC patients and residents, caregivers, ombudsmen, and patient advocacy
group representatives. The Development and Maintenance of Post-Acute
Care Cross-Setting Standardized Patient Assessment Data Focus Group
Summary Report is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Our data element contractor also assembled a 16-member TEP that met on
April 7 and 8, 2016, and January 5 and 6, 2017, in Baltimore, Maryland,
to provide expert input on data elements that are currently in each PAC
assessment instrument, as well as data elements that could be
standardized. The Development and Maintenance of Post-Acute Care Cross-
Setting Standardized Patient Assessment Data TEP Summary Reports are
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
As part of the environmental scan, data elements currently in the
four existing PAC assessment instruments were examined to see if any
could be considered for proposal as standardized patient assessment
data. Specifically, this evaluation included consideration of data
elements in OASIS-C2 (effective January 2017); IRF-PAI, v1.4 (effective
October 2016); LCDS, v3.00 (effective April 2016); and MDS 3.0, v1.14
(effective October 2016). Data elements in the standardized assessment
instrument that we tested in the Post-Acute Care Payment Reform
Demonstration (PAC PRD)--the Continuity Assessment Record and
Evaluation (CARE)--were also considered. A literature search was also
conducted to determine whether additional data elements to propose as
standardized patient assessment data could be identified.
We also held four Special Open Door Forums (SODFs) on October 27,
2015; May 12, 2016; September 15, 2016; and December 8, 2016, to
present data elements we were considering and solicit input. At each
SODF, some stakeholders provided immediate input, and all were invited
to submit additional comments via the CMS IMPACT Mailbox at:
[email protected].
We also convened a meeting with federal agency subject matter
experts (SMEs) on May 13, 2016. In addition, a public comment period
was open from August 12 to September 12, 2016, to solicit comments on
detailed candidate data element descriptions, data collection methods,
and coding methods. The IMPACT Act Public Comment Summary Report
containing the public comments (summarized and verbatim) and our
responses, is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
We specifically sought to identify standardized patient assessment
data that we could feasibly incorporate into the LTCH, IRF, SNF, and
HHA
[[Page 20089]]
assessment instruments and that have the following attributes: (1)
Being supported by current science; (2) testing well in terms of their
reliability and validity, consistent with findings from the Post-Acute
Care-Payment Reform Demonstration (PAC PRD); (3) the potential to be
shared (for example, through interoperable means) among PAC and other
provider types to facilitate efficient care coordination and improved
beneficiary outcomes; (4) the potential to inform the development of
quality, resource use and other measures, as well as future payment
methodologies that could more directly take into account individual
beneficiary health characteristics; and (5) the ability to be used by
practitioners to inform their clinical decision and care planning
activities. We also applied the same considerations that we apply with
quality measures, including the CMS Quality Strategy which is framed
using the three broad aims of the National Quality Strategy.
4. Policy for Retaining LTCH QRP Measures and Proposal To Apply That
Policy to Standardized Patient Assessment Data
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53614 through
53615), we adopted a policy that would allow any quality measure
adopted for use in the LTCH QRP to remain in effect until the measure
is removed, suspended, or replaced. For further information on how
measures are considered for removal, suspension, or replacement, we
refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53614
through 53615). We are proposing to apply this policy to the
standardized patient assessment data that we adopt for the LTCH QRP.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal.
5. Policy for Adopting Changes to LTCH QRP Measures and Proposal To
Apply That Policy to Standardized Patient Assessment Data
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53615 through
53616), we adopted a subregulatory process to incorporate updates to
LTCH quality measure specifications that do not substantively change
the nature of the measure. Substantive changes will be proposed and
finalized through rulemaking. For further information on what
constitutes a substantive versus a nonsubstantive change and the
subregulatory process for nonsubstantive changes, we refer readers to
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53615 through 53616). We
are proposing to apply this policy to the standardized patient
assessment data that we adopt for the LTCH QRP.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal.
6. Quality Measures Previously Finalized for the LTCH QRP
The LTCH QRP currently has 17 finalized measures as outlined in the
table below:
Quality Measures Currently Adopted for the LTCH QRP
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Measure name and data source
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LTCH CARE Data Set
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pressure Ulcers.............. Percent of Residents or Patients with
Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened
(Short Stay) (NQF #0678).
Patient Influenza Vaccine.... Percent of Residents or Patients Who Were
Assessed and Appropriately Given the
Seasonal Influenza Vaccine (Short Stay)
(NQF #0680).
Application of Falls......... Application of Percent of Residents
Experiencing One or More Falls with
Major Injury (Long Stay) (NQF #0674).*
Functional Assessment........ Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH)
Patients with an Admission and Discharge
Functional Assessment and a Care Plan
That Addresses Function (NQF #2631).
Application of Functional Application of Percent of Long-Term Care
Assessment. Hospital (LTCH) Patients with an
Admission and Discharge Functional
Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function (NQF #2631).
Change in Mobility........... Functional Outcome Measure: Change in
Mobility Among Long-Term Care Hospital
(LTCH) Patients Requiring Ventilator
Support (NQF #2632).
DRR.......................... Drug Regimen Review Conducted With Follow-
Up for Identified Issues- Post Acute
Care (PAC) Long-Term Care Hospital
(LTCH) Quality Reporting Program (QRP).*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHSN
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAUTI........................ National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract
Infection Outcome Measure (NQF #0138).
CLABSI....................... National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Central Line-Associated Bloodstream
Infection Outcome Measure (NQF #0139).
MRSA......................... National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) Bacteremia Outcome Measure
(NQF #1716).
CDI.......................... National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset
Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI)
Outcome Measure (NQF #1717).
HCP Influenza Vaccine........ Influenza Vaccination Coverage among
Healthcare Personnel (NQF #0431).
VAE.......................... National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Ventilator-Associated Event (VAE)
Outcome Measure.*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Claims-Based
------------------------------------------------------------------------
All-Cause Readmissions....... All-Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure
for 30-Days Post[dash]Discharge from
Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs) (NQF
#2512).
MSPB......................... Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary (MSPB)-
Post Acute Care (PAC) Long-Term Care
Hospital (LTCH) Quality Reporting
Program (QRP).*
DTC.......................... Discharge to Community-Post Acute Care
(PAC) Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH)
Quality Reporting Program (QRP).*
[[Page 20090]]
PPR.......................... Potentially Preventable 30-Day Post-
Discharge Readmission Measure for Long-
Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Quality
Reporting Program (QRP).*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Not currently NQF-endorsed for the LTCH setting.
7. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Proposed Beginning With the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP
Beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, in addition to the quality
measures we are retaining under our policy described in section IX.C.4.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the
current pressure ulcer measure entitled Percent of Residents or
Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay)
(NQF #0678) and replace it with a modified version of the measure
entitled Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury and adopt two new measures (one process and one outcome) related
to ventilator weaning. We are also proposing to characterize the data
elements described below as standardized patient assessment data under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B) of the Act that must be reported by LTCHs under
the LTCH QRP through the LTCH CARE Data Set.
The proposed measures are as follows:
Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury
Compliance with Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT) by Day 2
of the LTCH Stay
Ventilator Liberation Rate
The measures are described in more detail below.
a. Proposal To Replace the Current Pressure Ulcer Quality Measure,
Percent of Residents or Patients With Pressure Ulcers That Are New or
Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), With a Modified Pressure Ulcer
Measure, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury
(1) Measure Background
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the current
pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or Patients with Pressure
Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), from the LTCH
QRP measure set and to replace it with a modified version of that
measure, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury, beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. The change in the measure
name is to reduce confusion about the new modified measure. The
modified version differs from the current version of the measure
because it includes new or worsened unstageable pressure ulcers,
including deep tissue injuries (DTIs), in the measure numerator. The
proposed modified version of the measure also contains updated
specifications intended to eliminate redundancies in the assessment
items needed for its calculation and to reduce the potential for
underestimating the frequency of pressure ulcers. The modified version
of the measure would satisfy the IMPACT Act domain of skin integrity
and changes in skin integrity.
(2) Measure Importance
As described in the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51754
through 51756), pressure ulcers are high-cost adverse events and are an
important measure of quality. For information on the history and
rationale for the relevance, importance, and applicability of having a
pressure ulcer measure in the LTCH QRP, we refer readers to the FY 2012
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51748 through 51750) and the FY 2014
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50861 through 50863).
We are proposing to adopt a modified version of the current
pressure ulcer measure because unstageable pressure ulcers, including
DTIs, are similar to Stage 2, Stage 3, and Stage 4 pressure ulcers in
that they represent poor outcomes, are a serious medical condition that
can result in death and disability, are debilitating and painful, and
are often an avoidable outcome of medical care.305
306 307 308 309
310 Studies show that most pressure ulcers can be avoided
and can also be healed in acute, post-acute, and long-term care
settings with appropriate medical care.\311\ Furthermore, some studies
indicate that DTIs, if managed using appropriate care, can be resolved
without deteriorating into a worsened pressure ulcer.312
313
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\305\ Casey, G. (2013). ``Pressure ulcers reflect quality of
nursing care.'' Nurs N Z 19(10): 20-24.
\306\ Gorzoni, M. L. and S. L. Pires (2011). ``Deaths in nursing
homes.'' Rev Assoc Med Bras 57(3): 327-331.
\307\ Thomas, J. M., et al. (2013). ``Systematic review: health-
related characteristics of elderly hospitalized adults and nursing
home residents associated with short-term mortality.'' J Am Geriatr
Soc 61(6): 902-911.
\308\ White-Chu, E. F., et al. (2011). ``Pressure ulcers in
long-term care.'' Clin Geriatr Med 27(2): 241-258.
\309\ Bates-Jensen BM. Quality indicators for prevention and
management of pressure ulcers in vulnerable elders. Ann Int Med.
2001;135 (8 Part 2), 744-51.
\310\ Bennet, G, Dealy, C Posnett, J (2004). The cost of
pressure ulcers in the UK, Age and Aging, 33(3):230-235.
\311\ Black, Joyce M., et al. ``Pressure ulcers: avoidable or
unavoidable? Results of the national pressure ulcer advisory panel
consensus conference.'' Ostomy-Wound Management 57.2 (2011): 24.
\312\ Sullivan, R. (2013). A Two-year Retrospective Review of
Suspected Deep Tissue Injury Evolution in Adult Acute Care Patients.
Ostomy Wound Management 59(9) //www.o-wm.com/article/two-year-retrospective-review-suspected-deep-tissue-injury-evolution-adult-acute-care-patient.
\313\ Posthauer, ME, Zulkowski, K. (2005). Special to OWM: The
NPUAP Dual Mission Conference: Reaching Consensus on Staging and
Deep Tissue Injury. Ostomy Wound Management 51(4) //www.o-wm.com/content/the-npuap-dual-mission-conference-reaching-consensus-staging-and-deep-tissue-injury.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While there are few studies that provide information regarding the
incidence of unstageable pressure ulcers in PAC settings, an analysis
conducted by a contractor suggests the incidence of unstageable
pressure ulcers varies according to the type of unstageable pressure
ulcer and setting. This analysis examined the national incidence of new
unstageable pressure ulcers in LTCHs at discharge compared with
admission using LTCH discharges from January through December 2015. The
contractor found a national incidence of 1.15 percent of new
unstageable pressure ulcers due to slough and/or eschar, 0.05 percent
of new unstageable pressure ulcers due to non-removable dressing/
device, and 1.01 percent of new DTIs. In addition, an international
study spanning the time period 2006 to 2009 provides some evidence to
suggest that the proportion of pressure ulcers identified as DTI has
increased over time. The study found DTIs increased by three fold, to
nine percent of all observed ulcers in 2009, and that DTIs were more
prevalent than either Stage 3 or 4 ulcers. During the same time period,
the proportion of Stage 1 and 2 ulcers decreased, and the proportion of
Stage 3 and 4 ulcers remained constant.\314\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\314\ VanGilder, C, MacFarlane, GD, Harrison, P, Lachenbruch, C,
Meyer, S (2010). The Demographics of Suspected Deep Tissue Injury in
the United States: An Analysis of the International Pressure Ulcer
Prevalence Survey 2006-2009. Advances in Skin & Wound Care. 23(6):
254-261.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20091]]
The inclusion of unstageable pressure ulcers, including DTIs, in
the numerator of this measure is expected to increase measure scores
and variability in measure scores, thereby improving the ability to
discriminate among poor- and high-performing LTCHs. In the currently
implemented pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or Patients
with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678),
analysis using data from Quarter 1 through Quarter 4 2015 data reveals
that the LTCH mean score is 1.95 percent; the 25th and 75th percentiles
are 0.53 percent and 2.49 percent, respectively; and 12.11 percent of
facilities have perfect scores. In the proposed measure, Changes in
Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury, during the same
timeframe, the LTCH mean score is 3.73 percent; the 25th and 75th
percentiles are 1.53 percent and 4.89 percent, respectively; and 5.46
percent of facilities have perfect scores.
(3) Stakeholder Feedback
Our measure development contractor sought input from subject matter
experts, including Technical Expert Panels (TEPs), over the course of
several years on various skin integrity topics and specifically those
associated with the inclusion of unstageable pressure ulcers, including
DTIs. Most recently, on July 18, 2016, a TEP convened by our measure
development contractor provided input on the technical specifications
of this proposed quality measure, including the feasibility of
implementing the proposed measure's updates across PAC settings. The
TEP supported the updates to the measure across PAC settings, including
the inclusion in the numerator of unstageable pressure ulcers due to
slough and/or eschar that are new or worsened, new unstageable pressure
ulcers due to a non-removable dressing or device, and new DTIs. The TEP
also supported the use of different data elements for measure
calculation. The TEP recommended supplying additional guidance to
providers regarding each type of unstageable pressure ulcer. This
support was in agreement with earlier TEP meetings, held on June 13 and
November 15, 2013, which had recommended that CMS update the
specifications for the pressure ulcer measure to include unstageable
pressure ulcers in the numerator.315 316 Exploratory data
analysis conducted by our measure development contractor suggests that
the addition of unstageable pressure ulcers, including DTIs, will
increase the observed incidence and variation in the rate of new or
worsened pressure ulcers at the facility level, which may improve the
ability of the proposed quality measure to discriminate between poor-
and high-performing facilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\315\ Schwartz, M., Nguyen, K.H., Swinson Evans, T.M., Ignaczak,
M.K., Thaker, S., and Bernard, S.L.: Development of a Cross-Setting
Quality Measure for Pressure Ulcers: OY2 Information Gathering,
Final Report. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, November
2013. Available: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/Downloads/Development-of-a-Cross-Setting-Quality-Measure-for-Pressure-Ulcers-Information-Gathering-Final-Report.pdf.
\316\ Schwartz, M., Ignaczak, M.K., Swinson Evans, T.M., Thaker,
S., and Smith, L.: The Development of a Cross-Setting Pressure Ulcer
Quality Measure: Summary Report on November 15, 2013, Technical
Expert Panel Follow-Up Webinar. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, January 2014. Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/Downloads/Development-of-a-Cross-Setting-Pressure-Ulcer-Quality-Measure-Summary-Report-on-November-15-2013-Technical-Expert-Pa.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We solicited stakeholder feedback on this proposed measure by means
of a public comment period held from October 17 through November 17,
2016. In general, we received considerable support for the proposed
measure. A few commenters supported all of the changes to the current
pressure ulcer measure that resulted in the proposed measure, with one
commenter noting the significance of the work to align the pressure
ulcer quality measure specifications across the PAC settings.
Many commenters supported the inclusion of unstageable pressure
ulcers due to slough/eschar, due to non-removable dressing/device, and
DTIs in the proposed quality measure. Other commenters did not support
the inclusion of DTIs in the proposed quality measure because they
stated that there is no universally accepted definition for this type
of skin injury.
Some commenters provided feedback on the data elements used to
calculate the proposed quality measure. We believe that these data
elements will promote facilitation of cross-setting quality comparison
as mandated by the IMPACT Act, alignment between quality measures and
payment, reduction in redundancies in assessment items, and prevention
of inappropriate underestimation of pressure ulcers. The currently
implemented pressure ulcer measure is calculated using retrospective
data elements that assess the number of new or worsened pressure ulcers
at each stage, while the proposed measure is calculated using the
number of unhealed pressure ulcers at each stage after subtracting the
number that were present upon admission. Some commenters did not
support the data elements that would be used to calculate the proposed
measure, and requested further testing of these data elements. Other
commenters supported the use of these data elements stating that these
data elements simplified the measure calculation process.
The public comment summary report for the proposed measure is
available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
This summary includes further detail about our responses to various
concerns and ideas stakeholders raised.
The NQF-convened Measures Application Partnership (MAP) Post-Acute
Care/Long-Term Care (PAC/LTC) Workgroup met on December 14 and 15,
2016, and provided input to CMS about this measure. The Workgroup
provided a recommendation of ``support for rulemaking'' for use of the
proposed measure in the LTCH QRP. The MAP Coordinating Committee met on
January 24 and 25, 2017, and provided a recommendation of ``conditional
support for rulemaking'' for use of the proposed measure in the LTCH
QRP. The MAP's conditions of support include that, as a part of measure
implementation, CMS provide guidance on the correct collection and
calculation of the measure result, as well as guidance on public
reporting Web sites explaining the impact of the specification changes
on the measure result. The MAP's conditions also specify that CMS
continue analyzing the proposed measure in order to investigate
unexpected results reported in public comment. We intend to fulfill
these conditions by offering additional training opportunities and
educational materials in advance of public reporting, and by continuing
to monitor and analyze the proposed measure. More information about the
MAP's recommendations for this measure is available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84452.
We reviewed the NQF's consensus endorsed measures and were unable
to identify any NQF-endorsed pressure ulcer quality measures for PAC
settings that are inclusive of unstageable pressure ulcers. There are
related measures, but after careful review, we determined these
measures are not applicable for use in LTCHs based on the populations
addressed or other
[[Page 20092]]
aspects of the specifications. We are unaware of any other such quality
measures that have been endorsed or adopted by another consensus
organization for the LTCH setting. Therefore, based on the evidence
discussed above, we are proposing to adopt the quality measure
entitled, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury, for the LTCH QRP beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. We plan
to submit the proposed measure to the NQF for endorsement consideration
as soon as feasible.
(4) Data Collection
The data for this quality measure would be collected using the LTCH
CARE Data Set, which is currently submitted by LTCHs through the QIES
ASAP System. The proposed standardized patient assessment data
applicable to this measure that must be reported by LTCHs for
admissions as well as discharges occurring on or after April 1, 2018 is
described in section IX.C.11. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
While the inclusion of unstageable wounds in the proposed measure
results in a measure calculation methodology that is different from the
methodology used to calculate the current pressure ulcer measure, the
data elements needed to calculate the proposed measure are already
included on the LTCH CARE Data Set. In addition, our proposal to
eliminate duplicative data elements that were used in calculation of
the current pressure ulcer measure will result in an overall reduced
reporting burden for LTCHs with respect to the proposed measure. For
more information on LTCH CARE Data Set submission using the QIES ASAP
System, we refer readers to: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCHTechnicalInformation.html.
For technical information about this proposed measure, including
information about the measure calculation and the standardized patient
assessment data elements used to calculate this measure, we refer
readers to the document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP
Quality Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We are proposing that LTCHs would begin reporting the proposed
pressure ulcer measure, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care:
Pressure Ulcer/Injury, which will replace the current pressure ulcer
measure, with data collection beginning April 1, 2018.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to replace the
current pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or Patients with
Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), with
a modified version of that measure, entitled Changes in Skin Integrity
Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury, for the LTCH QRP beginning with
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
b. Proposed Mechanical Ventilation Process Quality Measure: Compliance
With Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT) by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay
Invasive mechanical ventilation care was identified through
technical expert panels convened by our measure development contractor
and public comment periods as a gap in the LTCH QRP measure set and
aligns with the National Quality Strategy priority and the CMS Quality
Strategy goal of ``promoting the most effective prevention and
treatment practices'' by reducing the risk of complications from
unnecessarily prolonged mechanical ventilation. We are proposing to
adopt the quality measure, Compliance with Spontaneous Breathing Trial
(SBT) by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay, beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
The data applicable to this measure that must be reported by LTCHs for
admissions as well as discharges occurring on or after April 1, 2018 is
described in section IX.C.11. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay measure is a
process quality measure. For patients on invasive mechanical
ventilation support upon admission to the LTCH, except those who meet
measure exclusion criteria, this measure assesses facility-level
compliance with SBT, including TCT or CPAP breathing trial, by Day 2 of
the LTCH stay, where Day 1 is the day of admission to the LTCH and Day
2 is the subsequent calendar day. This measure is calculated and
reported for the following two components: (1) The percentage of
patients admitted on invasive mechanical ventilation who were assessed
for readiness for SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay, and (2) the percentage
of patients deemed medically ready for SBT who received SBT by Day 2 of
the LTCH stay. Higher percentages indicate better compliance. Patients
are included in this quality measure if they are on invasive mechanical
ventilation support upon admission to the LTCH, unless they meet
measure exclusion criteria.
Patients on invasive mechanical ventilation support present a
critical focus for assessment of high quality care because they
comprise a substantial proportion of LTCH patient admissions.
Mechanically ventilated patients are increasingly common in both acute
care hospital intensive care units (ICUs), where up to 40 percent of
patients require some duration of mechanical ventilation,\317\ and
LTCHs, where patients are frequently transferred for weaning following
treatment in ICUs.318 319 320 Patients
who require invasive mechanical ventilation of longer than 14 or 21
days are undergoing prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV). In 2012,
about 22,000 or 15.8 percent of all LTCH discharges received PMV
services during the LTCH stay.\321\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\317\ Dasta, J. F., et al. (2005). ``Daily cost of an intensive
care unit day: the contribution of mechanical ventilation.'' Crit
Care Med 33(6): 1266-1271.
\318\ Dasta, J. F., et al. (2005). ``Daily cost of an intensive
care unit day: the contribution of mechanical ventilation.'' Crit
Care Med 33(6): 1266-1271.
\319\ Kahn, J. M., et al. (2010). ``Long-term acute care
hospital utilization after critical illness.'' JAMA 303(22): 2253-
2259.
\320\ Szubski, C. R., et al. (2014). ``Predicting discharge to a
long-term acute care hospital after admission to an intensive care
unit.'' Am J Crit Care 23(4): e46-53.
\321\ MedPAC (2016). Chapter 10. Long-term Care Hospital
Services. In: Report to the Congress: Medicare Payment Policy.
Washington, DC, Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This ventilator weaning-related process quality measure is
important for encouraging implementation of evidence-based weaning
guidelines as early during the LTCH patient stay as is beneficial to
the patient. Although often necessary for life support, invasive
mechanical ventilation is not without risk of harm to patients, and
these risks increase as duration of ventilation
continues.322 323 324 In both ICUs and
LTCHs, unsuccessful weaning and delayed weaning increase patient
exposure to a number of ventilator-associated negative health outcomes,
including ventilator-associated pneumonia,325 326
327 328 ventilator-
[[Page 20093]]
associated lung injury,329 330 331
ventilator induced diaphragm dysfunction,\332\ psychological distress
333 334 335 and post-traumatic stress
disorder,\336\ disability \337\ and decreased functional
status,338 339 and chronic critical illness
syndrome.\340\ Furthermore, these ventilator-associated negative health
outcomes particularly affect the LTCH population since a significant
number of its patients are on PMV. The majority of mechanically
ventilated patients who are transferred to an LTCH have received
mechanical ventilation for at least 21 days.\341\ PMV increases the
risk of patient morbidity and short-term and long-term mortality.
According to a recent systematic review, the pooled mortality of
patients with PMV (defined here as invasive mechanical ventilation for
>=14 days) undergoing weaning attempts in LTCHs was 31 percent (18
studies); however, the pooled mortality at one year significantly
increased to 73 percent (8 studies).\342\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\322\ Esteban, A., et al. (2002). ``Characteristics and outcomes
in adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation: a 28-day
international study.'' JAMA 287(3): 345-355.
\323\ Cox, C. E., et al. (2007). ``Differences in one-year
health outcomes and resource utilization by definition of prolonged
mechanical ventilation: a prospective cohort study.'' Crit Care
11(1): R9.
\324\ Penuelas, O., et al. (2011). ``Characteristics and
outcomes of ventilated patients according to time to liberation from
mechanical ventilation.'' Am J Respir Crit Care Med 184(4): 430-437.
\325\ Cook, D. J., et al. (1998). ``Incidence of and risk
factors for ventilator-associated pneumonia in critically ill
patients.'' Ann Intern Med 129(6): 433-440.
\326\ Papazian, L., et al. (1996). ``Effect of ventilator-
associated pneumonia on mortality and morbidity.'' Am J Respir Crit
Care Med 154(1): 91-97.
\327\ Vincent, J. L., et al. (1995). ``The prevalence of
nosocomial infection in intensive care units in Europe. Results of
the European Prevalence of Infection in Intensive Care (EPIC) Study.
EPIC International Advisory Committee.'' JAMA 274(8): 639-644.
\328\ Safdar, N., et al. (2005). ``Clinical and economic
consequences of ventilator-associated pneumonia: a systematic
review.'' Crit Care Med 33(10): 2184-2193.
\329\ Meade, M. O. and D. J. Cook (1995). ``The aetiology,
consequences and prevention of barotrauma: a critical review of the
literature.'' Clin Intensive Care 6(4): 166-173.
\330\ Meade, M. O., et al. (1997). ``How to use articles about
harm: the relationship between high tidal volumes, ventilating
pressures, and ventilator-induced lung injury.'' Crit Care Med
25(11): 1915-1922.
\331\ Slutsky, A. S. and L. N. Tremblay (1998). ``Multiple
system organ failure. Is mechanical ventilation a contributing
factor?'' Am J Respir Crit Care Med 157(6 Pt 1): 1721-1725.
\332\ Levine, S., et al. (2008). ``Rapid disuse atrophy of
diaphragm fibers in mechanically ventilated humans.'' N Engl J Med
358(13): 1327-1335.
\333\ Rose, L., et al. (2014). ``Psychological wellbeing, health
related quality of life and memories of intensive care and a
specialised weaning centre reported by survivors of prolonged
mechanical ventilation.'' Intensive Crit Care Nurs 30(3): 145-151.
\334\ Schou, L. and I. Egerod (2008). ``A qualitative study into
the lived experience of post-CABG patients during mechanical
ventilator weaning.'' Intensive Crit Care Nurs 24(3): 171-179.
\335\ Rotondi, A. J., et al. (2002). ``Patients' recollections
of stressful experiences while receiving prolonged mechanical
ventilation in an intensive care unit.'' Crit Care Med 30(4): 746-
752.
\336\ Jubran, A., et al. (2010). ``Post-traumatic stress
disorder after weaning from prolonged mechanical ventilation.''
Intensive Care Med 36(12): 2030-2037.
\337\ Barnato, A. E., et al. (2011). ``Disability among elderly
survivors of mechanical ventilation.'' Am J Respir Crit Care Med
183(8): 1037-1042.
\338\ Scheinhorn, D. J., et al. (2007). ``Post-ICU mechanical
ventilation at 23 long-term care hospitals: a multicenter outcomes
study.'' Chest 131(1): 85-93.
\339\ Cox, C. E., et al. (2007). ``Differences in one-year
health outcomes and resource utilization by definition of prolonged
mechanical ventilation: a prospective cohort study.'' Crit Care
11(1): R9.
\340\ Cox, C. E., et al. (2007). ``Differences in one-year
health outcomes and resource utilization by definition of prolonged
mechanical ventilation: a prospective cohort study.'' Crit Care
11(1): R9.
\341\ MacIntyre, N. R., Epstein, S. K., Carson, S., Scheinhorn,
D., Christopher, K., Muldoon, S., & National Association for Medical
Direction of Respiratory, C. (2005). Management of patients
requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: report of a NAMDRC
consensus conference. Chest, 128(6), 3937-3954.
\342\ Damuth, E., et al. (2015). ``Long-term survival of
critically ill patients treated with prolonged mechanical
ventilation: a systematic review and meta-analysis.'' Lancet Respir
Med. 2015 May 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to increased morbidity and mortality, mechanical
ventilation is also associated with higher costs. While the literature
on costs of mechanical ventilation are limited for the LTCH setting,
studies in the acute care hospital ICU setting indicate that patients
who require mechanical ventilation can have up to 50 percent higher
costs than patients who do not receive mechanical ventilation.\343\ ICU
patients who develop VAP incur at least $40,000 more in hospital costs
than ventilated patients without VAP, and costs increase with
increasing duration of mechanical ventilation.344
345 346
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\343\ Dasta, J. F., et al. (2005). ``Daily cost of an intensive
care unit day: the contribution of mechanical ventilation.'' Crit
Care Med 33(6): 1266-1271.
\344\ Kollef, M. H., et al. (2012). ``Economic impact of
ventilator-associated pneumonia in a large matched cohort.'' Infect
Control Hosp Epidemiol 33(3): 250-256.
\345\ Restrepo, M. I., et al. (2010). ``Economic burden of
ventilator-associated pneumonia based on total resource
utilization.'' Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 31(5): 509-515.
\346\ Sedwick, M. B., et al. (2012). ``Using evidence-based
practice to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia.'' Crit Care
Nurse 32(4): 41-51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although there is evidence regarding the benefit of daily
assessments of patient readiness for weaning from invasive mechanical
ventilation,\347\ as well as for the importance of adherence to weaning
protocols,\348\ we are not aware of any studies in LTCHs that evaluate
timing of assessment for readiness to wean with respect to the
admission date. However, an international task force, convened in 2005,
developed guideline recommendations to address the entire weaning
process. Despite the limited evidence, this task force recommended that
weaning be considered as soon as possible,\349\ because failure to
assess the patient for readiness to wean may lead to undue prolonged
mechanical ventilation,\350\ thus exposing patients unnecessarily to
adverse ventilator-associated morbidity and mortality.\351\ Based on
studies and observations of implementation of regular assessment for
SBTs and weaning protocols in ICUs, adherence to the recommended
weaning processes, including prompt assessment of weaning readiness and
initiation of SBTs, appears quite variable, likely due to differences
in clinicians' intuitive thresholds for determination of patients'
readiness to wean.352 353 Clinician delays in
recognizing that weaning may be possible and beginning assessment of
weaning readiness are two common causes of weaning delays.\354\ In one
study, 50 percent of the patients considered to be incapable of
sustaining spontaneous ventilation by clinicians later were able to
tolerate a weaning trial. The authors concluded that tests used to
validate clinician intuition on a patient's readiness for weaning are
often inaccurate and that clinicians should follow explicit protocols
to consistently test patients on their readiness to wean.\355\ Because
prompt identification of patients' readiness for SBTs has been shown to
reduce weaning duration without harm to patients,\356\ such delays
indicate less than optimal
[[Page 20094]]
performance \357\ and opportunities for improvement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\347\ Robertson, T. E., et al. (2008). ``Improved extubation
rates and earlier liberation from mechanical ventilation with
implementation of a daily spontaneous-breathing trial protocol.'' J
Am Coll Surg 206(3): 489-495.
\348\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2014). ``Protocolized versus non-
protocolized weaning for reducing the duration of mechanical
ventilation in critically ill adult patients.'' Cochrane Database
Syst Rev 11: Cd006904.
\349\ Boles, J. M., et al. (2007). ``Weaning from mechanical
ventilation.'' Eur Respir J 29(5): 1033-1056.
\350\ MacIntyre, N. R., Epstein, S. K., Carson, S., Scheinhorn,
D., Christopher, K., Muldoon, S., & National Association for Medical
Direction of Respiratory, C. (2005). Management of patients
requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: report of a NAMDRC
consensus conference. Chest, 128(6), 3937-3954.
\351\ Hess, D. R., & MacIntyre, N. R. (2011). Ventilator
discontinuation: why are we still weaning? Am J Respir Crit Care
Med, 184(4), 392-394.
\352\ MacIntyre, N. R. (2013). ``The ventilator discontinuation
process: an expanding evidence base.'' Respir Care 58(6): 1074-1086.
\353\ Kollef, M. H., et al. (1997). ``A randomized, controlled
trial of protocol-directed versus physician-directed weaning from
mechanical ventilation.'' Crit Care Med 25(4): 567-574.
\354\ Boles, J. M., et al. (2007). ``Weaning from mechanical
ventilation.'' Eur Respir J 29(5): 1033-1056.
\355\ Cook, D., et al. (2000). Criteria for Weaning from
Mechanical Ventilation. Evidence Reports/Technology Assessments,
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
\356\ Ely, E. W., et al. (1996). ``Effect on the duration of
mechanical ventilation of identifying patients capable of breathing
spontaneously.'' N Engl J Med 335(25): 1864-1869.
\357\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2014). ``Protocolized versus non-
protocolized weaning for reducing the duration of mechanical
ventilation in critically ill adult patients.'' Cochrane Database
Syst Rev 11: Cd006904.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indirect evidence for the need for prompt recognition of patients'
readiness to wean in LTCHs comes from a recent study of patients newly
admitted to LTCHs on invasive mechanical ventilation, which reported
that 32 percent of invasively mechanically ventilated patients admitted
to an LTCH passed a 5-day TCT following admission.\358\ That nearly one
third of newly admitted LTCH patients were able to be completely weaned
within five days underscores the need to assess patients' ability to
breathe without assistance soon after admission to an LTCH, and also
indicates that this quality measure has potential to positively impact
the health and quality of care received by a considerable proportion of
the LTCH patient population.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\358\ Jubran, A., et al. (2013). ``Effect of pressure support vs
unassisted breathing through a tracheostomy collar on weaning
duration in patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a
randomized trial.'' JAMA 309(7): 671-677.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because invasive mechanical ventilation should be discontinued as
soon as patients are capable of breathing
independently,359 360 unnecessarily prolonged mechanical
ventilation can be an indicator of poor care quality or of persistent
illness.\361\ This quality measure is designed to encourage adherence
to evidence-based and consensus-based guidelines through implementation
of timely assessment of patient readiness to wean and trials of
unassisted breathing. To increase timeliness of weaning and reduce
patient risk of complications, it is important to assess a patient's
need for continued mechanical ventilation at the time of admission.
Measuring and comparing assessment of readiness to wean and compliance
with SBT by Day 2 is expected to help differentiate among facilities
with varying performance in this important domain. The anticipated
improvement in quality is an improvement in timeliness of weaning and
ventilator liberation for patients admitted to LTCHs on invasive
mechanical ventilation. In addition, facilities can use results of this
measure to improve timely compliance with evidence-based weaning
guidelines and develop ventilator weaning quality improvement programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\359\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2011). ``Use of weaning protocols
for reducing duration of mechanical ventilation in critically ill
adult patients: Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis.'' BMJ
342: c7237.
\360\ Epstein, S. K. (2009). Weaning from ventilatory support.
Curr Opin Crit Care, 15(1), 36-43. doi: 10.1097/
MCC.0b013e3283220e07.
\361\ MacIntyre, N. R. (2013). ``The ventilator discontinuation
process: an expanding evidence base.'' Respir Care 58(6): 1074-1086.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A TEP assembled by our measure development contractor convened nine
meetings (two in-person meetings and seven webinars) between April 2014
and August 2016 in order to refine the quality measure's technical
specifications, including the measure target population, inclusion and
exclusion criteria, and key definitions (for example, ``non-weaning'').
The TEP also offered feedback on the individual LTCH CARE Data Set
ventilator weaning items and supported the feasibility of implementing
this measure in the LTCH setting. The measure developer recruited two
former patients successfully weaned from mechanical ventilation as well
as the primary caregiver of one of the patients to solicit their views
on the measures. The 2014-2016 Development of Long-Term Care Hospital
(LTCH) Ventilator Weaning Quality Measures Technical Expert Panel
Summary Report is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We also solicited stakeholder feedback on the development of this
measure through a public comment period held from May 19, 2016, through
June 9, 2016. Several stakeholders and organizations supported this
measure for implementation, including hospitals and professional
organizations. The public comment summary report for the proposed
measure is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Our measure development contractor conducted a pilot test on the
data elements used to calculate this quality measure. The pilot test
was conducted in 10 LTCHs among approximately 150 LTCH patients and
used a mixed methods research design to collect data. Quantitative data
on the ventilator weaning items was collected from May 27, 2016 through
September 10, 2016, and qualitative data on these items was collected
from June 6, 2016 through October 4, 2016. The LTCHs who participated
in the pilot test were selected to represent variation across several
key facility-level characteristics: geographic location, size, and
profit status.
The qualitative data from the pilot test of the ventilator weaning
process measure supported the importance of the measure. Results from
qualitative and quantitative analysis further support the feasibility
of data collection for this quality measure. Data collection for this
quality measure was not seen as burdensome by pilot sites. The pilot
test summary report for this measure is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The NQF-convened MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup met on December 12, 2014 and
again on December 14 and 15, 2015. During these meetings, the MAP
encouraged continued development of this proposed measure,
acknowledging that there is evidence for interventions that improve
ventilator care,\362\ that variation in quality of care exists among
LTCHs,\363\ and that ventilator care is an important safety priority
for LTCHs.\364\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\362\ ``Spreadsheet of MAP 2015 Final Recommendations (XLSX).''
Measure Applications Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care
Workgroup. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=78711.
\363\ ``Spreadsheet of MAP 2016 Final Recommendations (XLSX).''
Measure Applications Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care
Workgroup. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=81593.
\364\ MAP 2015 Considerations for Implementing Measures in
Federal Programs: Draft for Public Comment. Measure Applications
Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care Workgroup. Available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75370.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the MAP's review and recommendation of continued development
in 2015, we have continued to refine this proposed measure in
compliance with the MAP's recommendations. Results of continued
development activities, including stakeholder feedback from the 2016
public comment period and 2016 pilot test findings, were presented to
the MAP during the MAP feedback loop meeting in October 2016. The
proposed measure is consistent with the information submitted to the
MAP, and the original MAP submission and our continued refinements
support its scientific acceptability for use in quality reporting
programs. As discussed with the MAP, we fully anticipate that
additional analyses will continue once data collection for the measure
begins. More information about the MAP's recommendations for this
proposed measure is available at: //www.qualityforum.org/
Publications/2016/02/MAP_2016_Considerations_
[[Page 20095]]
for_Implementing_Measures_in_Federal_Programs_-_PAC-LTC.aspx.
We reviewed the NQF's consensus endorsed measures and were unable
to identify any NQF-endorsed ventilator weaning quality measures
focused on assessment of readiness to wean for patients admitted on
invasive mechanical ventilation in the LTCH setting. We are unaware of
any other quality measures for weaning from invasive mechanical
ventilation that have been endorsed or adopted by another consensus
organization for the LTCH setting. Therefore, based on the evidence
discussed above, we are proposing to adopt the quality measure
entitled, Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay, for the LTCH
QRP beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. We plan to submit the quality
measure to the NQF for consideration for endorsement.
We are proposing that data for this ventilator weaning quality
measure be collected through the LTCH CARE Data Set, with submission
through the QIES ASAP System. For more information on LTCH QRP
reporting using the QIES ASAP System, we refer readers to our Web site
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCHTechnicalInformation.html. We
intend to revise the LTCH CARE Data Set to include new items that
assess processes for weaning from invasive mechanical ventilation,
should this proposed measure be adopted.
This measure is calculated and reported for two components. The
proposed measure denominator for Component 1, Percentage of Patients
Assessed for Readiness for SBT by Day 2 of LTCH Stay, is the total
number of patients admitted during the reporting period who were on
invasive mechanical ventilation upon admission to an LTCH and expected
or anticipated by the provider to undergo weaning attempts at
admission. The proposed measure numerator for Component 1 is the number
of patients admitted on invasive mechanical ventilation during the
reporting period who were assessed for readiness for SBT (including TCT
or CPAP breathing trial) by Day 2 of the LTCH stay.
The proposed measure denominator for Component 2, Percentage of
Patients Ready for SBT Who Received SBT by Day 2 of LTCH Stay, is the
subset of patients in the denominator of the Component 1, who were
assessed and deemed ready for SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH stay. The
proposed measure numerator for Component 2, Percentage of Patients
Ready for SBT Who Received SBT by Day 2 of LTCH Stay, is the number of
patients admitted on invasive mechanical ventilation during the
reporting period who were ready for SBT and who received an SBT
(including TCT or CPAP breathing trial) by Day 2 of the LTCH stay.
For technical information about this proposed measure, including
information about the measure calculation and proposed measure
denominator exclusions, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to adopt the
quality measure, Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay,
beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
c. Proposed Mechanical Ventilation Outcome Quality Measure: Ventilator
Liberation Rate
Invasive mechanical ventilation care was identified as an important
gap in the LTCH QRP measure set,\365\ and aligns with the National
Quality Strategy priority and the CMS Quality Strategy goal of
``promoting the most effective prevention and treatment practices'' by
reducing the risk of complications from unnecessarily prolonged
mechanical ventilation. We are proposing to adopt the quality measure,
Ventilator Liberation Rate, for the LTCH QRP beginning with the FY 2020
LTCH QRP. The data applicable to this measure that must be reported by
LTCHs for admissions as well as discharges occurring on or after April
1, 2018 is described in section IX.C.11. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\365\ Technical Expert Panel Report: Quality Measures for Long-
Term Care Hospitals. Thaker, S., Gage, B., Bernard, S., and Nguyen,
K. March 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Ventilator Liberation Rate measure is an outcome quality
measure. This quality measure is a facility-level measure that reports
the percentage of LTCH patients admitted on invasive mechanical
ventilation, for whom weaning attempts were expected or anticipated,
and are fully weaned by the end of their LTCH stay. Patients who are
considered fully weaned at discharge are those who did not require any
invasive mechanical ventilation support for at least 2 consecutive
calendar days immediately prior to discharge. While the first
ventilator weaning measure we are proposing captures the weaning
process, this measure captures the key outcome of successful liberation
from invasive mechanical ventilation.
We refer readers to section IX.C.7.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for information regarding the literature review in
support of proposing the mechanical ventilation process quality
measure, Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay.
Discontinuation of invasive mechanical ventilation, known as
weaning or liberation, is feasible for many ventilated patients, and is
associated with improved health outcomes. In LTCHs, higher weaning
rates have been associated with lower post-discharge mortality, even
among the elderly,366 367 368 369 370 and fewer days of
mechanical ventilation may lead to decreased risk of ventilator-
associated complications/events, enhanced rehabilitation opportunities,
and a shorter length of stay.\371\ Based on the evidence, increasing
weaning rates is expected to reduce the risk of harm associated with
invasive mechanical ventilation, thus contributing to more favorable
clinical outcomes for patients 372 373 and
decreased costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\366\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2014). ``Protocolized versus non-
protocolized weaning for reducing the duration of mechanical
ventilation in critically ill adult patients.'' Cochrane Database
Syst Rev 11: Cd006904.
\367\ Frengley, J., et al. (2014). ``Prolonged mechanical
ventilation in 540 seriously ill older adults: effects of increasing
age on clinical outcomes and survival.'' J Am Geriatr Soc 62(1): 1-
9.
\368\ Rose, L. and I. M. Fraser (2012). ``Patient
characteristics and outcomes of a provincial prolonged-ventilation
weaning centre: a retrospective cohort study.'' Can Respir J 19(3):
216-220.
\369\ Scheinhorn, D. J., et al. (2007). ``Post-ICU mechanical
ventilation at 23 long-term care hospitals: a multicenter outcomes
study.'' Chest 131(1): 85-93.
\370\ Stearn-Hassenpflug, M., et al. (2013). ``Post-ICU
Mechanical Ventilation: Trends in Mortality and 12-month Post-
discharge Survival.'' Critical Care Medicine 41(12): A166.
\371\ Hassenpflug, M. S., et al. (2015). Post-ICU Mechanical
Ventilation: Outcomes of the Revised Therapist-Implemented Patient-
Specific Weaning Protocol. [abstract] B44. Invasive And Non-Invasive
Mechanical Ventilation, American Thoracic Society: A3166-A3166.
\372\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2014). ``Protocolized versus non-
protocolized weaning for reducing the duration of mechanical
ventilation in critically ill adult patients.'' Cochrane Database
Syst Rev 11: Cd006904.
\373\ Jubran, ``Effect of pressure support vs unassisted
breathing through a tracheostomy collar on weaning duration in
patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a randomized
trial.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Numerous studies from 1991 through 2015 have reported a range of
ventilator liberation rates among LTCHs. A review of nine single-center
studies conducted between 1991 and 2001 reported that, among more than
3,000 patients with
[[Page 20096]]
PMV >21 days, facility-level liberation rates ranged from 34 percent to
60 percent, with an overall weaning rate of 52 percent.\374\ A recent
systematic review identified nine studies (4,769 patients) reporting
the proportion of patients successfully liberated from ventilation in
LTCHs, and found a pooled weaning rate of 47 percent (95 percent CI 42-
51); rates reported by individual studies conducted in the United
States varied from 13 percent to 56 percent.\375\ Lower liberation
rates may indicate less-than-optimal performance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\374\ Scheinhorn, D. J., et al. (2001). ``Post-ICU weaning from
mechanical ventilation: the role of long-term facilities.'' Chest
120(6 Suppl): 482S-484S.
\375\ Damuth, E., et al. (2015). ``Long-term survival of
critically ill patients treated with prolonged mechanical
ventilation: a systematic review and meta-analysis.'' Lancet Respir
Med.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ventilator liberation rate is an actionable health care outcome.
Multiple interventions have been shown to increase ventilator
liberation rates, including selection and implementation of weaning
protocols, ventilator modes, and type of pressure support strategies.
Multiple studies in LTCHs 376 377 378 and ICUs
379 380 provide evidence to support the relationship between
weaning processes and the successful weaning of mechanically ventilated
LTCH patients. The effectiveness of these interventions suggests that
improvement in liberation rates among LTCH patients is possible through
modifying provider-led processes and interventions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\376\ Jubran, A., et al. (2013). ``Effect of pressure support vs
unassisted breathing through a tracheostomy collar on weaning
duration in patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a
randomized trial.'' JAMA 309(7): 671-677.
\377\ Vitacca, M., et al. (2001). ``Comparison of two methods
for weaning patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
requiring mechanical ventilation for more than 15 days.'' Am J
Respir Crit Care Med 164(2): 225-230.
\378\ Hassenpflug, M. S., et al. (2015). Post-ICU Mechanical
Ventilation: Outcomes of the Revised Therapist-Implemented Patient-
Specific (TIPS?) Weaning Protocol. B44. Invasive And Non-Invasive
Mechanical Ventilation, American Thoracic Society: A3166-A3166.
\379\ Ely, E. W., et al. (1996). ``Effect on the duration of
mechanical ventilation of identifying patients capable of breathing
spontaneously.'' N Engl J Med 335(25): 1864-1869.
\380\ Burns, K. E., et al. (2014). ``Noninvasive ventilation as
a weaning strategy for mechanical ventilation in adults with
respiratory failure: a Cochrane systematic review.'' CMAJ 186(3):
E112-122.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expectations of successful ventilator liberation are high for many
LTCH patients.381 382 383 Unnecessarily prolonged mechanical
ventilation increases the risk of negative patient outcomes and can be
an indicator of poor quality care or of persistent illness.\384\ Based
on the evidence, improving weaning processes and increasing weaning
rates are expected to mitigate the risk of harm associated with
invasive mechanical ventilation, thus contributing to more favorable
clinical outcomes for patients 385 386 and decreased
costs.\387\ This quality measure, Ventilator Liberation Rate, will
assess the proportion of patients discharged alive from an LTCH who are
fully weaned, thereby promoting weaning efforts and encouraging quality
management of LTCH patients on invasive mechanical ventilation. Kahn et
al. (2013) noted that inclusion of a liberation outcome measure is key
to providing a truly patient-centered measure related to invasive
mechanical ventilation weaning among LTCH patients.\388\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\381\ Rose, L. and I. M. Fraser (2012). ``Patient
characteristics and outcomes of a provincial prolonged-ventilation
weaning centre: a retrospective cohort study.'' Can Respir J 19(3):
216-220.
\382\ Hassenpflug, M. S., et al. (2011). Post-ICU Mechanical
Ventilation: Extended Care Facility Residents Transferred From
Intensive Care To Long-Term Acute Care. American Thoracic Society
2011 International Conference. Denver, Colorado.
\383\ Hassenpflug, M. S., et al. (2015). Post-ICU Mechanical
Ventilation: Outcomes of the Revised Therapist-Implemented Patient-
Specific (TIPS?) Weaning Protocol. B44. Invasive And Non-Invasive
Mechanical Ventilation, American Thoracic Society: A3166-A3166.
\384\ MacIntyre, N. R. (2013). ``The ventilator discontinuation
process: an expanding evidence base.'' Respir Care 58(6): 1074-1086.
\385\ Blackwood, B., et al. (2014). ``Protocolized versus non-
protocolized weaning for reducing the duration of mechanical
ventilation in critically ill adult patients.'' Cochrane Database
Syst Rev 11: Cd006904.
\386\ Jubran, A., et al. (2013). ``Effect of pressure support vs
unassisted breathing through a tracheostomy collar on weaning
duration in patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation: a
randomized trial.'' JAMA 309(7): 671-677.
\387\ Dasta, J. F., et al. (2005). ``Daily cost of an intensive
care unit day: the contribution of mechanical ventilation.'' Crit
Care Med 33(6): 1266-1271.
\388\ Kahn, J. M., & Carson, S. S. (2013). Generating evidence
on best practice in long-term acute care hospitals. JAMA, 309(7),
719-720.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A TEP assembled by our measure development contractor convened nine
meetings (two in-person meetings and seven webinars) between April 2014
and August 2016. TEP members provided input to guide the development of
the quality measures, including feedback on the individual LTCH CARE
Data Set ventilator weaning items, the target population, inclusion and
exclusion criteria, and patient demographic and clinical factors that
could affect ventilator weaning outcomes (risk adjustors). The TEP also
supported the feasibility of implementing this measure in the LTCH
setting. The measure developer recruited two former patients
successfully weaned from mechanical ventilation as well as the primary
caregiver of one of the patients to solicit their views on the
measures. The 2014-2016 Development of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH)
Ventilator Weaning Quality Measures Technical Expert Panel Summary
Report is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We also solicited stakeholder feedback on the development of this
measure through a public comment period held from May 19, 2016, through
June 9, 2016. Several stakeholders and organizations supported this
measure for implementation, including hospitals and professional
organizations. The public comment summary report for the proposed
measure is available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Our measure development contractor conducted a pilot test on the
proposed data elements used to calculate this quality measure. The
pilot test was conducted in ten LTCHs among approximately 150 LTCH
patients and used a mixed methods research design to collect data.
Quantitative data on the ventilator weaning items was collected from
May 27, 2016 through September 10, 2016, and qualitative data on these
items was collected from June 6, 2016 through October 4, 2016. The
LTCHs who participated in the pilot test were selected to represent
variation across several key facility-level characteristics: geographic
location, size, and profit status.
The qualitative data from the pilot test of the ventilator
liberation quality measure supported the importance of the measure;
results from qualitative and quantitative analysis also supported the
feasibility of data collection. Data collection for this quality
measure was not seen as burdensome by pilot sites. The pilot test
summary report for this measure is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The NQF-convened MAP PAC/LTC Workgroup met on December 12, 2014,
and on December 14 and 15, 2015. During these meetings, the MAP
provided input on the importance and
[[Page 20097]]
specifications of this measure. The MAP encouraged continued
development of the measure, stating that this measure has high value
potential for the LTCH QRP \389\ because successful weaning is
important for improving quality of life and decreasing morbidity,
mortality, and resource use among patients.390 391
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\389\ ``Spreadsheet of MAP 2016 Final Recommendations (XLSX).''
Measure Applications Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care
Workgroup. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=81593.
\390\ MAP 2015 Considerations for Implementing Measures in
Federal Programs: Draft for Public Comment. Measure Applications
Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care Workgroup. Available at:
//www.qualityforum.org/ProjectMaterials.aspx?projectID=75370.
\391\ ``Spreadsheet of MAP 2016 Final Recommendations (XLSX).''
Measure Applications Partnership Post Acute Care/Long-Term Care
Workgroup. Available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=81593.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the MAP's review and recommendation of continued development
in 2015, we have continued to refine this proposed measure in
compliance with the MAP's recommendations. Results of continued
development activities, including stakeholder feedback from the 2016
public comment period and 2016 pilot test findings, were presented to
the MAP during the MAP feedback loop meeting in October 2016. The
proposed measure is consistent with the information submitted to the
MAP, and the original MAP submission and our continued refinements
support its scientific acceptability for use in quality reporting
programs. As discussed with the MAP, we fully anticipate that
additional analyses will continue once data collection for the measure
begins. More information about the MAP's recommendations for this
measure is available at: //www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2016/02/MAP_2016_Considerations_for_Implementing_Measures_in_Federal_Programs_-_PAC-LTC.aspx.
We reviewed the NQF's consensus endorsed measures and were unable
to identify any NQF-endorsed ventilator weaning quality measures
focused on the liberation status at discharge for patients admitted on
invasive mechanical ventilation in the LTCH setting. We are unaware of
any other quality measures for liberation from invasive mechanical
ventilation that have been endorsed or adopted by another consensus
organization for the LTCH setting. Therefore, based on the evidence
discussed above, we are proposing to adopt the quality measure
entitled, Ventilator Liberation Rate, for the LTCH QRP beginning with
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. We plan to submit the quality measure to the NQF
for consideration for endorsement.
We are proposing that data for this quality measure be collected
through the LTCH CARE Data Set, with the submission through the QIES
ASAP System. For more information on LTCH QRP reporting using the QIES
ASAP system, we refer readers to our Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCHTechnicalInformation.html. We intend to revise
the LTCH CARE Data Set to include new items that assess invasive
mechanical ventilation liberation at discharge, should this proposed
measure be adopted.
This measure reports facility-level Ventilator Liberation Rate for
patients admitted to an LTCH on invasive mechanical ventilation, and
for whom weaning attempts were expected or anticipated as reported on
the Admission Assessment. The Ventilator Liberation Rate is defined as
the percentage of patients on invasive mechanical ventilation upon
admission who are alive and fully liberated at discharge. The proposed
measure denominator is the number of patients requiring invasive
mechanical ventilation support upon admission to an LTCH, except those
who meet exclusion criteria. The proposed measure numerator is the
number of patients who are discharged alive and fully liberated. This
measure is risk-adjusted for variables such as age, neurological injury
or disease, dialysis, and other comorbidities and treatments. If a
patient has more than one LTCH stay during the reporting period, then
each LTCH stay will be included in the measure calculation and
reporting. For technical information about this measure, including
information about the measure calculation, risk adjustment, and
proposed measure denominator exclusions, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We are inviting public comments on our proposal to adopt the
quality measure, Ventilation Liberation Rate, beginning with the FY
2020 LTCH QRP.
8. Proposed Removal of the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure for
30 Days Post-Discharge From LTCHs From the LTCH QRP
We are proposing to remove the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission
Measure for 30 Days Post-Discharge from LTCHs (NQF #2512) from the LTCH
QRP.
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49730 through
49731), we adopted the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure for 30
Days Post-Discharge from LTCHs (NQF #2512) for the LTCH QRP. This
measure assesses all-cause unplanned hospital readmissions from LTCHs.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57215 through 57219), we
adopted the Potentially Preventable 30-Day Post-Discharge Readmission
Measure for LTCH QRP to fulfill IMPACT Act requirements. In response to
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we received public comments
expressing concern over the multiplicity of readmission measures and
the overlap between the All-Cause Readmission and Potentially
Preventable Readmission (PPR) 30-Day Post-Discharge measures (see 81 FR
57217 through 57218). Commenters also stated that more than one
readmission measure would create confusion and require additional
effort by providers to track and improve performance.
We retained the All-Cause Readmission measure because it would
allow us to monitor trends in both all-cause and PPR rates. In
particular, we could compare facility performance on the All-Cause
Readmission and PPR 30-Day Post-Discharge measures. However, upon
further consideration of the public comments, we believe that removing
the All-Cause Readmission measure and retaining the PPR 30-Day Post-
Discharge measure in the LTCH QRP would prevent duplication, because
potentially preventable readmissions are a subset of all-cause
readmissions. Although there is no data collection burden associated
with these claims-based measures, we recognize that having two hospital
readmission measures in the LTCH QRP may create confusion. We agree
with commenters that there is overlap between the All-Cause Readmission
measure and the PPR 30-Day Post-Discharge measure, which identifies a
subset of all-cause readmissions, and believe the PPR measure will be
more actionable for quality improvement.
We are proposing to remove the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission
measure beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP. We are proposing that
public reporting of this measure would end by October 2018 when public
reporting of the PPR
[[Page 20098]]
30-Day Post-Discharge measure begins by October 2018. We refer readers
to section IX.C.17. of the preamble of this proposed rule for more
information regarding our proposal to publicly report the PPR 30-Day
Post-Discharge measure. We refer readers to the PPR 30-Day Post-
Discharge measure specifications available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/Downloads/Measure-Specifications-for-FY17-LTCH-QRP-Final-Rule.pdf.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to remove the All-
Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure for 30 Days Post-Discharge from
LTCHs (NQF #2512) from the LTCH QRP, beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH
QRP.
9. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Under Consideration for Future Years
a. LTCH QRP Quality Measures Under Consideration for Future Years
We are inviting public comment on the importance, relevance,
appropriateness, and applicability of each of the quality measures
listed in the table below for future years in the LTCH QRP.
LTCH QRP Quality Measures Under Consideration for Future Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NQS Priority: Patient- and Caregiver-Centered Care
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measures.......................... Experience of Care.
Application of Percent of
Residents Who Self-Report Moderate
to Severe Pain (Short Stay) (NQF
#0676).
Advance Care Plan.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NQS Priority: Patient Safety
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure........................... Patients Who Received an
Antipsychotic Medication.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NQS Priority: Communication and Care Coordination
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure........................... Modification of the
Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP
measure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this proposed rule, we are also soliciting public comments on
the use of survey-based experience of care measures for the LTCH QRP.
We are currently developing an experience of care survey for LTCHs and
survey-based measures will be developed from this survey. These survey-
based measures may be considered for inclusion in the LTCH QRP through
future notice-and-comment rulemaking. This survey was developed using a
rigorous survey development methodology that included a public request
for measures titled Request for Information To Aid in the Design and
Development of a Survey Regarding Patient and Family Member Experiences
With Care Received in Long-Term Care Hospitals (80 FR 72722 through
72725); focus groups and interviews with patients, family members, and
caregivers; input from a TEP of LTCHs, researchers, and patient
advocates; and cognitive interviewing. The survey has also been field
tested. The survey explores experience of care across five main areas:
(1) Beginning stay at the hospital; (2) interactions with staff; (3)
experience during the hospital stay; (4) preparing for leaving
hospital; and (5) overall hospital rating. We are specifically
interested in comments regarding survey implementation and logistics,
use of the survey-based measures in the LTCH QRP, and general feedback.
Also, we are considering a measure focused on pain that relies on
the collection of patient-reported pain data, and another measure that
documents whether a patient has an Advance Care Plan. Finally, we are
considering a measure related to patient safety, specifically, Patients
Who Received an Antipsychotic Medication. We are inviting public
comment on the possible inclusion of such measures in future years of
the LTCH QRP.
b. IMPACT Act Measure--Possible Future Update to Measure Specifications
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57207 through
57215), we finalized the Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP measure,
which assesses successful discharge to the community from an LTCH
setting, with successful discharge to the community including no
unplanned rehospitalizations and no death in the 31 days following
discharge from the LTCH. We received public comments (see 81 FR 57211)
recommending exclusion of baseline nursing facility residents from the
measure, as these residents did not live in the community prior to
their LTCH stay. At that time, we highlighted that, using Medicare FFS
claims alone, we were unable to accurately identify baseline nursing
facility residents. We stated that potential future modifications of
the measure could include assessment of the feasibility and impact of
excluding baseline nursing facility residents from the measure through
the addition of patient assessment-based data. In response to these
public comments, we are considering a future modification of the
Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP measure, which would exclude
baseline nursing facility residents from the measure.
We are inviting public comment on the possibility of excluding
baseline nursing facility residents from the Discharge to Community-PAC
LTCH QRP measure in future years of the LTCH QRP.
c. IMPACT Act Implementation Update
As a result of the input and suggestions provided by technical
experts at the TEPs held by our measure developer, and through public
comment, we are engaging in additional development work, including
performing additional testing, with respect to two measures that would
satisfy the domain of accurately communicating the existence of and
providing for the transfer of health information and care preferences
when the individual transitions, in section 1899B(c)(1)(E) of the Act.
The measures under development are: Transfer of Information at Post-
Acute Care Admission, Start or Resumption of Care from other Providers/
Settings; and Transfer of Information at Post-Acute Care Discharge, and
End of Care to other Providers/Settings. We intend to specify these
measures under section 1899B(c)(1)(E) of the Act no later than October
1, 2018, and we intend to propose to adopt them for the FY 2021 LTCH
QRP, with data collection beginning on or about April 1, 2019.
[[Page 20099]]
10. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting for the
LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting for the FY
2019 LTCH QRP
Section 1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act requires that for fiscal year
2019 and each subsequent year, LTCHs report standardized patient
assessment data required under section 1899B(b)(1) of the Act. As we
describe in more detail above, we are proposing that the current
pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or Patients with Pressure
Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), be replaced
with the proposed pressure ulcer measure, Changes in Skin Integrity
Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury, beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP. The current pressure ulcer measure will remain in the LTCH QRP
until that time. Accordingly, with respect to the requirement that
LTCHs report standardized patient assessment data for the FY 2019 LTCH
QRP, we are proposing that the data elements used to calculate that
measure meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to medical conditions and co-morbidities under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act, and that the successful reporting of
that data under section 1886(m)(5)(F)(i) of the Act with respect to
admissions as well as discharges occurring during last three quarters
of CY 2017 would also satisfy the requirement to report standardized
patient assessment data for the FY 2019 LTCH QRP.
The collection of assessment data pertaining to skin integrity,
specifically pressure related wounds, is important for multiple
reasons. Clinical decision support, care planning, and quality
improvement all depend on reliable assessment data collection. Pressure
related wounds represent poor outcomes, are a serious medical condition
that can result in death and disability, are debilitating, painful and
are often an avoidable outcome of medical
care.392 393 394 395 396 397 Pressure related wounds are
considered healthcare acquired conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\392\ Casey, G. (2013). ``Pressure ulcers reflect quality of
nursing care.'' Nurs N Z 19(10): 20-24.
\393\ Gorzoni, M.L. and S.L. Pires (2011). ``Deaths in nursing
homes.'' Rev Assoc Med Bras 57(3): 327-331.
\394\ Thomas, J.M., et al. (2013). ``Systematic review: health-
related characteristics of elderly hospitalized adults and nursing
home residents associated with short-term mortality.'' J Am Geriatr
Soc 61(6): 902-911.
\395\ White-Chu, E.F., et al. (2011). ``Pressure ulcers in long-
term care.'' Clin Geriatr Med 27(2): 241-258.
\396\ Bates-Jensen BM. Quality indicators for prevention and
management of pressure ulcers in vulnerable elders. Ann Int Med.
2001;135 (8 Part 2), 744-51.
\397\ Bennet, G, Dealy, C, Posnett, J (2004). The cost of
pressure ulcers in the UK, Age and Aging, 33(3):230-235.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we note above, the data elements needed to calculate the current
pressure ulcer measure are already included on the LTCH CARE Data Set
and reported by LTCHs, and exhibit validity and reliability for use
across PAC providers. Item reliability for these data elements was also
tested for the nursing home setting during implementation of MDS 3.0.
Testing results are from the RAND Development and Validation of MDS 3.0
project.\398\ The RAND pilot test of the MDS 3.0 data elements showed
good reliability and is also applicable to both the IRF-PAI and the
LTCH CARE Data Set because the data elements tested are the same.
Across the pressure ulcer data elements, the average gold-standard
nurse to gold-standard nurse kappa statistic was 0.905. The average
gold-standard nurse to facility-nurse kappa statistic was 0.937. Data
elements used to risk adjust this quality measure were also tested
under this same pilot test, and the gold-standard to gold-standard
kappa statistic, or percent agreement (where kappa statistic not
available), ranged from 0.91 to 0.99 for these data elements. These
kappa scores indicate ``almost perfect'' agreement using the Landis and
Koch standard for strength of agreement.\399\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\398\ Saliba, D., & Buchanan, J. (2008, April). Development and
validation of a revised nursing home assessment tool: MDS 3.0.
Contract No. 500-00-0027/Task Order #2. Santa Monica, CA: Rand
Corporation. Retrieved from //www.cms.hhs.gov/NursingHomeQualityInits/Downloads/MDS30FinalReport.pdf.
\399\ Landis, R., & Koch, G. (1977, March). The measurement of
observer agreement for categorical data. Biometrics 33(1), 159-174.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The data elements used to calculate the current pressure ulcer
measure received public comment on several occasions, including when
that measure was proposed in the FY 2012 IRF PPS (76 FR 47876) and
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rules (76 FR 51754). Further, they were
discussed in the past by TEPs held by our measure development
contractor on June 13 and November 15, 2013, and recently by a TEP on
July 18, 2016. TEP members supported the measure and its cross-setting
use in PAC. The report, Technical Expert Panel Summary Report:
Refinement of the Percent of Patients or Residents with Pressure Ulcers
that are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678) Quality Measure for
Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs), Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities
(IRFs), Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs), and Home Health Agencies
(HHAs), is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
b. Proposed Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting Beginning
With the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
We describe below our proposals for the reporting of standardized
patient assessment data by LTCHs beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
LTCHs would be required to report these data with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018, with the exception of three data elements (Brief Interview of
Mental Status (BIMS), Hearing, and Vision) that would be required with
respect to LTCH admissions only that occur between April 1, 2018 and
December 31, 2018. The BIMS, Hearing, and Vision data elements would be
assessed at admission only due to the relatively stable nature of the
types of cognitive function, hearing impairment, and vision impairment,
making it unlikely that these assessments would change between the
start and end of the PAC stay. Assessment of the BIMS, Hearing, and
Vision data elements at discharge would introduce additional burden
without improving the quality or usefulness of the data, and is
unnecessary. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
In selecting the data elements proposed below, we carefully weighed
the balance of burden in assessment-based data collection and aimed to
minimize additional burden through the utilization of existing data in
the assessment instruments.
We also took into consideration the following factors with respect
to each data element: overall clinical relevance; ability to support
clinical decisions, care planning and interoperable exchange to
facilitate care coordination during transitions in care; and the
ability to capture medical complexity and risk factors that can inform
both payment and quality. In addition, the data elements had to have
strong scientific reliability and validity; be meaningful enough to
inform longitudinal analysis by providers; had to have received general
consensus agreement for its usability; and had to have the ability to
collect such data once but support multiple uses. Further,
[[Page 20100]]
to inform the final set of data elements for proposal, we took into
account technical and clinical subject matter expert review, public
comment, and consensus input in which such principles were applied. We
also took into account the consensus work and empirical findings from
the PAC-PRD.
Below, we discuss the proposed standardized patient assessment data
by category.
(1) Functional Status Data
We are proposing that the data elements currently reported by LTCHs
to calculate the measure, Application of Percent of Long-Term Care
Hospital Patients with an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment
and a Care Plan That Addresses Function (NQF #2631), would also meet
the definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
functional status under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(i) of the Act, and that
the successful reporting of that data under section 1886(m)(5)(F)(i) of
the Act would also satisfy the requirement to report standardized
patient assessment data under section 1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act.
These patient assessment data for functional status are from the
CARE Item Set. The development of the CARE Item Set and a description
and rationale for each item is described in a report entitled ``The
Development and Testing of the Continuity Assessment Record and
Evaluation (CARE) Item Set: Final Report on the Development of the CARE
Item Set: Volume 1 of 3.'' \400\ Reliability and validity testing were
conducted as part of CMS' Post-Acute Care Payment Reform Demonstration,
and we concluded that the functional status items have acceptable
reliability and validity. A description of the testing methodology and
results are available in several reports, including the report entitled
``The Development and Testing of the Continuity Assessment Record And
Evaluation (CARE) Item Set: Final Report On Reliability Testing: Volume
2 of 3'' \401\ and the report entitled ``The Development and Testing of
The Continuity Assessment Record And Evaluation (CARE) Item Set: Final
Report on Care Item Set and Current Assessment Comparisons: Volume 3 of
3.'' \402\ The reports are available on CMS' Post-Acute Care Quality
Initiatives Web page at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/CARE-Item-Set-and-B-CARE.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\400\ Barbara Gage et al., ``The Development and Testing of the
Continuity Assessment Record and Evaluation (CARE) Item Set: Final
Report on the Development of the CARE Item Set'' (RTI International,
2012).
\401\ Ibid.
\402\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about this quality measure and the data
elements used to calculate it, we refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49739 through 49747).
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
(2) Cognitive Function and Mental Status Data
Cognitive function and mental status in PAC patient and resident
populations can be affected by a number of underlying conditions,
including dementia, stroke, traumatic brain injury, side effects of
medication, metabolic and/or endocrine imbalances, delirium, and
depression.\403\ The assessment of cognitive function and mental status
by PAC providers is important because of the high percentage of
patients and residents with these conditions,\404\ and the opportunity
for improving the quality of care. Symptoms of dementia may improve
with pharmacotherapy, occupational therapy, or physical
activity,405 406 407 and promising treatments for severe
traumatic brain injury are currently being tested.\408\ For older
patients and residents diagnosed with depression, treatment options to
reduce symptoms and improve quality of life include antidepressant
medication and psychotherapy,409 410 411 412 and targeted
services, such as therapeutic recreation, exercise, and restorative
nursing, to increase opportunities for psychosocial interaction.\413\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\403\ National Institute on Aging. (2014). Assessing Cognitive
Impairment in Older Patients. A Quick Guide for Primary Care
Physicians. Retrieved from: //www.nia.nih.gov/alzheimers/publication/assessing-cognitive-impairment-older-patients.
\404\ Gage B., Morley M., Smith L., et al. (2012). Post-Acute
Care Payment Reform Demonstration (Final report, Volume 4 of 4).
Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
\405\ Casey D.A., Antimisiaris D., O'Brien J. (2010). Drugs for
Alzheimer's Disease: Are They Effective? Pharmacology &
Therapeutics, 35, 208-11.
\406\ Graff M.J., Vernooij-Dassen M.J., Thijssen M., Dekker J.,
Hoefnagels W.H., Rikkert M.G.O. (2006). Community Based Occupational
Therapy for Patients with Dementia and their Care Givers: Randomised
Controlled Trial. BMJ, 333(7580): 1196.
\407\ Bherer L., Erickson K.I., Liu-Ambrose T. (2013). A Review
of the Effects of Physical Activity and Exercise on Cognitive and
Brain Functions in Older Adults. Journal of Aging Research, 657508.
\408\ Giacino J.T., Whyte J., Bagiella E., et al. (2012).
Placebo-controlled trial of amantadine for severe traumatic brain
injury. New England Journal of Medicine, 366(9), 819-826.
\409\ Alexopoulos G.S., Katz I.R., Reynolds C.F. 3rd, Carpenter
D., Docherty J.P., Ross R.W. (2001). Pharmacotherapy of depression
in older patients: a summary of the expert consensus guidelines.
Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 7(6), 361-376.
\410\ Arean P.A., Cook B.L. (2002). Psychotherapy and combined
psychotherapy/pharmacotherapy for late life depression. Biological
Psychiatry, 52(3), 293-303.
\411\ Hollon S.D., Jarrett R.B., Nierenberg A.A., Thase M.E.,
Trivedi M., Rush A.J. (2005). Psychotherapy and medication in the
treatment of adult and geriatric depression: which monotherapy or
combined treatment? Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 66(4), 455-468.
\412\ Wagenaar D, Colenda CC, Kreft M, Sawade J, Gardiner J,
Poverejan E. (2003). Treating depression in nursing homes: practice
guidelines in the real world. J Am Osteopath Assoc. 103(10), 465-
469.
\413\ Crespy SD, Van Haitsma K, Kleban M, Hann CJ. Reducing
Depressive Symptoms in Nursing Home Residents: Evaluation of the
Pennsylvania Depression Collaborative Quality Improvement Program. J
Healthc Qual. 2016. Vol. 38, No. 6, pp. e76-e88.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accurate assessment of cognitive function and mental status of
patients and residents in PAC would be expected to have a positive
impact on the National Quality Strategy's domains of patient and family
engagement, patient safety, care coordination, clinical process/
effectiveness, and efficient use of health care resources. For example,
standardized assessment of cognitive function and mental status of
patients and residents in PAC will support establishing a baseline for
identifying changes in cognitive function and mental status (for
example, delirium), anticipating the patient or resident's ability to
understand and participate in treatments during a PAC stay, ensuring
patient and resident safety (for example, risk of falls), and
identifying appropriate support needs at the time of discharge or
transfer. Standardized assessment data elements will enable or support
clinical decision-making and early clinical intervention; person-
centered, high quality care through: Facilitating better care
continuity and coordination; better data exchange and interoperability
between settings; and longitudinal outcome analysis. Hence, reliable
data elements assessing cognitive impairment and mental status are
needed in order to initiate a management program that can optimize a
patient or resident's prognosis and reduce the possibility of adverse
events.
Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS)
We are proposing that the data elements that comprise the Brief
Interview for Mental Status meet the definition of standardized patient
assessment data with respect to cognitive function and mental status
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act. The proposed data elements
consist of seven BIMS questions that result in a cognitive function
score. For more information on the BIMS, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed
[[Page 20101]]
Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized Data
Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Dementia and cognitive impairment are associated with long-term
functional dependence and, consequently, poor quality of life and
increased health care costs and mortality.\414\ This makes assessment
of mental status and early detection of cognitive decline or impairment
critical in the PAC setting. The burden of cognitive impairment in PAC
is high. The intensity of routine nursing care is higher for patients
and residents with cognitive impairment than those without, and
dementia is a significant variable in predicting readmission after
discharge to the community from PAC providers.\415\ The BIMS is a
performance-based cognitive assessment that assesses repetition, recall
with and without prompting, and temporal orientation. It was developed
to be a brief screener to assess cognition, with a focus on learning
and memory. The BIMS data elements are currently in use in two of the
PAC assessments: The MDS 3.0 in SNFs and the IRF-PAI in IRFs. The BIMS
was tested in the PAC PRD where it was found to have substantial to
almost perfect agreement for inter-rater reliability (kappa range of
0.71 to 0.91) when tested in all four PAC settings.\416\ Clinical and
subject matter expert advisors working with our data element contractor
agreed that the BIMS is a feasible data element for use by PAC
providers. In addition, discussions during a TEP convened on April 6
and 7, 2016, demonstrated support for the BIMS. The Development and
Maintenance of Post-Acute Care Cross-Setting Standardized Patient
Assessment Data Technical Expert Panel Summary Report is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\414\ Ag[uuml]ero-Torres, H., Fratiglioni, L., Guo, Z.,
Viitanen, M., von Strauss, E., & Winblad, B. (1998). ``Dementia is
the major cause of functional dependence in the elderly: 3-year
follow-up data from a population-based study.'' Am J of Public
Health 88(10): 1452-1456.
\415\ RTI International. Proposed Measure Specifications for
Measures Proposed in the FY 2017 LTCH QRP NPRM. Research Triangle
Park, NC. 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To solicit additional feedback on the BIMS, we asked for public
comment from August 12 to September 12, 2016. Many commenters expressed
support for use of the BIMS, noting that it is reliable, feasible to
use across settings, and will provide useful information about patients
and residents. These comments noted that the data collected through the
BIMS will provide a clearer picture of patient or resident complexity,
help with the care planning process, and be useful during care
transitions and when coordinating across providers. A full report of
the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing to adopt the BIMS for use in the LTCH
QRP. We are proposing to add the data elements that comprise the BIMS
to the LCDS, and that LTCHs would be required to report these data for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH admissions that occur between
April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting
year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would
be based on a full calendar year of such data reporting. The BIMS data
element would be assessed at admission only due to the relatively
stable nature of the types of cognitive function assessed by the BIMS,
making it unlikely that a patient's score on this assessment would
change between the start and end of the PAC stay. Assessment at
discharge would introduce additional burden without improving the
quality or usefulness of the data, and we believe that it is
unnecessary.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)
We are proposing that the data elements that comprise the Confusion
Assessment Method (CAM) meet the definition of standardized patient
assessment data with respect to cognitive function and mental status
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act. The CAM is a six-question
instrument that screens for overall cognitive impairment, as well as
distinguishes delirium or reversible confusion from other types of
cognitive impairment. For more information on the CAM, we refer readers
to the document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality
Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The CAM was developed to identify the signs and symptoms of
delirium. It results in a score that suggests whether the patient or
resident should be assigned a diagnosis of delirium. Because patients
and residents with multiple comorbidities receive services from PAC
providers, it is important to assess delirium, which is associated with
a high mortality rate and prolonged duration of stay in hospitalized
older adults.\417\ Assessing these signs and symptoms of delirium is
clinically relevant for care planning by PAC providers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\417\ Fick, D. M., Steis, M. R., Waller, J. L., & Inouye, S. K.
(2013). ``Delirium superimposed on dementia is associated with
prolonged length of stay and poor outcomes in hospitalized older
adults.'' J of Hospital Med 8(9): 500-505.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CAM is currently in use in two of the PAC assessments: the MDS
3.0 in SNFs and the LCDS in LTCHs. The CAM was tested in the PAC PRD
where it was found to have substantial agreement for inter-rater
reliability for the ``Inattention and Disorganized Thinking'' questions
(kappa range of 0.70 to 0.73); and moderate agreement for the ``Altered
Level of Consciousness'' question (kappa of 0.58).\418\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\418\ Gage B., Morley M., Smith L., et al. (2012). Post-Acute
Care Payment Reform Demonstration (Final report, Volume 2 of 4).
Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the CAM is feasible for use by PAC
providers, that it assesses key aspects of cognition, and that this
information about patient or resident cognition would be clinically
useful both within and across PAC provider types. The CAM was also
supported by a TEP that discussed and rated candidate data elements
during a meeting on April 6 and 7, 2016. The Development and
Maintenance of Post-Acute Care Cross-Setting Standardized Patient
Assessment Data Technical Expert Panel Summary Report is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html. We asked for public comment on
the CAM from August 12 to September 12, 2016. Many commenters expressed
support for use of the CAM, noting that it would provide important
information for care planning and care coordination, and therefore,
contribute to quality improvement. The commenters noted it is
particularly helpful in distinguishing
[[Page 20102]]
delirium and reversible confusion from other types of cognitive
impairment. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
As noted above, the CAM is already included on the LCDS. For
purposes of reporting for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, LTCHs would be required
to report these data with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges
that occur between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the
initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for
the LTCH QRP would be based on a full calendar year of such data
reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Behavioral Signs and Symptoms
We are proposing that the Behavioral Signs and Symptoms data
elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to cognitive function and mental status under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act. The proposed data elements consist of
three Behavioral Signs and Symptoms questions and result in three
scores that categorize respondents as having or not having certain
types of behavioral signs and symptoms. For more information on the
Behavioral Signs and Symptoms data elements, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The questions included in the Behavioral Signs and Symptoms group
assess whether the patient or resident has exhibited any behavioral
symptoms that may indicate cognitive impairment or other mental health
issues during the assessment period, including physical, verbal, and
other disruptive or dangerous behavioral symptoms, but excluding
patient wandering. Such behavioral disturbances can indicate
unrecognized needs and care preferences and are associated most
commonly with dementia and other cognitive impairment, and less
commonly with adverse drug events, mood disorders, and other
conditions. Assessing behavioral disturbances can lead to early
intervention, patient- and resident-centered care planning, clinical
decision support, and improved staff and patient or resident safety
through early detection. Assessment and documentation of these
disturbances can help inform care planning and patient transitions and
provide important information about resource use.
Data elements that capture behavioral symptoms are currently
included in two of the PAC assessments: the MDS 3.0 in SNFs and the
OASIS-C2 in HHAs.\419\ In the MDS, each question includes four response
options ranging from ``behavior not exhibited'' (0) to behavior
``occurred daily'' (3). The OASIS-C2 includes some similar data
elements which record the frequency of disruptive behaviors on a 6-
point scale ranging from ``never'' (0) to ``at least daily'' (5). Data
elements that mirror those used in the MDS and serve the same
assessment purpose were tested in post-acute providers in the PAC PRD
and found to be clinically relevant, meaningful for care planning, and
feasible for use in each of the four PAC settings.\420\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\420\ Gage B., Morley M., Smith L., et al. (2012). Post-Acute
Care Payment Reform Demonstration (Final report, Volume 2 of 4).
Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed data elements were supported by comments from the
Standardized Patient Assessment Data TEP held by our data element
contractor. The TEP identified patient and resident behaviors as an
important consideration for resource intensity and care planning, and
affirmed the importance of the standardized assessment of patient
behaviors through data elements such as those in use in the MDS. The
Development and Maintenance of Post-Acute Care Cross-Setting
Standardized Patient Assessment Data Technical Expert Panel Summary
Report is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Because the PAC PRD version of the Behavioral Signs and Symptoms
data elements were previously tested across PAC providers, we solicited
additional feedback on this version of the data elements by including
these data elements in a call for public comment that was open from
August 12 to September 12, 2016. Consistent with the TEP discussion on
the importance of patient and resident behaviors, many commenters
expressed support for use of the Behavioral Signs and Symptoms data
elements, noting that they would provide useful information about
patient and resident behavior at both admission and discharge and
contribute to care planning related to what treatment is appropriate
for the patient or resident and what resources are needed. Public
comment also supported the use of highly similar MDS version of the
data element in order to provide continuity with existing assessment
processes in SNFs. A full report of the comments is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing the MDS version of the Behavioral Signs
and Symptoms data elements because they focus more closely on
behavioral symptoms than the OASIS data elements, and include more
detailed response categories than those used in the PAC PRD version,
capturing more information about the frequency of behaviors. We are
proposing to add the Behavioral Signs and Symptoms data elements to the
LCDS, and that LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY
2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur
between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial
reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH
QRP would be based on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2)
We are proposing that the PHQ-2 data elements meet the definition
of standardized patient assessment data with respect to cognitive
function and mental status under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act.
The proposed data elements consist of the PHQ-2 two-item questionnaire
that assesses the cardinal criteria for depression: depressed mood and
anhedonia (inability to feel pleasure). For more information on the
PHQ-2, we refer readers to the document titled, Proposed Specifications
for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Depression is a common mental health condition often missed and
under-recognized. Assessments of depression help PAC providers better
understand the needs of their patients
[[Page 20103]]
and residents by: Prompting further evaluation (that is, to establish a
diagnosis of depression); elucidating the patient's or resident's
ability to participate in therapies for conditions other than
depression during their stay; and identifying appropriate ongoing
treatment and support needs at the time of discharge. A PHQ-2 score
beyond a predetermined threshold signals the need for additional
clinical assessment in order to determine a depression diagnosis.
The proposed data elements that comprise the PHQ-2 are currently
used in the OASIS-C2 for HHAs and the MDS 3.0 for SNFs (as part of the
PHQ-9). The PHQ-2 data elements were tested in the PAC PRD, where they
were found to have almost perfect agreement for inter-rater reliability
(kappa range of 0.84 to 0.91) when tested by all four PAC
providers.\421\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\421\ Gage B., Smith L., Ross J. et al. (2012). The Development
and Testing of the Continuity Assessment Record and Evaluation
(CARE) Item Set (Final Report on Reliability Testing, Volume 2 of
3). Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the PHQ-2 is feasible for use in PAC,
that it assesses key aspects of mental status, and that this
information about patient or resident mood would be clinically useful
both within and across PAC provider types. We note that both the PHQ-9
and the PHQ-2 were supported by TEP members who discussed and rated
candidate data elements during a meeting on April 6 and 7, 2016. They
particularly noted that the brevity of the PHQ-2 made it feasible with
low burden for both assessors and PAC patients or residents. The
Development and Maintenance of Post-Acute Care Cross-Setting
Standardized Patient Assessment Data Technical Expert Panel Summary
Report is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
To solicit additional feedback on the PHQ-2, we asked for public
comment from August 12 to September 12, 2016. Many commenters provided
feedback on using the PHQ-2 for the assessment of mood. Overall,
commenters believed that collecting these data elements across PAC
provider types was appropriate, given the role that depression plays in
well-being. Several commenters expressed support for an approach that
would use PHQ-2 as a gateway to the longer PHQ-9 and would maintain the
reduced burden on most patients and residents, as well as test
administrators, which is a benefit of the PHQ-2, while ensuring that
the PHQ-9, which exhibits higher specificity,\422\ would be
administered for patients and residents who showed signs and symptoms
of depression on the PHQ-2. Specific comments are described in a full
report available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\422\ Arroll B, Goodyear-Smith F, Crengle S, Gunn J, Kerse N,
Fishman T, et al. Validation of PHQ-2 and PHQ-9 to screen for major
depression in the primary care population. Annals of family
medicine. 2010;8(4):348-53. doi: 10.1370/afm.1139 pmid:20644190;
PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2906530.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, we are proposing to add the PHQ-2 data elements to the
LCDS, and that LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY
2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur
between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial
reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH
QRP would be based on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(3) Special Services, Treatments, and Interventions Data
Special services, treatments, and interventions performed in PAC
can have a major effect on an individual's health status, self-image,
and quality of life. The assessment of these special services,
treatments, and interventions in PAC is important to ensure the
continuing appropriateness of care for the patients and residents
receiving them, and to support care transitions from one PAC provider
to another, an acute care hospital, or discharge. Accurate assessment
of special services, treatments, and interventions of patients and
residents served by PAC providers are expected to have a positive
impact on the National Quality Strategy's domains of patient and family
engagement, patient safety, care coordination, clinical process/
effectiveness, and efficient use of health care resources.
For example, standardized assessment of special services,
treatments, and interventions used in PAC can promote patient and
resident safety through appropriate care planning (for example,
mitigating risks such as infection or pulmonary embolism associated
with central intravenous access), and identifying life-sustaining
treatments that must be continued, such as mechanical ventilation,
dialysis, suctioning, and chemotherapy, at the time of discharge or
transfer. Standardized assessment of these data elements will enable or
support: Clinical decision-making and early clinical intervention;
person-centered, high quality care through, for example, facilitating
better care continuity and coordination; better data exchange and
interoperability between settings; and longitudinal outcome analysis.
Hence, reliable data elements assessing special services, treatments,
and interventions are needed to initiate a management program that can
optimize a patient or resident's prognosis and reduce the possibility
of adverse events.
We are proposing 15 special services, treatments, and interventions
as presented below grouped by cancer treatments, respiratory
treatments, other treatments, and nutritional approaches. A TEP
convened by the data element standardization contractor provided input
on the 15 data elements for Special Services, Treatments, and
Interventions. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined that
these data elements are appropriate for standardization because they
would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning and
care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these services
and interventions is standard clinical practice, and that the
collection of these data by means of a list and checkbox format would
conform with common workflow for PAC providers. A full report of the
TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Cancer Treatment: Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other)
We are proposing that the Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other) data
elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data elements
consist of the principal Chemotherapy data element and three sub-
elements: IV Chemotherapy, Oral Chemotherapy, and Other. For more
information on the Chemotherapy data element, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //
[[Page 20104]]
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-
Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-
Information.html.
Chemotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that uses drugs to
destroy cancer cells. It is sometimes used when a patient has a
malignancy (cancer), which is a serious, often life-threatening or
life-limiting condition. Both intravenous (IV) and oral chemotherapy
have serious side effects, including nausea/vomiting, extreme fatigue,
risk of infection due to a suppressed immune system, anemia, and an
increased risk of bleeding due to low platelet counts. Oral
chemotherapy can be as potent as chemotherapy given by IV, but can be
significantly more convenient and less resource-intensive to
administer. Because of the toxicity of these agents, special care must
be exercised in handling and transporting chemotherapy drugs. IV
chemotherapy may be given by peripheral IV, but is more commonly given
via an indwelling central line, which raises the risk of bloodstream
infections. Given the significant burden of malignancy, the resource
intensity of administering chemotherapy, and the side effects and
potential complications of these highly-toxic medications, assessing
the receipt of chemotherapy is important in the PAC setting for care
planning and determining resource use.
The need for chemotherapy predicts resource intensity, both because
of the complexity of administering these potent, toxic drug
combinations under specific protocols, and because of what the need for
chemotherapy signals about the patient's underlying medical condition.
Furthermore, the resource intensity of IV chemotherapy is higher than
for oral chemotherapy, as the protocols for administration and the care
of the central line (if present) require significant resources.
The Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other) data elements consist of a
principal data element and three sub-elements: IV chemotherapy, which
is generally resource-intensive; oral chemotherapy, which is less
invasive and generally less intensive with regard to administration
protocols; and a third category provided to enable the capture of other
less common chemotherapeutic approaches. This third category is
potentially associated with higher risks and is more resource intensive
due to delivery by other routes (for example, intraventricular or
intrathecal).
The principal Chemotherapy data element is currently in use in the
MDS 3.0. One proposed sub-element, IV Chemotherapy, was tested in the
PAC PRD and found feasible for use in each of the four PAC settings. We
solicited public comment on IV Chemotherapy from August 12 to September
12, 2016. Several commenters provided support for the data element and
suggested it be included as standardized patient assessment data.
Commenters stated that assessing the use of chemotherapy services is
relevant to share across the care continuum to facilitate care
coordination and care transitions and noted the validity of the data
element. Commenters also noted the importance of capturing all types of
chemotherapy, regardless of route, and stated that collecting data only
on patients and residents who received chemotherapy by IV would limit
the usefulness of this standardized data element. A full report of the
comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
As a result of the comments and input received from clinical and
subject matter experts, we are proposing a principal Chemotherapy data
element with three sub-elements, including Oral and Other for
standardization. Our data element contractor then presented the
proposed data elements to the Standardized Patient Assessment Data TEP
on January 5 and 6, 2017, who supported these data elements for
standardization. A full report of the TEP discussion is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other)
data elements with a principal data element and three sub-elements meet
the definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other) data elements to the LCDS, and that
LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April
1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based
on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Cancer Treatment: Radiation
We are proposing that the Radiation data element meets the
definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Radiation data element. For more information on the
Radiation data element, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Radiation is a type of cancer treatment that uses high-energy
radioactivity to stop cancer by damaging cancer cell DNA, but it can
also damage normal cells. Radiation is an important therapy for
particular types of cancer, and the resource utilization is high, with
frequent radiation sessions required, often daily for a period of
several weeks. Assessing whether a patient or resident is receiving
radiation therapy is important to determine resource utilization
because PAC patients and residents will need to be transported to and
from radiation treatments, and monitored and treated for side effects
after receiving this intervention. Therefore, assessing the receipt of
radiation therapy, which would compete with other care processes given
the time burden, would be important for care planning and care
coordination by PAC providers.
The Radiation data element is currently in use in the MDS 3.0. This
data element was not tested in the PAC PRD. However, public comment and
other expert input on the Radiation data element supported its
importance and clinical usefulness for patients in PAC settings, due to
the side effects and consequences of radiation treatment on patients
that need to be considered in care planning and care transitions. To
solicit additional feedback on the Radiation data element we are
proposing, we asked for public comment from August 12 to September 12,
2016. Several commenters provided support for the data element, noting
the relevance of this data element to facilitating care coordination
and supporting care transitions, the feasibility of the item, and the
potential for it to improve quality. A full report of the comments is
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-
Assessment-
[[Page 20105]]
Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/
IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
The proposed data element was presented to and supported by the TEP
held by our data element contractor on January 5-6, 2017, which opined
that Radiation was important corollary information about cancer
treatment to collect alongside Chemotherapy (IV, Oral, Other), and
that, because capturing this information is a customary part of
clinical practice, the proposed data element would be feasible,
reliable, and easily incorporated into existing workflow.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Radiation data element meets
the definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the Radiation
data element to the LCDS, and that LTCHs would be required to report
these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH admissions and
discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018.
Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP,
subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full calendar
year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Respiratory Treatment: Oxygen Therapy (Continuous,
Intermittent)
We are proposing that the Oxygen Therapy (Continuous, Intermittent)
data elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment
data with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data
elements consist of the principal Oxygen data element and two sub-
elements, ``Continuous'' (whether the oxygen was delivered
continuously, typically defined as >=14 hours per day), or
``Intermittent.'' For more information on the Oxygen Therapy
(Continuous, Intermittent) data elements, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Oxygen therapy provides a patient or resident with extra oxygen
when medical conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
pneumonia, or severe asthma prevent the patient or resident from
getting enough oxygen from breathing. Oxygen administration is a
resource-intensive intervention, as it requires specialized equipment
such as a source of oxygen, delivery systems (for example, oxygen
concentrator, liquid oxygen containers, and high-pressure systems), the
patient interface (for example, nasal cannula or mask), and other
accessories (for example, regulators, filters, tubing). These data
elements capture patient or resident use of two types of oxygen therapy
(continuous and intermittent) which are reflective of intensity of care
needs, including the level of monitoring and bedside care required.
Assessing the receipt of this service is important for care planning
and resource use for PAC providers.
The proposed data elements were developed based on similar data
elements that assess oxygen therapy, currently in use in the MDS 3.0
(``Oxygen Therapy'') and OASIS-C2 (``Oxygen (intermittent or
continuous)''), and a data element tested in the PAC PRD that focused
on intensive oxygen therapy (``High O2 Concentration Delivery System
with FiO2 > 40%'').
As a result of input from expert advisors, we solicited public
comment on the single data element, Oxygen (inclusive of intermittent
and continuous oxygen use), from August 12 to September 12, 2016.
Several commenters supported the importance of the Oxygen data element,
noting feasibility of this item in PAC, and the relevance of it to
facilitating care coordination and supporting care transitions, but
suggesting that the extent of oxygen use be documented. A full report
of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
As a result of public comment and input from expert advisors about
the importance and clinical usefulness of documenting the extent of
oxygen use, we expanded the single data element to include two sub-
elements, intermittent and continuous.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Oxygen Therapy (Continuous,
Intermittent) data elements with a principal data element and two sub-
elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Oxygen Therapy (Continuous, Intermittent) data elements to the LCDS,
and that LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020
LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur
between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial
reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH
QRP would be based on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Respiratory Treatment: Suctioning (Scheduled, as Needed)
We are proposing that the Suctioning (Scheduled, As needed) data
elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
element with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data
elements consist of the principal Suctioning data element, and two sub-
elements, ``Scheduled'' and ``As needed.'' These sub-elements capture
two types of suctioning. ``Scheduled'' indicates suctioning based on a
specific frequency, such as every hour; ``As needed'' means suctioning
only when indicated. For more information on the Suctioning (Scheduled,
As needed) data elements, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Suctioning is a process used to clear secretions from the airway
when a person cannot clear those secretions on his or her own. It is
done by aspirating secretions through a catheter connected to a suction
source. Types of suctioning include oropharyngeal and nasopharyngeal
suctioning, nasotracheal suctioning, and suctioning through an
artificial airway such as a tracheostomy tube. Oropharyngeal and
nasopharyngeal suctioning are a key part of many patients' care plans,
both to prevent the accumulation of secretions than can lead to
aspiration pneumonias (a common condition in patients with inadequate
gag reflexes), and to relieve obstructions from mucus plugging during
an acute or chronic respiratory infection, which often lead to
desaturations and increased respiratory effort. Suctioning can be done
on a scheduled basis if the patient is judged to clinically benefit
from regular interventions; or can be done as needed, such as when
secretions become so prominent that gurgling or choking is noted, or a
sudden
[[Page 20106]]
desaturation occurs from a mucus plug. As suctioning is generally
performed by a care provider rather than independently, this
intervention can be quite resource-intensive if it occurs every hour,
for example, rather than once a shift. It also signifies an underlying
medical condition that prevents the patient from clearing his/her
secretions effectively (such as after a stroke, or during an acute
respiratory infection). Generally, suctioning is necessary to ensure
that the airway is clear of secretions which can inhibit successful
oxygenation of the individual. The intent of suctioning is to maintain
a patent airway, the loss of which can lead to death, or complications
associated with hypoxia.
The proposed data elements are based on an item currently in use in
the MDS 3.0 (``Suctioning'' without the two sub-elements), and data
elements tested in the PAC PRD that focused on the frequency of
suctioning required for patients with tracheostomies (``Trach Tube with
Suctioning: Specify most intensive frequency of suctioning during stay
[Every__hours]'').
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the proposed Suctioning (Scheduled, As
needed) data elements are feasible for use in PAC, and that they
indicate important treatment that would be clinically useful to capture
both within and across PAC providers. We solicited public comment on
the suctioning data element currently included in the MDS 3.0 between
August 12, to September 12, 2016. Several commenters wrote in support
of this data element, noting feasibility of this item in PAC, and the
relevance of this data element to facilitating care coordination and
supporting care transitions. We also received comments suggesting that
we examine the frequency of suctioning in order to better understand
the use of staff time, the impact on a patient or resident's capacity
to speak and swallow, and intensity of care required. Based on these
comments, we decided to add two sub-elements (scheduled and as needed)
to the suctioning element. The proposed data elements, Suctioning
(Scheduled, As needed) includes both the principal suctioning data
element that is included on the MDS 3.0 and two sub-elements,
``scheduled'' and ``as needed.'' A full report of the comments is
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Suctioning (Scheduled, As
needed) data elements with a principal data element and two sub-
elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Suctioning (scheduled, as needed) data element to the LCDS, and that
LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April
1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based
on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Respiratory Treatment: Tracheostomy Care
We are proposing that the Tracheostomy Care data element meets the
definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Tracheostomy Care data element. For more information on the
Tracheostomy Care data element, we refer readers to the document
titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and
Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
A tracheostomy provides an air passage to help a patient or
resident breathe when the usual route for breathing is obstructed or
impaired. Generally, in all of these cases, suctioning is necessary to
ensure that the tracheostomy is clear of secretions which can inhibit
successful oxygenation of the individual. Often, individuals with
tracheostomies are also receiving supplemental oxygenation. The
presence of a tracheostomy, albeit permanent or temporary, warrants
careful monitoring and immediate intervention if the tracheostomy
becomes occluded or in the case of a temporary tracheostomy, the device
used becomes dislodged. While in rare cases the presence of a
tracheostomy is not associated with increased care demands (and in some
of those instances, the care of the ostomy is performed by the patient)
in general the presence of such a device is associated with increased
patient risk, and clinical care services will necessarily include close
monitoring to ensure that no life-threatening events occur as a result
of the tracheostomy, often considered part of the patient's life line.
In addition, tracheostomy care, which primarily consists of cleansing,
dressing changes, and replacement of the tracheostomy cannula (tube),
is also a critical part of the care plan. Regular cleansing is
important to prevent infection such as pneumonia and to prevent any
occlusions with which there are risks for inadequate oxygenation.
The proposed data element is currently in use in the MDS 3.0
(``Tracheostomy care''). Data elements (``Trach Tube with Suctioning'')
that were tested in the PAC PRD included an equivalent principal data
element on the presence of a tracheostomy. This data element was found
feasible for use in each of the four PAC settings as the data
collection aligned with usual work flow.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the Tracheostomy Care data element is
feasible for use in PAC and that it assesses an important treatment
that would be clinically useful both within and across PAC provider
types.
We solicited public comment on this data element from August 12 to
September 12, 2016. Several commenters wrote in support of this data
element, noting the feasibility of this item in PAC, and the relevance
of this data element to facilitating care coordination and supporting
care transitions. A full report of the comments is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
[[Page 20107]]
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Tracheostomy Care data element
meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data with
respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Tracheostomy Care data element to the LCDS, and that LTCHs would be
required to reporting these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect
to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and
December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020
LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Respiratory Treatment: Non-invasive Mechanical Ventilator
(BiPAP, CPAP)
We are proposing that the Non-invasive Mechanical Ventilator
(Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure [BiPAP], Continuous Positive Airway
Pressure [CPAP]) data elements meet the definition of standardized
patient assessment data with respect to special services, treatments,
and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The
proposed data elements consist of the principal Non-invasive Mechanical
Ventilator data element and two sub-elements, BiPAP and CPAP. For more
information on the Non-invasive Mechanical Ventilator (BiPAP, CPAP)
data element, we refer readers to the document titled, Proposed
Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized Data
Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
BiPAP and CPAP are respiratory support devices that prevent the
airways from closing by delivering slightly pressurized air via
electronic cycling throughout the breathing cycle (Bilevel PAP,
referred to as BiPAP) or through a mask continuously (Continuous PAP,
referred to as CPAP). Assessment of non-invasive mechanical ventilation
is important in care planning, as both CPAP and BiPAP are resource-
intensive (although less so than invasive mechanical ventilation) and
signify underlying medical conditions about the patient or resident who
requires the use of this intervention. Particularly when used in
settings of acute illness or progressive respiratory decline,
additional staff (for example, respiratory therapists) are required to
monitor and adjust the CPAP and BiPAP settings and the patient or
resident may require more nursing resources.
Data elements that assess BiPAP and CPAP are currently included on
the OASIS-C2 for HHAs (``Continuous/Bi-level positive airway
pressure''), LCDS for the LTCH setting (``Non-invasive Ventilator
(BIPAP, CPAP)''), and the MDS 3.0 for the SNF setting (``BiPAP/CPAP'').
A data element that focused on CPAP was tested across the four PAC
providers in the PAC-PRD study and found to be feasible for
standardization. All of these data elements assess BiPAP or CPAP with a
single check box, not separately.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the standardized assessment of Non-
invasive Mechanical Ventilator (BiPAP, CPAP) data elements would be
feasible for use in PAC, and assess an important treatment that would
be clinically useful both within and across PAC provider types.
To solicit additional feedback on the form of the Non-invasive
Mechanical Ventilator (BiPAP, CPAP) data elements best suited for
standardization, we asked for public comment on a single data element,
BiPAP/CPAP, equivalent (but for labeling) to what is currently in use
on the MDS, OASIS, and LCDS, from August 12 to September 12, 2016.
Several commenters wrote in support of this data element, noting the
feasibility of these items in PAC, and the relevance of these data
elements for facilitating care coordination and supporting care
transitions. In addition, there was support in the public comment
responses for separating out BiPAP and CPAP as distinct sub-elements,
as they are therapies used for different types of patients and
residents. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore we are proposing that the Non-invasive Mechanical
Ventilator (BiPAP, CPAP) data elements with a principal data element
and two sub-elements meet the definition of standardized patient
assessment data with respect to special services, treatments, and
interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are
proposing to expand the existing ``Non-invasive Ventilator (BiPAP,
CPAP)'' data element on the LCDS, by retaining and renaming the main
data element to be Non-invasive Mechanical Ventilator and adding two
sub-elements for BiPAP and CPAP. For the purposes of reporting for the
FY 2020 LTCH QRP, LTCHs would be required to report the Non-invasive
Mechanical Ventilator (BiPAP, CPAP) data elements with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Respiratory Treatment: Invasive Mechanical Ventilator
We are proposing that the Invasive Mechanical Ventilator data
element meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element
consists of a single Invasive Mechanical Ventilator data element which,
for LTCHs, will be collected from the Invasive Mechanical Ventilator
(Weaning) and Invasive Mechanical Ventilator (Non-Weaning) data
elements that are already included on the LCDS. For more information on
the Invasive Mechanical Ventilator data element, we refer readers to
the document titled, Proposed
[[Page 20108]]
Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized Data
Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Invasive mechanical ventilation includes ventilators and
respirators that ventilate the patient through a tube that extends via
the oral airway into the pulmonary region or through a surgical opening
directly into the trachea. Thus, assessment of invasive mechanical
ventilation is important in care planning and risk mitigation.
Ventilation in this manner is a resource-intensive therapy associated
with life-threatening conditions without which the patient or resident
would not survive. However, ventilator use has inherent risks requiring
close monitoring. Failure to adequately care for the patient or
resident who is ventilator dependent can lead to iatrogenic events such
as death, pneumonia and sepsis. Mechanical ventilation further
signifies the complexity of the patient's underlying medical and or
surgical condition. Of note, invasive mechanical ventilation is
associated with high daily and aggregate costs.\423\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\423\ Wunsch, H., Linde-Zwirble, W. T., Angus, D. C., Hartman,
M. E., Milbrandt, E. B., & Kahn, J. M. (2010). ``The epidemiology of
mechanical ventilation use in the United States.'' Critical Care Med
38(10): 1947-1953.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data elements that capture invasive mechanical ventilation, but
vary in their level of specificity, are currently in use in the MDS 3.0
(``Ventilator or respirator'') and LCDS (``Invasive Mechanical
Ventilator: weaning'' and ``Invasive Mechanical Ventilator: non-
weaning''), and related data elements that assess invasive ventilator
use and weaning status were tested in the PAC PRD (``Ventilator--
Weaning'' and ``Ventilator--Non-Weaning'') and found feasible for use
in each of the four PAC settings.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that assessing Invasive Mechanical Ventilator
use is feasible in PAC, and would be clinically useful both within and
across PAC providers.
To solicit additional feedback on the form of a data element on
this topic that would be appropriate for standardization, data elements
that assess invasive ventilator use and weaning status that were tested
in the PAC PRD (``Ventilator--Weaning'' and ``Ventilator--Non-
Weaning'') were included in a call for public comment that was open
from August 12 to September 12, 2016 because it was being considered
for standardization. Several commenters wrote in support of this data
element, highlighting the importance of this information in supporting
care coordination and care transitions. Some commenters expressed
concern about the appropriateness for standardization, given the
prevalence of ventilator weaning across PAC providers; the timing of
administration; how weaning is defined; and how it weaning status in
particular relates to quality of care. These comments guided the
decision to propose a single data element focused on current use of
invasive mechanical ventilation only, and does not attempt to capture
weaning status. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Invasive Mechanical Ventilator
data element that assesses the use of an invasive mechanical
ventilator, but does not assess weaning status, meets the definition of
standardized patient assessment data with respect to special services,
treatments, and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the
Act. However, and as noted above, two data elements that capture
invasive mechanical ventilator use and weaning status are already
included on the LCDS: Invasive Mechanical Ventilator (Weaning) and
Invasive Mechanical Ventilator (Non-Weaning) data elements. Because
these two existing data elements both indicate the same information,
the presence of invasive ventilator use, we propose that these existing
data elements will provide the necessary data on invasive mechanical
ventilation use required for standardization. The inclusion of weaning
status pertains to other purposes in the LCDS, and does not disrupt the
intended standardization of the overarching indication of ventilator
use. For purposes of reporting for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, LTCHs will be
required to report these data with respect to LTCH admissions and
discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018.
Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP,
subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full calendar
year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Other Treatment: Intravenous (IV) Medications (Antibiotics,
Anticoagulation, Other)
We are proposing that the IV Medications (Antibiotics,
Anticoagulation, Other) data elements meet the definition of
standardized patient assessment data with respect to special services,
treatments, and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the
Act. The proposed data elements consist of the principal IV Medications
data element and three sub-elements, Antibiotics, Anticoagulation, and
Other. For more information on the IV Medications (Antibiotics,
Anticoagulation, Other) data element, we refer readers to the document
titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and
Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
IV medications are solutions of a specific medication (for example,
antibiotics, anticoagulants) administered directly into the venous
circulation via a syringe or intravenous catheter (tube). IV
medications are administered via intravenous push (bolus), single,
intermittent, or continuous infusion through a tube placed into the
vein (for example, commonly referred to as central, midline, or
peripheral ports). Further, IV medications are more resource intensive
to administer than oral medications, and signify a higher patient
complexity (and often higher severity of illness).
The clinical indications for each of the sub-elements of the IV
Medication data element (Antibiotics, Anticoagulants, and Other) are
very different. IV antibiotics are used for severe infections when: (1)
The bioavailability of the oral form of the medication would be
inadequate to kill the pathogen; (2) an oral form of the
[[Page 20109]]
medication does not exist; or (3) the patient is unable to take the
medication by mouth. IV anticoagulants refer to anti-clotting
medications (that is, ``blood thinners''), often used for the
prevention and treatment of deep vein thrombosis and other
thromboembolic complications. IV anticoagulants are commonly used in
patients with limited mobility (either chronically or acutely, in the
post-operative setting), who are at risk of deep vein thrombosis, or
patients with certain cardiac arrhythmias such as atrial fibrillation.
The indications, risks, and benefits of each of these classes of IV
medications are distinct, making it important to assess each separately
in PAC. Knowing whether or not patients are receiving IV medication and
the type of medication provided by each PAC provider will improve
quality of care.
The principal IV Medication data element is currently in use on the
MDS 3.0 and there is a related data element in OASIS-C2 that collects
information on Intravenous and Infusion Therapies. One sub-element of
the proposed data elements, IV Anti-coagulants, and two other data
elements related to IV therapy (IV Vasoactive Medications and IV
Chemotherapy), were tested in the PAC PRD and found feasible for use in
that the data collection aligned with usual work flow in each of the
four PAC settings, demonstrating the feasibility of collecting IV
medication information, including type of IV medication, through
similar data elements in these settings.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that standardized collection of information
on medications, including IV medications, would be feasible in PAC, and
assess an important treatment that would be clinically useful both
within and across PAC provider types.
We solicited public comment on a related data element, Vasoactive
Medications, from August 12 to September 12, 2016. While commenters
supported this data element with one noting the importance of this data
element in supporting care transitions, others criticized the need for
collecting specifically on Vasoactive Medications, giving feedback that
the data element was too narrowly focused. In addition, comment
received indicated that the clinical significance of vasoactive
medications administration alone was not high enough in PAC to merit
mandated assessment, noting that related and more useful information
could be captured in an item that assessed all IV medication use.
Overall, public comment indicated the importance of including the
additional check box data elements to distinguish particular classes of
medications. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the IV Medications (Antibiotics,
Anticoagulation, Other) data elements with a principal data element and
three sub-elements meet the definition of standardized patient
assessment data with respect to special services, treatments, and
interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are
proposing to add the IV Medications (Antibiotics, Anticoagulation,
Other) data element to the LCDS, and that LTCHs would be required to
report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Other Treatment: Transfusions
We are proposing that the Transfusions data element meets the
definition of standardized patient assessment data element with respect
to special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Transfusions data element. For more information on the
Transfusions data element, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Transfusion refers to introducing blood, blood products, or other
fluid into the circulatory system of a person. Blood transfusions are
based on specific protocols, with multiple safety checks and monitoring
required during and after the infusion in case of adverse events.
Coordination with the provider's blood bank is necessary, as well as
documentation by clinical staff to ensure compliance with regulatory
requirements. In addition, the need for transfusions signifies
underlying patient complexity that is likely to require care
coordination and patient monitoring, and impacts planning for
transitions of care, as transfusions are not performed by all PAC
providers.
The proposed data element was selected from three existing
assessment items on transfusions and related services, currently in use
in the MDS 3.0 (``Transfusions'') and OASIS-C2 (``Intravenous or
Infusion Therapy''), and a data element tested in the PAC PRD (``Blood
Transfusions''), that was found feasible for use in each of the four
PAC settings. We chose to propose the MDS version because of its
greater level of specificity over the OASIS-C2 data element. This
selection was informed by expert advisors and reviewed and supported in
the proposed form by the Standardized Patient Assessment Data TEP held
by our data element contractor on January 5 and 6, 2017. A full report
of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Transfusions data element that
is currently in use in the MDS meets the definition of standardized
patient assessment data with respect to special services, treatments,
and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are
proposing to add the Transfusions data element to the LCDS, and that
LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April
1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based
on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
[[Page 20110]]
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Other Treatment: Dialysis (Hemodialysis, Peritoneal Dialysis)
We are proposing that the Dialysis (Hemodialysis, Peritoneal
dialysis) data elements meet the definition of standardized patient
assessment data with respect to special services, treatments, and
interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The
proposed data elements consist of the principal Dialysis data element
and two sub-elements, Hemodialysis and Peritoneal dialysis. For more
information on the Dialysis (Hemodialysis, Peritoneal dialysis) data
element, we refer readers to the document titled, Proposed
Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized Data
Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Dialysis is a treatment primarily used to provide replacement for
lost kidney function. Both forms of dialysis (hemodialysis and
peritoneal dialysis) are resource intensive, not only during the actual
dialysis process but before, during and following. Patients and
residents who need and undergo dialysis procedures are at high risk for
physiologic and hemodynamic instability from fluid shifts and
electrolyte disturbances as well as infections that can lead to sepsis.
Further, patients or residents receiving hemodialysis are often
transported to a different facility, or at a minimum, to a different
location in the same facility. Close monitoring for fluid shifts, blood
pressure abnormalities, and other adverse effects is required prior to,
during and following each dialysis session. Nursing staff typically
perform peritoneal dialysis at the bedside, and as with hemodialysis,
close monitoring is required.
The principal Dialysis data element is currently included on the
MDS 3.0 and the LCDS v3.0 and assesses the overall use of dialysis. The
sub-elements for Hemodialysis and Peritoneal dialysis were tested
across the four PAC providers in the PAC PRD study, and found to be
feasible for standardization. Clinical and subject matter expert
advisors working with our data element contractor opined that the
standardized assessment of dialysis is feasible in PAC, and that it
assesses an important treatment that would be clinically useful both
within and across PAC providers. As the results of expert and public
feedback, described below, we decided to propose a data element that
includes both the principal Dialysis data element and the two sub-
elements (hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis).
The Hemodialysis data element, which was tested in the PAC PRD, was
included in a call for public comment that was open from August 12 to
September 12, 2016. Commenters supported the assessment of hemodialysis
and recommended that the data element be expanded to include peritoneal
dialysis. Several commenters supported the Hemodialysis data element,
noting the relevance of this information for sharing across the care
continuum to facilitate care coordination and care transitions, the
potential for this data element to be used to improve quality, and the
feasibility for use in PAC. In addition, we received comment that the
item would be useful in improving patient and resident transitions of
care. Several commenters also stated that peritoneal dialysis should be
included in a standardized data element on dialysis and recommended
collecting information on peritoneal dialysis in addition to
hemodialysis. The rationale for including peritoneal dialysis from
commenters included the fact that patients and residents receiving
peritoneal dialysis will have different needs at post-acute discharge
compared to those receiving hemodialysis or not having any dialysis.
Based on these comments, the Hemodialysis data element was expanded to
include a principal Dialysis data element and two sub-elements,
hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis; these are the same two data
elements that were tested in the PAC PRD. This expanded version,
Dialysis (Hemodialysis, Peritoneal dialysis), are the data elements
being proposed. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
We note that the Dialysis (Hemodialysis, Peritoneal dialysis) data
elements were also supported by the TEP that discussed candidate data
elements for Special Services, Treatments, and Interventions during a
meeting on January 5 and 6, 2017. A full report of the TEP discussion
is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Dialysis (Hemodialysis,
Peritoneal dialysis) data elements with a principal data element and
two sub-elements meet the definition of standardized patient assessment
data with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to
expand the Dialysis data element in current use on the LCDS to include
sub-elements for Hemodialysis and Peritoneal dialysis. For the purposes
of reporting for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, LTCHs would be required to
report these data with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that
occur between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the
initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for
the LTCH QRP would be based on a full calendar year of such data
reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Other Treatment: Intravenous (IV) Access (Peripheral IV,
Midline, Central line, Other)
We are proposing that the IV Access (Peripheral IV, Midline,
Central line, Other) data elements meet the definition of standardized
patient assessment data element with respect to special services,
treatments, and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the
Act. The proposed data elements consist of the principal IV Access data
element and four sub-elements, Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line,
and Other. For more information on the IV Access data element, we refer
readers to the document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP
Quality Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Patients or residents with central lines, including those
peripherally inserted or who have subcutaneous central line ``port''
access, always require vigilant nursing care to keep patency of the
lines and ensure that such invasive lines remain free from any
potentially life-threatening events such as infection, air embolism, or
bleeding from an open lumen. Clinically complex patients and residents
are likely to be receiving medications or nutrition intravenously. The
sub-elements included in the IV Access data elements distinguish
between peripheral access and different types of central access. The
rationale for distinguishing between a peripheral IV and central IV
access is
[[Page 20111]]
that central lines confer higher risks associated with life-threatening
events such as pulmonary embolism, infection, and bleeding.
The proposed IV Access (Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line,
Other) data elements are not currently included on any of the mandated
PAC assessment instruments. However, related data elements (for
example, IV Medication in MDS 3.0 for SNF, Intravenous or infusion
therapy in OASIS-C2 for HHAs) currently assess types of IV access.
Several related data elements that describe types of IV access (for
example, Central Line Management, IV Vasoactive Medications) were
tested across the four PAC providers in the PAC PRD study, and found to
be feasible for standardization.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that assessing type of IV access would be
feasible for use in PAC and that it assesses an important treatment
that would be clinically useful both within and across PAC provider
types.
We asked for public comment on one of the PAC PRD data elements,
Central Line Management, from August 12 to September 12, 2016. A
central line is one type of IV access. Commenters supported the
assessment of central line management and recommended that the data
element be broadened to also include other types of IV access. Several
commenters supported the data element, noting feasibility and
importance for facilitating care coordination and care transitions.
However, a few commenters recommended that the definition of this data
element be broadened to include peripherally inserted central catheters
(``PICC lines'') and midline IVs. Based on public comment feedback and
in consultation with clinical and subject matters experts, we expanded
the Central Line Management data element to include more types of IV
access (Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line, Other). This expanded
version, IV Access (Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line, Other), are
the data elements being proposed. A full report of the comments is
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
We note that the IV Access (Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line,
Other) data elements were supported by the TEP that discussed candidate
data elements for Special Services, Treatments, and Interventions
during a meeting on January 5 and 6, 2017. A full report of the TEP
discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the IV access (Peripheral IV,
Midline, Central line, Other) data elements with a principal data
element and four sub-elements meet the definition of standardized
patient assessment data with respect to special services, treatments,
and interventions under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are
proposing to add the IV Access (Peripheral IV, Midline, Central line,
Other) data elements to the LCDS and that LTCHs would be required to
report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Nutritional Approach: Parenteral/IV Feeding
We are proposing that the Parenteral/IV Feeding data element meets
the definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Parenteral/IV Feeding data element. For more information on
the Parenteral/IV Feeding data element, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Parenteral/IV Feeding refers to a patient or resident being fed
intravenously using an infusion pump, bypassing the usual process of
eating and digestion. The need for IV/parenteral feeding indicates a
clinical complexity that prevents the patient or resident from meeting
his/her nutritional needs enterally, and is more resource intensive
than other forms of nutrition, as it often requires monitoring of blood
chemistries, and maintenance of a central line. Therefore, assessing a
patient or resident's need for parenteral feeding is important for care
planning and resource use. In addition to the risks associated with
central and peripheral intravenous access, total parenteral nutrition
is associated with significant risks such as embolism and sepsis.
The Parenteral/IV Feeding data element is currently in use in the
MDS 3.0, and equivalent or related data elements are in use in the
LCDS, IRF-PAI, and the OASIS-C2. An equivalent data element was tested
in the PAC PRD (``Total Parenteral Nutrition'') and found feasible for
use in each of the four PAC settings, demonstrating the feasibility of
collecting information about this nutritional service in these
settings.
Total Parenteral Nutrition (an item with the same meaning as the
proposed data element, but with the label used in the PAC PRD) was
included in a call for public comment that was open from August 12 to
September 12, 2016. Several commenters supported this data element,
noting its relevance to facilitating care coordination and supporting
care transitions. After the public comment period, the Total Parenteral
Nutrition data element was re-named Parenteral/IV Feeding, to be
consistent with how this data element is referred to in the MDS. A full
report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
A TEP convened by the data element contractor provided input on the
proposed data elements. This TEP, held on January 5 and 6, 2017, opined
that these data elements are appropriate for standardization because
they would provide useful clinical information to inform care planning
and care coordination. The TEP affirmed that assessment of these
services and interventions is standard clinical practice.
A full report of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Parenteral/IV Feeding data
element meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to retain and
rename the existing and equivalent Total Parenteral Nutrition data
element to be Parenteral/IV Feeding on the LCDS, and that LTCHs would
be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
[[Page 20112]]
with respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April
1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based
on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Nutritional Approach: Feeding Tube
We are proposing that the Feeding Tube data element meets the
definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Feeding Tube data element. For more information on the
Feeding Tube data element, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The majority of patients admitted to acute care hospitals
experience deterioration of their nutritional status during their
hospital stay, making assessment of nutritional status and method of
feeding if unable to eat orally very important in PAC. A feeding tube
can be inserted through the nose or the skin on the abdomen to deliver
liquid nutrition into the stomach or small intestine. Feeding tubes are
resource intensive and are therefore important to assess for care
planning and resource use. Patients with severe malnutrition are at
higher risk for a variety of complications.\424\ In PAC settings, there
are a variety of reasons that patients and residents may not be able to
eat orally (including clinical or cognitive status).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\424\ Dempsey, D. T., Mullen, J. L., & Buzby, G. P. (1988).
``The link between nutritional status and clinical outcome: can
nutritional intervention modify it?'' Am J of Clinical Nutrition
47(2): 352-356.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Feeding Tube data element is currently included in the MDS 3.0
for SNFs, and in the OASIS-C2 for HHAs, where it is labeled Enteral
Nutrition. A related data element, collected in the IRF-PAI for IRFs
(Tube/Parenteral Feeding), assesses use of both feeding tubes and
parenteral nutrition. The testing of similar nutrition-focused data
elements in the PAC PRD, and the current assessment of feeding tubes
and related nutritional services and devices, demonstrates the
feasibility of collecting information about this nutritional service in
these settings.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor opined that the Feeding Tube data element is
feasible for use in PAC, and supported its importance and clinical
usefulness for patients in PAC settings, due to the increased level of
nursing care and patient monitoring required for patients who received
enteral nutrition with this device.
We solicited additional feedback on an Enteral Nutrition data
element (an item with the same meaning as the proposed data element,
but with the label used in the OASIS) in a call for public comment that
was open from August 12 to September 12, 2016. Several commenters
supported the data element, noting the importance of assessing enteral
nutrition status for facilitating care coordination and care
transitions. After the public comment period, the Enteral Nutrition
data element used in public comment was re-named Feeding Tube,
indicating the presence of an assistive device. A full report of the
comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
We note that the Feeding Tube data element was also supported by
the TEP that discussed candidate data elements for Special Services,
Treatments, and Interventions during a meeting on January 5 and 6,
2017. A full report of the TEP discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Feeding Tube data element
meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data with
respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Feeding Tube data element to the LCDS and that LTCHs would be required
to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Nutritional Approach: Mechanically Altered Diet
We are proposing that the Mechanically Altered Diet data element
meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data with
respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element
consists of the single Mechanically Altered Diet data element. For more
information on the Mechanically Altered Diet data element, we refer
readers to the document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP
Quality Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
The Mechanically Altered Diet data element refers to food that has
been altered to make it easier for the patient or resident to chew and
swallow, and this type of diet is used for patients and residents who
have difficulty performing these functions. Patients with severe
malnutrition are at higher risk for a variety of complications.\425\ In
PAC settings, there are a variety of reasons that patients and
residents may have impairments related to oral feedings, including
clinical or cognitive status. The provision of a mechanically altered
diet may be resource intensive, and can signal difficulties associated
with swallowing/eating safety, including dysphagia. In other cases, it
signifies the type of altered food source, such as ground or puree,
that will enable the safe and thorough ingestion of nutritional
substances and ensure safe and adequate delivery of nourishment to the
patient. Often, patients on mechanically altered diets also require
additional nursing supports such as individual feeding, or direct
observation, to ensure the safe consumption of the food product.
Assessing whether a patient or resident requires a mechanically altered
diet is therefore important for care planning and resource
identification.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\425\ Dempsey, D. T., Mullen, J. L., & Buzby, G. P. (1988).
``The link between nutritional status and clinical outcome: can
nutritional intervention modify it?'' Am J of Clinical Nutrition
47(2): 352-356.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed data element for a mechanically altered diet is
currently included on the MDS 3.0 for SNFs. A related data element for
modified food consistency/supervision is currently included on the IRF-
PAI for IRFs. A related data element is included in the OASIS-C2 for
HHAs that collects
[[Page 20113]]
information about independent eating that requires ``a liquid, pureed
or ground meat diet.'' The testing of similar nutrition-focused data
elements in the PAC PRD, and the current assessment of various
nutritional services across the four PAC settings, demonstrates the
feasibility of collecting information about this nutritional service in
these settings.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that the proposed Mechanically Altered Diet
data element is feasible for use in PAC, and it assesses an important
treatment that would be clinically useful both within and across PAC
settings. Expert input on the Mechanically Altered Diet data element
highlighted its importance and clinical usefulness for patients in PAC
settings, due to the increased monitoring and resource use required for
patients on special diets. We note that the Mechanically Altered Diet
data element was also supported by the TEP that discussed candidate
data elements for Special Services, Treatments, and Interventions
during a meeting on January 5 and 6, 2017. A full report of the TEP
discussion is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Mechanically Altered Diet data
element meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Mechanically Altered Diet data element to the LCDS and that LTCHs would
be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with respect
to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April 1, 2018 and
December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020
LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Nutritional Approach: Therapeutic Diet
We are proposing that the Therapeutic Diet data element meets the
definition of standardized patient assessment data with respect to
special services, treatments, and interventions under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. The proposed data element consists of
the single Therapeutic Diet data element. For more information on the
Therapeutic Diet data element, we refer readers to the document titled,
Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures and Standardized
Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Therapeutic Diet refers to meals planned to increase, decrease, or
eliminate specific foods or nutrients in a patient or resident's diet,
such as a low-salt diet, for the purpose of treating a medical
condition. The use of therapeutic diets among patients in PAC provides
insight on the clinical complexity of these patients and their multiple
comorbidities. Therapeutic diets are less resource intensive from the
bedside nursing perspective, but do signify one or more underlying
clinical conditions that preclude the patient from eating a regular
diet. The communication among PAC providers about whether a patient is
receiving a particular therapeutic diet is critical to ensure safe
transitions of care.
The Therapeutic Diet data element is currently in use in the MDS
3.0. The testing of similar nutrition-focused data elements in the PAC
PRD, and the current assessment of various nutritional services across
the four PAC settings, demonstrates the feasibility of collecting
information about this nutritional service in these settings.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor supported the importance and clinical usefulness of
the proposed Therapeutic Diet data element for patients in PAC
settings, due to the increased monitoring and resource use required for
patients on special diets, and agreed that it is feasible for use in
PAC and that it assesses an important treatment that would be
clinically useful both within and across PAC settings. We note that the
Therapeutic Diet data element was also supported by the TEP that
discussed candidate data elements for Special Services, Treatments, and
Interventions during a meeting on January 5 and 6, 2017.
Therefore, we are proposing that the Therapeutic Diet data element
meets the definition of standardized patient assessment data with
respect to special services, treatments, and interventions under
section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(iii) of the Act. We are proposing to add the
Therapeutic Diet data element to the LCDS, and that LTCHs would be
required to begin reporting these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP with
respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur between April 1,
2018 and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based
on a full calendar year of such data reporting.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
(4) Medical Condition and Comorbidity Data
We are proposing that the data elements needed to calculate the
current measure, Percent of Residents or Patients with Pressure Ulcers
That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678), and the proposed
measure, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury, meet the definition of standardized patient assessment data
with respect to medical conditions and co-morbidities under section
1899B(b)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act, and that the successful reporting of
that data under section 1886(m)(5)(F)(i) of the Act would also satisfy
the requirement to report standardized patient assessment data under
section 1886(m)(5)(F)(ii) of the Act.
``Medical conditions and comorbidities'' and the conditions
addressed in the standardized data elements used in the calculation and
risk adjustment of these measures, that is, the presence of pressure
ulcers, diabetes, incontinence, peripheral vascular disease or
peripheral arterial disease, mobility, as well as low body mass index,
are all health-related conditions that indicate medical complexity that
can be indicative of underlying disease severity and other
comorbidities.
Specifically, the data elements used in the measure are important
for care planning and provide information pertaining to medical
complexity. Pressure ulcers are serious wounds representing poor
outcomes, and can result in sepsis and death. Assessing skin condition,
care planning for pressure ulcer prevention and healing, and informing
providers about their presence in patient transitions of care is a
customary and best practice. Venous and arterial disease and diabetes
are associated with low blood flow which may increase the risk of
tissue damage. These diseases are indicators of factors that may place
individuals at risk for pressure ulcer development and are therefore
important for care planning. Low BMI, which may be an indicator of
underlying disease severity, may be associated with loss of fat and
muscle, resulting in potential risk for pressure ulcers. Bowel
incontinence, and the possible maceration to the skin associated, can
lead to higher risk for
[[Page 20114]]
pressure ulcers. In addition, the bacteria associated with bowel
incontinence can complicate current wounds and cause local infection.
Mobility is an indicator of impairment or reduction in mobility and
movement which is a major risk factor for the development of pressure
ulcers. Taken separately and together, these data elements are
important for care planning, transitions in services and identifying
medical complexities.
In sections IX.C.7.a. and IX.C.10.a. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we discuss our rationale for proposing that the data
elements used in the measures meet the definition of standardized
patient assessment data. In summary, we believe that the collection of
such assessment data is important for multiple reasons, including
clinical decision support, care planning, and quality improvement, and
that the data elements assessing pressure ulcers and the data elements
used to risk adjust showed good reliability. We solicited stakeholder
feedback on the quality measure, and the data elements from which it is
derived, by means of a public comment period and TEPs, as described in
section IX.C.7.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
(5) Impairment Data
Hearing and vision impairments are conditions that, if unaddressed,
affect activities of daily living, communication, physical functioning,
rehabilitation outcomes, and overall quality of life. Sensory
limitations can lead to confusion in new settings, increase isolation,
contribute to mood disorders, and impede accurate assessment of other
medical conditions. Failure to appropriately assess, accommodate, and
treat these conditions increases the likelihood that patients will
require more intensive and prolonged treatment. Onset of these
conditions can be gradual, so individualized assessment with accurate
screening tools and follow-up evaluations are essential to determining
which patients need hearing- or vision-specific medical attention or
assistive devices and accommodations, including auxiliary aids and/or
services, and to ensure that person-directed care plans are developed
to accommodate a patient's needs. Accurate diagnosis and management of
hearing or vision impairment would likely improve rehabilitation
outcomes and care transitions, including transition from institutional-
based care to the community. Accurate assessment of hearing and vision
impairment would be expected to lead to appropriate treatment,
accommodations, including the provision of auxiliary aids and services
during the stay, and ensure that patients continue to have their vision
and hearing needs met when they leave the facility.
Accurate individualized assessment, treatment, and accommodation of
hearing and vision impairments of patients and residents in PAC would
be expected to have a positive impact on the National Quality
Strategy's domains of patient and family engagement, patient safety,
care coordination, clinical process/effectiveness, and efficient use of
health care resources. For example, standardized assessment of hearing
and vision impairments used in PAC will support ensuring patient safety
(for example, risk of falls), identifying accommodations needed during
the stay, and appropriate support needs at the time of discharge or
transfer. Standardized assessment of these data elements will enable or
support clinical decision-making and early clinical intervention;
person-centered, high quality care (for example, facilitating better
care continuity and coordination); better data exchange and
interoperability between settings; and longitudinal outcome analysis.
Hence, reliable data elements assessing hearing and vision impairments
are needed to initiate a management program that can optimize a patient
or resident's prognosis and reduce the possibility of adverse events.
Hearing
We are proposing that the Hearing data element meets the definition
of standardized patient assessment data with respect to impairments
under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(v) of the Act. The proposed data element
consists of the single Hearing data element. This data element assesses
level of hearing impairment, and consists of one question. For more
information on the Hearing data element, we refer readers to the
document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP Quality Measures
and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Accurate assessment of hearing impairment is important in the PAC
setting for care planning and resource use. Hearing impairment has been
associated with lower quality of life, including poorer physical,
mental, and social functioning, and emotional health.426 427
Treatment and accommodation of hearing impairment led to improved
health outcomes, including but not limited to quality of life.\428\ For
example, hearing loss in elderly individuals has been associated with
depression and cognitive impairment,429 430 431 higher rates
of incident cognitive impairment and cognitive decline,\432\ and less
time in occupational therapy.\433\ Accurate assessment of hearing
impairment is important in the PAC setting for care planning and
defining resource use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\426\ Dalton DS, Cruickshanks KJ, Klein BE, Klein R, Wiley TL,
Nondahl DM. The impact of hearing loss on quality of life in older
adults. Gerontologist. 2003;43(5):661-668.
\427\ Hawkins K, Bottone FG, Jr., Ozminkowski RJ, et al. The
prevalence of hearing impairment and its burden on the quality of
life among adults with Medicare Supplement Insurance. Qual Life Res.
2012;21(7):1135-1147.
\428\ Horn KL, McMahon NB, McMahon DC, Lewis JS, Barker M,
Gherini S. Functional use of the Nucleus 22-channel cochlear implant
in the elderly. The Laryngoscope. 1991;101(3):284-288.
\429\ Sprinzl GM, Riechelmann H. Current trends in treating
hearing loss in elderly people: a review of the technology and
treatment options--a mini-review. Gerontology. 2010;56(3):351-358.
\430\ Lin FR, Thorpe R, Gordon-Salant S, Ferrucci L. Hearing
Loss Prevalence and Risk Factors Among Older Adults in the United
States. The Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences
and Medical Sciences. 2011;66A(5):582-590.
\431\ Hawkins K, Bottone FG, Jr., Ozminkowski RJ, et al. The
prevalence of hearing impairment and its burden on the quality of
life among adults with Medicare Supplement Insurance. Qual Life Res.
2012;21(7):1135-1147.
\432\ Lin FR, Metter EJ, O'Brien RJ, Resnick SM, Zonderman AB,
Ferrucci L. Hearing Loss and Incident Dementia. Arch Neurol.
2011;68(2):214-220.
\433\ Cimarolli VR, Jung S. Intensity of Occupational Therapy
Utilization in Nursing Home Residents: The Role of Sensory
Impairments. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2016;17(10):939-942.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed data element was selected from two forms of the
Hearing data element based on expert and stakeholder feedback. We
considered the two forms of the Hearing data element, one of which is
currently in use in the MDS 3.0 (Hearing) and another data element with
different wording and fewer response option categories that is
currently in use in the OASIS-C2 (Ability to Hear). Ability to Hear was
also tested in the PAC PRD and found to have substantial agreement for
inter-rater reliability across PAC settings (kappa of 0.78).\434\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\434\ Gage B., Smith L., Ross J. et al. (2012). The Development
and Testing of the Continuity Assessment Record and Evaluation
(CARE) Item Set (Final Report on Reliability Testing, Volume 2 of
3). Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several data elements that assess hearing impairment were presented
to the Standardized Patient Assessment Data TEP held by our data
element contractor. The TEP did not reach consensus on the ideal number
of
[[Page 20115]]
response categories or phrasing of response options, which are the
primary differences between the current MDS (Hearing) and OASIS
(Ability to Hear) items. The Development and Maintenance of Post-Acute
Care Cross-Setting Standardized Patient Assessment Data Technical
Expert Panel Summary Report is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
The PAC PRD form of the data element (Ability to Hear) was included
in a call for public comment that was open from August 12 to September
12, 2016. This data element includes three response choices, in
contrast to the Hearing data element (in use in the MDS 3.0 and being
proposed for standardization), which includes four response choices.
Several commenters supported the use of the Ability to Hear data
element, although some commenters raised concerns that the three-level
response choice was not compatible with the current, four-level
response used in the MDS, and favored the use of the MDS version of the
Hearing data element. In addition, we received comments stating that
standardized assessment related to hearing impairment has the ability
to improve quality of care if information on hearing is included in
medical records of patients and residents, which would improve care
coordination and facilitate the development of patient- and resident-
centered treatment plans. Based on comments that the three-level
response choice (Ability to Hear) was not congruent with the current,
four-level response used in the MDS (Hearing), and support for the use
of the MDS version of the Hearing data element received in the public
comment, we are proposing the Hearing data element. A full report of
the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Therefore, we are proposing the Hearing data element currently in
use in the MDS. We are proposing to add the Hearing data element to the
LCDS. LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP with respect to LTCH admissions that occur between April 1, 2018
and December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY
2020 LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a
full calendar year of such data reporting. The Hearing data element
would be assessed at admission only due to the relatively stable nature
of hearing impairment, making it unlikely that this assessment would
change between the start and end of the PAC stay. Assessment at
discharge would introduce additional burden without improving the
quality or usefulness of the data, and we believe it is unnecessary.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
Vision
We are proposing that the Vision data element meets the definition
of standardized patient assessment data element with respect to
impairments under section 1899B(b)(1)(B)(v) of the Act. The proposed
data element consists of the single Vision (Ability To See in Adequate
Light) data element that consists of one question with five response
categories. For more information on the Vision data element, we refer
readers to the document titled, Proposed Specifications for LTCH QRP
Quality Measures and Standardized Data Elements, available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
Evaluation of an individual's ability to see is important for
assessing for risks such as falls and provides opportunities for
improvement through treatment and the provision of accommodations,
including auxiliary aids and services, which can safeguard patients and
improve their overall quality of life. Further, vision impairment is
often a treatable risk factor associated with adverse events and poor
quality of life. For example, individuals with visual impairment are
more likely to experience falls and hip fracture, have less mobility,
and report depressive symptoms.435 436 437 438 439 440 441
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\435\ Colon-Emeric CS, Biggs DP, Schenck AP, Lyles KW. Risk
factors for hip fracture in skilled nursing facilities: who should
be evaluated? Osteoporos Int. 2003;14(6):484-489.
\436\ Freeman EE, Munoz B, Rubin G, West SK. Visual field loss
increases the risk of falls in older adults: the Salisbury eye
evaluation. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2007;48(10):4445-4450.
\437\ Keepnews D, Capitman JA, Rosati RJ. Measuring patient-
level clinical outcomes of home health care. J Nurs Scholarsh.
2004;36(1):79-85.
\438\ Nguyen HT, Black SA, Ray LA, Espino DV, Markides KS.
Predictors of decline in MMSE scores among older Mexican Americans.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2002;57(3):M181-185.
\439\ Prager AJ, Liebmann JM, Cioffi GA, Blumberg DM. Self-
reported Function, Health Resource Use, and Total Health Care Costs
Among Medicare Beneficiaries With Glaucoma. JAMA ophthalmology.
2016;134(4):357-365.
\440\ Rovner BW, Ganguli M. Depression and disability associated
with impaired vision: the MoVies Project. J Am Geriatr Soc.
1998;46(5):617-619.
\441\ Tinetti ME, Ginter SF. The nursing home life-space
diameter. A measure of extent and frequency of mobility among
nursing home residents. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1990;38(12):1311-1315.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Individualized initial screening can lead to life-improving
interventions such as accommodations, including the provision of
auxiliary aids and services, during the stay and/or treatments that can
improve vision and prevent or slow further vision loss. For patients
with some types of visual impairment, use of glasses and contact lenses
can be effective in restoring vision.\442\ Other conditions, including
glaucoma \443\ and age-related macular degeneration,444 445
have responded well to treatment. In addition, vision impairment is
often a treatable risk factor associated with adverse events which can
be prevented and accommodated during the stay. Accurate assessment of
vision impairment is important in the LTCH setting for care planning
and defining resource use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\442\ Rein DB, Wittenborn JS, Zhang X, et al. The Cost-
effectiveness of Welcome to Medicare Visual Acuity Screening and a
Possible Alternative Welcome to Medicare Eye Evaluation Among
Persons Without Diagnosed Diabetes Mellitus. Archives of
ophthalmology. 2012;130(5):607-614.
\443\ Leske M, Heijl A, Hussein M, et al. Factors for glaucoma
progression and the effect of treatment: The early manifest glaucoma
trial. Archives of Ophthalmology. 2003;121(1):48-56.
\444\ Age-Related Eye Disease Study Research G. A randomized,
placebo-controlled, clinical trial of high-dose supplementation with
vitamins c and e, beta carotene, and zinc for age-related macular
degeneration and vision loss: AREDS report no. 8. Archives of
Ophthalmology. 2001;119(10):1417-1436.
\445\ Takeda AL, Colquitt J, Clegg AJ, Jones J. Pegaptanib and
ranibizumab for neovascular age[hyphen]related macular degeneration:
a systematic review. The British Journal of Ophthalmology.
2007;91(9):1177-1182.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Vision data element that we are proposing for standardization
was tested as part of the development of the MDS 3.0 and is currently
in use in that assessment. Similar data elements, but with different
wording and fewer response option categories, are in use in the OASIS-
C2 and was tested in post-acute providers in the PAC PRD and found to
be clinically relevant, meaningful for care planning, reliable (kappa
of 0.74),\446\ and feasible for use in each of the four PAC settings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\446\ Gage B., Smith L., Ross J. et al. (2012). The Development
and Testing of the Continuity Assessment Record and Evaluation
(CARE) Item Set (Final Report on Reliability Testing, Volume 2 of
3). Research Triangle Park, NC: RTI International.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several data elements that assess vision were presented to the TEP
held by our data element contractor. The TEP
[[Page 20116]]
did not reach consensus on the ideal number of response categories or
phrasing of response options, which are the primary differences between
the current MDS and OASIS items; some members preferring more granular
response options (for example, mild impairment and moderate impairment)
while others were comfortable with collapsed response options (that is,
mild/moderate impairment). The Development and Maintenance of Post-
Acute Care Cross-Setting Standardized Patient Assessment Data Technical
Expert Panel Summary Report is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html. We solicited public comment from August 12 to September
12, 2016, on the Ability to See in Adequate Light data element (version
tested in the PAC PRD with three response categories). The data element
in public comment differed from the proposed data element, but the
comments supported the assessment of vision in PAC settings and the
useful information a vision data element would provide. The commenters
stated that the Ability to See item would provide important information
that would facilitate care coordination and care planning, and
consequently improve the quality of care. Other commenters suggested it
would be helpful as an indicator of resource use and noted that the
item would provide useful information about the abilities of patients
and residents to care for themselves. Additional commenters noted that
the item could feasibly be implemented across PAC providers and that
its kappa scores from the PAC PRD support its validity. Some commenters
noted a preference for MDS version of the Vision data element over the
form put forward in public comment, citing the widespread use of this
data element. A full report of the comments is available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Post-Acute-Care-Quality-Initiatives/IMPACT-Act-of-2014/IMPACT-Act-Downloads-and-Videos.html.
Clinical and subject matter expert advisors working with our data
element contractor agreed that assessing vision impairment of patients
and residents with a standardized data element is feasible in PAC, that
it can reliably and accurately identify adults with objective impaired
vision, and that this information about impaired vision would be
clinically useful to identify needed accommodations and/or treatment
both within and across PAC settings.
Therefore, we are proposing the Vision data element from the MDS.
We are proposing to add the Vision data element to the LCDS and that
LTCHs would be required to report these data for the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
with respect to LTCH admissions that occur between April 1, 2018 and
December 31, 2018. Following the initial reporting year for the FY 2020
LTCH QRP, subsequent years for the LTCH QRP would be based on a full
calendar year of such data reporting. The Vision data element would be
assessed at admission only due to the relatively stable nature of
vision impairment, making it unlikely that this assessment would change
between the start and end of the PAC stay. Assessment at discharge
would introduce additional burden without improving the quality or
usefulness of the data, and we believe that it is unnecessary.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
11. Proposals Relating to the Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submission Under the LTCH QRP
a. Proposed Start Date for Standardized Patient Assessment Data
Reporting by New LTCHs
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49749 through
49752), we adopted timing for new LTCHs to begin reporting quality data
under the LTCH QRP beginning with the FY 2017 LTCH QRP. We are
proposing that new LTCHs will be required to begin reporting
standardized patient assessment data on the same schedule.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
b. Proposed Mechanism for Reporting Standardized Patient Assessment
Data Beginning With the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
Under our current policy, LTCHs report data by completing
applicable sections of the LCDS, and submitting the LCDS to CMS through
the QIES ASAP system. For more information on LTCH QRP reporting
through the QIES ASAP system, refer to the ``Related Links'' section at
the bottom of: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Technical-Information.html.
The proposed standardized patient assessment data elements are
already included on, or would be added to, the LCDS. Details regarding
the LCDS with respect to the proposed standardized assessment data are
available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
c. Proposed Schedule for Reporting Standardized Patient Assessment Data
Beginning With the FY 2019 LTCH QRP
We are proposing that the standardized patient assessment data as
discussed in section IX.C.10.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule
necessary to calculate the quality measure ``Percent of Residents or
Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay)
(NQF #0678)'' would be used for the FY 2019 LTCH QRP. We are also
proposing that for purposes of the FY 2019 LTCH QRP program year such
data would only include the last three quarters of calendar year 2017
(April 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017). In section IX.C.7.a. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we proposed to adopt the measure,
``Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury'' to
replace the current measure, ``Percent of Residents or Patients with
Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF # 0678)''
with data collection beginning on April 1, 2018. Should the proposed
measure be finalized, the FY 2020 LTCH QRP will be determined using the
data from the first quarter of CY 2018 using the current measure,
``Percent of Residents or Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or
Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678)'' and last three quarters of CY 2018
using the data from the proposed measure, ``Changes in Skin Integrity
Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury.''
In section IX.C.10.b of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discussed the additional standardized patient data proposed beginning
with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. Unless otherwise indicated, under our
current policy, except for the first program year for which a measure
is adopted, LTCHs must report data on measures with respect to LTCH
admissions and discharges that occur during the 12 month calendar year
period that applies to the program year. For the first program year for
which a measure is adopted, LTCHs are only required to report data for
LTCH admissions and discharges that occur during the last three
quarters of the calendar year that applies to that program year, as the
version of the LTCH CARE Data Set that will contain the new items that
allow LTCHs to report a new measure, is routinely released on April 1st
of any given year.
[[Page 20117]]
For example, for the FY 2018 LTCH QRP, data on measures adopted for
earlier program years must be reported with respect to all CY 2016 LTCH
admissions and discharges. However, data on new measures adopted for
the first time for the FY 2018 LTCH QRP must only be reported with
respect to LTCH admissions and discharges that occur during the last
three calendar quarters of 2016. This is because the newest iteration
of the LTCH CARE Data Set would have been scheduled for release on
April 1, 2016. We are proposing to apply this policy to the reporting
of standardized patient assessment data beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH
QRP. The tables below illustrate this policy using the FY 2020 and FY
2021 LTCH QRP as examples.
Summary Illustration of Initial Reporting Cycle for Newly Adopted
Measure and Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting Using CY
Quarters 2, 3, and 4 Data *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed data submission
Proposed data collection/submission quarterly deadlines beginning
quarterly reporting period * with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP *
[supcaret]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q2: CY 2018 4/1/2018-6/30/2018......... CY 2017 Q2 Deadline: November
15, 2018.
Q3: CY 2018 7/1/2018-9/30/2018......... CY 2017 Q3 Deadline: February
15, 2019.
Q4: CY 2018 10/1/2018-12/31/2018....... CY 2017 Q4 Deadline: May 15,
2019.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Applies to data reporting using the LTCH CARE Data Set and data
reporting using the National Healthcare Safety Network.
[supcaret] The term ``FY 2020 LTCH QRP'' means the fiscal year for which
the LTCH QRP requirements applicable to that fiscal year must be met
in order for an LTCH to receive the full annual update when
calculating the payment rates applicable to it for that fiscal year.
Summary Illustration of Calendar Year Quarterly Reporting Cycle for
Measure and Standardized Patient Assessment Data Reporting *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed data submission
Proposed data collection/submission quarterly deadlines beginning
quarterly reporting period * with the FY 2021 LTCH QRP *
[supcaret]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q1: CY 2019--1/1/2019-3/31/2019........ CY 2018 Q1 Deadline: August 15,
2019.
Q2: CY 2019--4/1/2019-6/30/2019........ CY 2018 Q2 Deadline: November
15, 2019.
Q3: CY 2019--7/1/2019-9/30/2019........ CY 2018 Q3 Deadline: February
15, 2020.
Q4: CY 2019--10/1/2019-12/31/2019...... CY 2018 Q4 Deadline: May 15,
2020.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Applies to data reporting using the LTCH CARE Data Set and data
reporting using the National Healthcare Safety Network.
[supcaret] The term ``FY 2021 LTCH QRP'' means the fiscal year for which
the LTCH QRP requirements applicable to that fiscal year must be met
in order for an LTCH to receive the full annual update when
calculating the payment rates applicable to it for that fiscal year.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal for standardized
data reporting beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP and to extend our
current policy governing the schedule for reporting quality measure
data to the reporting of standardized patient assessment data beginning
with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
d. Proposed Schedule for Reporting the Proposed Quality Measures
Beginning With the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
As discussed in section IX.C.7. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to adopt three quality measures beginning with
the FY 2020 LTCH QRP: Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care:
Pressure Ulcer/Injury, Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay,
and Ventilator Liberation Rate. We are proposing that LTCHs would
report data on these measures using the LTCH CARE Data Set that is
submitted through the QIES ASAP system. LTCHs would be required to
report these data beginning with LTCH admissions and discharges that
occur between April 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018. More information on
LTCH reporting using the QIES ASAP system is located at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Technical-Information.html.
Under our currently policy, LTCHs would only be required to submit
data on the proposed measures for the last three quarters of CY 2018
for purposes of the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. Starting in CY 2019, LTCHs would
be required to submit data for the entire calendar year beginning with
the FY 2021 LTCH QRP.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
e. Proposed Removal of Interrupted Stay Items From the LTCH CARE Data
Set
We are proposing to remove the program interruption items from the
LTCH CARE Data Set. Specifically, we are proposing to remove the
following items: (1) A2500, Program Interruption(s); (2) A2510, Number
of Program Interruptions During This Stay in This Facility; and (3)
A2525, Program Interruption Dates, because we do not currently utilize
this information nor do we have plans to utilize this information for
the LTCH QRP. For a detailed discussion of burden related to LTCH CARE
Data Set, we refer readers to section XIV.B.9. of the preamble of this
proposed rule.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
12. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Participation Requirements
Under the LTCH QRP
We are proposing to revise the regulatory text at Sec. 412.560(a)
to state that an LTCH must begin submitting quality data, including
standardized patient assessment data, under the LTCH QRP by no later
than the first day of the calendar quarter subsequent to 30 days after
the date on its CMS Certification Number (CCN) notification letter.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
13. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Data Submission
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
We are proposing to revise the regulatory text at Sec.
412.560(b)(1) to require LTCHs to report both data on measures and
standardized patient assessment data under the LTCH QRP in a form and
manner, and at a time, specified by CMS.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
14. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Exception and Extension
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
We are proposing to revise the regulatory text at Sec. 412.560(c)
to extend
[[Page 20118]]
these policies to the submission of standardized patient assessment
data beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
15. Proposed Changes to Previously Codified Reconsiderations
Requirements Under the LTCH QRP
We are proposing to revise the regulatory text at Sec. 412.560(d)
to extend these policies to the submission of standardized patient
assessment data beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
16. Proposal To Apply the LTCH QRP Data Completion Thresholds to the
Submission of Standardized Patient Assessment Data Beginning With the
FY 2019 LTCH QRP
In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50311 through
50314), we finalized LTCH QRP thresholds for completeness of LTCH data
submissions. To ensure that LTCHs are meeting an acceptable standard
for completeness of submitted data, we finalized the policy that,
beginning with the FY 2016 LTCH QRP, LTCHs must meet or exceed two
separate data completeness thresholds: One threshold set at 80 percent
for completion of measures data collected using the LTCH CARE Data Set
submitted through the QIES ASAP system and a second threshold set at
100 percent for measures data collected and submitted using the CDC
NHSN.
We note that in our finalized policy we included that LTCHs must
meet or exceed a threshold set at 80 percent for completion of measures
data collected using the LTCH CARE Data Set submitted through the QIES
ASAP system. However, some assessment data will not invoke a response
and, in those circumstances, are not ``missing'' nor is the data
incomplete. For example, in the case of a patient who does not have any
of the medical conditions in a ``check all that apply'' listing, the
absence of a response of a health condition indicates that the
condition is not present, and it would be incorrect to consider the
absence of such data as missing in a threshold determination. We are
inviting public comment on our proposal to extend our current LTCH QRP
data completion requirements to the reporting of standardized patient
assessment data.
We are also proposing to codify these LTCH QRP data completion
thresholds at a new Sec. 412.560(f) for measures data collected using
the LTCH CARE Data Set, beginning with the FY 2016 LTCH QRP, and
standardized patient assessment data elements collected using the LTCH
CARE Data Set, beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP. Under this section,
we are proposing to codify that LTCHs must meet or exceed two separate
data completeness thresholds: 80 percent for completion of measures
data and standardized patient assessment data collected using the LTCH
CARE Data Set submitted through the QIES; and 100 percent for measures
data collected and submitted using the CDC NHSN. These thresholds would
apply to all measures and data elements adopted into LTCH QRP. An LTCH
must meet or exceed both thresholds to avoid receiving a 2 percentage
point reduction to their annual payment update for a given fiscal year,
beginning with the FY 2016 LTCH QRP for measures data and beginning
with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP for standardized patient assessment data
elements.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal to extend our
current LTCH QRP data completion requirements to the reporting of
standardized patient assessment data. We are also inviting public
comment on our proposal to codify the LTCH QRP data completion
thresholds at Sec. 412.560(f) for measures and standardized patient
assessment data elements collected using the LTCH CARE Data Set.
17. Proposals and Policies Regarding Public Display of Measure Data for
the LTCH QRP
Section 1886(m)(5)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish procedures for making the LTCH QRP data available to the
public after ensuring that an LTCH has the opportunity to review its
data prior to public display. Measure data is currently displayed on
the Long-Term Care Hospital Compare Web site, which is an interactive
web tool that assists individuals by providing information on LTCH
quality of care including those who need to select an LTCH. For more
information on LTCH Compare, we refer readers to: //www.medicare.gov/longtermcarehospitalcompare/. In addition, for a more
detailed discussion about the provider's confidential review process
prior to public display of quality measures we refer readers to the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57231 through 57236).
We also finalized the process we use to publish a list of LTCHs
that successfully meet the reporting requirements for the applicable
LTCH QRP year on the LTCH QRP Web site in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57231). The list of compliant LTCHs is available at:
//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Data-Submission-Deadlines.html.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57231 through
57236), we finalized the public display of measure data on the LTCH
Compare Web site in CY 2017 for the following 4 quality measures
pending the availability of data: (1) NHSN Facility-wide Inpatient
Hospital-onset MRSA Bacteremia Outcome Measure (NQF #1716); (2) NHSN
Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset CDI Outcome Measure (NQF #1717);
(3) Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel (NQF
#0431); and (4) Percent of Residents or Patients Who Were Assessed and
Appropriately Given the Seasonal Influenza Vaccine (NQF #0680).
The public display of NHSN Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset
MRSA Bacteremia Outcome Measure (NQF #1716) and NHSN Facility-wide
Inpatient Hospital-onset CDI Outcome Measure (NQF #1717) will initially
be based on data collected from January 1, 2015 through December 31,
2015 and will be displayed based on 4 rolling quarters. The Influenza
Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel (NQF #0431) and Percent
of Residents or Patients Who Were Assessed and Appropriately Given the
Seasonal Influenza Vaccine (NQF #0680) will be based on the influenza
vaccination season from October 1, 2015 through March 31, 2016 and will
be updated annually. We refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57231 through 57233) for details on the calculations
and display of these quality measures.
In this proposed rule, pending the availability of data, we are
proposing to publicly report data in CY 2018 for the following 3
assessment-based measures: (1) Percent of LTCH Patients With an
Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function (NQF #2631); (2) Application of Percent of LTCH
Patients With an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a
Care Plan That Addresses Function (NQF #2631); and (3) Application of
Percent of Residents Experiencing One or More Falls with Major Injury
(NQF #0674). In addition, pending the availability of data, we are
proposing to publicly report data in CY 2020 for the assessment-based
measure Functional Outcome Measure: Change in Mobility Among Patients
Requiring Ventilator Support (NQF #2632). Data collection for these 4
new assessment-based
[[Page 20119]]
measures began on April 1, 2016. We are proposing to display data for
the assessment-based measures based on four rolling quarters of data
and would initially use discharges from January 1, 2017 through
December 31, 2017, with the exception of Functional Outcome Measure:
Change in Mobility Among Patients Requiring Ventilator Support (NQF
#2632) which would be based on eight rolling quarters of data and would
initially use discharges from January 1, 2017 through December 31,
2018.
In addition, we are proposing to publicly report 3 claims-based
measures: (1) Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary-PAC LTCH QRP; (2)
Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP; and (3) Potentially Preventable
30-Day Post-Discharge Readmission Measure for LTCH QRP.
These measures were adopted for the LTCH QRP in the FY 2017 rule to
be based on data from 2 consecutive calendar years. As previously
adopted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57233 through
57236), confidential feedback reports for these 3 claims-based measures
will be based on calendar years 2015 and 2016 and data collected for
discharges beginning January 1, 2015 through December 31, 2016.
However, our current proposal revises the dates for public reporting
and we are proposing to transition from calendar year to fiscal year to
make these measure data publicly available by October 2018. Thus, we
are proposing public reporting beginning in CY 2018 for these claims-
based measures based on fiscal years 2016 and 2017 and data collected
from discharges beginning October 1, 2015 through September 30, 2017.
We are proposing to remove the following claims-based measure
``All-Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure for 30 Days Post Discharge
from LTCHs'' from the LTCH QRP and public reporting by October 2018. We
refer readers to section IX.C.8. of the preamble of this proposed rule
for additional information regarding the proposed removal of this
measure from quality reporting and public display. We also are
proposing to remove the following assessment-based measure ``Percent of
Residents or Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened
(Short Stay) (NQF #0678)'' and to replace it with a modified version of
the measure entitled ``Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care:
Pressure Ulcer/Injury'' from the LTCH QRP and public reporting by
October 2020. We refer readers to section IX.C.7.a. of the preamble of
this proposed rule for additional information regarding the proposed
replacement of this measure from quality reporting and public display.
For the assessment-based measures: Percent of LTCH Patients With an
Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan That
Addresses Function (NQF #2631); Application of Percent of LTCH Patients
With an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan
That Addresses Function (NQF #2631); and Application of Percent of
Residents Experiencing One or More Falls with Major Injury (NQF #0674),
to ensure the statistical reliability of the measures, we are proposing
to assign LTCHs with fewer than 20 eligible cases during a performance
period to a separate category: ``The number of cases/patient stays is
too small to report.'' If an LTCH had fewer than 20 eligible cases, the
LTCH's performance would not be publicly reported for the measure for
that performance period.
For the claims-based measures: Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP
and Potentially Preventable 30-Day Post-Discharge Readmission Measure
for LTCH QRP, to ensure the statistical reliability of the measures, we
are proposing to assign LTCHs with fewer than 25 eligible cases during
a performance period to a separate category: ``The number of cases/
patient stays is too small to report.'' If an LTCH had fewer than 25
eligible cases, the LTCH's performance would not be publicly reported
for the measure for that performance period. For Medicare Spending Per
Beneficiary-PAC LTCH QRP, to ensure the statistical reliability of the
measure, we are proposing to assign LTCHs with fewer than 20 eligible
cases during a performance period to a separate category: ``The number
of cases/patient stays is too small to report.'' If an LTCH had fewer
than 20 eligible cases, the LTCH's performance would not be publicly
reported for the measure for that performance period.
Previously Finalized and Proposed Measures for CY 2018 Public Display
and Confidential Feedback Reports
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously Finalized Measures:
Percent of Residents or Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New
or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678).
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Catheter-Associated
Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI) Outcome Measure (NQF #0138).
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Central Line-Associated
Bloodstream Infection (CLABSI) Measure (NQF #0139).
NHSN Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Bacteremia Outcome Measure (NQF
#1716).
NHSN Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset Clostridium difficile
Infection (CDI) Outcome Measure (NQF #1717).
Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel (NQF
#0431).
Percent of Residents or Patients Who Were Assessed and Appropriately
Given the Seasonal Influenza Vaccine (NQF #0680).
Proposed Measures:
Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Patients With an Admission
and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care Plan That Addresses
Function (NQF #2631).
Application of Percent of Long-Term Care Hospital (LTCH) Patients
With an Admission and Discharge Functional Assessment and a Care
Plan That Addresses Function (NQF #2631).
Application of Percent of Residents Experiencing One or More Falls
with Major Injury (NQF #0674).
Medicare Spending Per Beneficiary-PAC LTCH QRP.
Discharge to Community-PAC LTCH QRP.
Potentially Preventable 30-Day Post-Discharge Readmission Measure
for LTCH QRP.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Additional Measure for CY 2020 Public Display and Confidential
Feedback Reports
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Functional Outcome Measure: Change in Mobility Among Long-Term Care
Hospital (LTCH) Patients Requiring Ventilator Support (NQF #2632).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20120]]
We are inviting public comment on the proposal for the public
display of the four assessment-based measures and three claims-based
measures, the removal of the All-Cause Unplanned Readmission Measure
for 30 Days Post Discharge from LTCHs from the LTCH QRP and public
display, and the replacement of ``Percent of Residents or Patients with
Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678)''
with a modified version of the measure entitled ``Changes in Skin
Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury'' as described above.
18. Mechanism for Providing Feedback Reports to LTCHs
Section 1899B(f) of the Act requires the Secretary to provide
confidential feedback reports to PAC providers on their performance on
the measures specified under sections 1899B(c)(1) and (d)(1) of the
Act, beginning one year after the specified application date that
applies to such measures and PAC providers. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57233 through 57236), we finalized processes to
provide LTCHs the opportunity to review their data and information
using confidential feedback reports that will enable LTCHs to review
their performance on the measures required under the LTCH QRP.
Information on how to obtain these and other reports available to the
LTCH can be found at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Public-Reporting.html.
We are not proposing any changes to this policy.
D. Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program
1. Background
a. Statutory Authority
Section 1886(s)(4) of the Act, as added and amended by sections
3401(f) and 10322(a) of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
requires the Secretary to implement a quality reporting program for
inpatient psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units. Section
1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act requires that, for fiscal year (FY) 2014
\447\ and each subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary must reduce any
annual update to a standard federal rate for discharges occurring
during the fiscal year by 2.0 percentage points for any inpatient
psychiatric hospital or psychiatric unit that does not comply with
quality data submission requirements with respect to an applicable
fiscal year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\447\ The statute uses the term ``rate year'' (RY). However,
beginning with the annual update of the inpatient psychiatric
facility prospective payment system (IPF PPS) that took effect on
July 1, 2011 (RY 2012), we aligned the IPF PPS update with the
annual update of the ICD codes, effective on October 1 of each year.
This change allowed for annual payment updates and the ICD coding
update to occur on the same schedule and appear in the same Federal
Register document, promoting administrative efficiency. To reflect
the change to the annual payment rate update cycle, we revised the
regulations at 42 CFR 412.402 to specify that, beginning October 1,
2012, the RY update period would be the 12-month period from October
1 through September 30, which we refer to as a ``fiscal year'' (FY)
(76 FR 26435). Therefore, with respect to the IPFQR Program, the
terms ``rate year,'' as used in the statute, and ``fiscal year'' as
used in the regulation, both refer to the period from October 1
through September 30. For more information regarding this
terminology change, we refer readers to section III. of the RY 2012
IPF PPS final rule (76 FR 26434 through 26435).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As provided in section 1886(s)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act, the
application of the reduction for failure to report under section
1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act may result in an annual update of less than
0.0 percent for a fiscal year, and may result in payment rates under
section 1886(s)(1) of the Act being less than the payment rates for the
preceding year. In addition, section 1886(s)(4)(B) of the Act requires
that the application of the reduction to a standard Federal rate update
be noncumulative across fiscal years. Thus, any reduction applied under
section 1886(s)(4)(A) of the Act will apply only with respect to the
fiscal year rate involved and the Secretary may not take into account
the reduction in computing the payment amount under the system
described in section 1886(s)(1) of the Act for subsequent years.
Section 1886(s)(4)(C) of the Act requires that, for FY 2014
(October 1, 2013, through September 30, 2014) and each subsequent year,
each psychiatric hospital and psychiatric unit must submit to the
Secretary data on quality measures as specified by the Secretary. The
data must be submitted in a form and manner and at a time specified by
the Secretary. Under section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act, unless the
exception of subclause (ii) applies, measures selected for the quality
reporting program must have been endorsed by the entity with a contract
under section 1890(a) of the Act. The National Quality Forum (NQF)
currently holds this contract.
Section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act provides an exception to the
requirement for NQF endorsement of measures: In the case of a specified
area or medical topic determined appropriate by the Secretary for which
a feasible and practical measure has not been endorsed by the entity
with a contract under section 1890(a) of the Act, the Secretary may
specify a measure that is not so endorsed as long as due consideration
is given to measures that have been endorsed or adopted by a consensus
organization identified by the Secretary.
Section 1886(s)(4)(E) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish procedures for making public the data submitted by inpatient
psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units under the IPFQR Program.
These procedures must ensure that a facility has the opportunity to
review its data prior to the data being made public. The Secretary must
report quality measures that relate to services furnished by the
psychiatric hospitals and units on the CMS Web site.
b. Covered Entities
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53645), we
established that the IPFQR Program's quality reporting requirements
cover those psychiatric hospitals and psychiatric units paid under
Medicare's Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Prospective Payment System
(IPF PPS) (42 CFR 412.404(b)). Generally, psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units within acute care and critical access hospitals that
treat Medicare patients are paid under the IPF PPS. Consistent with
prior rules, we continue to use the term ``inpatient psychiatric
facility'' (IPF) to refer to both inpatient psychiatric hospitals and
psychiatric units. This usage follows the terminology in our IPF PPS
regulations at 42 CFR 412.402. For more information on covered
entities, we refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77
FR 53645).
c. Considerations in Selecting Quality Measures
Our objective in selecting quality measures is to balance the need
for information on the full spectrum of care delivery and the need to
minimize the burden of data collection and reporting. We have primarily
focused on measures that evaluate critical processes of care that have
significant impact on patient outcomes and support CMS and HHS
priorities for improved quality and efficiency of care provided by
IPFs. When possible, we also seek to incorporate measures that directly
evaluate patient outcomes. We refer readers to section VIII.F.4.a. of
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53645 through 53646) for a
detailed discussion of the considerations taken into account in
selecting quality measures.
[[Page 20121]]
(1) Measure Selection Process
Before being proposed for inclusion in the IPFQR Program, measures
are placed on a list of measures under consideration, which is
published annually by December 1 on behalf of CMS by the NQF. In
compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act, measures proposed for
the IPFQR Program were included in a publicly available document:
``List of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016'' available
at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf. The Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP), a multi-stakeholder group convened by the NQF, reviews the
measures under consideration for the IPFQR Program, among other Federal
programs, and provides input on those measures to the Secretary. The
MAP's 2017 recommendations for quality measures under consideration are
captured in the following documents: ``Process and Approach for MAP
Pre-Rulemaking Deliberations, 2016-2017,'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84455 and ``2016-2017 Spreadsheet
of Final Recommendations to HHS and CMS'' available at: //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84452. We considered the input and
recommendations provided by the MAP in selecting all measures for the
IPFQR Program, including those discussed below.
(2) Accounting for Social Risk Factors in the IPFQR Program
We understand that social risk factors such as income, education,
race and ethnicity, employment, disability, community resources, and
social support (certain factors of which are also sometimes referred to
as socioeconomic status (SES) factors or socio-demographic status (SDS)
factors) play a major role in health. One of our core objectives is to
improve beneficiary outcomes including reducing health disparities, and
we want to ensure that all beneficiaries, including those with social
risk factors, receive high quality care. In addition, we seek to ensure
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed as fairly as possible under our programs while ensuring that
beneficiaries have adequate access to excellent care.
We have been reviewing reports prepared by the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) \448\ and the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on the issue
of measuring and accounting for social risk factors in CMS' value-based
purchasing and quality reporting programs, and considering options on
how to address the issue in these programs. On December 21, 2016, ASPE
submitted a Report to Congress on a study it was required to conduct
under section 2(d) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care
Transformation (IMPACT) Act of 2014. The study analyzed the effects of
certain social risk factors in Medicare beneficiaries on quality
measures and measures of resource use used in one or more of nine
Medicare value-based purchasing programs.\449\ The report also included
considerations for strategies to account for social risk factors in
these programs. In a January 10, 2017 report released by the National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, that body provided
various potential methods for measuring and accounting for social risk
factors, including stratified public reporting.\450\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\448\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation. 2016. Report to Congress: Social Risk Factors and
Performance Under Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Programs.
Available at: //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\449\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation. 2016. Report to Congress: Social Risk Factors and
Performance Under Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Programs. 21
Dec. 2016. Available at: //aspe.hhs.gov/pdf-report/report-congress-social-risk-factors-and-performance-under-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
\450\ National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
2017. Accounting for social risk factors in Medicare payment.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, the NQF has
undertaken a 2-year trial period in which new measures, measures
undergoing maintenance review, and measures endorsed with the condition
that they enter the trial period can be assessed to determine whether
risk adjustment for selected social risk factors is appropriate for
these measures. This trial entails temporarily allowing inclusion of
social risk factors in the risk-adjustment approach for these measures.
At the conclusion of the trial, NQF will issue recommendations on the
future inclusion of social risk factors in risk adjustment for these
quality measures, and we will closely review their findings.
As we continue to consider the analyses and recommendations from
these reports and await the results of the NQF trial on risk adjustment
for quality measures, we are continuing to work with stakeholders in
this process. As we have previously communicated, we are concerned
about holding providers to different standards for the outcomes of
their patients with social risk factors because we do not want to mask
potential disparities or minimize incentives to improve the outcomes
for disadvantaged populations. Keeping this concern in mind, while we
sought input on this topic previously, we continue to seek public
comment on whether we should account for social risk factors in the
IPFQR Program, and if so, what method or combination of methods would
be most appropriate for accounting for social risk factors. Examples of
methods include: Confidential reporting to providers of measure rates
stratified by social risk factors; public reporting of stratified
measure rates; and potential risk adjustment of a particular measure as
appropriate based on data and evidence.
In addition, we are seeking public comment on which social risk
factors might be most appropriate for reporting stratified measure
scores and/or potential risk adjustment of a particular measure.
Examples of social risk factors include, but are not limited to, dual
eligibility/low-income subsidy, race and ethnicity, and geographic area
of residence. We are seeking comments on which of these factors,
including current data sources where this information would be
available, could be used alone or in combination, and whether other
data should be collected to better capture the effects of social risk.
We will take commenters' input into consideration as we continue to
assess the appropriateness and feasibility of accounting for social
risk factors in the IPFQR Program. We note that any such changes would
be proposed through future notice-and-comment rulemaking.
We look forward to working with stakeholders as we consider the
issue of accounting for social risk factors and reducing health
disparities in CMS programs. Of note, implementing any of the above
methods would be taken into consideration in the context of how this
and other CMS programs operate (for example, data submission methods,
availability of data, statistical considerations relating to
reliability of data calculations, among others), so we also welcome
comment on operational considerations. CMS is committed to ensuring
that its beneficiaries have access to and receive excellent care, and
that the quality of care furnished by providers and suppliers is
assessed fairly in CMS programs.
[[Page 20122]]
(3) IPFQR Program Measures Adopted in Previous Payment Determinations
The current IPFQR Program includes 18 mandatory measures. For more
information on these measures, we refer readers to the following final
rules:
The FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53646 through
53652);
The FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50889 through
50895);
The FY 2015 IPF PPS final rule (79 FR 45963 through
45974);
The FY 2016 IPF PPS final rule (80 FR 46694 through
46714); and
The FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57236 through
57249).
2. Factors for Removal or Retention of IPFQR Program Measures
a. Background
The Hospital IQR Program adopted formal policies regarding measure
retention and removal in the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR
50185). We believe that it is important to be consistent between
programs to the extent possible. Therefore, to align with the policies
adopted in this and other quality reporting programs, we are proposing
to adopt similar policies within the IPFQR Program. In the past, we
have retained measures from each previous year's IPFQR Program measure
set for subsequent years' measure sets, except when we specifically
proposed to remove or replace a measure. For example, we removed HBIPS-
6 and HBIPS-7 and replaced these measures with Transition Record with
Specified Elements Received by Discharged Patients (NQF #0647) and
Timely Transmission of Transition Record (NQF #0648) respectively in
the FY 2016 IPF PPS final rule (80 FY 46701 through 46709). In this
proposed rule, we are proposing factors to consider in removing or
retaining measures effective upon finalization of this proposed rule,
anticipated to be effective October 1, 2017 and for subsequent years.
We will continue to use the notice and comment rulemaking process
to propose measures for removal or replacement.
b. Proposed Considerations in Removing or Retaining Measures
With respect to measure removal, we believe it is important to be
transparent in identifying factors that we would take into
consideration on a case-by-case basis as guidelines to evaluate a
measure for potential removal from the IPFQR Program. We believe that
these factors should be aligned between our programs whenever possible.
Therefore, we refer readers to the Hospital IQR Program (80 FR 49641
through 49642) factors we consider in removing or retaining measures.
We intend to align our policies in the IPFQR Program with those in the
Hospital IQR Program. Thus, in this proposed rule, we are proposing:
(1) Measure removal factors; (2) criteria for determining when a
measure is ``topped-out;'' and (3) measure retention factors. These
proposals are discussed in more detail below.
We are proposing the following measure removal factors for the
IPFQR Program:
Measure performance among IPFs is so high and unvarying
that meaningful distinctions and improvements in performance can no
longer be made (``topped-out'' measures);
Measure does not align with current clinical guidelines or
practice;
Measure can be replaced by a more broadly applicable
measure (across settings or populations) or a measure that is more
proximal in time to desired patient outcomes for the particular topic;
Measure performance or improvement does not result in
better patient outcomes;
Measure can be replaced by a measure that is more strongly
associated with desired patient outcomes for the particular topic;
Measure collection or public reporting leads to negative
unintended consequences other than patient harm; and
Measure is not feasible to implement as specified.
For the purposes of considering measures for removal from the
program, we are also proposing to align our criteria for determining
that a measure is ``topped-out'' with the Hospital IQR Program's
criteria (80 FR 49642), which states that a measure is ``topped-out''
if there is statistically indistinguishable performance at the 75th and
90th percentiles and the truncated coefficient of variation is less
than or equal to 0.10.
Furthermore, we recognize that there may be times when measures may
meet some of the outlined factors for removal, but continue to bring
value to the program. Therefore, we are also proposing the following
factors for consideration in determining whether to retain a measure in
the IPFQR Program, which also are based on factors established in the
Hospital IQR Program (80 FR 49641 through 49642):
Measure aligns with other CMS and HHS policy goals, such
as those delineated in the National Quality Strategy or CMS Quality
Strategy;
Measure aligns with other CMS programs, including other
quality reporting programs; and
Measure supports efforts to move IPFs towards reporting
electronic measures.
We reiterate that these removal and retention factors are
considerations that we take into account in balancing the benefits and
drawbacks of whether or not to remove measures on a case-by-case basis.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to adopt: (1)
Measure removal factors; (2) criteria for determining when a measure is
``topped out;'' and (3) measure retention factors as discussed above.
If finalized, these factors and criteria will become effective upon
finalization of this proposed rule, anticipated to be effective October
1, 2017 and for subsequent years; measures identified as appropriate
for removal would be proposed through notice-and-comment rulemaking
subsequent to that date.
3. Proposed New Quality Measure for the FY 2020 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years--Medication Continuation Following Inpatient
Psychiatric Discharge
a. Background
We are proposing one new measure, Medication Continuation following
Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge, for the FY 2020 payment determination
and subsequent years. The measure uses Medicare fee-for-service (FFS)
claims to identify whether patients admitted to IPFs with diagnoses of
major depressive disorder (MDD), schizophrenia, or bipolar disorder had
filled at least one evidence-based medication within 2 days prior to
discharge through 30 days post-discharge. We believe that medication
continuation is important for patients discharged from the inpatient
psychiatric setting with MDD, schizophrenia, or bipolar disorder
because of significant negative outcomes associated with non-adherence
to medication regimens. For example, patients with MDD who do not
remain on prescribed medications are more likely to have negative
health outcomes such as relapse and readmission, decreased quality of
life, and increased healthcare costs.451 452 Patients with
schizophrenia who do not adhere to their medication regimen are more
likely to be hospitalized, use emergency psychiatric services, be
arrested, be victims of crimes, and consume alcohol
[[Page 20123]]
or drugs compared to those who adhere to their medication regimen.\453\
Patients with bipolar disorder who do not adhere to their medications
have increased suicide risk.\454\ For these reasons, guidelines from
the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and the Department of
Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense (VA/DoD), which are based on
extensive literature, recommend pharmacotherapy as the primary form of
treatment for patients with these
conditions.455 456 457 458 459
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\451\ Geddes JR, Carney SM, Davies C, et al. Relapse prevention
with antidepressant drug treatment in depressive disorders: a
systematic review. Lancet. 2003;361(9358):653-661.
\452\ Glue P, Donovan MR, Kolluri S, Emir B. Meta-analysis of
relapse prevention antidepressant trials in depressive disorders.
The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.
2010;44(8):697-705.
\453\ Gilmer TP, Dolder CR, Lacro JP, et al. Adherence to
treatment with antipsychotic medication and health care costs among
Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia. The American journal of
psychiatry. 2004;161(4):692-699.
\454\ Gonzalez-Pinto A, Mosquera F, Alonso M, et al. Suicidal
risk in bipolar I disorder patients and adherence to long-term
lithium treatment. Bipolar disorders. 2006;8(5 Pt 2):618-624.
\455\ American Psychiatric Association. (2002). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder,
second edition. Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/bipolar.pdf.
\456\ American Psychiatric Association. (2010). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with major depressive
disorder, 3rd ed. Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/mdd.pdf.
\457\ American Psychiatric Association. (2010). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia: 2nd ed.
Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/schizophrenia.pdf.
\458\ U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, & U.S. Department of
Defense. (2016). Management of major depressive disorder (MDD).
Retrieved from: //www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/MH/mdd/VADoDMDDCPGFINAL82916.pdf.
\459\ U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs & U.S. Department of
Defense. (2010) VA/DOD clinical practice guideline for management of
bipolar disorder in adults. Retrieved from: //www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/MH/bd/bd_305_full.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interventions that can be applied in the inpatient setting that
increase medication compliance and prevent the negative outcomes
associated with nonadherence have been identified. These interventions
include patient education, enhanced therapeutic relationships, shared
decision-making, and text-message reminders, with multidimensional
approaches resulting in the best
outcomes.460 461 462 463 464 465 Furthermore, patients and
caregivers interviewed during the development of this measure indicated
the importance of the facility's role in communicating information
about medications to the patient, pharmacy, and outpatient
providers.\466\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\460\ Douaihy AB, Kelly TM, Sullivan C. Medications for
substance use disorders. Social work in public health. 2013;28(3-
4):264-278.
\461\ Haddad PM, Brain C, Scott J. Nonadherence with
antipsychotic medication in schizophrenia: challenges and management
strategies. Patient related outcome measures. 2014;5:43-62.
\462\ Hung CI. Factors predicting adherence to antidepressant
treatment. Current opinion in psychiatry. 2014;27(5):344-349.
\463\ Lanouette NM, Folsom DP, Sciolla A, Jeste DV. Psychotropic
medication nonadherence among United States Latinos: a comprehensive
literature review. Psychiatric services (Washington, DC).
2009;60(2):157-174.
\464\ Mitchell AJ. Understanding Medication Discontinuation in
Depression. BMedSci Psychiatric Times. 2007;24(4).
\465\ Sylvia LG, Hay A, Ostacher MJ, et al. Association between
therapeutic alliance, care satisfaction, and pharmacological
adherence in bipolar disorder. Journal of clinical
psychopharmacology. 2013;33(3):343-350.
\466\ Health Services Advisory Group. Final Methodology Report:
Medication Continuation Following Inpatient Discharge. Tampa, FL;
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Appropriateness for the IPFQR Program
In compliance with section 1890A(a)(2) of the Act, this measure was
included in a publicly available document: ``List of Measures under
Consideration for December 1, 2016'' available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf. The MAP Hospital Workgroup concluded that the measure
addressed a critical quality objective, was evidence-based, and would
contribute to efficient use of resources.\467\ One Workgroup member
commented that it was appropriate to hold IPFs accountable for patients
filling a prescription for an evidence-based medication post-discharge,
further remarking that the measure was moving in the right
direction.\468\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\467\ MAP Hospital Workgroup, Preliminary Analysis Worksheet.
December 2017.
\468\ National Quality Forum, Measure Applications Partnership.
Meeting Transcript, Day 1 of 2--In-Person Meeting. 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MAP Hospital Workgroup classified the measure as ``Refine and
Resubmit Prior to Rulemaking.'' \469\ The measure received this
classification because the MAP recommended that measure testing be
completed to demonstrate reliability and validity at the facility level
in the hospital setting and that the measure be submitted to NQF for
review and endorsement.\470\ The MAP also requested additional details
on the measure, such as: (1) The definition of medication dispensation;
(2) how does the facility know whether the medication was dispensed;
and (3) how the measure would be impacted if Medicare Part D coverage
is optional. The MAP also recommended that this measure be submitted to
NQF for review and endorsement. The final methodology report includes
the results of reliability and validity testing, and additional measure
updates that occurred between the MAP review and NQF submission in
December 2016.\471\ This methodology report also provides the
additional details requested by MAP at the December meeting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\469\ //www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=84452.
\470\ National Quality Forum, Measure Application Partnership.
MAP 2017 Considerations for Implementing Measures in Federal
Programs: Hospitals. 2017.
\471\ Health Services Advisory Group. Final Methodology Report:
Medication Continuation Following Inpatient Discharge. Tampa, FL;
2016. //www.cms.gov/medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-
Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-
Methodology.html. To access the report, click on the zip file titled
``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Medication Continuation Measure.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reliability and validity testing completed in 2016 using the final
measure specifications demonstrates that the measure, as specified,
provides reliable and valid facility-level scores of medication
continuation.\472\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\472\ Health Services Advisory Group. Final Methodology Report:
Medication Continuation Following Inpatient Discharge. Tampa, FL;
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reliability was established using a method of mean denominator and
volume categories. Using that approach, a minimum denominator size of
75 discharges was established to attain an overall reliability score of
at least 0.7; this reliability score is within acceptable norms and
indicates sufficient signal strength to discriminate performance
between facilities.\473\ This means that it is possible to distinguish
good performance from poor performance based on measure scores among
facilities with at least 75 cases in the denominator.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\473\ Adams J. The reliability of provider profiling: a
tutorial. Santa Monica, CA: RAND; 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Validity was established by evaluating the correlations of
medication continuation scores with the conceptually related IPFQR
Program measures. The medication continuation scores were moderately
correlated with the scores for 7- and 30-day follow-up after
hospitalization for mental illness scores as expected (rho = 0.35 and
0.45, where rho is the Spearman's rank correlation coefficient). In
other words, the positive correlation between scores of these two types
of measures is expected because high follow-up rates with mental health
providers and high follow-up rates of medication continuation both
indicate a high-quality transition from the inpatient to the outpatient
setting. The medication continuation scores were negatively correlated
with readmission scores as expected (rho = -0.27). This negative
correlation is expected because patients that do not continue their
medications are more likely to relapse and be
[[Page 20124]]
readmitted.474 475 476 All correlations are statistically
significant at p-value <0.0001. After reviewing these results and the
proposed measure specifications, all of the 10 TEP members who were
present for the face validity vote agreed that the measure score had
face validity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\474\ 1 Glue P, Donovan MR, Kolluri S, Emir B. Meta-analysis of
relapse prevention antidepressant trials in depressive disorders.
The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.
2010;44(8):697-705.
\475\ Geddes JR, Carney SM, Davies C, et al. Relapse prevention
with antidepressant drug treatment in depressive disorders: a
systematic review. Lancet. 2003;361(9358):653-661.
\476\ Gilmer TP, Dolder CR, Lacro JP, et al. Adherence to
treatment with antipsychotic medication and health care costs among
Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia. The American journal of
psychiatry. 2004;161(4):692-699.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This measure was submitted to NQF for endorsement on December 16,
2016, the NQF Standing Committee has recommended the measure for
endorsement, and we are currently awaiting NQF's final decision. Under
section 1886(s)(4)(D)(i) of the Act, measures selected for the IPFQR
Program must have been endorsed by the entity with a contract under
section 1890(a) of the Act. The NQF currently holds this contract.
However, section 1886(s)(4)(D)(ii) of the Act provides that, in the
case of a specified area or medical topic determined appropriate by the
Secretary for which a feasible and practical measure has not been
endorsed by the entity with a contract under section 1890(a) of the
Act, the Secretary may specify a measure that is not so endorsed as
long as due consideration is given to measures that have been endorsed
or adopted by a consensus organization identified by the Secretary. We
have reviewed NQF endorsed measures related to medication continuation
in this patient population and did not identify any equivalent
measures. We believe this measure is consensus-based because of the
extensive measure development process, including the solicitation of
expert and patient opinion and public comments (discussed in more
detail below).
In addition, the proposed measure addresses several aspects of the
CMS Quality Strategy goals and objectives. The measure supports the CMS
Quality Strategy Goal to ``promote effective prevention and treatment
of chronic disease,'' which includes an objective to improve behavioral
health access and quality of care by using evidence-based
practices.\477\ The measure also supports the CMS Quality Strategy Goal
to ``promote effective communication and coordination of care.'' \478\
Specifically, the measure addresses three objectives within the goal of
``promoting effective communication and coordination of care'': (1)
``To reduce admissions and readmissions'' \479\ as patients with these
conditions who do not adhere to their medication regimens are at an
increased risk of relapse and readmission; \480 481 482\ (2) ``to embed
best practices to enable successful transitions between all settings of
care,'' \483\ because ensuring medication continuation following
discharge is a critical component of transitioning from the IPF to the
home or home health care; and (3) ``to enable effective healthcare
system navigation,'' \484\ as we believe that this measure will
encourage IPFs to provide information to patients regarding the
importance of medication continuation and guidance on how to fill
prescriptions following discharge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\477\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS Quality
Strategy 2016. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human
Services; 2015. //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/CMS-Quality-Strategy.pdf.
\478\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS Quality
Strategy 2016. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human
Services; 2015. //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/CMS-Quality-Strategy.pdf.
\479\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS Quality
Strategy 2016. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human
Services; 2015. //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/CMS-Quality-Strategy.pdf.
\480\ Glue P, Donovan MR, Kolluri S, Emir B. Meta-analysis of
relapse prevention antidepressant trials in depressive disorders.
The Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry.
2010;44(8):697-705.
\481\ Geddes JR, Carney SM, Davies C, et al. Relapse prevention
with antidepressant drug treatment in depressive disorders: a
systematic review. Lancet. 2003;361(9358):653-661.
\482\ Gilmer TP, Dolder CR, Lacro JP, et al. Adherence to
treatment with antipsychotic medication and health care costs among
Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia. The American journal of
psychiatry. 2004;161(4):692-699.
\483\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS Quality
Strategy 2016. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human
Services; 2015. //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/CMS-Quality-Strategy.pdf.
\484\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. CMS Quality
Strategy 2016. Baltimore, MD: US Department of Health and Human
Services; 2015. //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Downloads/CMS-Quality-Strategy.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed measure would complement the portfolio of facility-
level measures in the IPFQR Program that assess the transition from the
inpatient to outpatient setting: Follow-Up After Hospitalization for
Mental Illness; Thirty-day All Cause Unplanned Readmission Following
Psychiatric Hospitalization in an Inpatient Psychiatric Facility;
Transition Record with Specified Elements Received by Discharged
Patients; and Timely Transmission of Transition Record.
More detailed information about the development of this measure as
well as final measure specifications can be downloaded from the CMS Web
site at: //www.cms.gov/medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-
Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html.
To access the report, click on the zip file titled ``Inpatient
Psychiatric Facility Medication Continuation Measure.''
c. Measure Calculation
The measure is calculated by dividing the number of admissions that
meet the numerator criteria (described below) by the number of
admissions that meet the denominator criteria (also described below).
(1) Numerator
The numerator for the measure includes discharges for patients with
a principal diagnosis of MDD, schizophrenia, or bipolar disorder in the
denominator who were dispensed at least one evidence-based outpatient
medication within 2 days prior to discharge through 30 days post-
discharge. The evidence-based medications that define the numerator are
based on the practice guidelines for each condition from the APA and
VA/DoD.485 486 487 488 489 Furthermore, we sought to align
the medications with evidence-based medications from existing quality
measures including the Antidepressant Medication Management measure
from the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) 2015
for MDD, the Adherence
[[Page 20125]]
to Antipsychotic Medications for Individuals with Schizophrenia measure
(NQF #1879) for schizophrenia, and the Adherence to Mood Stabilizers
for Individuals with Bipolar I Disorder measure (NQF #1880) for bipolar
disorder. Staff pharmacists reviewed these lists of medications for
completeness and appropriateness in the IPF setting. The finalized
lists of evidence-based medications are available in the measure
methodology report at: //www.cms.gov/medicare/Quality-
Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html. To access the report, click on the zip file
titled ``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Medication Continuation
Measure.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\485\ American Psychiatric Association. (2010). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with major depressive
disorder, 3rd ed. Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/mdd.pdf.
\486\ American Psychiatric Association. (2002). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with bipolar disorder,
second edition. Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/bipolar.pdf.
\487\ American Psychiatric Association. (2010). Practice
guideline for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia: 2nd ed.
Retrieved from: //psychiatryonline.org/pb/assets/raw/sitewide/practice_guidelines/guidelines/schizophrenia.pdf.
\488\ U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs & U.S. Department of
Defense. (2016). Management of major depressive disorder (MDD).
Retrieved from: //www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/MH/mdd/VADoDMDDCPGFINAL82916.pdf.
\489\ U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs & U.S. Department of
Defense. (2010) VA/DOD clinical practice guideline for management of
bipolar disorder in adults. Retrieved from: //www.healthquality.va.gov/guidelines/MH/bd/bd_305_full.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We considered the appropriate number of days prior to discharge and
post-discharge to include in the follow-up period for the numerator.
Clinical experts noted that discharge planning may start as early as 2
days prior to discharge and that some facilities may help patients fill
their outpatient prescriptions prior to discharge. Therefore, the
numerator includes outpatient medications filled up to 2 days prior to
discharge (Day 2 through Day 1). The follow-up period extends 30 days
post-discharge (Day 0 through Day 30) to align with other care
coordination measures, such as the 30 day follow-up period in Follow-Up
After Hospitalization for Mental Illness (FUH) (NQF #0576) which we
finalized for the IPFQR Program in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(78 FR 50894 through 50896). To further support a 30-day follow-up
period, we confirmed that over 93 percent of the evidence-based
prescriptions filled prior to the admission were for a 30-day supply,
which indicates that most patients would need to fill a medication
within 30 days of discharge to avoid gaps in treatment even if they had
some medications at home.
(2) Denominator
The denominator for the measure includes Medicare FFS beneficiaries
aged 18 years and older who were discharged from an IPF to home or home
health care \490\ with a principal diagnosis of MDD, schizophrenia, or
bipolar disorder. The denominator excludes discharges for patients who:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\490\ The measure specifications, as submitted to the MAP, did
not include home health care. For details of this addition, please
see the measure methodology report: //www.cms.gov/medicare/
Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/
HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. To access the report,
click on the zip file titled ``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility
Medication Continuation Measure.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) during the
inpatient stay or follow-up period because some patients who receive
ECT during the inpatient stay or follow-up period may have failed
pharmacotherapy and would not fill an evidence-based prescription post-
discharge;
Received Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) during
the inpatient stay or follow-up period because some patients who
receive TMS during the inpatient stay or follow-up period may have
failed pharmacotherapy and would not fill an evidence-based
prescription post-discharge;
Were pregnant during the inpatient stay because some of
the evidence-based medications for the treatment of MDD, schizophrenia,
and bipolar disorder are contraindicated during pregnancy;
Had a secondary diagnosis of delirium because some of the
evidence-based medications for the treatment of MDD, schizophrenia, and
bipolar disorder are contraindicated for patients with delirium; or
Had a principal diagnosis of schizophrenia and secondary
diagnosis of dementia because evidence-based medications for the
treatment of schizophrenia have an FDA Black Box Warning due to an
increased risk of mortality for elderly patients with dementia related
psychosis.\491\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\491\ U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Public Health Advisory:
Deaths with Antipsychotics in Elderly Patients with Behavioral
Disturbances. 2005. Accessed at: //www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/PostmarketDrugSafetyInformationforPatientsandProviders/ucm053171.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All patients in the measure denominator are enrolled in Medicare
Parts A, B, and D during the measurement and follow-up periods.
Therefore, these patients have prescription drug coverage for evidence-
based medications in the measure. While patients are responsible for
some out-of-pocket medication costs after Part D has been applied, low
income patients qualify for additional support through both Medicare
and Medicaid to help mitigate the cost of prescriptions and ensure that
patients do not face financial barriers to filling necessary
medications.
We refer readers to the measure specifications for more details
about measure inclusions and exclusions at: //www.cms.gov/
medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/
HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. To access the report,
click on the zip file titled ``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility
Medication Continuation Measure.''
d. Data Sources
The proposed measure would be implemented using Medicare FFS Parts
A, B, and D claims and enrollment data to calculate the measure
results. Valid prescription drug claims from Medicare Parts B and D
provide the data necessary to calculate this measure. Therefore, no
data collection will be required from IPFs. The measure would be
reported as a combined facility-level rate across all three conditions.
The measurement period is 2 years to maximize the number of facilities
with a minimum of 75 discharges, which is necessary for calculation of
reliable facility-level scores.\492\ If this measure is finalized as
proposed, we will inform stakeholders of the claims data collection
period through a subregulatory process, such as on a CMS Web site and/
or on our applicable listservs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\492\ Health Services Advisory Group. Final Methodology Report:
Medication Continuation Following Inpatient Discharge. Tampa, FL;
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
e. Public Comment
During the measure development process, we solicited public
comments on the measure via the CMS Quality Measures Public Comment
Page.\493\ We provided the draft measure information form \494\ and
draft measure justification form \495\ to the public for review. We
accepted public comments from August 25, 2016 through September 15,
2016. Numerous commenters expressed support for the Medication
Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge measure (with
only 6 of 53 commenters expressing reluctance to support the measure)
and commented on the importance of measuring medication continuation as
this is an important component of care transitions and reduces the risk
of readmissions. We received public comments about denominator
specifications, numerator specifications, data collection, attribution
of the measure to the IPF, and the relevance of the proposed measure.
After review and evaluation of all the public comments received, we
expanded the follow-up period from day of discharge (Day 0) through 30
days post discharge to include outpatient
[[Page 20126]]
prescriptions filled up to 2 days prior to discharge as described
above. For specific information regarding the comments we received, we
refer readers to the public comment summary at: //www.cms.gov/
medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/
HospitalQualityInits/Measure-Methodology.html. To access the report,
click on the zip file titled ``Inpatient Psychiatric Facility
Medication Continuation Measure.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\493\ CMS Quality Measure Public Comment Page: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/MMS/CallforPublicComment.html#44 In the ``Downloads''
section of this page, please select ``Recently Archived Call for
Public Comments Files.'' The information regarding the Medication
Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge information
is available in the ``Inpatient-Psychiatric-Facility-IPF-Outcome-
and-Process-Measure-Development-and-Maintenance'' zip file).
\494\ Ibid.
\495\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe the proposed measure evaluates a process with a
demonstrated quality gap and has the potential to benefit patients. For
these reasons and the reasons stated above, we are proposing the
Medication Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge
measure described in this section for the FY 2020 payment determination
and subsequent years.
In summary, we are proposing one measure for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years, as shown in the table below.
Newly Proposed IPFQR Program Measure for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
National quality strategy priority NQF # Measure ID Measure
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Communication/Care Coordination........... N/A N/A Medication Continuation following
Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We welcome public comment on our proposal to adopt the Medication
Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge measure.
4. Summary of Proposed and Previously Finalized Measures for the FY
2020 Payment Determinations and Subsequent Years
If the Medication Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric
Discharge measure is adopted, the number of measures for the FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years will total 19 as set forth
in the table below.
Proposed and Previously Finalized Measures for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NQF # Measure ID Measure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
640........................... HBIPS-2.......... Hours of Physical
Restraint Use.
641........................... HBIPS-3.......... Hours of Seclusion
Use.
560........................... HBIPS-5.......... Patients Discharged
on Multiple
Antipsychotic
Medications with
Appropriate
Justification.
576........................... FUH.............. Follow-up After
Hospitalization for
Mental Illness.
1661.......................... SUB-1............ Alcohol Use
Screening.
1663.......................... SUB-2 and SUB-2a. Alcohol Use Brief
Intervention
Provided or Offered
and SUB-2a Alcohol
Use Brief
Intervention.
1664.......................... SUB-3 and SUB-3a. Alcohol and Other
Drug Use Disorder
Treatment Provided
or Offered at
Discharge and SUB-3a
Alcohol and Other
Drug Use Disorder
Treatment at
Discharge.
1651.......................... TOB-1............ Tobacco Use
Screening.
1654.......................... TOB-2 and TOB-2a. Tobacco Use Treatment
Provided or Offered
and TOB-2a Tobacco
Use Treatment.
1656.......................... TOB-3 and TOB-3a. Tobacco Use Treatment
Provided or Offered
at Discharge and Tob-
3a Tobacco Use
Treatment at
Discharge.
1659.......................... IMM-2............ Influenza
Immunization.
647........................... N/A.............. Transition Record
with Specified
Elements Received by
Discharged Patients
(Discharges from an
Inpatient Facility
to Home/Self Care or
Any Other Site of
Care).
648........................... N/A.............. Timely Transmission
of Transition Record
(Discharges from an
Inpatient Facility
to Home/Self Care or
Any Other Site of
Care).
N/A........................... N/A.............. Screening for
Metabolic Disorders.
431........................... N/A.............. Influenza Vaccination
Coverage Among
Healthcare
Personnel.
N/A........................... N/A.............. Assessment of Patient
Experience of Care.
N/A........................... N/A.............. Use of an Electronic
Health Record.
2860 *........................ N/A.............. Thirty-Day All-Cause
Unplanned
Readmission
Following
Psychiatric
Hospitalization in
an Inpatient
Psychiatric
Facility.
N/A........................... N/A.............. Medication
Continuation
following Inpatient
Psychiatric
Discharge.**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Since this measure was finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (57239 through 57246), NQF endorsement has been received.
** New measure proposed for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years.
5. Possible IPFQR Program Measures and Topics for Future Consideration
As we have previously indicated (79 FR 45974 through 45975), we
seek to develop a comprehensive set of quality measures to be available
for widespread use for informed decision-making and quality improvement
in the IPF setting. Therefore, through future rulemaking, we intend to
propose new measures for development or adoption that will help further
our goals of achieving better healthcare and improved health for
individuals who obtain inpatient psychiatric services through the
widespread dissemination and use of quality information. As noted on
the ``List of Measures under Consideration for December 1, 2016'' \496\
published by the NQF on behalf of CMS, we are considering a measure of
Medication Reconciliation on Admission and a measure of Identification
of Opioid Use Disorder among Patients Admitted to
[[Page 20127]]
Inpatient Psychiatric Facilities. We welcome comments on these measure
concepts for future inclusion in the IPFQR Program. In addition, we
have identified several areas which we believe are important to
stakeholders, but which are not currently sufficiently covered by IPFQR
Program measures. These areas are:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\496\ //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityMeasures/Downloads/Measures-under-Consideration-List-for-2016.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family and caregiver engagement;
Patient experience of care;
Opioid use and treatment;
Access to care; and
Inpatient assaults and violence.
We welcome public comments on possible new measures in these or
other areas.
6. Public Display and Review Requirements
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53653 through 53654), in which we finalized that we would publicly
display the submitted data on the CMS Web site beginning in the first
quarter of the calendar year following the respective payment
determination year. We also finalized that IPFs would have the
opportunity to preview their data between September 20 and October 19
of the respective payment determination year. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (78 FR 50897 through 50898), we finalized policies on
public display and review of data stating that we would publicly
display the data in April of the calendar year following the start of
the payment determination year and that the preview period would be 30
days approximately twelve weeks prior to the public display of the
data. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57248 through
57249), we finalized changes to how we specify the timeframes for the
IPFQR Program, including that we would: (1) No longer specify the exact
dates of the preview period or data publication in rulemaking; (2) make
the data for the IPFQR Program available as soon as possible; (3)
announce the exact timeframes through subregulatory guidance; and (4)
continue our policy that the time period for review will be
approximately 30 days. In this proposed rule, we are not proposing any
changes to the public display and review policies.
7. Form, Manner, and Timing of Quality Data Submission for the FY 2019
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
a. Procedural Requirements for FY 2019 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53654 through 77 FR
53655), we finalized procedural requirements for the IPFQR Program,
including the requirements that facilities must do the following to
participate in the IPFQR Program:
Register with QualityNet before the IPF begins reporting;
Identify a QualityNet Administrator who follows the
registration process listed on the QualityNet Web site;
Complete a Notice of Participation (NOP) within a
specified time period; and,
Submit aggregate numerator and denominator data for all
age groups, for all measures.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50901), we clarified
that the policy we adopted for the FY 2016 payment determination also
applies to the FY 2017 payment determination and subsequent years,
unless we change it through future rulemaking. In this proposed rule,
we are proposing to make changes related to the Notice of Participation
(NOP) and withdrawals for the FY 2019 payment determination and
subsequent years.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53654), we finalized
our policies that IPFs participating in the IPFQR Program must comply
with several procedural requirements. In that rule, one of the policies
we finalized was that the time frame for completing an online NOP form
is between January 1 and August 15 before each respective payment
determination year (for example, for the FY 2017 payment determination
year, IPFs would be required to submit an NOP between January 1, 2016
and August 15, 2016). Similarly, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53654), we also finalized that withdrawals from the IPFQR
Program will be accepted no later than August 15 before the beginning
of each respective payment determination year.
As described in section IX.D.7.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, there have been times that we have updated the data submission
period through subregulatory means; this has led to a data submission
period that is not aligned with the submission period for the NOP or
program withdrawal. To ensure these dates align, in this proposed rule,
we are proposing to change the submission timeframes for both NOPs and
withdrawals from between January 1 and August 15 before each respective
payment determination year to prior to the end of the data submission
period before each respective payment determination year. This means
that we are proposing to accept NOPs and withdrawals any time prior to
the end of the data submission period before the payment determination
year. For example, for the FY 2019 payment determination year, if our
proposal in IX.D.7.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule is
finalized, the end of the data submission period would be a date on or
after June 15, 2018 (which we would announce via subregulatory means).
This date would coincide with the deadline to submit an NOP or withdraw
from the program.
In addition, we are proposing to provide precise dates that define
the end of the data submission period/NOP/withdrawal submission
deadline through subregulatory means, such as on a CMS Web site and/or
on our applicable listservs, beginning with the FY 2019 payment
determination.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to: (1) Change the
submission timeframes for both NOPs and withdrawals to the end of the
data submission period before each respective payment determination
year; and (2) provide precise dates that define the end of the data
submission period/NOP/withdrawal submission deadline through
subregulatory means for the FY 2019 payment determination and
subsequent years.
b. Data Submission Requirements for the FY 2019 Payment Determination
and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53655 through 53656) and the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50901) for our previously finalized policies regarding quality data
submission requirements. In this proposed rule, we are proposing to
make changes related to the data submission period for the FY 2019
payment determination and subsequent years.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53655) we finalized
our policies related to reporting periods and submission timelines for
data required by the IPFQR Program. IPFs are required to submit their
aggregated data on the measures on an annual basis, beginning in FY
2014 (77 FR 53655). In that rule, we specified that data must be
submitted between July 1 and August 15 of the calendar year preceding a
given payment determination year (for example, between July 1, 2015 and
August 15, 2015 for the FY 2016 payment determination (77 FR 53655
through 53656)). In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50899),
we clarified that this policy applies to all future years of data
submission for the IPFQR Program unless we change the policy through
future rulemaking.
Because there have been times that the submission period has been
updated
[[Page 20128]]
through the subregulatory process (for example, due to systems issues
impacting data collection in the specified timeframe), in order to
avoid contradictory guidance between dates established in the Federal
Register and dates established through subregulatory guidance, we are
proposing to no longer specify the exact dates of the submission period
through rulemaking. We are proposing to provide these exact dates
through a subregulatory process instead, beginning with the FY 2019
payment determination. We are proposing to shift to a 45-day submission
period beginning at least 30 calendar days following the end of the
data collection period. For example, for the FY 2019 payment
determination, the latest reporting period for a measure for which
facilities must submit data ends on March 31, 2018. In this example,
the submission period would begin at least 30 days after March 31, 2018
(that is, no earlier than May 1, 2018). IPFs then would have 45 days
from May 1 to submit their data, which would result in a June 15, 2018
submission deadline for this example. Because the exact dates could
vary from year to year, for the FY 2019 payment determination and
subsequent years, we are also proposing to provide notification of the
exact dates of the 45-day submission period through subregulatory
means, such as on a CMS Web site and/or on our applicable listservs.
We welcome public comments on our proposals to: (1) Change the
specification of the submission deadline from exact dates (that is,
July 1-August 15) to a 45-day submission period beginning at least 30
days following the end of the data collection period; and (2) provide
notification of the exact dates of the 45-day submission period through
subregulatory means for the FY 2019 payment determination and
subsequent years.
c. Reporting Requirements for the FY 2019 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53655 through 53657), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50901
through 50902), and the FY 2016 IPF PPS final rule (80 FR 46715 and
46716), for information about data reporting periods. We are not
proposing any changes to these policies in this proposed rule.
d. Population and Sampling
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53657 through 53658), the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50902), FY 2015 IPF PPS final rule (79 FR 45973), the FY 2016 IPF PPS
final rule (80 FR 46717 through 46719), for information about
population, sampling, and minimum case thresholds. In this proposed
rule, we are not proposing any changes to the population and sampling
methodology or to the minimum case thresholds.
e. Data Accuracy and Completeness Acknowledgement (DACA) Requirements
We are not proposing any changes to the DACA requirements and refer
readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53658) for more
information on these requirements.
8. Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures
We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53658 through 53660), FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50953),
and 42 CFR 412.434 for details on our reconsideration and appeals
procedures. We are not proposing any changes to these policies.
9. Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy for the IPFQR
Program
a. Background
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53659 through
53660), we finalized policies for facilities to request waivers, now
called ``exceptions'' (79 FR 45978), from quality reporting
requirements for the FY 2014 payment determination and subsequent
years. We stated that in the event of extraordinary circumstances not
within the control of IPFs, such as a natural disaster, IPFs may
request a reporting extension or a complete waiver of the requirement
to submit quality data for one or more quarters for the FY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years. In that rule, we also finalized
that facilities would be required to submit a request form with the
following information:
The IPF's CMS Certification Number (CCN);
The IPF's name;
Contact information for the IPF's Chief Executive Officer
(CEO) and any other designated personnel, including name, email
address, telephone number, and mailing address (the address must be a
physical address, not a post office box);
The IPF's reason for requesting an extension or waiver;
Evidence of the impact of extraordinary circumstances,
including but not limited to photographs, newspaper and other media
articles; and
A date when the IPF will again be able to submit IPFQR
Program data, and a justification for the proposed date.
In addition, we finalized that the form must be signed by the IPF's
CEO and submitted within 30 days of the date that the extraordinary
circumstance occurred. We also finalized that following the receipt of
the request form, we would: (1) Provide a written acknowledgement,
using the contact information provided in the request, to the CEO and
any additional designated IPF personnel, notifying them that the IPF's
request has been received; and (2) provide a formal response to the CEO
and any designated IPF personnel, using the contact information
provided in the request, notifying the IPF of our decision.
Furthermore, in that rule, we discussed that the above policy does not
preclude us from granting waivers or extensions to IPFs that have not
requested them when we determine that an extraordinary circumstance has
affected an entire region or locale. We stated that if we make the
determination to grant such a waiver or extension, we would communicate
this decision through routine communication channels (77 FR 53659). In
the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we did not make any changes to
this policy (78 FR 50903).
In the FY 2015 IPF PPS final rule (79 FR 45978), we clarified that
the term ``exception'' is synonymous with the term ``waiver'' used in
previous rules and renamed our policy to ``Extraordinary Circumstances
Exception'' in order to align with similar exceptions in other CMS
quality reporting programs. In that rule, we also finalized that that
we may grant a waiver or extension to IPFs if we determine that a
systemic problem with one of our data collection systems directly
affects the ability of the IPFs to submit data. We stated that because
we do not anticipate that these types of systemic errors will occur
often, we do not anticipate granting a waiver or extension on this
basis frequently (79 FR 45978). We noted that if we make the
determination to grant a waiver or extension, we would communicate this
decision through routine communication channels to IPFs, vendors, and
quality improvement organizations (QIOs) by means of, for example,
memoranda, emails, and notices on the QualityNet Web site (79 FR
45978).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to modify aspects of our
current ECE policy to align with those of other CMS quality reporting
programs. Many of our quality reporting and value-based purchasing
programs
[[Page 20129]]
share common processes for requesting an exception from program
reporting due to an extraordinary circumstance not within a provider's
control. We refer readers to the Hospital IQR Program (76 FR 51651
through 51652, 78 FR 50836 through 50837, 79 FR 50277, 81 FR 57181
through 57182, and 42 CFR 412.140(c)(2)), Hospital OQR Program (77 FR
68489, 78 FR 75119 through 75120, 79 FR 66966, and 80 FR 70524), and
ASCQR Program (77 FR 53642 through 53643 and 78 FR 75140 through 75141)
as well as the HAC Reduction Program (80 FR 49579 through 49581),
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (80 FR 49542 through 49543),
and PCHQR Program (78 FR 50848) for program specific information about
extraordinary circumstances exceptions requests. In reviewing the
policies for these programs, however, we found five areas in which
these programs have variance: (1) Contact Information and Signature on
ECE Form--there is inconsistency regarding whether the program requires
contact information and a signature on the ECE form from the facility's
or hospital's CEO versus CEO or designated personnel; (2) Submission
deadline--there is inconsistency in requiring the form be submitted
within 90 days following the date that the extraordinary circumstance
occurred versus within 30 days following the date the extraordinary
circumstance occurred; (3) CMS' response following an ECE request--
there is inconsistency regarding specification of a timeline for us to
provide our formal response notifying the facility or hospital of our
decision; (4) CMS system issues--there is inconsistency regarding
whether programs make explicit the ability to grant ECEs specific for
systemic issues with CMS data collection systems that directly affect
the ability of hospitals/facilities to submit data; and (5) Policy
name--there is inconsistency in the names used to refer to the policy,
with some programs using ``extraordinary circumstances extensions/
exemptions'' and some using ``extraordinary circumstances exceptions.''
We believe aligning these five areas across the programs will
improve administrative efficiencies for affected facilities or
hospitals. We note that, in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule,
we are also proposing to update ECE policies in the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program (in section V.I.12. of the preamble of
this proposed rule); the HAC Reduction Program (in section V.K.8. of
the preamble of this proposed rule), Hospital IQR Program (in section
IX.A.15. of the preamble of this proposed rule), and the PCHQR Program
(in section IX.B.10. of the preamble of this proposed rule) in order to
align policies. We refer readers to these sections for more details.
b. Proposed ECE Policy Modifications
The IPFQR Program currently includes policies to: (1) Make explicit
the ability to grant ECEs specific for systemic issues with CMS data
collection systems that directly affect the ability of hospitals/
facilities to submit data; and (2) refer to the ECE policy as
``extraordinary circumstances exceptions.'' Therefore we are not making
proposals related to these two items. However, to improve cross-program
alignment we are proposing to update the IPFQR Program's ECE policy by:
(1) Allowing designated personnel to sign the ECE request form that
IPFs currently submit with contact information for the CEO and
designated personnel and the signature from the CEO; (2) extending the
deadline from 30 days following the date that the extraordinary
circumstance occurred to 90 days following the date the extraordinary
circumstance occurred; and (3) specifying that we will strive to
provide our formal response to an ECE request notifying the IPF of our
decision within 90 days of receipt of the IPF's request. We are
proposing that these policies would apply beginning with extraordinary
circumstances that occur on or after the effective date of the 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, anticipated to be October 1, 2017. These
proposals are discussed in more detail below.
(1) Signature of Either Designated Personnel or CEO
As discussed above, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53659 through 53660) we finalized ECE requests for the IPFQR Program
must submitted with contact information for the CEO and any designated
personnel, and be signed by the IPF's CEO. However, we now believe that
there may be circumstances in which it is not feasible for an IPF's CEO
to sign the ECE request form, such as in cases where the CEO has become
disabled or is deceased. Also, in the event that the CEO of a facility
affected by an extraordinary circumstance, such as a natural disaster,
is unavailable to sign the ECE request form, we believe that the
affected facility should be able to submit ECE form despite the CEO's
inability to sign. Therefore, we are proposing that ECE forms may be
signed by either the CEO or the designated personnel as listed on the
ECE form.
(2) ECE Request Submission Deadline
As discussed above, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53659 through 53660) we finalized that ECE requests for the IPFQR
Program must be submitted within 30 days of the date that the
extraordinary circumstance occurred. However, we believe that it may be
difficult for some IPFs to timely evaluate the impact of a certain
extraordinary circumstance within 30 calendar days. Therefore, we are
proposing to change the ECE request form submission deadline from
within 30 days of the date that the extraordinary circumstance occurred
to within 90 days of the date that the extraordinary circumstance
occurred.
We believe that extending the deadline to 90 calendar days would
allow IPFs more time to determine whether it is necessary and
appropriate to submit an ECE request and to provide a more
comprehensive account of the extraordinary circumstance in their ECE
request form to CMS. As an example, if an IPF has suffered damage due
to a hurricane on October 1, 2017, it would have until December 30,
2017, 90 calendar days after the hurricane, to submit an ECE form via
the QualityNet Secure Portal, mail, email, or secure fax as instructed
on the ECE form.
(3) Clarification of CMS Response Timeframe
As stated above, in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53659 through 53660), we finalized that following the receipt of the
request form, we would provide: (1) A written acknowledgement, using
the contact information provided in the request, to the CEO and any
additional designated IPF personnel, notifying them that the IPF's ECE
request has been received; and (2) a formal response to the CEO and any
designated IPF personnel, using the contact information provided in the
request, notifying the IPF of our decision. We believe that it is
important for IPFs to receive timely feedback in a predictable time
frame regarding the status of ECE requests. We strive to complete our
review of each ECE request as quickly as possible. However, the number
of requests we receive and the complexity of the information provided
affect the timeframe that we need to make ECE determinations.
Therefore, in an effort to provide facilities with a predictable
timeframe, we are clarifying that we will strive to complete our review
of ECE requests within 90 days of receipt, depending on the number of
requests and the complexity of the information provided by facilities.
[[Page 20130]]
We welcome public comments on our proposals to: (1) Specify that
ECE forms can be signed by either the CEO or the designated personnel
as listed on the ECE form; and (2) change the ECE request form
submission deadline to within 90 days of the date that the
extraordinary circumstance occurred. We also invite public comments on
our intent to clarify that we will strive to complete our review of ECE
requests within 90 days of receipt.
E. Clinical Quality Measurement for Eligible Hospitals and Critical
Access Hospitals (CAHs) Participating in the EHR Incentive Programs
1. Background
The HITECH Act (Title IV of Division B of the ARRA, together with
Title XIII of Division A of the ARRA) authorizes incentive payments
under Medicare and Medicaid for the adoption and meaningful use of
certified electronic health record (EHR) technology (CEHRT). Incentive
payments under Medicare were available to eligible hospitals and CAHs
for certain payment years (as authorized under sections 1886(n) and
1814(l) of the Act, respectively) if they successfully demonstrated
meaningful use of CEHRT, which includes reporting on clinical quality
measures (CQMs or eCQMs) using CEHRT.
Sections 1886(b)(3)(B) and 1814(l) of the Act also establish
downward payment adjustments under Medicare, beginning with FY 2015,
for eligible hospitals and CAHs that do not successfully demonstrate
meaningful use of CEHRT for certain associated reporting periods.
Section 1903(a)(3)(F)(i) of the Act establishes 100 percent Federal
financial participation (FFP) to States for providing incentive
payments to eligible Medicaid providers (described in section
1903(t)(2) of the Act) to adopt, implement, upgrade and meaningfully
use CEHRT.
Under sections 1814(l)(3)(A), 1886(n)(3)(A), and
1903(t)(6)(C)(i)(II) of the Act and the definition of ``meaningful EHR
user'' under 42 CFR 495.4, eligible hospitals and CAHs must report on
CQMs selected by CMS using CEHRT, as part of being a meaningful EHR
user under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs.
2. Proposed Modifications to the CQM Reporting Requirements for the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs for CY 2017
a. Background
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57255), we stated
the CQM reporting periods in CY 2017 for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs as outlined below. For the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program, we finalized the following submission periods for eligible
hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs by attestation and eligible hospitals
and CAHs electronically reporting CQMs (81 FR 57255). In regard to the
Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, we provided States with the flexibility
to determine the submission periods for reporting CQMs.
Eligible Hospitals and CAHs Reporting CQMs by Attestation:
++ For eligible hospitals and CAHs demonstrating meaningful use for
the first time in 2017, the reporting period is any continuous 90-day
period within CY 2017. The submission period for attestation is the 2
months following the close of the calendar year, ending February 28,
2018.
++ For eligible hospitals and CAHs that demonstrated meaningful use
in any year prior to 2017, the reporting period is the full CY 2017
(consisting of four quarterly data reporting periods). The submission
period for attestation is the 2 months following the close of the
calendar year, ending February 28, 2018.
Eligible Hospitals and CAHs Reporting CQMs Electronically:
For eligible hospitals and CAHs demonstrating meaningful use for the
first time in 2017 or that have demonstrated meaningful use in any year
prior to 2017, the reporting period is the full CY 2017 (consisting of
four quarterly data reporting periods). The submission period for
reporting CQMs electronically begins in late spring 2017 and continues
through the 2 months following the close of the calendar year, ending
February 28, 2018.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57251 through
57255), we finalized the following reporting criteria regarding the
number of CQMs eligible hospitals and CAHs are required to report for
the reporting periods in CY 2017:
For Attestation: If only participating in the EHR
Incentive Program, report on all 16 available CQMs.
For Electronic Reporting: If only participating in the EHR
Incentive Program, or participating in both the EHR Incentive Program
and the Hospital IQR Program (81 FR 57150 through 57159), report on 8
of the available CQMs.
For further information on the policies applicable for CQM
reporting for the EHR Incentive Program in 2017, we refer readers to
the discussion in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule at 81 FR 57249
through 57257.
Since the publication of the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we
have continued to receive frequent feedback from hospitals and EHR
vendors about the ongoing challenges of implementing CQM reporting
capabilities. A summary of the main concerns identified by these data
submitters is as follows:
The timing of the transition to a new EHR system during
2017 (system upgrades or new EHR vendor) may influence hospitals'
ability to report in a timely manner;
The current timeframe for the implementation of new EHR
requirements presents challenges due to the varying 6 to 24-month
cycles needed for vendors to code new measures, test and institute
measure updates, train hospital staff, and rollout other upgraded
features;
Hospitals have had difficulty identifying applicable
measures that reflect their patient population, given the reduction in
the number of available CQMs (from 29 to 16) for CY 2017; and
Hospitals have had challenges with data mapping and
workflow because of the need to collect CY 2017 data while still
reporting CY 2016 data.
In addition, there have been other recent issues related to the CMS
data receiving system not being able to process QRDA Category I files,
and as a result, the system is not generating notifications confirming
for providers that their files have been received and processed by the
system. The aforementioned issues and challenges being experienced by
hospitals and vendors are impacting the capability of hospitals to meet
the requirements for CY 2017. As a result, we are proposing
modifications to the CY 2017 final policies in this proposed rule,
which would reduce CQM reporting requirements in order for hospitals
and vendors to address these issues.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing two modifications to our CY
2017 electronic CQM reporting policies for the Medicare and Medicaid
EHR Incentive Programs. For eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs
electronically in CY 2017, we are proposing to: (1) Decrease the number
of calendar quarters for which such hospitals are required to submit
data; and (2) decrease the number of CQMs for which such hospitals must
submit data (further discussion below). These proposals are made in
conjunction with our proposals discussed in sections IX.A.8. and
IX.A.10.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule to align requirements
for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and the Hospital
IQR Program. In making these proposals, we believe that eligible
[[Page 20131]]
hospitals and CAHs would have additional time to upgrade their systems
and processes in preparation for the transition to electronic reporting
on additional CQMs for additional quarters in future years.
As we continue to make strides with electronic reporting, we want
to ensure we provide eligible hospitals and CAHs with a robust
selection of CQMs. As noted above, hospitals have expressed concerns
with identifying applicable measures that reflect their patient
population; thus, we believe that the addition of new CQMs in the
future will offer more clinically relevant CQMs that facilitate
reporting and help drive quality improvement. In section IX.A.9.d. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss and seek feedback on
future potential CQMs for the Hospital IQR Program and the Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs for eligible hospitals and CAHs.
b. Proposed Changes to Policies Regarding Electronic Reporting of CQMs
for CY 2017
In response to concerns from stakeholders, we are proposing to
modify the CQM reporting period for eligible hospitals and CAHs
reporting CQMs electronically for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs in CY 2017--for eligible hospitals and CAHs
demonstrating meaningful use for the first time in 2017 or that have
demonstrated meaningful use in any year prior to 2017, the reporting
period would be two self-selected quarters of CQM data in CY 2017.
In addition, we are proposing to modify the reporting criteria
regarding the required number of CQMs for eligible hospitals and CAHs
that are reporting electronically for the reporting periods in CY 2017
under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs--if only
participating in the EHR Incentive Program, or participating in both
the EHR Incentive Program and the Hospital IQR Program, eligible
hospitals and CAHs would report on at least 6 (self-selected) of the
available CQMs. For a list of the available CQMs for reporting periods
in CY 2017, we refer readers to the table in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule at 81 FR 57255.
It should be noted that we are not proposing to modify any other
aspects of the policies for reporting CQMs electronically for CY 2017,
including the submission periods, nor are we proposing any changes to
our policies for reporting CQMs by attestation.
Through our proposals for CY 2017, we intend to continue to
maintain alignment between the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs and the Hospital IQR Program to reduce confusion and reporting
burden among participants in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs that also participate in the Hospital IQR Program. As noted
above, we are retaining the submission period for reporting CQMs
electronically under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program, in which such
submission period begins in late spring 2017 and continues through the
2 months following the close of the calendar year, ending February 28,
2018. In addition, we are continuing to provide States with the
flexibility to determine the submission periods for reporting CQMs
under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. For more details on the
aligned reporting requirements for the Hospital IQR and Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, we refer readers to section IX.A.10.d.
of the preamble of this proposed rule.
We believe that reducing the number of CQMs required to be
electronically reported from 8 to 6 would ease the burden on data
submitters, allowing them to shift resources to support system
upgrades, map data, and train staff on CQMs. Reducing the number of
data reporting periods to 2 quarters, rather than 4 quarters, and
allowing eligible hospitals and CAHs to select which two quarters of CY
2017 to electronically report would offer greater reporting flexibility
and allow eligible hospitals, CAHs, and vendors more time to plan for
reporting, and account for and schedule hospital-specific scenarios
such as EHR upgrades or system transitions. We recognize that eligible
hospitals and CAHs are concerned about their capability of meeting the
CY 2017 requirements established in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule and believe that these modified reporting requirements for CY 2017
account for the challenges stakeholders are experiencing while
requiring the electronic reporting on a portion of CQMs, which is
consistent with our goal to transition to electronic reporting (81 FR
57254).
We are inviting public comment on our proposals to modify the CY
2017 CQM reporting requirements for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs as described above.
3. CQM Reporting for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs
in 2018
a. Background
In the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs Final Rule (80 FR 62892 through
62893), beginning in CY 2017 and for subsequent years, we established a
CQM reporting period of one full calendar year (consisting of four
quarterly data reporting periods) for the reporting of CQMs by eligible
hospitals and CAHs participating in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs, with an exception for providers demonstrating
meaningful use for the first time under the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program, for whom the CQM reporting period is any continuous 90-day
period within the calendar year. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 57250), we noted that one full calendar year of data will
result in more complete and accurate data, and hospitals will be able
to submit one full calendar year of data for both the Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and the Hospital IQR Program, thereby
reducing the reporting burden.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57250 through
57255), we removed 13 CQMs from the set of CQMs available for eligible
hospitals and CAHs to report under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs, beginning with the reporting periods in CY 2017.
All 16 of the remaining measures listed in Table 10 of the EHR
Incentive Program Stage 2 final rule (77 FR 54083 through 54087) are
available for eligible hospitals and CAHs to report for the Medicare
and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. The following table lists the 16
CQMs available for eligible hospitals and CAHs to report for the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs beginning in CY 2017 (81
FR 57255).
CQMs for Eligible Hospitals and CAHs Beginning With CY 2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Short name Measure name NQF #
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Electronic Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AMI-8a................................. Primary PCI Received Within 90 Minutes of Hospital 0163
Arrival.
ED-3................................... Median Time from ED Arrival to ED Departure for 0496
Discharged ED Patients.
[[Page 20132]]
CAC-3.................................. Home Management Plan of Care Document Given to Patient/ (+)
Caregiver.
ED-1 *................................. Median Time from ED Arrival to ED Departure for 0495
Admitted ED Patients.
ED-2 *................................. Admit Decision Time to ED Departure Time for Admitted 0497
Patients.
EHDI-1a................................ Hearing Screening Prior to Hospital Discharge.......... 1354
PC-01.................................. Elective Delivery (Collected in aggregate, submitted 0469
via web-based tool or electronic clinical quality
measure).
PC-05.................................. Exclusive Breast Milk Feeding.......................... 0480
STK-02................................. Discharged on Antithrombotic Therapy................... 0435
STK-03................................. Anticoagulation Therapy for Atrial Fibrillation/Flutter 0436
STK-05................................. Antithrombotic Therapy by the End of Hospital Day Two.. 0438
STK-06................................. Discharged on Statin Medication........................ 0439
STK-08................................. Stroke Education....................................... (+)
STK-10................................. Assessed for Rehabilitation............................ 0441
VTE-1.................................. Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis..................... 0371
VTE-2.................................. Intensive Care Unit Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis. 0372
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* NQF endorsement has been removed.
(+) NQF endorsement has been removed.
For CY 2018 and future calendar years, we plan to continue to align
the CQM reporting requirements for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs and the Hospital IQR Program. As we expect to expand
the current measures to align with the National Quality Strategy and
the CMS Quality Strategy \497\ and incorporate updated standards and
terminology in current CQMs, including updating the electronic
specifications for these CQMs, and creating de novo CQMs, we plan to
expand the set of CQMs available for reporting under the EHR Incentive
Programs in future years. We will continue to engage stakeholders to
provide input on future proposals for CQMs as well as request comment
on future electronic specifications for new and updated CQMs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\497\ Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/CMS-Quality-Strategy.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. CQM Reporting Period for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs in CY 2018
(1) Background
Our goal is to continue to move toward increased electronic
reporting while also addressing stakeholder concerns as described
above, which we believe will likely continue into CY 2018, but to a
lesser extent than in CY 2017. With the CY 2017 proposed policies
reducing reporting requirements and providing additional time for
eligible hospitals, CAHs, and vendors to make EHR upgrades and system
transitions in CY 2017, we believe that stakeholders would be able to
address some of the issues and challenges they face prior to CY 2018,
but recognize that certain challenges and issues (for example, EHR
upgrade and system transition challenges associated with the
development cycle of technology and the timeframe to develop and
execute work flows and processes and train staff based on EHR upgrades
and system transitions) may not be fully resolved and as a result, may
persist in CY 2018. As established in the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs
Final Rule (80 FR 62894), reporting CQMs by attestation will no longer
be an option for eligible hospitals and CAHs starting with the
reporting periods in CY 2018, except in circumstances in which
electronic reporting is not feasible.
For CY 2018, we are proposing the following CQM reporting period
for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and the following
submission period for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program--for eligible
hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs electronically that demonstrate
meaningful use for the first time in 2018 or that have demonstrated
meaningful use in any year prior to 2018, the reporting period would be
the first 3 quarters of CY 2018, and the submission period would be the
2 months following the close of the calendar year, ending February 28,
2019.
For eligible hospitals and CAHs that report CQMs by attestation
under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program as a result of electronic
reporting not being feasible, and for eligible hospitals and CAHs that
report CQMs by attestation under their state's Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program, we established a CQM reporting period of the full CY 2018
(consisting of 4 quarterly data reporting periods) (80 FR 62893). We
also established an exception to this full-year reporting period for
eligible hospitals and CAHs demonstrating meaningful use for the first
time under their state's Medicaid EHR Incentive Program; under this
exception, the CQM reporting period is any continuous 90-day period
within CY 2018 (80 FR 62893).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing the submission period for
eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs by attestation under the
Medicare EHR Incentive Program would be the 2 months following the
close of the CY 2018 CQM reporting period, ending February 28, 2019.
In regard to the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, we provide States
with the flexibility to determine the method of reporting CQMs
(attestation or electronic reporting) and the submission periods for
reporting CQMs, subject to prior approval by CMS.
(2) CQM Reporting Criteria for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs in CY 2018
We are proposing the following reporting criteria under the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and
CAHs reporting CQMs electronically for the reporting period in CY
2018--for eligible hospitals and CAHs participating only in the EHR
Incentive Program, or participating in both the EHR Incentive Program
and the Hospital IQR Program, report on at least six (self-selected) of
the available CQMs from the table in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule at 81 FR 57255.
We are proposing the following reporting criteria for eligible
hospitals and CAHs that report CQMs by attestation under the Medicare
EHR Incentive Program because electronic reporting is not feasible, and
for eligible hospitals and CAHs that report CQMs by attestation under
their state's
[[Page 20133]]
Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, for the reporting period in CY 2018--
report on all 16 available CQMs from the table in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule at 81 FR 57255.
In developing these proposals, we considered several alternatives.
Specifically, we considered aligning the requirements for CY 2018 with
the proposed requirements for CY 2017 outlined in this proposed rule,
such that eligible hospitals and CAHs would report on 6 (self-selected)
available CQMs for two self-selected quarters of data in both CY 2017
and CY 2018. We also considered the final policy in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule for the Hospital IQR Program (81 FR 57150 through
57159), which would require hospitals to report one full calendar year
of data for at least 8 (self-selected) CQMs out of the available CQMs
for both the CY 2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination and
the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination. However, we
are proposing changes to this previously adopted policy in the Hospital
IQR Program and refer readers to section IX.A.8. of the preamble of
this proposed rule for more details. Ultimately, we believe that our
proposal balances our goal to shift towards electronic reporting of
quality measure data with concerns from stakeholders regarding an
increased burden to meet CQM reporting requirements.
In addition, the proposal provides eligible hospitals and CAHs with
the opportunity to have several years of experience reporting data
electronically for the Hospital IQR and Medicare and Medicaid EHR
Incentive Programs. Therefore, we believe that eligible hospitals and
CAHs will be better prepared to submit an additional quarter of data
for the CY 2018 reporting period compared to the number of quarters we
are proposing for the CY 2017 reporting period. This proposal is being
made in conjunction with our proposals discussed in section IX.A.10.d.
of the preamble of this proposed rule to align requirements for the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and the Hospital IQR
Program.
We are inviting public comment on our proposals regarding the CY
2018 reporting requirements for eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting
CQMs under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs.
c. CQM Reporting Form and Method for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program
in 2018
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49759 through
49760), we removed the QRDA-III as an option for reporting under the
Medicare EHR Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs. For the
reporting periods in 2016 and future years, we are requiring QRDA-I for
CQM electronic submissions for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program. As
noted in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49760), States
would continue to have the option, subject to our prior approval, to
allow or require QRDA-III for CQM reporting.
As noted in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49759), we
encourage health IT developers to test any updates, including any
updates to the CQMs and CMS reporting requirements based on the CMS
Implementation Guide for Quality Reporting Document Architecture (QRDA)
Category I and Category III (CMS Implementation Guide for QRDA) for
Hospital Quality Reporting (HQR), on an annual basis.
The form and method of electronic submission are further explained
in subregulatory guidance and the certification process. For example,
the following documents are updated annually to reflect the most recent
CQM electronic specifications: The CMS Implementation Guide for QRDA;
program specific performance calculation guidance; and CQM electronic
specifications and guidance documents. These documents are located on
the eCQI Resource Center Web page at //ecqi.healthit.gov/. For
further information on CQM reporting, we refer readers to the EHR
Incentive Program Web site where guides and tip sheets are located at:
//www.cms.gov/ehrincentiveprograms.
For the CY 2018 reporting period, we are proposing the following
for CQM submission under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program:
Eligible hospital and CAH participating in the Medicare
EHR Incentive Program (single program participation)--electronically
report CQMs through QualityNet Portal.
Eligible hospital and CAH options for electronic reporting
for multiple programs (that is, EHR Incentive Program and Hospital IQR
Program participation)--electronically report through QualityNet
Portal.
As noted in the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs Final Rule (80 FR
62894), starting in 2018, eligible hospitals and CAHs participating in
the Medicare EHR Incentive Program must electronically report CQMs
where feasible; and attestation to CQMs will no longer be an option
except in certain circumstances where electronic reporting is not
feasible.
For the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, States continue to be
responsible for determining whether and how electronic reporting of
CQMs would occur, or if they wish to allow reporting through
attestation. Any changes that States make to their CQM reporting
methods must be submitted through the State Medicaid Health IT Plan
(SMHP) process for CMS review and approval prior to being implemented.
For CY 2018, we are proposing to continue our policy regarding the
electronic submission of CQMs, which would require the use of the most
recent version of the CQM electronic specification for each CQM to
which the EHR is certified. For the CY 2018 electronic reporting of
CQMs, this means eligible hospitals and CAHs would be required to use
the Spring 2017 version of the CQM electronic specifications and any
applicable addenda available on the eCQI Resource Center Web page at:
//ecqi.healthit.gov/. In addition, we are proposing to require
that an eligible hospital or CAH would need to have its EHR technology
certified to all 16 available CQMs from the table in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule at 81 FR 57255 in order to meet the reporting
requirements for CY 2018. As described in the 2015 EHR Incentive
Programs Final Rule (80 FR 62767), starting in CY 2018, eligible
hospitals and CAHs are required to have EHR technology certified to the
2015 Edition.
Starting in CY 2018, we are proposing to require the use of EHR
technology certified to the 2015 Edition for CQM reporting.
Furthermore, we are proposing that an EHR certified for CQMs under the
2015 Edition certification criteria would not need to be recertified
each time it is updated to a more recent version of the CQMs. We
believe it is not necessary for an EHR certified for CQMs under the
2015 Edition certification criteria to be recertified each time it is
updated to the most recent version of the CQMs because the EHR
technology continues to meet the 2015 Edition certification criteria
and any updates to the CQM specifications do not impact or change any
elements regarding certification and thus, we are proposing that
recertification is not necessary. For further discussion regarding EHR
certification requirements for 2018, we refer readers to section
IX.G.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule. We are inviting public
comment on these proposals.
[[Page 20134]]
F. Clinical Quality Measurement for Eligible Professionals (EPs)
Participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program in 2017
The proposals in this section would apply only to EPs participating
in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. They would not apply to eligible
hospitals or CAHs, or to the Medicare EHR Incentive Program.
1. Proposed Modifications to the CQM Reporting Period for EPs in 2017
In the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs Final Rule (80 FR 62762), we
established for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs a CQM
reporting period of the full CY 2017 for EPs who have demonstrated
meaningful use in a prior year and a CQM reporting period of any
continuous 90 days within CY 2017 for EPs who are demonstrating
meaningful use for the first time (80 FR 62891 through 62892). We also
noted that we would continue to allow the States to determine the form
and manner in which Medicaid EPs should report CQMs, subject to CMS
approval (80 FR 62891, 62894).
In the final rule with comment period titled Medicare Program;
Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Alternative Payment
Model (APM) Incentive Under the Physician Fee Schedule, and Criteria
for Physician-Focused Payment Models (81 FR 77008) (referred to as the
``CY 2017 Quality Payment Program final rule with comment period''), we
established at Sec. 414.1320(a), for the 2019 MIPS payment year, a
minimum of a continuous 90-day performance period within CY 2017, up to
and including the full CY 2017, for the quality performance category of
the MIPS. We established at Sec. 414.1320(b), for the 2020 MIPS
payment year, a performance period of the full CY 2018.
Following the publication of that final rule with comment period,
we received feedback from EPs observing that having CQM reporting or
performance periods for Medicare professionals under MIPS that are
different from the CQM reporting period for EPs under the Medicaid EHR
Incentive Program would create administrative burdens for EPs who wish
to participate in both programs and to report CQMs electronically. Our
goal has always been to align Medicare and Medicaid reporting and
quality improvement programs to the extent possible. In addition, while
participation in MIPS is required for professionals who are considered
``MIPS eligible clinicians,'' participation in the Medicaid EHR
Incentive Program is not required. If the CQM reporting periods and
MIPS performance periods are not aligned, we believe it is less likely
that MIPS eligible clinicians will also participate as EPs in the
remaining years of the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program.
Therefore, we are proposing to change the CQM reporting period for
EPs who report CQMs electronically in the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program to match the performance period established under MIPS in the
quality performance category for MIPS eligible clinicians. We are
proposing a minimum of a continuous 90-day period during CY 2017 for
EPs electronically reporting CQMs for the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program. We note that we consider the reporting periods established
through rulemaking to be minimums and would encourage States to accept
data from longer reporting periods. The reporting period for CQMs for
EPs who choose to attest rather than report electronically, and who
have demonstrated meaningful use in a previous program year under the
EHR Incentive Program would remain one full year (CY 2017), which is in
alignment with the requirements for eligible hospitals and CAHs for the
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs for 2017 (80 FR 62892
through 62893). We note that reporting CQMs by attestation is not an
option for eligible clinicians under MIPS, so the reason for proposing
a shortened reporting period for EPs reporting CQMs electronically,
which is to align this reporting period with the MIPS performance
period, would not exist for EPs who choose not to report
electronically. Nothing in this proposal would change the CQM reporting
period for EPs demonstrating meaningful use for the first time, which
was established in the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs Final Rule to be any
continuous 90 day period regardless of the method of CQM submission (80
FR 62892).
The CQM reporting period for the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program in
2018 for EPs that have demonstrated meaningful use in a previous
program year would remain one full year (CY 2018) to align with the
corresponding performance period in MIPS for MIPS eligible clinicians.
If changes are made to the MIPS performance period through future
rulemaking, we will revisit the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program policies
to continue our alignment goals.
We intend to reduce EP burden and simplify the program through this
proposal, which is intended to better align CQM reporting periods and
CQM reporting for the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program with policies
under MIPS. Overall, we believe the proposed alignment at the State
attestation system and EP levels would both reduce burden associated
with reporting on multiple CMS programs and enhance State and CMS
operational efficiency.
We are inviting public comment on this proposal, including on
whether making the proposed change would create burdens for EPs or
States.
2. Proposed Modifications to CQM Reporting Requirements for Medicaid
EPs Under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program
We also are proposing to align the specific CQMs available to EPs
participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program with those
available to clinicians participating in MIPS who submit CQMs through
their EHR. In the final rule titled ``Medicare and Medicaid Programs;
Electronic Health Record Incentive Program--Stage 2,'' we established
(77 FR 54058) that EPs are required to report 9 CQMs covering at least
3 of the National Quality Strategy (NQS) domains from a list of 64 CQMs
(77 FR 54069, Table 8). Subsequently and in the following years, in
general, there has been alignment between the CQMs selected for the
Medicaid and Medicare EHR Incentive Programs for EPs and the electronic
measures selected for the PQRS program. Updates to the PQRS measure set
were proposed and finalized in the annual Physician Fee Schedule (PFS)
rule for purposes such as keeping specifications in line with industry
standards and clinical guidelines.
In the CY 2017 Quality Payment Program final rule with comment
period (81 FR 77144), we revised the list of CQMs for the 2019 MIPS
payment year, based on performance periods within CY 2017, to better
reflect updated clinical standards and guidelines. Specifically, we
removed a number of CQMs that had not been updated and were no longer
clinically relevant (81 FR 77773, Appendix, Table F). Because MIPS is
replacing PQRS, in order to keep CQM specifications current, we are
proposing to align the CQMs for Medicaid EPs with those updated
annually for MIPS. Specifically, we are proposing that the CQMs
available for Medicaid EPs in 2017 would consist of the list of
available CQMs for reporting from an EHR for MIPS in 2017, available in
the Appendix of the CY 2017 Quality Payment Program final rule with
comment period under Table A, which are denoted with a CMS e-Measure ID
number.
In the CY 2017 Quality Payment Program final rule with comment
period
[[Page 20135]]
(81 FR 77145), we noted that one commenter requested that we engage
State Medicaid leaders to maximize measure alignment across Medicare
and Medicaid. We responded that we intend to align quality measures
among all CMS quality programs where possible, including Medicaid, and
would take this comment into account in the future. In addition, States
have requested alignment between the CQM set for MIPS and the CQM set
for EPs in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program for consistency and
convenience, to reduce burden, and to avoid confusion. In addition, we
believe it is more likely that professionals would participate in both
programs if the CQM sets are aligned. While participation in MIPS is
required for professionals who are considered ``MIPS eligible
clinicians,'' participation in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program is
not required. If the CQMs are not aligned across both programs, we
believe it is less likely that MIPS eligible clinicians would also
participate as EPs in the remaining years of the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program. Finally, as noted above, the CQMs that were removed from MIPS
(81 FR 77773, Appendix, Table F) had not been updated and were no
longer clinically relevant, and we believe that the revised list of
CQMs would better reflect updated clinical standards and guidelines (81
FR 77144).
We anticipate that this proposal would reduce burden for Medicaid
EPs, and that the systems changes that would be needed to implement it
would not be significant for either States or EPs. The set of 53 CQMs
available to MIPS participants is a subset of the 64 CQMs currently
available under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. In addition, we
believe that if EPs also plan to participate in MIPS, they should
already be prepared to report on the 53 CQMs. However, we welcome
comments on whether any EPs might be negatively affected by the
proposal; for example, on whether any EPs might have EHRs that do not
measure enough of the 53 remaining CQMs because they were relying on
some of the 11 CQMs that would be removed. We do not anticipate that
this would be a common situation because these 11 CQMs are outdated,
and the industry is moving away from them as EHRs are upgraded to meet
the MIPS requirements.
We anticipate that the proposal to reduce the number of available
CQMs would have only a minimal impact on States, which would have to
make minor adjustments to State systems to reduce the available
measures from 64 to 53. It is our understanding that State systems can
turn off or easily exclude CQMs from user visibility on the front end
and still easily manage on the back end.
The data submission criteria for the MIPS quality performance
category at Sec. 414.1335(a)(1)(i) provide that individual MIPS
eligible clinicians and groups who elect to submit data via claims,
qualified registry, EHR or qualified clinical data registry must submit
data on at least six quality measures, including at least one outcome
measure (or, if an applicable outcome measure is not available, one
other high priority measure). We refer readers to Sec. 414.1335(a)(2)
and (3) for the data submission criteria that apply to individual MIPS
eligible clinicians and groups who elect to submit data via other data
submission mechanisms.
Instead of requiring MIPS eligible clinicians to report on CQMs
across a certain number of NQS domains, MIPS provides individual MIPS
eligible clinicians and groups with a variety of alternatives for
participating in MIPS, including a variety of data submission
mechanisms and scoring criteria. We believe that the burden on EPs and
States of adopting all of these MIPS alternatives for the Medicaid EHR
Incentive Program would outweigh any benefits gained. The alternative
reporting options for MIPS are calibrated as part of an overall quality
improvement program beyond what the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs are designed to be. We believe it would be inappropriate to
apply all of these new requirements to the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program.
We are proposing to eliminate the requirement to report on CQMs
across 3 of the 6 NQS domains that existed in previous years of the
Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, for improved alignment with the data
submission criteria for the MIPS quality performance category. The
removal of this requirement would provide EPs greater flexibility in
selecting CQMs to report and would assure that they could report on the
same CQMs from their EHR to both MIPS and the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program.
We propose that for 2017 Medicaid EPs would be required to report
on any six measures that are relevant to the EP's scope of practice.
This proposal would better align with the data submission criteria for
the MIPS quality performance category in 2017.
We note that we would continue our policy on allowing zero
denominators to be reported to allow EPs to meet the CQM reporting
requirements of the EHR Incentive Programs (80 FR 62889). Future years'
requirements for reporting CQMs in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program
will be established in future rulemaking, as the policies for MIPS are
developed for 2018 and beyond. We will continue to align the quality
reporting requirements, as logical and feasible, to reduce EP burden.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals, specifically on
whether making these proposed changes to CQM measures and measure
reporting effective for 2017 would create burdens on EPs or States. If
so, CMS will consider making these proposed changes to the CQM
reporting requirements effective beginning with the reporting period in
2018.
G. Changes to the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs
1. Proposed Revisions to the EHR Reporting Period in 2018
We received additional feedback from EPs, hospitals, hospital
associations, and other clinical associations indicating that
additional time may be necessary for testing and implementation of the
new application programming interface (API) functionality requirement
for Stage 3 citing inability to meet the required timeframe for
implementation of Stage 3 and complexity of the new functionality and
associated requirements for the Patient Electronic Access to Health
Information (80 FR 62841 through 62846) and Coordination of Care
Through Patient Engagement (80 FR 62846 through 62852) objectives. The
API functionality supports health care providers and patient electronic
access to health information, which is key to improving the free flow
of health information, quality improvement, and patient engagement.
Because this functionality is included as part of the 2015 Edition Base
EHR definition (and thus must be part of CEHRT) (80 FR 62675 through
62676), APIs may be enabled by a health care provider or organization
for their own use of third party applications with their CEHRT, such as
for quality improvement. An API could also be enabled by a health care
provider to give patients access to their health information through a
third-party application with more flexibility than is often found in
many current patient portals. From the health care provider
perspective, an API could complement a specific provider branded
patient portal or could also potentially make one unnecessary if
patients are able to use software applications designed to interact
with an API that could support their ability to view, download, and
transmit their health information to a third party (80 FR 62842). We
want to ensure that health
[[Page 20136]]
care providers have the opportunity to thoroughly test their systems
and make adjustments in order to successfully attest for the EHR
reporting period in CY 2018. In addition, we believe that health care
providers may need extra time to fully implement and test workflows
with the 2015 Edition of CEHRT, which is required beginning in CY 2018
(80 FR 62874 through 62875).
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology (ONC) monitors technical development and progress toward
certification to evaluate readiness among the health IT industry for
implementation of technology certified to 2015 Edition certification
criteria. One part of this evaluation involves monitoring products in
the certification process, which is supplemented by discussions with
health IT developers, ONC-Authorized Testing Laboratory (ONC-ATLs), and
ONC-Authorized Certification Body (ONC-ACBs). Health IT developers have
conveyed to the ONC that some of the 2015 Edition certification
criteria required additional effort, including implementation of new
functionalities (including APIs) and facilitation of greater
interoperability in comparison to previous Editions. The 2015 Edition
health IT certification criteria enables health information exchange
through new and enhanced certification criteria standards, and
implementation specifications for interoperability while incorporating
changes that are designed to spur innovation and provide more choices
to health care providers and patients for the exchange of electronic
health information including new application access (API) certification
criteria. For example, new transitions of care certification criterion
rigorously assesses a product's ability to create and receive an
interoperable Consolidated-Clinical Document Architecture (C-CDA). The
ONC also adopted certification criteria that both support
interoperability in other settings and use cases, such as the Common
Clinical Data Set summary record, data segmentation for privacy, and
care plan certification criteria (80 FR 62603). It also indicated that
it did not anticipate any significant delays toward the delivery and
roll out of products to customers because of this additional effort.
This timing was expressed as a goal of developers to enable health care
providers to engage in upgrades, training, and other improvements that
would be needed to begin using the 2015 Edition CEHRT in 2018.
In addition, the ONC also compares data such as program tracking
and projections related to the release of the previous Editions of
CEHRT to help inform its evaluation of progress during this current
transition period for the 2015 Edition. In particular, ONC has reviewed
historical data for actual participation and implementation of
technologies certified to the 2014 Edition during the transition year
in CY 2014, when users were transitioning from technology certified to
the 2011 Edition to technology certified to the 2014 Edition. In 2014,
projections indicated expectations of market readiness of greater than
90 percent by the end of the CY 2014. However, subsequent analysis
found that the actual market coverage for hospitals was approximately
98 percent at the end of CY 2014, meaning that 98 percent of hospitals
had implemented the 2014 Edition by the end of CY 2014. However,
attestations for the EHR Incentive Program for CY 2014 indicated a
potential lag in implementation and variability in the amount of time
required by hospitals to complete implementation of the technology and
the subsequent training, technical processes, and operational and
clinical workflows required for successful use. Attestation data show
that 9 percent of eligible hospitals and CAHs used EHR technology
certified to the 2011 Edition for part or all of their EHR reporting
period.
In addition, ONC considers the number of health care providers
likely to be covered by the individual developers seeking certification
under the ONC Health IT Certification Program. The ONC considers trends
within the industry when projecting for 2015 Edition readiness. The
market trend of consolidation was considered as part of the projection
model and supports an analysis that supports an estimate of greater
than 85 percent of hospitals will be ready by the end of CY 2017.
However, a more conservative approach--based on the identified variance
in implementation timelines for hospitals may be necessary to support
the hospitals that may require additional time to successfully
implement technology certified to the 2015 Edition.
In addition, the historical data indicates EPs are more likely to
use a wider range of products, including products which individually
make up a smaller segment of the overall market. Therefore, when market
factors are taken into account, there exists a larger proportion of
readiness that is unknown due to the wider range of products used by
EPs. Therefore, a more conservative approach is necessary and supports
an estimate of greater than 74 percent readiness by the end of CY 2017
for EPs.
Thus, while we expect a majority of EPs, eligible hospitals and
CAHs participating in the EHR Incentive Programs to be ready to begin
using 2015 Edition CEHRT in CY 2018, it is reasonable to assume there
will still be some who will not be ready and will require a longer
timeframe for successful implementation. In addition, it is likely that
there will be a proportion of them that have the technology implemented
in time for the beginning of CY 2018 who would similarly benefit from
additional time to implement new processes and workflows supporting
their use of certified EHR technology in the EHR Incentive Program.
This is especially important given requirements in the ONC Health IT
Certification program which leverage new functionalities such as APIs
which also require adherence to existing security and privacy
standards. We stated in the 2015 EHR Incentive Programs Final Rule (80
FR 62842 through 62843) that the requirement to conduct and review a
security risk analysis in compliance with HIPAA Security Rule would
include the certified API enabled as a part of the health care
provider's CEHRT.
For the reasons discussed above, we are proposing to modify the EHR
reporting periods in 2018 for new and returning participants attesting
to CMS or their State Medicaid agency from the full year (CY 2018) to a
minimum of any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018. This would mean
that EPs that attest directly to a State for the State's Medicaid EHR
Incentive Program and eligible hospitals and CAHs attesting to CMS or
the State's Medicaid EHR Incentive Program would attest to meaningful
use of CEHRT for an EHR reporting period of a minimum of any continuous
90-day period from January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018. The
applicable incentive payment year and payment adjustment years for the
EHR reporting period in 2018, as well as the deadlines for attestation
and other related program requirements, would remain the same as
established in prior rulemaking. We are proposing corresponding changes
to the definition of ``EHR reporting period'' and ``EHR reporting
period for a payment adjustment year'' at 42 CFR 495.4.
We are inviting public comment on our proposal.
2. Exception for Decertified EHR Technology for EPs, Eligible
Hospitals, and CAHs Seeking To Avoid the Medicare Payment Adjustment
The 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255) was enacted on
December 13, 2016. Section 4002(b)(1)(A) amended
[[Page 20137]]
section 1848(a)(7)(B) of the Act to provide that the Secretary shall
exempt an eligible professional from the application of the payment
adjustment under section 1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act with respect to a
year, subject to annual renewal, if the Secretary determines that
compliance with the requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not
possible because the certified EHR technology used by such professional
has been decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification Program.
Similarly, section 4002(b)(2) of the 21st Century Cures Act amended
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(II) of the Act to provide that the Secretary
shall exempt a hospital from the application of the payment adjustment
under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(I) with respect to a fiscal year,
subject to annual renewal, if the Secretary determines that compliance
with the requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not possible
because the certified EHR technology used by the hospital is
decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification Program. We include
proposals below to implement these amendments with respect to EPs,
eligible hospitals, and CAHs. We note that sections 1848(a)(7)(B) and
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(II) of the Act provide that in no case may an EP,
eligible hospital, or CAH be granted an exemption from the payment
adjustment based on significant hardship or decertified EHR technology
for more than five years.
The ONC Health IT Certification Program: Enhanced Oversight and
Accountability final rule (``EOA final rule'') (81 FR 72404), effective
December 19, 2016, created a regulatory framework for the ONC's direct
review of health information technology (health IT) certified under the
ONC Health IT Certification Program, including, when necessary,
requiring the correction of non-conformities found in health IT
certified under the Program and terminating certifications issued to
certified health IT. Prior to the EOA final rule, ONC-Authorized
Certification Bodies (ONC-ACBs) had the only authority to terminate or
revoke certification of health IT under the program, which they used on
previous occasions. On September 23, 2015, we posted an FAQ discussing
the requirements for using a decertified CEHRT.\498\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\498\ //questions.cms.gov/faq.php?isDept=0&search=decertify&searchType=keyword&submitSearch=1&id=5005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Once all administrative processes, if any, are complete, then
notice of a ``termination of certification'' is listed on the Certified
Health IT Product List (CPHL) Web page.\499\ As appropriate, ONC will
also publicize the termination of certification of health IT through
other communication channels (for example, ONC list serve(s)). Further,
when ONC terminates the certification of a health IT product, the
health IT developer is required to notify all potentially affected
customers in a timely manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\499\ The ``list can be found at: //chpl.healthit.gov/#/decertifications/products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We further note that in comparison to termination actions taken by
ONC and ONC-ACBs, a health IT developer may voluntarily withdraw a
certification that is in good standing under the ONC Health IT
Certification Program. A voluntary withdrawal may be the result of the
health IT developer going out of business, the developer no longer
supporting the product, or for other reasons that are not in response
to ONC-ACB surveillance, ONC direct review, or a finding of non-
conformity by ONC or an ONC-ACB.\500\ In such instances, ONC will list
these products on the ``Inactive Certificates'' \501\ Web page of the
CHPL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\500\ For further descriptions of certification statuses, we
refer readers to the CHPL Public User Guide.
\501\ The ``Inactive Certificates'' Web page can be found at:
//chpl.healthit.gov/#/decertifications/inactive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to revise Sec. 495.102(d) to add a new exception
for EPs who demonstrate through an application process that compliance
with the requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not possible
because the certified EHR technology used by the EP has been
decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification Program. We are
proposing this exception for the CY 2018 payment adjustment year, which
is the final year of the payment adjustment for EPs under section
1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act. We considered but are not proposing this
exception also for the CY 2017 payment adjustment year because it would
require us to reprocess claims for potentially the entire CY 2017,
which would be costly and administratively burdensome. ONC provides
that there is a 6-step process that usually occurs when implementing a
certified EHR technology system.\502\ We believe that if an EP has to
procure new certified EHR technology they will likely have to go
through some phases of this cycle again and understand that it would be
time consuming and may take up to a year to implement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\502\ //www.healthit.gov/providers-professionals/ehr-implementation-steps.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing an EP may qualify for this exception if their
certified EHR technology was decertified either before or during the
applicable EHR reporting period for the CY 2018 payment adjustment
year, which under Sec. 495.4 is any continuous 90-day period in CY
2016 or 2017, depending on whether the EP has successfully demonstrated
meaningful use in a prior year. If the certified EHR technology was
decertified at any time during the 12-month period preceding the
applicable EHR reporting period for the CY 2018 payment adjustment
year, or during the applicable EHR reporting period for the CY 2018
payment adjustment year, the EP may qualify for this exception. For
example, if an EP intended to attest to meaningful use for a 90-day EHR
reporting period beginning on April 1, 2016, the EP could apply for
this exception if their certified EHR technology was decertified at any
time during the 12-month period beginning on April 1, 2015 and ending
on March 31, 2016, or if their certified EHR technology was decertified
at any time during their 90-day EHR reporting period beginning on April
1, 2016. We believe a 12-month period is reasonable because we
understand the burden placed on EPs related to time and funds needed to
purchase and deploy new certified EHR technology including the process
that goes along with implementing new certified EHR technology.
In addition, we are proposing that the EP must demonstrate in its
application and through supporting documentation if available that the
EP intended to attest to meaningful use for a certain EHR reporting
period and made a good faith effort to adopt and implement another
CEHRT in advance of that EHR reporting period. We are proposing an EP
seeking to qualify for this exception would submit an application in
the form and manner specified by us by October 1, 2017, or a later date
specified by us.
We are proposing to revise Sec. 412.64(d)(4) to add a new category
of exception for eligible hospitals that demonstrate through an
application process that compliance with the requirement for being a
meaningful EHR user is not possible because the certified EHR
technology used by the eligible hospital has been decertified under
ONC's Health IT Certification Program. We are proposing this exception
would be available beginning with the FY 2019 payment adjustment year.
We considered but are not proposing to make this exception available
beginning with the FY 2018 payment adjustment year because making this
exception available beginning with the FY 2018
[[Page 20138]]
payment adjustment would be administratively burdensome, since previous
guidance at FAQ 12657 indicated that providers could apply for a
hardship if their product was decertified prior to the end of the EHR
reporting period.\503\ Therefore, we believe that an eligible hospital
would have already received a hardship exception under this
circumstance. We also note that to date no certifications have been
terminated under ONC's direct review authority. We are proposing an
eligible hospital may qualify for this exception if their certified EHR
technology was decertified either before or during the applicable EHR
reporting period for the payment adjustment year. We refer readers to
the definition of ``EHR reporting period for a payment adjustment
year'' under Sec. 495.4 for the applicable EHR reporting periods for
payment adjustment years for eligible hospitals. For example, under
Sec. 495.4, for the FY 2019 payment adjustment year, the EHR reporting
period is any continuous 90-day period in CY 2017. If the certified EHR
technology was decertified at any time during the 12-month period
preceding the applicable EHR reporting period for the payment
adjustment year, or during the applicable EHR reporting period for the
payment adjustment year, the eligible hospital may qualify for this
exception. For example, if an eligible hospital intended to attest to
meaningful use for a 90-day EHR reporting period beginning on April 1,
2017, the eligible hospital could apply for this exception if their
certified EHR technology was decertified at any time during the 12-
month period beginning on April 1, 2016 and ending on March 31, 2017,
or if their certified EHR technology was decertified at any time during
their 90-day EHR reporting period beginning on April 1, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\503\ //questions.cms.gov/faq.php?isDept=0&search=decertified&searchType=keyword&submitSearch=1&id=5005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We believe a 12-month period is reasonable for the same reasons
stated above for EPs. In addition, we are proposing that the eligible
hospital must demonstrate in its application and through supporting
documentation if available that the eligible hospital intended to
attest to meaningful use for a certain EHR reporting period and made a
good faith effort to adopt and implement another CEHRT in advance of
that EHR reporting period. We are proposing an eligible hospital
seeking to qualify for this exception would submit an application in
the form and manner specified by us by July 1 of the year before the
payment adjustment year (for example, for the FY 2019 payment
adjustment year, by July 1, 2018), or a later date specified by us.
We are proposing to revise Sec. 413.70(a)(6) to add a new category
of exception for CAHs that demonstrate through an application process
that compliance with the requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is
not possible because the certified EHR technology used by the CAH has
been decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification Program. We are
proposing this exception would be available beginning with the FY 2018
payment adjustment year. We are proposing a CAH may qualify for this
exception if their certified EHR technology was decertified either
before or during the applicable EHR reporting period for the payment
adjustment year. We refer readers to the definition of ``EHR reporting
period for a payment adjustment year'' under Sec. 495.4 for the
applicable EHR reporting periods for payment adjustment years for CAHs.
For example, under Sec. 495.4, for the FY 2018 payment adjustment
year, the EHR reporting period is either CY 2018 or a continuous 90-day
period in CY 2018, depending on whether the CAH has successfully
demonstrated meaningful use in a prior year. If the certified EHR
technology was decertified at any time during the 12-month period
preceding the applicable EHR reporting period for the payment
adjustment year, or during the applicable EHR reporting period for the
payment adjustment year, the CAH may qualify for this exception. For
example, if a CAH intended to attest to meaningful use for a 90-day EHR
reporting period beginning on April 1, 2018, the CAH could apply for
this exception if their certified EHR technology was decertified at any
time during the 12-month period beginning on April 1, 2017 and ending
on March 31, 2018, or if their certified EHR technology was decertified
at any time during their 90-day EHR reporting period beginning on April
1, 2018. We believe a 12-month period is reasonable for the same
reasons stated above for EPs. In addition, we are proposing that the
CAH must demonstrate in its application and through supporting
documentation if available that the CAH intended to attest to
meaningful use for a certain EHR reporting period and made a good faith
effort to adopt and implement another CEHRT in advance of that EHR
reporting period. We are proposing a CAH seeking to qualify for this
exception would submit an application in the form and manner specified
by us by November 30 after the end of the applicable payment adjustment
year (for example, for the FY 2018 payment adjustment year, by November
30, 2018), or a later date specified by us.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals. We considered
alternative timeframes for decertification to the proposed 12-month
period preceding the applicable EHR reporting period. We are requesting
public comments on whether this 12-month timeframe is reasonable or
whether another period should be considered.
3. Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC)-Based Eligible Professionals (EPs)
Section 16003 of the 21st Century Cures Act amended section
1848(a)(7)(D) of the Act to provide that no payment adjustment may be
made under section 1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act for 2017 and 2018 in the
case of an eligible professional who furnishes substantially all of his
or her covered professional services in an ambulatory surgical center
(ASC). Section 1848(a)(7)(D)(iii) of the Act provides that
determinations of whether an eligible professional is ASC-based may be
made based on the site of service as defined by the Secretary or an
attestation, but shall be made without regard to any employment or
billing arrangement between the eligible professional and any other
supplier or provider of services. Section 1848(a)(7)(D)(iv) of the Act
provides that the ASC-based exception shall no longer apply as of the
first year that begins more than 3 years after the date on which the
Secretary determines, through notice-and-comment rulemaking, that
certified EHR technology applicable to the ASC setting is available.
The statute refers to an EP who furnishes ``substantially all'' of
his or her covered professional services in an ASC. Therefore, we must
identify the minimum percentage of an EP's covered professional
services that must be furnished in an ASC setting in order for the EP
to be considered as furnishing ``substantially all'' of his or her
covered professional services in an ASC. To this end, we are proposing
two alternative definitions of an ASC-based EP and requesting public
comment to determine the final definition.
We are proposing to define an ASC-based EP under Sec. 495.4 as an
EP who furnishes 75 percent or more of his or her covered professional
services in sites of service identified by the codes used in the HIPAA
standard transaction as an ASC setting in the calendar year that is two
years before the payment
[[Page 20139]]
adjustment year. The percentage of covered professional services in
this proposed definition is the same as our definition of a hospital-
based MIPS eligible clinician under the Quality Payment Program (Sec.
414.1305 and 81 FR 77238 through 77240). In the alternative, we are
proposing to define an ASC-based EP as an EP who furnishes 90 percent
or more of his or her covered professional services in sites of service
identified by the codes used in the HIPAA standard transaction as an
ASC setting in the calendar year that is two years before the payment
adjustment year. The percentage of covered professional services in
this alternative proposal is the same as our definition of a hospital-
based EP for the EHR Incentive Programs (Sec. 495.4 and 75 FR 44439
through 44442). Under these proposals, we would use claims for services
furnished in CY 2015 to determine whether an EP is ASC-based for the CY
2017 payment adjustment year, and we would use claims for services
furnished in CY 2016 to determine whether an EP is ASC-based for the CY
2018 payment adjustment year. We are also proposing to use Place of
Service (POS) code 24 to identify services furnished in an ASC and are
requesting public comment on whether other POS codes or mechanisms to
identify sites of service should be used in addition to or in lieu of
POS code 24.
We analyzed claims data from CYs 2015 and 2016 to estimate how many
EPs would be considered ASC-based under our proposal and alternative
proposal. Under our proposed definition of ``substantially all,'' for
CY 2015, we found that 380 EPs billed at least 75 percent of their
covered professional services in POS 24, out of 523,000 Medicare EPs,
which equals approximately .07 percent of Medicare EPs. For CY 2016, we
found that 404 EPs billed at least 75 percent of their covered
professional services in POS 24, out of 508,575 Medicare EPs, which
equals approximately .08 percent of Medicare EPs.
Under our alternative proposed definition of ``substantially all,''
for CY 2015, we found that 176 EPs billed at least 90 percent of their
covered professional services in POS 24, out of 523,000 Medicare EPs,
which equals approximately .03 percent of Medicare EPs. For CY 2016, we
found that 197 EPs billed at least 90 percent of their covered
professional services in POS 24, out of 508,575 Medicare EPs, which
equals approximately .04 percent of Medicare EPs.
We are inviting public comment on these proposals.
4. Certification Requirements for 2018
In the 2015 EHR Incentive Program final rule (80 FR 62871 through
62875), we adopted a final policy regarding which Edition of CEHRT must
be used by EPs, eligible hospitals, and CAHs for the EHR Incentive
Program, which is reflected in the definition of CEHRT Sec. 495.4. At
a minimum, EPs, eligible hospitals, and CAHs would be required to use
EHR technology certified to the 2014 Edition certification criteria for
their respective EHR reporting periods in 2015 through 2017. They may
also upgrade to the 2015 Edition to meet the required certified EHR
technology definition for the EHR reporting periods in 2015, 2016, or
2017, or they may use a combination of 2014 and 2015 Editions if they
have modules from both editions that meet the requirements for the
meaningful use objectives and measures or if they fully upgrade during
an EHR reporting period. Starting with 2018, all EPs, eligible
hospitals, and CAHs would be required to use technology certified to
the 2015 Edition to demonstrate meaningful use for an EHR reporting
period in 2018 and subsequent years (80 FR 62873 through 62875). We
received comments on the Stage 3 proposed rule requesting that we allow
health care providers to use the 2014 and 2015 Editions of CEHRT in
2018 (80 FR 62874 through 62875). We also received feedback from EPs,
eligible hospitals and hospital associations after the 2015 EHR
Incentive Program final rule was published. The feedback expressed
concerns regarding the burden that will likely occur as a result of the
new functionalities required in the implementation of the Stage 3
requirements including an increase in the cost of care without better
patient outcomes.
Based on our past experience with the transition from the 2011
Edition to the 2014 Edition and concerns expressed by stakeholders, we
understand that transitioning to technology certified to a new Edition
can be complex and can require more resources and time than
anticipated, including the time necessary to effectively deploy the
upgraded system and make the necessary patient safety, staff training
and workflow investments. We understand and appreciate these concerns,
and are working in cooperation with our Federal partners at ONC to
monitor progress on the 2015 Edition upgrade. Furthermore, we believe
that there are many benefits for switching to EHR technology certified
to the 2015 Edition. At this time, our analysis shows that progress
toward certification and upgrade of systems should enable EPs that
attest directly to a State for the State's Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program and eligible hospitals and CAHs attesting to CMS or the State's
Medicaid EHR Incentive Program to upgrade systems to the 2015 Edition
and successfully attest for an EHR reporting period in 2018.
We will work with ONC to monitor the deployment and implementation
status of EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition. If we identify
a change in the current trends and significant issues with the
certification and deployment of the 2015 Edition, we will consider
flexibility in 2018, for those EPs that attest directly to a State for
the State's Medicaid EHR Incentive Program and eligible hospitals and
CAHs attesting to CMS or the State's Medicaid EHR Incentive Program
that are not able to implement 2015 Edition CEHRT to attest for an EHR
reporting period in 2018.
One possibility is the flexibility to use technology certified to
the 2014 Edition or the 2015 Edition for an EHR reporting period in
2018. Another option is allowing a combination of EHR technologies
certified to the 2014 Edition and 2015 Edition to be used for an EHR
reporting period in 2018, for those EPs, eligible hospitals, and CAHs
that are not able to fully implement EHR technology certified to the
2015 Edition.
We are inviting public comment on these options for offering
flexibility in CY 2018 with regard to EHR certification requirements.
X. Proposed Revisions of Medicare Cost Reporting and Provider
Requirements
A. Electronic Signature and Submission of the Certification and
Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost Report
1. Background
Sections 1815(a) and 1833(e) of the Act provide that no payments
will be made to a provider unless it has furnished such information, as
may be requested by the Secretary, to determine the amount of payments
due the provider under the Medicare program. In general, providers
submit this information through annual cost reports that cover a 12-
month period of time. Under the provisions of 42 CFR 413.20(b) and
413.24(f), providers are required to submit cost reports annually, with
the reporting period based on the provider's accounting year. For cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 1989, section
1886(f)(1) of the Act and Sec. 413.24(f)(4) of the regulations require
hospitals to submit cost reports in a standardized electronic format,
and the same
[[Page 20140]]
requirement was later imposed for other types of providers.
Currently, under Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(ii), hospitals, skilled nursing
facilities, home health agencies, hospices, end-stage renal disease
facilities, organ procurement organizations, histocompatibility
laboratories, rural health clinics, Federally qualified health centers,
and community mental health centers are required to file Medicare cost
reports in a standardized electronic format. When preparing the cost
report, the provider's electronic program must produce the CMS
standardized output file in a form that can be read by the contractor's
automated system. This electronic file, also known as the electronic
cost report, is forwarded to the contractor for processing through its
system. (42 CFR 413.24(f)(4)(ii) and (iii))
Although the Medicare cost report is forwarded to the contractor in
electronic format, certain hard copy portions must be separately
submitted by the provider to its contractor. Specifically, under Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv), the provider is required to submit a hard copy of the
settlement summary, if applicable, which is a statement of certain
worksheet totals, and a certification statement containing a signature
by the provider's administrator or chief financial officer certifying
the accuracy of the electronic file. The certification statement and
the settlement summary both appear together on the ``Certification and
Settlement Summary'' page of the Medicare cost report for all providers
that are required to file a Medicare cost report. By signing the
certification statement, the provider is certifying, among other
things, to the accuracy of the electronic file, and also that it has
read the statement that misrepresentation or falsification of
information contained in the cost report may be punishable by criminal,
civil or administrative action.
This certification statement signed by the provider's administrator
or chief financial officer was incorporated into Sec. 413.24(f)(4) of
the regulations in a final rule with comment period (59 FR 26964
through 26965) issued in response to public comments received following
the Uniform Electronic Cost Reporting System for Hospitals proposed
rule (56 FR 41110). Currently, this certification statement is required
to have an original signature. This original signature requirement is
also set forth in Chapter 1 of the Provider Reimbursement Manual (CMS
Pub. 15-2), which explains that a facsimile or stamped copy of the
signature is unacceptable.
Due to the original signature requirement, the Certification and
Settlement Summary page containing the original signature is required
to be mailed by the provider to the contractor. As set forth in Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv) and (5)(i) and (ii), an acceptable cost report
submission must include the electronic cost report, along with a hard
copy of the Certification and Settlement Summary page with an original
signature, the Provider Cost Reimbursement Questionnaire, if
applicable, and the supporting documentation required from teaching
hospitals (the Intern and Resident Information System diskette).
2. Proposed Changes Relating to Electronic Signature on the
Certification and Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost Report
In this proposed rule, in lieu of requiring the provider to sign
the certification statement with an original signature on a hard copy
of the Medicare cost report's Certification and Settlement Summary
page, we are proposing to revise Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv) to allow
providers to use an electronic signature. For Medicare cost reporting
purposes, we are proposing that this electronic signature be placed on
the signature line of the certification statement and may be (1) any
format of the original signature that contains the first and last name
of the provider's administrator or chief financial officer (for
example, photocopy or stamp) or (2) an electronic signature that must
be the first and last name of the provider's administrator or chief
financial officer entered in the provider's electronic program. An
electronic signature for this purpose cannot be a symbol, numerical
characters, or codes. We believe that allowing providers to utilize an
electronic signature would afford providers greater flexibility in
signing the certification statement and allow a faster and more
efficient submission of the Medicare cost report.
To indicate the provider's election to sign the certification
statement with an electronic signature, we are proposing to add an
electronic signature checkbox placed immediately after the
certification statement and above the signature line on the
Certification and Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost report.
The checkbox electing the electronic signature would read: ``I have
read and agree with the above certification statement. I certify that I
intend my electronic signature on this certification statement to be
the legally binding equivalent of my original signature.'' We are
proposing that the checkbox must be checked to signify that the
certification statement has been read and that an electronic signature
will be placed on the signature line by the provider.
Only when the checkbox is checked would the signature line be
accepted with an electronic signature. Completion of both the
electronic signature checkbox and the electronic signature, placed on
the signature line by the provider's administrator or chief financial
officer under the certification statement, would together constitute an
accepted electronic signature of the provider's administrator or chief
financial officer on the certification statement. By signing the
certification statement with an electronic signature on the
Certification and Settlement Summary page, the signatory would be
attesting that its electronic signature was executed with the intent to
sign the certification statement, that the electronic signature is
being submitted in lieu of an original signature, and additionally that
the electronic signature has the same legal effect as an original
signature. Because we are proposing that it would be optional for
providers to utilize an electronic signature on the certification
statement, providers would continue to be able to sign the
certification statement with an original signature on a hard copy of
the Certification and Settlement Summary page.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals.
3. Proposed Changes Relating to Electronic Submission of the
Certification and Settlement Summary Page of the Medicare Cost Report
In section X.A.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to allow providers to use an electronic signature on the
certification statement of the Certification and Settlement Summary
page of the Medicare cost report. We are further proposing that if the
provider signs the certification statement with an electronic signature
in the manner proposed in section X.A.2. of the preamble of this
proposed rule and checks the electronic signature checkbox, the
provider also may submit the Certification and Settlement Summary page
electronically to the contractor at the same time and in the same
manner in which the Medicare cost report is submitted. For example, if
the provider submits the electronic cost report file via electronic
mail to the contractor, the provider may also include the Certification
and Settlement Summary page signed with an electronic signature.
Under our proposal, a provider could still choose to sign the
certification statement with an original signature on the Certification
and Settlement
[[Page 20141]]
Summary page. However, if the provider chooses to do so, this page
would have to be mailed to its contractor. We believe this proposal, to
allow the electronic submission of the Certification and Settlement
Summary page, would reduce the need for and storage of paper documents.
Under our proposal, providers would have the option to submit the
entire cost report electronically, in lieu of the previous requirement
to mail a hard copy of the Certification and Settlement Summary page of
the Medicare cost report to the contractor. We believe this proposed
option would improve the capability of providers to efficiently
transmit the Medicare cost report and save providers an appreciable
amount of time as well as the cost of separately mailing a hard copy of
the Certification and Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost
report to the contractor.
We are inviting public comments on this proposal.
4. Clarifications Relating to the Items Required To Be Submitted by
Providers With the Medicare Cost Report
a. Settlement Summary and Certification Statement
In this proposed rule, we are clarifying the portion of the
language in Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv) that describes the items a provider
is required to submit along with the electronically filed cost report.
Section 413.24(f)(4)(iv) currently sets forth that a provider is
required to submit a hard copy of a settlement summary, a statement of
certain worksheet totals found within the electronic file, and a
statement signed by its administrator or chief financial officer
certifying the accuracy of the electronic file or the manually prepared
cost report. These items are contained on the Certification and
Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost report. We believe that
the structure of the sentence in the regulation text describing these
items may give rise to the impression that these are three separate
items: (1) A ``settlement summary''; (2) a ``statement of certain
worksheet totals found within the electronic file''; and (3) a
``statement signed by its administrator or chief financial officer
certifying the accuracy of the electronic file or the manually prepared
cost report'', also known as the certification statement. We are
clarifying that ``a statement of certain worksheet totals found within
the electronic file'' is not a separate item but rather intended as a
descriptor of the ``settlement summary.'' The settlement summary is
actually the list of ``certain worksheet totals found within the
electronic file.'' Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are proposing
to revise Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv) to clarify this, as further discussed
in section X.A.5. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
b. Removal of the Transition Period Language
Following the effective dates for which certain providers were
required to submit cost reports in a standardized electronic format
under Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(ii), a transition period was implemented when
certain providers were required to submit a hard copy of the completed
cost report forms in addition to the electronic file. In this proposed
rule, we are proposing to remove the language in Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv)
which sets forth this expired transition period. Specifically, we are
proposing to remove the language that specifies that, during a
transition period (first two cost-reporting periods on or after
December 31, 2004 for hospices and end-stage renal disease facilities,
and the first two cost-reporting periods on or after March 31, 2005 for
organ procurement organizations, histocompatibility laboratories, rural
health clinics, Federally qualified health centers, and community
mental health centers), providers must submit a hard copy of the
completed cost report forms in addition to the electronic file. Because
the transition period has expired and these providers are no longer
required to submit a hard copy of the completed cost report forms in
addition to the electronic file, this language in Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv) is no longer necessary.
5. Proposed Revisions to 42 CFR 413.24(f)(4)(iv)
In this proposed rule, to reflect our proposals discussed earlier,
we are proposing to revise Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv) to specify that,
effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2017, providers that are required to file an electronic Medicare cost
report may elect to electronically submit the settlement summary, if
applicable, and the cost report's certification statement, found on the
Certification and Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost report,
with an electronic signature of the provider's administrator or chief
financial officer. A provider that elects to electronically sign and
submit the Certification and Settlement Summary page would no longer be
required to send this page in hard copy to its contractor with an
original signature. We are further proposing to revise Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv) to specify that the provider must check the electronic
signature checkbox that would be placed immediately after the
certification statement and directly above the signature line of the
certification statement. This electronic signature checkbox would
specify that the provider's administrator or chief financial officer
has read and agrees with the certification statement, and certifies
that he or she intends the electronic signature to be the legally
binding equivalent of his or her original signature. The provider must
check the electronic signature checkbox in order for the provider to
sign the certification statement with an electronic signature and in
order for the electronic signature to be accepted.
In addition, we are proposing to revise the regulatory language
under Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv) to reflect our clarification that the
phrase ``a statement of certain worksheet totals found within the
electronic file'' describes the settlement summary and does not denote
a separate item. Specifically, we are proposing to revise Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv) to state that a provider must submit a settlement
summary, if applicable, which is a statement of certain worksheet
totals found within the electronic file, and a certification statement
signed by its administrator or chief financial officer certifying the
accuracy of the electronic file or manually prepared cost report.
In addition, as indicated earlier, because the transition period
during which certain providers were required to submit a hard copy of
the completed cost report forms in addition to the electronic file has
expired, we are proposing to remove the transition period language in
Sec. 413.24(f)(4)(iv).
Finally, we are proposing to revise the regulation text at Sec.
413.24(f)(4)(iv) by adding the certification statement from the
certification section of the Certification and Settlement Summary page
of the Medicare cost report. This certification statement appears in
all caps and informs the provider that ``Misrepresentation or
falsification of any information contained in this cost report may be
punishable by criminal, civil and administrative action, fine and/or
imprisonment under Federal law. Furthermore if services identified in
this report were provided or procured through the payment directly or
indirectly of a kickback or were otherwise illegal, criminal, civil and
administrative action, fines, and/or imprisonment may result.'' This
language has appeared on the Certification and Settlement Summary page
for many years. Because the certification section of the Medicare cost
report refers to it as having been read by the provider, incorporation
of it into the
[[Page 20142]]
regulation text would provide completeness and clarification of the
certification statement.
We are inviting public comments on these proposals.
B. Clarification of Limitations on the Valuation of Depreciable Assets
Disposed of On or After December 1, 1997
In this section of this proposed rule, we are proposing revisions
to the Medicare provider reimbursement regulations to clarify our
longstanding policy pertaining to allowable costs and the limits on the
valuation of a depreciable asset that may be recognized in establishing
an appropriate allowance for depreciation for assets disposed of on or
after December 1, 1997. Questions have arisen with regard to whether
this limitation on the valuation of depreciable assets depends on the
manner in which a provider disposes of an asset. In this proposed rule,
we are clarifying that the elimination of the gain or loss for
depreciable assets applies to assets a provider disposes of by sale or
scrapping on or after December 1, 1997, regardless of whether the asset
is scrapped, sold as an individual asset of a Medicare participating
provider, or sold incident to a provider's change of ownership.
Reasonable cost is defined at section 1861(v)(1)(A) of the Act and
in the implementing regulations at 42 CFR part 413. Since the inception
of the Medicare program, allowable costs under Medicare have included a
provider's direct and indirect costs necessary for the provision of
patient care, including the cost of using assets in patient care.
Depreciation of these assets is an allowable cost under Medicare and
the allowance is computed using the depreciable basis and estimated
useful life of the assets (Sec. 413.134). Under Medicare's reasonable
cost reimbursement system, the appropriate allowance for depreciation
and for interest on capital indebtedness on buildings and equipment
used in the provision of patient care is based in part on the
historical cost of the asset (Sec. 413.134(a) and (b)). When an asset
is disposed of, no further depreciation may be taken on it. Gains and
losses on the disposition of depreciable assets may be includable, as
applicable, either in computing allowable cost or in computing the
adjustment to Medicare reimbursable cost, depending upon the manner of
disposition of the asset, the date of the disposal, and the amount of
the depreciation adjustment (Sec. 413.134 and Part 1, Chapter 1 of the
Provider Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15-1)).
Prior to the enactment of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (Pub. L.
105-33), when a Medicare certified provider's capital asset was
disposed of through sale or scrapping, Medicare shared in any gain or
loss from the transaction. In this regard, if a provider realized a
gain or loss from the sale or scrapping of an asset, an adjustment to
the provider's allowable costs was necessary so that Medicare paid its
share of the actual cost the provider incurred in using the asset for
patient care. Generally, when a provider sold its depreciable assets at
more than the net book value, Medicare shared in the gain. If the
provider sold its depreciable assets at less than the net book value,
Medicare shared in the loss. The amount of a gain was limited to the
amount of depreciation previously included in Medicare allowable costs.
The amount of a loss was limited to the undepreciated basis of the
asset permitted under the program.
In the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Congress eliminated Medicare's
recognition of gains or losses on a provider's disposition of assets on
or after December 1, 1997. Section 4404 of the Balanced Budget Act of
1997 (Pub. L. 105-33) amended section 1861(v)(1)(O)(i) of the Act to
state that, in establishing an appropriate allowance for depreciation
and for interest on capital indebtedness with respect to an asset of a
provider of services which has undergone a change of ownership, such
regulations shall provide, except as provided in clause (iii), that the
valuation of the asset after such change of ownership shall be the
historical cost of the asset, as recognized under the Medicare program,
less depreciation allowed, to the owner of record as of August 5, 1997
(or, in the case of an asset not in existence as of August 5, 1997, the
first owner of record of the asset after August 5, 1997).
In enacting section 4404 of Public Law 105-33, Congress was
concerned with providers that may have been ``creating specious
`losses' '' on the disposition of assets ``in order to be eligible for
additional Medicare payments'' (H. Rep. No. 105-149 (1997)). In
addition, Congress was concerned with the June 1997 OIG report,
Medicare Losses on Hospital Sales (OEI-03-96-00170), which indicated
that there were substantial Medicare losses due to depreciation
adjustments for hospitals that underwent changes of ownership.
In a January 1998 final rule with comment period (63 FR 1379), we
conformed the regulations at Sec. 413.134 to section 1861(v)(1)(O) of
the Act, as amended by section 4404 of Public Law 105-33. In that rule,
we stated that, under the provisions of section 4404 of Public Law 105-
33, ``when a depreciable asset of a provider undergoes a change of
ownership, the valuation of the asset, for purposes of establishing a
Medicare allowance for depreciation and interest, will be the
historical cost of the asset to the owner of record, less depreciation
allowed. Thus, when a depreciable asset is sold, the value of the asset
to the seller will be the historical cost (as recognized under
Medicare) to the owner of record as of August 5, 1997, less
depreciation allowed. In this case, there will be no adjustment for
gain or loss on the sale. For the buyer, the value of the asset will
also be the historical cost (as recognized under Medicare) to the owner
of record as of August 5, 1997, less depreciation allowed. Accordingly,
the new owner's allowance for depreciation and interest will be based
on this value. Stated simply, the asset moves from the hands of the
seller to the hands of the buyer at the asset's net book value defined
in Sec. 413.134(b)(9)'' (63 FR 1381).
Our policy referenced the asset of a provider undergoing a change
of ownership, meaning the asset itself changing owners, regardless of
whether the provider changes ownership. In conforming the regulations
to the new statutory provision, we revised the regulations at Sec.
413.134(f)(1) to specify that ``[d]epreciable assets may be disposed of
through sale, scrapping, trade-in, exchange, demolition, abandonment,
condemnation, fire, theft, or other casualty. If disposal of a
depreciable asset, including the sale or scrapping of an asset before
December 1, 1997, results in a gain or loss, an adjustment is necessary
in the provider's allowable cost. (No gain or loss is recognized on
either the sale or the scrapping of an asset that occurs on or after
December 1, 1997.) The amount of a gain included in the determination
of allowable cost is limited to the amount of depreciation previously
included in Medicare allowable costs. The amount of a loss to be
included is limited to the undepreciated basis of the asset permitted
under the program. The treatment of the gain or loss depends upon the
manner of disposition of the asset, as specified in paragraphs (f)(2)
through (6) of [Sec. 413.134]. The gain or loss on the disposition of
depreciable assets has no retroactive effect on a proprietary
provider's equity capital for years prior to the year of disposition.''
In the January 1998 final rule with comment period, we added the
parenthetical ``(No gain or loss is recognized on either the sale or
the
[[Page 20143]]
scrapping of an asset that occurs on or after December 1, 1997)'' to
Sec. 413.134(f)(1). This parenthetical was intended to implement
section 4404 of the BBA of 1997 by disallowing the gain or loss when a
provider sells or scraps an asset.
We believe that, under section 4404 of the BBA of 1997, Medicare's
nonrecognition of a loss or gain with respect to an asset a provider
disposes of by sale or scrapping applies, regardless of whether the
sale of the asset occurs incident to a provider's change of ownership
or whether the asset is otherwise sold or scrapped by a currently
participating Medicare provider.
We note that following the enactment of the Deficit Reduction Act
of 1984 (Pub. L. 98-369, section 2314), in which Congress amended
section 1861(v)(1) of the Act by adding new subparagraph (O) concerning
the valuation and determination of historical costs of assets after
July 18, 1984, we stated that the new provisions applied ``not only to
the sale or purchase of groups of assets, but also to the sale or
purchase of individual assets'' (57 FR 43913). Similarly, we believe
section 4404 of the BBA of 1997 applies to a provider's disposition of
assets through sale or scrapping, including the sale or scrapping of
individual provider assets and assets sold or scrapped incident to a
provider's change of ownership. Accordingly, we are proposing to revise
the regulation text at Sec. 413.134(f)(1) to clarify our longstanding
policy that Medicare does not recognize a provider's gain or loss on
the sale or scrapping of an asset that occurs on or after December 1,
1997, regardless of whether the asset is sold incident to a provider's
change of ownership or is otherwise sold or scrapped as an asset of a
Medicare participating provider.
XI. Proposed Changes Relating to Survey and Certification Requirements
A. Proposed Revisions to the Application and Re-Application Procedures
for National Accrediting Organizations (AOs), Provider and Supplier
Conditions, and Posting of Survey Reports and Acceptable Plans of
Corrections (PoCs)
1. Background
Health care facilities must demonstrate compliance with the
Medicare conditions of participation (CoPs), conditions for coverage
(CfCs), or conditions for certification (depending on the type of
facility) to be eligible to receive Medicare payments. Section 1865 of
the Act allows health care facilities that are ``provider entities'' to
demonstrate this compliance through accreditation by an accreditation
program of a private, national accrediting organization (AO) that is
approved by the Secretary. An AO must demonstrate the ability to
effectively evaluate a facility's compliance using accreditation
standards that meet or exceed the applicable Medicare conditions, as
well as survey processes that are comparable to those survey methods,
procedures, and forms required by CMS for conducting Federal surveys
for the same health care facility type, which are generally outlined in
regulations and specified in the State Operations Manual (SOM).
Section 1865(a)(2) of the Act requires that the Secretary base its
decision to approve or deny the Medicare accreditation program
application of an accrediting organization after considering at least
the following factors: (a) Program requirements for the accreditation
program to meet or exceed Medicare requirements; (b) survey procedures
that are comparable to those of Medicare; (c) the ability to provide
adequate resources for conducting surveys; (d) the capacity to furnish
information for use by CMS in enforcement activities; (e) monitoring
procedures for providers or suppliers identified as being out of
compliance with conditions or requirements; and (f) the ability to
provide the necessary data for validation surveys to the Secretary. In
addition, section 1865(a)(2) of the Act specifies that the Secretary
shall consider other factors with respect to determining the AOs
ability to meet or exceed applicable conditions, therefore meaning that
CMS has the ability to determine ``other factors'' when considering an
AO for deemed status.
CMS has responsibility for oversight and approval of AO
accreditation programs used for Medicare certification purposes, and
for ensuring that providers and suppliers that are accredited under an
approved AO accreditation program meet the quality and patient safety
standards required by the Medicare conditions and requirements. The
Medicare regulations at 42 CFR 488.5 set forth the detailed
requirements that a national AO must satisfy in order to receive
approval, and maintain recognition, of a Medicare accreditation
program. Section 488.5 also details the procedures that CMS follows in
reviewing applications from AOs.
The results of surveys conducted by State Survey Agencies of a
facility's compliance with Medicare conditions and requirements of CMS-
certified facilities are reported using the CMS Form 2567, ``Statement
of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction'' (OMB No. 0938-0391). These
reports describe any findings of noncompliance with Federal
requirements (also referred to as ``deficiencies'') that the surveyors
may have found. If there are cited deficiencies, a facility must submit
an acceptable plan of correction (PoC) for achieving compliance to CMS
describing how and when, within a reasonable timeframe, it will correct
them. Failure to correct deficiencies will lead to the facility's
termination from Medicare participation.
CMS makes survey reports and acceptable PoCs publicly available
through a variety of settings as part of the Department's commitment to
transparency, and to providing all health care consumers and the
general public with access to quality and safety information. CMS began
posting redacted CMS Form 2567 survey data for skilled nursing
facilities and nursing facilities on its Nursing Home Compare Web site
in July 2012. In March 2013, CMS began posting on its Web site the CMS
Form-2567 surveys reports based on complaint investigations for short-
term acute care hospitals and critical access hospitals (CAHs).\504\ In
addition, two Web sites owned by private entities also publish the
public CMS survey data of nursing homes, short-term acute care
hospitals, and CAHs, based on the CMS survey information. The
ProPublica Web site \505\ and the Association for Health Care
Journalist (AHCJ) Web sites, respectively, provide search engines that
refer back to the CMS Form 2567 data that CMS has made available. These
Web sites enable all health care consumers and the general public
across the country to learn about the performance of these providers in
order to make more informed decisions about where to get health care.
We also believe that release of this information encourages these
health care providers to improve the quality of care and services they
provide. Such information can also be obtained by the public directly
from State Survey Agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\504\ Survey & Certification Policy Memorandum (SC-13-21-ALL).
Available at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificationGenInfo/Downloads/Survey-and-Cert-Letter-13-21.pdf.
\505\ ProPublica (2016) Web site: //projects.propublica.org/nursing-homes/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AOs perform their own accreditation surveys and issue their own
survey reports which provide information on accredited facilities'
compliance with Federal standards. These facilities include: Hospitals,
psychiatric hospitals, CAHs, home health agencies (HHAs), hospices,
ambulatory surgery
[[Page 20144]]
centers (ASCs), outpatient physical therapy and speech-language
pathology services (OPTs), and rural health clinics (RHCs).\506\ These
facilities participate in Medicare based on their accreditation from a
CMS-approved AO and are not subject to routine surveys from State
survey agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\506\ Note that other types of facilities may also participate
in Medicare via an approved accreditation program, but to date, no
AO has sought and received approval for any of these additional
facility types.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, AOs currently do not make their survey reports and
accompanying PoCs publicly available. We believe it is important to
continue to lead the effort to make information regarding a health care
facility's compliance with health and safety requirements found in
survey reports publicly available through our various provider and
supplier Compare sites, including hospital and home health Compare
sites to increase transparency. CMS recognizes, based on the above
references to CMS Compare sites and other resources which make survey
reports publically available, that these survey reports vary in the
type of information accessible to the public (complaint) based on the
provider or supplier type. For example, the current CMS Survey and
Certification site for hospital 2567 downloads (//www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/CertificationandCompliance/Hospitals.html) only contains complaint
surveys; no recertification survey reports are posted. In addition,
there has been an increasing concern in terms of AO disparity rates
based on the AO deficiency findings compared to serious, condition-
level deficiencies found by the State Survey Agencies. For example, in
FY 2015, the disparity rates increased by 1 percent to 39 percent for
hospitals and decreased by 6 percent to 69 percent for psychiatric
hospitals, from FY 2014. This continued trend of high disparity rates
from FY 2012 to FY 2015 raises serious concerns regarding the AOs'
ability to appropriately identify and cite health and safety
deficiencies during the survey process. Therefore, we believe that
posting AO survey reports and acceptable PoCs would address some of the
concerns of reporting hospital information from both CMS and AOs, as
well as the disparity between serious deficiency findings, and provide
a more comprehensive picture to health care consumers and the public in
general.
As the number of health care facilities participating in Medicare
by virtue of their accreditation and deemed status increases, the
number of survey reports and acceptable PoC available to health care
consumers decreases. The table below illustrates that 40 percent of
Medicare-participating providers or suppliers with an accreditation
option participate in Medicare via accreditation and deemed status. In
addition, 89 percent of hospitals and psychiatric hospitals across the
country participate in Medicare via accreditation and deemed status.
This represents a significant number of hospital and other health care
facility survey reports and acceptable PoCs that are currently not
available to health care consumers. This information is not available
to assist health care consumers in their decision making when selecting
a health care facility in which to receive care for themselves or a
loved one. Therefore, we believe that it is critical that accrediting
organizations with CMS-approved accreditation programs make available
publicly all survey reports and acceptable plans of correction on their
Web sites.
Total Medicare Participating Facilities--FY 2015 Deemed Versus Non-Deemed
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deemed * Non-deemed **
Program type (percentage) (percentage) Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital........................................................ 3,500 (89) 432 (11) 3,932
Psychiatric Hospital............................................ 424 (89) 53 (11) 477
CAH............................................................. 420 (32) 887 (68) 1,307
HHA............................................................. 4,450 (47) 5,008 (53) 9,458
Hospice......................................................... 1,694 (40) 2,573 (60) 4,267
ASC............................................................. 1,499 (27) 3,973 (73) 5,472
OPT............................................................. 175 (8) 1,957 (92) 2,132
RHC............................................................. 253 (6) 3,862 (94) 4,115
-----------------------------------------------
Total....................................................... 12,415 (40) 18,745 (60) 31,160
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* As reported by accrediting organizations.
** Surveyed by a State survey agency for compliance with Medicare conditions.
2. Proposed Regulation Changes
In an effort to increase transparency, in this proposed rule, we
are proposing to require AOs with CMS-approved accreditation programs
to post final accreditation survey reports and acceptable PoCs on
public facing Web site designated by the AO. All current AOs with CMS-
approved accreditation programs have Web sites that inform the general
public about their organization. Therefore, we are proposing to require
AOs to have their final accreditation survey reports and acceptable
PoCs available on their Web sites.
Establishing the standard for posting both accredited and
nonaccredited provider and supplier survey reports, which would include
initial and recertification surveys, and acceptable PoCs would expand
transparency even further. Disclosure of survey findings protects both
patient health and safety, in which public disclosure of findings
currently only shows the subset of complaint activity. Expanding these
requirements through the posting of all survey reports and acceptable
PoCs would allow for a more comprehensive way to show a provider's or
supplier's compliance with all health and safety requirements.
Therefore, we are proposing to revise Sec. 488.5 of the
regulations to incorporate this proposed requirement. We are proposing
to add a new standard at Sec. 488.5(a)(21) to require that each
national AO applying or reapplying for CMS-approval of its Medicare
provider or supplier accreditation program provide a statement
acknowledging that it agrees to make all Medicare provider or supplier
final accreditation survey reports (including statements of deficiency
findings) as well as acceptable PoCs publicly available on
[[Page 20145]]
its Web site within 90 days after such information is made available to
those facilities for the most recent 3 years. This provision would
include all triennial, full, follow-up, focused, and complaint surveys,
whether they are performed onsite or offsite.
In addition, pursuant to section 1834(e) of the Act, State Survey
Agencies do not evaluate suppliers of the technical component of
advanced diagnostic imaging services. CMS-approved advanced diagnostic
imaging AOs are the only source of compliance data for suppliers of the
technical component of advanced diagnostic imaging services. Therefore,
we believe it is critical that these AOs also be required to post
survey reports and acceptable PoCs on their Web sites. Otherwise, it
will not be possible to provide health care consumers with compliance
information about Medicare-participating suppliers of advanced
diagnostic imaging services. We are proposing to amend our regulations
at 42 CFR 414.68 governing imaging accreditation under Medicare by
redesignating paragraphs (c)(7) through (c)(14) as paragraphs (c)(8)
through (c)(15), respectively, and adding a new paragraph (c)(7) to
require that each national advanced diagnostic imaging AO that applies
or reapplies for CMS approval of its Medicare advanced diagnostic
imaging accreditation program must provide a statement acknowledging
that it agrees to make all Medicare advanced diagnostic imaging final
accreditation survey reports as well as acceptable PoCs publicly
available on its Web site within 90 days after such information is made
available to the supplier of advanced diagnostic imaging services for
the most recent 3 years. This provision would apply to all full,
follow-up, focused, and complaint surveys, regardless of whether they
are performed onsite or offsite.
We are inviting public comments on these proposals.
B. Proposed Changes to Termination Public Notice Requirements for
Certain Providers and Suppliers
1. Background
Under the provisions of sections 1866(b)(2) of the Act and
implementing regulations at 42 CFR 489.53, the Secretary may terminate
an agreement with a provider of services if it is determined that the
provider is not in substantial compliance with applicable requirements
governing provider agreements. For instance, CMS must determine that
the provider:
Is not complying substantially with the terms of the
agreement, the provisions of title XVIII, or regulations promulgated
thereunder;
Has failed to supply information necessary to determine
whether payments are or were due and the amounts of such payments;
Refuses to permit examination of fiscal and other records
(including medical records) necessary for the verification of
information furnished as a basis for claiming payment under the
Medicare program; or
Refuses to permit photocopying of any records or other
information necessary to determine or verify compliance with
participation requirements.
Sections 1866(b)(1) and (2) of the Act require reasonable public
notice, as prescribed in regulations, of both voluntary and involuntary
terminations of Medicare and Medicaid participating providers and
suppliers. Various existing regulations specify the requirements of
public notice for voluntary and involuntary terminations prior to
termination of a provider or supplier agreement. Specifically, for
voluntary terminations, providers at 42 CFR 489.52(c)(2), RHCs at 42
CFR 405.2404(d), FQHCs at 42 CFR 405.2442, ASCs at 42 CFR 416.35(d),
and OPOs at 42 CFR 486.312(e) are required to publish termination
notices in the local public newspaper.
2. Basis for Proposed Changes
The existing regulations requiring termination notices to be
published in local newspapers have become outdated over time as the
public and beneficiaries increasingly turn to the Internet and other
electronic forums for information. Currently, rural health centers
(RHCs), Federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), ambulatory surgical
centers (ASCs), and organ procurement organizations (OPOs) are required
to publish public notices of voluntary and involuntary termination of
participation in the Medicare and Medicaid programs in one or more
local newspapers. Providers and suppliers that voluntarily terminate
their participation agreement must give notice to the public at least
15 days before the effective date of termination and the notice must be
published in one or more local newspapers. The use of hard copy local
newspaper through time has become less effective, as a large majority
of the public uses alternate sources such as Web sites or other online
news and resources.
According to national studies, approximately 23 percent of the
general public continues to read print newspapers.\507\ Many
individuals have turned to digital platforms to read news rather than
print news, which continues to decline on an annual basis, therefore,
limiting the effectiveness of publishing termination notices in local
newspapers. In light of the public's increased access to the Internet
and other electronic forums for information and the decline of print
newspaper readership, in this proposed rule, we are proposing changes
in the existing regulations noted earlier regarding newspaper
publication of termination notices to allow CMS Regional Offices and
providers and suppliers more media platforms in which to publish
termination notices, both voluntary and involuntary, with the intent of
making these notices more visible and effective.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\507\ PewResearchCenter (2012) Number of Americans Who Read
Print Newspapers Continues Decline. Available at: //www.pewresearch.org/daily-number/number-of-americans-who-read-print-newspapers-continues-decline/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Proposed Changes to Regulations
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the regulatory
language specifying public notice of terminations for FQHCs, RHCs,
ASCs, and OPOs to be exclusively in newspapers to allow for more
flexibility for both the CMS Regional Offices and providers and
suppliers. Specifically, we are proposing changes to the regulations
for RHCs at 42 CFR 405.2404(d), for FQHCs at 42 CFR 405.2442(a) and
(b), for ASCs at 42 CFR 416.35(d), and for OPOs at 42 CFR 486.312(e) to
remove the reference to publication in newspapers as the means for
notifying the community of involuntary and voluntary terminations from
participation in Medicare and Medicaid programs. This proposal for
termination notices to the public for RHCs, FHQCs, ASCs, and OPOs would
align with the termination notices CMS currently has set forth for all
other providers and suppliers. For example, under 42 CFR 488.456(c)
(enforcement procedures for long-term care facilities), CMS must notify
the public of a termination of a nursing home's provider agreement, but
the regulation does not specify through which public forum this notice
is to be given. Similarly, 42 CFR 489.53(d)(5) also does not specify
the method of public notification required for terminations. Through
this proposed change, RHCs, FQHCs, ASCs, and OPOs would have the same
requirement for the notice to the public as under 42 CFR 489.53(d)(5),
where there is a termination by CMS in which public notice is required
but the method for these providers or suppliers
[[Page 20146]]
for providing public notice is not specified, to allow for flexibility.
In addition, we are proposing to revise 42 CFR 489.52(c)(2) to
remove the requirement to publish notice in one or more local
newspapers in circumstances of the termination of a provider agreement
by a provider and instead to allow providers to inform the community
via public notice, without specifying the method used for public
notice. We believe that these proposed changes will ensure that the
community continues to be aware of terminations of Medicare and
Medicaid participating providers and suppliers.
The method for delivering the required public notice is no longer
being specified by removing the word ``newspaper'' from the regulations
for RHCs, FQHCs, ASCs, and OPOs. Instead, we are proposing to allow for
flexibility for the CMS Regional Offices and the providers or suppliers
to post public notices through a manner in which the maximum number of
community individuals and beneficiaries would be informed. This may
include, but is not limited to State Web site postings, facility Web
sites, or local news and social media channels. It also would not
preclude publication in local newspapers. Through this proposed rule,
we will continue to fulfill the regulatory requirement to publically
post involuntary termination notices. We are also operationally
considering allowing voluntarily terminating providers and suppliers
the same public notice platform used for involuntary notices in order
to meet their regulatory public notice requirements. This could include
media venues such as Web site postings and press releases through the
use of CMS Regional press officers.
We are inviting public comments on our proposals. In addition, we
are seeking suggestions from the public on sufficient mechanisms to
provide public information, other than local newspapers, for posting
Medicare and Medicaid participating provider and supplier termination
notices.
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
Under section 1886(e)(4)(B) of the Act, the Secretary must consider
MedPAC's recommendations regarding hospital inpatient payments. Under
section 1886(e)(5) of the Act, the Secretary must publish in the annual
proposed and final IPPS rules the Secretary's recommendations regarding
MedPAC's recommendations. We have reviewed MedPAC's March 2017 ``Report
to the Congress: Medicare Payment Policy'' and have given the
recommendations in the report consideration in conjunction with the
proposed policies set forth in this proposed rule. MedPAC
recommendations for the IPPS for FY 2018 are addressed in Appendix B to
this proposed rule.
For further information relating specifically to the MedPAC reports
or to obtain a copy of the reports, contact MedPAC at (202) 653-7226,
or visit MedPAC's Web site at: //www.medpac.gov.
XIII. Other Required Information
A. Publicly Available Data
IPPS-related data are available on the Internet for public use. The
data can be found on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.hhs.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html.
Following is a listing of the IPPS-related files that are available.
1. CMS Wage Data Public Use File
This file contains the hospital hours and salaries from Worksheet
S-3, Parts II and III from FY 2014 Medicare cost reports used to create
the proposed FY 2018 IPPS wage index. Multiple versions of this file
are created each year. For a complete schedule on the release of
different versions of this file, we refer readers to the wage index
schedule in section III.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Processing year Wage data year PPS fiscal year
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2017 2014 2018
2016 2013 2017
2015 2012 2016
2014 2011 2015
2013 2010 2014
2012 2009 2013
2011 2008 2012
2010 2007 2011
2009 2006 2010
2008 2005 2009
2007 2004 2008
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files.html.
Periods Available: FY 2007 through FY 2018 IPPS Update.
2. CMS Occupational Mix Data Public Use File
This file contains the CY 2013 occupational mix survey data to be
used to compute the occupational mix adjustment wage indexes. Multiple
versions of this file are created each year. For a complete schedule on
the release of different versions of this file, we refer readers to the
wage index schedule in section III.M. of the preamble of this proposed
rule.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
3. Provider Occupational Mix Adjustment Factors for Each Occupational
Category Public Use File
This file contains each hospital's occupational mix adjustment
factors by occupational category. Two versions of these files are
created each year to support the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-AService-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
4. Other Wage Index Files
CMS releases other wage index analysis files after each proposed
and final rule.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Wage-Index-Files.html.
Periods Available: FY 2005 through FY 2018 IPPS Update.
5. FY 2018 IPPS SSA/FIPS CBSA State and County Crosswalk
This file contains a crosswalk of State and county codes used by
the Social Security Administration (SSA) and the Federal Information
Processing Standards (FIPS), county name, and a list of Core-Based
Statistical Areas (CBSAs).
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
6. HCRIS Cost Report Data
The data included in this file contain cost reports with fiscal
years ending on or after September 30, 1996. These data files contain
the highest level of cost report status.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Downloadable-Public-Use-Files/Cost-Reports/Cost-Reports-by-Fiscal-Year.html.
(We note that data are no longer offered on a CD. All of the data
collected are now available free for download from the cited Web site.)
[[Page 20147]]
7. Provider-Specific File
This file is a component of the PRICER program used in the MAC's
system to compute DRG/MS-DRG payments for individual bills. The file
contains records for all prospective payment system eligible hospitals,
including hospitals in waiver States, and data elements used in the
prospective payment system recalibration processes and related
activities. Beginning with December 1988, the individual records were
enlarged to include pass-through per diems and other elements.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ProspMedicareFeeSvcPmtGen/psf_text.html.
Period Available: Quarterly Update.
8. CMS Medicare Case-Mix Index File
This file contains the Medicare case-mix index by provider number
as published in each year's update of the Medicare hospital inpatient
prospective payment system. The case-mix index is a measure of the
costliness of cases treated by a hospital relative to the cost of the
national average of all Medicare hospital cases, using DRG/MS-DRG
weights as a measure of relative costliness of cases. Two versions of
this file are created each year to support the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Periods Available: FY 1985 through FY 2018.
9. MS-DRG Relative Weights (Also Table 5--MS-DRGs)
This file contains a listing of MS-DRGs, MS-DRG narrative
descriptions, relative weights, and geometric and arithmetic mean
lengths of stay for each fiscal year. Two versions of this file are
created each year to support the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Periods Available: FY 2005 through FY 2018 IPPS Update
10. IPPS Payment Impact File
This file contains data used to estimate payments under Medicare's
hospital inpatient prospective payment systems for operating and
capital-related costs. The data are taken from various sources,
including the Provider-Specific File, HCRIS Cost Report Data, MedPAR
Limited Data Sets, and prior impact files. The data set is abstracted
from an internal file used for the impact analysis of the changes to
the prospective payment systems published in the Federal Register. Two
versions of this file are created each year to support the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Historical-Impact-Files-for-FY-1994-through-Present.html.
Periods Available: FY 1994 through FY 2018 IPPS Update.
11. AOR/BOR Tables
This file contains data used to develop the MS-DRG relative
weights. It contains mean, maximum, minimum, standard deviation, and
coefficient of variation statistics by MS-DRG for length of stay and
standardized charges. The BOR tables are ``Before Outliers Removed''
and the AOR is ``After Outliers Removed.'' (Outliers refer to
statistical outliers, not payment outliers.)
Two versions of this file are created each year to support the
rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Periods Available: FY 2005 through FY 2018 IPPS Update.
12. Prospective Payment System (PPS) Standardizing File
This file contains information that standardizes the charges used
to calculate relative weights to determine payments under the hospital
inpatient operating and capital prospective payment systems. Variables
include wage index, cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), case-mix index,
indirect medical education (IME) adjustment, disproportionate share,
and the Core-Based Statistical Area (CBSA). The file supports the
rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
13. Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program Supplemental File
This file contains information on the calculation of the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) payment adjustment. Variables
include the proxy excess readmission ratios for acute myocardial
infarction (AMI), pneumonia (PN) and heart failure (HF), coronary
obstruction pulmonary disease (COPD), total hip arthroplasty (THA)/
total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and coronary artery bypass grafting
(CABG) and the proxy readmissions payment adjustment for each provider
included in the program. In addition, the file contains information on
the number of cases for each of the applicable conditions excluded in
the calculation of the readmission payment adjustment factors. It also
contains MS-DRG relative weight information to estimate the payment
adjustment factors. The file supports the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
14. Medicare Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) Supplemental File
This file contains information on the calculation of the
uncompensated care payments for FY 2018. Variables include the data
used to determine a hospital's share of uncompensated care payments,
total uncompensated care payments and estimated per claim uncompensated
care payment amounts. The file supports the rulemaking.
Media: Internet at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/Acute-Inpatient-Files-for-Download.html.
Period Available: FY 2018 IPPS Update.
B. Collection of Information Requirements
1. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In
order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection
burden.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Recommendations to minimize the information collection
burden on the
[[Page 20148]]
affected public, including automated collection techniques.
In this proposed rule, we are soliciting public comment on each of
these issues for the following sections of this document that contain
information collection requirements (ICRs).
2. ICRs for Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies
Section II.H.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule discusses
add-on payments for new services and technologies. Specifically, this
section states that applicants for add-on payments for new medical
services or technologies for FY 2019 must submit a formal request. A
formal request includes a full description of the clinical applications
of the medical service or technology and the results of any clinical
evaluations demonstrating that the new medical service or technology
represents a substantial clinical improvement. In addition, the request
must contain a significant sample of the data to demonstrate that the
medical service or technology meets the high-cost threshold.
We believe the burden associated with this requirement is exempt
from the PRA under 5 CFR 1320.3(c), which defines the agency collection
of information subject to the requirements of the PRA as information
collection imposed on 10 or more persons within any 12-month period.
This information collection does not impact 10 or more entities in a
12-month period. For FYs 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014,
2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018, we received 1, 4, 5, 3, 3, 5, 5, 7, 9, 9,
and 9 applications, respectively. We note that 3 of the 9 applications
for FY 2018 were withdrawn prior to the publication of the proposed
rule as indicated in section II.H.6. of the preamble of this proposed
rule.
3. ICRs for the Occupational Mix Adjustment to the Proposed FY 2018
Wage Index (Hospital Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey)
Section III.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule discusses the
occupational mix adjustment to the proposed FY 2018 wage index. While
the preamble does not contain any new ICRs, we note that there is an
OMB approved information collection request associated with the
hospital wage index.
Section 304(c) of Public Law 106-554 amended section 1886(d)(3)(E)
of the Act to require us to collect data at least once every 3 years on
the occupational mix of employees for each short-term, acute care
hospital participating in the Medicare program in order to construct an
occupational mix adjustment to the wage index. We collect the data via
the occupational mix survey.
The burden associated with this information collection requirement
is the time and effort required to collect and submit the data in the
Hospital Wage Index Occupational Mix Survey to CMS. The aforementioned
burden is subject to the PRA; it is currently approved under OMB
control number 0938-0907.
4. Hospital Applications for Geographic Reclassifications by the MGCRB
Section III.I.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule discusses
proposed changes to the wage index based on hospital reclassifications.
As stated in that section, under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, the
MGCRB has the authority to accept short-term IPPS hospital applications
requesting geographic reclassification for wage index and to issue
decisions on these requests by hospitals for geographic
reclassification for purposes of payment under the IPPS.
The burden associated with this application process is the time and
effort necessary for an IPPS hospital to complete and submit an
application for reclassification to the MGCRB. The burden associated
with this requirement is subject to the PRA. The current information
collection requirement for this application process is approved under
OMB Control Number 0938-0573 in 2014 but expired on February 28, 2017.
A request for an extension of this currently approved collection
requirement under OMB control number 0938-0573 is currently awaiting
OMB approval and can be accessed at: //www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=201612-0938-023.
5. ICRs for Temporary Exception to the LTCH PPS Site Neutral Payment
Rate for Certain Spinal Cord Specialty Hospitals
In section VIII.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the proposed implementation of section 15009 of Public Law 114-
255, which provides for a temporary exception to the site neutral
payment rate for certain spinal cord specialty hospitals under section
1886(m)(6)(F) of the Act. Under this provision, discharges occurring in
cost reporting periods beginning during FY 2018 and FY 2019 for LTCHs
that meet the specified statutory criteria are excepted from the site
neutral payment rate (that is, all discharges from such LTCHs during
this period would be paid at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate). In order for an LTCH to qualify for this temporary exception,
the LTCH must, among other things, meet the ``significant out-of-state
admissions criterion'' at section 1886(m)(6)(F)(iii) of the Act. To
meet the significant out-of-state admissions criterion, an LTCH must
have discharged inpatients (including both individuals entitled to, or
enrolled for, Medicare Part A benefits and individuals not so entitled
or enrolled) during FY 2014 who had been admitted from at least 20 of
the 50 States, determined by the States of residency of such inpatients
and based on such data submitted by the hospital to the Secretary as
the Secretary may require. The statute further provides authority for
the Secretary to implement the significant out-of-state admissions
criterion at section 1886(m)(6)(F)(iii) of the Act by program
instruction or otherwise, and exempts the policy initiatives from any
information collection requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act.
As such, the burden associated with the data submitted by the hospital
to meet the significant out-of-State admissions criteria is not subject
the PRA. However, our estimate of the burden associated with this data
submission is discussed in section I.J. of Appendix A of this proposed
rule.
6. ICRs for the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
a. Background
The Hospital IQR Program (formerly referred to as the Reporting
Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment (RHQDAPU) Program) was
originally established to implement section 501(b) of the MMA, Public
Law 108-173. This program expanded our voluntary Hospital Quality
Initiative. The Hospital IQR Program originally consisted of a
``starter set'' of 10 quality measures. The collection of information
associated with the original starter set of quality measures was
previously approved under OMB control number 0938-0918. All of the
information collection requirements previously approved under OMB
control number 0938-0918 have been combined with the information
collection request currently approved under OMB control number 0938-
1022. We no longer use OMB control number 0938-0918. OMB has currently
approved 3,681,023 hours of burden and approximately $121 million under
OMB control number 0938-1022, accounting for burden experienced by
3,300 IPPS hospitals and 1,100 non-IPPS hospitals for the FY 2019
payment determination. Below, we describe the burden changes for IPPS
hospitals due to the proposals in this proposed rule.
In section IX.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
making the following proposals that we expect to
[[Page 20149]]
affect our burden estimates: (1) Updates to the electronic clinical
quality measure (eCQM) reporting requirements with regard to the number
of eCQMs and quarters of data for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 payment
determinations; (2) updates to our previously finalized eCQM validation
procedures for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years;
and; (3) begin voluntary reporting on the new Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-
Day Readmission measure for the CY 2018 reporting period. Details on
these proposals, as well as the expected burden changes, are discussed
below.
This proposed rule also includes proposals to: (1) Update the eCQM
certification requirements for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 payment
determinations; (2) allow hospitals to use an educational review
process to correct incorrect validation results for the first three
quarters of validation for chart-abstracted measures beginning with the
FY 2020 payment determination and for subsequent years; (3) refine the
Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems
(HCAHPS) Survey measure (NQF #0166 and 0228) to replace the questions
on pain management for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years; (4) refine the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic Stroke Measure to include the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stroke Scale data for the FY 2023
payment determination and subsequent years; (5) provide confidential
reports of measure data stratified by dual eligible status for the
Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate
Following Pneumonia Hospitalization and Hospital 30-day, All-Cause,
Risk Standardized Mortality Rate (RSRR) for Pneumonia measures; and (6)
align the naming of the Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE)
Policy for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years. As
discussed further below, we do not expect these proposals to affect our
burden estimates.
In prior rules (81 FR 57260), we have estimated that reporting
eCQMs for the Hospital IQR Program measures could be accomplished by
staff with a mean hourly wage of $16.42 per hour,\508\ and we are
retaining that wage rate, and applying it broadly for all of our
calculations in this proposed rule, as we have done previously (81 FR
57260). We note that more recent wage data has become available, and we
intend to update the wage rate used in these calculations in the FY
2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. We have chosen to calculate the cost of
overhead, including fringe benefits, at 100 percent of the mean hourly
wage, as has been done in previous years (81 FR 57260). This is
necessarily a rough adjustment, both because fringe benefits and
overhead costs vary significantly from employer-to-employer and because
methods of estimating these costs vary widely from study-to-study.
Nonetheless, we believe that doubling the hourly wage rate ($16.42 x 2
= $32.84) to estimate total cost is a reasonably accurate estimation
method. Accordingly, we calculate cost burden to hospitals using a wage
plus benefits estimate of $32.84 throughout the discussion below for
the Hospital IQR Program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\508\ Occupational Outlook Handbook. Available at: //www.bls.gov/oes/2012/may/oes292071.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Burden Estimates for the Proposed Updates to the eCQM Reporting
Requirements
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we finalized policies to
require hospitals to submit a full year (four quarters) (81 FR 57159)
of data for at least eight eCQMs of the available eCQMs (81 FR 57157)
for both the FY 2019 and FY 2020 payment determinations. In section
IX.A.8. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing the
following changes to these finalized policies: (1) Revise the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination eCQM reporting
requirements, such that hospitals are required to report six eCQMs and
to submit two, self-selected, calendar quarters of data; and (2) revise
the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination eCQM
reporting requirements such that hospitals are required to report six
eCQMs for the first three quarters of CY 2018.
(1) Calculations for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019 Payment
Determination
As in previous years, we believe the total burden associated with
the eCQM reporting policy will be similar to that previously outlined
in the Medicare EHR Incentive Program Stage 2 final rule (77 FR 54126
through 54133). Under that program, the burden estimate for a hospital
to report one eCQM is 10 minutes per record per quarter. We believe
this estimate is accurate and appropriate to apply to the Hospital IQR
Program because we align the eCQM reporting requirements between both
programs. Therefore, using the estimate of 10 minutes per record per
quarter, we anticipate our proposal to require: (1) Reporting on at
least six of the available eCQMs; and (2) submission of two self-
selected quarters of eCQM data, would result in a burden reduction of 3
hours and 20 minutes (200 minutes) per hospital for the FY 2019 payment
determination. This estimate was calculated by considering the burden
difference between the updated eCQM reporting requirements proposed for
the FY 2019 payment determination (10 minutes per record x 6 eCQMs x 2
quarters = 120 minutes for 2 quarters of reporting) and the eCQM
reporting requirements previously finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57157 through 57159) (10 minutes per record x 8
eCQMs x 4 quarters = 320 minutes for 4 quarters of reporting). Through
these calculations (120 minutes-320 minutes), we arrived at a reduction
of 200 minutes per hospital per year, or 3 hours and 20 minutes per
hospital per year, for the FY 2019 payment determination.
In total, for the FY 2019 payment determination, we expect our
proposal to require hospitals to report data on six eCQMs for two
quarters (as compared to our previously finalized requirements to
report data on eight eCQMs for four quarters) to represent an annual
burden reduction of 11,000 hours across all 3,300 IPPS hospitals
participating in the Hospital IQR Program (-200 minutes per hospital/60
minutes per hour x 3,300 hospitals = -11,000 hours). Using the wage
estimate described above, we expect this to represent a cost reduction
of $361,240 ($32.84 hourly wage x 11,000 annual hours reduction) across
all 3,300 IPPS hospitals participating in the Hospital IQR Program.
(2) Calculations for the CY 2018 Reporting Period/FY 2020 Payment
Determination
Using the same estimate as described above of 10 minutes per record
per quarter, if our proposed updates to the CY 2018 reporting period/FY
2020 payment determination are finalized, we anticipate our proposal to
require: (1) Reporting on at least 6 of the available eCQMs; and (2)
submission of the first three quarters of CY 2018 eCQM data, would
result in a burden reduction of 2 hours and 20 minutes (140 minutes)
per hospital for the FY 2020 payment determination as compared to the
previously finalized requirements to report eight eCQMs for four
quarters for the FY 2020 payment determination (81 FR 57157 through
57159). This estimate was calculated by considering the burden
difference between the updated eCQM reporting requirements proposed for
the FY 2020 payment determination (10 minutes per record x 6 eCQMs x 3
quarters = 180 minutes for 3 quarters of reporting) and the eCQM
reporting
[[Page 20150]]
requirements previously finalized for the FY 2020 payment determination
(10 minutes per record x 8 eCQMs x 4 quarters = 320 minutes for 4
quarters of reporting). Through these calculations (180 minutes-320
minutes), we arrived at a reduction of 140 minutes per hospital per
year, or 2 hours and 20 minutes per hospital per year, for the FY 2020
payment determination as compared to the previously finalized
requirements for the FY 2020 payment determination. In total, this
would represent an annual burden reduction of 7,700 hours across all
3,300 IPPS hospitals participating in the Hospital IQR Program (-140
minutes per hospital/60 minutes per hour x 3,300 hospitals) and a cost
reduction of $252,868 ($32.84 hourly wage x 7,700 annual hours
reduction) across all 3,300 IPPS hospitals.
c. Burden Estimate for the Proposed Modifications to eCQM Certification
Requirements for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 Payment Determinations and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.10.d of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposed changes to the Hospital IQR Program eCQM
submission requirements to align them with the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs. Specifically, for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, we are proposing that:
(1) A hospital using EHR technology certified to the 2014 or 2015
Edition, but such EHR technology is not certified to all available
eCQMs, would be required to have its EHR technology certified to all
eCQMs that are available to report; and (2) EHR technology that is
certified to all available eCQMs would not need to be recertified each
time it is updated to a more recent version of the eCQM specifications.
For the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination, we are
proposing that: (1) A hospital using EHR technology certified to the
2015 Edition, but such EHR technology is not certified to all available
eCQMs, would be required to have its EHR technology certified to all
eCQMs that are available to report; and (2) an EHR certified for all
available eCQMs under the 2015 Edition of CEHRT would not need to be
recertified each time it is updated to a more recent version of the
eCQM specifications. Further, we are proposing that: (1) For the CY
2017 reporting period, hospitals would be required to use the most
recent version of the CQM electronic specifications; Spring 2016
version of the eCQM specifications and any applicable addenda; and (2)
for the CY 2018 reporting period, hospitals be required to use the most
recent version of the CQM electronic specifications; Spring 2017
version of the eCQM specifications and any applicable addenda. For eCQM
specifications, we refer readers to the eCQI Resource Center Web site
at: //ecqi.healthit.gov/. Because the use of certified EHR
technology is already required for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program,
we believe that these proposals will have no effect on burden for
hospitals under the Hospital IQR Program.
d. Burden Estimates for the Proposed Modifications to the Existing
Validation Processes
(1) Calculations for Proposed Modifications to the Validation of eCQM
Data for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to adopt a modification to the existing eCQM data
validation process for the Hospital IQR Program data beginning with
validation for the FY 2020 payment determination. First, we are
proposing to require eight cases to be submitted per quarter for eCQM
validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years.
We are making this proposal in conjunction with our proposal to require
two quarters of data for the CY 2017 eCQM reporting period and our
proposal to require three quarters of data for the CY 2018 eCQM
reporting period. Accordingly, if those eCQM reporting proposals are
finalized, we are proposing that the number of required case files for
validation would be 16 records (eight cases per quarter over two
quarters) for the FY 2020 payment determination and 24 records (eight
cases per quarter over three quarters) for the FY 2021 payment
determination. We note that, as discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57176), CY 2017 eCQM data will be validated beginning
in CY 2018 for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years.
Therefore, CY 2018 data will be validated beginning in CY 2019 for the
FY 2021 payment determination. Second, we are proposing to add
additional exclusion criteria to our hospital and case selection
process for eCQM validation for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years. Third, we are proposing to
continue our previously finalized medical record submission
requirements for the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent years
as well as to provide clarification to our finalized policy. We believe
the updates to the exclusions and maintaining previously finalized
medical record submission requirements will have no effect on burden
for hospitals. We discuss the burden associated with the proposed eCQM
validation process in more detail below.
In previous years (79 FR 50347), we estimated a burden of 16 hours
(960 minutes) for the submission of 12 records, which will equal 1 hour
and 20 minutes (or 80 minutes) per record (960 minutes/12 records) for
validation of eCQM data. Applying the time per individual submission of
1 hour and 20 minutes (or 80 minutes) per record for the 16 records we
are proposing that hospitals submit for validation for the FY 2020
payment determination, we estimate a total burden of approximately 21
hours (80 minutes x 16 records/60 minutes per hour) for each hospital
selected for participation in eCQM validation for the FY 2020 payment
determination. We estimate that the total burden would be approximately
4,200 hours across the 200 hospitals selected for eCQM validation (21
hours per hospital x 200 hospitals = 4,200 hours). As compared to our
total burden estimate of 8,533 hours previously estimated in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57261), this represents a burden
reduction of approximately 4,333 hours across up to 200 hospitals
selected for eCQM validation (4,200 hours estimated in this proposed
rule -8,533 hours estimated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule = -
4,333 hours). Using the estimated hourly labor cost of $32.84, we
estimate an annual cost reduction of $142,296 (4,333 hours x $32.84 per
hour) across the 200 hospitals selected for eCQM validation due to our
proposal to decrease the number of records collected for validation
from 32 records to 16 records for the FY 2020 payment determination.
(2) Calculations for Proposed Modifications to the Validation of eCQM
Data for the FY 2021 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
Applying the time per individual submission of 1 hour and 20
minutes (or 80 minutes) per record for the 24 records we are proposing
that hospitals submit for eCQM validation for the FY 2021 payment
determination, we estimate a total burden of approximately 32 hours (80
minutes x 24 records/60 minutes per hour) for each hospital selected
for participation in eCQM validation. We estimate that the total burden
would be approximately 6,400 hours across the 200 hospitals selected
[[Page 20151]]
for eCQM validation (32 hours per hospital x 200 hospitals = 6,400
hours). We note that compared to our total burden estimate of 8,533
hours previously estimated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57261) for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years,
this would represent a burden reduction of approximately 2,133 hours
across up to 200 hospitals selected for eCQM validation for the FY 2021
payment determination (6,400 hours estimated for the FY 2021 payment
determination in this proposed rule--8,533 hours estimated in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule = -2,133 hours). Using the estimated
hourly labor cost of $32.84, we estimate an annual cost reduction of
$70,048 (2,133 hours x $32.84 per hour) across the 200 hospitals
selected for eCQM validation due to our proposal to reduce the number
of records collected from 32 records as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57178) to 24 records for the FY 2021 payment
determination.
(3) Calculations for Proposed Modifications to the eCQM Validation
Exclusions for the FY2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing a new eCQM validation exclusion criterion. Specifically,
hospitals that do not have at least five discharges for at least one
reported eCQM (among the six required eCQMs proposed for the CY 2017
and CY 2018 eCQM reporting periods) included in their QRDA I file
submissions would be excluded from the random sample of up to 200
hospitals selected for eCQM validation for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years. In summary, for the FY 2020 payment
determination and subsequent years, we would exclude hospitals meeting
the newly proposed exclusion criterion discussed above and/or either of
the two exclusion criteria finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (81 FR 57178). Lastly, we are proposing that the three exclusions
would be applied before the random selection of 200 hospitals for eCQM
validation, such that hospitals meeting any of these exclusions would
not be eligible for selection.
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to exclude the following cases from validation for those
hospitals selected to participate in eCQM validation: (1) Episodes of
care that are longer than 120 days; and (2) cases with a zero
denominator for each measure, for the FY 2020 payment determination and
subsequent years.
We do not believe that these proposals will impact the burden
experienced by hospitals because, while they influence which hospitals
and cases would be selected, they would not change the number of
hospitals that must participate in eCQM validation, the number of
records that would be collected for validation, or the validation
reporting requirements for the hospitals selected.
(4) Calculations for the Proposed Modifications to the Medical Record
Submission Requirements for the FY 2021 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing for the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent years,
to apply the medical record submission requirements that were finalized
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57179) only for the FY
2020 payment determination. Specifically, we are proposing that for
hospitals participating in eCQM validation we: (1) Would require
submission of at least 75 percent of sampled eCQM measure medical
records in a timely and complete manner; and (2) would maintain the
previously finalized policy that the accuracy of eCQM data submitted
for validation would not affect a hospital's validation score (81 FR
57180). We do not expect these proposals to influence our burden
estimates, as we are proposing to continue existing policies.
(5) Calculations for the Proposed Educational Review Process for Chart-
Abstracted Measures for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to formalize the process of allowing hospitals to use an
educational review process to correct incorrect validation results for
the first three quarters of validation for chart-abstracted measures.
Secondly, we are proposing to update the process to specify that if the
results of an educational review indicate that we incorrectly scored a
hospital, the corrected score would be used to compute the hospital's
final validation score whether or not the hospital submits a
reconsideration request. Under this proposal, the educational review
request process, as well as CMS' procedures for responding to requests,
remain the same for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years, except that revised scores identified through an educational
review would be used to correct a hospital's validation score. As
stated in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49762), we
estimate a burden of 15 minutes per hospital to report structural
measure data and to complete all forms, including the reconsideration
request form and the educational review form. We refer readers to the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for more detailed information on the
burden associated with the chart-abstracted validation requirements (81
FR 57260). Although this proposal may allow hospitals to avoid the
formal reconsideration process, we do not expect this proposal to
influence our burden estimates for the chart-abstracted measures
validation process as it would not change the requirements for
selecting hospitals for validation of chart-abstracted measures nor
change the chart-abstracted validation reporting requirements for the
selected hospitals.
e. Burden Estimate for the Proposed Voluntary Reporting on the Hybrid
Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission Measure for the CY 2018 Reporting
Period
In section IX.A.7.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing voluntary reporting on the Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day
Readmission measure for CY 2018 reporting period. This measure uses
both claims-based data as well as a set of 13 core clinical data
elements from patient electronic health records (EHRs). We do not
expect any additional burden to hospitals to report the claims-based
portion of this measure because these data are already reported to the
Medicare program for payment purposes.
As described in section IX.A.7.b. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing that hospitals submit the 13 core clinical data
elements and the six data elements required for linking with claims
data for this measure using the same submission process required for
eCQM reporting, specifically, that these data be reported using QRDA I
files submitted to the CMS data receiving system. Accordingly, we
expect the burden associated with voluntarily reporting this measure to
be similar to our estimates for eCQM reporting (that is 10 minutes per
measure, per quarter). We anticipate that approximately 100 hospitals
would voluntarily report the Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission
measure. Therefore, using the estimate of 10 minutes per measure per
quarter, we estimate that our proposal would result in a burden
increase of 0.67 hours (40 minutes) per participating hospital for
[[Page 20152]]
the one year (4 quarters) during which this pilot would take place (10
minutes per record x 1 measure x 4 quarters/60 minutes per hour = 0.67
hours). In total, for the one year duration of voluntary reporting the
Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission measure, we estimate an annual
burden increase of 67 hours across up to 100 hospitals voluntarily
participating (40 minutes per hospital/60 minutes per hour x 100
hospitals = 67 hours). Using the wage estimate described above, we
estimate this to represent a cost increase of $2,200 ($32.84 hourly
wage x 67 annual hours) across up to 100 hospitals voluntarily
participating in the pilot. We note that the claims-based version of
the Hospital-Wide All-Cause Unplanned Readmission (HWR) measure is
currently a part of the Hospital IQR Program measure set, as adopted in
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53530).
f. Burden Estimate for the Proposed Refinement of the HCAHPS Survey
Measure for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.6.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to update the HCAHPS Survey measure by replacing the current
Pain Management questions (HCAHPS Q12, Q13, and Q14) with new questions
referred to collectively as the ``Communication About Pain'' composite
measure beginning with the FY 2020 payment determination. There is no
additional information collection burden associated with the refinement
of these questions because we are rewording the existing questions and
not changing the total number of questions. In addition, consistent
with previous years (81 FR 57261), the burden estimate for the Hospital
IQR Program excludes the burden associated with the HCAHPS survey
measure, which is submitted under a separate information collection
request and approved under OMB control number 0938-0981.
g. Burden Estimate for the Proposed Refinement of the Hospital 30-Day,
All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic
Stroke Measure for the FY 2023 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
In section IX.A.6.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to update the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic Stroke measure to include the
use of NIH stroke scale claims data for risk adjustment beginning with
the FY 2023 payment determination. Because this proposed update would
result only in the inclusion of additional claims-based data that are
already reported to the Medicare program for payment purposes, we
believe no additional burden on hospitals will result from the update
to the stroke mortality measure.
h. Burden Estimate for the Confidential and Potential Future Public
Reporting of Readmission Measure Data Stratified by Social Risk Factors
In section IX.A.13 of the preamble of this proposed rule we discuss
our intent to provide confidential reports to hospitals that include
measure data stratified by dual eligible status for the Hospital 30-
day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate Following Pneumonia
Hospitalization and Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized
Mortality Rate (RSRR) for Pneumonia measures. In addition to
confidential reporting, we are seeking comment on options for public
display of measure data stratified by social risk factor indicators on
the Hospital Compare Web site. Because this proposal is related to the
way we display data, and not the methods of data collection implemented
by the hospitals, we believe no additional burden on hospitals would
result from confidential reporting of stratified measure data using
social risk factor indicators. We note that all measures for which we
might consider confidential reporting or public display of stratified
measure data would already be included in the Hospital IQR Program, and
as claims-based measures, we do not expect any additional burden
because these data are already reported to the Medicare program for
payment purposes.
i. Burden Estimate for the Proposed Changes to the Hospital IQR Program
Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy for the FY2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.15.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule we
discuss our intent to align the naming of this exception policy and
update CFR 412.140 to reflect our current ECE policies. We also are
clarifying the timing of CMS' response to ECE requests. Because we are
not seeking any new or additional information in our ECE proposals, we
believe the updates will have no effect on burden for hospitals.
j. Summary of Burden Estimates for the Hospital IQR Program
In summary, under OMB control number 0938-1022, we estimate: (1) A
total burden reduction of 11,000 hours (-11,000 hours due to the
proposed updates to the CY 2017 eCQM reporting requirements) and a
total cost reduction of $361,240 (-11,000 hours x $32.84 per hour) for
the FY 2019 payment determination; (2) a total burden reduction of
11,966 hours (-7,700 hours due to the proposed updates to the CY 2018
eCQM reporting requirements--4,333 hours due to the proposed updates to
the eCQM validation procedures for the FY 2020 payment determination +
67 hours for the proposed Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission
measure pilot) and a total cost reduction of $392,963 (-11,866 hours x
$32.84 per hour) for the FY 2020 payment determination; and (3) a total
burden reduction of 2,133 hours (-2,133 hours due to the proposed
updates to eCQM validation procedures for the FY 2021 payment
determination) and a total cost reduction of $70,048 (-2,133 hours x
$32.84 per hour) for the FY 2021 payment determination. These are the
burden estimate totals for which we are requesting OMB approval under
OMB number 0938-1022.
[[Page 20153]]
Hospital IQR Program FY 2019 Payment Determination Burden Estimates
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual recordkeeping and reporting requirements under OMB control number 0938-1022 for FY 2019 payment determination
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously
finalized
annual burden
Newly proposed (hours) across
Number Number of Average Annual annual burden IPPS hospitals Net
Activity Estimated time per reporting IPPS number burden (hours) across for FY 2019 difference
record (minutes) FY quarters hospitals records per (hours) per IPPS hospitals payment in annual
2019 per year FY reporting hospital hospital for FY 2019 determination burden
2019 per quarter payment per the FY hours
determination 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final
rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reporting on 6 eCQMs for 2 60 (10 minutes x 6 2 3,300 1 2 6,600 17,600 -11,000
Quarters. measures).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Change in Burden Hours: -11,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost Estimate: Hourly Wage ($32.84) x Change in Burden Hours (-11,000) = -$361,240
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital IQR Program FY 2020 Payment Determination Burden Estimates
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual recordkeeping and reporting requirements under OMB control number 0938-1022 for FY 2020 payment determination
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously
Newly proposed finalized
Number Number of Average Annual annual burden annual burden Net
Activity Estimated time per reporting IPPS number burden (hours) across (hours) across difference
record (minutes) FY quarters hospitals records per (hours) per IPPS hospitals IPPS hospitals in annual
2020 per year FY reporting hospital hospital for FY 2020 per the FY burden
2020 per quarter payment 2017 IPPS/LTCH hours
determination PPS final rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reporting on 6 eCQMs for 3 60 (10 minutes x 6 3 3,300 1 3 9,900 17,600 -7,700
Quarters. measures).
FY 2020 eCQM Validation.......... 80.................. 2 200 8 21 4,200 8,533 -4,333
Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day 10.................. 4 100 1 0.67 67 0 67
Readmission Measure Voluntary
Pilot.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Change in Burden Hours: -11,966
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost Estimate: Hourly Wage ($32.84) x Change in Burden Hours (-11,966) = -$392,963
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital IQR Program FY 2021 Payment Determination Burden Estimates
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual recordkeeping and reporting requirements under OMB control number 0938-1022 for FY 2021 payment determination
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Previously
Newly proposed finalized
Number Number of Average Annual annual burden annual burden Net
Activity Estimated time per reporting IPPS number burden (hours) across (hours) across difference
record (minutes) FY quarters hospitals records per (hours) per IPPS hospitals IPPS hospitals in annual
2021 per year FY reporting hospital hospital for FY 2021 per the FY burden
2021 per quarter payment 2017 IPPS/LTCH hours
determination PPS final rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2021 eCQM Validation.......... 80.................. 3 200 8 32 6,400 8,533 -2,133
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Change in Burden Hours: -2,133
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost Estimate: Hourly Wage ($32.84) x Change in Burden Hours (-2,133) = -$70,048
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. ICRs for PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR)
Program
As discussed in sections IX.B. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, section 1866(k)(1) of the Act requires, for purposes of FY 2014
and each subsequent fiscal year, that a hospital described in section
1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act (a PPS-exempt cancer hospital, or a PCH)
submit data in accordance with section 1866(k)(2) of the Act with
respect to such fiscal year. There is no financial impact to PCH
Medicare reimbursement if a PCH does not participate.
We refer readers to the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50957 through 50959), the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50347
through 50348), the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49764), and
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57182), as well as to OMB
Control Number 0938-1175, for a detailed discussion of the burden for
the program requirements that we have previously adopted. Below we
discuss only changes in burden that would result from the proposals in
this proposed rule.
[[Page 20154]]
a. Estimated Hourly Labor Cost
Previously, we used $66 as our hourly labor cost in calculating the
burden associated with chart-abstraction activities in the PCHQR
Program. However, our experience working with our data analysis
contractors and those performing chart abstraction indicates that this
work is performed by a different labor category than we previously
thought. In addition, our previous labor cost is different from those
used in other quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs,
and we do not believe there is a justification for these different
values given the similarity in quality measures and required staff.
Therefore, to align the estimated hourly labor costs (hourly wage plus
fringe and overhead, as discussed below) used to calculate burden in
the PCHQR Program with those used in other CMS quality reporting
programs, including the Hospital IQR Program, we are proposing to
revise our hourly labor cost estimate to $32.84.\509\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\509\ //www.bls.gov/oes/2012/may/oes292071.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This labor cost is based on the BLS wage for a Medical Records and
Health Information Technician. The BLS is ``the principal Federal
agency responsible for measuring labor market activity, working
conditions, and price changes in the economy.'' \510\ The BLS describes
Medical Records and Health Information Technicians as those responsible
for organizing and managing health information data; therefore, we
believe it is reasonable to assume that these individuals would be
tasked with abstracting clinical data for submission for the PCHQR
Program. According to the BLS, the median pay for Medical Records and
Health Information Technicians is $16.42 per hour, before inclusion of
overhead and fringe benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\510\ //www.bls.gov/bls/infohome.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Obtaining data on overhead costs is challenging because overhead
costs vary across PCHs, and cost elements assigned as ``indirect'' or
``overhead'' costs, as opposed to direct costs or employee wages, are
subject to interpretation at the facility level. Therefore, we are
proposing to calculate the cost of overhead, including fringe benefits,
at 100 percent of the mean hourly wage, as is currently done in other
CMS quality reporting programs.\511\ This is necessarily a rough
adjustment, both because fringe benefits and overhead costs vary
significantly from employer to employer and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely from study to study. Nonetheless, we
believe that doubling the hourly wage rate ($16.42 x 2 = $32.84) to
estimate total cost is a reasonably accurate estimation method.
Accordingly, we are proposing to use an hourly labor cost estimate of
$32.84 ($16.42 base salary + $16.42 fringe and overhead) for
calculation of burden forthwith. We note that more recent wage data has
become available, and we intend to update the wage rate used in these
calculations in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\511\ See, e.g., FY2016 IPPS/LTCH Final Rule at 80 FR 49764 FN
153.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are inviting public comment on this proposal.
b. Estimated Burden of PCHQR Program Proposals for the FY 2020 Program
Year
In section IX.B.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to adopt four claims-based measures beginning with the FY
2020 program: (1) Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Receiving
Chemotherapy in the Last 14 Days of Life (NQF #0210); (2) Proportion of
Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to the ICU in the Last 30 Days
of Life (NQF #0213); (3) Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer
Not Admitted to Hospice (NQF #0215); and (4) Proportion of Patients Who
Died from Cancer Admitted to Hospice for Less Than Three Days (NQF
#0216)).
In conjunction with our proposal in section IX.B.3. of the preamble
of this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove three existing chart-
abstracted measures beginning with the FY 2020 program--(1) Adjuvant
Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered Within 4 Months (120 Days)
of Diagnosis to Patients Under the Age of 80 with AJCC III (Lymph Node
Positive) Colon Cancer (PCH-01/NQF #0223); (2) Combination Chemotherapy
is Considered or Administered Within 4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis
for Women Under 70 with AJCC T1c, or Stage II or III Hormone Receptor
Negative Breast Cancer (PCH-02/NQF #0559); and (3) Adjuvant Hormonal
Therapy (PCH-03/NQF #0220)). If all of these proposals are finalized,
the PCHQR Program measure set would consist of 18 measures for the FY
2020 program.
Our proposal to remove the three chart-abstracted measures would
reduce the burden associated with quality data reporting on PCHs. Based
on the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH final rule (77 FR 53667) finalized estimates
of the burden of collecting measure information, submitting measure
information, and training personnel, we estimate the reduction in
burden for collecting measure information, submitting measure
information, and training personnel provided by the proposed removal of
the three measures to be approximately 3,776 hours per year for each
PCH, or an average reduction in burden of 315 hours per month per PCH.
Therefore, we estimate a reduction in hourly burden of chart
abstraction and data submission of approximately 41,536 hours per year
across the 11 PCHs.\512\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\512\ In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53667), we
originally calculated the burden for reporting the three chart-
abstracted cancer measures and two NHSN CDC measures (CLABSI and
CAUTI) at approximately 6,293.5 hours annually for each PCH, or
69,228.5 burden hours annually for all 11 PCHs. To calculate the
reduction in burden achieved by removing three of these five
measures, we multiplied the annual burden by 11 (the number of
PCHs), divided by 5 (the total number of measures making up the
burden estimate), and multiplied the result by 3 (the total number
of measures being removed).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We do not anticipate any increase in burden on the PCHs
corresponding to our proposal to adopt four claims-based measures into
the PCHQR Program beginning with the FY 2020 program year. The four
measures are claims-based and therefore do not require facilities to
report any additional data. Because these measures do not require
facilities to submit any additional data, we do not believe that there
is any increase in burden associated with this proposal.
In summary, as a result of our proposals, we estimate a reduction
of 40,910 hours of burden per year associated with the proposals above
for all 11 PCHs beginning with the FY 2020 program. Coupled with our
revised estimated salary costs, we estimate that these proposed changes
would result in a reduction in annual labor costs of $1,364,078
(41,537.1 hours x $32.84 hourly labor cost) across the 11 PCHs
beginning with the FY 2020 PCHQR Program. The burden associated with
these reporting requirements is currently under OMB Control Number
0938-1175. The information collection will be revised and submitted to
OMB.
8. ICRs for the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program
In section V.J. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss
proposed requirements for the Hospital VBP Program. Specifically, in
this proposed rule, with respect to quality measures, we are proposing
to: (1) Remove the current PSI 90 measure beginning with the FY 2019
program year; (2) adopt the Hospital-Level, Risk-Standardized Payment
Associated with a 30-Day Episode-of-Care for Pneumonia PN Payment)
measure beginning with the FY 2022 program year; and (3) adopt the
Patient Safety and Adverse Events
[[Page 20155]]
(Composite) (NQF #0531) (Modified PSI 90) beginning with the PY 2023
program year.
As required under section 1886(o)(2)(A) of the Act, Hospital VBP
Program measures, including the proposed additional and updated
measures, are used in the Hospital IQR Program. Therefore, their
inclusion in the Hospital VBP Program does not result in any additional
burden because the Hospital VBP Program uses data that are required for
and collected under the Hospital IQR Program. Therefore, the burden
associated with these reporting requirements is currently approved
under OMB Control Number 0938-1022.
9. ICRs for the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality Reporting Program (LTCH
QRP)
As discussed in section IX.C.7. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to replace the current pressure ulcer measure
beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP and adopt two new measures (one
process and one outcome) related to ventilator weaning also beginning
with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP.
LTCH QRP Quality Measures Proposed in This FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS
Proposed Rule Beginning With the FY 2020 LTCH QRP
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Measure title
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury.
Compliance with Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT) by Day 2 of the LTCH
Stay.
Ventilator Liberation Rate.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The LTCH QRP measure set also currently includes claims-based
measures that are calculated based on data that LTCHs are already
required to report to the Medicare program for payment purposes. In
this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove the All-Cause Unplanned
Readmission Measure for 30 Days Post-Discharge from LTCHs (NQF #2512)
from the LTCH QRP measure set, beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP.
However, because LTCHs will still be required to report data on this
measure for payment purposes, we believe that the removal of this
measure will not affect the burden estimate for the LTCH QRP.
The LTCH CARE Data Set Version 3.00 was implemented April 1, 2016
and is approved under OMB control number 0938-1163. The LTCH CARE Data
Set Version 3.00 is available on the LTCH QRP Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-CARE-Data-Set-and-LTCH-QRP-Manual.html. For a discussion of burden related to LTCH CARE Data Set
Version 3.00, we refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(81 FR 57339 through 57341).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing three measures: Changes in
Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/Injury; and two new
measures related to ventilator weaning, Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of
the LTCH Stay and Ventilator Liberation Rate. The data for these
measures will be collected using the LTCH CARE Data Set Version 4.00.
The LTCH CARE Data Set Version 4.00, effective April 1, 2018, will
also contain additional data elements needed to calculate the Drug
Regimen Review Conducted with Follow-Up for Identified Issues-PAC LTCH
QRP quality measure, which was finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57219 through 57223) as well as the data elements
needed to calculate the measures we are proposing to adopt in this
proposed rule.
Adoption of the proposed pressure ulcer measure, Change in Skin
Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer Injury, to replace the
current pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or Patients with
Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay) (NQF #0678),
would result in the removal of some data elements related to pressure
ulcer assessment that we believe are duplicative or no longer
necessary. As a result, the estimated burden and cost for LTCHs to
report the proposed measure would be reduced from the burden and cost
to report the current measure. Specifically, we believe that there
would be a 3-minute reduction in clinical staff time to report data. We
estimate 146,592 discharges from 426 LTCHs annually. This equates to a
decrease of 7,330 hours in burden for all LTCHs (0.05 hours x 146,592
discharges). Given 3 minutes of RN time at $69.40 per hour completing
an average of 344 sets of LTCH CARE Data Set assessments per provider
per year, we estimated the total cost would be reduced by $1,194.07 per
LTCH annually, or $508,674 for all LTCHs annually. This decrease in
burden will be accounted for in the information collection under OMB
control number (0938-1163).
We estimate the additional data elements for the newly proposed
Compliance with SBT by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay quality measure would
take 1.5 minutes of clinical staff time to report data on admission. We
believe that the additional LTCH CARE Data Set items we are proposing
will be completed by registered nurses and respiratory therapists (RT).
Individual LTCHs determine the staffing resources necessary. We
estimate 146,592 discharges from 426 LTCHs annually. This equates to an
increase of 3,665 hours in burden for all LTCHs (0.025 hours x 146,592
discharges). Given 0.75 minutes of RN time at $69.40 per hour and 0.75
minutes of RT time at $58.30 per hour completing an average of 344 sets
of LTCH CARE Data Set assessments per provider per year, we estimated
the total cost would be increased by $549.29 per LTCH annually, or
$233,997 for all LTCHs annually. This increase in burden will be
accounted for in the information collection under OMB control number
(0938-1163).
We estimate the additional elements for the newly proposed
Ventilator Liberation Rate quality measure would take 2.7 minutes of
clinical staff time to report data on admission and 0.3 minutes of
clinical staff time to report data on discharge, for a total of 3
minutes. We believe that the additional LTCH CARE Data Set items we are
proposing will be completed by registered nurses and respiratory
therapists. Individual providers determine the staffing resources
necessary. We estimate 146,592 discharges from 426 LTCHs annually. This
equates to an increase of 7,330 hours in burden for all LTCHs (0.05
hours x 146,592 discharges). Given 2.85 minutes of RN time at $69.40
per hour and 0.15 minutes of respiratory therapist (RT) time at $58.30
per hour completing an average of 344 sets of LTCH CARE Data Set
assessments per provider per year, we estimated the total cost would be
increased by $1,184.52 per LTCH annually, or $504,606 for all LTCHs
annually. This increase in burden will be accounted for in the
information collection under OMB control number (0938-1163).
We are proposing to remove the program interruption items from the
LTCH CARE Data Set. Specifically, we are proposing to remove the
following items: (1) A2500, Program Interruption(s); (2) A2510, Number
of Program Interruptions During This Stay in This Facility; and (3)
A2525, Program Interruption Dates, because we do not currently utilize
this information nor do we have plans to utilize this information for
the LTCH QRP. As a result, the estimated burden and cost for LTCHs
would be reduced. Specifically, we believe that there would be a 3.6
minute reduction in clinical staff time to report data. We estimate
146,592 discharges from 426 LTCHs annually. This equates
[[Page 20156]]
to a decrease of 8,796 hours in burden for all LTCHs (0.06 hours x
146,592 discharges). Given 3.6 minutes of RN time at $69.40 per hour
completing an average of 344 sets of LTCH CARE Data Set assessments per
provider per year, we estimated the total cost would be reduced by
$1,432.89 per LTCH annually, or $610,409 for all LTCHs annually. This
decrease in burden will be accounted for in the information collection
under OMB control number (0938-1163).
Also, in section IX.C.10.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
we are proposing requirements related to the reporting of standardized
patient assessment data beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP. Some of
the proposed data elements are already included on the LTCH CARE Data
Set, and our proposal to characterize those data elements as
standardized patient assessment data will not result in an additional
reporting burden for LTCHs. However, we are proposing to adopt 25 new
standardized patient assessment data elements with respect to LTCH
admissions and 17 new standardized patient assessment data elements
with respect to LTCH discharges. We estimate that it will take an
LTCH's clinical staff 7.5 minutes to report the data elements required
with respect to admissions and 5.1 minutes to report the data elements
required with respect to discharges, for a total of additional 12.6
minutes. This equates to an increase of 30,784 hours in burden for all
LTCHs (0.21 hours x 146,592 discharges). We believe that the additional
LTCH CARE Data Set data elements we are proposing will be completed by
registered nurses (approximately 45 percent of the time), licensed
vocational nurses (approximately 45 percent of the time) and
respiratory therapists (approximately 10 percent of the time). We
estimate 146,592 discharges from 426 LTCHs annually.
We obtained mean hourly wages for these staff from the U.S. Bureau
of Labor Statistics' May 2016 National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates (//www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm). The mean
hourly wage for a RN (BLS occupation code: 29-1141) is $34.70, for a
respiratory therapist (BLS occupation code: 29-1126) is $29.15, and for
a licensed vocational nurse (BLS occupation code: 29-2061) is $21.56.
Individual providers determine the staffing resources necessary.
However, to account for overhead and fringe benefits, we have doubled
the mean hourly wage, making it $69.40 for an RN, $58.30 for a
respiratory therapist, and $43.12 for a licensed vocational nurse.
Given the clinician times and wages above completing an average of 344
sets of LTCH CARE Data Set assessments per provider per year, the total
cost related to the additional standardized patient assessment data
elements is estimated at $4,080.30 per LTCH annually, or $1,738,206 for
all LTCHs annually.
In summary, the 4.5-minute increase in burden for the two proposed
ventilator weaning quality measures is offset with the 3 minute
reduction in burden for the proposed pressure ulcer quality measure and
the 3.6 minute reduction in burden for the program interruption items.
This results in a net reduction in burden of 2.1 minutes. In addition,
we are proposing that data for the new standardized data elements will
be collected by LTCHs and reported to CMS using the LTCH CARE Data Set
(LTCH CARE Data Set Version 4.00, effective April 1, 2018) for the
purpose of fulfilling the requirements of the IMPACT Act. This results
in an additional 12.6 minutes of burden for the proposed standardized
data elements, with a net burden of 10.5 minutes. Overall, the cost
associated with the proposed changes to the LTCH QRP is estimated at an
additional $3,187.15 per LTCH annually, or $1,357,726 for all LTCHs
annually.
The proposed LTCH CARE Data Set Version 4.00 is available on the
LTCH QRP Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/LTCH-Quality-Reporting/LTCH-Quality-Reporting-Measures-Information.html.
For a discussion of burden related to LTCH CARE Data Set Version
4.00, we refer readers to section I.M. of Appendix A of the preamble of
this proposed rule.
10. ICRs for the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility Quality Reporting
(IPFQR) Program
We refer readers to the FY 2015 IPF PPS final rule (79 FR 45978
through 45980), the FY 2016 IPF PPS final rule (80 FR 46720 through
46721), and the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS (81 FR 57265 through 57266) final
rule for a detailed discussion of the burden for the program
requirements that we have previously adopted. Additional information on
the full burden of existing requirements can also be found in the
materials associated with OMB 0938-1171, the OMB Paperwork Reduction
Act materials for this Program. We are proposing provisions that affect
the FY 2019 payment determination (through procedural requirements that
occur in FY 2018) and the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years. ICRs associated with proposals for each period are discussed in
more detail below.
a. Burden Associated With Procedural Proposals for the FY 2019 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
For FY 2018 and subsequent years we are proposing: (1) Updates to
the Extraordinary Circumstances Exception (ECE) process (affecting
submission of ECE requests in FY 2018, which would impact payment
determination year FY 2019 and subsequent years); (2) to adopt measure
removal factors, including criteria for determining when a measure is
``topped-out,'' and measure retention factors (which could affect
measures for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years);
and (3) changes associated with procedural deadlines (which affects FY
2019 payment determination and subsequent years).
For the ECE proposals, we are specifically proposing to: (1)
Specify that ECE forms can be signed by either the CEO or the
designated personnel as listed in the contact information section of
the form; (2) change the ECE request form submission deadline to within
90 days of the date that the extraordinary circumstance occurred; and
(3) we will strive to complete our review of ECE requests within 90
days of receipt. These changes to the ECE process would not change data
submission requirements for facilities requesting ECEs, but update
procedural requirements related to ECE requests instead. Therefore, we
do not expect any changes to burden associated with these proposals.
Second, the proposal to adopt measures removal and retention
factors does not affect the data submission requirements. These factors
are intended to improve transparency of our measure review and
evaluation process.
Third, for the procedural deadlines, we are proposing to: (1)
Change the submission deadline such that facilities have a 45-day
submission period beginning at least 30 days following the end of the
data collection period for a measure; (2) change the submission
timeframes for both NOPs and withdrawals to the end of the data
submission period before each respective payment determination year;
and (3) provide exact dates that define the end of the data submission
period/NOP/withdrawal submission deadline through subregulatory means.
These proposals do not affect the data that a facility must submit,
instead these proposals affect the specification of timeframes.
Because none of the policies that we are proposing for FY 2018 and
subsequent years affects the data that
[[Page 20157]]
IPFs are required to submit, we do not believe there will be any change
in burden.
b. Burden Associated With Proposal for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
For FY 2020 and subsequent years, we are proposing one measure,
Medication Continuation following Inpatient Psychiatric Discharge. This
measure is claims based and therefore does not require facilities to
report any additional data. Because this measure does not require
facilities to submit any additional data, we do not believe that there
is any associated burden associated with this proposal.
11. ICRs for the Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs and
Meaningful Use
In section IX.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss
proposed policies for eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs
electronically under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs.
As outlined in this proposed rule, we are proposing the following
modifications to the CY 2017 final CQM policies: (1) Revise the CY 2017
reporting period for eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs
electronically to require the submission of 2 self-selected quarters of
data; and (2) revise the number of CQMs eligible hospitals and CAHs are
required to report electronically for CY 2017 to 6 (self-selected)
available CQMs. In addition, we are proposing the following CQM
reporting requirements for CY 2018: (1) Eligible hospitals and CAHs
reporting CQMs electronically that demonstrate meaningful use for the
first time in 2018 or that have demonstrated meaningful use in any year
prior to 2018, the reporting period would be the first 3 quarters of CY
2018 with a submission period (Medicare EHR Incentive Program only)
consisting of the 2 months following the close of the calendar year,
ending on February 28, 2019; (2) eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting
CQMs electronically would be required to report at least 6 (self-
selected) of the available CQMs; (3) eligible hospitals and CAHs that
report CQMs by attestation under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program
because electronic reporting is not feasible, and eligible hospitals
and CAHs that report CQMs by attestation under their State's Medicaid
EHR Incentive Program, would be required to report on all 16 available
CQMs; and (4) eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs by attestation
under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program would have a submission period
that would be the 2 months following the close of the CY 2018 CQM
reporting period, ending February 28, 2019.
Because the proposed reporting requirements for data collection
regarding the reporting of CQMs electronically under the Medicare and
Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs would align with the reporting
requirements under the Hospital IQR Program, we do not believe that
there is any additional burden for the collection of such information.
We are not proposing modifications for the CQMs reporting requirements
by attestation. Therefore, there would be no change in burden
associated with attestation of CQMs.
In section IX.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss
proposed policies regarding clinical quality measurement for EPs
participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. We note that there
may be costs incurred by States associated with systems development as
a result of the proposed policies. State attestation systems would
likely require minor updates, which may be eligible for support through
enhanced Federal funding, subject to CMS prior approval, if outlined in
an updated Implementation Advanced Planning Document (IAPD). We
anticipate that EPs may also face minor burden and incremental capital
cost for updating clinical quality measures and reporting capabilities
in the EHR. We intend to reduce EP burden and simplify the program
through these proposals, which are intended to better align CQM
reporting periods and CQM reporting for the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program with policies under MIPS. Overall, we believe the proposed CQM
alignment at the State attestation system and EP levels would both
reduce burden associated with reporting on multiple CMS programs and
enhance state and CMS operational efficiency.
In section IX.G.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals to change the EHR reporting period in 2018 from
the full CY 2018 to any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018 for all
returning EPs, eligible hospitals and CAHs in the Medicare and Medicaid
EHR Incentive Programs. We do not believe that modifying the EHR
reporting period would cause an increase in burden as the reporting
requirements for a 90 day reporting period are virtually the same for a
full calendar year reporting period and the same objectives and
measures will be used for reporting for a full calendar year reporting
or a 90 day reporting period.
In section IX.G.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, as
required by the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), we are
proposing an exemption from the payment adjustments under sections
1848(a)(7)(A), 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(I), and 1814(l)(4) of the Act for EPs,
eligible hospitals and CAHs, respectively, that demonstrate through an
application process that compliance with the requirement for being a
meaningful EHR user is not possible because their certified EHR
technology has been decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification
Program. The application process involves participants completing an
application form for an exception. While the form is standardized, we
believe it is exempt from the PRA. The form is structured as an
attestation. Therefore, we believe it is exempt under 5 CFR
1320.3(h)(1) of the implementing regulations of the PRA. The form is an
attestation that imposes no burden beyond what is required to provide
identifying information and to attest to the applicable information.
In section IX.G.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule, as
required by the 21st Century Cures Act, we are proposing to exempt
ambulatory surgical center-based EPs from the 2017 and 2018 payment
adjustments under section 1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act if they furnish
substantially all of their covered professional services in an
ambulatory surgical center. We do not believe this requirement would
cause an increase in burden as CMS would identify the EPs who might
meet this requirement.
For the expected effects relating to the above proposals, we refer
readers to section I.O. of Appendix A of this proposed rule.
We are requesting public comments on these information collection
and recordkeeping requirements.
12. ICRs Relating to Proposed Electronic Signature and Electronic
Submission of the Certification and Settlement Summary Page of Medicare
Cost Reports
In section X.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss
our proposal to allow providers to use an electronic signature on the
certification statement of the Certification and Settlement Summary
page of the Medicare cost report and submit it electronically. The
Certification and Settlement Summary page, which contains the required
provider signature line, currently exists in the Medicare cost report
and is mailed to the contractor from the provider. We are proposing to
allow providers the option to sign and submit this page electronically.
The signature from the provider's administrator or chief financial
officer is an existing data
[[Page 20158]]
collection requirement. There would be no new data collection from
providers resulting from our proposal. The proposal to allow providers
to sign this page electronically is not a substantive change to the
existing data collection instrument and would have a minimal impact on
providers to complete.
13. ICRs Relating to Survey and Certification Requirements
a. Proposed Transparency in Survey Reports and Plans of Correction
In section XI.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to require accrediting organizations (AO) to post survey
results and findings (that is, statements of deficiency findings) as
well as any associated acceptable plans of correction (PoCs), and make
this information publicly available on its Web site within 90 days
after such information is made available to those facilities, for the
most recent 3 years.
According to data and information available to us, as of September
30, 2016, there are approximately 12,434 deemed facilities (providers
and suppliers) across all CMS-approved programs that have surveys
(either initial and renewal, including complaints) for which an AO
would be required to make survey reports and associated PoCs publicly
available under our proposal.513 514 515 The CY 2016
Advanced Diagnostic Imaging (ADI) AO annual data submission lists
approximately 16,873 ADI suppliers and locations that have surveys
(initial, renewal, complaint, and mid-cycle) (approximately 2,128) for
which AOs of ADI suppliers would be required to make survey reports and
PoCs publicly available on their Web site under our proposal. Unlike
Medicare- and Medicaid-certified providers and suppliers, there are no
prescriptive statutory, regulatory, or policy requirements regarding
the frequency of ADI AOs surveys.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\513\ FY 2016 Report to Congress (RTC): Review of Medicare's
Program Oversight of Accrediting Organizations (AOs) and the
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) Validation
Program--Section 2, Table 5.
\514\ CMS Survey and Certification Web site for hospital Form
CMS-2567 (Statement of Deficiencies and Plan or Correction)
downloads: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/CertificationandComplianc/Hospitals.html.
\515\ ProPublica (2016) Web site: //projects.propublica.org/nursing-homes/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We do not have sufficient data to determine the burden associated
with the information collection requirements under our proposal.
Therefore, we are requesting public comments on the potential costs and
burden associated with our proposal on AOs regarding modifying their
existing public Web sites and uploading of survey reports and PoCs.
b. Proposed Changes in Public Notices of Terminations
In section XI.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to no longer require the posting of voluntary and involuntary
termination public notice in newspapers for RHCs, FQHCs, ASCs, and
OPOs. These providers and suppliers would be permitted to use other
methods of notification in light of the expanded use of information
technology. We also are proposing to change the regulations regarding
termination of provider agreements by CMS (that is, involuntary
termination) or providers or suppliers to remove the provision for
public notice through ``newspapers'' to allow flexibility in the method
of public notice.
We believe none of the proposed provisions would have a financial
burden as we are only eliminating the specification which requires
newspaper hard print to be the notice source.
We refer readers to the economic impact provisions of section I.P.
of Appendix A of this proposed rule for additional information.
If you comment on these information collection and recordkeeping
requirements, please do either of the following:
1. Submit your comments electronically as specified in the
ADDRESSES section of this proposed rule; or
2. Submit your comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: CMS Desk Officer, CMS-1677-P
Fax: (202) 395-6974; or
Email:
[email protected].
C. Request for Information on CMS Flexibilities and Efficiencies
CMS is committed to transforming the health care delivery system--
and the Medicare program--by putting an additional focus on patient-
centered care and working with providers, physicians, and patients to
improve outcomes. We seek to reduce burdens for hospitals, physicians,
and patients, improve the quality of care, decrease costs, and ensure
that patients and their providers and physicians are making the best
health care choices possible. These are the reasons we are including
this Request for Information in this proposed rule.
As we work to maintain flexibility and efficiency throughout the
Medicare program, we would like to start a national conversation about
improvements that can be made to the health care delivery system that
reduce unnecessary burdens for clinicians, other providers, and
patients and their families. We aim to increase quality of care, lower
costs improve program integrity, and make the health care system more
effective, simple and accessible.
We would like to take this opportunity to invite the public to
submit their ideas for regulatory, subregulatory, policy, practice, and
procedural changes to better accomplish these goals. Ideas could
include payment system redesign, elimination or streamlining of
reporting, monitoring and documentation requirements, aligning Medicare
requirements and processes with those from Medicaid and other payers,
operational flexibility, feedback mechanisms and data sharing that
would enhance patient care, support of the physician-patient
relationship in care delivery, and facilitation of individual
preferences. Responses to this Request for Information could also
include recommendations regarding when and how CMS issues regulations
and policies and how CMS can simplify rules and policies for
beneficiaries, clinicians, physicians, providers, and suppliers. Where
practicable, data and specific examples would be helpful. If the
proposals involve novel legal questions, analysis regarding CMS'
authority is welcome for CMS' consideration. We are particularly
interested in ideas for incentivizing organizations and the full range
of relevant professionals and paraprofessionals to provide screening,
assessment and evidence-based treatment for individuals with opioid use
disorder and other substance use disorders, including reimbursement
methodologies, care coordination, systems and services integration, use
of paraprofessionals including community paramedics and other
strategies. We are requesting commenters to provide clear and concise
proposals that include data and specific examples that could be
implemented within the law.
We note that this is a Request for Information only. Respondents
are encouraged to provide complete but concise responses. This Request
for Information is issued solely for information and planning purposes;
it does not constitute a Request for Proposal (RFP), applications,
proposal abstracts, or quotations. This Request for Information does
not commit the U.S. Government to contract for any supplies or services
or make a grant award.
[[Page 20159]]
Further, CMS is not seeking proposals through this Request for
Information and will not accept unsolicited proposals. Responders are
advised that the U.S. Government will not pay for any information or
administrative costs incurred in response to this Request for
Information; all costs associated with responding to this Request for
Information will be solely at the interested party's expense. We note
that not responding to this Request for Information does not preclude
participation in any future procurement, if conducted. It is the
responsibility of the potential responders to monitor this Request for
Information announcement for additional information pertaining to this
request. In addition, we note that CMS will not respond to questions
about the policy issues raised in this Request for Information. CMS
will not respond to comment submissions in response to this Request for
Information in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. Rather, CMS will
actively consider all input as we develop future regulatory proposals
or future subregulatory policy guidance. CMS may or may not choose to
contact individual responders. Such communications would be for the
sole purpose of clarifying statements in the responders' written
responses. Contractor support personnel may be used to review responses
to this Request for Information. Responses to this notice are not
offers and cannot be accepted by the Government to form a binding
contract or issue a grant. Information obtained as a result of this
Request for Information may be used by the Government for program
planning on a nonattribution basis. Respondents should not include any
information that might be considered proprietary or confidential. This
Request for Information should not be construed as a commitment or
authorization to incur cost for which reimbursement would be required
or sought. All submissions become U.S. Government property and will not
be returned. CMS may publically post the public comments received, or a
summary of those public comments.
D. Response to Public Comments
Because of the large number of public comments we normally receive
on Federal Register documents, we are not able to acknowledge or
respond to them individually. We will consider all public comments we
receive by the date and time specified in the DATES section of this
preamble, and, when we proceed with a subsequent document, we will
respond to the public comments in the preamble of that document.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 405
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping,
Rural areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 412
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Puerto Rico, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 413
Health facilities, Kidney diseases, Medicare, Puerto Rico,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and procedures, Biologics, Drugs, Health
facilities, Health professions, Kidney diseases, Medicare, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 416
Health facilities, Health professions, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 486
Grant programs--health, Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, X-ray.
42 CFR Part 488
Administrative practice and procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 489
Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 495
Administrative practice and procedure, Electronic health records,
Health facilities, Health professions, Health maintenance organizations
(HMO), Medicaid, Medicare, Penalties, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble of this proposed rule,
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is proposing to amend 42
CFR Chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 405--FEDERAL HEALTH INSURANCE FOR THE AGED AND DISABLED
0
1. The authority citation for part 405 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 205(a), 1102, 1142, 1861, 1862(a), 1869, 1871,
1874, 1881, and 1886(k) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
405(a), 1302, 1320b-12, 1395x, 1395y(a), 1395ff, 1395hh, 1395kk,
1395rr, and 1395ww(k)), and sec. 353 of the Public Health Service
Act (42 U.S.C. 263a).
0
2. Section 405.2404 is amended by revising paragraph (d) introductory
text to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2404 Termination of rural health clinic agreements.
* * * * *
(d) Notice to the public. Prompt notice of the date and effect of
termination must be given to the public by either of the following:
* * * * *
0
3. Section 405.2442 is amended by revising paragraph (a) introductory
text and paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 405.2442 Notice to the public.
(a) When the FQHC voluntarily terminates the agreement and an
effective date is set for the termination, the FQHC must notify the
public in the area serviced by the FQHC prior to a prospective
effective date or on the actual day that business ceases, if no
prospective date of termination has been set. The notice must include--
* * * * *
(b) When CMS terminates the agreement, CMS will notify the public
in the area serviced by the FQHC.
PART 412--PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL
SERVICES
0
4. The authority citation for part 412 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh); sec. 124 of Pub. L. 106-113 (113 Stat.
1501A-332); sec. 1206 of Pub. L. 113-67; sec. 112 of Pub. L. 113-93;
sec. 231 of Pub. L. 114-113; and secs. 15004, 15006, 15007, 15008,
15009, and 15010 of Pub. L. 114-255.
0
5. Section 412.22 is amended by revising paragraph (e) introductory
text and paragraph (e)(1)(v) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 412.22 Excluded hospitals and hospital units: General rules.
* * * * *
(e) Hospitals-within-hospitals. A hospital-within-a-hospital is a
hospital that occupies space in a building also used by another
hospital, or in one or more separate buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by another hospital. Prior to October 1, 2017,
except as provided in paragraphs (e)(1)(vi) and (f) of this section, a
hospital-within-a-hospital must meet the following criteria in order to
be excluded from the prospective payment systems specified in Sec.
412.1(a)(1). On or
[[Page 20160]]
after October 1, 2017, except as provided in paragraphs (e)(1)(vi) and
(f) of this section, a hospital-within-hospital that is excluded from
the prospective payment systems specified in Sec. 412.1(a)(1) that
occupies space in a building also used by a hospital which is not
excluded from the prospective payment systems specified in Sec.
412.1(a)(1), or in one or more separate buildings located on the same
campus as buildings used by a hospital not excluded from the
prospective payment systems specified in Sec. 412.1(a)(1) must meet
the following criteria in order to be excluded from the prospective
payment systems specified in Sec. 412.1(a)(1).
(1) * * *
(v) Performance of basic hospital functions. Prior to October 1,
2017, the hospital meets one of the following criteria:
* * * * *
0
6. Section 412.23 is amended by revising paragraphs (e)(2)(ii),
(e)(3)(vi), and (e)(7)(iii) and adding paragraph (j) to read as
follows:
Sec. 412.23 Excluded hospitals: Classifications.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) For cost reporting periods beginning on or after August 5,
1997 and on or before December 31, 2014, a hospital that was first
excluded from the prospective payment system under this section in 1986
meets the length-of-stay criterion if it has an average inpatient
length of stay for all patients, including both Medicare and non-
Medicare inpatients, of greater than 20 days and demonstrates that at
least 80 percent of its annual Medicare inpatient discharges in the 12-
month cost reporting period ending in fiscal year 1997 have a principal
diagnosis that reflects a finding of neoplastic disease as defined in
paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section.
(3) * * *
(vi) For cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2015, the Medicare inpatient days and discharges that are paid at the
site neutral payment rate specified at Sec. 412.522(c)(1) or paid
under a Medicare Advantage plan (Medicare Part C) will not be included
in the calculation of the Medicare inpatient average length of stay
specified under paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
* * * * *
(7) * * *
(iii) April 1, 2014 through September 30, 2017--The number of
Medicare-certified beds in an existing long-term care hospital or an
existing long-term care hospital satellite facility must not be
increased beyond the number of Medicare-certified beds prior to April
1, 2014, unless one of the exceptions specified in paragraph (e)(6)(ii)
of this section is met.
* * * * *
(j) Long-term care neoplastic disease hospitals--(1) General. For
cost reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2015, a long-
term care neoplastic disease hospital must be a hospital that was first
excluded from the prospective payment system under this section in 1986
which has an average inpatient length of stay for all patients,
including both Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients, of greater than 20
days and demonstrates that at least 80 percent of its annual Medicare
inpatient discharges in the 12-month cost reporting period ending in
fiscal year 1997 have a principal diagnosis that reflects a finding of
neoplastic disease as defined in paragraph (f)(1)(iv) of this section.
(2) Payment. Payment for inpatient operating costs for hospitals
classified under paragraph (j)(1) of this section is made as set forth
in Sec. 412.526(c)(3). Payment for capital costs for hospitals
classified under paragraph (j)(1) of this section is made as set forth
in Sec. 412.526(c)(4).
0
7. Section 412.64 is amended by--
0
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1)(vii);
0
b. Adding paragraph (d)(4)(iii); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (i)(3)(iii).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 412.64 Federal rates for inpatient operating costs for Federal
fiscal year 2005 and subsequent fiscal years.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) For fiscal years 2017 and 2018, the percentage increase in
the market basket index (as defined in Sec. 413.40(a)(3) of this
chapter) for prospective payment hospitals, subject to the provisions
of paragraphs (d)(2) and (3) of this section, less a multifactor
productivity adjustment (as determined by CMS) and less 0.75 percentage
point.
* * * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) Exception for decertified EHR technology. Beginning with the
fiscal year 2019 payment adjustment year, the Secretary shall exempt an
eligible hospital that is not a qualifying eligible hospital from the
application of the reduction under paragraph (d)(3) of this section if
the Secretary determines that compliance with the requirement for being
a meaningful EHR user is not possible because the certified EHR
technology used by the eligible hospital has been decertified under
ONC's Health IT Certification Program. To be considered for an
exception, an eligible hospital must submit an application, in the
manner specified by CMS, demonstrating that the certified EHR
technology was decertified during the 12-month period preceding the
applicable EHR reporting period for the payment adjustment year, or
during the applicable EHR reporting period for the payment adjustment
year, and that the eligible hospital made a good faith effort to obtain
another certified EHR technology for that EHR reporting period. (See
Sec. 495.4 for definitions of payment adjustment year, EHR reporting
period, and meaningful EHR user.) Applications requesting this
exception must be submitted by July 1 of the year before the applicable
payment adjustment year, or a later date specified by CMS. This
exception is subject to annual renewal, but in no case may an eligible
hospital be granted an exception under paragraph (d)(4) of this section
for more than 5 years.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) Any wage index adjustment made under this paragraph (i) is
effective for a period of 3 fiscal years, except that hospitals in a
qualifying county may elect to waive the application of the wage index
adjustment. A hospital may waive the application of the wage index
adjustment by notifying CMS in writing within 45 days of the date of
public display of the annual notice of proposed rulemaking for the
hospital inpatient prospective payment system at the Office of the
Federal Register.
* * * * *
0
8. Section 412.87 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 412.87 Additional payment for new medical services and
technologies: General provisions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) A medical service or technology may be considered new within 2
or 3 years after the point at which data begin to become available
reflecting the inpatient hospital code (as defined in section
1886(d)(5)(K)(iii) of the Social Security Act) assigned to the new
service or technology (depending on when a new code is assigned and
data on the new service or technology become available for DRG
recalibration). After CMS has recalibrated the DRGs, based on available
data, to reflect the costs of an otherwise new medical service or
technology, the medical service or technology will no longer be
[[Page 20161]]
considered ``new'' under the criterion of this section.
* * * * *
0
9. Section 412.90 is amended by revising paragraph (j) to read as
follows:
Sec. 412.90 General rules.
* * * * *
(j) Medicare-dependent, small rural hospitals. For cost reporting
periods beginning on or after April 1, 1990, and before October 1,
1994, and for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 1997 and
before October 1, 2017, CMS adjusts the prospective payment rates for
inpatient operating costs determined under subparts D and E of this
part if a hospital is classified as a Medicare-dependent, small rural
hospital.
* * * * *
0
10. Section 412.92 is amended by revising paragraph (e)(3) introductory
text to read as follows:
Sec. 412.92 Special treatment: Sole community hospitals.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(3) Effective for cost reporting periods beginning before October
1, 2017, the intermediary determines a lump sum adjustment amount not
to exceed the difference between the hospital's Medicare inpatient
operating costs and the hospital's total DRG revenue for inpatient
operating costs based on DRG-adjusted prospective payment rates for
inpatient operating costs (including outlier payments for inpatient
operating costs determined under subpart F of this part and additional
payments made for inpatient operating costs for hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income patients as determined under Sec.
412.106 and for indirect medical education costs as determined under
Sec. 412.105). Effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2017, the MAC determines a lump sum adjustment amount
equal to the difference between the hospital's fixed Medicare inpatient
operating costs and the hospital's total MS-DRG revenue based on MS-
DRG-adjusted prospective payment rates for inpatient operating costs
(including outlier payments for inpatient operating costs determined
under subpart F of this part and additional payments made for inpatient
operating costs for hospitals that serve a disproportionate share of
low-income patients as determined under Sec. 412.106 and for indirect
medical education costs as determined under Sec. 412.105) multiplied
by the ratio of the hospital's fixed Medicare inpatient operating costs
to its total Medicare inpatient operating costs.
* * * * *
0
11. Section 412.101 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2)
introductory text and adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 412.101 Special treatment: Inpatient hospital payment adjustment
for low-volume hospitals.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) In order to qualify for this adjustment, a hospital must meet
the following criteria, subject to the provisions of paragraph (e) of
this section:
* * * * *
(e) Special treatment regarding hospitals operated by the Indian
Health Service (IHS) or a Tribe. For discharges occurring in FY 2018
and subsequent fiscal years--
(1) A hospital operated by the IHS or a Tribe will be considered to
meet the applicable mileage criterion specified under paragraph (b)(2)
of this section if it is located more than the specified number of road
miles from the nearest subsection (d) hospital operated by the IHS or a
Tribe.
(2) A hospital, other than a hospital operated by the IHS or a
Tribe, will be considered to meet the applicable mileage criterion
specified under paragraph (b)(2) of this section if it is located more
than the specified number of road miles from the nearest subsection (d)
hospital other than a subsection (d) hospital operated by the IHS or a
Tribe.
0
12. Section 412.106 is amended by adding paragraph (g)(1)(iii)(C)(4) to
read as follows:
Sec. 412.106 Special treatment: Hospitals that serve a
disproportionate share of low-income patients.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) * * *
(4) For fiscal year 2018, CMS will base its estimates of the amount
of hospital uncompensated care on utilization data for Medicaid and
Medicare SSI patients, as determined by CMS in accordance with
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (4) of this section, using data on Medicaid
utilization from 2012 and 2013 cost reports from the most recent HCRIS
database extract and 2012 cost report data submitted to CMS by IHS or
Tribal hospitals and the most recent available 2 years of data on
Medicare SSI utilization (or, for Puerto Rico hospitals, a proxy for
Medicare SSI utilization data), and data on uncompensated care costs,
defined as charity care costs plus non-Medicare bad debt costs from
2014 cost reports from the most recent HCRIS database extract.
* * * * *
0
13. Section 412.140 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(2) and (d)(2)
to read as follows:
Sec. 412.140 Participation, data submission, and validation
requirements under the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR)
Program.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) Extraordinary circumstances exceptions. CMS may grant an
exception with respect to quality data reporting requirements in the
event of extraordinary circumstances beyond the control of the
hospital. CMS may grant an exception as follows:
(i) For circumstances not relating to the reporting of electronic
clinical quality measure data, a hospital participating in the Hospital
IQR Program that wishes to request an exception with respect to quality
data reporting requirements must submit its request to CMS within 90
days of the date that the extraordinary circumstances occurred. For
circumstances relating to the reporting of electronic clinical quality
measures, a hospital participating in the Hospital IQR Program that
wishes to request an exception must submit its request to CMS by April
1 following the end of the reporting calendar year in which the
extraordinary circumstances occurred. Specific requirements for
submission of a request for an exception are available on
QualityNet.org.
(ii) CMS may grant an exception to one or more hospitals that have
not requested an exception if: CMS determines that a systemic problem
with CMS data collection systems directly affected the ability of the
hospital to submit data; or if CMS determines that an extraordinary
circumstance has affected an entire region or locale.
(d) * * *
(2)(i) A hospital meets the chart-abstracted validation requirement
with respect to a fiscal year if it achieves a 75-percent score, as
determined by CMS.
(ii) A hospital meets the eCQM validation requirement with respect
to a fiscal year if it submits at least 75 percent of sampled eCQM
measure medical records in a timely and complete manner, as determined
by CMS.
* * * * *
[[Page 20162]]
0
14. Section 412.211 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(3)(iii) to
read as follows:
Sec. 412.211 Puerto Rico rates for Federal fiscal year 2004 and
subsequent fiscal years.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) Any wage index adjustment made under this paragraph (f) is
effective for a period of 3 fiscal years, except that hospitals in a
qualifying county may elect to waive the application of the wage index
adjustment. A hospital may waive the application of the wage index
adjustment by notifying CMS in writing within 45 days of the date of
public display of the annual notice of proposed rulemaking for the
hospital inpatient prospective payment system at the Office of the
Federal Register.
* * * * *
0
15. Section 412.230 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(3)
introductory text, (a)(3)(i) and (ii), and (d)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 412.230 Criteria for an individual hospital seeking
redesignation to another rural area or an urban area.
(a) * * *
(3) Special rules for sole community hospitals and rural referral
centers. To be redesignated under the special rules in this paragraph,
the hospital must submit documentation of the approval of sole
community hospital or rural referral center status to the MGCRB no
later than the first business day after January 1.
(i) A hospital that is approved as a rural referral center or a
sole community hospital, or both, does not have to demonstrate a close
proximity to the area to which it seeks redesignation.
(ii) If a hospital that is approved as a rural referral center or a
sole community hospital, or both, qualifies for urban redesignation, it
is redesignated to the urban area that is closest to the hospital or to
the hospital's geographic home area. If the hospital is closer to
another rural area than to any urban area, it may seek redesignation to
either the closest rural area or the closest urban area.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) Rural referral center exceptions. For the exceptions in this
paragraph to apply, the hospital must submit documentation of the
approval of rural referral center status to the MGCRB no later than the
first business day after January 1.
(i) If a hospital was ever approved as a rural referral center, it
does not have to demonstrate that it meets the average hourly wage
criterion set forth in paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of this section.
(ii) If a hospital was ever approved as a rural referral center, it
is required to meet only the criterion that applies to rural hospitals
under paragraph (d)(1)(iv) of this section, regardless of its actual
location in an urban or rural area.
* * * * *
0
16. Section 412.273 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(1)(ii) and
(c)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 412.273 Withdrawing an application, terminating an approved 3-
year classification, or cancelling a previous withdrawal or
termination.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) After the MGCRB issues a decision, provided that the request
for withdrawal is received by the MCGRB within 45 days of the date of
public display at the Office of the Federal Register of CMS' annual
notice of proposed rulemaking concerning changes to the inpatient
hospital prospective payment system and proposed payment rates for the
fiscal year for which the application has been filed.
(2) A request for termination must be received by the MGCRB within
45 days of the date of public display at the Office of the Federal
Register of CMS' annual notice of proposed rulemaking concerning
changes to the inpatient hospital prospective payment system and
proposed payment rates for the fiscal year for which the termination is
to apply.
* * * * *
0
17. Section 412.500 is amended by adding paragraphs (a)(7) and (8) to
read as follows:
Sec. 412.500 Basis and scope of subpart.
(a) * * *
(7) Section 411 of Public Law 114-10 which revises the annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate in FY 2018.
(8) Public Law 114-255 which at--
(i) Section 15004 amended the moratorium on increasing beds in
existing LTCHs and LTCH satellite facilities and amended high cost
outlier payment requirements;
(ii) Section 15006 amended moratoria on certain payment policies;
(iii) Section 15007 amended the average length of stay
requirements;
(iv) Section 15009 temporally excepted certain spinal cord
specialty hospitals from the site neutral payment rate; and
(v) Section 15010 temporally excepted certain wound care discharges
from certain LTCHs from the site neutral payment rate.
* * * * *
0
18. Section 412.522 is amended by adding paragraphs (b)(3) and (4) to
read as follows:
Sec. 412.522 Application of site neutral payment rate.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) Temporary exception for certain severe wound discharges.--(i)
Definitions. For purposes of this paragraph (b)(3) the following
definitions are applicable:
Severe wound means a wound which is a stage 3 wound, stage 4 wound,
unstageable wound, non-healing surgical wound, fistula, as identified
by the applicable code on the claim from the long-term care hospital.
Wound means an injury, usually involving division of tissue or
rupture of the integument or mucous membrane with exposure to the
external environment.
(ii) Discharges for severe wounds. A discharge that occurs in a
cost reporting period beginning during fiscal year 2018 for a patient
who was treated for a severe wound that meets all of the following
criteria is excluded from the site neutral payment rate specified under
this section:
(A) The severe wound meets the definition specified in paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section.
(B) The discharge is from a long-term care hospital that is
described in Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) and meets the criteria of Sec.
412.22(f); and
(C) The discharge is classified under MS-LTC-DRG 539, 540, 602, or
603.
(4) Temporary exception for certain spinal cord specialty
hospitals. For discharges in cost reporting periods beginning in fiscal
years 2018 and 2019, the site neutral payment rate specified under this
section does not apply if such discharge is from a long-term care
hospital that meets each of the following requirements:
(i) The hospital was a not-for-profit long-term care hospital on
June 1, 2014, as determined by cost report data;
(ii) Of the discharges in calendar year 2013 from the long-term
care hospital for which payment was made under subpart O, at least 50
percent were classified under MS-LTC-DRGs 28, 29, 52, 57, 551, 573, and
963; and
(iii) The long-term care hospital discharged inpatients (including
both individuals entitled to, or enrolled for, benefits under Medicare
Part A and individuals not so entitled or enrolled) during fiscal year
2014 who had been admitted from at least 20 of the 50
[[Page 20163]]
States determined by the States of residency of such inpatients.
* * * * *
0
19. Section 412.523 is amended by--
0
a. Adding paragraph (c)(3)(xiv);
0
b. Revising paragraph (d)(1); and
0
c. Adding paragraph (d)(5).
The additions and revision read as follows:
Sec. 412.523 Methodology for calculating the Federal prospective
payment rates.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(xiv) For long-term care hospital prospective payment system fiscal
year beginning October 1, 2017, and ending September 30, 2018. The LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate for the long-term care hospital
prospective payment system beginning October 1, 2017, and ending
September 30, 2018, is the standard Federal payment rate for the
previous long-term care hospital prospective payment system fiscal year
updated by 1.0 percent and further adjusted, as appropriate, as
described in paragraph (d) of this section.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Outlier payments. CMS adjusts the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate by a reduction factor of 8 percent, the estimated
proportion of outlier payments under Sec. 412.525(a) payable for
discharges described in Sec. 412.522(a)(2) (notwithstanding the
provisions of Sec. 412.525(a)(2)(ii) for FY 2018 and subsequent years.
* * * * *
(5) Adjustment for changes to the short-stay outlier policy. The
standard Federal rate determined under paragraph (c)(3) of this section
is permanently adjusted by a one-time factor so that estimated
aggregate payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal rate cases in FY 2018
are projected to equal estimated aggregate payments that would have
been paid for such cases without regard to the change in the short-stay
outlier policy for FY 2018 under Sec. 412.529(c)(5).
* * * * *
0
20. Section 412.525 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 412.525 Adjustments to the Federal prospective payment.
(a) * * *
(2)(i) The fixed loss-amount for discharges from a long-term care
hospital described under Sec. 412.522(a)(2) is determined for the
long-term care hospital prospective payment system payment year, using
the LTC-DRG relative weights that are in effect at the start of the
applicable long-term care hospital prospective payment system payment
year.
(ii) For FY 2018 and subsequent years, the fixed-loss amount for
long-term care hospital discharges described under Sec. 412.522(a)(2)
is determined such that the estimated proportion of outlier payments
under paragraph (a) of this section payable for such discharges is
projected to be equal to 99.6875 of 8 percent.
* * * * *
0
21. Section 412.529 is amended by--
0
a. Revising paragraph (c)(3) introductory text;
0
b. Adding paragraph (c)(4); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (f) introductory text.
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 412.529 Special payment provision for short-stay outliers.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) Discharges occurring on or after July 1, 2007 and before
December 29, 2007 and discharges occurring on or after December 29,
2012 and on or before September 30, 2017. For discharges from long-term
care hospitals described under Sec. 412.23(e)(2)(i) occurring on or
after July 1, 2007, and on or before December 29, 2007 and discharges
occurring on or after December 29, 2012, and on or before September 30,
2017, the LTCH prospective payment system adjusted payment amount for a
short-stay outlier case is adjusted by either of the following:
* * * * *
(4) Discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017. For
discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017, short-stay outlier
payments are determined according to paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this
section.
* * * * *
(f) Reconciliation of short-stay payments. Payments for discharges
occurring before October 1, 2017 are reconciled in accordance with one
of the following:
* * * * *
0
22. Section 412.538 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 412.538 Limitation on long-term care hospital admissions from
referring hospitals.
(a) * * *
(1) The provisions of this section apply to all long-term care
hospitals excluded from the hospital inpatient prospective payment
system under Sec. 412.23(e), except as specified in paragraph (a)(2)
of this section, effective for discharges occurring on or after October
1, 2018.
* * * * *
0
23. Section 412.560 is amended by revising the section heading,
paragraphs (a), (b)(1), (c) introductory text, (c)(1), (c)(3)(vii),
(c)(4)(ii), (d)(1), and (d)(2)(vii), and adding paragraph (f) to read
as follows:
Sec. 412.560 Requirements under the Long-Term Care Hospital Quality
Reporting Program (LTCH QRP).
(a) Participation in the LTCH QRP. A long-term-care hospital must
begin submitting data on measures specified under sections
1886(m)(5)(D), 1899B(c)(1) and 1899B(d)(1) of the Act, and standardized
patient assessment data required under section 1899B(b)(1) of the Act,
under the LTCH QRP by no later than the first day of the calendar
quarter subsequent to 30 days after the date on its CMS Certification
Number (CCN) notification letter.
(b) Data submission requirements and payment impact. (1) Except as
provided in paragraph (c) of this section, a long-term care hospital
must submit to CMS data on measures specified under sections
1886(m)(5)(D), 1899B(c)(1) and 1899B(d)(1) of the Act, and standardized
patient assessment data required under section 1899B(b)(1) of the Act.
Such data must be submitted in a form and manner, and at a time,
specified by CMS.
* * * * *
(c) Exception and extension request requirements. Upon request by a
long-term care hospital, CMS may grant an exception or extension with
respect to the measures data and standardized patient assessment data
reporting requirements, for one or more quarters, in the event of
certain extraordinary circumstances beyond the control of the long-term
care hospital, subject to the following:
(1) A long-term care hospital that wishes to request an exception
or extension with respect to measures data and standardized patient
assessment data reporting requirements must submit its request to CMS
within 90 days of the date that the extraordinary circumstances
occurred.
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) The date on which the long-term care hospital will be able to
again submit measures data and standardized patient assessment data
under the LTCH QRP and a justification for the proposed date.
(4) * * *
[[Page 20164]]
(ii) A systemic problem with one of CMS' data collection systems
directly affected the ability of the long-term care hospital to submit
measures data and standardized patient assessment data.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Written notification of noncompliance decision. CMS will send a
long-term care hospital written notification of a decision of
noncompliance with the measures data and standardized patient
assessment data reporting requirements for a particular fiscal year.
CMS also will use the Quality Improvement and Evaluation system (QIES)
Assessment Submission and Processing (ASAP) System to provide
notification of noncompliance to the long-term care hospital.
(2) * * *
(vii) Accompanying documentation that demonstrates compliance of
the long-term care hospital with the LTCH QRP requirements. This
documentation must be submitted electronically at the same time as the
reconsideration request as an attachment to the email.
* * * * *
(f) Data completion thresholds. (1) Long-term care hospitals must
meet or exceed two separate data completeness thresholds: One threshold
set at 80 percent for completion of measures data and standardized
patient assessment data collected using the LTCH CARE Data Set
submitted through the QIES ASAP System; and a second threshold set at
100 percent for measures data collected and submitted using the CDC
NHSN.
(2) The thresholds in paragraph (f)(1) of this section apply to all
data that must be submitted under paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) A long-term care hospital must meet or exceed both thresholds
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section to avoid receiving a 2 percentage
point reduction to its annual payment update for a given fiscal year,
beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP.
PART 413--PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE COST REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE SERVICES; OPTIONAL PROSPECTIVELY DETERMINED
PAYMENT RATES FOR SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES; PAYMENT FOR ACUTE
KIDNEY INJURY DIALYSIS
0
24. The authority citation for part 413 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1812(d), 1814(b), 1815, 1833(a), (i),
and (n), 1861(v), 1871, 1881, 1883 and 1886 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395d(d), 1395f(b), 1395g, 1395l(a), (i), and
(n), 1395x(v), 1395hh, 1395rr, 1395tt, and 1395ww); and sec. 124 of
Public Law 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501A-332; sec. 3201 of Public Law
112-96, 126 Stat. 156; sec. 632 of Public Law 112-240, 126 Stat.
2354; sec. 217 of Public Law 113-93, 129 Stat. 1040; and sec. 204 of
Public Law 113-295, 128 Stat. 4010; and sec. 808 of Public Law 114-
27, 129 Stat. 362.
0
25. Section 413.24 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(4)(iv) to read
as follows:
Sec. 413.24 Adequate cost data and cost finding.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(4) * * *
(iv)(A) Effective as specified in paragraphs (f)(4)(iv)(A)(1)
through (4) and except as provided in paragraph (f)(4)(iv)(C) of this
section, a provider must submit a hard copy of a settlement summary, if
applicable, which is a statement of certain worksheet totals found
within the electronic file, and the certification statement described
in paragraph (f)(4)(iv)(B) of this section signed by its administrator
or chief financial officer certifying the accuracy of the electronic
file or the manually prepared cost report.
(1) For hospitals, effective for cost reporting periods ending on
or after September 30, 1994;
(2) For skilled nursing facilities and home health agencies,
effective for cost reporting periods ending on or after February 1,
1997;
(3) For hospices and end-stage renal disease facilities, effective
for cost reporting periods ending on or after December 31, 2004; and
(4) For organ procurement organizations, histocompatibility
laboratories, rural health clinics, Federally qualified health centers,
and community mental health centers, effective for cost reporting
periods ending on or after March 31, 2005.
(B) The following certification statement must immediately precede
the dated original signature, or electronic signature as set forth in
paragraph (f)(4)(iv)(C)(1) of this section, of the provider's
administrator or chief financial officer:
MISREPRESENTATION OR FALSIFICATION OF ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED IN
THIS COST REPORT MAY BE PUNISHABLE BY CRIMINAL, CIVIL AND
ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION, FINE AND/OR IMPRISONMENT UNDER FEDERAL LAW.
FURTHERMORE, IF SERVICES IDENTIFIED IN THIS REPORT WERE PROVIDED OR
PROCURED THROUGH THE PAYMENT DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OF A KICKBACK OR
WERE OTHERWISE ILLEGAL, CRIMINAL, CIVIL AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION,
FINES AND/OR IMPRISONMENT MAY RESULT.
I hereby certify that I have read the above certification statement
and that I have examined the accompanying electronically filed or
manually submitted cost report and the Balance Sheet and Statement of
Revenue and Expenses prepared by _____ (Provider Name(s) and Number(s))
for the cost reporting period beginning _____ and ending _____ and that
to the best of my knowledge and belief, this report and statement are
true, correct, complete and prepared from the books and records of the
provider in accordance with applicable instructions, except as noted. I
further certify that I am familiar with the laws and regulations
regarding the provision of health care services, and that the services
identified in this cost report were provided in compliance with such
laws and regulations.
(C) Effective for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2017--
(1) A provider that is required to file an electronic cost report
may elect to electronically submit the settlement summary, if
applicable, and the certification statement with an electronic
signature of the provider's administrator or chief financial officer.
The following checkbox for electronic signature and submission will
immediately follow the certification statement as set forth in
paragraph (f)(4)(iv)(B) of this section and must be checked if
electronic signature and submission is elected.
[squ] I have read and agree with the above certification statement.
I certify that I intend my electronic signature on this certification
statement to be the legally binding equivalent of my original
signature.
(2) A provider that is required to file an electronic cost report
but does not elect to electronically submit the certification statement
with an electronic signature, must submit a hard copy of the settlement
summary, if applicable, and a certification statement with an original
signature of the provider's administrator or chief financial officer as
set forth in paragraphs (f)(4)(iv)(A) and (B) of this section.
* * * * *
0
26. Section 413.65 is amended by revising paragraph (m) introductory
text to read as follows:
[[Page 20165]]
Sec. 413.65 Requirements for a determination that a facility or an
organization has provider-based status.
* * * * *
(m) Status of Indian Health Service and Tribal facilities and
organizations. Facilities and organizations operated by the Indian
Health Services and Tribes will be considered to be departments of
hospitals operated by the Indian Health Service or Tribes if they
furnish only services that are billed, using the CCN of the main
provider and with the consent of the main provider, as if they had been
furnished by a department of a hospital operated by the Indian Health
Service or a Tribe and they are:
* * * * *
0
27. Section 413.70 is amended by--
0
a. Redesignating paragraph (a)(6)(iii) as paragraph (a)(6)(iv);
0
b. Adding a new paragraph (a)(6)(iii); and
0
c. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (a)(6)(iv).
The addition and revision read as follows:
Sec. 413.70 Payment for services of a CAH.
(a) * * *
(6) * * *
(iii) Exception for decertified EHR technology. Beginning with the
fiscal year 2018 payment adjustment year, the Secretary shall exempt a
CAH that is not a qualifying CAH from the application of the payment
adjustment under paragraph (a)(6)(i) of this section if the Secretary
determines that compliance with the requirement for being a meaningful
EHR user is not possible because the certified EHR technology used by
the CAH has been decertified under ONC's Health IT Certification
Program. In order to be considered for an exception, a CAH must submit
an application, in the manner specified by CMS, demonstrating that the
certified EHR technology was decertified during the 12-month period
preceding the applicable EHR reporting period for the payment
adjustment year, or during the applicable EHR reporting period for the
payment adjustment year, and that the CAH made a good faith effort to
obtain another certified EHR technology for that EHR reporting period.
Applications requesting this exception must be submitted by November 30
after the end of the applicable payment adjustment year, or a later
date specified by CMS.
(iv) Exceptions granted under paragraphs (a)(6)(ii) and (iii) of
this section are subject to annual renewal, but in no case may a CAH be
granted such an exception for more than 5 years.
* * * * *
0
28. Section 413.134 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 413.134 Depreciation: Allowance for deprecation based on asset
costs.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(1) General. Depreciable assets may be disposed of through sale,
scrapping, trade-in, exchange, demolition, abandonment, condemnation,
fire, theft, or other casualty.
(i) Disposal of an asset before December 1, 1997. If disposal of a
depreciable asset, including the sale or scrapping of an asset before
December 1, 1997, results in a gain or loss, an adjustment is necessary
in the provider's allowable cost.
(A) The amount of a gain included in the determination of allowable
cost is limited to the amount of depreciation previously included in
Medicare allowable costs.
(B) The amount of a loss to be included is limited to the
undepreciated basis of the asset permitted under the program.
(C) The treatment of the gain or loss depends upon the manner of
disposition of the asset, as specified in paragraphs (f)(2) through (6)
of this section.
(D) The gain or loss on the disposition of depreciable assets has
no retroactive effect on a proprietary provider's equity capital for
years prior to the year of disposition.
(ii) Disposal of an asset on or after December 1, 1997. No gain or
loss is recognized on either the sale or scrapping of an asset that
occurs on or after December 1, 1997, regardless of whether the asset is
sold incident to a provider's change of ownership, or otherwise sold or
scrapped as an asset of a Medicare participating provider. Gains or
losses on dispositions other than sales or scrapping are recognized to
the same extent as prior to December 1, 1997.
* * * * *
PART 414--PAYMENT FOR PART B MEDICAL AND OTHER HEALTH SERVICES
0
29. The authority citation for part 414 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1871, and 1881(b)(1) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and 1395rr(b)(1)).
0
30. Section 414.68 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (c)(7)
through (14) as paragraphs (c)(8) through (15), respectively, and
adding new paragraph (c)(7) to read as follows:
Sec. 414.68 Imaging accreditation.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(7) A statement acknowledging that the organization agrees to make
all Medicare final accreditation survey reports (including statements
of deficiencies) and acceptable plans of correction publicly available
on the organization's Web site within 90 days after such information is
made available to those facilities for the most recent 3 years, on an
ongoing basis. This acknowledgement includes all full, follow-up,
focused, and complaint surveys, regardless of whether they are
performed onsite or offsite.
* * * * *
PART 416--AMBULATORY SURGICAL SERVICES
0
31. The authority citation for part 416 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1138, and 1871 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1320b-8, and 1395hh) and section 371 of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 273).
0
32. Section 416.35 is amended by revising paragraph (d) introductory
text to read as follows:
Sec. 416.35 Termination of agreement.
* * * * *
(d) Notice to the public. Prompt notice of the date and effect of
termination is given to the public by--
* * * * *
PART 486--CONDITIONS FOR COVERAGE OF SPECIALIZED SERVICES FURNISHED
BY SUPPLIERS
0
33. The authority citation for part 486 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1138, and 1871 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1320b-8, and 1395hh) and section 371 of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 273).
0
34. Section 486.312 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as
follows:
Sec. 486.312 De-certification.
* * * * *
(e) Public notice. Once CMS approves the date for a voluntary
termination, the OPO must provide prompt public notice in the service
area of the date of de-certification and such other information as CMS
may require. In the case of involuntary termination or nonrenewal of an
agreement, CMS also provides notice to the public in the service area
of the date of de-certification. No payment under titles XVIII or XIX
of the Act will be made with respect to organ procurement costs
attributable to the OPO on or after the effective date of de-
certification.
[[Page 20166]]
PART 488--SURVEY, CERTIFICATION, AND ENFORCEMENT PROCEDURES
0
35. The authority citation for part 488 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1128l, 1864, 1865, 1871, and 1875 of the
Social Security Act, unless otherwise noted (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1320a-
7, 1395aa, 1395bb, 1395hh, and 1395ll).
0
36. Section 488.5 is amended by adding paragraph (a)(21) to read as
follows:
Sec. 488.5 Application and re-application procedures for national
accrediting organizations.
(a) * * *
(21) A statement acknowledging that the organization agrees to make
all Medicare final accreditation survey reports (including statements
of deficiencies) and acceptable plans of correction publicly available
on the organization's Web site within 90 days after such information is
made available to those facilities for the most recent 3 years, on an
ongoing basis. This acknowledgement includes all triennial, full,
follow-up, focused, and complaint surveys, regardless of whether they
are performed onsite or offsite.
* * * * *
PART 489--PROVIDER AGREEMENTS AND SUPPLIER APPROVAL
0
37. The authority citation for part 489 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 1819, 1820(E), 1861, 1864(M), 1866, 1869,
and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395i-3, 1395x,
1395aa(m), 1395cc, 1395ff, and 1395(hh)).
0
38. Section 489.52 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(2) introductory
text to read as follows:
Sec. 489.52 Termination by the provider.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) The notice must--
* * * * *
PART 495--STANDARDS FOR THE ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD TECHNOLOGY
INCENTIVE PROGRAM
0
39. The authority citation for part 495 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
0
40. Section 495.4 is amended by--
0
a. Adding in alphabetical order a definition of ``Ambulatory surgical
center-based EP.''
0
b. In the definition of ``EHR reporting period,'' revising paragraph
(1)(ii) introductory text, adding paragraph (1)(ii)(D), revising
paragraph (1)(iii) introductory text, revising paragraph (2)(ii)
introductory text, adding paragraph (2)(ii)(D) and revising paragraph
(2)(iii) introductory text.
0
c. In the definition of ``EHR reporting period for a payment adjustment
year'', revising paragraph (2)(ii) introductory text, adding paragraph
(2)(ii)(D), revising paragraph (2)(iii) introductory text, revising
paragraph (3)(ii) introductory text, adding paragraph (3)(ii)(D), and
revising paragraph (3)(iii) introductory text.
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 495.4 Definitions.
* * * * *
Ambulatory surgical center-based EP means an EP who furnishes 75
percent or more of his or her covered professional services in sites of
service identified by the codes used in the HIPAA standard transaction
as an ASC setting in the calendar year that is 2 years before the
payment adjustment year.
* * * * *
EHR reporting period. * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) The following are applicable for 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018:
* * * * *
(D) For the CY 2018 payment year under the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program:
(1) For the EP first demonstrating he or she is a meaningful EHR
user, any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018.
(2) For the EP who has successfully demonstrated he or she is a
meaningful EHR user in any prior year, any continuous 90-day period
within CY 2018.
(iii) The following are applicable beginning with the CY 2019
payment year under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program:
* * * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) The following are applicable for 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018:
* * * * *
(D) For the FY 2018 payment year under the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program:
(1) For the eligible hospital or CAH first demonstrating it is a
meaningful EHR user, any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018.
(2) For the eligible hospital or CAH that has successfully
demonstrated it is a meaningful EHR user in any prior year, any
continuous 90-day period within CY 2018.
(iii) The following are applicable beginning with the FY 2019
payment year under the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program:
* * * * *
EHR reporting period for a payment adjustment year. * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) The following are applicable for 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018:
* * * * *
(D) In 2018 as follows:
(1) If an eligible hospital has not successfully demonstrated it is
a meaningful EHR user in a prior year, the EHR reporting period is any
continuous 90-day period within CY 2018 and applies for the FY 2019 and
2020 payment adjustment years. For the FY 2019 payment adjustment year,
the EHR reporting period must end before and the eligible hospital must
successfully register for and attest to meaningful use no later than
October 1, 2018.
(2) If in a prior year an eligible hospital has successfully
demonstrated it is a meaningful EHR user, the EHR reporting period is
any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018 and applies for the FY 2020
payment adjustment year.
(iii) The following are applicable beginning in 2019:
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(ii) The following are applicable for 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018:
* * * * *
(D) In 2018 as follows:
(1) If a CAH has not successfully demonstrated it is a meaningful
EHR user in a prior year, the EHR reporting period is any continuous
90-day period within CY 2018 and applies for the FY 2018 payment
adjustment year.
(2) If in a prior year a CAH has successfully demonstrated it is a
meaningful EHR user, the EHR reporting period is any continuous 90-day
period within CY 2018 and applies for the FY 2018 payment adjustment
year.
(iii) The following are applicable beginning in 2019:
* * * * *
0
41. Section 495.102 is amended by redesignating paragraph (d)(5) as
paragraph (d)(6) and adding new paragraphs (d)(5) and (7) to read as
follows:
Sec. 495.102 Incentive payments to EPs.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(5) Exception for decertified EHR technology. The Secretary shall
exempt an EP from the application of the payment adjustment for CY 2018
under paragraph (d)(1) of this section if the Secretary determines that
compliance with the requirement for being a
[[Page 20167]]
meaningful EHR user is not possible because the certified EHR
technology used by the EP has been decertified under ONC's Health IT
Certification Program. To be considered for an exception, an EP must
submit, in the manner specified by CMS, an application demonstrating
that the certified EHR technology was decertified during the 12-month
period preceding the applicable EHR reporting period for the CY 2018
payment adjustment year, or during the applicable EHR reporting period
for the CY 2018 payment adjustment year, and that the EP made a good
faith effort to obtain another certified EHR technology for that EHR
reporting period. Applications requesting this exception must be
submitted no later than October 1, 2017, or a later date specified by
CMS.
* * * * *
(7) Payment adjustments not applicable to ambulatory surgical
center-based EPs. For the CY 2017 and CY 2018 payment adjustment years,
no payment adjustment under paragraphs (d)(1) through (3) of this
section may be made in the case of an ambulatory surgical center-based
eligible professional, as defined in Sec. 495.4.
Dated: April 10, 2017.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Dated: April 11, 2017
Thomas E. Price,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
Note: The following Addendum and Appendixes will not appear in
the Code of Federal Regulations.
Addendum--Proposed Schedule of Standardized Amounts, Update Factors,
Rate-of-Increase Percentages Effective With Cost Reporting Periods
Beginning on or After October 1, 2017, and Payment Rates for LTCHs
Effective for Discharges Occurring on or After October 1, 2017
I. Summary and Background
In this Addendum, we are setting forth a description of the
methods and data we used to determine the proposed prospective
payment rates for Medicare hospital inpatient operating costs and
Medicare hospital inpatient capital-related costs for FY 2018 for
acute care hospitals. We also are setting forth the rate-of-increase
percentage for updating the target amounts for certain hospitals
excluded from the IPPS for FY 2018. We note that, because certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS are paid on a reasonable cost basis
subject to a rate-of-increase ceiling (and not by the IPPS), these
hospitals are not affected by the proposed figures for the
standardized amounts, offsets, and budget neutrality factors.
Therefore, in this proposed rule, we are setting forth the rate-of-
increase percentage for updating the target amounts for certain
hospitals excluded from the IPPS that would be effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2017.
In addition, we are setting forth a description of the methods
and data we used to determine the proposed standard Federal payment
rate that would be applicable to Medicare LTCHs for FY 2018.
In general, except for SCHs, for FY 2018, each hospital's
payment per discharge under the IPPS is based on 100 percent of the
Federal national rate, also known as the national adjusted
standardized amount. This amount reflects the national average
hospital cost per case from a base year, updated for inflation. We
note that, under section 205 of the Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10, enacted on
April 16, 2015), the MDH program is set to expire at the end of FY
2017.
SCHs are paid based on whichever of the following rates yields
the greatest aggregate payment: The Federal national rate
(including, as discussed in section V.G. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, uncompensated care payments under section 1886(r)(2)
of the Act); the updated hospital-specific rate based on FY 1982
costs per discharge; the updated hospital-specific rate based on FY
1987 costs per discharge; the updated hospital-specific rate based
on FY 1996 costs per discharge; or the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 2006 costs per discharge. As noted, under current
law, the MDH program is set to expire at the end of FY 2017.
As discussed in section V.B. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, in accordance with section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act as amended
by section 601 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L.
114-113), for FY 2018, subsection (d) Puerto Rico hospitals will
continue to be paid based on 100 percent of the national
standardized amount. Because Puerto Rico hospitals are paid 100
percent of the national standardized amount and are subject to the
same national standardized amount as subsection (d) hospitals that
receive the full update, our discussion below does not include
references to the Puerto Rico standardized amount or the Puerto
Rico-specific wage index.
As discussed in section II. of this Addendum, we are proposing
to make changes in the determination of the prospective payment
rates for Medicare inpatient operating costs for acute care
hospitals for FY 2018. In section III. of this Addendum, we discuss
our proposed policy changes for determining the prospective payment
rates for Medicare inpatient capital-related costs for FY 2018. In
section IV. of this Addendum, we are setting forth the rate-of-
increase percentage for determining the rate-of-increase limits for
certain hospitals excluded from the IPPS for FY 2018. In section V.
of this Addendum, we discuss proposed policy changes for determining
the standard Federal rate for LTCHs paid under the LTCH PPS for FY
2018. The tables to which we refer in the preamble of this proposed
rule are listed in section VI. of this Addendum and are available
via the Internet on the CMS Web site.
II. Proposed Changes to Prospective Payment Rates for Hospital
Inpatient Operating Costs for Acute Care Hospitals for FY 2018
The basic methodology for determining prospective payment rates
for hospital inpatient operating costs for acute care hospitals for
FY 2005 and subsequent fiscal years is set forth under Sec. 412.64.
The basic methodology for determining the prospective payment rates
for hospital inpatient operating costs for hospitals located in
Puerto Rico for FY 2005 and subsequent fiscal years is set forth
under Sec. Sec. 412.211 and 412.212. Below we discuss the factors
we are proposing to use for determining the proposed prospective
payment rates for FY 2018.
In summary, the proposed standardized amounts set forth in
Tables 1A, 1B, and 1C that are listed and published in section VI.
of this Addendum (and available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site) reflect--
Equalization of the standardized amounts for urban and
other areas at the level computed for large urban hospitals during
FY 2004 and onward, as provided for under section
1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act.
The labor-related share that is applied to the
standardized amounts to give the hospital the highest payment, as
provided for under sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of
the Act. For FY 2018, depending on whether a hospital submits
quality data under the rules established in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act (hereafter referred to as a hospital
that submits quality data) and is a meaningful EHR user under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act (hereafter referred to as a
hospital that is a meaningful EHR user), there are four possible
applicable percentage increases that can be applied to the national
standardized amount. We refer readers to section V.B. of the
preamble of this proposed rule for a complete discussion on the
proposed FY 2018 inpatient hospital update. Below is a table with
these four options:
[[Page 20168]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital Hospital Hospital did Hospital did
submitted submitted NOT submit NOT submit
quality data quality data quality data quality data
FY 2018 and is a and is NOT a and is a and is NOT a
meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR
user user user user
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Market Basket 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9
Rate[dash]of[dash]Increase.....................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to Submit 0.0 0.0 -0.725 -0.725
Quality Data under Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)
of the Act.....................................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to be a 0.0 -2.175 0.0 -2.175
Meaningful EHR User under Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act...................
Proposed MFP Adjustment under Section -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) of the Act...................
Statutory Adjustment under Section -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75
1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act..................
Proposed Applicable Percentage Increase Applied 1.75 -0.425 1.025 -1.15
to Standardized Amount.........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, which
specifies the adjustment to the applicable percentage increase for
``subsection (d)'' hospitals that do not submit quality data under
the rules established by the Secretary, is not applicable to
hospitals located in Puerto Rico.
In addition, section 602 of Public Law 114-113 amended section
1886(n)(6)(B) of the Act to specify that Puerto Rico hospitals are
eligible for incentive payments for the meaningful use of certified
EHR technology, effective beginning FY 2016, and also to apply the
adjustments to the applicable percentage increase under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act to Puerto Rico hospitals that are not
meaningful EHR users, effective FY 2022. Accordingly, because the
provisions of section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act are not
applicable to hospitals located in Puerto Rico until FY 2022, the
adjustments under this provision are not applicable for FY 2018.
An adjustment to the standardized amount to ensure
budget neutrality for DRG recalibration and reclassification, as
provided for under section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
An adjustment to ensure the wage index and labor-
related share changes are budget neutral, as provided for under
section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act (as discussed in the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47395) and the FY 2010 IPPS final rule (74 FR
44005). We note that section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act requires
that when we compute such budget neutrality, we assume that the
provisions of section 1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act (requiring a 62-
percent labor-related share in certain circumstances) had not been
enacted.
An adjustment to ensure the effects of geographic
reclassification are budget neutral, as provided for under section
1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, by removing the FY 2017 budget neutrality
factor and applying a revised factor.
Removal of the adjustment in FY 2017 to offset the cost
of the 3-year hold harmless transitional wage index provisions
provided by CMS as a result of the implementation of the new OMB
labor market area delineations (beginning with FY 2015).
A single positive adjustment of 0.4588 in FY 2018 as
required under section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L.
114-255), which amended section 7(b)(1)(B) of the TMA, as amended by
section 631 of the ATRA and section 414 of the MACRA, to reduce the
adjustment for FY 2018 from 0.5 percentage point to 0.4588
percentage point.
An adjustment to remove the FY 2017 outlier offset and
apply an offset for FY 2018, as provided for in section
1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act.
As discussed in section V.M. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, a factor of (1/1.006) in the calculation of the FY
2018 standardized amount. Specifically, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57058 through 57060), using our authority under
section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act, we finalized a policy to
include a permanent factor of (1/0.998) and a temporary one-time
factor of (1.006) in the calculation of the FY 2017 standardized
amount and to include a factor of (1/1.006) in the calculation of
the FY 2018 standardized amount to remove the temporary one-time
factor of 1.006 applied in FY 2017 to address the effects of the 0.2
percent reduction to the rate for the 2-midnight policy in effect
for FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016. Therefore, in this proposed rule,
for FY 2018, we are removing the temporary one-time prospective
increase to the FY 2017 standardized amount of 0.6 percent or a
factor of 1.006.
For FY 2018, consistent with current law, we are proposing to
apply the rural floor budget neutrality adjustment to hospital wage
indexes. Also, consistent with section 3141 of the Affordable Care
Act, instead of applying a State-level rural floor budget neutrality
adjustment to the wage index, we are proposing to apply a uniform,
national budget neutrality adjustment to the FY 2018 wage index for
the rural floor. We note that, in section III.H.2.b. of the preamble
to this proposed rule, the imputed floor is set to expire effective
October 1, 2017, and we are not proposing to extend the imputed
floor policy.
In prior fiscal years, CMS made an adjustment to ensure the
effects of the rural community hospital demonstration program
required under section 410A of Public Law 108-173, as amended by
sections 3123 and 10313 of Public Law 111-148, which extended the
demonstration program for an additional 5 years (FYs 2011 through
2016), were budget neutral as required under section 410A(c)(2) of
Public Law 108-173. As discussed in section V.L.3. of the preamble
to this proposed rule, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 amended
section 410A of Public Law 108-173 to provide for a 10-year
extension of the demonstration (in place of the 5-year extension
required by the Affordable Care Act) beginning on the date
immediately following the last day of the initial 5-year period
under section 410A(a)(5) of Public Law 108-173. Thus, section 15003
of Public Law 114-255 requires an additional 5-year extension of the
demonstration. Regarding the costs of the demonstration specifically
for FY 2018, as described in section V.L.3. of the preamble to this
proposed rule, we are proposing that if the selection of additional
hospitals pursuant to section 410A(g)(6) of Public Law 108-173 (as
added by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255) is announced by June
2017, we would include in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule an
estimate of the costs of the demonstration for FY 2018 and the
resulting budget neutrality offset amount for the newly selected
hospitals (Cohort 3 hospitals) and for the previously participating
hospitals (Cohorts 1 and 2 hospitals). If the final selection of the
additional hospitals is not announced by June 2017, we would not be
able to include an estimate of the costs of the demonstration for
any participating hospitals or an estimated budget neutrality
adjustment for FY 2018 in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. We
refer the reader to section V.L.3. of the preamble to this proposed
rule for complete details on the rural community hospital
demonstration program and our proposed methodology for calculating
budget neutrality for this demonstration.
A. Calculation of the Proposed Adjusted Standardized Amount
1. Standardization of Base-Year Costs or Target Amounts
In general, the national standardized amount is based on per
discharge averages of adjusted hospital costs from a base period
(section 1886(d)(2)(A) of the Act), updated and otherwise adjusted
in accordance with the provisions of section 1886(d) of the Act. The
September 1, 1983 interim final rule (48 FR 39763) contained a
detailed explanation of how base-year cost data (from cost reporting
periods ending during FY 1981) were established for urban and rural
hospitals in the initial development of standardized amounts for the
IPPS.
Sections 1886(d)(2)(B) and 1886(d)(2)(C) of the Act require us
to update base-year per discharge costs for FY 1984 and then
standardize the cost data in order to remove the effects of certain
sources of cost variations among hospitals. These effects include
case-mix, differences in area wage levels, cost-of-living
adjustments for Alaska
[[Page 20169]]
and Hawaii, IME costs, and costs to hospitals serving a
disproportionate share of low-income patients.
For FY 2018, we are proposing to rebase and revise the national
labor-related and nonlabor-related shares (based on the proposed
2014-based hospital market basket discussed in section IV. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). Specifically, under section
1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the Secretary estimates, from time to
time, the proportion of payments that are labor-related and adjusts
the proportion (as estimated by the Secretary from time to time) of
hospitals' costs which are attributable to wages and wage-related
costs of the DRG prospective payment rates. We refer to the
proportion of hospitals' costs that are attributable to wages and
wage-related costs as the ``labor-related share.'' For FY 2018, as
discussed in section IV.B.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
we are proposing to apply a labor-related share of 68.3 percent for
the national standardized amounts for all IPPS hospitals (including
hospitals in Puerto Rico) that have a wage index value that is
greater than 1.0000. Consistent with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act, we are proposing to apply the wage index to a labor-related
share of 62 percent of the national standardized amount for all IPPS
hospitals (including hospitals in Puerto Rico) whose wage index
values are less than or equal to 1.0000.
The proposed standardized amounts for operating costs appear in
Tables 1A, 1B, and 1C that are listed and published in section VI.
of the Addendum to this proposed rule and are available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site.
2. Computing the National Average Standardized Amount
Section 1886(d)(3)(A)(iv)(II) of the Act requires that,
beginning with FY 2004 and thereafter, an equal standardized amount
be computed for all hospitals at the level computed for large urban
hospitals during FY 2003, updated by the applicable percentage
update. Accordingly, we are proposing to calculate the FY 2018
national average standardized amount irrespective of whether a
hospital is located in an urban or rural location.
3. Updating the National Average Standardized Amount
Section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act specifies the applicable
percentage increase used to update the standardized amount for
payment for inpatient hospital operating costs. We note that, in
compliance with section 404 of the MMA, in this proposed rule, we
are proposing to use the revised and rebased 2014-based IPPS
operating and capital market baskets for FY 2018. As discussed in
section V.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, in accordance
with section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, as amended by section 3401(a)
of the Affordable Care Act, we are proposing to reduce the FY 2018
applicable percentage increase (which is based on IHS Global
Insight, Inc.'s (IGI's) fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the proposed
2014-based IPPS market basket) by the MFP adjustment (the 10-year
moving average of MFP for the period ending FY 2018) of 0.4
percentage point, which is calculated based on IGI's fourth quarter
2016 forecast.
In addition, in accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the
Act, as amended by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable
Care Act, we are proposing to further update the standardized amount
for FY 2018 by the estimated market basket percentage increase less
0.75 percentage point for hospitals in all areas. Sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) and (xii) of the Act, as added and amended by
sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable Care Act, further
state that these adjustments may result in the applicable percentage
increase being less than zero. The percentage increase in the market
basket reflects the average change in the price of goods and
services required as inputs to provide hospital inpatient services.
Based on IGI's 2016 fourth quarter forecast of the hospital
market basket increase (as discussed in Appendix B of this proposed
rule), the forecast of the hospital market basket increase for FY
2018 for this proposed rule is 2.9 percent. As discussed earlier,
for FY 2018, depending on whether a hospital submits quality data
under the rules established in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act and is a meaningful EHR user under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act, there are four possible
applicable percentage increases that could be applied to the
standardized amount. We refer readers to section V.B. of the
preamble of this proposed rule for a complete discussion on the
proposed FY 2018 inpatient hospital update to the standardized
amount. We also refer readers to the table above for the four
possible applicable percentage increases that would be applied to
update the national standardized amount. The proposed standardized
amounts shown in Tables 1A through 1C that are published in section
VI. of this Addendum and that are available via the Internet on the
CMS Web site reflect these differential amounts.
Although the update factors for FY 2018 are set by law, we are
required by section 1886(e)(4) of the Act to recommend, taking into
account MedPAC's recommendations, appropriate update factors for FY
2018 for both IPPS hospitals and hospitals and hospital units
excluded from the IPPS. Section 1886(e)(5)(A) of the Act requires
that we publish our proposed recommendations in the Federal Register
for public comment. Our recommendation on the update factors is set
forth in Appendix B of this proposed rule.
4. Methodology for Calculation of the Average Standardized Amount
The methodology we used to calculate the proposed FY 2018
standardized amount is as follows:
To ensure we are only including hospitals paid under
the IPPS in the calculation of the standardized amount, we apply the
following inclusion and exclusion criteria: include hospitals whose
last four digits fall between 0001 and 0879 (section 2779A1 of
Chapter 2 of the State Operations Manual on the CMS Web site at:
//www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/som107c02.pdf); exclude CAHs at the time of this proposed
rule; exclude hospitals in Maryland (because these hospitals are
paid under an all payer model under section 1115A of the Act); and
remove PPS-excluded cancer hospitals that have a ``V'' in the fifth
position of their provider number or a ``E'' or ``F'' in the sixth
position.
As in the past, we are proposing to adjust the FY 2018
standardized amount to remove the effects of the FY 2017 geographic
reclassifications and outlier payments before applying the FY 2018
updates. We then apply budget neutrality offsets for outliers and
geographic reclassifications to the standardized amount based on
proposed FY 2018 payment policies.
We do not remove the prior year's budget neutrality
adjustments for reclassification and recalibration of the DRG
relative weights and for updated wage data because, in accordance
with sections 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) and 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act,
estimated aggregate payments after updates in the DRG relative
weights and wage index should equal estimated aggregate payments
prior to the changes. If we removed the prior year's adjustment, we
would not satisfy these conditions.
Budget neutrality is determined by comparing aggregate IPPS
payments before and after making changes that are required to be
budget neutral (for example, changes to MS-DRG classifications,
recalibration of the MS-DRG relative weights, updates to the wage
index, and different geographic reclassifications). We include
outlier payments in the simulations because they may be affected by
changes in these parameters.
Consistent with our methodology established in the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50422 through 50433), because
IME Medicare Advantage payments are made to IPPS hospitals under
section 1886(d) of the Act, we believe these payments must be part
of these budget neutrality calculations. However, we note that it is
not necessary to include Medicare Advantage IME payments in the
outlier threshold calculation or the outlier offset to the
standardized amount because the statute requires that outlier
payments be not less than 5 percent nor more than 6 percent of total
``operating DRG payments,'' which does not include IME and DSH
payments. We refer readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
for a complete discussion on our methodology of identifying and
adding the total Medicare Advantage IME payment amount to the budget
neutrality adjustments.
Consistent with the methodology in the FY 2012 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, in order to ensure that we capture only fee-
for-service claims, we are only including claims with a ``Claim
Type'' of 60 (which is a field on the MedPAR file that indicates a
claim is an FFS claim).
Consistent with our methodology established in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57277), in order to further
ensure that we capture only FFS claims, we are excluding claims with
a ``GHOPAID'' indicator of 1 (which is a field on the MedPAR file
that indicates a claim is not an FFS claim and is paid by a Group
Health Organization).
Consistent with our methodology established in the FY
2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50422 through 50423), we
examine the MedPAR file and remove
[[Page 20170]]
pharmacy charges for anti-hemophilic blood factor (which are paid
separately under the IPPS) with an indicator of ``3'' for blood
clotting with a revenue code of ``0636'' from the covered charge
field for the budget neutrality adjustments. We also remove organ
acquisition charges from the covered charge field for the budget
neutrality adjustments because organ acquisition is a pass-through
payment not paid under the IPPS.
The Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI)
initiative, developed under the authority of section 3021 of the
Affordable Care Act (codified at section 1115A of the Act), is
comprised of four broadly defined models of care, which link
payments for multiple services beneficiaries receive during an
episode of care. Under the BPCI initiative, organizations enter into
payment arrangements that include financial and performance
accountability for episodes of care. On January 31, 2013, CMS
announced the first set of health care organizations selected to
participate in the BPCI initiative. Additional organizations were
selected in 2014. For additional information on the BPCI initiative,
we refer readers to the CMS Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Innovation's Web site at: //innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/Bundled-Payments/index.html.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53341 through
53343), for FY 2013 and subsequent fiscal years, we finalized a
methodology to treat hospitals that participate in the BPCI
initiative the same as prior fiscal years for the IPPS payment
modeling and ratesetting process (which includes recalibration of
the MS-DRG relative weights, ratesetting, calculation of the budget
neutrality factors, and the impact analysis) without regard to a
hospital's participation within these bundled payment models (that
is, as if they are not participating in those models under the BPCI
initiative). For FY 2018, we are proposing to continue to include
all applicable data from subsection (d) hospitals participating in
BPCI Models 1, 2, and 4 in our IPPS payment modeling and ratesetting
calculations.
Consistent with our methodology established in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53687 through 53688), we
believe that it is appropriate to include adjustments for the
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and the Hospital VBP Program
(established under the Affordable Care Act) within our budget
neutrality calculations.
Both the hospital readmissions payment adjustment (reduction)
and the hospital VBP payment adjustment (redistribution) are applied
on a claim-by-claim basis by adjusting, as applicable, the base-
operating DRG payment amount for individual subsection (d)
hospitals, which affects the overall sum of aggregate payments on
each side of the comparison within the budget neutrality
calculations.
In order to properly determine aggregate payments on each side
of the comparison, as we have done for the last 4 fiscal years, for
FY 2018 and subsequent years, we are proposing to continue to apply
the hospital readmissions payment adjustment and the hospital VBP
payment adjustment on each side of the comparison, consistent with
the methodology that we adopted in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (77 FR 53687 through 53688). That is, we are proposing to apply
the proposed readmissions payment adjustment factor and the proposed
hospital VBP payment adjustment factor on both sides of our
comparison of aggregate payments when determining all budget
neutrality factors described in section II.A.4. of this Addendum.
For the purpose of calculating the proposed FY 2018 readmissions
payment adjustment factors, we are proposing to use excess
readmission ratios and aggregate payments for excess readmissions
based on admissions from the prior fiscal year's applicable period
because hospitals have had the opportunity to review and correct
these data before the data were made public under the policy we
adopted regarding the reporting of hospital-specific readmission
rates, consistent with section 1886(q)(6) of the Act. For FY 2018,
in this proposed rule, we are proposing to calculate the
readmissions payment adjustment factors using excess readmission
ratios and aggregate payments for excess readmissions based on
admissions from the finalized applicable period for FY 2018 as
hospitals have had the opportunity to review and correct these data
under our policy regarding the reporting of hospital-specific
readmission rates consistent with section 1886(q)(6) of the Act. We
discuss our proposed policy regarding the reporting of hospital-
specific readmission rates for FY 2018 in section V.I.3.f. of the
preamble of this proposed rule. (For additional information on our
general policy for the reporting of hospital-specific readmission
rates, consistent with section 1886(q)(6) of the Act, we refer
readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53399 through
53400).)
In addition, for FY 2018, in this proposed rule, for the purpose
of modeling aggregate payments when determining all budget
neutrality factors, we are proposing to use proxy hospital VBP
payment adjustment factors for FY 2018 that are based on data from a
historical period because hospitals have not yet had an opportunity
to review and submit corrections for their data from the FY 2018
performance period. (For additional information on our policy
regarding the review and correction of hospital-specific measure
rates under the Hospital VBP Program, consistent with section
1886(o)(10)(A)(ii) of the Act, we refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53578 through 53581), the CY 2012 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74544 through 74547), and
the Hospital Inpatient VBP final rule (76 FR 26534 through 26536).)
The Affordable Care Act also established section
1886(r) of the Act, which modifies the methodology for computing the
Medicare DSH payment adjustment beginning in FY 2014. Beginning in
FY 2014, IPPS hospitals receiving Medicare DSH payment adjustments
will receive an empirically justified Medicare DSH payment equal to
25 percent of the amount that would previously have been received
under the statutory formula set forth under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of
the Act governing the Medicare DSH payment adjustment. In accordance
with section 1886(r)(2) of the Act, the remaining amount, equal to
an estimate of 75 percent of what otherwise would have been paid as
Medicare DSH payments, reduced to reflect changes in the percentage
of individuals under age 65 who are uninsured and an additional
statutory adjustment, will be available to make additional payments
to Medicare DSH hospitals based on their share of the total amount
of uncompensated care reported by Medicare DSH hospitals for a given
time period. In order to properly determine aggregate payments on
each side of the comparison for budget neutrality, prior to FY 2014,
we included estimated Medicare DSH payments on both sides of our
comparison of aggregate payments when determining all budget
neutrality factors described in section II.A.4. of this Addendum.
To do this for FY 2018 (as we did for the last 4 fiscal years),
we are proposing to include estimated empirically justified Medicare
DSH payments that will be paid in accordance with section 1886(r)(1)
of the Act and estimates of the additional uncompensated care
payments made to hospitals receiving Medicare DSH payment
adjustments as described by section 1886(r)(2) of the Act. That is,
we are proposing to consider estimated empirically justified
Medicare DSH payments at 25 percent of what would otherwise have
been paid, and also the estimated additional uncompensated care
payments for hospitals receiving Medicare DSH payment adjustments on
both sides of our comparison of aggregate payments when determining
all budget neutrality factors described in section II.A.4. of this
Addendum.
When calculating total payments for budget neutrality,
to determine total payments for SCHs, we model total hospital-
specific rate payments and total Federal rate payments and then
include whichever one of the total payments is greater. As discussed
in section V.G. of the preamble to this proposed rule and below, we
are proposing to continue the FY 2014 finalized methodology under
which we would take into consideration uncompensated care payments
in the comparison of payments under the Federal rate and the
hospital-specific rate for SCHs. Therefore, we are proposing to
include estimated uncompensated care payments in this comparison.
We are proposing to include an adjustment to the
standardized amount for those hospitals that are not meaningful EHR
users in our modeling of aggregate payments for budget neutrality
for FY 2018. Similar to FY 2017, we are including this adjustment
based on data on the prior year's performance. Payments for
hospitals would be estimated based on the proposed applicable
standardized amount in Tables 1A and 1B for discharges occurring in
FY 2018.
a. Proposed Recalibration of MS-DRG Relative Weights
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act specifies that, beginning
in FY 1991, the annual DRG reclassification and recalibration of the
relative weights must be made in a manner that ensures that
aggregate payments
[[Page 20171]]
to hospitals are not affected. As discussed in section II.G. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we normalized the recalibrated MS-
DRG relative weights by an adjustment factor so that the average
case relative weight after recalibration is equal to the average
case relative weight prior to recalibration. However, equating the
average case relative weight after recalibration to the average case
relative weight before recalibration does not necessarily achieve
budget neutrality with respect to aggregate payments to hospitals
because payments to hospitals are affected by factors other than
average case relative weight. Therefore, as we have done in past
years, we are proposing to make a budget neutrality adjustment to
ensure that the requirement of section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act
is met.
For FY 2018, to comply with the requirement that MS-DRG
reclassification and recalibration of the relative weights be budget
neutral for the standardized amount and the hospital-specific rates,
we used FY 2016 discharge data to simulate payments and compared the
following:
Aggregate payments using the FY 2017 labor-related
share percentages, the FY 2017 relative weights, and the FY 2017
pre-reclassified wage data, and applied the proposed FY 2018
hospital readmissions payment adjustments and estimated FY 2018
hospital VBP payment adjustments; and
Aggregate payments using the FY 2017 labor-related
share percentages, the proposed FY 2018 relative weights, and the FY
2017 pre-reclassified wage data, and applied the same proposed FY
2018 hospital readmissions payment adjustments and estimated FY 2018
hospital VBP payment adjustments applied above.
Based on this comparison, we computed a proposed budget
neutrality adjustment factor equal to 0.997573 and applied this
factor to the standardized amount. As discussed in section IV. of
this Addendum, we also are proposing to apply the MS-DRG
reclassification and recalibration budget neutrality factor of
0.997555 to the hospital-specific rates that are effective for cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2017.
b. Updated Wage Index--Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act requires us to update the
hospital wage index on an annual basis beginning October 1, 1993.
This provision also requires us to make any updates or adjustments
to the wage index in a manner that ensures that aggregate payments
to hospitals are not affected by the change in the wage index.
Section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act requires that we implement the
wage index adjustment in a budget neutral manner. However, section
1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act sets the labor-related share at 62
percent for hospitals with a wage index less than or equal to
1.0000, and section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act provides that the
Secretary shall calculate the budget neutrality adjustment for the
adjustments or updates made under that provision as if section
1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act had not been enacted. In other words,
this section of the statute requires that we implement the updates
to the wage index in a budget neutral manner, but that our budget
neutrality adjustment should not take into account the requirement
that we set the labor-related share for hospitals with wage indexes
less than or equal to 1.0000 at the more advantageous level of 62
percent. Therefore, for purposes of this budget neutrality
adjustment, section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act prohibits us from
taking into account the fact that hospitals with a wage index less
than or equal to 1.0000 are paid using a labor-related share of 62
percent. Consistent with current policy, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to adjust 100 percent of the wage index factor for
occupational mix. We describe the occupational mix adjustment in
section III.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
To compute a proposed budget neutrality adjustment factor for
wage index and labor-related share percentage changes, we used FY
2016 discharge data to simulate payments and compared the following:
Aggregate payments using the proposed FY 2018 relative
weights and the FY 2017 pre-reclassified wage indexes, applied the
FY 2017 labor-related share of 69.6 percent to all hospitals
(regardless of whether the hospital's wage index was above or below
1.0000), and applied the proposed FY 2018 hospital readmissions
payment adjustment and the estimated FY 2018 hospital VBP payment
adjustment; and
Aggregate payments using the proposed FY 2018 relative
weights and the proposed FY 2018 pre-reclassified wage indexes,
applied the proposed labor-related share for FY 2018 of 68.3 percent
to all hospitals (regardless of whether the hospital's wage index
was above or below 1.0000), and applied the same proposed FY 2018
hospital readmissions payment adjustments and estimated FY 2018
hospital VBP payment adjustments applied above.
In addition, we applied the proposed MS-DRG reclassification and
recalibration budget neutrality adjustment factor (derived in the
first step) to the payment rates that were used to simulate payments
for this comparison of aggregate payments from FY 2017 to FY 2018.
By applying this methodology, we determined a proposed budget
neutrality adjustment factor of 1.000465 for proposed changes to the
wage index.
c. Reclassified Hospitals--Proposed Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Section 1886(d)(8)(B) of the Act provides that certain rural
hospitals are deemed urban. In addition, section 1886(d)(10) of the
Act provides for the reclassification of hospitals based on
determinations by the MGCRB. Under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act, a
hospital may be reclassified for purposes of the wage index.
Under section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act, the Secretary is
required to adjust the standardized amount to ensure that aggregate
payments under the IPPS after implementation of the provisions of
sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act are equal
to the aggregate prospective payments that would have been made
absent these provisions. We note that the wage index adjustments
provided for under section 1886(d)(13) of the Act are not budget
neutral. Section 1886(d)(13)(H) of the Act provides that any
increase in a wage index under section 1886(d)(13) shall not be
taken into account in applying any budget neutrality adjustment with
respect to such index under section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act. To
calculate the proposed budget neutrality adjustment factor for FY
2018, we used FY 2016 discharge data to simulate payments and
compared the following:
Aggregate payments using the proposed FY 2018 labor-
related share percentages, proposed FY 2018 relative weights and
proposed FY 2018 wage data prior to any reclassifications under
sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and (C) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act, and
applied the proposed FY 2018 hospital readmissions payment
adjustments and the estimated FY 2018 hospital VBP payment
adjustments; and
Aggregate payments using the proposed FY 2018 labor-
related share percentages, proposed FY 2018 relative weights, and
proposed FY 2018 wage data after such reclassifications, and applied
the same proposed FY 2018 hospital readmissions payment adjustments
and the estimated FY 2018 hospital VBP payment adjustments applied
above.
We note that the reclassifications applied under the second
simulation and comparison are those listed in Table 2 associated
with this proposed rule, which is available via the Internet on the
CMS Web site. This table reflects reclassification crosswalks
proposed for FY 2018, and apply the proposed policies explained in
section III. of the preamble to this proposed rule. Based on these
simulations, we calculated a proposed budget neutrality adjustment
factor of 0.988522 to ensure that the effects of these provisions
are budget neutral, consistent with the statute.
The proposed FY 2018 budget neutrality adjustment factor was
applied to the standardized amount after removing the effects of the
FY 2017 budget neutrality adjustment factor. We note that the
proposed FY 2018 budget neutrality adjustment reflects FY 2018 wage
index reclassifications approved by the MGCRB or the Administrator
at the time of development of the proposed rule.
d. Proposed Rural Floor Budget Neutrality Adjustment
Under Sec. 412.64(e)(4), we make an adjustment to the wage
index to ensure that aggregate payments after implementation of the
rural floor under section 4410 of the BBA (Pub. L. 105-33) is equal
to the aggregate prospective payments that would have been made in
the absence of this provision. Consistent with section 3141 of the
Affordable Care Act and as discussed in section III.H. of the
preamble of this proposed rule and codified at Sec.
412.64(e)(4)(ii), the budget neutrality adjustment for the rural
floor is a national adjustment to the wage index.
As noted above and as discussed in section III.H.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, the imputed floor is set to expire
effective October 1, 2017, and we are not proposing to extend the
imputed floor policy.
Similar to our calculation in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 50369 through 50370), for FY 2018, we are proposing to
calculate a national rural Puerto
[[Page 20172]]
Rico wage index. Because there are no rural Puerto Rico hospitals
with established wage data, our calculation of the proposed FY 2018
rural Puerto Rico wage index is based on the policy adopted in the
FY 2008 IPPS final rule with comment period (72 FR 47323). That is,
we will use the unweighted average of the wage indexes from all
CBSAs (urban areas) that are contiguous (share a border with) to the
rural counties to compute the rural floor (72 FR 47323; 76 FR
51594). Under the OMB labor market area delineations, except for
Arecibo, Puerto Rico (CBSA 11640), all other Puerto Rico urban areas
are contiguous to a rural area. Therefore, based on our existing
policy, the proposed FY 2018 rural Puerto Rico wage index is
calculated based on the average of the proposed FY 2018 wage indexes
for the following urban areas: Aguadilla-Isabela, PR (CBSA 10380);
Guayama, PR (CBSA 25020); Mayaguez, PR (CBSA 32420); Ponce, PR (CBSA
38660); San German, PR (CBSA 41900); and San Juan-Carolina-Caguas,
PR (CBSA 41980).
To calculate the national rural floor budget neutrality
adjustment factor, we are proposing to use FY 2016 discharge data to
simulate payments and the proposed post-reclassified national wage
indexes and compared the following:
National simulated payments without the proposed
national rural floor; and
National simulated payments with the proposed national
rural floor.
Based on this comparison, we determined a proposed national
rural floor budget neutrality adjustment factor of 0.993672. The
national adjustment was applied to the national wage indexes to
produce a proposed national rural floor budget neutral wage index.
e. Proposed Adjustment for FY 2018 Required Under Section 414 of Public
Law 114-10 (MACRA) and Section 15005 of Public Law 114-255
As stated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56785),
once the recoupment required under section 631 of the ATRA was
complete, we had anticipated making a single positive adjustment in
FY 2018 to offset the reductions required to recoup the $11 billion
under section 631 of the ATRA. However, section 414 of the MACRA
(which was enacted on April 16, 2015) replaced the single positive
adjustment we intended to make in FY 2018 with a 0.5 percent
positive adjustment for each of FYs 2018 through 2023. In the FY
2017 rulemaking, we indicated that we would address the adjustments
for FY 2018 and later fiscal years in future rulemaking. As noted
previously, section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Public Law
114-255), which was enacted December 13, 2016, amended section
7(b)(1)(B) of the TMA, as amended by section 631 of the ATRA and
section 414 of the MACRA, to reduce the adjustment for FY 2018 from
0.5 percentage points to 0.4588 percentage points. Therefore, for FY
2018, we are proposing to implement the required +0.4588 percent
adjustment to the standardized amount. This is a permanent
adjustment to payment rates. While we are not proposing future
adjustments required under section 414 of the MACRA and section
15005 of Public Law 114-255 at this time, we expect to propose
positive 0.5 percent adjustments to the standardized amounts for FYs
2019 through 2023.
f. Proposed Outlier Payments
Section 1886(d)(5)(A) of the Act provides for payments in
addition to the basic prospective payments for ``outlier'' cases
involving extraordinarily high costs. To qualify for outlier
payments, a case must have costs greater than the sum of the
prospective payment rate for the MS-DRG, any IME and DSH payments,
uncompensated care payments, any new technology add-on payments, and
the ``outlier threshold'' or ``fixed-loss'' amount (a dollar amount
by which the costs of a case must exceed payments in order to
qualify for an outlier payment). We refer to the sum of the
prospective payment rate for the MS-DRG, any IME and DSH payments,
uncompensated care payments, any new technology add-on payments, and
the outlier threshold as the outlier ``fixed-loss cost threshold.''
To determine whether the costs of a case exceed the fixed-loss cost
threshold, a hospital's CCR is applied to the total covered charges
for the case to convert the charges to estimated costs. Payments for
eligible cases are then made based on a marginal cost factor, which
is a percentage of the estimated costs above the fixed-loss cost
threshold. The marginal cost factor for FY 2018 is 80 percent, or 90
percent for burn MS-DRGs 927, 928, 929, 933, 934 and 935. We have
used a marginal cost factor of 90 percent since FY 1989 (54 FR 36479
through 36480) for designated burn DRGs as well as a marginal cost
factor of 80 percent for all other DRGs since FY 1995 (59 FR 45367).
In accordance with section 1886(d)(5)(A)(iv) of the Act, outlier
payments for any year are projected to be not less than 5 percent
nor more than 6 percent of total operating DRG payments (which does
not include IME and DSH payments) plus outlier payments. When
setting the outlier threshold, we compute the 5.1 percent target by
dividing the total operating outlier payments by the total operating
DRG payments plus outlier payments. We do not include any other
payments such as IME and DSH within the outlier target amount.
Therefore, it is not necessary to include Medicare Advantage IME
payments in the outlier threshold calculation. Section 1886(d)(3)(B)
of the Act requires the Secretary to reduce the average standardized
amount by a factor to account for the estimated proportion of total
DRG payments made to outlier cases. More information on outlier
payments may be found on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/outlier.htm.
(1) Proposed FY 2018 Outlier Fixed-Loss Cost Threshold
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50977 through
50983), in response to public comments on the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule, we made changes to our methodology for projecting the
outlier fixed-loss cost threshold for FY 2014. We refer readers to
the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for detailed discussion of the
changes.
As we have done in the past, to calculate the proposed FY 2018
outlier threshold, we simulated payments by applying proposed FY
2018 payment rates and policies using cases from the FY 2016 MedPAR
file. Therefore, in order to determine the proposed FY 2018 outlier
threshold, we inflated the charges on the MedPAR claims by 2 years,
from FY 2016 to FY 2018. As discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule, we believe a methodology that is based on 1-year of
charge data will provide a more stable measure to project the
average charge per case because our prior methodology used a 6-month
measure, which inherently uses fewer claims than a 1-year measure
and makes it more susceptible to fluctuations in the average charge
per case as a result of any significant charge increases or
decreases by hospitals. As finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final
rule (81 FR 57282), we are using the following methodology to
calculate the charge inflation factor for FY 2018:
To produce the most stable measure of charge inflation,
we applied the following inclusion and exclusion criteria of
hospitals claims in our measure of charge inflation: Include
hospitals whose last four digits fall between 0001 and 0899 (section
2779A1 of Chapter 2 of the State Operations Manual on the CMS Web
site at //www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/som107c02.pdf); include CAHs that were IPPS
hospitals for the time period of the MedPAR data being used to
calculate the charge inflation factor; include hospitals in
Maryland; and remove PPS-excluded cancer hospitals who have a ``V''
in the fifth position of their provider number or a ``E'' or ``F''
in the sixth position.
We excluded Medicare Advantage IME claims for the
reasons described in section I.A.4. of this Addendum. We refer
readers to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for a complete
discussion on our methodology of identifying and adding the total
Medicare Advantage IME payment amount to the budget neutrality
adjustments.
In order to ensure that we capture only FFS claims, we
included claims with a ``Claim Type'' of 60 (which is a field on the
MedPAR file that indicates a claim is an FFS claim).
In order to further ensure that we capture only FFS
claims, we excluded claims with a ``GHOPAID'' indicator of 1 (which
is a field on the MedPAR file that indicates a claim is not an FFS
claim and is paid by a Group Health Organization).
We examined the MedPAR file and removed pharmacy
charges for anti-hemophilic blood factor (which are paid separately
under the IPPS) with an indicator of ``3'' for blood clotting with a
revenue code of ``0636'' from the covered charge field. We also
removed organ acquisition charges from the covered charge field
because organ acquisition is a pass-through payment not paid under
the IPPS.
In the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH final rule (80 FR 49779-49780), we
stated that commenters were concerned that they were unable to
replicate the calculation of the charge inflation factor that CMS
used in the proposed rule. In response to those
[[Page 20173]]
comments, we stated that we continue to believe that it is optimal
to use the most recent period of charge data available to measure
charge inflation. In response to those comments, similar to FY 2016
and 2017, for FY 2018 we grouped claims data by quarter in the table
below in order that the public would be able to replicate the claims
summary for the claims with discharge dates through September 30,
2016, that are available under the current LDS structure. In order
to provide even more information in response to the commenters'
request, similar to FY 2016 and FY 2017, for FY 2018 we have made
available on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html (click
on the link on the left titled ``FY 2018 IPPS Proposed Rule Home
Page'' and then click the link ``FY 2018 Proposed Rule Data
Files''') a more detailed summary table by provider with the monthly
charges that were used to compute the charge inflation factor. We
continue to work with our systems teams and privacy office to
explore expanding the information available in the current LDS,
perhaps through the provision of a supplemental data file for future
rulemaking.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Covered charges (January Cases (January 1, 2015, Covered charges (January Cases (January 1, 2016,
Quarter 1, 2015, through December through December 31, 1, 2016, through December through December 31,
31, 2015) 2015) 31, 2016) 2016)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1........................................... $134,654,491,108 2,550,009 $140,324,387,852 2,503,723
2........................................... 128,043,608,047 2,432,111 134,274,423,481 2,401,159
3........................................... 125,070,725,661 2,352,162 129,395,535,792 2,318,480
4........................................... 130,224,314,081 2,386,486 104,063,409,952 1,850,535
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................... 517,993,138,897 9,720,768 508,057,757,077 9,073,897
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under this methodology, to compute the 1-year average annualized
rate-of-change in charges per case for FY 2018, we compared the
average covered charge per case of $53,287 ($517,993,138,897/
9,720,768) from the second quarter of FY 2015 through the first
quarter of FY 2016 (January 1, 2015, through December 31, 2015) to
the average covered charge per case of $55,991 ($508,057,757,077/
9,073,897) from the second quarter of FY 2016 through the first
quarter of FY 2017 (January 1, 2016, through December 31, 2016).
This rate-of-change is 5.1 percent (1.05074) or 10.4 percent
(1.104055) over 2 years. The billed charges are obtained from the
claim from the MedPAR file and inflated by the inflation factor
specified above.
As we have done in the past, in this proposed rule, we are
proposing to establish the proposed FY 2018 outlier threshold using
hospital CCRs from the December 2016 update to the Provider-Specific
File (PSF)--the most recent available data at the time of the
development of this proposed rule. We are proposing to apply the
following edits to providers' CCRs in the PSF. We believe these
edits are appropriate in order to accurately model the outlier
threshold. We first search for Indian Health Service providers and
those providers assigned the statewide average CCR from the current
fiscal year. We then replace these CCRs with the statewide average
CCR for the upcoming fiscal year. We also assign the statewide
average CCR (for the upcoming fiscal year) to those providers that
have no value in the CCR field in the PSF or whose CCRs exceed the
ceilings described later in this section (3.0 standard deviations
from the mean of the log distribution of CCRs for all hospitals). We
do not apply the adjustment factors described below to hospitals
assigned the statewide average CCR.
For FY 2018, we also are proposing to continue to apply an
adjustment factor to the CCRs to account for cost and charge
inflation (as explained below). We are proposing that, if more
recent data become available, we would use that data to calculate
the final FY 2018 outlier threshold.
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50979), we
adopted a new methodology to adjust the CCRs. Specifically, we
finalized a policy to compare the national average case-weighted
operating and capital CCR from the most recent update of the PSF to
the national average case-weighted operating and capital CCR from
the same period of the prior year.
Therefore, as we did for the last 4 fiscal years, we are
proposing to adjust the CCRs from the December 2016 update of the
PSF by comparing the percentage change in the national average case-
weighted operating CCR and capital CCR from the December 2015 update
of the PSF to the national average case-weighted operating CCR and
capital CCR from the December 2016 update of the PSF. We note that
we used total transfer-adjusted cases from FY 2016 to determine the
national average case-weighted CCRs for both sides of the
comparison. As stated in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50979), we believe that it is appropriate to use the same case count
on both sides of the comparison because this will produce the true
percentage change in the average case-weighted operating and capital
CCR from one year to the next without any effect from a change in
case count on different sides of the comparison.
Using the proposed methodology above, we calculated a proposed
December 2015 operating national average case-weighted CCR of
0.274139 and a proposed December 2016 operating national average
case-weighted CCR of 0.26579. We then calculated the percentage
change between the two national operating case-weighted CCRs by
subtracting the December 2015 operating national average case-
weighted CCR from the December 2016 operating national average case-
weighted CCR and then dividing the result by the December 2015
national operating average case-weighted CCR. This resulted in a
proposed national operating CCR adjustment factor of 0.979187.
We used the same methodology proposed above to adjust the
capital CCRs. Specifically, we calculated a December 2015 capital
national average case-weighted CCR of 0.024047 and a December 2016
capital national average case-weighted CCR of 0.022967. We then
calculated the percentage change between the two national capital
case-weighted CCRs by subtracting the December 2015 capital national
average case-weighted CCR from the December 2016 capital national
average case-weighted CCR and then dividing the result by the
December 2015 capital national average case-weighted CCR. This
resulted in a proposed national capital CCR adjustment factor of
0.955068.
As discussed in section III.B.3. of the preamble to the FY 2011
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50160 and 50161) and in section
III.H.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule, in accordance with
section 10324(a) of the Affordable Care Act, we created a wage index
floor of 1.0000 for all hospitals located in States determined to be
frontier States. We note that the frontier State floor adjustments
would be calculated and applied after rural floor budget neutrality
adjustments are calculated for all labor market areas, in order to
ensure that no hospital in a frontier State would receive a wage
index less than 1.0000 due to the proposed rural floor adjustment.
In accordance with section 10324(a) of the Affordable Care Act, the
frontier State adjustment will not be subject to budget neutrality,
and will only be extended to hospitals geographically located within
a frontier State. However, for purposes of estimating the proposed
outlier threshold for FY 2018, it was necessary to adjust the
proposed wage index of those eligible hospitals in a frontier State
when calculating the proposed outlier threshold that results in
outlier payments being 5.1 percent of total payments for FY 2018. If
we did not take the above into account, our estimate of total FY
2018 payments would be too low, and, as a result, our proposed
outlier threshold would be too high, such that estimated outlier
payments would be less than our projected 5.1 percent of total
payments.
As we did in establishing the FY 2009 outlier threshold (73 FR
57891), in our projection of FY 2018 outlier payments, we are
proposing not to make any adjustments for the possibility that
hospitals' CCRs and outlier payments may be reconciled upon cost
report settlement. We continue to believe that, due to the policy
implemented in the June 9, 2003 Outlier Final Rule (68 FR 34494),
CCRs will no longer fluctuate significantly and, therefore, few
hospitals
[[Page 20174]]
will actually have these ratios reconciled upon cost report
settlement. In addition, it is difficult to predict the specific
hospitals that will have CCRs and outlier payments reconciled in any
given year. We note that we have instructed MACs to identify for CMS
any instances where (1) a hospital's actual CCR for the cost
reporting period fluctuates plus or minus 10 percentage points
compared to the interim CCR used to calculate outlier payments when
a bill is processed; and (2) the total outlier payments for the
hospital exceeded $500,000.00 for that period. Our simulations
assume that CCRs accurately measure hospital costs based on
information available to us at the time we set the outlier
threshold. For these reasons, we are proposing not to make any
assumptions regarding the effects of reconciliation on the outlier
threshold calculation.
As described in sections V.I. and V.J. respectively, of the
preamble of this proposed rule, sections 1886(q) and 1886(o) of the
Act establish the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and the
Hospital VBP Program, respectively. We do not believe that it is
appropriate to include the hospital VBP payment adjustments and the
hospital readmissions payment adjustments in the proposed outlier
threshold calculation or the proposed outlier offset to the
standardized amount. Specifically, consistent with our definition of
the base operating DRG payment amount for the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program under Sec. 412.152 and the Hospital VBP Program
under Sec. 412.160, outlier payments under section 1886(d)(5)(A) of
the Act are not affected by these payment adjustments. Therefore,
outlier payments would continue to be calculated based on the
unadjusted base DRG payment amount (as opposed to using the base-
operating DRG payment amount adjusted by the hospital readmissions
payment adjustment and the hospital VBP payment adjustment).
Consequently, we are proposing to exclude the hospital VBP payment
adjustments and the hospital readmissions payment adjustments from
the calculation of the proposed outlier fixed-loss cost threshold.
We note that, to the extent section 1886(r) of the Act modifies
the DSH payment methodology under section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act,
the uncompensated care payment under section 1886(r)(2) of the Act,
like the empirically justified Medicare DSH payment under section
1886(r)(1) of the Act, may be considered an amount payable under
section 1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act such that it would be reasonable to
include the payment in the outlier determination under section
1886(d)(5)(A) of the Act. As we have done since the implementation
of uncompensated care payments in FY 2014, we also are proposing for
FY 2018 to allocate an estimated per-discharge uncompensated care
payment amount to all cases for the hospitals eligible to receive
the uncompensated care payment amount in the calculation of the
outlier fixed-loss cost threshold methodology. We continue to
believe that allocating an eligible hospital's estimated
uncompensated care payment to all cases equally in the calculation
of the outlier fixed-loss cost threshold would best approximate the
amount we would pay in uncompensated care payments during the year
because, when we make claim payments to a hospital eligible for such
payments, we would be making estimated per-discharge uncompensated
care payments to all cases equally. Furthermore, we continue to
believe that using the estimated per-claim uncompensated care
payment amount to determine outlier estimates provides
predictability as to the amount of uncompensated care payments
included in the calculation of outlier payments. Therefore,
consistent with the methodology used since FY 2014 to calculate the
outlier fixed-loss cost threshold, for FY 2018, we are proposing to
include estimated FY 2018 uncompensated care payments in the
computation of the proposed outlier fixed-loss cost threshold.
Specifically, we are proposing to use the estimated per-discharge
uncompensated care payments to hospitals eligible for the
uncompensated care payment for all cases in the calculation of the
proposed outlier fixed-loss cost threshold methodology.
Using this methodology, we used the formula described in section
I.C.1 of this Addendum to simulate and calculate the Federal payment
rate and outlier payments for all claims. We used a threshold of
$26,713 and calculated total operating Federal payments of
$89,955,398,001 and total outlier payments of $4,587,838,750. We
then divided total outlier payments by total operating Federal
payments plus total outlier payments and determined that this
threshold met the 5.1 percent target. As a result, we are proposing
an outlier fixed-loss cost threshold for FY 2018 equal to the
prospective payment rate for the MS-DRG, plus any IME, empirically
justified Medicare DSH payments, estimated uncompensated care
payment, and any add-on payments for new technology, plus $26,713.
(2) Other Proposed Changes Concerning Outliers
As stated in the FY 1994 IPPS final rule (58 FR 46348), we
establish an outlier threshold that is applicable to both hospital
inpatient operating costs and hospital inpatient capital-related
costs. When we modeled the combined operating and capital outlier
payments, we found that using a common threshold resulted in a lower
percentage of outlier payments for capital-related costs than for
operating costs. We project that the thresholds for FY 2018 will
result in outlier payments that will equal 5.1 percent of operating
DRG payments and 5.66 percent of capital payments based on the
Federal rate.
In accordance with section 1886(d)(3)(B) of the Act, we are
proposing to reduce the FY 2018 standardized amount by the same
percentage to account for the projected proportion of payments paid
as outliers.
The proposed outlier adjustment factors that would be applied to
the standardized amount based on the proposed FY 2018 outlier
threshold are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating
standardized Capital
amounts federal rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
National................................ 0.948999 0.943414
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are proposing to apply the outlier adjustment factors to the
proposed FY 2018 payment rates after removing the effects of the FY
2017 outlier adjustment factors on the standardized amount.
To determine whether a case qualifies for outlier payments, we
apply hospital-specific CCRs to the total covered charges for the
case. Estimated operating and capital costs for the case are
calculated separately by applying separate operating and capital
CCRs. These costs are then combined and compared with the outlier
fixed-loss cost threshold.
Under our current policy at Sec. 412.84, we calculate operating
and capital CCR ceilings and assign a statewide average CCR for
hospitals whose CCRs exceed 3.0 standard deviations from the mean of
the log distribution of CCRs for all hospitals. Based on this
calculation, for hospitals for which the MAC computes operating CCRs
greater than 1.17 or capital CCRs greater than 0.161, or hospitals
for which the MAC is unable to calculate a CCR (as described under
Sec. 412.84(i)(3) of our regulations), statewide average CCRs are
used to determine whether a hospital qualifies for outlier payments.
Table 8A listed in section VI. of this Addendum (and available only
via the Internet on the CMS Web site) contains the proposed
statewide average operating CCRs for urban hospitals and for rural
hospitals for which the MAC is unable to compute a hospital-specific
CCR within the above range. These statewide average ratios would be
effective for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017 and
would replace the statewide average ratios from the prior fiscal
year. Table 8B listed in section VI. of this Addendum (and available
via the Internet on the CMS Web site) contains the comparable
proposed statewide average capital CCRs. As previously stated, the
proposed CCRs in Tables 8A and 8B would be used during FY 2018 when
hospital-specific CCRs based on the latest settled cost report
either are not available or are outside the range noted above. Table
8C listed in section VI. of this Addendum (and available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site) contains the proposed statewide
average total CCRs used under the LTCH PPS as discussed in section
V. of this Addendum.
We finally note that we published a manual update (Change
Request 3966) to our outlier policy on October 12, 2005, which
updated Chapter 3, Section 20.1.2 of the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual. The manual update covered an array of topics, including
CCRs, reconciliation, and the time value of money. We encourage
hospitals that are assigned the statewide average operating and/or
capital CCRs to work with their MAC on a possible alternative
operating and/or capital CCR as explained in Change Request 3966.
Use of an alternative CCR developed by the hospital in conjunction
with the MAC can avoid possible overpayments or underpayments at
cost report settlement, thereby ensuring better accuracy when making
outlier payments and negating the need for outlier reconciliation.
We also note that a hospital may request an alternative operating or
capital CCR ratio at any time as long as the guidelines of Change
Request
[[Page 20175]]
3966 are followed. In addition, as mentioned above, we published an
additional manual update (Change Request 7192) to our outlier policy
on December 3, 2010, which also updated Chapter 3, Section 20.1.2 of
the Medicare Claims Processing Manual. The manual update outlines
the outlier reconciliation process for hospitals and Medicare
contractors. To download and view the manual instructions on outlier
reconciliation, we refer readers to the CMS Web site: //www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/clm104c03.pdf.
(3) FY 2016 Outlier Payments
Our current estimate, using available FY 2016 claims data, is
that actual outlier payments for FY 2016 were approximately 5.37
percent of actual total MS-DRG payments. Therefore, the data
indicate that, for FY 2016, the percentage of actual outlier
payments relative to actual total payments is higher than we
projected for FY 2016. Consistent with the policy and statutory
interpretation we have maintained since the inception of the IPPS,
we do not make retroactive adjustments to outlier payments to ensure
that total outlier payments for FY 2016 are equal to 5.1 percent of
total MS-DRG payments. As explained in the FY 2003 Outlier Final
Rule (68 FR 34502), if we were to make retroactive adjustments to
all outlier payments to ensure total payments are 5.1 percent of MS-
DRG payments (by retroactively adjusting outlier payments), we would
be removing the important aspect of the prospective nature of the
IPPS. Because such an across-the-board adjustment would either lead
to more or less outlier payments for all hospitals, hospitals would
no longer be able to reliably approximate their payment for a
patient while the patient is still hospitalized. We believe it would
be neither necessary nor appropriate to make such an aggregate
retroactive adjustment. Furthermore, we believe it is consistent
with the statutory language at section 1886(d)(5)(A)(iv) of the Act
not to make retroactive adjustments to outlier payments. This
section calls for the Secretary to ensure that outlier payments are
equal to or greater than 5 percent and less than or equal to 6
percent of projected or estimated (not actual) MS-DRG payments. We
believe that an important goal of a PPS is predictability.
Therefore, we believe that the fixed-loss outlier threshold should
be projected based on the best available historical data and should
not be adjusted retroactively. A retroactive change to the fixed-
loss outlier threshold would affect all hospitals subject to the
IPPS, thereby undercutting the predictability of the system as a
whole.
We note that because the MedPAR claims data for the entire FY
2017 will not be available until after September 30, 2017, we are
unable to provide an estimate of actual outlier payments for FY 2017
based on FY 2017 claims data in this proposed rule. We will provide
an estimate of actual FY 2017 outlier payments in the FY 2019 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule.
5. Proposed FY 2018 Standardized Amount
The adjusted standardized amount is divided into labor-related
and nonlabor-related portions. Tables 1A and 1B listed and published
in section VI. of this Addendum (and available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site) contain the national standardized amounts that we
are proposing to apply to all hospitals, except hospitals located in
Puerto Rico, for FY 2018. The proposed standardized amount for
hospitals in Puerto Rico is shown in Table 1C listed and published
in section VI. of this Addendum (and available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site). The proposed amounts shown in Tables 1A and 1B
differ only in that the labor-related share applied to the
standardized amounts in Table 1A is 68.3 percent, and the labor-
related share applied to the standardized amounts in Table 1B is 62
percent. In accordance with sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and
1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act, we are proposing to apply a labor-
related share of 62 percent, unless application of that percentage
would result in lower payments to a hospital than would otherwise be
made. In effect, the statutory provision means that we will apply a
labor-related share of 62 percent for all hospitals whose wage
indexes are less than or equal to 1.0000.
In addition, Tables 1A and 1B include the proposed standardized
amounts reflecting the proposed applicable percentage increases for
FY 2018.
The proposed labor-related and nonlabor-related portions of the
national average standardized amounts for Puerto Rico hospitals for
FY 2018 are set forth in Table 1C listed and published in section
VI. of this Addendum (and available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site). Similar to above, section 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act, as
amended by section 403(b) of Public Law 108-173, provides that the
labor-related share for hospitals located in Puerto Rico be 62
percent, unless the application of that percentage would result in
lower payments to the hospital.
The following table illustrates the changes from the FY 2017
national standardized amount to the proposed FY 2018 national
standardized amount. The second through fifth columns display the
proposed changes from the FY 2017 standardized amounts for each
applicable FY 2018 standardized amount. The first row of the table
shows the updated (through FY 2017) average standardized amount
after restoring the FY 2017 offsets for outlier payments, geographic
reclassification budget neutrality, new labor market delineation
wage index transition budget neutrality and removing the FY 2017 2-
midnight rule one-time prospective increase. The MS-DRG
reclassification and recalibration and wage index budget neutrality
adjustment factors are cumulative. Therefore, those FY 2017
adjustment factors are not removed from this table.
Changes From FY 2017 Standardized Amounts to the Proposed FY 2018 Standardized Amounts
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital submitted Hospital did NOT Hospital did NOT
Hospital submitted quality data and submit quality submit quality
quality data and is NOT a data and is a data and is NOT a
is a meaningful meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR
EHR user user user user
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Base Rate after
removing:
1. FY 2017 Geographic If Wage Index is If Wage Index is If Wage Index is If Wage Index is
Reclassification Budget Greater Than Greater Than Greater Than Greater Than
Neutrality (0.988136). 1.0000: 1.0000: 1.0000: 1.0000:
2. FY 2017 Operating Outlier Labor (68.3%): Labor (68.3%): Labor (68.3%): Labor (68.3%):
Offset (0.948998). $3,993.72. $3,993.72. $3,993.72. $3,993.72.
3. FY 2017 2-Midnight Rule Nonlabor Nonlabor Nonlabor Nonlabor
One-Time Prospective (30.4%): (30.4%): (30.4%): (30.4%):
Increase (1.006). $1,853.60. $1,853.60. $1,853.60. $1,853.60.
4. FY 2017 Labor Market If Wage Index is If Wage Index is If Wage Index is If Wage Index is
Delineation Wage Index less Than or less Than or less Than or less Than or
Transition Budget Equal to 1.0000: Equal to 1.0000: Equal to 1.0000: Equal to 1.0000:
Neutrality Factor
(0.999997)..
Labor (62%): Labor (62%): Labor (62%): Labor (62%):
$3,625.34. $3,625.34. $3,625.34. $3,625.34.
Nonlabor (38%): Nonlabor (38%): Nonlabor (38%): Nonlabor (38%):
$2,221.98. $2,221.98. $2,221.98. $1,853.60.
Proposed FY 2018 Update Factor.. 1.0175............ 0.99575........... 1.01025........... 0.9885.
[[Page 20176]]
Proposed FY 2018 MS[dash]DRG 0.997573.......... 0.997573.......... 0.997573.......... 0.997573.
Recalibration Budget Neutrality
Factor.
Proposed FY 2018 Wage Index 1.000465.......... 1.000465.......... 1.000465.......... 1.000465.
Budget Neutrality Factor.
Proposed FY 2018 0.988522.......... 0.988522.......... 0.988522.......... 0.988522.
Reclassification Budget
Neutrality Factor.
Proposed FY 2018 Operating 0.948999.......... 0.948999.......... 0.948999.......... 0.98999.
Outlier Factor.
Proposed Adjustment for FY 2018 1.004588.......... 1.004588.......... 1.004588.......... 1.004588.
Required under Section 414 of
Public Law 114-10 (MACRA) and
Section 15005 of Public Law 114-
255.
Proposed National Standardized Labor: $3,822.07.. Labor: $3,740.37.. Labor: $3,794.84.. Labor: $3,713.14.
Amount for FY 2018 if Wage Nonlabor: Nonlabor: Nonlabor: Nonlabor:
Index is Greater Than 1.0000; $1,773.93. $1,736.01. $1,761.29. $1,723.37.
Labor/Non-Labor Share
Percentage (68.3/31.7).
Proposed National Standardized Labor: $3,469.52.. Labor: $3,395.36.. Labor: $3,444.80.. Labor: $3,370.64.
Amount for FY 2018 if Wage Nonlabor: Nonlabor: Nonlabor: Nonlabor:
Index is less Than or Equal to $2,126.48. $2,081.02. $2,111.33. $2,065.87.
1.0000; Labor/Non-Labor Share
Percentage (62/38).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that, in recent years, we have estimated the MS-DRG
recalibration budget neutrality factor, wage index budget neutrality
factor, reclassification budget neutrality factor and operating
outlier factor to six decimal places. While we are not proposing any
changes at this time, we are interested in receiving comments from
the public as to the continued necessity of six decimal places for
these four estimates or if fewer decimal places would be sufficient.
B. Proposed Adjustments for Area Wage Levels and Cost-of-Living
Tables 1A through 1C, as published in section VI. of this
Addendum (and available via the Internet on the CMS Web site),
contain the proposed labor-related and nonlabor-related shares that
we are proposing to use to calculate the prospective payment rates
for hospitals located in the 50 States, the District of Columbia,
and Puerto Rico for FY 2018. This section addresses two types of
adjustments to the standardized amounts that are made in determining
the proposed prospective payment rates as described in this
Addendum.
1. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage Levels
Sections 1886(d)(3)(E) and 1886(d)(9)(C)(iv) of the Act require
that we make an adjustment to the labor-related portion of the
national prospective payment rate to account for area differences in
hospital wage levels. This adjustment is made by multiplying the
labor-related portion of the adjusted standardized amounts by the
appropriate wage index for the area in which the hospital is
located. For FY 2018, as discussed in section IV.B.3. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to apply a labor-
related share of 68.3 percent for the national standardized amounts
for all IPPS hospitals (including hospitals in Puerto Rico) that
have a wage index value that is greater than 1.0000. Consistent with
section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, we are proposing to apply the wage
index to a labor-related share of 62 percent of the national
standardized amount for all IPPS hospitals (including hospitals in
Puerto Rico) whose wage index values are less than or equal to
1.0000. In section III. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the data and methodology for the proposed FY 2018 wage
index.
2. Proposed Adjustment for Cost-of-Living in Alaska and Hawaii
Section 1886(d)(5)(H) of the Act provides discretionary
authority to the Secretary to make adjustments as the Secretary
deems appropriate to take into account the unique circumstances of
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii. Higher labor-related costs
for these two States are taken into account in the adjustment for
area wages described above. To account for higher nonlabor-related
costs for these two States, we multiply the nonlabor-related portion
of the standardized amount for hospitals in Alaska and Hawaii by an
adjustment factor. For FY 2011 and in prior fiscal years, we used
the most recent cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) factors obtained
from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Web site at
//www.opm.gov/oca/cola/rates.asp to update this nonlabor
portion.
In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51797), we
explained that sections 1911 through 1919 of the Nonforeign Area
Retirement Equity Assurance Act, as contained in subtitle B of title
XIX of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year
2010 (Pub. L. 111-84, October 28, 2009), transitions the Alaska and
Hawaii COLAs to locality pay. We finalized that, for FY 2012, as OPM
transitioned away from COLAs, we would continue to use the same
``frozen'' COLA factors (published by OPM) that we used to adjust
payments in FY 2011 (which were based on OPM's 2009 COLA factors) to
adjust the nonlabor-related portion of the standardized amount for
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii. We refer readers to the FY
2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for a more detailed discussion of our
rationale for continuing to use the frozen COLAs in FY 2012.
In the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53700 and 53701),
for FY 2013, we continued to use the same COLA factors that were
used to adjust payments in FY 2012 (as originally used to adjust
payments in FY 2011, which were based on OPM's 2009 COLA factors).
We also established a methodology to update the COLA factors
published by OPM every 4 years (at the same time as the update of
the labor-related share of the IPPS market basket), beginning in FY
2014. We refer readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule
(77 FR 28145 and 28146) for a detailed description of this
methodology. For FY 2014, we updated the COLA factors for Alaska and
Hawaii published by OPM for 2009 using the methodology finalized in
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53700 and 53701).
For FY 2018, we are proposing to continue to update the COLA
factors published by OPM for 2009 (as these are the last COLA
factors OPM published prior to transitioning from COLAs to locality
pay) using the methodology that we finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule and implemented for the FY 2014 IPPS update.
Specifically, we are proposing to update the 2009 OPM COLA factors
by a comparison of the growth in the Consumer Price Indices (CPIs)
for Anchorage, AK, and Honolulu, HI,
[[Page 20177]]
relative to the growth in the CPI for the average U.S. city as
published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Because BLS
publishes CPI data for only Anchorage and Honolulu, using the
methodology we finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we
use the comparison of the growth in the overall CPI relative to the
growth in the CPI for those cities to update the COLA factors for
all areas in Alaska and Hawaii, respectively. We believe that the
relative price differences between these cities and the United
States (as measured by the CPIs mentioned above) are appropriate
proxies for the relative price differences between the ``other
areas'' of Alaska and Hawaii and the United States.
BLS publishes the CPI for All Items for Anchorage, Honolulu, and
for the average U.S. city. However, consistent with our methodology
finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we are creating
reweighted CPIs for each of the respective areas to reflect the
underlying composition of the IPPS market basket nonlabor-related
share. The current composition of the CPI for All Items for all of
the respective areas is approximately 40 percent commodities and 60
percent services. However, the IPPS nonlabor-related share is
comprised of a different mix of commodities and services. Therefore,
we create reweighted indexes for Anchorage, Honolulu, and the
average U.S. city using the respective CPI commodities index and CPI
services index and using the approximate 55 percent commodities/45
percent services shares obtained from the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket. We create reweighted indexes using BLS data for 2009
through 2016--the most recent data available at the time of this
proposed rulemaking. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50985 through 50987), we created reweighted indexes based on the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket (which was adopted for the FY 2014
IPPS update) and BLS data for 2009 through 2012 (the most recent BLS
data at the time of the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS rulemaking).
We continue to believe this methodology is appropriate because
we continue to make a COLA for hospitals located in Alaska and
Hawaii by multiplying the nonlabor-related portion of the
standardized amount by a COLA factor. We note that OPM's COLA
factors were calculated with a statutorily mandated cap of 25
percent. As stated in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50985 through 50987), under the COLA update methodology we finalized
in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we exercised our
discretionary authority to adjust payments to hospitals in Alaska
and Hawaii by incorporating this cap. In applying this finalized
methodology for updating the COLA factors, we are proposing for FY
2018 to continue to use such a cap, as our proposal is based on
OPM's COLA factors (updated by the methodology described above).
Applying this methodology, the COLA factors that we are
proposing to establish for FY 2018 to adjust the nonlabor-related
portion of the standardized amount for hospitals located in Alaska
and Hawaii are shown in the table below. For comparison purposes, we
also are showing the FY 2013 COLA factors (which were based on OPM's
published COLA factors for 2009) and the FY 2014 COLA factors.
Lastly, as we finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(77 FR 53700 and 53701), we are updating the COLA factors based on
our methodology every 4 years, at the same time as the update to the
labor-related share of the IPPS market basket.
Cost-of-Living Adjustment Factors: Alaska and Hawaii Hospitals
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2014
Area FY 2013 through FY Proposed FY
2017 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road. 1.23 1.23 1.25
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road. 1.23 1.23 1.25
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road.... 1.23 1.23 1.25
Rest of Alaska.............................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
County of Hawaii............................................ 1.18 1.19 1.21
County of Kauai............................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao........................ 1.25 1.25 1.25
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that the reweighted CPI for Honolulu, HI grew faster
than the reweighted CPI for the average U.S. city over the 2009 to
2016 time period, at 13.7 percent and 10.5 percent, respectively. As
a result, for FY 2018, we calculated proposed COLA factors for the
City and County of Honolulu, County of Kauai, County of Maui, and
County of Kalawao to be 1.29 compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of
1.25 (which was based on OPM's published COLA factors for 2009, as
described above). However, as stated above, we are applying our
methodology as finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to
incorporate a cap of 1.25 for these areas. In addition, the proposed
COLA factor we calculated for the County of Hawaii for FY 2018 is
1.21 compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.18. The COLA factors
adopted in FY 2014 using this same methodology can be found in the
table above.
Similarly, the reweighted CPI for Anchorage, AK grew faster than
the reweighted CPI for the average U.S. city over the 2009 to 2016
time period, at 12.4 percent and 10.5 percent, respectively. As a
result, for FY 2018, we calculated proposed COLA factors for the
City of Anchorage, City of Fairbanks, and City of Juneau to be 1.25
compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.23. For FY 2018, we
calculated a proposed COLA factor of 1.27 for the rest of Alaska
compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.25. However, as stated
above, we are applying our methodology as finalized in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to incorporate a cap of 1.25 for the Rest
of Alaska.
As stated above, the COLA factors adopted in the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule were based on the same methodology used to
determine the proposed FY 2018 COLA factors but utilizing BLS data
from 2009 through 2012 (the most recent data available at the time
of FY 2014 rulemaking) rather than through 2016 (the most recent
data available at the time of this rulemaking). Compared to the FY
2014 COLA factors, the proposed FY 2018 COLA factors are higher--
with all areas either reaching or exceeding the cap of 1.25 except
the County of Hawaii.
C. Calculation of the Proposed Prospective Payment Rates
General Formula for Calculation of the Prospective Payment Rates for FY
2018
In general, the operating prospective payment rate for all
hospitals (including hospitals in Puerto Rico) paid under the IPPS,
except SCHs, for FY 2018 equals the Federal rate (which includes
uncompensated care payments).
SCHs are paid based on whichever of the following rates yields
the greatest aggregate payment: The Federal national rate (which, as
discussed in section V.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
includes uncompensated care payments); the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 1982 costs per discharge; the updated hospital-
specific rate based on FY 1987 costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1996 costs per discharge; or the
updated hospital-specific rate based on FY 2006 costs per discharge
to determine the rate that yields the greatest aggregate payment.
The prospective payment rate for SCHs for FY 2018 equals the
higher of the applicable
[[Page 20178]]
Federal rate, or the hospital-specific rate as described below.
1. Operating and Capital Federal Payment Rate and Outlier Payment
Calculation
Note: The formula below is used for actual claim payment and is
also used by CMS to project the outlier threshold for the upcoming
fiscal year. The difference is the source of some of the variables
in the formula. For example, operating and capital CCRs for actual
claim payment are from the PSF while CMS uses an adjusted CCR (as
described above) to project the threshold for the upcoming fiscal
year. In addition, charges for a claim payment are from the bill
while charges to project the threshold are from the MedPAR data with
an inflation factor applied to the charges (as described earlier).
Step 1--Determine the MS-DRG and MS-DRG relative weight for each
claim based on the ICD-10-CM procedure and diagnosis codes on the
claim.
Step 2--Select the applicable average standardized amount
depending on whether the hospital submitted qualifying quality data
and is a meaningful EHR user, as described above.
Step 3--Compute the operating and capital Federal payment rate:
--Federal Payment Rate for Operating Costs = MS-DRG Relative Weight
x [(Labor-Related Applicable Standardized Amount x Applicable CBSA
Wage Index) + (Nonlabor-Related Applicable Standardized Amount x
Cost-of-Living Adjustment)] x (1 + IME + (DSH * 0.25))
--Federal Payment for Capital Costs = MS-DRG Relative Weight x
Federal Capital Rate x Geographic Adjustment Fact x (l + IME + DSH)
Step 4--Determine operating and capital costs:
--Operating Costs = (Billed Charges x Operating CCR)
--Capital Costs = (Billed Charges x Capital CCR).
Step 5--Compute operating and capital outlier threshold (CMS
applies a geographic adjustment to the operating and capital outlier
threshold to account for local cost variation):
--Operating CCR to Total CCR = (Operating CCR)/(Operating CCR +
Capital CCR)
--Operating Outlier Threshold = [Fixed Loss Threshold x ((Labor-
Related Portion x CBSA Wage Index) + Nonlabor-Related portion)] x
Operating CCR to Total CCR + Federal Payment with IME, DSH +
Uncompensated Care Payment + New Technology Add-On Payment Amount
--Capital CCR to Total CCR = (Capital CCR)/(Operating CCR + Capital
CCR)
--Capital Outlier Threshold = (Fixed Loss Threshold x Geographic
Adjustment Factor x Capital CCR to Total CCR) + Federal Payment with
IME and DSH
Step 6--Compute operating and capital outlier payments:
--Marginal Cost Factor = 0.80 or 0.90 (depending on the MS-DRG)
--Operating Outlier Payment = (Operating Costs-Operating Outlier
Threshold) x Marginal Cost Factor
--Capital Outlier Payment = (Capital Costs--Capital Outlier
Threshold) x Marginal Cost Factor
The payment rate may then be further adjusted for hospitals that
qualify for a low-volume payment adjustment under section
1886(d)(12) of the Act and 42 CFR 412.101(b). The base-operating DRG
payment amount may be further adjusted by the hospital readmissions
payment adjustment and the hospital VBP payment adjustment as
described under sections 1886(q) and 1886(o) of the Act,
respectively. Payments also may be reduced by the 1-percent
adjustment under the HAC Reduction Program as described in section
1886(p) of the Act. We also make new technology add-on payments in
accordance with section 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L) of the Act. Finally,
we add the uncompensated care payment to the total claim payment
amount. As noted in the formula above, we take uncompensated care
payments and new technology add-on payments into consideration when
calculating outlier payments.
2. Hospital-Specific Rate (Applicable Only to SCHs)
a. Calculation of Hospital-Specific Rate
Section 1886(b)(3)(C) of the Act provides that SCHs are paid
based on whichever of the following rates yields the greatest
aggregate payment: The Federal rate; the updated hospital-specific
rate based on FY 1982 costs per discharge; the updated hospital-
specific rate based on FY 1987 costs per discharge; the updated
hospital-specific rate based on FY 1996 costs per discharge; or the
updated hospital-specific rate based on FY 2006 costs per discharge
to determine the rate that yields the greatest aggregate payment. As
noted above, under section 205 of the Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10, enacted on
April 16, 2015), the MDH program is set to expire at the end of FY
2017.
For a more detailed discussion of the calculation of the
hospital-specific rates, we refer readers to the FY 1984 IPPS
interim final rule (48 FR 39772); the April 20, 1990 final rule with
comment period (55 FR 15150); the FY 1991 IPPS final rule (55 FR
35994); and the FY 2001 IPPS final rule (65 FR 47082).
b. Updating the FY 1982, FY 1987, FY 1996, FY 2002 and FY 2006
Hospital-Specific Rate for FY 2018
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act provides that the
applicable percentage increase applicable to the hospital-specific
rates for SCHs equals the applicable percentage increase set forth
in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act (that is, the same update
factor as for all other hospitals subject to the IPPS). Because the
Act sets the update factor for SCHs equal to the update factor for
all other IPPS hospitals, the update to the hospital-specific rates
for SCHs is subject to the amendments to section 1886(b)(3)(B) of
the Act made by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable Care
Act. Accordingly, the proposed applicable percentage increases to
the hospital-specific rates applicable to SCHs are the following:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital Hospital Hospital did Hospital did
submitted submitted NOT submit NOT submit
quality data quality data quality data quality data
FY 2018 and is a and is NOT a and is a and is NOT a
meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR
user user user user
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Market Basket 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9
Rate[dash]of[dash]Increase.....................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to Submit 0.0 0.0 -0.725 -0.725
Quality Data under Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)
of the Act.....................................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to be a 0.0 -2.175 0.0 -2.175
Meaningful EHR User under Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act...................
Proposed MFP Adjustment under Section -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) of the Act...................
Statutory Adjustment under Section -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75
1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act..................
Proposed Applicable Percentage Increase Applied 1.75 -0.425 1.025 -1.15
to Hospital-Specific Rate......................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For a complete discussion of the applicable percentage increase
applied to the hospital-specific rates for SCHs, we refer readers to
section V.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
In addition, because SCHs use the same MS-DRGs as other
hospitals when they are paid based in whole or in part on the
hospital-specific rate, the hospital-specific rate is adjusted by a
budget neutrality factor to ensure that changes to the MS-DRG
classifications and the recalibration of the MS-DRG relative weights
are made in a manner so that aggregate IPPS payments are unaffected.
Therefore, the hospital-specific rate for an SCH is adjusted by the
proposed MS-DRG reclassification and recalibration
[[Page 20179]]
budget neutrality factor of 0.997573, as discussed in section III.
of this Addendum. The resulting rate is used in determining the
payment rate that an SCH will receive for its discharges beginning
on or after October 1, 2017. We note that, in this proposed rule,
for FY 2018, we are not proposing to make a documentation and coding
adjustment to the hospital-specific rate. We refer readers to
section II.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule for a complete
discussion regarding our proposed policies and previously finalized
policies (including our historical adjustments to the payment rates)
relating to the effect of changes in documentation and coding that
do not reflect real changes in case-mix.
Also, as discussed in section V.M. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are including a factor of (1/1.006) in the
calculation of the FY 2018 hospital-specific rates. Specifically, in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57058 through 57060),
using our authority under section 1886(d)(5)(I)(i) of the Act, we
finalized a policy to include a permanent factor of (1/0.998) and a
temporary one-time factor of (1.006) in the calculation of the FY
2017 hospital-specific rates and to include a factor of (1/1.006) in
the calculation of the FY 2018 hospital-specific rates to remove the
temporary one-time factor of 1.006 applied in FY 2017 to address the
effects of the 0.2 percent reduction to the rates for the 2-midnight
policy in effect for FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016. Therefore, in
this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are removing the temporary one-
time prospective increase to the FY 2017 hospital-specific rates of
0.6 percent or a factor of 1.006.
III. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Acute Care Hospital
Inpatient Capital-Related Costs for FY 2018
The PPS for acute care hospital inpatient capital-related costs
was implemented for cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 1991. Effective with that cost reporting period, over a
10-year transition period (which extended through FY 2001) the
payment methodology for Medicare acute care hospital inpatient
capital-related costs changed from a reasonable cost-based
methodology to a prospective methodology (based fully on the Federal
rate).
The basic methodology for determining Federal capital
prospective rates is set forth in the regulations at 42 CFR 412.308
through 412.352. Below we discuss the factors that we are proposing
to use to determine the capital Federal rate for FY 2018, which
would be effective for discharges occurring on or after October 1,
2017.
The 10-year transition period ended with hospital cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1, 2001 (FY 2002). Therefore,
for cost reporting periods beginning in FY 2002, all hospitals
(except ``new'' hospitals under Sec. 412.304(c)(2)) are paid based
on the capital Federal rate. For FY 1992, we computed the standard
Federal payment rate for capital-related costs under the IPPS by
updating the FY 1989 Medicare inpatient capital cost per case by an
actuarial estimate of the increase in Medicare inpatient capital
costs per case. Each year after FY 1992, we update the capital
standard Federal rate, as provided at Sec. 412.308(c)(1), to
account for capital input price increases and other factors. The
regulations at Sec. 412.308(c)(2) also provide that the capital
Federal rate be adjusted annually by a factor equal to the estimated
proportion of outlier payments under the capital Federal rate to
total capital payments under the capital Federal rate. In addition,
Sec. 412.308(c)(3) requires that the capital Federal rate be
reduced by an adjustment factor equal to the estimated proportion of
payments for exceptions under Sec. 412.348. (We note that, as
discussed in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53705),
there is generally no longer a need for an exceptions payment
adjustment factor.) However, in limited circumstances, an additional
payment exception for extraordinary circumstances is provided for
under Sec. 412.348(f) for qualifying hospitals. Therefore, in
accordance with Sec. 412.308(c)(3), an exceptions payment
adjustment factor may need to be applied if such payments are made.
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that the capital standard Federal
rate be adjusted so that the effects of the annual DRG
reclassification and the recalibration of DRG weights and changes in
the geographic adjustment factor (GAF) are budget neutral.
Section 412.374 provides for payments to hospitals located in
Puerto Rico under the IPPS for acute care hospital inpatient
capital-related costs. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57061 through 57062), we revised Sec. 412.374 to add paragraph
(e) to provide that, effective with discharges on or after October
1, 2016, capital IPPS payments to hospitals located in Puerto Rico
are based on 100 percent of the Federal rate.
A. Determination of the Proposed Federal Hospital Inpatient
Capital-Related Prospective Payment Rate Update for FY 2018
In the discussion that follows, we explain the factors that we
are proposing to use to determine the capital Federal rate for FY
2018. In particular, we explain why the proposed FY 2018 capital
Federal rate would increase approximately 1.03 percent, compared to
the FY 2017 capital Federal rate. As discussed in the impact
analysis in Appendix A to this proposed rule, we estimate that
capital payments per discharge would increase approximately 2.4
percent during that same period. Because capital payments constitute
approximately 10 percent of hospital payments, a percent change in
the capital Federal rate yields only approximately a 0.1 percent
change in actual payments to hospitals.
1. Proposed Projected Capital Standard Federal Rate Update
a. Description of the Update Framework
Under Sec. 412.308(c)(1), the capital standard Federal rate is
updated on the basis of an analytical framework that takes into
account changes in a capital input price index (CIPI) and several
other policy adjustment factors. Specifically, we adjust the
projected CIPI rate of change as appropriate each year for case-mix
index-related changes, for intensity, and for errors in previous
CIPI forecasts. The proposed update factor for FY 2018 under that
framework is 1.2 percent based on a projected 1.2 percent increase
in the proposed 2014-based CIPI, a 0.0 percentage point adjustment
for intensity, a 0.0 percentage point adjustment for case-mix, a 0.0
percentage point adjustment for the DRG reclassification and
recalibration, and a forecast error correction of 0.0 percentage
point. As discussed in section III.C. of this Addendum, we continue
to believe that the CIPI is the most appropriate input price index
for capital costs to measure capital price changes in a given year.
We also explain the basis for the proposed FY 2018 CIPI projection
in that same section of this Addendum. Below we describe the policy
adjustments that we are proposing to apply in the update framework
for FY 2018.
The case-mix index is the measure of the average DRG weight for
cases paid under the IPPS. Because the DRG weight determines the
prospective payment for each case, any percentage increase in the
case-mix index corresponds to an equal percentage increase in
hospital payments.
The case-mix index can change for any of several reasons:
The average resource use of Medicare patient changes
(``real'' case-mix change);
Changes in hospital documentation and coding of patient
records result in higher-weighted DRG assignments (``coding
effects''); and
The annual DRG reclassification and recalibration
changes may not be budget neutral (``reclassification effect'').
We define real case-mix change as actual changes in the mix (and
resource requirements) of Medicare patients as opposed to changes in
documentation and coding behavior that result in assignment of cases
to higher-weighted DRGs, but do not reflect higher resource
requirements. The capital update framework includes the same case-
mix index adjustment used in the former operating IPPS update
framework (as discussed in the May 18, 2004 IPPS proposed rule for
FY 2005 (69 FR 28816)). (We no longer use an update framework to
make a recommendation for updating the operating IPPS standardized
amounts as discussed in section II. of Appendix B to the FY 2006
IPPS final rule (70 FR 47707).)
For FY 2018, we are projecting a 0.5 percent total increase in
the case-mix index. We estimated that the real case-mix increase
will equal 0.5 percent for FY 2018. The net adjustment for change in
case-mix is the difference between the projected real increase in
case-mix and the projected total increase in case-mix. Therefore,
the proposed net adjustment for case-mix change in FY 2018 is 0.0
percentage point.
The capital update framework also contains an adjustment for the
effects of DRG reclassification and recalibration. This adjustment
is intended to remove the effect on total payments of prior year's
changes to the DRG classifications and relative weights, in order to
retain budget neutrality for all case-mix index-related changes
other than those due to patient severity of illness. Due to the lag
time in the availability of data, there is a 2-year lag in data used
to determine the adjustment for the effects of DRG reclassification
and recalibration. For
[[Page 20180]]
example, we have data available to evaluate the effects of the FY
2016 DRG reclassification and recalibration as part of our proposed
update for FY 2018. We estimate that FY 2016 DRG reclassification
and recalibration resulted in no change in the case-mix when
compared with the case-mix index that would have resulted if we had
not made the reclassification and recalibration changes to the DRGs.
Therefore, we are proposing to make a 0.0 percentage point
adjustment for reclassification and recalibration in the update
framework for FY 2018.
The capital update framework also contains an adjustment for
forecast error. The input price index forecast is based on
historical trends and relationships ascertainable at the time the
update factor is established for the upcoming year. In any given
year, there may be unanticipated price fluctuations that may result
in differences between the actual increase in prices and the
forecast used in calculating the update factors. In setting a
prospective payment rate under the framework, we make an adjustment
for forecast error only if our estimate of the change in the capital
input price index for any year is off by 0.25 percentage point or
more. There is a 2-year lag between the forecast and the
availability of data to develop a measurement of the forecast error.
Historically, when a forecast error of the CIPI is greater than 0.25
percentage point in absolute terms, it is reflected in the update
recommended under this framework. A forecast error of 0.2 percentage
point was calculated for the FY 2016 update, for which there are
historical data. That is, current historical data indicate that the
forecasted FY 2016 CIPI (1.3 percent) used in calculating the FY
2016 update factor was 0.2 percentage points higher than actual
realized price increases (1.1 percent). However, as this does not
exceed the 0.25 percentage point threshold, we are proposing not to
make an adjustment for forecast error in the update for FY 2018.
Under the capital IPPS update framework, we also make an
adjustment for changes in intensity. Historically, we calculated
this adjustment using the same methodology and data that were used
in the past under the framework for operating IPPS. The intensity
factor for the operating update framework reflected how hospital
services are utilized to produce the final product, that is, the
discharge. This component accounts for changes in the use of
quality-enhancing services, for changes within DRG severity, and for
expected modification of practice patterns to remove noncost-
effective services. Our intensity measure is based on a 5-year
average.
We calculate case-mix constant intensity as the change in total
cost per discharge, adjusted for price level changes (the CPI for
hospital and related services) and changes in real case-mix. Without
reliable estimates of the proportions of the overall annual
intensity changes that are due, respectively, to ineffective
practice patterns and the combination of quality-enhancing new
technologies and complexity within the DRG system, we assume that
one-half of the annual change is due to each of these factors. The
capital update framework thus provides an add-on to the input price
index rate of increase of one-half of the estimated annual increase
in intensity, to allow for increases within DRG severity and the
adoption of quality-enhancing technology.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to continue to use a
Medicare-specific intensity measure that is based on a 5-year
adjusted average of cost per discharge for FY 2018 (we refer readers
to the FY 2011 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (75 FR 50436) for a full
description of our Medicare-specific intensity measure).
Specifically, for FY 2018, we are proposing to use an intensity
measure that is based on an average of cost per discharge data from
the 5-year period beginning with FY 2011 and extending through FY
2015. Based on these data, we estimated that case-mix constant
intensity declined during FYs 2011 through 2015. In the past, when
we found intensity to be declining, we believed a zero (rather than
a negative) intensity adjustment was appropriate. Consistent with
this approach, because we estimate that intensity will decline
during that 5-year period, we believe it is appropriate to continue
to apply a zero intensity adjustment for FY 2018. Therefore, we are
proposing to make a 0.0 percentage point adjustment for intensity in
the update for FY 2018.
Above, we described the basis of the components we are proposing
to use to develop the proposed 1.2 percent capital update factor
under the capital update framework for FY 2018 as shown in the
following table.
CMS Proposed FY 2018 Update Factor to the Capital Federal Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital Input Price Index *...................................... 1.2
Intensity:....................................................... 0.0
Case-Mix Adjustment Factors:
Real Across DRG Change....................................... 0.5
Projected Case-Mix Change.................................... 0.5
------
Subtotal..................................................... 1.2
Effect of FY 2016 Reclassification and Recalibration............. 0.0
Forecast Error Correction........................................ 0.0
------
Total Proposed Update........................................ 1.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The capital input price index represents the proposed 2014-based CIPI.
b. Comparison of CMS and MedPAC Update Recommendation
In its March 2017 Report to Congress, MedPAC did not make a
specific update recommendation for capital IPPS payments for FY
2018. (We refer readers to MedPAC's Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy, March 2017, Chapter 3, available on the Web site at:
//www.medpac.gov.)
2. Proposed Outlier Payment Adjustment Factor
Section 412.312(c) establishes a unified outlier payment
methodology for inpatient operating and inpatient capital-related
costs. A single set of thresholds is used to identify outlier cases
for both inpatient operating and inpatient capital-related payments.
Section 412.308(c)(2) provides that the standard Federal rate for
inpatient capital-related costs be reduced by an adjustment factor
equal to the estimated proportion of capital-related outlier
payments to total inpatient capital-related PPS payments. The
outlier thresholds are set so that operating outlier payments are
projected to be 5.1 percent of total operating IPPS DRG payments.
For FY 2017, we estimated that outlier payments for capital
would equal 6.14 percent of inpatient capital-related payments based
on the capital Federal rate in FY 2017. Based on the thresholds as
set forth in section II.A. of this Addendum, we estimate that
outlier payments for capital-related costs would equal 5.66 percent
for inpatient capital-related payments based on the capital Federal
rate in FY 2018. Therefore, we are proposing to apply an outlier
adjustment factor of 0.9434 in determining the capital Federal rate
for FY 2018. Thus, we estimate that the percentage of capital
outlier payments to total capital Federal rate payments for FY 2018
will be lower than the percentage for FY 2017.
The outlier reduction factors are not built permanently into the
capital rates; that is, they are not applied cumulatively in
determining the capital Federal rate. The proposed FY 2018 outlier
adjustment of 0.9434 is a 0.51 percent change from the FY 2017
outlier adjustment of 0.9386. Therefore, the net change in the
proposed outlier adjustment to the capital Federal rate for FY 2018
is 1.0051(0.9434/0.9386). Thus, the proposed outlier adjustment
would increase the FY 2018 capital Federal rate by 0.51 percent
compared to the FY 2017 outlier adjustment.
3. Proposed Budget Neutrality Adjustment Factor for Changes in DRG
Classifications and Weights and the GAF
Section 412.308(c)(4)(ii) requires that the capital Federal rate
be adjusted so that aggregate payments for the fiscal year based on
the capital Federal rate after any changes resulting from the annual
DRG reclassification and recalibration and changes in the GAF are
projected to equal aggregate payments that would have been made on
the basis of the capital Federal rate without such changes. The
budget neutrality factor for DRG reclassifications and recalibration
nationally is applied in determining the capital IPPS Federal rate,
and is applicable for all hospitals, including those hospitals
located in Puerto Rico.
To determine the proposed national capital rate factors for FY
2018, we compared estimated aggregate capital Federal rate payments
based on the FY 2017 MS-DRG classifications and relative weights and
the FY 2017 GAF to estimated aggregate capital Federal rate payments
based on the FY 2017 MS-DRG classifications and relative weights and
the proposed FY 2018 GAFs. To achieve budget neutrality for the
changes in the national GAFs, based on calculations using updated
data, we are proposing to apply an incremental budget neutrality
adjustment factor of 0.9997 for FY 2018 to the previous cumulative
FY 2017 adjustment factor of 0.9850, yielding an adjustment factor
of 0.9847 through FY 2018.
We then compared estimated aggregate capital Federal rate
payments based on the FY 2017 MS-DRG relative weights and the
[[Page 20181]]
proposed FY 2018 GAFs to estimated aggregate capital Federal rate
payments based on the cumulative effects of the proposed FY 2018 MS-
DRG classifications and relative weights and the proposed FY 2018
GAFs. The proposed incremental adjustment factor for DRG
classifications and changes in relative weights is 0.9994. The
proposed cumulative adjustment factor for MS-DRG classifications and
changes in relative weights and for changes in the GAFs through FY
2018 is 0.9842. (We note that all the values are calculated with
unrounded numbers.)
The GAF/DRG budget neutrality adjustment factors are built
permanently into the capital rates; that is, they are applied
cumulatively in determining the capital Federal rate. This follows
the requirement under Sec. 412.308(c)(4)(ii) that estimated
aggregate payments each year be no more or less than they would have
been in the absence of the annual DRG reclassification and
recalibration and changes in the GAFs.
The methodology used to determine the recalibration and
geographic adjustment factor (GAF/DRG) budget neutrality adjustment
is similar to the methodology used in establishing budget neutrality
adjustments under the IPPS for operating costs. One difference is
that, under the operating IPPS, the budget neutrality adjustments
for the effect of geographic reclassifications are determined
separately from the effects of other changes in the hospital wage
index and the MS-DRG relative weights. Under the capital IPPS, there
is a single GAF/DRG budget neutrality adjustment factor for changes
in the GAF (including geographic reclassification) and the MS-DRG
relative weights. In addition, there is no adjustment for the
effects that geographic reclassification has on the other payment
parameters, such as the payments for DSH or IME.
The proposed cumulative adjustment factor of 0.9992 (the product
of the proposed incremental national GAF budget neutrality
adjustment factor of 0.9997 and the proposed incremental DRG budget
neutrality adjustment factor of 0.9994) accounts for the MS-DRG
reclassifications and recalibration and for changes in the GAFs. It
also incorporates the effects on the GAFs of FY 2018 geographic
reclassification decisions made by the MGCRB compared to FY 2017
decisions. However, it does not account for changes in payments due
to changes in the DSH and IME adjustment factors.
As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57062), we made an adjustment of (1/0.998) to the national capital
Federal rate to remove the 0.2 percent reduction (an adjustment
factor of 0.998) to the national capital Federal rate to offset the
estimated increase in capital IPPS expenditures associated with the
2-midnight policy. This was consistent with the adjustment to the
operating IPPS standardized amount and the hospital-specific payment
rates. In addition, consistent with the approach for the operating
IPPS standardized amount and hospital-specific payment rates and for
the reasons discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we
made a one-time prospective adjustment of 1.006 in FY 2017 to the
national capital Federal rate to address the effect of the 0.2
percent reduction to the national capital Federal rates in effect
for FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016. Furthermore, as provided for in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57294) we are removing
this one-time prospective adjustment through an adjustment of (1/
1.006) to the national capital Federal rate in FY 2018, consistent
with the approach for the operating IPPS standardized amount and
hospital-specific payment rates (as discussed in section V.M. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). We refer readers to sections V.M.
and VI.C. of the preamble of this proposed rule for a complete
discussion of these issues.
4. Proposed Capital Federal Rate for FY 2018
For FY 2017, we established a capital Federal rate of $446.79
(81 FR 68947 through 68949 (Correction Notice)). We are proposing to
establish an update of 1.2 percent in determining the FY 2018
capital Federal rate for all hospitals. As a result of this proposed
update, the proposed budget neutrality factors discussed earlier,
and the adjustment to remove the one-time 0.6 percent adjustment
made in FY 2017 to address the effect of the 0.2 percent reduction
to the national capital Federal rates in effect for FY 2014, FY
2015, and FY 2016, as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final rule
(81 FR 57294), we are proposing to establish a national capital
Federal rate of $451.37 for FY 2018. The proposed national capital
Federal rate for FY 2018 was calculated as follows:
The proposed FY 2018 update factor is 1.0120; that is,
the proposed update is 1.2[deg] percent.
The proposed FY 2018 budget neutrality adjustment
factor that is applied to the capital Federal rate for changes in
the MS-DRG classifications and relative weights and changes in the
GAFs is 0.9992.
The proposed FY 2018 outlier adjustment factor is
0.9434.
The 2-midnight policy adjustment to remove the one-time
0.6 percent adjustment is 1/1.006.
(We note that, as discussed in section VI.C. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we are not making an additional MS-DRG
documentation and coding adjustment to the capital IPPS Federal rate
for FY 2018.)
Because the FY 2018 capital Federal rate has already been
adjusted for differences in case-mix, wages, cost-of-living,
indirect medical education costs, and payments to hospitals serving
a disproportionate share of low-income patients, we are not
proposing to make additional adjustments in the capital Federal rate
for these factors, other than the proposed budget neutrality factor
for changes in the MS-DRG classifications and relative weights and
for changes in the GAFs.
We are providing the following chart that shows how each of the
proposed factors and adjustments for FY 2018 affects the computation
of the proposed FY 2018 national capital Federal rate in comparison
to the FY 2017 national capital Federal rate. The proposed FY 2018
update factor has the effect of increasing the capital Federal rate
by 1.02[deg] percent compared to the FY 2017 capital Federal rate.
The proposed GAF/DRG budget neutrality adjustment factor has the
effect of decreasing the capital Federal rate by 0.08[deg] percent.
The proposed FY 2018 outlier adjustment factor has the effect of
increasing the capital Federal rate by 0.51 percent compared to the
FY 2017 capital Federal rate. The removal of the one-time 0.6
percent adjustment for FY 2017 relating to the 2-midnight policy has
the effect of decreasing the capital Federal rate by 0.60 percent.
The combined effect of all the proposed changes would increase the
proposed national capital Federal rate by approximately 1.03[deg]
percent compared to the FY 2017 national capital Federal rate.
Comparison of Factors and Adjustments: FY 2017 Capital Federal Rate and FY 2018 Proposed Capital Federal Rate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FY Proposed Proposed percent
FY 2017 2018 change change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Update Factor \1\............................ 1.0090 1.0120 1.0120 1.20
GAF/DRG Adjustment Factor \1\................ 0.9990 0.9992 0.9992 -0.08
Outlier Adjustment Factor \2\................ 0.9386 0.9434 1.0051 0.51
Removal of One-Time 2-Midnight Policy 1.0060 1/1.006 0.9940 -0.6
Adjustment Factor...........................
Capital Federal Rate......................... $446.79 $451.37 1.0103 \3\ 1.03
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The update factor and the GAF/DRG budget neutrality adjustment factors are built permanently into the
capital Federal rates. Thus, for example, the proposed incremental change from FY 2017 to FY 2018 resulting
from the application of the proposed 0.9992 GAF/DRG budget neutrality adjustment factor for FY 2018 is a
proposed net change of 0.9992 (or -0.08 percent).
\2\ The outlier reduction factor is not built permanently into the capital Federal rate; that is, the factor is
not applied cumulatively in determining the capital Federal rate. Thus, for example, the proposed net change
resulting from the application of the proposed FY 2018 outlier adjustment factor is 0.9434/0.9386 or 1.0051
(or 0.51 percent).
\3\ Proposed percent change may not sum due to rounding.
[[Page 20182]]
In this proposed rule, we also are providing the following chart
that shows how the proposed FY 2018 capital Federal rate differs
from the final FY 2017 capital Federal rate as presented in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57291 through 57295) as
corrected in the Correction Notice published October 5, 2016 (81 FR
68954).
Comparison of Factors and Adjustments: Proposed FY 2018 Capital Federal Rate and Final FY 2017 Capital Federal
Rate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FY
Final FY 2017 2018 Change Percent change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Update Factor \1\............................... 1.0090 1.0120 1.0120 1.20
GAF/DRG Adjustment Factor \1\................... 0.9990 0.9992 0.9992 -0.08
Outlier Adjustment Factor \2\................... 0.9386 0.9434 1.0051 0.51
Permanent 2-midnight Policy Adjustment Factor... 1.002 N/A 1.000 0.00
One-Time 2-midnight Policy Adjustment Factor.... 1.006 1/1.006 0.9940 -0.60
Capital Federal Rate............................ $446.79 $451.37 1.0103 1.03
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Calculation of the Inpatient Capital-Related Prospective
Payments for FY 2018
For purposes of calculating payments for each discharge during
FY 2018, the capital Federal rate is adjusted as follows: (Standard
Federal Rate) x (DRG weight) x (GAF) x (COLA for hospitals located
in Alaska and Hawaii) x (1 + DSH Adjustment Factor + IME Adjustment
Factor, if applicable). The result is the adjusted capital Federal
rate.
Hospitals also may receive outlier payments for those cases that
qualify under the thresholds established for each fiscal year.
Section 412.312(c) provides for a single set of thresholds to
identify outlier cases for both inpatient operating and inpatient
capital-related payments. The proposed outlier thresholds for FY
2018 are in section II.A. of this Addendum. For FY 2018, a case
would qualify as a cost outlier if the cost for the case plus the
(operating) IME and DSH payments (including both the empirically
justified Medicare DSH payment and the estimated uncompensated care
payment, as discussed in section II.A.4.g.(1) of this Addendum) is
greater than the prospective payment rate for the MS-DRG plus the
fixed-loss amount of $26,713.
Currently, as provided under Sec. 412.304(c)(2), we pay a new
hospital 85 percent of its reasonable costs during the first 2 years
of operation unless it elects to receive payment based on 100
percent of the capital Federal rate. Effective with the third year
of operation, we pay the hospital based on 100 percent of the
capital Federal rate (that is, the same methodology used to pay all
other hospitals subject to the capital PPS).
C. Capital Input Price Index
1. Background
Like the operating input price index, the capital input price
index (CIPI) is a fixed-weight price index that measures the price
changes associated with capital costs during a given year. The CIPI
differs from the operating input price index in one important
aspect--the CIPI reflects the vintage nature of capital, which is
the acquisition and use of capital over time. Capital expenses in
any given year are determined by the stock of capital in that year
(that is, capital that remains on hand from all current and prior
capital acquisitions). An index measuring capital price changes
needs to reflect this vintage nature of capital. Therefore, the CIPI
was developed to capture the vintage nature of capital by using a
weighted-average of past capital purchase prices up to and including
the current year.
We periodically update the base year for the operating and
capital input price indexes to reflect the changing composition of
inputs for operating and capital expenses. For this FY 2018 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule, we are proposing to rebase and revise the
IPPS operating and capital market baskets to reflect a 2014 base
year. For a complete discussion of this proposed rebasing, we refer
readers to section IV. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
2. Forecast of the CIPI for FY 2018
Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s fourth quarter 2016
forecast, for this proposed rule, we are forecasting the proposed
2014-based CIPI to increase 1.2 percent in FY 2018. This reflects a
projected 1.6 percent increase in vintage-weighted depreciation
prices (building and fixed equipment, and movable equipment), and a
projected 3.2 percent increase in other capital expense prices in FY
2018, partially offset by a projected 1.6 percent decline in
vintage-weighted interest expense prices in FY 2018. The weighted
average of these three factors produces the forecasted 1.2 percent
increase for the proposed 2014-based CIPI in FY 2018.
IV. Proposed Changes to Payment Rates for Excluded Hospitals: Proposed
Rate-of-Increase Percentages for FY 2018
Payments for services furnished in children's hospitals, 11
cancer hospitals, and hospitals located outside the 50 States, the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico (that is, short-term acute care
hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa) that are excluded from the IPPS
are made on the basis of reasonable costs based on the hospital's
own historical cost experience, subject to a rate-of-increase
ceiling. A per discharge limit (the target amount as defined in
Sec. 413.40(a) of the regulations) is set for each hospital based
on the hospital's own cost experience in its base year, and updated
annually by a rate-of-increase percentage. (We note that, in
accordance with Sec. 403.752(a), religious nonmedical health care
institutions (RNHCIs) are also subject to the rate-of-increase
limits established under Sec. 413.40 of the regulations.)
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, the proposed FY
2018 rate-of-increase percentage for updating the target amounts for
the 11 cancer hospitals, children's hospitals, the short-term acute
care hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa, and RNHCIs is the
estimated percentage increase in the IPPS operating market basket
for FY 2018, in accordance with applicable regulations at Sec.
413.40. Based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s 2016 fourth quarter
forecast, we estimate that the proposed 2014-based IPPS operating
market basket update for FY 2018 is 2.9 percent (that is, the
estimate of the market basket rate-of-increase). However, we are
proposing that if more recent data become available for the final
rule, we would use them to calculate the IPPS operating market
basket update for FY 2018. Therefore, for children's hospitals, the
11 cancer hospitals, hospitals located outside the 50 States, the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico (that is, short-term acute care
hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa), and RNHCIs, the proposed FY
2018 rate-of-increase percentage that would be applied to the FY
2017 target amounts in order to determine the FY 2018 target amounts
is 2.9 percent.
The IRF PPS, the IPF PPS, and the LTCH PPS are updated annually.
We refer readers to section VIII. of the preamble of this proposed
rule and section V. of the Addendum to this proposed rule for the
proposed update changes to the Federal payment rates for LTCHs under
the LTCH PPS for FY 2018. The annual updates for the IRF PPS and the
IPF PPS are issued by the agency in separate Federal Register
documents.
V. Proposed Changes to the Payment Rates for the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
A. Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate for 2018
1. Overview
In section VIII. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposed annual updates to the payment rates, factors,
and specific policies under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018.
Under Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(ii) of the regulations, for LTCH PPS
rate years beginning with RY 2004 through RY 2006, we updated the
standard Federal payment rate annually by a factor to adjust for the
most recent estimate of the increases in prices of an appropriate
[[Page 20183]]
market basket of goods and services for LTCHs. We established this
policy of annually updating the standard Federal payment rate
because, at that time, we believed that was the most appropriate
method for updating the rate for years after the initial
implementation of the LTCH PPS in FY 2003. Therefore, under Sec.
412.523(c)(3)(ii), for RYs 2004 through 2006, the annual update to
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate was equal to the previous
rate year's Federal rate updated by the most recent estimate of
increases in the appropriate market basket of goods and services
included in covered inpatient LTCH services.
In determining the annual update to the standard Federal payment
rate for RY 2007, based on our ongoing monitoring activity, we
believed that, rather than solely using the most recent estimate of
the LTCH PPS market basket update as the basis of the annual update
factor, it was appropriate to adjust the standard Federal payment
rate to account for the effect of documentation and coding in a
prior period that was unrelated to patients' severity of illness (71
FR 27818). Accordingly, we established under Sec.
412.523(c)(3)(iii) that the annual update to the standard Federal
payment rate for RY 2007 was zero percent based on the most recent
estimate of the LTCH PPS market basket at that time, offset by an
adjustment to account for changes in case-mix in prior periods due
to the effect of documentation and coding that were unrelated to
patients' severity of illness. For RY 2008 through FY 2011, we also
made an adjustment to account for the effect of documentation and
coding that was unrelated to patients' severity of illness in
establishing the annual update to the standard Federal payment rate
as set forth in the regulations at Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(iv) through
(c)(3)(vii). For FYs 2012 through 2017, we updated the standard
Federal payment rate by the most recent estimate of the LTCH PPS
market basket at that time, including additional statutory
adjustments required by sections 1886(m)(3)(A)(i) (citing sections
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II), 1886(m)(3)(A)(ii), and 1886(m)(4) of the Act
as set forth in the regulations at Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(viii) through
(c)(3)(xiii)).
Section 1886(m)(3)(A) of the Act, as added by section 3401(c) of
the Affordable Care Act, specifies that, for rate year 2010 and each
subsequent rate year, any annual update to the standard Federal
payment rate shall be reduced:
For rate year 2010 through 2019, by the other
adjustment specified in section 1886(m)(3)(A)(ii) and (m)(4) of the
Act; and
For rate year 2012 and each subsequent year, by the
productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act (which we refer to as ``the multifactor productivity
(MFP) adjustment'') as discussed in section VIII.E.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
Section 1886(m)(3)(B) of the Act provides that the application
of paragraph (3) of section 1886(m) of the Act may result in the
annual update being less than zero for a rate year, and may result
in payment rates for a rate year being less than such payment rates
for the preceding rate year. (As noted in section VIII.C.2.b. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, the annual update to the LTCH PPS
occurs on October 1 and we have adopted the term ``fiscal year''
(FY) rather than ``rate year'' (RY) under the LTCH PPS beginning
October 1, 2010. Therefore, for purposes of clarity, when discussing
the annual update for the LTCH PPS, including the provisions of the
Affordable Care Act, we use the term ``fiscal year'' rather than
``rate year'' for 2011 and subsequent years.)
Notwithstanding those provisions, however, section 411(e) of
Public Law 114-10 (the MACRA) requires a 1.0 percent update in FY
2018.
For FY 2017, consistent with our historical practice, we
established an update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
based on the full estimated LTCH PPS market basket increase of 2.8
percent and the 1.05 percentage point reductions required by
sections 1886(m)(3)(A)(i) and 1886(m)(3)(A)(ii) with 1886(m)(4)(F)
of the Act. Accordingly, at Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(xiii) of the
regulations, we established an annual update of 1.75 percent to the
standard Federal payment rate for FY 2017 (81 FR 57296 through
57297). In addition, as discussed in that same final rule, the
annual update for FY 2017 was further reduced by 2.0 percentage
points for LTCHs that failed to submit quality reporting data in
accordance with the requirements of the LTCH QRP under section
1886(m)(5) of the Act.
Section 411(e) of the MACRA amended section 1886(m)(3) of the
Act by providing an additional special rule for FY 2018.
Specifically, as amended, section 1886(m)(3)(C) of the Act requires
that the annual update for FY 2018, after applications of the
reductions for the MFP adjustment and the ``other adjustment''
(under section 1886(m)(3)(A)) is 1 percent. (For additional details,
refer to section VIII.C.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule.)
Accordingly, in this proposed rule, we are proposing an annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of 1.0 percent
for FY 2018 as required by section 411(e)(2) of the MACRA. For LTCHs
that fail to submit the required quality reporting data for FY 2017
in accordance with the LTCH QRP, the annual update is reduced by 2.0
percentage points as required by section 1886(m)(5) of the Act.
Accordingly, we are proposing an annual update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate of -1.0 percent for LTCHs that fail to
submit the required quality reporting data for FY 2018 (that is, the
proposed full update of 1.0 percent and less 2.0 percentage points
for failure to submit quality reporting data as required by section
1886(m)(5) of the Act).
2. Development of the Proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Payment Rate
Consistent with our historical practice, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to apply the annual update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate from the previous year. Furthermore, in
determining the proposed LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for
FY 2018, we also are proposing to make certain regulatory
adjustments, consistent with past practices. Specifically, in
determining the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate, we are proposing to apply a budget neutrality adjustment
factor for the proposed changes related to the area wage adjustment
(that is, proposed changes to the wage data and proposed labor-
related share) in accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(4) and a proposed
budget neutrality adjustment factor for the proposed change to the
SSO payment methodology (discussed in VIII.D. of the preamble of
this proposed rule).
For FY 2017, we established an annual update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate of 1.75 percent based on the full
estimated LTCH PPS market basket increase of 2.8 percent, less the
MFP adjustment of 0.3 percentage point consistent with section
1886(m)(3)(A)(i) of the Act and less the 0.75 percentage point
required by sections 1886(m)(3)(A)(ii) and (m)(4)(F) of the Act.
Accordingly, at Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(xiii), we established an annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2017 of
1.75 percent. That is, we applied an update factor of 1.0175 to the
FY 2016 Federal rate of $41,762.85 to determine the FY 2017 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate. We also applied an area wage level
budget neutrality factor for FY 2017 of 0.999593 to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate to ensure that any changes to the area
wage level adjustment would not result in any change in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS payments. Consequently, we established an LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2017 of $42,476.41
(calculated as $41,762.85 x 1.0175 x 0.999593) (81 FR 57297).
In this proposed rule, as required by statute, we are proposing
an annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of
1.0 percent for FY 2018 (as described above). Accordingly, under
Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(xiii), we are proposing to apply a factor of
1.01 to the FY 2017 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of
$42,476.41 to determine the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate. Also, under proposed Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(iv),
in conjunction with the provisions of Sec. 412.523(c)(4), we are
proposing to apply an annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate of -1.0 percent (that is, a proposed update factor of
0.99) for FY 2018 for LTCHs that fail to submit the required quality
reporting data for FY 2018 as required under the LTCH QRP.
Consistent with Sec. 412.523(d)(4), we also are proposing to apply
an area wage level budget neutrality factor to the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of 1.000077, based on the
best available data at this time, to ensure that any proposed
changes to the area wage level adjustment (that is, the proposed
annual update of the wage index values and labor-related share)
would not result in any change (increase or decrease) in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS standard Federal rate payments. Finally, we are
proposing a budget neutrality adjustment of 0.9672 for our proposed
changes to the SSO payment methodology (discussed in VIII.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule). Accordingly, we are proposing an
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of $41,497.20 (calculated as
$42,476.41 x 1.01 x 1.000077
[[Page 20184]]
x 0.9672) for FY 2018. For LTCHs that fail to submit quality
reporting data for FY 2018, in accordance with the requirements of
the LTCHQRP under section 1886(m)(5) of the Act, we are proposing an
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of $40,675.49 (calculated as
$42,476.41 x 0.99 x 1.000077 x 0.9672) for FY 2018.
B. Proposed Adjustment for Area Wage Levels Under the LTCH PPS for
FY 2018
1. Background
Under the authority of section 123 of the BBRA, as amended by
section 307(b) of the BIPA, we established an adjustment to the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate to account for differences in LTCH
area wage levels under Sec. 412.525(c). The labor-related share of
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate is adjusted to account
for geographic differences in area wage levels by applying the
applicable LTCH PPS wage index. The applicable LTCH PPS wage index
is computed using wage data from inpatient acute care hospitals
without regard to reclassification under section 1886(d)(8) or
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
When we implemented the LTCH PPS, we established a 5-year
transition to the full area wage level adjustment. The area wage
level adjustment was completely phased-in for cost reporting periods
beginning in FY 2007. Therefore, for cost reporting periods
beginning on or after October 1, 2006, the applicable LTCH area wage
index values are the full LTCH PPS area wage index values calculated
based on acute care hospital inpatient wage index data without
taking into account geographic reclassification under section
1886(d)(8) and section 1886(d)(10) of the Act. For additional
information on the phase-in of the area wage level adjustment under
the LTCH PPS, we refer readers to the August 30, 2002 LTCH PPS final
rule (67 FR 56015 through 56019) and the RY 2008 LTCH PPS final rule
(72 FR 26891).
2. Proposed Geographic Classifications (Labor Market Areas) for the
LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
In adjusting for the differences in area wage levels under the
LTCH PPS, the labor-related portion of an LTCH's Federal prospective
payment is adjusted by using an appropriate area wage index based on
the geographic classification (labor market area) in which the LTCH
is located. Specifically, the application of the LTCH PPS area wage
level adjustment under existing Sec. 412.525(c) is made based on
the location of the LTCH--either in an ``urban area,'' or a ``rural
area,'' as defined in Sec. 412.503. Under Sec. 412.503, an ``urban
area'' is defined as a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) (which
includes a Metropolitan division, where applicable), as defined by
the Executive OMB and a ``rural area'' is defined as any area
outside of an urban area. (Information on OMB's MSA delineations
based on the 2010 standards can be found at: //www.obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/fedreg_2010/06282010_metro_standards-Complete.pdf).
The CBSA-based geographic classifications (labor market area
definitions) currently used under the LTCH PPS, effective for
discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2014, are based on the
OMB labor market area delineations based on the 2010 Decennial
Census data. The current statistical areas (which were implemented
beginning with FY 2015) are based on revised OMB delineations issued
on February 28, 2013, in OMB Bulletin No. 13-01. We adopted these
labor market area delineations because they are based on the best
available data that reflect the local economies and area wage levels
of the hospitals that are currently located in these geographic
areas. We also believe that these OMB delineations will ensure that
the LTCH PPS area wage level adjustment most appropriately accounts
for and reflects the relative hospital wage levels in the geographic
area of the hospital as compared to the national average hospital
wage level. We noted that this policy was consistent with the IPPS
policy adopted in FY 2015 under Sec. 412.64(b)(1)(ii)(D) of the
regulations (79 FR 49951 through 49963). (For additional information
on the CBSA-based labor market area (geographic classification)
delineations currently used under the LTCH PPS and the history of
the labor market area definitions used under the LTCH PPS, we refer
readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50180 through
50185).)
In general, it is our historical practice to update the CBSA-
based labor market area delineations annually based on the most
recent updates issued by OMB. Generally, OMB issues major revisions
to statistical areas every 10 years, based on the results of the
decennial census. However, OMB occasionally issues minor updates and
revisions to statistical areas in the years between the decennial
censuses. As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 56913 through 56914), OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 on July
15, 2015 to update and supersede Bulletin No. 13-10. Bulletin No.
15-01 and its attachment provide detailed information on the update
to statistical areas since the February 28, 2013 release of Bulletin
No. 13-10 and are based on the application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas to
Census Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2012, and July 1,
2013. A copy of this bulletin may be obtained on the Web site at:
//obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/omb/bulletins/2015/15-01.pdf.
We believe that these revisions to the CBSA-based labor market
area delineations will ensure that the LTCH PPS area wage level
adjustment most appropriately accounts for and reflects the relative
hospital wage levels in the geographic area of the hospital as
compared to the national average hospital wage level based on the
best available data that reflect the local economies and area wage
levels of the hospitals that are currently located in these
geographic areas (81 FR 57298). Therefore, we are proposing to
continue to use the CSBA-based labor market area delineations
adopted under the LTCH PPS, effective October 1, 2017 (as adopted in
the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57298)). Moreover, the
proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS wage index values in Tables 12A and 12B
listed in section VI. of the Addendum of this proposed rule (which
are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site) reflect the
revisions to the CBSA-based labor market area delineations described
above. We note that, as discussed in section III.A.2. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, the revisions to the CBSA-based
delineations also were adopted under the IPPS, effective beginning
October 1, 2016.
3. Proposed Labor-Related Share for the LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Payment Rate
Under the payment adjustment for the differences in area wage
levels under Sec. 412.525(c), the labor-related share of an LTCH's
standard Federal payment rate payment is adjusted by the applicable
wage index for the labor market area in which the LTCH is located.
The LTCH PPS labor-related share currently represents the sum of the
labor-related portion of operating costs (Wages and Salaries;
Employee Benefits; Professional Fees Labor-Related; Administrative
and Business Support Services; and All-Other: Labor-Related
Services) and a labor-related portion of capital costs using the
applicable LTCH PPS market basket. Additional background information
on the historical development of the labor-related share under the
LTCH PPS can be found in the RY 2007 LTCH PPS final rule (71 FR
27810 through 27817 and 27829 through 27830) and the FY 2012 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51766 through 51769 and 51808).
For FY 2013, we revised and rebased the market basket used under
the LTCH PPS by adopting the newly created FY 2009-based LTCH-
specific market basket. In addition, beginning in FY 2013, we
determined the labor-related share annually as the sum of the
relative importance of each labor-related cost category of the 2009-
based LTCH-specific market basket for the respective fiscal year
based on the best available data. (For more details, we refer
readers to the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53477 through
53479).) As noted previously, we rebased and revised the 2009-based
LTCH-specific market basket to reflect a 2013 base year. In
conjunction with that policy, as discussed in section VIII.C. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to establish that
the LTCH PPS labor-related share for FY 2018 is the sum of the FY
2018 relative importance of each labor-related cost category in the
2013-based LTCH market basket using the most recent available data.
Specifically, we are proposing to establish that the labor-related
share for FY 2018 would include the sum of the labor-related portion
of operating costs from the 2013-based LTCH market basket (that is,
the sum of the FY 2018 relative importance share of Wages and
Salaries; Employee Benefits; Professional Fees: Labor-Related;
Administrative and Facilities Support Services; Installation,
Maintenance, and Repair Services; All Other: Labor-related Services)
and a portion of the Capital-Related cost weight from the 2013-based
LTCH PPS market basket. Based on IGI's fourth quarter 2016 forecast
of the 2013-based LTCH market basket, we are proposing to establish
a labor-related share under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018 of 66.3
percent. This labor-related share is determined using the same
methodology as employed in calculating all previous LTCH
[[Page 20185]]
PPS labor-related shares. Consistent with our historical practice,
we also are proposing that if more recent data become available, we
would use that data, if appropriate, to determine the final FY 2018
labor-related share in the final rule.
The proposed labor-related share for FY 2018 is the sum of the
FY 2018 relative importance of each labor-related cost category, and
would reflect the different rates of price change for these cost
categories between the base year (2013) and FY 2018. The sum of the
relative importance for FY 2018 for operating costs (Wages and
Salaries; Employee Benefits; Professional Fees: Labor-Related;
Administrative and Facilities Support Services; Installation,
Maintenance, and Repair Services; All Other: Labor-Related Services)
is 62.1 percent. The portion of capital-related costs that is
influenced by the local labor market is estimated to be 46 percent
(the same percentage applied to the 2009-based LTCH-specific market
basket). Because the relative importance for capital-related costs
under our policies is 9.2 percent of the 2013-based LTCH market
basket in FY 2018, we are proposing to take 46 percent of 9.2
percent to determine the labor-related share of capital-related
costs for FY 2018 (0.46 x 9.2). The result is 4.2 percent, which we
added to 62.1 percent for the operating cost amount to determine the
total proposed labor-related share for FY 2018. Therefore, we are
proposing that the labor-related share under the LTCH PPS for FY
2018 is 66.3 percent.
4. Proposed Wage Index for FY 2018 for the LTCH PPS Standard Federal
Payment Rate
Historically, we have established LTCH PPS area wage index
values calculated from acute care IPPS hospital wage data without
taking into account geographic reclassification under sections
1886(d)(8) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act (67 FR 56019). The area wage
level adjustment established under the LTCH PPS is based on an
LTCH's actual location without regard to the ``urban'' or ``rural''
designation of any related or affiliated provider.
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57299 through
57301), we calculated the FY 2017 LTCH PPS area wage index values
using the same data used for the FY 2017 acute care hospital IPPS
(that is, data from cost reporting periods beginning during FY
2013), without taking into account geographic reclassification under
sections 1886(d)(8) and 1886(d)(10) of the Act, as these were the
most recent complete data available at that time. In that same final
rule, we indicated that we computed the FY 2017 LTCH PPS area wage
index values, consistent with the urban and rural geographic
classifications (labor market areas) that were in place at that time
and consistent with the pre-reclassified IPPS wage index policy
(that is, our historical policy of not taking into account IPPS
geographic reclassifications in determining payments under the LTCH
PPS). As with the IPPS wage index, wage data for multicampus
hospitals with campuses located in different labor market areas
(CBSAs) are apportioned to each CBSA where the campus (or campuses)
are located. We also continued to use our existing policy for
determining area wage index values for areas where there are no IPPS
wage data.
Consistent with our historical methodology, as discussed in this
FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, to determine the applicable
area wage index values for the FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate, under the broad authority of section 123 of the BBRA,
as amended by section 307(b) of the BIPA, we are proposing to use
wage data collected from cost reports submitted by IPPS hospitals
for cost reporting periods beginning during FY 2014, without taking
into account geographic reclassification under sections 1886(d)(8)
and 1886(d)(10) of the Act, because these data are the most recent
complete data available. We also note that these are the same data
we are using to compute the FY 2018 acute care hospital inpatient
wage index, as discussed in section III. of the preamble of this
proposed rule. We are proposing to compute the proposed FY 2018 LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate area wage index values consistent
with the ``urban'' and ``rural'' geographic classifications (that
is, labor market area delineations, including the proposed updates,
as previously discussed in section V.B. of this Addendum) and our
historical policy of not taking into account IPPS geographic
reclassifications under sections 1886(d)(8) and 1886(d)(10) of the
Act in determining payments under the LTCH PPS. We also are
proposing to continue to apportion wage data for multicampus
hospitals with campuses located in different labor market areas to
each CBSA where the campus or campuses are located, consistent with
the IPPS policy. Lastly, consistent with our existing methodology
for determining the LTCH PPS wage index values, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to continue to use our existing policy for determining
area wage index values for areas where there are no IPPS wage data.
Under our existing methodology, the LTCH PPS wage index value for
urban CBSAs with no IPPS wage data would be determined by using an
average of all of the urban areas within the State and the LTCH PPS
wage index value for rural areas with no IPPS wage data would be
determined by using the unweighted average of the wage indices from
all of the CBSAs that are contiguous to the rural counties of the
State.
Based on the FY 2014 IPPS wage data that we are proposing to use
to determine the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate area wage index values in this proposed rule, there are no IPPS
wage data for the urban area of Hinesville, GA (CBSA 25980).
Consistent with the methodology discussed above, we calculated the
proposed FY 2018 wage index value for CBSA 25980 as the average of
the wage index values for all of the other urban areas within the
state of Georgia (that is, CBSAs 10500, 12020, 12060, 12260, 15260,
16860, 17980, 19140, 23580, 31420, 40660, 42340, 46660 and 47580),
as shown in Table 12A, which is listed in section VI. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule and available via the Internet on the
CMS Web site). We note that, as IPPS wage data are dynamic, it is
possible that urban areas without IPPS wage data will vary in the
future.
Based on the FY 2014 IPPS wage data that we are proposing to use
to determine the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate area wage index values in this proposed rule, there are no
rural areas without IPPS hospital wage data. Therefore, it is not
necessary to use our established methodology to calculate a proposed
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate wage index value for proposed
rural areas with no IPPS wage data for FY 2018. We note that, as
IPPS wage data are dynamic, it is possible that the number of rural
areas without IPPS wage data will vary in the future. The proposed
FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate wage index values
that would be applicable for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2017, through September
30, 2018, are presented in Table 12A (for urban areas) and Table 12B
(for rural areas), which are listed in section VI. of the Addendum
of this proposed rule and available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site.
5. Proposed Budget Neutrality Adjustment for Proposed Changes to the
LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate Area Wage Level Adjustment
Historically, the LTCH PPS wage index and labor-related share
are updated annually based on the latest available data. Under Sec.
412.525(c)(2), any changes to the area wage index values or labor-
related share are to be made in a budget neutral manner such that
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments are unaffected; that is, will
be neither greater than nor less than estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments without such changes to the area wage level adjustment.
Under this policy, we determine an area wage-level adjustment budget
neutrality factor that will be applied to the standard Federal
payment rate to ensure that any changes to the area wage level
adjustments are budget neutral such that any changes to the area
wage index values or labor-related share would not result in any
change (increase or decrease) in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments. Accordingly, under Sec. 412.523(d)(4), we apply an area
wage level adjustment budget neutrality factor in determining the
standard Federal payment rate, and we also established a methodology
for calculating an area wage level adjustment budget neutrality
factor. (For additional information on the establishment of our
budget neutrality policy for changes to the area wage level
adjustment, we refer readers to the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(76 FR 51771 through 51773 and 51809).)
In this proposed rule, for FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases, in accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(4), we are
proposing to apply an area wage level adjustment budget neutrality
factor to adjust the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate to
account for the estimated effect of the proposed adjustments or
updates to the area wage level adjustment under Sec. 412.525(c)(1)
on estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments using a methodology that is
consistent with the methodology we established in the FY 2012 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51773). Specifically, we are proposing to
determine an area wage level adjustment
[[Page 20186]]
budget neutrality factor that would be applied to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate under Sec. 412.523(d)(4) for FY 2018
using the following methodology:
Step 1--We simulated estimated aggregate LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate payments using the FY 2017 wage index values
and the FY 2017 labor-related share of 66.5 percent (as established
in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57099 and 57100)).
Step 2--We simulated estimated aggregate LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate payments using the proposed FY 2018 wage index
values (as shown in Tables 12A and 12B listed in the Addendum to
this proposed rule and available via the Internet on the CMS Web
site) and the proposed FY 2018 labor-related share of 66.3 percent
(based on the latest available data as previously discussed in this
Addendum).
Step 3--We calculated the ratio of these estimated total LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate payments by dividing the estimated
total LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments using the FY
2017 area wage level adjustments (calculated in Step 1) by the
estimated total LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments
using the proposed FY 2018 area wage level adjustments (calculated
in Step 2) to determine the proposed area wage level adjustment
budget neutrality factor for FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate payments.
Step 4--We then applied the proposed FY 2018 area wage level
adjustment budget neutrality factor from Step 3 to determine the
proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate after the
application of the proposed FY 2018 annual update (discussed
previously in section V.A. of this Addendum).
We note that, with the exception of cases subject to the
transitional blend payment rate provisions in the first 2 years and
certain temporary exemptions for certain spinal cord specialty
hospitals and certain severe wound cases, under the dual rate LTCH
PPS payment structure, only LTCH PPS cases that meet the statutory
criteria to be excluded from the site neutral payment rate (that is,
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases) are paid based on the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate. Because the area wage level
adjustment under Sec. 412.525(c) is an adjustment to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate, we only used data from claims that
would have qualified for payment at the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate if such rate had been in effect at the time of
discharge to calculate the FY 2017 LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate area wage level adjustment budget neutrality factor described
above.
For this proposed rule, using the steps in the methodology
previously described, we determined a proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate area wage level adjustment budget
neutrality factor of 1.000077. Accordingly, in section V.A. of the
Addendum to this proposed rule, to determine the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate, we are proposing to apply an
area wage level adjustment budget neutrality factor of 1.000077, in
accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(4). The proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate shown in Table 1E of the Addendum to
this proposed rule reflects this adjustment factor.
C. Proposed Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) for LTCHs Located in
Alaska and Hawaii
Under Sec. 412.525(b), a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) is
provided for LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii to account for the
higher costs incurred in those States. Specifically, we apply a COLA
to payments to LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii by multiplying the
nonlabor-related portion of the standard Federal payment rate by the
applicable COLA factors established annually by CMS. Higher labor-
related costs for LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii are taken into
account in the adjustment for area wage levels previously described.
Under our current methodology, we update the COLA factors for
Alaska and Hawaii every 4 years (at the same time as the update to
the labor-related share of the IPPS market basket) (77 FR 53712
through 53713). This methodology is based on a comparison of the
growth in the Consumer Price Indexes (CPIs) for Anchorage, Alaska,
and Honolulu, Hawaii, relative to the growth in the CPI for the
average U.S. city as published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS). It also includes a 25-percent cap on the CPI-updated COLA
factors. Under our current policy, we update the COLA factors using
the methodology described above every 4 years; the first year began
in FY 2014. For FY 2014, we updated the COLA factors for Alaska and
Hawaii published by OPM for 2009 using the methodology finalized in
FY 2013. (For additional details on our current methodology for
updating the COLA factors for Alaska and Hawaii, we refer readers to
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53481 through 53482).)
As discussed in this proposed rule, we continue to believe that
determining updated COLA factors using this methodology would
appropriately adjust the nonlabor-related portion of the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for LTCHs located in Alaska and
Hawaii.
For FY 2018, we are proposing to continue to update the COLA
factors published by OPM for 2009 (as these are the last COLA
factors OPM published prior to transitioning from COLAs to locality
pay) using the methodology that we finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule and implemented for the FY 2014 IPPS update.
Specifically, we are proposing to update the 2009 OPM COLA factors
by a comparison of the growth in the Consumer Price Indices (CPIs)
for Anchorage, Alaska, and Honolulu, Hawaii, relative to the growth
in the CPI for the average U.S. city as published by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS). Because BLS publishes CPI data for only
Anchorage and Honolulu, using the methodology we finalized in the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we use the comparison of the growth
in the overall CPI relative to the growth in the CPI for those
cities to update the COLA factors for all areas in Alaska and
Hawaii, respectively. We believe that the relative price differences
between these cities and the U.S. (as measured by the CPIs mentioned
above) are appropriate proxies for the relative price differences
between the ``other areas'' of Alaska and Hawaii and the United
States.
BLS publishes the CPI for All Items for Anchorage, Honolulu, and
for the average U.S. city. However, consistent with our methodology
finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we are creating
reweighted CPIs for each of the respective areas to reflect the
underlying composition of the IPPS market basket nonlabor-related
share. The current composition of the CPI for All Items for all of
the respective areas is approximately 40 percent commodities and 60
percent services. However, the IPPS nonlabor-related share is
comprised of a different mix of commodities and services. Therefore,
we create reweighted indexes for Anchorage, Honolulu, and the
average U.S. city using the respective CPI commodities index and CPI
services index using the approximate 55 percent commodities/45
percent services shares obtained from the proposed 2014-based IPPS
market basket. We create reweighted indexes using BLS data for 2009
through 2016--the most recent data available at the time of this
proposed rulemaking. In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR
50985 through 50987), we created reweighted indexes based on the FY
2010-based IPPS market basket (which was adopted for the FY 2014
update) and BLS data for 2009 through 2012 (the most recent BLS data
at the time of the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS rulemaking).
We continue to believe this methodology is appropriate because
we continue to make a COLA for LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii by
multiplying the nonlabor-related portion of the LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate by a COLA factor. We note that OPM's COLA factors were
calculated with a statutorily mandated cap of 25 percent. As stated
in the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50987), when
developing the COLA update methodology we finalized in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH final rule, we exercised our discretionary authority to
adjust payments to LTCHs in Alaska and Hawaii by incorporating this
cap. In applying this finalized methodology for updating the COLA
factors, our proposal for FY 2018 continues to use a 25-percent cap,
as our proposal is based on OPM's COLA factors (updated by the
methodology described earlier).
Applying this methodology, the COLA factors that we are
proposing to establish for FY 2018 to adjust the nonlabor related
portion of the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for LTCHs located in
Alaska and Hawaii are shown in the table below. For comparison
purposes, we also are showing the FY 2013 COLA factors (which were
based on OPM's published COLA factors for 2009) and the COLA factors
for FYs 2014 through 2017.
[[Page 20187]]
Proposed Cost-of-Living Adjustment Factors for Alaska and Hawaii Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2014
Area FY 2013 through FY Proposed FY
2017 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska:
City of Anchorage and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road. 1.23 1.23 1.25
City of Fairbanks and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road. 1.23 1.23 1.25
City of Juneau and 80-kilometer (50-mile) radius by road.... 1.23 1.23 1.25
Rest of Alaska.............................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
Hawaii:
City and County of Honolulu................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
County of Hawaii............................................ 1.18 1.19 1.21
County of Kauai............................................. 1.25 1.25 1.25
County of Maui and County of Kalawao........................ 1.25 1.25 1.25
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that the reweighted CPI for Honolulu, HI grew faster
than the reweighted CPI for the average U.S. city over the 2009 to
2016 time period at 13.7 percent and 10.5 percent, respectively. As
a result, for FY 2018, we calculated COLA factors for the City and
County of Honolulu, County of Kauai, and County of Maui and County
of Kalawao to be 1.29 compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.25
(which were based on OPM's published COLA factors for 2009, as
described above). However, as stated above, we are applying our
methodology as finalized in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH final rule to
incorporate a cap of 1.25 for these areas. In addition, the proposed
COLA factor we calculated for the County of Hawaii for FY 2018 is
1.21 compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.18. The COLA factors
adopted in FY 2014 using this same methodology can be found in the
table above.
Similarly, the reweighted CPI for Anchorage, AK grew faster than
the reweighted CPI for the average U.S. city over the 2009 to 2016
time period, at 12.4 percent and 10.5 percent, respectively. As a
result, for FY 2018, we calculated proposed COLA factors for the
City of Anchorage, City of Fairbanks, and City of Juneau to be 1.25
compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.23. For FY 2018, we
calculated a proposed COLA factor of 1.27 for the Rest of Alaska
compared to the FY 2013 COLA factor of 1.25. However, as stated
above, we are applying our methodology as finalized in the FY 2013
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to incorporate a cap of 1.25 for the rest
of Alaska.
As stated above, the COLA factors adopted in the FY 2014 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule were based on the same methodology used to
determine the proposed FY 2018 COLA factors but utilizing BLS data
from 2009 through 2012 (the most recent data available at the time
of the FY 2014 rulemaking) rather than through 2016 (the most recent
data available at the time of this rulemaking). Compared to the FY
2014 COLA factors, the proposed FY 2018 COLA factors are higher--
with all areas either reaching or exceeding the cap of 1.25 except
the County of Hawaii.
D. Proposed Adjustment for LTCH PPS High-Cost Outlier (HCO) Cases
1. HCO Background
From the beginning of the LTCH PPS, we have included an
adjustment to account for cases in which there are extraordinarily
high costs relative to the costs of most discharges. Under this
policy, additional payments are made based on the degree to which
the estimated cost of a case (which is calculated by multiplying the
Medicare allowable covered charge by the hospital's overall hospital
CCR) exceeds a fixed-loss amount. This policy results in greater
payment accuracy under the LTCH PPS and the Medicare program, and
the LTCH sharing the financial risk for the treatment of
extraordinarily high-cost cases.
We retained the basic tenets of our HCO policy in FY 2016 when
we implemented the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure under
section 1206 of Public Law 113-67. LTCH discharges that meet the
criteria for exclusion from the site neutral payment rate (that is,
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases) are paid at the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate, which includes, as applicable,
HCO payments under Sec. 412.523(e). LTCH discharges that do not
meet the criteria for exclusion are paid at the site neutral payment
rate, which includes, as applicable, HCO payments under Sec.
412.522(c)(2)(i). In the same rule, we established separate fixed-
loss amounts and targets for the two different LTCH PPS payment
rates. Under this bifurcated policy, the historic 8 percent HCO
target was retained for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases, with the fixed-loss amount calculated using only data from
LTCH cases that would have been paid at the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate if that rate had been in effect at the time of
those discharges. For site neutral payment rate cases, we adopted
the operating IPPS HCO target (currently 5.1 percent) and set the
fixed-loss amount for site neutral payment rate cases at the value
of the IPPS fixed-loss amount. Under the HCO policy for both payment
rates, an LTCH receives 80 percent of the difference between the
estimated cost of the case and the applicable HCO threshold, which
is the sum of the LTCH PPS payment for the case and the applicable
fixed-loss amount for such case.
In order to maintain budget neutrality, consistent with the
budget neutrality requirement for HCO payments to LTCH PPS standard
Federal rate payment cases, we also adopted a budget neutrality
requirement for HCO payments to site neutral payment rate cases by
applying a budget neutrality factor to the LTCH PPS payment for
those site neutral payment rate cases. (We refer readers to Sec.
412.522(c)(2)(i) of the regulations for further details.) We note
that, during the 2-year transitional period, the site neutral
payment rate HCO budget neutrality factor did not apply to the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate portion of the blended rate at
Sec. 412.522(c)(3) payable to site neutral payment rate cases. (For
additional details on the HCO policy adopted for site neutral
payment rate cases under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure,
including the budget neutrality adjustment for HCO payments to site
neutral payment rate cases, we refer readers to the FY 2016 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49617 through 49623).)
2. Determining LTCH CCRs Under the LTCH PPS
a. Background
As noted above, CCRs are used to determine payments for HCO
adjustments for both payment rates under the LTCH PPS, and also are
currently used to determine payments for SSO cases under Sec.
412.529 as well as payments for site neutral payment rate cases. (We
note that the provisions of Sec. 412.529 are only applicable to
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases). However, if our
proposed SSO payment method is finalized, CCRs would no longer be
used to determine the payment adjustment for SSO cases. Therefore,
if our proposed SSO policies are finalized, this discussion would no
longer be relevant to all HCO and site neutral payment rate
calculations.
As noted earlier, currently in determining HCO, SSO, and the
site neutral payment rate (regardless of whether the case is also an
HCO) payments, we generally calculate the estimated cost of the case
by multiplying the LTCH's overall CCR by the Medicare allowable
charges for the case. An overall CCR is used because the LTCH PPS
uses a single prospective payment per discharge that covers both
inpatient operating and capital-related costs. The LTCH's overall
CCR is generally computed based on the sum of LTCH operating and
capital costs (as described in Section 150.24, Chapter 3, of the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual (Pub. 100-4)) as compared to total
Medicare charges (that is, the sum of its operating and capital
inpatient routine and ancillary charges), with those values
determined from either the most recently settled cost report or the
most recent tentatively settled cost report,
[[Page 20188]]
whichever is from the latest cost reporting period. However, in
certain instances, we use an alternative CCR, such as the statewide
average CCR, a CCR that is specified by CMS, or one that is
requested by the hospital. (We refer readers to Sec.
412.525(a)(4)(iv) of the regulations for further details regarding
HCO adjustments for either LTCH PPS payment rate, Sec.
412.529(f)(4) for SSO adjustments under the current policy, and
Sec. 412.522(c)(1)(ii) for the site neutral payment rate,
respectively.)
The LTCH's calculated CCR is then compared to the LTCH total CCR
ceiling. Under our established policy, an LTCH with a calculated CCR
in excess of the applicable maximum CCR threshold (that is, the LTCH
total CCR ceiling, which is calculated as 3 standard deviations from
the national geometric average CCR) is generally assigned the
applicable statewide CCR. This policy is premised on a belief that
calculated CCRs above the LTCH total CCR ceiling are most likely due
to faulty data reporting or entry, and CCRs based on erroneous data
should not be used to identify and make payments for outlier cases.
b. LTCH Total CCR Ceiling
Consistent with our historical practice, we are proposing to use
the most recent data to determine the LTCH total CCR ceiling for FY
2018 in this proposed rule. Specifically, in this proposed rule,
using our established methodology for determining the LTCH total CCR
ceiling based on IPPS total CCR data from the December 2016 update
of the Provider Specific File (PSF), which is the most recent data
available, we are proposing to establish an LTCH total CCR ceiling
of 1.276 under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018 in accordance with Sec.
412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2) for HCO cases under either payment rate and
Sec. 412.522(c)(1)(ii) for the site neutral payment rate. Also,
consistent with our historical practice, we are proposing that if
more recent data become available, we would use it to establish the
LTCH total CCR ceiling for FY 2018 in the final rule. (For
additional information on our methodology for determining the LTCH
total CCR ceiling, we refer readers to the FY 2007 IPPS final rule
(71 FR 48118 through 48119).)
c. LTCH Statewide Average CCRs
Our general methodology for determining the statewide average
CCRs used under the LTCH PPS is similar to our established
methodology for determining the LTCH total CCR ceiling because it is
based on ``total'' IPPS CCR data. (For additional information on our
methodology for determining statewide average CCRs under the LTCH
PPS, we refer readers to the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119
through 48120).) Under the LTCH PPS HCO policy for cases paid under
either payment rate at Sec. 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(C)(2), the current
SSO policy at Sec. 412.529(f)(4)(iii)(B), and the site neutral
payment rate at Sec. 412.522(c)(1)(ii), the MAC may use a statewide
average CCR, which is established annually by CMS, if it is unable
to determine an accurate CCR for an LTCH in one of the following
circumstances: (1) New LTCHs that have not yet submitted their first
Medicare cost report (a new LTCH is defined as an entity that has
not accepted assignment of an existing hospital's provider agreement
in accordance with Sec. 489.18); (2) LTCHs whose calculated CCR is
in excess of the LTCH total CCR ceiling; and (3) other LTCHs for
whom data with which to calculate a CCR are not available (for
example, missing or faulty data). (Other sources of data that the
MAC may consider in determining an LTCH's CCR include data from a
different cost reporting period for the LTCH, data from the cost
reporting period preceding the period in which the hospital began to
be paid as an LTCH (that is, the period of at least 6 months that it
was paid as a short-term, acute care hospital), or data from other
comparable LTCHs, such as LTCHs in the same chain or in the same
region.)
Consistent with our historical practice of using the best
available data, in this proposed rule, using our established
methodology for determining the LTCH statewide average CCRs, based
on the most recent complete IPPS ``total CCR'' data from the
December 2016 update of the PSF, we are proposing to establish LTCH
PPS statewide average total CCRs for urban and rural hospitals that
would be effective for discharges occurring on or after October 1,
2017, through September 30, 2018, in Table 8C listed in section VI.
of the Addendum to this proposed rule (and available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site). Consistent with our historical
practice, we also are proposing that if more recent data become
available, we would use that data to determine the LTCH PPS
statewide average total CCRs for FY 2018 in the final rule.
Under the current LTCH PPS labor market areas, all areas in
Delaware, the District of Columbia, New Jersey, and Rhode Island are
classified as urban. Therefore, there are no rural statewide average
total CCRs listed for those jurisdictions in Table 8C. This policy
is consistent with the policy that we established when we revised
our methodology for determining the applicable LTCH statewide
average CCRs in the FY 2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48119 through
48121) and is the same as the policy applied under the IPPS. In
addition, although Connecticut has areas that are designated as
rural, in our calculation of the LTCH statewide average CCRs, there
was no data available from short-term, acute care IPPS hospitals to
compute a rural statewide average CCR or there were no short-term,
acute care IPPS hospitals or LTCHs located in that area as of
December 2016. Therefore, consistent with our existing methodology,
we are proposing to use the national average total CCR for rural
IPPS hospitals for rural Connecticut in Table 8C. While
Massachusetts also has rural areas, the statewide average CCR for
rural areas in Massachusetts is based on one provider whose CCR is
an atypical 1.222. Because this is much higher than the statewide
urban average of 0.466 and furthermore implies costs exceeded
charges, as with Connecticut, we are proposing to use the national
average total CCR for rural hospitals for hospitals located in rural
Massachusetts. Furthermore, consistent with our existing
methodology, in determining the urban and rural statewide average
total CCRs for Maryland LTCHs paid under the LTCH PPS, we are
proposing to continue to use, as a proxy, the national average total
CCR for urban IPPS hospitals and the national average total CCR for
rural IPPS hospitals, respectively. We are using this proxy because
we believe that the CCR data in the PSF for Maryland hospitals may
not be entirely accurate (as discussed in greater detail in the FY
2007 IPPS final rule (71 FR 48120)).
d. Reconciliation of HCO and SSO Payments
Under the HCO policy for cases paid under either payment rate at
Sec. 412.525(a)(4)(iv)(D) and the current SSO policy at Sec.
412.529(f)(4)(iv), the payments for HCO and SSO cases are subject to
reconciliation. Specifically, any such payments are reconciled at
settlement based on the CCR that is calculated based on the cost
report coinciding with the discharge. However, under our proposed
changes to the SSO payment methodology discussed in section VIII.D.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to remove
estimated cost as a consideration for payment to SSO cases. As such,
consistent with our proposed changes to the SSO payment methodology,
we are proposing that SSO payments would no longer be subject to
reconciliation. Specifically, we are proposing to revise paragraph
(f) of Sec. 412.529 to specify that SSO payments would be
reconciled only for discharges occurring before October 1, 2017. We
note that this proposal is dependent upon adoption of our proposed
SSO payment methodology, and if those changes are not finalized, we
would not finalize this proposal either.
For additional information on the reconciliation policy, we
refer readers to Sections 150.26 through 150.28 of the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual (Pub. 100-4), as added by Change Request
7192 (Transmittal 2111; December 3, 2010), and the RY 2009 LTCH PPS
final rule (73 FR 26820 through 26821).
3. High-Cost Outlier Payments for LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment
Rate Cases
a. Proposed Changes to High-Cost Outlier Payments for LTCH PPS Standard
Federal Payment Rate Cases
When we implemented the LTCH PPS, we established a fixed-loss
amount so that total estimated outlier payments are projected to
equal 8 percent of total estimated payments under the LTCH PPS (67
FR 56022 through 56026). Furthermore, Sec. 412.523(d)(1) requires
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate be adjusted by a
reduction factor of 8 percent, the estimated proportion of outlier
payments under Sec. 412.525(a) payable to LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases. Section 15004(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act
(Pub. L. 114-255) amended section 1886(m) of the Act by adding new
paragraph (7), which specifies certain treatment of HCO payments for
fiscal years beginning on or after October 1, 2017 (FY 2018).
Specifically, section 1886(m)(7)(A) of the Act requires, beginning
in FY 2018, that the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate be
reduced as if estimated HCO payments for standard Federal payment
rate cases would be equal to 8 percent of estimated aggregate
payments for standard Federal payment rate cases for
[[Page 20189]]
a given year. In other words, section 1886(m)(7)(A) of the Act makes
our existing regulatory budget neutrality requirement at Sec.
412.523(d)(1) for the 8 percent HCO target for standard Federal
payment rate cases a statutory requirement beginning in FY 2018. In
addition, section 1886(m)(7)(B) of the Act requires, beginning in FY
2018, that the fixed-loss amount for HCO payments for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases be determined so that the
estimated aggregate amount of HCO payments for such cases in a given
year are equal to 99.6875 percent of the 8 percent estimated
aggregate payments for standard Federal payment rate cases (that is,
7.975 percent). In other words, sections 1886(m)(7)(A) and (7)(B)
require that we adjust the standard Federal payment rate each year
to ensure budget neutrality for HCO payments as if estimated
aggregate HCO payments made for standard Federal payment rate
discharges remain at 8 percent, while the fixed-loss amount for the
HCO payments is set each year so that the estimated aggregate HCO
payments for standard Federal payment rate cases are 7.975 percent
of estimated aggregate payments for standard Federal payment rate
cases.
More specifically, section 1886(m)(7)(A) of the Act stipulates
that, for fiscal years beginning on or after October 1, 2017, the
Secretary shall reduce the standard Federal payment rate as if the
estimated aggregate amount of HCO payments for standard Federal
payment rate discharges for each such fiscal year would be equal to
8 percent of estimated aggregate payments for standard Federal
payment rate discharges for each such fiscal year; while section
1886(m)(7)(B) of the Act states that the Secretary shall set the
fixed loss amount for HCO payments such that the estimated aggregate
amount of HCO payments made for standard Federal payment rate
discharges for fiscal years beginning on or after October 1, 2017,
shall be equal to 99.6875 percent of 8 percent of estimated
aggregate payments for standard Federal payment rate discharges for
each such fiscal year. Furthermore, section 1886(m)(7)(C) of the Act
requires that any reduction in payments resulting from the
application of paragraph (B) shall not be taken into account in
applying any budget neutrality provision. Finally, section
1886(m)(7)(D) of the Act provides there will be no effect on HCO
payments to site neutral payment rate cases by this certain
treatment of HCO payments by requiring that this paragraph shall not
apply with respect to the computation of the applicable site neutral
payment rate under section 1886(m)(6) of the Act.
To codify the treatment of HCO payments provided by section
15004(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act (discussed earlier), we are
proposing to revise Sec. 412.525(a) by redesignating paragraph (2)
as paragraph (2)(i) and adding paragraph (2)(ii) which would specify
that, for FY 2018 and subsequent years, the fixed-loss amount for
LTCH discharges described under Sec. 412.522(a)(2) is determined
such that the estimated proportion of outlier payments under Sec.
412.522(a) that are payable for such discharges is projected to be
equal to 99.6875 percent of 8 percent. We also are proposing to make
conforming changes to Sec. 412.523(d)(1) to specify that the
provisions under proposed Sec. 412.525(a)(2)(ii) would not affect
the reduction factor of 8 percent that is applied to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate under Sec. 412.523(d)(1).
b. Establishment of the Proposed Fixed-Loss Amount for LTCH PPS
Standard Federal Payment Rate Cases for FY 2018
When we implemented the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure
beginning in FY 2016, we established that, in general, the
historical LTCH PPS HCO policy will continue to apply to LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases. That is, the fixed-loss amount
and target for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases is
determined using the LTCH PPS HCO policy adopted when the LTCH PPS
was first implemented, but we limited the data used under that
policy to LTCH cases that would have been LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases if the statutory changes had been in effect at
the time of those discharges.
To determine the applicable fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases, we estimate outlier payments
and total LTCH PPS payments for each LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate case (or for each case that would have been a LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate case if the statutory changes had been
in effect at the time of the discharge) using claims data from the
MedPAR files. Historically, the applicable fixed-loss amount for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases results in estimated
total outlier payments being projected to be equal to 8 percent of
projected total LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases. We use MedPAR claims data and CCRs based on data
from the most recent PSF (or from the applicable statewide average
CCR if an LTCH's CCR data are faulty or unavailable) to establish an
applicable fixed-loss threshold amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases. For FY 2018 and subsequent fiscal years, we are
proposing to continue to use the same general approach as in
previous years, but the applicable fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases would be estimated so that total
HCO payments are 7.975 percent (that is, 99.6875 percent of 8
percent) of projected total LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases, consistent with section 1886(m)(7)(B) of
the Act (as discussed above).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to continue to use our
current methodology to calculate an applicable fixed-loss amount for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases for FY 2018 using the
best available data that would maintain estimated HCO payments at
the projected 7.975 percent of total estimated LTCH PPS payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases (based on the proposed
payment rates and policies for these cases presented in this
proposed rule). Specifically, based on the most recent complete LTCH
data available (that is, LTCH claims data from the December 2016
update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file and CCRs from the December 2016
update of the PSF), we are proposing to determine a fixed-loss
amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases for FY 2018
of $30,081 that would result in estimated outlier payments projected
to be equal to 7.975 percent of estimated FY 2018 payments for such
cases. Under this proposal, we would continue to make an additional
HCO payment for the cost of an LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate case that exceeds the HCO threshold amount that is equal to 80
percent of the difference between the estimated cost of the case and
the outlier threshold (the sum of the proposed adjusted LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate payment and the proposed fixed-loss
amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases of $30,081).
We note that the proposed fixed-loss amount for HCO cases paid
under the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate in FY 2018 of
$30,081 is notably higher than the FY 2017 fixed-loss amount for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases of $22,728. However,
based on the most recent available data at the time of this proposed
rule, we found that the current FY 2017 HCO threshold of $21,943
results in estimated HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases of approximately 8.6 percent of the estimated
total LTCH PPS payments in FY 2017, which exceeds the 8 percent
target by 0.6 percentage points. We continue to believe, as
discussed in detail in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (81
FR 25287), this increase is largely attributable to rate-of-change
(that is, increase) in the Medicare allowable charges on the claims
data in the MedPAR file. In particular, using the historic 8-percent
target for projected aggregate outlier payments (absent the required
changes under the 21st Century Cures Act for comparison purposes),
the proposed HCO threshold would be $29,934, and thus represents a
36-percent increase from the final FY 2017 HCO threshold of $21,943.
However, this increase is in line with previous proposed increases
of the HCO threshold, such as the 38-percent increase from FY 2016
($16,432) to our proposed FY 2017 HCO threshold ($22,728). We
further note that the proposed FY 2017 HCO threshold was established
based on the most recent data available at that time (specifically,
the December 2015 update of the FY 2015 MedPAR file and the December
2015 update of the PSF), and in the FY 2017 final rule, based on the
March 2016 update of the FY 2015 MedPAR file and the March 2016
update to the PSF, we finalized a somewhat lower HCO threshold of
$21,943. Consistent with our historical practice of using the best
data available, we are proposing that, when determining the fixed-
loss amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases for FY
2018 in the final rule, we would use the most recent available LTCH
claims data and CCR data at that time.
We also note that fluctuations in the fixed-loss amount occurred
in the first few years after the implementation of the LTCH PPS,
due, in part, to the changes in LTCH behavior (such as Medicare
beneficiary treatment patterns) in response to the new payment
system and the lack of data and information available to predict how
those changes would
[[Page 20190]]
affect the estimate costs of LTCH cases. As we gain more experience
with the effects and implementation of the LTCH PPS, the annual
changes on the fixed-loss amount generally stabilized relative to
the fluctuations that occurred in the early years of the LTCH PPS.
Therefore, we are not proposing any changes to our method for the
inflation factor applied to update the costs of each case (that is,
an inflation factor based on the most recent estimate of the 2013-
based LTCH market basket as determined by the Office of the Actuary)
in determining the proposed fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases for FY 2018. We continue to believe that
it is appropriate to continue to use our historical approach until
we gain experience with the effects and implementation of the dual
rate LTCH PPS payment structure that began with discharges occurring
in cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2015, and
the types of cases paid at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate under this dual rate payment structure. As we explained in the
FY 2017 proposed and final rules, we may revisit this issue in the
future if data demonstrate such a change is warranted, and would
propose any changes in the future through the notice-and-comment
rulemaking process. Furthermore, we are inviting public comments on
potential improvements to the determination of the fixed-loss amount
for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases, including the most
appropriate method of determining an inflation factor for projecting
the costs of each case when determining the fixed-loss threshold.
Maintaining the fixed-loss amount at the current level would result
in HCO payments that are substantially more than the current
statutorily required 7.975 HCO percent target for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases because a lower fixed-loss amount results
in more cases qualifying as outlier cases, as well as higher HCO
payments for qualifying cases because the maximum loss that an LTCH
must incur before receiving an HCO payment (that is, the fixed-loss
amount) would be smaller. For these reasons, we continue to believe
it is necessary and appropriate to propose an increase to the fixed-
loss amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases for FY
2018 to maintain estimated HCO payments that would equal to 7.975
percent of estimated total LTCH PPS payments for such cases as
required under proposed Sec. 412.525(a)(2)(ii).
In summary, for this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to determine an applicable fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases using data from LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases (or cases that would have been
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases had the dual rate LTCH
PPS payment structure been in effect at the time of those
discharges). The proposed fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases would be determined so that estimated HCO
payments would be projected to equal 7.975 percent of estimated
total LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases, consistent with
section 1886(m)(7)(B) of the Act as discussed above. Furthermore, in
accordance with Sec. 412.523(d)(1) and consistent with section
1886(m)(7)(A) of the Act as discussed above, we are proposing to
continue to apply a budget neutrality factor to LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases to offset our historic 8 percent HCO
target for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases that would
be necessary to achieve budget neutrality if the estimated aggregate
HCO payments were set to be equal to 8 percent. As described in
detail above, our calculation of the proposed fixed-loss amount for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases for FY 2018 of $30,081
is generally consistent with the methodology used to establish the
FY 2017 LTCH PPS fixed-loss amount (absent the modification from an
HCO target of 8 percent to the now statutorily required 7.975
percent HCO target).
c. Application of the High-Cost Outlier Policy to Short Stay Outlier
(SSO) Cases
Under our implementation of the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure required by statute, we are proposing that LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases (that is, LTCH discharges that
meet the criteria for exclusion from the site neutral payment rate)
would continue to be paid based on the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate, and would include all of the existing payment
adjustments under Sec. 412.525(d), such as the adjustments for SSO
cases under Sec. 412.529. Under some rare circumstances, an LTCH
discharge can qualify as an SSO case (as defined in the regulations
at Sec. 412.529 in conjunction with Sec. 412.503) and also as an
HCO case, as discussed in the August 30, 2002 final rule (67 FR
56026). In this scenario, a patient could be hospitalized for less
than five-sixths of the geometric average length of stay for the
specific MS-LTC-DRG, and yet incur extraordinarily high treatment
costs. If the estimated costs exceeded the HCO threshold (that is,
the SSO payment plus the applicable fixed-loss amount), the
discharge is eligible for payment as an HCO. (We note that, under
our proposed change to the SSO policy discussed in section VIII.D.
of the preamble of this proposed rule, SSO cases would still be
eligible to qualify for an HCO payment.) Therefore, for an SSO case
in FY 2018, we are proposing to establish that the HCO payment would
be 80 percent of the difference between the estimated cost of the
case and the outlier threshold (the sum of the proposed fixed-loss
amount of $30,081 and the amount paid under the proposed SSO policy
as specified in Sec. 412.529).
4. Proposed High-Cost Outlier Payments for Site Neutral Payment Rate
Cases
Under Sec. 412.525(a), site neutral payment rate cases receive
an additional HCO payment for costs that exceed the HCO threshold
that is equal to 80 percent of the difference between the estimated
cost of the case and the applicable HCO threshold (80 FR 49618
through 49629). In the following discussion, we note that the
statutory transitional payment method for cases that are paid the
site neutral payment rate for LTCH discharges occurring in cost
reporting periods beginning during FY 2016 or FY 2017 uses a blended
payment rate, which is determined as 50 percent of the site neutral
payment rate amount for the discharge and 50 percent of the standard
Federal prospective payment rate amount for the discharge (Sec.
412.522(c)(3)). The transitional blended payment rate uses the same
blend percentages (that is, 50 percent) for both years of the 2-year
transition period. For FY 2018, the site neutral payment rate
effective date for a given LTCH is determined based on the date on
which that LTCH's cost reporting period begins during FY 2018.
Specifically, for a given LTCH, those site neutral payment rate
cases discharged in FY 2018 and in a cost reporting period that
begins before October 1, 2017 continue to be paid under the blended
payment rate. However, site neutral payment rate cases discharged in
FY 2018 during the LTCH's cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2017 will no longer be paid under the blended
payment rate and instead will be paid the site neutral payment rate
amount as determined under Sec. 412.522(c)(1). As such, for FY 2018
discharges paid under the transitional payment method, the
discussion below pertains only to the site neutral rate portion in
Sec. 412.522(c)(3)(i)) of the blended payment rate (as well as to
FY 2018 discharges paid the site neutral payment rate amount
determined under Sec. 412.522(c)(1)).
When we implemented the application of the site neutral payment
rate in FY 2016, in examining the appropriate fixed-loss amount for
site neutral payment rate cases issue, we considered how LTCH
discharges based on historical claims data would have been
classified under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure and the
CMS' Office of the Actuary projections regarding how LTCHs will
likely respond to our implementation of policies resulting from the
statutory payment changes. We again relied on these considerations
and actuarial projections in FY 2017 because the historical claims
data available in FY 2017 predated the LTCH PPS dual rate payment
system. Similarly, for FY 2018, we continue to rely on these
considerations and actuarial projections because, due to the rolling
effective date of the site neutral payment policy, not all claims in
FY 2016 were subject to the site neutral payment system.
For both FY 2016 and FY 2017, at that time our actuaries
projected that the proportion of cases that would qualify as LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases versus site neutral payment
rate cases under the statutory provisions would remain consistent
with what is reflected in the historical LTCH PPS claims data.
Although our actuaries did not project an immediate change in the
proportions found in the historical data, they did project cost and
resource changes to account for the lower payment rates. Our
actuaries also projected that the costs and resource use for cases
paid at the site neutral payment rate would likely be lower, on
average, than the costs and resource use for cases paid at the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate and would likely mirror the costs
and resource use for IPPS cases assigned to the same MS-DRG,
regardless of whether the proportion of site neutral payment rate
cases in the future remains similar to what is found based on the
historical data. (As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (80 FR 49619), this
[[Page 20191]]
actuarial assumption is based on our expectation that site neutral
payment rate cases would generally be paid based on an IPPS
comparable per diem amount under the statutory LTCH PPS payment
changes that began in FY 2016, which, in the majority of cases, is
much lower than the payment that would have been paid if these
statutory changes were not enacted.) In light of these projections
and expectations, we discussed that we believed that the use of a
single fixed-loss amount and HCO target for all LTCH PPS cases would
be problematic. In addition, we discussed that we did not believe
that it would be appropriate for comparable LTCH PPS site neutral
payment rate cases to receive dramatically different HCO payments
from those cases that would be paid under the IPPS (80 FR 49617
through 49619 and 81 FR 57305 through 57307). For those reasons, we
stated that we believed that the most appropriate fixed-loss amount
for site neutral payment rate cases for both FY 2016 and FY 2017
would be equal to the IPPS fixed-loss amount for that year.
Therefore, we established the fixed-loss amount for site neutral
payment rate cases as the FY 2016 and FY 2017 IPPS fixed-loss
amounts, in FY 2016 and FY 2017 respectively. In particular, in FY
2017, we established that the fixed-loss amount for site neutral
payment rate cases is the FY 2017 IPPS fixed-loss amount of $23,570.
As noted earlier, because not all claims in the data used for
this proposed rule were subject to the site neutral payment rate
system, we continue to rely on the same considerations and actuarial
projections used in FY 2016 and FY 2017 when developing a fixed-loss
amount for site neutral payment rate cases for FY 2018. Because our
actuaries continue to project that site neutral payment rate cases
in FY 2018 will continue to mirror an IPPS case paid under the same
MS-DRG, we continue to believe that it would be inappropriate for
comparable LTCH PPS site neutral payment rate cases to receive
dramatically different HCO payments from those cases that would be
paid under the IPPS. More specifically, as with FY 2016 and FY 2017,
our actuaries project that the costs and resource use for FY 2018
cases paid at the site neutral payment rate would likely be lower,
on average, than the costs and resource use for cases paid at the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate and will likely mirror the
costs and resource use for IPPS cases assigned to the same MS-DRG,
regardless of whether the proportion of site neutral payment rate
cases in the future remains similar to what is found based on the
historical data. (Based on the most recent FY 2016 LTCH claims data,
approximately 58 percent of LTCH cases would have been paid the LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate and approximately 42 percent of
LTCH cases would have been paid the site neutral payment rate if
those rates had been in effect at that time for all LTCH discharges
occurring in FY 2016, regardless of LTCHs' cost reporting period
beginning dates.)
For these reasons, we continue to believe that the most
appropriate fixed-loss amount for site neutral payment rate cases
for FY 2018 is the IPPS fixed-loss amount for FY 2018. Therefore,
consistent with past practice, for FY 2018, we are proposing that
the applicable HCO threshold for site neutral payment rate cases is
the sum of the site neutral payment rate for the case and the IPPS
fixed-loss amount. That is, we are proposing a fixed-loss amount for
site neutral payment rate cases of $26,713, which is the same
proposed FY 2018 IPPS fixed-loss amount discussed in section
II.A.4.g.(1) of the Addendum to this proposed rule. We continue to
believe that this policy would reduce differences between HCO
payments for similar cases under the IPPS and site neutral payment
rate cases under the LTCH PPS and promote fairness between the two
systems. Accordingly, for FY 2018, we are proposing to calculate a
HCO payment for site neutral payment rate cases with costs that
exceed the HCO threshold amount, which is equal to 80 percent of the
difference between the estimated cost of the case and the outlier
threshold (the sum of proposed site neutral payment rate payment and
the proposed fixed-loss amount for site neutral payment rate cases
of $26,713).
In establishing a HCO policy for site neutral payment rate
cases, we established a budget neutrality adjustment under Sec.
412.522(c)(2)(i). We established this requirement because we
believed, and continue to believe, that the HCO policy for site
neutral payment rate cases should be budget neutral, just as the HCO
policy for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases are budget
neutral, meaning that estimated site neutral payment rate HCO
payments should not result in any change in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments.
To ensure that estimated HCO payments payable to site neutral
payment rate cases in FY 2018 would not result in any increase in
estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments, under the budget
neutrality requirement at Sec. 412.522(c)(2)(i), it is necessary to
reduce site neutral payment rate payments (or the portion of the
blended payment rate payment for FY 2018 discharges occurring in
LTCH cost reporting periods beginning before October 1, 2017) by 5.1
percent to account for the estimated additional HCO payments payable
to those cases in FY 2018. In order to achieve this, for FY 2018, in
general we are proposing to continue to use the policy adopted for
FY 2017.
As discussed earlier, consistent with the IPPS HCO payment
threshold, we estimate our proposed fixed-loss threshold of $26,713
results in HCO payments for site neutral payment rate cases equal to
5.1 percent of the site neutral payment rate payments that are based
on the IPPS comparable per diem amount. As such, to ensure estimated
HCO payments payable for site neutral payment rate cases in FY 2018
would not result in any increase in estimated aggregate FY 2018 LTCH
PPS payments, under the budget neutrality requirement at proposed
revised Sec. 412.522(c)(2)(i), it is necessary to reduce the site
neutral payment rate amount paid under Sec. 412.522(c)(1)(i) by 5.1
percent to account for the estimated additional HCO payments payable
for site neutral payment rate cases in FY 2018. In order to achieve
this, for FY 2018, we are proposing to apply a proposed budget
neutrality factor of 0.949 (that is, the decimal equivalent of a 5.1
percent reduction, determined as 1.0-5.1/100 = 0.949) to the site
neutral payment rate for those site neutral payment rate cases paid
under Sec. 412.522(c)(1)(i). We note that, consistent with the
policy adopted for FY 2017, under this proposal the proposed HCO
budget neutrality adjustment would not be applied to the HCO portion
of the site neutral payment rate amount (80 FR 57309).
Under the approach for applying the budget neutrality adjustment
to the site neutral payment rate portion of the transitional blended
payment rate in FY 2016 and FY 2017, there is no need to perform any
calculation of the site neutral payment rate case HCO payment budget
neutrality adjustment under our finalized policy. Because of our
actuarial assumptions discussed earlier, we project that our
proposal to use the IPPS fixed-loss threshold for the site neutral
payment rate cases would result in HCO payments for those cases that
are similar in proportion as is seen in IPPS cases assigned to the
same MS-DRG; that is, 5.1 percent. In other words, we estimated that
HCO payments for site neutral payment rate cases would be 5.1
percent of the site neutral payment rate payments (80 FR 49805 and
81 FR 57307).
E. Proposed Update to the IPPS Comparable/Equivalent Amounts To
Reflect the Statutory Changes to the IPPS DSH Payment Adjustment
Methodology
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50766), we
established a policy to reflect the changes to the Medicare IPPS DSH
payment adjustment methodology made by section 3133 of the
Affordable Care Act in the calculation of the ``IPPS comparable
amount'' under the SSO policy at Sec. 412.529 and the ``IPPS
equivalent amount'' under the 25-percent threshold payment
adjustment policy at Sec. 412.534 and Sec. 412.536. Historically,
the determination of both the ``IPPS comparable amount'' and the
``IPPS equivalent amount'' includes an amount for inpatient
operating costs ``for the costs of serving a disproportionate share
of low-income patients.'' Under the statutory changes to the
Medicare DSH payment adjustment methodology that began in FY 2014,
in general, eligible IPPS hospitals receive an empirically justified
Medicare DSH payment equal to 25 percent of the amount they
otherwise would have received under the statutory formula for
Medicare DSH payments prior to the amendments made by the Affordable
Care Act. The remaining amount, equal to an estimate of 75 percent
of the amount that otherwise would have been paid as Medicare DSH
payments, reduced to reflect changes in the percentage of
individuals who are uninsured, is made available to make additional
payments to each hospital that qualifies for Medicare DSH payments
and that has uncompensated care. The additional uncompensated care
payments are based on the hospital's amount of uncompensated care
for a given time period relative to the total amount of
uncompensated care for that same time period reported by all IPPS
hospitals that receive Medicare DSH payments.
To reflect the statutory changes to the Medicare DSH payment
adjustment
[[Page 20192]]
methodology in the calculation of the ``IPPS comparable amount'' and
the ``IPPS equivalent amount'' under the LTCH PPS, we stated that we
will include a reduced Medicare DSH payment amount that reflects the
projected percentage of the payment amount calculated based on the
statutory Medicare DSH payment formula prior to the amendments made
by the Affordable Care Act that will be paid to eligible IPPS
hospitals as empirically justified Medicare DSH payments and
uncompensated care payments in that year (that is, a percentage of
the operating Medicare DSH payment amount that has historically been
reflected in the LTCH PPS payments that is based on IPPS rates). We
also stated that the projected percentage will be updated annually,
consistent with the annual determination of the amount of
uncompensated care payments that will be made to eligible IPPS
hospitals. We believe that this approach results in appropriate
payments under the LTCH PPS and is consistent with our intention
that the ``IPPS comparable amount'' and the ``IPPS equivalent
amount'' under the LTCH PPS closely resemble what an IPPS payment
would have been for the same episode of care, while recognizing that
some features of the IPPS cannot be translated directly into the
LTCH PPS (79 FR 50766 through 50767).
For FY 2018, as discussed in greater detail in section V.G.3. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, based on the most recent data
available, our estimate of 75 percent of the amount that would
otherwise have been paid as Medicare DSH payments (under the
methodology outlined in section 1886(r)(2) of the Act) is adjusted
to 58.01 percent of that amount to reflect the change in the
percentage of individuals who are uninsured. The resulting amount is
then used to determine the amount available to make uncompensated
care payments to eligible IPPS hospitals in FY 2018. In other words,
the amount of the Medicare DSH payments that would have been made
prior to the amendments made by the Affordable Care Act will be
adjusted to 43.51 percent (the product of 75 percent and 58.01
percent) and the resulting amount would be used to calculate the
uncompensated care payments to eligible hospitals. As a result, for
FY 2018, we project that the reduction in the amount of Medicare DSH
payments pursuant to section 1886(r)(1) of the Act, along with the
payments for uncompensated care under section 1886(r)(2) of the Act,
would result in overall Medicare DSH payments of 66.52 percent of
the amount of Medicare DSH payments that would otherwise have been
made in the absence of the amendments made by the Affordable Care
Act (that is, 25 percent + 43.51 percent = 68.51 percent).
In this proposed rule, for FY 2018, we are proposing to
establish that the calculation of the ``IPPS comparable amount''
under Sec. 412.529 and the ``IPPS equivalent amount'' under Sec.
412.538 would include an applicable operating Medicare DSH payment
amount that is equal to 68.51 percent of the operating Medicare DSH
payment amount that would have been paid based on the statutory
Medicare DSH payment formula but for the amendments made by the
Affordable Care Act. Furthermore, consistent with our historical
practice, we are proposing that if more recent data become
available, if appropriate, we would use that data to determine this
factor in the final rule.
F. Computing the Proposed Adjusted LTCH PPS Federal Prospective
Payments for FY 2018
Section 412.525 sets forth the adjustments to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate. Under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure, only LTCH PPS cases that meet the statutory criteria to
be excluded from the site neutral payment rate are paid based on the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate. Under Sec. 412.525(c), the
proposed LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate is adjusted to
account for differences in area wages by multiplying the proposed
labor-related share of the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment for a
case by the applicable LTCH PPS wage index (the proposed FY 2018
values are shown in Tables 12A through 12B listed in section VI. of
the Addendum of this proposed rule and are available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site). The proposed LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate is also adjusted to account for the higher
costs of LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii by the applicable COLA
factors (the proposed FY 2018 factors are shown in the chart in
section V.C. of this Addendum) in accordance with Sec. 412.525(b).
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to establish an LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018 of $41,497.20, as
discussed in section V.A. of the Addendum to this proposed rule. We
illustrate the methodology to adjust the proposed LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate for FY 2018 in the following example:
Example:
During FY 2018, a Medicare discharge that meets the criteria to
be excluded from the site neutral payment rate, that is, an LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate case, is from an LTCH that is located
in Chicago, Illinois (CBSA 16974). The proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
wage index value for CBSA 16974 is 1.0563 (obtained from Table 12A
listed in section VI. of the Addendum of this proposed rule and
available via the Internet on the CMS Web site). The Medicare
patient case is classified into MS-LTC-DRG 189 (Pulmonary Edema &
Respiratory Failure), which has a proposed relative weight for FY
2018 of 0.9158 (obtained from Table 11 listed in section VI. of the
Addendum of this proposed rule and available via the Internet on the
CMS Web site). The LTCH submitted quality reporting data for FY 2018
in accordance with the LTCHQRP under section 1886(m)(5) of the Act.
To calculate the LTCH's total adjusted Federal prospective
payment for this Medicare patient case in FY 2018, we computed the
wage-adjusted proposed Federal prospective payment amount by
multiplying the unadjusted proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate ($41,497.20) by the proposed labor-related
share (66.3 percent) and the proposed wage index value (1.0563).
This wage-adjusted amount was then added to the proposed nonlabor-
related portion of the unadjusted proposed LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate (33.7 percent; adjusted for cost of living, if
applicable) to determine the adjusted proposed LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate, which is then multiplied by the proposed MS-
LTC-DRG relative weight (0.9158) to calculate the total adjusted
proposed LTCH PPS standard Federal prospective payment for FY 2018
($39,421.67). The table below illustrates the components of the
calculations in this example.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal Prospective $41,497.20
Payment Rate.......................................
Proposed Labor-Related Share........................ x 0.663
Proposed Labor-Related Portion of the LTCH PPS = $27,512.64
Standard Federal Payment Rate......................
Proposed Wage Index (CBSA 16974).................... x 1.0563
Proposed Wage-Adjusted Labor Share of LTCH PPS = $29,061.60
Standard Federal Payment Rate......................
Proposed Nonlabor-Related Portion of the LTCH PPS + $13,984.56
Standard Federal Payment Rate ($41,497.20 x 0.337).
Proposed Adjusted LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment = $43,046.16
Amount.............................................
Proposed MS-LTC-DRG 189 Relative Weight............. x 0.9158
Proposed Total Adjusted LTCH PPS Standard Federal = $39,421.67
Prospective Payment................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Tables Referenced in This Proposed Rule and Available Only Through
the Internet on the CMS Web Site
This section lists the tables referred to throughout the
preamble of this proposed rule and in this Addendum. In the past, a
majority of these tables were published in the Federal Register as
part of the annual proposed and final rules. However, similar to FYs
2012 through 2017, for the FY 2018 rulemaking cycle, the IPPS and
LTCH tables will not be published in the Federal Register in the
annual IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and final rules and will be available
only through the Internet. Specifically, all IPPS tables listed
below, with the exception of IPPS Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, and 1D, and
LTCH PPS Table 1E will be available only through the Internet. IPPS
Tables 1A, 1B, 1C, and 1D, and LTCH PPS Table 1E are displayed at
the end of this section and will continue to be published in the
Federal Register as part of the annual proposed and final rules.
[[Page 20193]]
As discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR
49807), we streamlined and consolidated the wage index tables for FY
2016 and subsequent fiscal years.
As discussed in sections II.F.14., II.F.15.b., II.F.16.,
II.F.17.a., and II.F.19.a.1., a.3., and c.1. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we developed the following ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS
code tables for FY 2018: Table 6A--New Diagnosis Codes; Table 6B--
New Procedure Codes; Table 6C--Invalid Diagnosis Codes; Table 6D--
Invalid Procedure Codes; Table 6E--Revised Diagnosis Code Titles;
Table 6F--Revised Procedure Code Titles; Table 6G.1--Proposed
Secondary Diagnosis Order Additions to the CC Exclusion List; Table
6G.2--Proposed Principal Diagnosis Order Additions to the CC
Exclusion List; Table 6H.1--Proposed Secondary Diagnosis Order
Deletions to the CC Exclusion List; Table 6H.2--Proposed Principal
Diagnosis Order Deletions to the CC Exclusion List; Table 6I.1--
Proposed Additions to the MCC List; Table 6I.2--Proposed Deletions
to the MCC List; Table 6J.1--Proposed Additions to the CC List;
Table 6J.2--Proposed Deletions to the CC List; and Table 6P--
Proposed ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Code Designations, MCE and MS-DRG
Changes. Table 6P contains multiple tables, 6P.1a through 6P.4p,
that include the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code lists relating to
proposed specific MCE and MS-DRG changes. In addition, under the HAC
Reduction Program established by section 3008 of the Affordable Care
Act, a hospital's total payment may be reduced by 1 percent if it is
in the lowest HAC performance quartile. However, as discussed in
section V.I. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are not
providing the hospital-level data as a table associated with this
proposed rule. The hospital-level data for the FY 2018 HAC Reduction
Program will be made publicly available once it has undergone the
review and corrections process.
Finally, Table 18 associated with this proposed rule contains
the proposed Factor 3 for purposes of determining the FY 2018
uncompensated care payment for all hospitals and identifies whether
or not a hospital is projected to receive Medicare DSH payments and,
therefore, eligible to receive the additional payment for
uncompensated care for FY 2018. A hospital's Factor 3 determines the
proportion of the aggregate amount available for uncompensated care
payments that a Medicare DSH eligible hospital will receive under
section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act.
Readers who experience any problems accessing any of the tables
that are posted on the CMS Web sites identified below should contact
Michael Treitel at (410) 786-4552.
The following IPPS tables for this FY 2018 proposed rule are
available only through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html. Click on the link on the left side of
the screen titled, ``FY 2018 IPPS Proposed Rule Home Page'' or
``Acute Inpatient--Files for Download.''
Table 2--Proposed Case-Mix Index and Wage Index Table by CCN--FY
2018
Table 3--Proposed Wage Index Table by CBSA--FY 2018
Table 5--List of Proposed Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Groups
(MS-DRGs), Relative Weighting Factors, and Geometric and Arithmetic
Mean Length of Stay--FY 2018
Table 6A--New Diagnosis Codes--FY 2018
Table 6B--New Procedure Codes--FY 2018
Table 6C--Invalid Diagnosis Codes--FY 2018
Table 6D--Invalid Procedure Codes--FY 2018
Table 6E--Revised Diagnosis Code Titles--FY 2018
Table 6F--Revised Procedure Code Titles--FY 2018
Table 6G.1--Proposed Secondary Diagnosis Order Additions to the CC
Exclusions List--FY 2018
Table 6G.2--Proposed Principal Diagnosis Order Additions to the CC
Exclusions List--FY 2018
Table 6H.1--Proposed Secondary Diagnosis Order Deletions to the CC
Exclusions List--FY 2018
Table 6H.2--Proposed Principal Diagnosis Order Deletions to the CC
Exclusions List--FY 2018
Table 6I.1--Proposed Additions to the MCC List--FY 2018
Table 6I.2--Proposed Deletions to the MCC List--FY 2018
Table 6J.1--Proposed Additions to the CC List--FY 2018
Table 6J.2--Proposed Deletions to the CC List--FY 2018
Table 6P--Proposed ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS Code Designations, MCE
and MS-DRG Changes--FY 2018
Table 7A--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2016 MedPAR Update--December 2016 GROUPER V34.0
MS-DRGs
Table 7B--Medicare Prospective Payment System Selected Percentile
Lengths of Stay: FY 2016 MedPAR Update--December 2016 GROUPER V35.0
MS-DRGs
Table 8A--Proposed FY 2018 Statewide Average Operating Cost-to-
Charge Ratios (CCRs) for Acute Care Hospitals (Urban and Rural)
Table 8B--Proposed FY 2018 Statewide Average Capital Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) for Acute Care Hospitals
Table 10--Proposed New Technology Add-On Payment Thresholds for
Applications for FY 2019
Table 15--Proposed Proxy FY 2018 Readmissions Adjustment Factors
Table 16--Proposed Proxy Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP)
Program Adjustment Factors for FY 2018
Table 18--Proposed FY 2018 Uncompensated Care Payment Factor 3
The following LTCH PPS tables for this FY 2018 proposed rule are
available only through the Internet on the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/LongTermCareHospitalPPS/index.html under the list item for
Regulation Number CMS-1677-P:
Table 8C--Proposed FY 2018 Statewide Average Total Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs) for LTCHs (Urban and Rural)
Table 11--Proposed MS-LTC-DRGs, Relative Weights, Geometric Average
Length of Stay, and Short-Stay Outlier (SSO) Threshold for LTCH PPS
Discharges Occurring from October 1, 2017 through September 30, 2018
Table 12A--Proposed LTCH PPS Wage Index for Urban Areas for
Discharges Occurring from October 1, 2017 through September 30, 2018
Table 12B--Proposed LTCH PPS Wage Index for Rural Areas for
Discharges Occurring from October 1, 2017 through September 30, 2018
Table 13A--Proposed Composition of Low Volume Quintiles for MS-LTC-
DRGs--FY 2018
Table 13B--Proposed No Volume MS LTC-DRG Crosswalk for FY 2018
Table 1A--Proposed National Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
[(68.3 percent labor share/31.7 percent nonlabor share if wage index is greater than 1)--FY 2018]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital submitted quality data and is Hospital submitted quality data and Hospital did NOT submit quality data Hospital did NOT submit quality data
a meaningful EHR user (update = 1.75 is NOT a meaningful EHR user (update and is a meaningful EHR user (update and is NOT a meaningful EHR user
percent) = -0.425 percent) = 1.025 percent) (update = -1.15 percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$3,822.07 $1,773.93 $3,740.37 $1,736.01 $3,794.84 $1,761.29 $3,713.14 $1,723.37
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20194]]
Table 1B--Proposed National Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts, Labor/Nonlabor
[(62 percent labor share/38 percent nonlabor share if wage index is less than or equal to 1)--FY 2018]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital submitted quality data and is Hospital submitted quality data and Hospital did NOT submit quality data Hospital did NOT submit quality data
a meaningful EHR user (update = 1.75 is NOT a meaningful EHR user (update and is a meaningful EHR user (update and is NOT a meaningful EHR user
percent) = -0.425 percent) = 1.025 percent) (update = -1.15 percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$3,469.52 $2,126.48 $3,395.36 $2,081.02 $3,444.80 $2,111.33 $3,370.64 $2,065.87
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1C--Proposed Adjusted Operating Standardized Amounts for Hospitals in Puerto Rico, Labor/Nonlabor
[(National: 62 percent labor share/38 percent nonlabor share because wage index is less than or equal to 1)--FY
2018]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rates if wage index is greater than 1 Rates if wage index is less
---------------------------------------------- than or equal to 1
Standardized amount -------------------------------
Labor Nonlabor Labor Nonlabor
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
National \1\...................... Not Applicable....... Not Applicable....... $3,469.52 $2,126.48
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For FY 2018, there are no CBSAs in Puerto Rico with a national wage index greater than 1.
Table 1D--Proposed Capital Standard Federal Payment Rate
[FY 2018]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
National............................................... $451.37
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1E--Proposed LTCH PPS Standard Federal Payment Rate
[FY 2018]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reduced
Full update update * (-
(1 percent) 1.0
percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Federal Rate......................... $41,497.20 $40,675.49
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* For LTCHs that fail to submit quality reporting data for FY 2018 in
accordance with the LTCH Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP), the
annual update is reduced by 2.0 percentage points as required by
section 1886(m)(5) of the Act.
Appendix A: Economic Analyses
I. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Introduction
We have examined the impacts of this proposed rule as required
by Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of
the Social Security Act, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132
on Federalism (August 4, 1999), the Congressional Review Act (5
U.S.C. 804(2), and Executive Order 13771 on Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs (January 30, 2017).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that
maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity).
Section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant
regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule:
(1) (Having an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more
in any 1 year, or adversely and materially affecting a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or state, local or tribal governments or
communities (also referred to as ``economically significant''); (2)
creating a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an
action taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
raising novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates,
the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in the
Executive Order.
We have determined that this proposed rule is a major rule as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). We estimate that the proposed changes
for FY 2018 acute care hospital operating and capital payments would
redistribute amounts in excess of $100 million to acute care
hospitals. The applicable percentage increase to the IPPS rates
required by the statute, in conjunction with other proposed payment
changes in this proposed rule, would result in an estimated $3.1
billion increase in FY 2018 proposed payments, including a $3.8
billion increase in FY 2018 proposed operating payments (or 1.7
percent change), an estimated $212 million increase in FY 2018
proposed capital payments (or 2.4 percent change), and an estimated
$1.0 billion increase in proposed uncompensated care payments (or a
1.2 percent change). As noted in section II.A. of this Appendix, all
expenditures are classified as transfers to Medicare providers.
These proposed changes are relative to payments made in FY 2017. The
impact analysis of the proposed capital payments can be found in
section I.I. of this Appendix. In addition, as described in section
I.J. of this Appendix, LTCHs are expected to experience a decrease
in payments by $173 million in FY 2018 relative to FY 2017.
Our operating impact estimate includes the 0.4588 percent
adjustment required under section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures
Act (Pub. L. 114-255) applied to the IPPS standardized amount, as
discussed in section II.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule. In
addition, our operating payment impact estimate includes the
proposed 1.75 percent hospital update to the standardized amount
(which includes the estimated 2.9 percent market basket update less
0.4 percentage point for the proposed multifactor productivity
adjustment and less 0.75 percentage point required under the
Affordable Care Act). Our operating payment impact estimate also
includes an adjustment factor of (1/1.006) to the FY 2018 rates to
remove the 1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to
address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs
2014 through 2016 as a result of the 2-midnight policy (we refer
readers to section V.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule for an
explanation of this adjustment). The estimates of IPPS operating
payments to acute care hospitals do not reflect any changes in
hospital admissions or real case-mix intensity, which will also
affect overall proposed payment changes.
The analysis in this Appendix, in conjunction with the remainder
of this document, demonstrates that this proposed rule is consistent
with the regulatory philosophy and principles identified in
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563, the RFA, and section 1102(b) of
the Act. This proposed rule would affect payments to a substantial
number of small rural hospitals, as well as other classes of
hospitals, and the effects on some hospitals may be significant.
Finally, in accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866,
the Executive Office of Management and Budget has reviewed this
proposed rule.
[[Page 20195]]
B. Statement of Need
This proposed rule is necessary in order to make payment and
policy changes under the Medicare IPPS for Medicare acute care
hospital inpatient services for operating and capital-related costs
as well as for certain hospitals and hospital units excluded from
the IPPS. This proposed rule also is necessary to make payment and
policy changes for Medicare hospitals under the LTCH PPS.
C. Objectives of the IPPS and the LTCH PPS
The primary objective of the IPPS and the LTCH PPS is to create
incentives for hospitals to operate efficiently and minimize
unnecessary costs while at the same time ensuring that payments are
sufficient to adequately compensate hospitals for their legitimate
costs in delivering necessary care to Medicare beneficiaries. In
addition, we share national goals of preserving the Medicare
Hospital Insurance Trust Fund.
We believe that the changes in this proposed rule would further
each of these goals while maintaining the financial viability of the
hospital industry and ensuring access to high quality health care
for Medicare beneficiaries. We expect that these proposed changes
will ensure that the outcomes of the prospective payment systems are
reasonable and equitable while avoiding or minimizing unintended
adverse consequences.
Because this proposed rule contains a range of proposed
policies, we refer readers to the section of the proposed rule where
each proposal is discussed. These sections include the rational for
our decisions, including the need for the proposed policy.
D. Limitations of Our Analysis
The following quantitative analysis presents the projected
effects of our proposed policy changes, as well as statutory changes
effective for FY 2018, on various hospital groups. We estimate the
effects of individual proposed policy changes by estimating payments
per case while holding all other payment policies constant. We use
the best data available, but, generally, we do not attempt to make
adjustments for future changes in such variables as admissions,
lengths of stay, or case-mix. In addition, we discuss limitations of
our analysis for specific proposals in the discussion of those
proposals as needed.
E. Hospitals Included in and Excluded From the IPPS
The prospective payment systems for hospital inpatient operating
and capital-related costs of acute care hospitals encompass most
general short-term, acute care hospitals that participate in the
Medicare program. There were 31 Indian Health Service hospitals in
our database, which we excluded from the analysis due to the special
characteristics of the prospective payment methodology for these
hospitals. Among other short-term, acute care hospitals, hospitals
in Maryland are paid in accordance with the Maryland All-Payer
Model, and hospitals located outside the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, and Puerto Rico (that is, 5 short-term acute care
hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa) receive payment for inpatient
hospital services they furnish on the basis of reasonable costs,
subject to a rate-of-increase ceiling.
As of March 2017, there were 3,292 IPPS acute care hospitals
included in our analysis. This represents approximately 54 percent
of all Medicare-participating hospitals. The majority of this impact
analysis focuses on this set of hospitals. There also are
approximately 1,385 CAHs. These small, limited service hospitals are
paid on the basis of reasonable costs rather than under the IPPS.
IPPS-excluded hospitals and units, which are paid under separate
payment systems, include IPFs, IRFs, LTCHs, RNHCIs, children's
hospitals, 11 cancer hospitals, and 5 short-term acute care
hospitals located in the Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana
Islands, and American Samoa. With the exception of the IPFQR
provisions presented in section IX.D. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, changes in the prospective payment systems for IPFs
and IRFs are made through separate rulemaking. Payment impacts of
changes to the prospective payment systems for these IPPS-excluded
hospitals and units are not included in this proposed rule. The
impact of the proposed update and proposed policy changes to the
LTCH PPS for FY 2018 is discussed in section I.J. of this Appendix.
F. Effects on Hospitals and Hospital Units Excluded From the IPPS
As of March 2017, there were 98 children's hospitals, 11 cancer
hospitals, 5 short-term acute care hospitals located in the Virgin
Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa, and
18 RNHCIs being paid on a reasonable cost basis subject to the rate-
of-increase ceiling under Sec. 413.40. (In accordance with Sec.
403.752(a) of the regulation, RNHCIs are paid under Sec. 413.40.)
Among the remaining providers, 263 rehabilitation hospitals and 870
rehabilitation units, and approximately 415 LTCHs, are paid the
Federal prospective per discharge rate under the IRF PPS and the
LTCH PPS, respectively, and 513 psychiatric hospitals and 1,113
psychiatric units are paid the Federal per diem amount under the IPF
PPS. As stated previously, IRFs and IPFs are not affected by the
rate updates discussed in this proposed rule. The impacts of the
changes on LTCHs are discussed in section I.J. of this Appendix.
For children's hospitals, the 11 cancer hospitals, the 5 short-
term acute care hospitals located in the Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa, and RNHCIs, we are
proposing that the update of the rate-of-increase limit (or target
amount) would be the estimated FY 2018 percentage increase in the
proposed 2014-based IPPS operating market basket, consistent with
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act, and Sec. Sec. 403.752(a) and
413.40 of the regulations. As discussed in section IV. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to revise and
rebase the IPPS operating market basket to a 2014 base year.
Therefore, we are proposing to use the percentage increase in the
2014-based IPPS operating market basket to update the target amounts
for FY 2018 and subsequent years for children's hospitals, the 11
cancer hospitals, the 5 short-term acute care hospitals located in
the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and
American Samoa, and RNHCs that are paid based on reasonable costs
subjects to the rate-of-increase limits. Consistent with current
law, based on IHS Global Insight, Inc.'s 2016 fourth quarter
forecast of the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket increase, we
are estimating the FY 2018 update to be 2.9 percent (that is, the
estimate of the market basket rate-of-increase). We are proposing
that if more recent data become available for the final rule, we
would use them to calculate the IPPS operating market basket update
for FY 2018. However, the Affordable Care Act requires an adjustment
for multifactor productivity (currently estimated to be 0.4
percentage point for FY 2018) and a 0.75 percentage point reduction
to the market basket update, resulting in a 1.75 percent applicable
percentage increase for IPPS hospitals that submit quality data and
are meaningful EHR users, as discussed in section IV.B. of the
preamble of this proposed rule. Children's hospitals, the 11 cancer
hospitals, the 5 short-term acute care hospitals located in the
Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American
Samoa, and RNHCIs that continue to be paid based on reasonable costs
subject to rate-of-increase limits under Sec. 413.40 of the
regulations are not subject to the reductions in the applicable
percentage increase required under the Affordable Care Act.
Therefore, for those hospitals paid under Sec. 413.40 of the
regulations, the update would be the percentage increase in the
proposed 2014-based IPPS operating market basket for FY 2018,
estimated at 2.9 percent, without the reductions described
previously under the Affordable Care Act.
The impact of the proposed update in the rate-of-increase limit
on those excluded hospitals depends on the cumulative cost increases
experienced by each excluded hospital since its applicable base
period. For excluded hospitals that have maintained their cost
increases at a level below the rate-of-increase limits since their
base period, the major effect is on the level of incentive payments
these excluded hospitals receive. Conversely, for excluded hospitals
with cost increases above the cumulative update in their rate-of-
increase limits, the major effect is the amount of excess costs that
would not be paid.
We note that, under Sec. 413.40(d)(3), an excluded hospital
that continues to be paid under the TEFRA system and whose costs
exceed 110 percent of its rate-of-increase limit receives its rate-
of-increase limit plus the lesser of: (1) 50 percent of its
reasonable costs in excess of 110 percent of the limit; or (2) 10
percent of its limit. In addition, under the various provisions set
forth in Sec. 413.40, hospitals can obtain payment adjustments for
justifiable increases in operating costs that exceed the limit.
[[Page 20196]]
G. Quantitative Effects of the Proposed Policy Changes Under the
IPPS for Operating Costs
1. Basis and Methodology of Estimates
In this proposed rule, we are announcing proposed policy changes
and proposed payment rate updates for the IPPS for FY 2018 for
operating costs of acute care hospitals. The proposed FY 2018
updates to the capital payments to acute care hospitals are
discussed in section I.I. of this Appendix.
Based on the overall percentage change in payments per case
estimated using our payment simulation model, we estimate that total
FY 2018 operating payments would increase by 1.7 percent compared to
FY 2017. In addition to the applicable percentage increase, this
amount reflects the FY 2018 adjustment required under section 15005
of the 21st Century Cures Act described in section II.D. of the
preamble of this proposed rule of 0.4588 percent to the IPPS
national standardized amounts. This amount also reflects the
adjustment factor of (1/1.006) to remove the 1.006 temporary one-
time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the effects of the 0.2
percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through 2016 related to the
2-midnight policy, which is discussed in section V.M. of the
preamble of this proposed rule. The impacts do not reflect changes
in the number of hospital admissions or real case-mix intensity,
which would also affect overall proposed payment changes.
We have prepared separate impact analyses of the proposed
changes to each system. This section deals with the proposed changes
to the operating inpatient prospective payment system for acute care
hospitals. Our payment simulation model relies on the most recent
available data to enable us to estimate the impacts on payments per
case of certain changes in this proposed rule. However, there are
other proposed changes for which we do not have data available that
would allow us to estimate the payment impacts using this model. For
those proposed changes, we have attempted to predict the payment
impacts based upon our experience and other more limited data.
The data used in developing the quantitative analyses of
proposed changes in payments per case presented in this section are
taken from the FY 2016 MedPAR file and the most current Provider-
Specific File (PSF) that is used for payment purposes. Although the
analyses of the proposed changes to the operating PPS do not
incorporate cost data, data from the most recently available
hospital cost reports were used to categorize hospitals. Our
analysis has several qualifications. First, in this analysis, we do
not make adjustments for future changes in such variables as
admissions, lengths of stay, or underlying growth in real case-mix.
Second, due to the interdependent nature of the IPPS payment
components, it is very difficult to precisely quantify the impact
associated with each proposed change. Third, we use various data
sources to categorize hospitals in the tables. In some cases,
particularly the number of beds, there is a fair degree of variation
in the data from the different sources. We have attempted to
construct these variables with the best available source overall.
However, for individual hospitals, some miscategorizations are
possible.
Using cases from the FY 2016 MedPAR file, we simulate payments
under the operating IPPS given various combinations of payment
parameters. As described previously, Indian Health Service hospitals
and hospitals in Maryland were excluded from the simulations. The
proposed impact of payments under the capital IPPS, or the impact of
payments for costs other than inpatient operating costs, are not
analyzed in this section. Estimated payment impacts of the capital
IPPS for FY 2018 are discussed in section I.I. of this Appendix.
We discuss the following proposed changes:
The effects of the proposed application of the
adjustment required under section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures
Act and the applicable percentage increase (including the proposed
market basket update, the proposed multifactor productivity
adjustment, and the applicable percentage reduction in accordance
with the Affordable Care Act) to the standardized amount and
hospital-specific rates.
The effects of the adjustment of (1/1.006) to remove
the 1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address
the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014
through 2016 related to the 2-midnight policy, as discussed in
section V.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The effects of the proposed changes to the relative
weights and MS-DRG GROUPER.
The effects of the proposed changes in hospitals' wage
index values reflecting updated wage data from hospitals' cost
reporting periods beginning during FY 2014, compared to the FY 2013
wage data, to calculate the FY 2018 wage index.
The effects of the geographic reclassifications by the
MGCRB (as of publication of this proposed rule) that would be
effective for FY 2018.
The effects of the proposed rural floor with the
application of the proposed national budget neutrality factor to the
wage index.
The effects of the proposed frontier State wage index
adjustment under the statutory provision that requires that
hospitals located in States that qualify as frontier States to not
have a wage index less than 1.0. This provision is not budget
neutral.
The effects of the implementation of section
1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by section 505 of Public Law 108-
173, which provides for an increase in a hospital's wage index if a
threshold percentage of residents of the county where the hospital
is located commute to work at hospitals in counties with higher wage
indexes. This provision is not budget neutral.
The effects of the expiration of the special payment
status for MDHs at the end of FY 2017 under current law as a result
of which MDHs that currently receive the higher of payments made
based on the Federal rate or the payments made based on the Federal
rate plus 75 percent of the difference between payments based on the
Federal rate and the hospital-specific rate will be paid based on
the Federal rate starting in FY 2018.
The total estimated change in payments based on the
proposed FY 2018 policies relative to payments based on FY 2017
policies that include the applicable percentage increase of 1.75
percent (or 2.9 percent market basket update with a proposed
reduction of 0.4 percentage point for the multifactor productivity
adjustment, and a 0.75 percentage point reduction, as required under
the Affordable Care Act).
To illustrate the impact of the proposed FY 2018 changes, our
analysis begins with a FY 2017 baseline simulation model using: The
FY 2017 applicable percentage increase of 1.65 percent and the
documentation and coding adjustment of -1.5 percent to the Federal
standardized amount; the adjustment of (1/0.998) to permanently
remove the -0.2 percent reduction to the rate put in place in FY
2014 to offset the estimated increase in IPPS expenditures as a
result of the 2-midnight policy; the 1.006 temporary adjustment to
address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs
2014 through 2016 related to the 2-midnight policy; the FY 2017 MS-
DRG GROUPER (Version 34); the FY 2017 CBSA designations for
hospitals based on the OMB definitions from the 2010 Census; the FY
2017 wage index; and no MGCRB reclassifications. Outlier payments
are set at 5.1 percent of total operating MS-DRG and outlier
payments for modeling purposes.
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act, as added by section
5001(a) of Public Law 109-171, as amended by section 4102(b)(1)(A)
of the ARRA (Pub. L. 111-5) and by section 3401(a)(2) of the
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-148), provides that, for FY 2007
and each subsequent year through FY 2014, the update factor will
include a reduction of 2.0 percentage points for any subsection (d)
hospital that does not submit data on measures in a form and manner
and at a time specified by the Secretary. Beginning in FY 2015, the
reduction is one-quarter of such applicable percentage increase
determined without regard to section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix), (xi), or
(xii) of the Act, or one-quarter of the market basket update.
Therefore, for FY 2018, we are proposing that hospitals that do not
submit quality information under rules established by the Secretary
and that are meaningful EHR users under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of
the Act would receive an applicable percentage increase of 1.025
percent. At the time that this impact was prepared, 82 hospitals are
estimated to not receive the full market basket rate-of-increase for
FY 2018 because they failed the quality data submission process or
did not choose to participate but are meaningful EHR users. For
purposes of the simulations shown later in this section, we modeled
the proposed payment changes for FY 2018 using a reduced update for
these hospitals.
For FY 2018, in accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the
Act, a hospital that has been identified as not a meaningful EHR
user would be subject to a reduction of three-quarters of such
applicable percentage increase determined without regard to section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix), (xi), or (xii) of the Act. Therefore, for FY
2018, we are proposing that hospitals that are identified as not
meaningful EHR users and do submit quality information under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act would receive an applicable
[[Page 20197]]
percentage increase of -0.425 percent. At the time that this impact
analysis was prepared, 103 hospitals are estimated to not receive
the full market basket rate-of-increase for FY 2018 because they are
identified as not meaningful EHR users that do submit quality
information under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act. For
purposes of the simulations shown in this section, we modeled the
proposed payment changes for FY 2018 using a reduced update for
these hospitals.
Hospitals that are identified as not meaningful EHR users under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act and also do not submit quality
data under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act would receive an
applicable percentage increase of -1.15 percent, which reflects a
one-quarter reduction of the market basket update for failure to
submit quality data and a three-quarter reduction of the market
basket update for being identified as not a meaningful EHR user. At
the time that this impact was prepared, 21 hospitals are estimated
to not receive the full market basket rate-of-increase for FY 2018
because they are identified as not meaningful EHR users that do not
submit quality data under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act.
Each proposed policy change, statutory or otherwise, is then
added incrementally to this baseline, finally arriving at an FY 2018
model incorporating all of the proposed changes. This simulation
allows us to isolate the effects of each proposed change.
Our final comparison illustrates the percent change in payments
per case from FY 2017 to FY 2018. Two factors not discussed
separately have significant impacts here. The first factor is the
proposed update to the standardized amount. In accordance with
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, we are proposing to update the
standardized amounts for FY 2018 using a proposed applicable
percentage increase of 1.75 percent. This includes our forecasted
IPPS operating hospital market basket increase of 2.9 percent with a
0.4 percentage point reduction for the multifactor productivity
adjustment and a 0.75 percentage point reduction as required under
the Affordable Care Act. Hospitals that fail to comply with the
quality data submission requirements and are meaningful EHR users
would receive a proposed update of 1.025 percent. This update
includes a reduction of one-quarter of the market basket update for
failure to submit these data. Hospitals that do comply with the
quality data submission requirements but are not meaningful EHR
users would receive an update of -0.425 percent, which includes a
reduction of three-quarters of the market basket update.
Furthermore, hospitals that do not comply with the quality data
submission requirements and also are not meaningful EHR users would
receive an update of -1.15 percent. Under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv)
of the Act, the update to the hospital-specific amounts for SCHs is
also equal to the applicable percentage increase, or 1.75 percent if
the hospital submits quality data and is a meaningful EHR user.
A second significant factor that affects the proposed changes in
hospitals' payments per case from FY 2017 to FY 2018 is the change
in hospitals' geographic reclassification status from one year to
the next. That is, payments may be reduced for hospitals
reclassified in FY 2017 that are no longer reclassified in FY 2018.
Conversely, payments may increase for hospitals not reclassified in
FY 2017 that are reclassified in FY 2018.
2. Analysis of Table I
Table I displays the results of our analysis of the proposed
changes for FY 2018. The table categorizes hospitals by various
geographic and special payment consideration groups to illustrate
the varying impacts on different types of hospitals. The top row of
the table shows the overall impact on the 3,292 acute care hospitals
included in the analysis.
The next four rows of Table I contain hospitals categorized
according to their geographic location: All urban, which is further
divided into large urban and other urban; and rural. There are 2,491
hospitals located in urban areas included in our analysis. Among
these, there are 1,349 hospitals located in large urban areas
(populations over 1 million), and 1,142 hospitals in other urban
areas (populations of 1 million or fewer). In addition, there are
801 hospitals in rural areas. The next two groupings are by bed-size
categories, shown separately for urban and rural hospitals. The
final groupings by geographic location are by census divisions, also
shown separately for urban and rural hospitals.
The second part of Table I shows hospital groups based on
hospitals' FY 2018 proposed payment classifications, including any
reclassifications under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act. For example,
the rows labeled urban, large urban, other urban, and rural show
that the numbers of hospitals paid based on these categorizations
after consideration of geographic reclassifications (including
reclassifications under sections 1886(d)(8)(B) and 1886(d)(8)(E) of
the Act that have implications for capital payments) are 2,391,
1,363, 1,028, and 901, respectively.
The next three groupings examine the impacts of the proposed
changes on hospitals grouped by whether or not they have GME
residency programs (teaching hospitals that receive an IME
adjustment) or receive Medicare DSH payments, or some combination of
these two adjustments. There are 2,211 nonteaching hospitals in our
analysis, 835 teaching hospitals with fewer than 100 residents, and
246 teaching hospitals with 100 or more residents.
In the DSH categories, hospitals are grouped according to their
DSH payment status, and whether they are considered urban or rural
for DSH purposes. The next category groups together hospitals
considered urban or rural, in terms of whether they receive the IME
adjustment, the DSH adjustment, both, or neither.
The next three rows examine the impacts of the proposed changes
on rural hospitals by special payment groups (SCHs, and RRCs). There
were 243 RRCs, 317 SCHs, and 129 hospitals that are both SCHs and
RRCs.
The next series of groupings are based on the type of ownership
and the hospital's Medicare utilization expressed as a percent of
total patient days. These data were taken from the FY 2014 or FY
2013 Medicare cost reports.
The next two groupings concern the geographic reclassification
status of hospitals. The first grouping displays all urban hospitals
that were reclassified by the MGCRB for FY 2018. The second grouping
shows the MGCRB rural reclassifications.
Table I--Impact Analysis of Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating Costs for FY 2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FY
2018 weights Proposed FY Proposed
Proposed and DRG 2018 wage rural floor Proposed
Number of hospital changes with data with with application of the Expiration All
hospitals rate update application application FY 2018 MGCRB application frontier wage of MDH proposed FY
\1\ and of of wage reclassifications of national index and status 2018
adjustments recalibration budget rural floor out[dash]migration changes
budget neutrality budget adjustment
neutrality neutrality
........... (1) \2\ (2) \3\ (3) \4\ (4) \5\ (5) \6\ (6) \7\ (7) \8\ (8) \9\
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Hospitals............................................... 3,292 1.5 0 0 0 0 0.1 -0.1 1.7
By Geographic Location:
Urban hospitals......................................... 2,491 1.6 0 0 -0.1 0 0.1 0 1.8
Large urban areas....................................... 1,349 1.6 -0.1 0 -0.4 -0.1 0 0 1.7
Other urban areas....................................... 1,142 1.6 0 0 0.3 0.2 0.2 -0.1 1.8
Rural hospitals......................................... 801 1.3 0.3 0.1 1.4 -0.2 0.2 -0.9 0.8
Bed Size (Urban):
0-99 beds............................................... 638 1.5 0.4 0.1 -0.6 0.1 0.2 -0.7 1.2
100-199 beds............................................ 765 1.6 0.2 0.1 -0.1 0.2 0.2 -0.1 1.9
200-299 beds............................................ 445 1.6 0.1 0 0.1 0 0.1 0 1.7
[[Page 20198]]
300-499 beds............................................ 431 1.6 0 0 -0.1 0 0.1 0 1.8
500 or more beds........................................ 212 1.5 -0.3 0 -0.2 -0.1 0.1 0 1.7
Bed Size (Rural):
0-49 beds............................................... 313 1.2 0.5 0 0.4 -0.1 0.3 -1.6 0.1
50-99 beds.............................................. 285 1.3 0.3 0 0.6 -0.2 0.2 -2.2 -0.8
100-149 beds............................................ 117 1.3 0.3 0 1.3 0 0.2 -0.1 1.4
150-199 beds............................................ 46 1 0.2 0.1 1.8 -0.2 0.1 0 1.7
200 or more beds........................................ 40 1.4 0.1 0.2 2.9 -0.2 0 0 2
Urban by Region:
New England............................................. 114 1.6 0.1 -0.4 1.3 1 0 -0.2 1.6
Middle Atlantic......................................... 315 1.6 0 -0.1 0.4 -0.3 0.1 0 1.2
South Atlantic.......................................... 404 1.6 0 0.1 -0.4 -0.3 0 -0.1 1.9
East North Central...................................... 385 1.6 0.1 0 -0.2 -0.3 0 0 2
East South Central...................................... 147 1.6 0 -0.1 -0.3 -0.2 0 0 1.7
West North Central...................................... 160 1.5 -0.1 0.4 -0.8 -0.3 0.7 -0.1 2
West South Central...................................... 378 1.6 0 0.5 -0.5 -0.3 0 -0.1 2.1
Mountain................................................ 162 1.5 0 -0.2 0 0.3 0.3 0 1
Pacific................................................. 375 1.5 -0.1 -0.3 -0.2 0.9 0.1 0 2
Puerto Rico............................................. 51 1.6 -0.4 1.4 -1 0.2 0.1 0 1.3
Rural by Region:
New England............................................. 20 1.3 0.2 1.1 2.2 -0.3 0.2 -2.1 1.2
Middle Atlantic......................................... 53 1.2 0.4 0 1.1 -0.2 0.2 -1.7 -0.1
South Atlantic.......................................... 125 1.2 0.3 -0.1 1.8 -0.2 0.2 -0.8 0.4
East North Central...................................... 115 1.3 0.2 -0.3 1.2 -0.2 0.1 -1.7 -0.4
East South Central...................................... 154 1.5 0.4 0.1 2.4 -0.3 0.1 -0.3 1.6
West North Central...................................... 97 1.2 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 -0.3 1.2
West South Central...................................... 154 1.3 0.4 0.3 1.7 -0.3 0.2 -0.7 1.3
Mountain................................................ 59 1 0.3 -0.1 0.2 -0.1 0.3 0 1.4
Pacific................................................. 24 1.1 0.2 0 1 0.1 0 0 1.2
By Payment Classification:
Urban hospitals......................................... 2,391 1.6 0 0 -0.2 0 0.1 0 1.8
Large urban areas....................................... 1,363 1.6 -0.1 0 -0.4 -0.1 0 0 1.7
Other urban areas....................................... 1,028 1.6 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.2 0 1.8
Rural areas............................................. 901 1.4 0.1 0.1 1.4 0 0.2 -0.7 1.2
Teaching Status:
Nonteaching............................................. 2,211 1.5 0.2 0 0.2 0.1 0.1 -0.3 1.6
Fewer than 100 residents................................ 835 1.6 0.1 0 -0.1 0 0.2 0 1.8
100 or more residents................................... 246 1.5 -0.3 -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 0 0 1.6
Urban DSH:
Non-DSH................................................. 561 1.6 0 0 -0.2 -0.1 0.2 -0.4 1.3
100 or more beds........................................ 1,563 1.6 0 0 -0.2 0 0.1 0 1.8
Less than 100 beds...................................... 357 1.5 0.4 0.1 -0.1 0.1 0.1 -0.1 2.1
Rural DSH:
SCH..................................................... 259 1.1 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 1.2
RRC..................................................... 271 1.4 0.1 0.2 1.7 0 0.3 -0.3 1.9
100 or more beds........................................ 41 1.6 0.2 0.3 1.6 -0.1 0.1 0 1.7
Less than 100 beds...................................... 240 1.5 0.7 0 0.6 -0.3 0.7 -4.7 -3.2
Urban teaching and DSH:
Both teaching and DSH................................... 870 1.6 -0.1 -0.1 -0.3 -0.1 0.1 0 1.7
Teaching and no DSH..................................... 94 1.6 -0.1 0 -0.4 -0.2 0.1 0 1.2
No teaching and DSH..................................... 1,050 1.6 0.2 0 0 0.3 0.1 0 2
No teaching and no DSH.................................. 377 1.6 0 0.1 -0.4 -0.1 0.2 0 1.9
Special Hospital Types:
RRC..................................................... 243 1.6 0.1 0.2 2.1 -0.1 0.4 -0.4 1.9
SCH..................................................... 317 1.1 -0.1 0 -0.1 0.2 0 0 1
SCH and RRC............................................. 129 1.1 0 0.1 0.3 0 0 0 1.3
Type of Ownership:
Voluntary............................................... 1,914 1.5 0 0 0 0 0.1 -0.1 1.6
Proprietary............................................. 862 1.6 0.2 0.1 0.1 0 0.1 -0.1 1.9
Government.............................................. 514 1.5 0 0 -0.2 0.2 0.1 -0.1 1.6
Medicare Utilization as a Percent of Inpatient Days:
0-25.................................................... 509 1.5 0 0 -0.4 0.2 0 0 1.6
25-50................................................... 2,113 1.6 0 0 0 0 0.1 -0.1 1.8
50-65................................................... 535 1.5 0.1 0.1 0.6 0 0.1 -0.5 1.2
Over 65................................................. 135 1.5 0.6 0.1 -0.5 0.4 0.3 -3.7 -1.5
FY 2018 Reclassifications by the Medicare Geographic
Classification Review Board:
All Reclassified Hospitals.............................. 900 1.5 0.1 0.1 1.9 -0.1 0 -0.1 1.7
Non-Reclassified Hospitals.............................. 2,392 1.6 0 0 -0.9 0 0.2 -0.1 1.7
[[Page 20199]]
Urban Hospitals Reclassified............................ 629 1.6 0.1 0.1 1.9 0 0 -0.1 1.7
Urban Nonreclassified Hospitals......................... 1,814 1.6 -0.1 -0.1 -0.9 0 0.1 0 1.8
Rural Hospitals Reclassified Full Year.................. 271 1.3 0.2 0 2.3 -0.1 0 -0.5 1.2
Rural Nonreclassified Hospitals Full Year............... 482 1.3 0.4 0.1 -0.2 -0.2 0.4 -1.5 0.1
All Section 401 Reclassified Hospitals:................. 148 1.5 0 0.3 1.4 0.1 0.3 -0.6 1.7
Other Reclassified Hospitals (Section 1886(d)(8)(B)).... 48 1.5 0.6 0.3 3.3 -0.3 0 -1.1 1.1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Because data necessary to classify some hospitals by category were missing, the total number of hospitals in each category may not equal the national total. Discharge data are from FY
2016, and hospital cost report data are from reporting periods beginning in FY 2013 and FY 2014.
\2\ This column displays the payment impact of the proposed hospital rate update and other proposed adjustments, including the proposed 1.75 percent adjustment to the national standardized
amount and the hospital-specific rate (the estimated 2.9 percent market basket update reduced by 0.4 percentage point for the proposed multifactor productivity adjustment and the 0.75
percentage point reduction under the Affordable Care Act), the 0.4588 percent adjustment to the national standardized amount required under section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act and a
factor of (1/1.006) to remove the 1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through 2016 related to the 2-
midnight policy.
\3\ This column displays the payment impact of the proposed changes to the Version 35 GROUPER, the proposed changes to the relative weights and the recalibration of the MS-DRG weights based on
FY 2016 MedPAR data in accordance with section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act. This column displays the application of the proposed recalibration budget neutrality factor of 0.997573 in
accordance with section 1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act.
\4\ This column displays the payment impact of the proposed update to wage index data using FY 2014 and 2013 cost report data and the OMB labor market area delineations based on 2010 Decennial
Census data. This column displays the payment impact of the application of the proposed wage budget neutrality factor, which is calculated separately from the proposed recalibration budget
neutrality factor, and is calculated in accordance with section 1886(d)(3)(E)(i) of the Act. The proposed wage budget neutrality factor is 1.000465.
\5\ Shown here are the effects of geographic reclassifications by the Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board (MGCRB. The effects demonstrate the FY 2018 payment impact of going from
no reclassifications to the reclassifications scheduled to be in effect for FY 2018. Reclassification for prior years has no bearing on the payment impacts shown here. This column reflects
the proposed geographic budget neutrality factor of 0.988522.
\6\ This column displays the effects of the proposed rural floor based on the continued implementation of the OMB labor market area delineations. The Affordable Care Act requires the rural
floor budget neutrality adjustment to be 100 percent national level adjustment. The proposed rural floor budget neutrality factor applied to the wage index is 0.993672.
\7\ This column shows the combined impact of the policy required under section 10324 of the Affordable Care Act that hospitals located in frontier States have a wage index no less than 1.0 and
of section 1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by section 505 of Public Law 108-173, which provides for an increase in a hospital's wage index if a threshold percentage of residents of the
county where the hospital is located commute to work at hospitals in counties with higher wage indexes. These are not budget neutral policies.
\8\ This column displays the impact of the expiration of MDH status for FY 2018, a non-budget neutral payment provision.
\9\ This column shows the estimated change in payments from FY 2017 to FY 2018.
a. Effects of the Proposed Hospital Update, Adjustment Required Under
Section 15005 of the 21st Century Cures Act, and Other Adjustments
(Column 1)
As discussed in section V.B. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, this column includes the proposed hospital update, including
the proposed 2.9 percent market basket update, the proposed
reduction of 0.4 percentage point for the multifactor productivity
adjustment, and the 0.75 percentage point reduction in accordance
with the Affordable Care Act. In addition, as discussed in section
II.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule, this column includes
the FY 2018 adjustment of 0.4588 percent on the national
standardized amount required under section 15005 of the 21st Century
Cures Act and, as discussed in section V.M. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, the adjustment factor of (1/1.006) to remove the
1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the
effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through
2016 related to the 2-midnight policy. As a result, we are proposing
to make a 1.6 percent update to the national standardized amount.
This column also includes the proposed update to the hospital-
specific rates which includes the proposed 2.9 percent market basket
update, the proposed reduction of 0.4 percentage point for the
multifactor productivity adjustment, and the 0.75 percentage point
reduction in accordance with the Affordable Care Act and, as
discussed in section V.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule, the
adjustment factor of (1/1.006) to remove the 1.006 temporary one-
time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the effects of the 0.2
percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through 2016 related to the
2-midnight policy. As a result, we are proposing to make a 1.15
percent update to the hospital-specific rates.
Overall, hospitals would experience a 1.5 percent increase in
payments primarily due to the combined effects of the proposed
hospital update and the proposed 0.4588 percent adjustment on the
national standardized amount and the proposed hospital update to the
hospital-specific rate as well as the adjustment factor of (1/1.006)
to remove the 1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to
address the effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs
2014 through 2016 related to the 2-midnight policy to both the
national standardized amount and the hospital-specific rate.
Hospitals that are paid under the hospital-specific rate would
experience a 1.15 percent increase in payments; therefore, hospital
categories containing hospitals paid under the hospital-specific
rate would experience a lower than average increases in payments.
b. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the MS-DRG Reclassifications and
Relative Cost-Based Weights With Recalibration Budget Neutrality
(Column 2)
Column 2 shows the effects of the proposed changes to the MS-
DRGs and relative weights with the application of the recalibration
budget neutrality factor to the standardized amounts. Section
1886(d)(4)(C)(i) of the Act requires us annually to make appropriate
classification changes in order to reflect changes in treatment
patterns, technology, and any other factors that may change the
relative use of hospital resources. Consistent with section
1886(d)(4)(C)(iii) of the Act, we are calculating a recalibration
budget neutrality factor to account for the changes in MS-
[[Page 20200]]
DRGs and relative weights to ensure that the overall payment impact
is budget neutral.
As discussed in section II.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, the FY 2018 MS-DRG relative weights would be 100 percent cost-
based and 100 percent MS-DRGs. For FY 2018, the MS-DRGs are
calculated using the FY 2016 MedPAR data grouped to the Version 35
(FY 2018) MS-DRGs. The methodology to calculate the relative weights
and the reclassification changes to the GROUPER are described in
more detail in section II.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule.
The ``All Hospitals'' line in Column 2 indicates that proposed
changes due to the MS-DRGs and relative weights would result in a
0.0 percent change in payments with the application of the proposed
recalibration budget neutrality factor of 0.997573 to the
standardized amount. Hospital categories that generally treat more
surgical cases than medical cases would experience a decrease in
their payments under the proposed relative weights for reasons that
include the proposals regarding operating room procedures described
in section II.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule. Rural
hospitals would experience a 0.3 percent increase in payments in
part because rural hospitals tend to treat fewer surgical cases than
medical cases, while teaching hospitals with more than 100 residents
would experience a decrease in payments by 0.3 percent in part
because those hospitals treat more surgical cases than medical
cases.
c. Effects of the Proposed Wage Index Changes (Column 3)
Column 3 shows the impact of updated wage data using FY 2014
cost report data, with the application of the wage budget neutrality
factor. The wage index is calculated and assigned to hospitals on
the basis of the labor market area in which the hospital is located.
Under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, beginning with FY 2005, we
delineate hospital labor market areas based on the Core Based
Statistical Areas (CBSAs) established by OMB. The current
statistical standards used in FY 2018 are based on OMB standards
published on February 28, 2013 (75 FR 37246 and 37252), and 2010
Decennial Census data (OMB Bulletin No. 13-01), as updated in OMB
Bulletin No. 15-01. (We refer readers to the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (79 FR 49951 through 49963) for a full discussion on our
adoption of the OMB labor market area delineations based on the 2010
Decennial Census data, effective beginning with the FY 2015 IPPS
wage index, and to section III.A.2. of the preamble of the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 56913) for a discussion of our
adoption of the CBSA updates in OMB Bulletin No. 15-01, which were
effective beginning with the FY 2017 wage index.)
Section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that, beginning
October 1, 1993, we annually update the wage data used to calculate
the wage index. In accordance with this requirement, the proposed
wage index for acute care hospitals for FY 2018 is based on data
submitted for hospital cost reporting periods beginning on or after
October 1, 2013 and before October 1, 2014. The estimated impact of
the updated wage data using the FY 2014 cost report data and the OMB
labor market area delineations on hospital payments is isolated in
Column 3 by holding the other payment parameters constant in this
simulation. That is, Column 3 shows the percentage change in
payments when going from a model using the FY 2017 wage index, based
on FY 2013 wage data, the labor-related share of 69.6 percent, under
the OMB delineations and having a 100-percent occupational mix
adjustment applied, to a model using the FY 2018 pre-
reclassification wage index based on FY 2014 wage data with the
labor-related share of 68.3 percent, under the OMB delineations,
also having a 100-percent occupational mix adjustment applied, while
holding other proposed payment parameters such as use of the Version
35 MS-DRG GROUPER constant. The proposed FY 2018 occupational mix
adjustment is based on the CY 2013 occupational mix survey.
In addition, the column shows the impact of the proposed
application of the wage budget neutrality to the national
standardized amount. In FY 2010, we began calculating separate wage
budget neutrality and recalibration budget neutrality factors, in
accordance with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, which specifies
that budget neutrality to account for wage index changes or updates
made under that subparagraph must be made without regard to the 62
percent labor-related share guaranteed under section
1886(d)(3)(E)(ii) of the Act. Therefore, for FY 2018, we are
proposing to calculate the wage budget neutrality factor to ensure
that payments under updated wage data and the labor-related share of
68.3 percent are budget neutral without regard to the lower labor-
related share of 62 percent applied to hospitals with a wage index
less than or equal to 1.0. In other words, the wage budget
neutrality is calculated under the assumption that all hospitals
receive the higher labor-related share of the standardized amount.
The proposed FY 2018 wage budget neutrality factor is 1.000465, and
the overall proposed payment change is 0.0 percent.
Column 3 shows the impacts of updating the wage data using FY
2014 cost reports. Overall, the new wage data and the labor-related
share, combined with the proposed wage budget neutrality adjustment,
would lead to no change for all hospitals as shown in Column 3.
In looking at the wage data itself, the proposed national
average hourly wage would increase 1.02 percent compared to FY 2017.
Therefore, the only manner in which to maintain or exceed the
previous year's wage index was to match or exceed the 1.02 percent
increase in the national average hourly wage. Of the 3,287 hospitals
with wage data for both FYs 2017 and 2018, 1,698 or 51.7 percent
would experience an average hourly wage increase of 1.02 percent or
more.
The following chart compares the shifts in wage index values for
hospitals due to proposed changes in the average hourly wage data
for FY 2018 relative to FY 2017. Among urban hospitals, 10 would
experience a decrease of 10 percent or more, and 2 urban hospitals
would experience an increase of 10 percent or more. One hundred and
one urban hospitals would experience an increase or decrease of at
least 5 percent or more but less than 10 percent. Among rural
hospitals, none would experience an increase of at least 5 percent
or more, but 12 rural hospitals would experience a decrease of
greater than or equal to 5 percent but less than 10 percent. Three
rural hospitals would experience decreases of 10 percent or more.
However, 775 rural hospitals would experience increases or decreases
of less than 5 percent, while 2,384 urban hospitals would experience
increases or decreases of less than 5 percent. No urban hospitals
and no rural hospitals experience no change to their wage index.
These figures reflect proposed changes in the ``pre-reclassified,
occupational mix-adjusted wage index,'' that is, the proposed wage
index before the application of proposed geographic
reclassification, the proposed rural floor, the proposed out-
migration adjustment, and other proposed wage index exceptions and
adjustments. (We refer readers to sections III.G. through III.L. of
the preamble of this proposed rule for a complete discussion of the
exceptions and adjustments to the wage index.) We note that the
proposed ``post-reclassified wage index'' or proposed ``payment wage
index,'' which is the proposed wage index that includes all such
exceptions and adjustments (as reflected in Tables 2 and 3
associated with this proposed rule, which are available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site) is used to adjust the labor-related
share of a hospital's standardized amount, either 68.3 percent or 62
percent, depending upon whether a hospital's wage index is greater
than 1.0 or less than or equal to 1.0. Therefore, the proposed pre-
reclassified wage index figures in the following chart may
illustrate a somewhat larger or smaller change than would occur in a
hospital's proposed payment wage index and total payment.
The following chart shows the projected impact of proposed
changes in the area wage index values for urban and rural hospitals.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of hospitals
Proposed FY 2018 percentage change in -------------------------------
area wage index values Urban Rural
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase 10 percent or more............. 2 0
Increase greater than or equal to 5 54 0
percent and less than 10 percent.......
Increase or decrease less than 5 percent 2,384 775
Decrease greater than or equal to 5 47 12
percent and less than 10 percent.......
[[Page 20201]]
Decrease 10 percent or more............. 10 3
Unchanged............................... 0 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
d. Effects of MGCRB Reclassifications (Column 4)
Our impact analysis to this point has assumed acute care
hospitals are paid on the basis of their actual geographic location
(with the exception of ongoing policies that provide that certain
hospitals receive payments on bases other than where they are
geographically located). The proposed changes in Column 4 reflect
the per case payment impact of moving from this baseline to a
simulation incorporating the MGCRB decisions for FY 2018.
By spring of each year, the MGCRB makes reclassification
determinations that would be effective for the next fiscal year,
which begins on October 1. The MGCRB may approve a hospital's
reclassification request for the purpose of using another area's
wage index value. Hospitals may appeal denials of MGCRB decisions to
the CMS Administrator. Further, hospitals have 45 days from
publication of the IPPS proposed rule in the Federal Register to
decide whether to withdraw or terminate an approved geographic
reclassification for the following year (we refer readers to the
discussion of our proposed revisions to this policy in section
III.I.2. of the preamble to this proposed rule).
The overall effect of geographic reclassification is required by
section 1886(d)(8)(D) of the Act to be budget neutral. Therefore,
for purposes of this impact analysis, we are proposing to apply an
adjustment of 0.988522 to ensure that the effects of the
reclassifications under section 1886(d)(10) of the Act are budget
neutral (section II.A. of the Addendum to this proposed rule).
Geographic reclassification generally benefits hospitals in rural
areas. We estimate that the geographic reclassification would
increase payments to rural hospitals by an average of 1.4 percent.
By region, all the rural hospital categories would experience
increases in payments due to MGCRB reclassifications.
Table 2 listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed
rule and available via the Internet on the CMS Web site reflects the
proposed reclassifications for FY 2018.
e. Effects of the Proposed Rural Floor, Including Application of
National Budget Neutrality (Column 5)
As discussed in section III.B. of the preamble of the FY 2009
IPPS final rule, the FY 2010 IPPS/RY 2010 LTCH PPS final rule, the
FYs 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rules, and this proposed rule, section 4410 of Public Law 105-33
established the rural floor by requiring that the wage index for a
hospital in any urban area cannot be less than the wage index
received by rural hospitals in the same State. We would apply a
uniform budget neutrality adjustment to the wage index. As discussed
in section III.H. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are not
proposing to extend the imputed floor policy. Therefore, column 6
shows the effects of the proposed rural floor only.
The Affordable Care Act requires that we apply one rural floor
budget neutrality factor to the wage index nationally. We have
calculated a proposed FY 2018 rural floor budget neutrality factor
to be applied to the wage index of 0.993672, which would reduce wage
indexes by 0.63 percent.
Column 5 shows the projected impact of the proposed rural floor
with the national rural floor budget neutrality factor applied to
the wage index based on the OMB labor market area delineations. The
column compares the proposed post-reclassification FY 2018 wage
index of providers before the proposed rural floor adjustment and
the proposed post-reclassification FY 2018 wage index of providers
with the proposed rural floor adjustment based on the OMB labor
market area delineations. Only urban hospitals can benefit from the
rural floor. Because the provision is budget neutral, all other
hospitals (that is, all rural hospitals and those urban hospitals to
which the adjustment is not made) would experience a decrease in
payments due to the budget neutrality adjustment that is applied
nationally to their wage index.
We estimate that 392 hospitals would receive the proposed rural
floor in FY 2018. All IPPS hospitals in our model would have their
wage index reduced by the rural floor budget neutrality adjustment
of 0.993672. We project that, in aggregate, rural hospitals would
experience a 0.63 percent decrease in payments as a result of the
application of the proposed rural floor budget neutrality because
the rural hospitals do not benefit from the rural floor, but have
their wage indexes downwardly adjusted to ensure that the
application of the rural floor is budget neutral overall. We project
hospitals located in urban areas would experience no change in
payments because increases in payments by hospitals benefitting from
the rural floor offset decreases in payments by nonrural floor urban
hospitals whose wage index is downwardly adjusted by the rural floor
budget neutrality factor. Urban hospitals in the New England region
would experience a 1.0 percent increase in payments primarily due to
the application of the proposed rural floor in Massachusetts.
Thirty-six urban providers in Massachusetts are expected to receive
the proposed rural floor wage index value, including the rural floor
budget neutrality adjustment, increasing payments overall to
Massachusetts by an estimated $44 million. We estimate that
Massachusetts hospitals would receive approximately a 1.3 percent
increase in IPPS payments due to the application of the proposed
rural floor in FY 2018.
Urban Puerto Rico hospitals are expected to experience a 0.2
percent increase in payments as a result of the application of the
proposed rural floor.
In response to a public comment addressed in the FY 2012 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR 51593), we are providing the payment
impact of the proposed rural floor with budget neutrality at the
State level. Column 1 of the following table displays the number of
IPPS hospitals located in each State. Column 2 displays the number
of hospitals in each State that would receive the proposed rural
floor wage index for FY 2018. Column 3 displays the percentage of
total payments each State would receive or contribute to fund the
rural floor with national budget neutrality. The column compares the
proposed post-reclassification FY 2018 wage index of providers
before the proposed rural floor adjustment and the proposed post-
reclassification FY 2018 wage index of providers with the proposed
rural floor adjustment. Column 4 displays the estimated payment
amount that each State would gain or lose due to the application of
the proposed rural floor with national budget neutrality.
[[Page 20202]]
Proposed FY 2018 IPPS Estimated Payments Due to Rural Floor With National Budget Neutrality
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed
Proposed percent change
number of in payments
Number of hospitals that due to Proposed
State hospitals would receive application of difference (in
the rural rural floor $ millions)
floor with budget
neutrality
(1) (2) (3) (4)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama......................................... 84 3 0.2 3.05
Alaska.......................................... 6 4 1.4 2.62
Arizona......................................... 57 44 0.9 17.47
Arkansas........................................ 44 1 -0.3 -3.39
California...................................... 299 177 1.3 136.28
Colorado........................................ 47 4 0.4 4.97
Connecticut..................................... 30 10 0.4 6.31
Delaware........................................ 6 0 -0.3 -1.61
Washington, D.C................................. 7 0 -0.3 -1.67
Florida......................................... 171 17 -0.2 -14.93
Georgia......................................... 103 0 -0.3 -8.07
Hawaii.......................................... 12 0 -0.3 -0.83
Idaho........................................... 14 0 -0.2 -0.77
Illinois........................................ 127 3 -0.3 -15.87
Indiana......................................... 85 7 -0.2 -5.92
Iowa............................................ 34 0 -0.3 -2.94
Kansas.......................................... 53 0 -0.3 -2.62
Kentucky........................................ 66 0 -0.3 -4.87
Louisiana....................................... 94 3 -0.3 -4.21
Maine........................................... 17 0 -0.3 -1.59
Massachusetts................................... 57 36 1.3 43.82
Michigan........................................ 94 0 -0.3 -13.74
Minnesota....................................... 49 0 -0.3 -5.66
Mississippi..................................... 60 0 -0.3 -3.4
Missouri........................................ 74 0 -0.2 -3.89
Montana......................................... 12 4 0 0.08
Nebraska........................................ 24 0 -0.3 -1.88
Nevada.......................................... 23 0 -0.4 -3.04
New Hampshire................................... 13 9 2.5 14.09
New Jersey...................................... 64 0 -0.4 -16.05
New Mexico...................................... 25 0 -0.2 -1.01
New York........................................ 154 21 -0.1 -11.13
North Carolina.................................. 84 0 -0.3 -9.6
North Dakota.................................... 6 0 -0.2 -0.62
Ohio............................................ 128 6 -0.3 -11.62
Oklahoma........................................ 84 4 -0.2 -2.81
Oregon.......................................... 34 5 -0.3 -2.64
Pennsylvania.................................... 150 3 -0.3 -16.09
Puerto Rico..................................... 51 10 0.2 0.38
Rhode Island.................................... 11 0 -0.4 -1.56
South Carolina.................................. 56 0 -0.3 -4.66
South Dakota.................................... 17 0 -0.2 -0.72
Tennessee....................................... 91 6 -0.3 -7.25
Texas........................................... 310 0 -0.3 -21.42
Utah............................................ 33 1 -0.3 -1.49
Vermont......................................... 6 0 -0.2 -0.44
Virginia........................................ 73 1 -0.2 -6.7
Washington...................................... 48 3 -0.2 -4.36
West Virginia................................... 29 3 -0.1 -0.46
Wisconsin....................................... 66 7 -0.2 -3.57
Wyoming......................................... 10 0 -0.1 -0.18
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
f. Effects of the Application of the Proposed Frontier State Wage Index
and Out-Migration Adjustment (Column 6)
This column shows the combined effects of the application of
section 10324(a) of the Affordable Care Act, which requires that we
establish a minimum post-reclassified wage-index of 1.00 for all
hospitals located in ``frontier States,'' and the effects of section
1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by section 505 of Public Law 108-
173, which provides for an increase in the wage index for hospitals
located in certain counties that have a relatively high percentage
of hospital employees who reside in the county, but work in a
different area with a higher wage index. These two wage index
provisions are not budget neutral and increase payments overall by
0.1 percent compared to the provisions not being in effect.
The term ``frontier States'' is defined in the statute as States
in which at least 50 percent of counties have a population density
less than 6 persons per square mile. Based on these criteria, 5
States (Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming)
[[Page 20203]]
are considered frontier States and 48 hospitals located in those
States would receive a frontier wage index of 1.0000. Overall, this
provision is not budget neutral and is estimated to increase IPPS
operating payments by approximately $65 million. Rural and urban
hospitals located in the West North Central region would experience
an increase in payments by 0.3 and 0.7 percent, respectively,
because many of the hospitals located in this region are frontier
State hospitals.
In addition, section 1886(d)(13) of the Act, as added by section
505 of Public Law 108-173, provides for an increase in the wage
index for hospitals located in certain counties that have a
relatively high percentage of hospital employees who reside in the
county, but work in a different area with a higher wage index.
Hospitals located in counties that qualify for the payment
adjustment are to receive an increase in the wage index that is
equal to a weighted average of the difference between the wage index
of the resident county, post-reclassification and the higher wage
index work area(s), weighted by the overall percentage of workers
who are employed in an area with a higher wage index. There are an
estimated 248 providers that would receive the out-migration wage
adjustment in FY 2018. Rural hospitals generally qualify for the
adjustment, resulting in a 0.2 percent increase in payments. This
provision appears to benefit section 401 hospitals and RRCs in that
they would experience a 0.3 percent and 0.4 percent increase in
payments, respectively. This out-migration wage adjustment also is
not budget neutral, and we estimate the impact of these providers
receiving the out-migration increase would be approximately $39
million.
g. Effects of the Expiration of MDH Special Payment Status (Column 7)
Column 7 shows our estimate of the changes in payments due to
the expiration of MDH status, a nonbudget neutral payment provision.
Section 205 of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of
2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114 10, enacted on April 16, 2015) extended
the MDH program (which, under previous law, was to be in effect for
discharges on or before March 31, 2015 only) for discharges
occurring on or after April 1, 2015, through FY 2017 (that is, for
discharges occurring on or before September 30, 2017). Therefore,
under current law, the MDH program will expire at the end of FY
2017. Hospitals that qualified to be MDHs receive the higher of
payments made based on the Federal rate or the payments made based
on the Federal rate amount plus 75 percent of the difference between
payments based the Federal rate and payments based the hospital-
specific rate (a hospital-specific cost-based rate). Because this
provision was not budget neutral, the expiration of this payment
provision results in a 0.1 percent decrease in payments overall.
There are currently 158 MDHs, of which we estimate 96 would have
been paid under the blended payment of the Federal rate and
hospital-specific rate if the MDH program had not expired. Because
those 96 MDHs will no longer receive the blended payment and will be
paid only under the Federal rate in FY 2018, it is estimated that
those hospitals would experience an overall decrease in payments of
approximately $119 million.
MDHs were generally rural hospitals, so the expiration of the
MDH program will result in an overall decrease in payments to rural
hospitals of 0.9 percent. Rural New England hospitals can expect a
decrease in payments of 2.1 percent because 6 out of the 20 rural
New England hospitals are MDHs that will lose this special payment
status under the expiration of the program at the end of FY 2017.
MDHs can expect a decrease in payments of 12 percent.
h. Effects of All FY 2018 Proposed Changes (Column 8)
Column 8 shows our estimate of the proposed changes in payments
per discharge from FY 2017 and FY 2018, resulting from all proposed
changes reflected in this proposed rule for FY 2018. It includes
combined effects of the year to year change of the previous columns
in the table.
The proposed average increase in payments under the IPPS for all
hospitals is approximately 1.7 percent for FY 2018 relative to FY
2017 and for this row is primarily driven by the changes reflected
in Column 1. Column 8 includes the proposed annual hospital update
of 1.6 percent to the national standardized amount. This proposed
annual hospital update includes the 2.9 percent market basket
update, the proposed reduction of 0.4 percentage point for the
multifactor productivity adjustment, and the 0.75 percentage point
reduction under section 3401 of the Affordable Care Act. As
discussed in section II.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
this column also includes the proposed FY 2018 adjustment of 0.4588
percent on the national standardized amount. In addition, this
column includes the adjustment factor of (1/1.006) to remove the
1.006 temporary one-time adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the
effects of the 0.2 percent reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through
2016 related to the 2-midnight policy, which is discussed in section
V.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule. Hospitals paid under the
hospital-specific rate would receive a 1.15 percent proposed
hospital update. As described in Column 1, the proposed annual
hospital update with the proposed adjustment of 0.4588 percent for
hospitals paid under the national standardized amount, the
adjustment of (1/1.006) to remove the 1.006 temporary one-time
adjustment made in FY 2017 to address the effects of the 0.2 percent
reduction in effect for FYs 2014 through 2016, which is discussed in
section V.M. of the preamble of this proposed rule, combined with
the proposed annual hospital update for hospitals paid under the
hospital-specific rates would result in a 1.7 percent increase in
payments in FY 2018 relative to FY 2017. There are also interactive
effects among the various factors comprising the payment system that
we are not able to isolate which contribute to our estimate of the
proposed changes in payments per discharge from FY 2017 and FY 2018
in Column 8.
Overall payments to hospitals paid under the IPPS due to the
proposed applicable percentage increase and proposed changes to
policies related to MS-DRGs, geographic adjustments, and outliers
are estimated to increase by 1.7 percent for FY 2018. Hospitals in
urban areas would experience a 1.8 percent increase in payments per
discharge in FY 2018 compared to FY 2017. Hospital payments per
discharge in rural areas are estimated to increase by 0.8 percent in
FY 2018.
3. Impact Analysis of Table II
Table II presents the projected impact of the proposed changes
for FY 2018 for urban and rural hospitals and for the different
categories of hospitals shown in Table I. It compares the estimated
average payments per discharge for FY 2017 with the proposed
estimated average payments per discharge for FY 2018, as calculated
under our models. Therefore, this table presents, in terms of the
average dollar amounts paid per discharge, the combined effects of
the proposed changes presented in Table I. The proposed estimated
percentage changes shown in the last column of Table II equal the
estimated percentage changes in average payments per discharge from
Column 8 of Table I.
Table II--Impact Analysis of Proposed Changes for FY 2018 Acute Care Hospital Operating Prospective Payment
System
[Payments per discharge]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Estimated
Number of average FY average FY Proposed FY
hospitals 2017 payment 2018 payment 2018 changes
per discharge per discharge
(1) (2) (3) (4)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Hospitals 3,292 11,842 12,041 1.7
By Geographic Location:
Urban hospitals............................. 2,491 12,179 12,393 1.8
[[Page 20204]]
Large urban areas........................... 1,349 12,953 13,174 1.7
Other urban areas........................... 1,142 11,311 11,516 1.8
Rural hospitals............................. 801 8,907 8,975 0.8
Bed Size (Urban):
0-99 beds................................... 638 9,688 9,806 1.2
100-199 beds................................ 765 10,232 10,423 1.9
200-299 beds................................ 445 11,051 11,244 1.7
300-499 beds................................ 431 12,395 12,620 1.8
500 or more beds............................ 212 14,917 15,173 1.7
Bed Size (Rural):
0-49 beds................................... 313 7,531 7,535 0.1
50-99 beds.................................. 285 8,501 8,431 -0.8
100-149 beds................................ 117 8,736 8,861 1.4
150-199 beds................................ 46 9,453 9,617 1.7
200 or more beds............................ 40 10,433 10,643 2
Urban by Region:
New England................................. 114 13,107 13,311 1.6
Middle Atlantic............................. 315 13,750 13,910 1.2
South Atlantic.............................. 404 10,775 10,980 1.9
East North Central.......................... 385 11,495 11,726 2
East South Central.......................... 147 10,247 10,419 1.7
West North Central.......................... 160 11,887 12,127 2
West South Central.......................... 378 10,936 11,163 2.1
Mountain.................................... 162 12,796 12,928 1
Pacific..................................... 375 15,612 15,922 2
Puerto Rico................................. 51 8,770 8,886 1.3
Rural by Region:
New England................................. 20 12,124 12,264 1.2
Middle Atlantic............................. 53 8,878 8,873 -0.1
South Atlantic.............................. 125 8,271 8,302 0.4
East North Central.......................... 115 9,221 9,183 -0.4
East South Central.......................... 154 7,887 8,012 1.6
West North Central.......................... 97 9,742 9,856 1.2
West South Central.......................... 154 7,535 7,631 1.3
Mountain.................................... 59 10,601 10,754 1.4
Pacific..................................... 24 12,463 12,614 1.2
By Payment Classification:
Urban hospitals............................. 2,391 12,193 12,406 1.8
Large urban areas........................... 1,363 12,940 13,160 1.7
Other urban areas........................... 1,028 11,201 11,406 1.8
Rural areas................................. 901 10,084 10,207 1.2
Teaching Status:
Nonteaching................................. 2,211 9,850 10,010 1.6
Fewer than 100 residents.................... 835 11,367 11,570 1.8
100 or more residents....................... 246 17,167 17,441 1.6
Urban DSH:
Non-DSH..................................... 561 10,314 10,448 1.3
100 or more beds............................ 1,563 12,565 12,785 1.8
Less than 100 beds.......................... 357 8,849 9,038 2.1
Rural DSH:
SCH......................................... 259 9,547 9,662 1.2
RRC......................................... 271 10,639 10,842 1.9
100 or more beds............................ 41 10,943 11,128 1.7
Less than 100 beds.......................... 240 6,977 6,754 -3.2
Urban teaching and DSH:
Both teaching and DSH....................... 870 13,659 13,887 1.7
Teaching and no DSH......................... 94 11,460 11,593 1.2
No teaching and DSH......................... 1,050 10,218 10,422 2
No teaching and no DSH...................... 377 9,840 10,023 1.9
Special Hospital Types:
RRC......................................... 243 10,318 10,518 1.9
SCH......................................... 317 10,781 10,886 1
SCH and RRC................................. 129 11,225 11,374 1.3
Type of Ownership:
[[Page 20205]]
Voluntary................................... 1,914 12,027 12,223 1.6
Proprietary................................. 862 10,383 10,585 1.9
Government.................................. 514 12,805 13,012 1.6
Medicare Utilization as a Percent of Inpatient
Days:
0-25........................................ 509 15,200 15,448 1.6
25-50....................................... 2,113 11,775 11,983 1.8
50-65....................................... 535 9,626 9,742 1.2
Over 65..................................... 135 7,473 7,364 -1.5
FY 2018 Reclassifications by the Medicare
Geographic Classification Review Board:
All Reclassified Hospitals.................. 900 11,720 11,914 1.7
Non-Reclassified Hospitals.................. 2,392 11,900 12,101 1.7
Urban Hospitals Reclassified................ 629 12,240 12,452 1.7
Urban Nonreclassified Hospitals............. 1,814 12,157 12,376 1.8
Rural Hospitals Reclassified Full Year...... 271 9,327 9,435 1.2
Rural Nonreclassified Hospitals Full Year... 482 8,419 8,424 0.1
All Section 401 Reclassified Hospitals:..... 148 11,661 11,862 1.7
Other Reclassified Hospitals (Section 48 8,080 8,169 1.1
1886(d)(8)(B)).............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Effects of Other Proposed Policy Changes
In addition to those proposed policy changes discussed
previously that we are able to model using our IPPS payment
simulation model, we are proposing to make various other changes in
this proposed rule. Generally, we have limited or no specific data
available with which to estimate the impacts of these proposed
changes. Our estimates of the likely impacts associated with these
other proposed changes are discussed in this section.
1. Effects of Proposed Policy Relating to New Medical Service and
Technology Add-On Payments
In section II.H. of the preamble to this proposed rule, we
discuss six technologies for which we received applications for add-
on payments for new medical services and technologies for FY 2018,
as well as the status of the new technologies that were approved to
receive new technology add-on payments in FY 2017. We note that
three applicants withdrew their applications prior to the issuance
of this proposed rule. As explained in the preamble to this proposed
rule, add-on payments for new medical services and technologies
under section 1886(d)(5)(K) of the Act are not required to be budget
neutral. As discussed in section II.H.6. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we have not yet determined whether any of these six
technologies for which we received applications for consideration
for new technology add-on payments for FY 2018 will meet the
specified criteria. Consequently, it is premature to estimate the
potential payment impact of these six technologies for any potential
new technology add-on payments for FY 2018. We note that if any of
the six technologies are found to be eligible for new technology
add-on payments for FY 2018, in the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule, we would discuss the estimated payment impact for FY 2018.
In section II.H.5. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to discontinue new technology add-on payments for
Blinatumomab (BLINCYTOTM), CardioMEMSTM HF
(Heart Failure) Monitoring System, the LUTONIX[supreg] Drug Coated
Balloon (DCB) Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA) and
IN.PACTTM AdmiralTM Paclitaxel Coated
Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA) Balloon Catheter, and
the MAGEC[supreg] Spinal Bracing and Distraction System
(MAGEC[supreg] Spine) for FY 2018 because these technologies will
have been on the U.S. market for 3 years. We also are proposing to
continue to make new technology add-on payments for
Defitelio[supreg] (Defibrotide), GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] Iliac
Branch Endoprosthesis (IBE), Idarucizumab and VistogardTM
(Uridine Triacetate) in FY 2018 because these technologies would
still be considered new. We note that new technology add-on payments
for each case are limited to the lesser of (1) 50 percent of the
costs of the new technology or (2) 50 percent of the amount by which
the costs of the case exceed the standard MS-DRG payment for the
case. Because it is difficult to predict the actual new technology
add-on payment for each case, our estimates below are based on the
increase in new technology add-on payments for FY 2018 as if every
claim that would qualify for a new technology add-on payment would
receive the maximum add-on payment. For Defitelio[supreg], based on
the applicant's estimate from FY 2017, we currently estimate that
new technology add-on payments for Defitelio[supreg] would increase
overall FY 2018 payments by $5,161,200 (maximum add-on payment of
$75,900 * 68 patients). Based on the applicant's estimate for FY
2017, we currently estimate that new technology add-on payments for
the GORE[supreg] EXCLUDER[supreg] IBE would increase overall FY 2018
payments by $5,685,750 (maximum add-on payment of $5,250 * 1,083
patients). Based on the applicant's estimate for FY 2017, we
currently estimate that new technology add-on payments for
Idarucizumab would increase overall FY 2018 payments by $14,766,500
(maximum add-on payment of $1,750 * 8,438 patients). Based on the
applicant's estimate for FY 2017, we currently estimate that new
technology add-on payments for VistogardTM would increase
overall FY 2018 payments by $2,812,500 (maximum add-on payment of
$37,500 * 75 patients).
2. Effects of Proposed Changes to MS-DRGs Subject to the Postacute Care
Transfer Policy and the MS-DRG Special Payment Policy
In section V.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposed changes to the list of MS-DRGs subject to the
postacute care transfer policy and the DRG special payment policy.
As reflected in Table 5 listed in section VI. of the Addendum to
this proposed rule (which is available via the Internet on the CMS
Web site), using criteria set forth in regulations at 42 CFR 412.4,
we evaluated MS-DRG charge, discharge, and transfer data to
determine which MS-DRGs qualify for the postacute care transfer and
MS-DRG special payment policies. We note that we are not proposing
to make any changes in these payment policies in this FY 2018
proposed rule. As a result of our proposals to revise the MS-DRG
classifications for FY 2018, which are discussed in section II.F. of
the preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing to add three
MS-DRGs to the list of MS-DRGs subject to the postacute care
transfer policy
[[Page 20206]]
and the MS-DRG special payment policy. Column 4 of Table I in this
Appendix A shows the effects of the proposed changes to the MS-DRGs
and the relative payment weights and the application of the
recalibration budget neutrality factor to the standardized amounts.
Section 1886(d)(4)(C)(i) of the Act requires us annually to make
appropriate DRG classification changes in order to reflect changes
in treatment patterns, technology, and any other factors that may
change the relative use of hospital resources. The analysis and
methods for determining the proposed changes due to the MS-DRGs and
relative payment weights account for and include changes as a result
of the proposed changes to the MS-DRGs subject to the MS-DRG
postacute care transfer and MS-DRG special payment policies. We
refer readers to section I.G. of this Appendix A for a detailed
discussion of payment impacts due to the proposed MS-DRG
reclassification policies for FY 2018.
3. Effects of the Proposed Changes to the Volume Decrease Adjustment
for Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs)
In section V.C. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to modify the methodology used to calculate
volume decrease adjustments for SCHs. We are proposing to
prospectively require that the MACs compare Medicare revenue
allocable to fixed costs from the cost reporting period when the
hospital experienced the volume decrease to the hospital's fixed
costs from that same cost reporting period when calculating a volume
decrease adjustment. We also are proposing that the cap will no
longer be applied to the volume decrease adjustment calculation
methodology in future periods. In addition, we are proposing to
prospectively modify the volume decrease adjustment process to no
longer require that a hospital explicitly demonstrate that it
appropriately adjusted the number of staff in inpatient areas of the
hospital based on the decrease in the number of inpatient days and
to no longer require the MACs to adjust the volume decrease
adjustment payment amount for excess staffing. We estimate that
these proposed changes to the volume decrease adjustment would
increase aggregate volume decrease adjustment payments by a total of
approximately $15 million for cost reporting periods beginning in FY
2018. Given that the volume decrease adjustment is only available to
SCHs and is predicated on the unanticipated nature of the volume
decrease, it is difficult to predict how many hospitals will qualify
for the adjustment in FY 2018. We assumed 20 hospitals would qualify
for the adjustment in FY 2018 that the additional amount of the
volume decrease adjustment payment based on our proposed methodology
would be $750,000 per hospital.
4. Effects of Proposed Changes to Low-Volume Hospital Payment
Adjustment Policy
In section V.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the expiration of the temporary changes to the low-volume
hospital payment policy originally provided for by the Affordable
Care Act and extended through FY 2017 by subsequent legislation.
Effective for FY 2018 and subsequent years, qualifying hospitals
must have less than 200 combined Medicare and non-Medicare
discharges (instead of 1,600 Medicare discharges) and must be
located more than 25 road miles from another subsection (d) hospital
(instead of 15 road miles from another subsection (d) hospital). In
this same section, we discuss our proposed parallel low-volume
hospital payment adjustment regarding hospitals operated by the IHS
or a Tribe. Under this proposal, an IHS hospital would be able to
qualify for a low-volume hospital adjustment based on its distance
to the nearest IHS hospital, and a non-IHS hospital would be able to
qualify to receive a low-volume hospital adjustment based on its
distance to the nearest non-IHS hospital. Based upon the best
available data at this time, we estimate the expiration of the
temporary changes to the low-volume hospital payment and the
proposed change to the low-volume payment adjustments would decrease
aggregate low-volume payment adjustments from $315 million in FY
2017 to $4 million in FY 2018. This $311 million decrease in FY 2018
is based on an estimated $314 million decrease in payments from the
expiration of the temporary changes to the low-volume hospital
definition and payment adjustment methodology together with an
estimated increase of $3 million in payments made to hospitals that
are expected to qualify under our proposed parallel low-volume
hospital payment adjustment. These payment estimates were determined
by identifying providers that, based on the best available data, are
expected to qualify under the criteria that will apply in FY 2018
(that is, are located at least 25 miles from the nearest subsection
(d) hospital and have les than 200 total discharges, and were
determined from the same data used in developing the quantitative
analyses of proposed changes in payments per case discussed
previously in section I.G. of this Appendix A.
5. Effects of the Proposed Changes to Medicare DSH and Uncompensated
Care Payments for FY 2018
As discussed in section V.G. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, under section 3133 of the Affordable Care Act, hospitals that
are eligible to receive Medicare DSH payments will receive 25
percent of the amount they previously would have received under the
statutory formula for Medicare DSH payments under section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Act. The remainder, equal to an estimate of 75
percent of what formerly would have been paid as Medicare DSH
payments (Factor 1), reduced to reflect changes in the percentage of
uninsured individuals and additional statutory adjustments (Factor
2), is available to make additional payments to each hospital that
qualifies for Medicare DSH payments and that has uncompensated care.
Each hospital eligible for Medicare DSH payments will receive an
additional payment based on its estimated share of the total amount
of uncompensated care for all hospitals eligible for Medicare DSH
payments. The uncompensated care payment methodology has
redistributive effects based on the proportion of a hospital's
uncompensated care relative to the uncompensated care for all
hospitals eligible for Medicare DSH payments (Factor 3).
For FY 2018, we are proposing a Factor 2 of 58.01 percent
determined using the uninsured estimates produced by CMS' Office of
the Actuary (OACT) as part of the development of the National Health
Expenditure Accounts (NHEA). We also are proposing to continue to
use low-income insured patient days as a proxy for uncompensated
care in combination with data on uncompensated care costs from
Worksheet S-10 in the calculation of Factor 3. The uncompensated
care payment methodology has redistributive effects based on the
proportion of a hospital's uncompensated care relative to the total
uncompensated care for all hospitals eligible for Medicare DSH
payments. The reduction to Medicare DSH payments under section 3133
of the Affordable Care Act is not budget neutral.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to establish the amount
to be distributed as uncompensated care payments to DSH eligible
hospitals, which for FY 2018 is $6,962,310,946.63, or 75 percent of
what otherwise would have been paid for Medicare DSH payment
adjustments adjusted by a proposed Factor 2 of 58.01 percent. For FY
2017, the amount available to be distributed for uncompensated care
was $5,977,483,146.86, or 75 percent of what otherwise would have
been paid for Medicare DSH payment adjustments adjusted by a Factor
2 of 55.36 percent. To calculate Factor 3 for FY 2018, we are
proposing to use an average of data computed using Medicaid days
from hospitals' 2012 and 2013 cost reports from the March 2017
update of the HCRIS database, uncompensated care costs from
hospitals' 2014 cost reports from the same extract of HCRIS,
Medicaid days from 2012 cost report data submitted to CMS by IHS
hospitals, and SSI days from the FY 2014 and FY 2015 SSI ratios. For
each eligible hospital, we are proposing to calculate an individual
Factor 3 for cost reporting years beginning during FYs 2012, 2013,
and 2014. We will then add the individual amounts and divide the sum
by three in order to calculate an average Factor 3 for FY 2018. For
purposes of this proposed rule, we are using data from the December
2016 update of the HCRIS database for the Medicaid days component of
the Factor 3 calculation as well as for the Worksheet S-10
uncompensated care cost component. For modeling purposes, as the FY
2015 SSI ratios are not yet available, we are using SSI days from
the FY 2013 and FY 2014 SSI ratios, which are the most recent
available SSI ratios. We expect the March 2017 update of the HCRIS
database as well as the FY 2015 SSI ratios to be available in time
for calculating Factor 3 for the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule.
The proposed FY 2018 policy of using data from hospitals' FY
2012, FY 2013, and FY 2014 cost reporting years to determine Factor
3 is based on our FY 2017 final policy (81 FR 56943 through 56973),
which is in contrast to the methodology used in FY 2016, when we
used Medicaid days from the more recent of a hospital's full year
2012 or 2011 cost report from the March 2015 update of the HCRIS
database, Medicaid days from
[[Page 20207]]
2012 cost report data submitted to CMS by IHS hospitals, and SSI
days from the FY 2013 SSI ratios to calculate Factor 3. In addition,
as explained in section V.G.4.c. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are proposing to make several additional modifications to
the Factor 3 methodology: (1) To annualize Medicaid data if a
hospitals' cost report does not equal 12 months of data; (2) to
apply a scaling factor to the uncompensated care payment amount
calculated for each DSH eligible hospital so that total
uncompensated care payments are consistent with the estimated amount
available to make uncompensated care payments for FY 2018; (3) to
apply statistical trims to the CCRs on Worksheet S-10 that are
considered anomalies to ensure reasonable CCRs are used to convert
charges to costs for purposes of determining uncompensated care
costs, and (4) to calculate Factor 3 for Puerto Rico hospitals and
Indian Health Service and Tribal hospitals by substituting data
regarding low-income insured days for FY 2013 for Worksheet S-10
data from FY 2014 cost reports. We also are proposing to continue
the policies that were finalized in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (79 FR 50020 through 50022) to address several specific issues
concerning the process and data to be employed in determining Factor
3 in the case of hospital mergers for FY 2018 and subsequent years,
as well as proposing to continue the policies finalized in the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule concerning the methodology for
calculating each hospital's relative share of uncompensated care,
such as combining data from multiple cost reports beginning in the
same fiscal year and averaging the sum of three individual Factor 3s
by the number of cost reporting periods with data.
To estimate the impact of the combined effect of changes in
Factors 1 and 2, as well as the changes to the data used in
determining Factor 3, on the calculation of Medicare DSH payments,
including both empirically justified Medicare DSH payments and
uncompensated care payments, we compared total DSH payments
estimated in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to total DSH
payments estimated in this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule. For
FY 2017, for each hospital, we calculated the sum of: (1) 25 Percent
of the estimated amount of what would have been paid as Medicare DSH
in FY 2017 in the absence of section 3133 of the Affordable Care
Act; and (2) 75 percent of the estimated amount of what would have
been paid as Medicare DSH payments in the absence of section 3133 of
the Affordable Care Act, adjusted by a Factor 2 of 55.36 percent and
multiplied by a Factor 3 calculated as described in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule. For FY 2018, we calculated the sum of: (1)
25 Percent of the estimated amount of what would be paid as Medicare
DSH payments in FY 2018 absent section 3133 of the Affordable Care
Act; and (2) 75 percent of the estimated amount of what would be
paid as Medicare DSH payments absent section 3133 of the Affordable
Care Act, adjusted by a Factor 2 of 58.01 percent and multiplied by
a Factor 3 calculated using the methodology described above.
Our analysis included 2,418 hospitals that are projected to be
eligible for DSH in FY 2018. It did not include hospitals that had
terminated their participation in the Medicare program as of
February 23, 2017, Maryland hospitals, and SCHs that are expected to
be paid based on their hospital-specific rates. In addition, data
from merged or acquired hospitals were combined under the surviving
hospital's CCN, and the nonsurviving CCN was excluded from the
analysis. The estimated impact of the proposed changes to Factors 1,
2, and 3 across all hospitals projected to be eligible for DSH
payments in FY 2018, by hospital characteristic, is presented in the
following table.
Modeled Disproportionate Share Hospital Proposed Payments for Estimated FY 2018 DSHs by Hospital Type: Model DSH
$ (in Millions) From FY 2017 to FY 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Dollar
Number of FY 2017 final proposed rule difference:
estimated DSHs rule estimated estimated DSH FY 2017- FY Percent change
(FY 2018) DSH $ (in $ (in 2018 (in **
millions) millions) millions)
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total........................... 2,418 $9,553 $10,931 $1,378 14.4
By Geographic Location:
Urban Hospitals............. 1,921 9,113 10,355 1,241 13.6
Large Urban Areas........... 1,037 5,717 6,538 821 14.4
Other Urban Areas........... 884 3,396 3,816 420 12.4
Rural Hospitals............. 497 439 577 137 31.2
Bed Size (Urban):
0 to 99 Beds................ 331 185 240 56 30.2
100 to 249 Beds............. 841 2,154 2,461 307 14.3
250+ Beds................... 749 6,775 7,653 878 13.0
Bed Size (Rural):
0 to 99 Beds................ 370 190 291 100 52.7
100 to 249 Beds............. 114 193 227 34 17.6
250+ Beds................... 13 56 58 3 4.7
Urban by Region:
New England................. 92 387 420 34 8.8
Middle Atlantic............. 237 1,570 1,676 106 6.8
South Atlantic.............. 314 1,724 2,082 359 20.8
East North Central.......... 324 1,252 1,421 169 13.5
East South Central.......... 128 566 617 52 9.1
West North Central.......... 103 439 497 58 13.2
West South Central.......... 253 1,165 1,489 324 27.8
Mountain.................... 120 448 512 64 14.4
Pacific..................... 311 1,448 1,496 48 3.3
Puerto Rico................. 41 116 144 28 23.8
Rural by Region:
New England................. 12 16 21 6 35.4
Middle Atlantic............. 27 33 34 1 1.5
South Atlantic.............. 84 92 118 27 29.0
East North Central.......... 66 44 59 14 32.4
East South Central.......... 136 141 154 13 9.2
West North Central.......... 28 19 23 4 23.5
West South Central.......... 112 72 140 67 93.6
[[Page 20208]]
Mountain.................... 27 15 21 6 37.0
Pacific..................... 5 7 6 (1) -8.9
By Payment Classification:
Urban Hospitals............. 1,912 9,106 10,346 1,239 13.6
Large Urban Areas........... 1,037 5,717 6,538 821 14.4
Other Urban Areas........... 875 3,389 3,807 418 12.3
Rural Hospitals............. 506 447 586 139 31.1
Teaching Status:
Nonteaching................. 1,510 2,955 3,428 472 16.0
Fewer than 100 residents.... 665 3,213 3,571 358 11.1
100 or more residents....... 243 3,384 3,932 548 16.2
Type of Ownership:
Voluntary................... 1,420 5,971 6,710 739 12.4
Proprietary................. 550 1,650 1,715 65 3.9
Government.................. 448 1,932 2,506 574 29.7
Medicare Utilization Percent:
Missing or Unknown.......... 4 0.65 1.25 0.60 92.2
0 to 25..................... 424 2,972 3,451 480 16.1
25 to 50.................... 1,635 6,218 7,044 826 13.3
50 to 65.................... 309 352 422 70 20.0
Greater than 65............. 46 11 13 2 20.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: Dobson DaVanzo analysis of 2012-2014 Hospital Cost Reports.
* Dollar DSH calculated by [0.25 * estimated section 1886(d)(5)(F) payments] + [0.75 * estimated section
1886(d)(5)(F) payments * Factor 2 * Factor 3]. When summed across all hospitals projected to receive DSH
payments, DSH payments are estimated to be $9,553 million in FY 2017 and $10,930 million in FY 2018.
**Z0 Percentage change is determined as the difference between Medicare DSH payments modeled for the FY 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (column 3) and Medicare DSH payments modeled for the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH final rule
(column 2) divided by Medicare DSH payments modeled for the FY 2017 final rule (column 2) 1 times 100 percent.
Changes in projected FY 2018 DSH payments from DSH payments in
FY 2017 are primarily driven by (1) proposed changes to Factor 1,
which increased from $10.797 billion to $12.002 billion; (2)
proposed changes to Factor 2, which increased from 55.36 percent to
58.01 percent; and (3) proposed changes to the data used to
determine Factor 3. The proposed impact analysis found that, across
all projected DSH eligible hospitals, FY 2018 DSH payments are
estimated at approximately $10.930 billion, or an increase of
approximately 14.4 percent from FY 2017 DSH payments (approximately
$9.553 billion). While these proposed changes result in a net
increase in the amount available to be distributed in uncompensated
care payments, DSH payments to select hospital types are expected to
decrease. This redistribution of DSH payments is caused by changes
in the data used to determine Factor 3.
As seen in the above table, percent changes in DSH payments of
less than 14.4 percent indicate that hospitals within the specified
category are projected to experience a smaller increase in DSH
payments, on average, compared to the universe of projected FY 2018
DSH hospitals. Conversely, percent changes in DSH payments that are
greater than 14.4 percent indicate a hospital type is projected to
have a larger increase than the overall average. The variation in
the distribution of DSH payments by hospital characteristic is
largely dependent on the change in a given hospital's number of
Medicaid days and SSI days for purposes of the low-income insured
days proxy between FY 2017 and FY 2018, as well as on its
uncompensated care costs as reported on Worksheet S-10, used in the
Factor 3 computation.
Many rural hospitals, grouped by geographic location, payment
classification, and bed size, are projected to experience a larger
increase in DSH payments than their urban counterparts. Overall,
urban hospitals are projected to receive a 13.6 percent increase in
DSH payments, and rural hospitals are projected to receive a 31.2
percent increase in DSH payments. However, only smaller rural
hospitals are projected to receive larger than average increases in
DSH payments, with rural hospitals that have 0-99 beds projected to
experience a 52.7 percent payment increase, and larger rural
hospitals with 250+ beds projected to experience a 4.6 percent
payment increase. This trend is consistent with urban hospitals, in
which the smallest urban hospitals (0-99 beds) are projected to
receive an increase in DSH payments of 30.2 percent. Larger
hospitals (100-250 beds and 250+ beds) are projected to receive
increases of 14.3 and 13.0 percent in DSH payments, respectively,
which are relatively consistent with the overall average.
By region, projected DSH payment increases for urban hospitals
are smallest in Pacific, Middle Atlantic, New England, and East
South Central regions. The West South Central, Puerto Rico, and
South Atlantic region hospitals are projected to receive a larger
than average increase in DSH payments. Increases in remaining urban
hospital regions are generally consistent with the overall average
percent increase of 14.4. Regionally, rural hospitals are projected
to receive a wider range of increases. Rural hospitals in the
Pacific region are expected to receive a decrease in DSH payments
(due to the reduction in the number of DSH hospitals in the region)
while rural hospitals in the Middle Atlantic region are expected to
receive virtually no change in in DSH payments, despite an estimated
increase in the overall amount of DSH payments. Increases are
projected to be substantially larger than the overall average in
most regions, including West South Central, Mountain, New England,
East North Central, South Atlantic, and West North Central regions.
Teaching hospitals with 100 or more residents are projected to
receive relatively larger increases than teaching hospitals with
fewer than 100 residents, although all are fairly consistent with
the national average. Government hospitals are projected to receive
larger than average increases, while voluntary hospitals are
expected to receive increases generally consistent with the overall
average. Proprietary hospitals are expected to receive smaller
increases in DSH payments. Hospitals with 25 to 50 percent
[[Page 20209]]
Medicare utilization are projected to receive increases in DSH
payments slightly below the overall average, while all other
hospitals are projected to receive larger increases.
6. Effects of Proposed Reduction Under the Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program
In section V.I. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals for the FY 2018 Hospital Readmissions
Reduction Program (established under section 3025 of the Affordable
Care Act), which requires a reduction to a hospital's base operating
MS-DRG payments to account for excess readmissions. In this proposed
rule, we estimate that 2,591 hospitals would have their base
operating MS-DRG payments reduced by their proposed proxy FY 2018
hospital-specific readmissions adjustment. As a result, we estimate
that the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program would save
approximately $564 million in FY 2018, an increase of $27 million
over the estimated FY 2017 savings. This estimate is based on the
same data used in developing the quantitative analyses of proposed
changes in payments per case discussed previously in section I.G. of
this Regulatory Impact Analysis, in conjunction with the FY 2017
hospital-specific readmissions adjustment factors and the proposed
proxy FY 2018 hospital-specific readmissions adjustment factors
found in Table 15 of this proposed rule (available only through the
Internet as described in section VI. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule).
7. Effects of Proposed Changes Under the FY 2018 Hospital Value-Based
Purchasing (VBP) Program
In section V.J. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the Hospital VBP Program under which the Secretary makes
value-based incentive payments to hospitals based on their
performance on measures during the performance period with respect
to a fiscal year. These incentive payments will be funded for FY
2018 through a reduction to the FY 2018 base operating DRG payment
amounts for all discharges for participating hospitals for such
fiscal year, as required by section 1886(o)(7)(B) of the Act. The
applicable percentage for FY 2018 and subsequent years is 2 percent.
The total amount available for value-based incentive payments must
be equal to the total amount of reduced payments for all hospitals
for the fiscal year, as estimated by the Secretary.
In section V.J.1.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
estimate the available pool of funds for value-based incentive
payments in the FY 2018 program year, which, in accordance with
section 1886(o)(7)(C)(v) of the Act, will be 2.00 percent of base
operating DRG payments, or a total of approximately $1.9 billion. We
intend to update this estimate for the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule using the March 2017 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file.
The proposed estimated impacts of the FY 2018 program year by
hospital characteristic, found in the table below, are based on
historical TPSs. We used the FY 2017 program year's TPSs to
calculate the proxy adjustment factors used for this impact
analysis. These are the most recently available scores that
hospitals were given an opportunity to review and correct. The proxy
adjustment factors use estimated annual base operating DRG payment
amounts derived from the December 2016 update to the FY 2016 MedPAR
file. The proxy adjustment factors can be found in Table 16
associated with this proposed rule (available via the Internet on
the CMS Web site at: //www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-For-
Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/index.html).
The impact analysis shows that, for the FY 2018 program year,
the number of hospitals that would receive an increase in their base
operating DRG payment amounts is higher than the number of hospitals
that would receive a decrease. Among urban hospitals, those in the
New England, South Atlantic, East North Central, East South Central,
West North Central, West South Central, Mountain, and Pacific
regions would have an increase, on average, in their base operating
DRG payment amounts. Urban hospitals in the Middle Atlantic region
would receive an average decrease in their base operating DRG
payment amounts. Among rural hospitals, those in all regions would
have an increase, on average, in their base operating DRG payment
amounts.
On average, hospitals that receive a higher (over 65) percent of
DSH payments would receive decreases in base operating DRG payment
amounts. With respect to hospitals' Medicare utilization as a
percent of inpatient days (MCR), those hospitals with an MCR above
65 percent would have the largest average increase in base operating
DRG payment amounts.
Nonteaching hospitals would have an average increase, and
teaching hospitals would experience an average decrease in base
operating DRG payment amounts.
Impact Analysis of Base Operating DRG Payment Amount Proposed Changes
Resulting From the FY 2018 Hospital VBP Program
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
Number of percentage
hospitals change
------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Geographic Location:
All Hospitals....................... 2,955 0.183
Large Urban......................... 1,227 0.094
Other Urban......................... 1,048 0.152
Rural Area.......................... 680 0.392
Urban hospitals..................... 2,275 0.121
0-99 beds....................... 486 0.685
100-199 beds.................... 721 0.082
200-299 beds.................... 434 -0.039
300-499 beds.................... 423 -0.159
500 or more beds................ 211 -0.159
Rural hospitals..................... 680 0.392
0-49 beds....................... 207 0.612
50-99 beds...................... 276 0.398
100-149 beds.................... 114 0.243
150-199 beds.................... 44 0.052
200 or more beds................ 39 -0.009
By Region:
Urban By Region..................... 2,275 0.121
New England..................... 110 0.072
Middle Atlantic................. 297 -0.119
South Atlantic.................. 387 0.025
East North Central.............. 364 0.217
East South Central.............. 135 0.009
West North Central.............. 152 0.451
West South Central.............. 320 0.194
Mountain........................ 156 0.058
[[Page 20210]]
Pacific......................... 354 0.203
Rural By Region..................... 680 0.392
New England..................... 19 0.539
Middle Atlantic................. 52 0.196
South Atlantic.................. 111 0.540
East North Central.............. 106 0.420
East South Central.............. 126 0.172
West North Central.............. 85 0.501
West South Central.............. 107 0.257
Mountain........................ 52 0.740
Pacific......................... 22 0.504
By MCR Percent:
0-25................................ 424 0.125
25-50............................... 2,017 0.167
50-65............................... 459 0.277
Over 65............................. 40 0.446
Missing............................. 15 0.424
By DSH Percent:
0-25................................ 1,218 0.355
25-50............................... 1,405 0.081
50-65............................... 177 0.113
Over 65............................. 155 -0.164
By Teaching Status:
Non-Teaching........................ 1,925 0.314
Teaching............................ 1,030 -0.063
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actual FY 2018 program year's TPSs will not be reviewed and
corrected by hospitals until after the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule has been published. Therefore, the same historical universe of
eligible hospitals and corresponding TPSs from the FY 2017 program
year will be used for the updated impact analysis in that final
rule.
8. Effects of Proposed Changes to the HAC Reduction Program for FY 2018
In section V.K. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the proposed changes to the HAC Reduction Program for FY
2018. The table and analysis below show the estimated cumulative
effect of the proposed measures and scoring system for the HAC
Reduction Program in this proposed rule. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (81 FR 57013 through 57025), we finalized changes to
the HAC Reduction Program for FY 2018, including adoption of the
modified PSI 90 Composite, defining the applicable time period, and
changes to the scoring methodology (adoption of the z-score method
for calculating measure scores). Based on this z-score methodology,
the table below presents data on the estimated proportion of
hospitals in the worst-performing quartile of the Total HAC Scores
by hospital characteristic. We note that because scores will undergo
a 30-day review and correction period by the hospitals that will not
conclude until after the publication of the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule, we are not providing hospital-level data or a hospital-
level payment impact in conjunction with this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule.
To estimate the impact of the FY 2018 HAC Reduction Program, we
used, as previously finalized, AHRQ PSI 90 measure results based on
Medicare FFS discharges from July 2014 through September 2015 and
version 6.0 (recalibrated) of the AHRQ software. For the CLABSI,
CAUTI, Colon and Abdominal Hysterectomy SSI, MRSA Bacteremia, and
CDI measure results, we used standardized infection ratios (SIRs)
calculated with hospital surveillance data reported to the NHSN for
infections occurring between January 1, 2014 and December 31, 2015.
We noted that actual FY 2018 HACRP results will be calculated using
CDC NHSN data from CYs 2015 and 2016 and will use the re-baselined
values and expansion to non-ICU wards but could not be presented
here due to data timelines.
We note that, at this time, we are unable to provide the
estimated impact of the FY 2018 HAC Reduction Program due to an
error in the version 6.0 (recalibrated) AHRQ software. We anticipate
that we will be able to provide this information in the FY 2018
final rule. We have provided the final impacts from the FY 2017
final rule as estimated impacts for FY 2018.
Estimated Proportion of Hospitals in the Worst-Performing Quartile (>75th Percentile) of the Total HAC Score for
the FY 2017 HAC Reduction Program
[By hospital characteristic]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Percent of
hospitals in hospitals in
Hospital characteristic Number of the worst- the worst-
hospitals \a\ performing performing
quartile \b\ quartile \c\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total \d\....................................................... 3,215 771 24.0
By Geographic Location:
All hospitals:
Urban....................................................... 2,404 653 27.2
Rural....................................................... 796 107 13.4
Urban hospitals:
1-99 beds................................................... 592 91 15.4
[[Page 20211]]
100-199 beds................................................ 734 166 22.6
200-299 beds................................................ 440 134 30.5
300-399 beds................................................ 276 101 36.6
400-499..................................................... 150 61 40.7
500 or more beds............................................ 212 100 47.2
Rural hospitals:
1-49 beds................................................... 303 48 15.8
50-99 beds.................................................. 289 29 10.0
100-149 beds................................................ 118 11 9.3
150-199 beds................................................ 45 9 20.0
200 or more beds............................................ 41 10 24.4
By Region:
New England................................................. 134 42 31.3
Mid-Atlantic................................................ 365 131 35.9
South Atlantic.............................................. 519 133 25.6
East North Central.......................................... 494 96 19.4
East South Central.......................................... 295 45 15.3
West North Central.......................................... 259 38 14.7
West South Central.......................................... 511 104 20.4
Mountain.................................................... 226 55 24.3
Pacific..................................................... 397 116 29.2
By DSH Percent: \e\
0-24........................................................ 1,387 321 23.1
25-49....................................................... 1,454 324 22.3
50-64....................................................... 181 58 32.0
65 and over................................................. 178 57 32.0
By Teaching Status: \f\
Non-teaching................................................ 2,160 381 17.6
Fewer than 100 residents.................................... 790 237 30.0
100 or more residents....................................... 250 142 56.8
By Type of Ownership:
Voluntary................................................... 1,868 478 25.6
Proprietary................................................. 825 154 18.7
Government.................................................. 485 121 24.9
By MCR Percent:
0-24........................................................ 472 148 31.4
25-49....................................................... 2,106 481 22.8
50-64....................................................... 518 104 20.1
65 and over................................................. 80 18 22.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FY 2018 HAC Reduction Program Proposed Rule preliminary results are based on AHRQ PSI 90 data from July
2014 through September 2015 and CDC CLABSI, CAUTI, SSI, CDI, and MRSA results from January 2014 to December
2015. Hospital Characteristics are based on the FY 2017 Final Rule Impact File updated on October 3, 2016.
\a\ The total number of non-Maryland hospitals with a Total HAC Score with hospital characteristic data (3,200
for geographic location, bed size, and teaching status; 3,178 for type of ownership; and 3,176 for MCR) does
not add up to the total number of non-Maryland hospitals with a Total HAC Score for the FY 2018 HAC Reduction
Program (3,215) because 15 hospitals are not included in the FY 2017 Final Rule Impact File and not all
hospitals have data for all characteristics.
\b\ This column is the number of non-Maryland hospitals with a Total HAC Score within the corresponding
characteristic that are estimated to be in the worst-performing quartile.
\c\ This column is the percent of hospitals within each characteristic that are estimated to be in the worst-
performing quartile. The percentages are calculated by dividing the number of non-Maryland hospitals with a
Total HAC Score in the worst-performing quartile by the total number of non-Maryland hospitals with a Total
HAC Score within that characteristic.
\d\ Total excludes 47 Maryland hospitals and 64 non-Maryland hospitals without a Total HAC Score for FY 2017.
\e\ A hospital is considered to be a DSH hospital if it has a DSH patient percentage greater than zero.
\f\ A hospital is considered to be a teaching hospital if it has an IME adjustment factor for Operation PPS
(TCHOP) greater than zero.
9. Effects of Implementation of the Additional 5-Year Extension of the
Rural Community Hospital Demonstration Program
In section V.L. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposed implementation of section 410A of Public Law
108-173, as amended by sections 3123 and 10313 of Public Law 111-
148, and more recently, by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255,
which requires the Secretary to conduct a demonstration that tests
the feasibility and advisability of establishing ``rural community''
hospitals to furnish covered inpatient hospital services to Medicare
beneficiaries. The demonstration makes payments under a reasonable
cost methodology for covered inpatient hospital services furnished
to Medicare beneficiaries by up to 30 rural hospitals. Section 15003
of Public Law 114-255, enacted December 13, 2016, requires a 10-year
extension period (in place of the 5-year extension required by
Public Law 111-148) for the demonstration. Therefore, the Secretary
is required to conduct the demonstration for an additional 5-year
period. Section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 also requires that, no
later than 120 days after enactment of Public Law 114-255, the
Secretary issue a solicitation for applications to select additional
hospitals to
[[Page 20212]]
participate in the demonstration program for the second 5 years of
the 10-year extension period so long as the maximum number of 30
hospitals stipulated by Public Law 111-148 is not exceeded. Section
410A(c)(2) of Public Law 108-173 requires that, in conducting the
demonstration program under this section, the Secretary shall ensure
that the aggregate payments made by the Secretary do not exceed the
amount which the Secretary would have paid if the demonstration
program under this section was not implemented (budget neutrality).
In this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we describe our
proposals for implementation of the extension under section 15003 of
Public Law 114-255, the proposed budget neutrality methodology for
the extension period authorized by the legislation, and the proposed
reconciliation of actual and estimated costs of the demonstration
for previous years (2011 through 2016). Our proposal for budget
neutrality would adopt the general methodology used in previous
years for the demonstration. As discussed in section V.L. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, in the IPPS final rules from FYs
2005 through 2016, we have estimated the additional payments for
each of the participating hospitals as a result of the
demonstration. In order to achieve budget neutrality, we have
adjusted the national IPPS rates by an amount sufficient to account
for the added costs of this demonstration. In other words, we have
applied budget neutrality across the payment system as a whole
rather than across the participants of this demonstration. The
language of the statutory budget neutrality requirement permits the
agency to implement the budget neutrality provision in this manner.
The statutory language requires that aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount which the Secretary would have
paid if the demonstration was not implemented, but does not identify
the range across which aggregate payments must be held equal.
Section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 requires the Secretary to
conduct the Rural Community Hospital Demonstration for a 10-year
extension period (in place of the 5-year extension period required
by Public Law 108-173), beginning on the date immediately following
the last day of the initial 5-year period under section 410A(a)(5)
of Public Law 108-173. Specifically, section 15003 of Public Law
114-255 amended section 410A(g)(4) of Public Law 108-173 to require
that, for hospitals participating in the demonstration as of the
last day of the initial 5-year period, the Secretary shall provide
for continued participation of such rural community hospitals in the
demonstration during the 10-year extension period, unless the
hospital makes an election to discontinue participation.
Furthermore, section 15003 of Public Law 114-255 added subsection
(g)(5) to section 410A of Public Law 108-173 which provides for
participation under the demonstration during the second 5 years of
the 10-year extension period for hospitals that are not described in
section 410A(g)(4) of Public Law 108-173, but that were
participating in the demonstration as of December 30, 2014, unless
the hospital makes an election to discontinue participation.
We are proposing to implement the second 5 years of the 10-year
extension period in a way that recognizes a gap in participation for
the previously participating hospitals between the end of the first
5 years and the start of the second 5 years of the extension period,
and that provides for alignment of the periods of performance under
the extension among all participating hospitals. Thus, for each
previously participating hospital that decides to participate in the
second 5 years of the 10-year extension period, we are proposing
that the start date for the period of performance under the second
5-year extension period would be the start of the first cost
reporting period on or after October 1, 2017 following upon the
announcement of the selection of the additional hospitals for the
demonstration. Our goal is to finalize this selection by June 2017,
in time to include in the FY 2018 IPPS final rule an estimate of the
costs of the demonstration during FY 2018 and the resulting budget
neutrality offset amount for these newly participating hospitals, as
well as for those hospitals among the previously participating
hospitals that decide to participate in the second 5 years of the
10-year extension period.
We are proposing that if the selection of the additional
hospitals under the solicitation is not announced by June 2017, we
would include the estimated costs of the demonstration for all
participating hospitals for FY 2018 in the budget neutrality offset
amount to be calculated in the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed and
final rules.
In section V.L. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we also
describe an alternative approach that we considered, under which
each previously participating hospital would begin the second 5
years of the 10-year extension period on the date immediately after
the date the period of performance under the first 5-year extension
period ended. In addition, we describe the methodology that we
considered for calculating the budget neutrality offset amount under
this alternative approach. We are inviting public comments on this
alternative approach and calculation methodology.
In previous years, we have incorporated a second component into
the budget neutrality offset amounts identified in the final IPPS
rules. As finalized cost reports became available, we determined the
amount by which the actual costs of the demonstration for an
earlier, given year differed from the estimated costs for the
demonstration set forth in the final IPPS rule for the corresponding
fiscal year, and we incorporated that amount into the budget
neutrality offset amount for the upcoming fiscal year. We have
calculated this difference for FYs 2005 through 2010 between the
actual costs of the demonstration as determined from finalized cost
reports once available, and estimated costs of the demonstration as
identified in the applicable IPPS final rules for these years.
With the extension of the demonstration for another 5-year
period, as authorized by section 15003 of Public Law 114-255, we are
proposing to continue this general procedure. Specifically, we are
proposing that when finalized cost reports for FYs 2011, 2012, and
2013 are available, we would include this difference for these years
in the budget neutrality offset adjustment to be applied to the
national IPPS rates in a future final rule. We expect that this will
occur in FY 2019. We also are proposing that when finalized cost
reports for FYs 2014 through 2016 are available, we would include
the difference between the actual costs as reflected on these cost
reports and the estimated amounts included in the budget neutrality
offset amounts for these fiscal years in a future final rule.
As discussed in section V.L. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, depending on when the selection of additional hospitals as
authorized by section 15003 of Public Law 114-225 is finalized, the
estimate of the cost of the demonstration for FY 2018 will be
formulated and included in the budget neutrality offset amount in
either the FY 2018 final rule or the FY 2019 proposed and final
rules. Therefore, although this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule
sets forth our proposed budget neutrality offset methodology, it
does not include a specific budget neutrality offset amount.
10. Effects of the Proposed Changes Relating to Provider-Based Status
of Indian Health Service and Tribal Facilities and Organizations
In section V.N. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals relating to provider-based status of Indian
Health Service (IHS) and tribal facilities and organizations.
Regulations at Sec. 413.65(m) currently grandfather facilities from
provider-based regulations if they meet certain criteria, including
on or before April 7, 2000, having furnished only services that were
billed as if they had been furnished by a department of a hospital
operated by the IHS or a Tribe. We have also issued subregulatory
guidance on circumstances that would or would not result in a
facility or organization losing its grandfathered status. After
consideration of the special and legally recognized relationship
between Indian Tribes and the U.S. Government, as well as current
IHS policies and procedures, we are proposing to remove the date
limitation in Sec. 413.65(m) that restricted the grandfathering
provision to IHS or Tribal facilities and organizations furnishing
services on or before April 7, 2000. We also are proposing to make a
technical change to make the regulation text more consistent with
our current rules that require these facilities to comply with all
applicable Medicare conditions of participation that apply to the
main provider. We do not expect any significant payment impact
because these proposals are in line with current guidance, and we
believe that IHS policies and procedures regarding the planning,
operation, and funding of such facilities are resulting in
appropriate Medicare payments.
11. Effects of the Proposed Changes Relating to Hospital-within-
Hospital (HwH) Policy
In section VII.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to revise the regulations applicable to HwHs so
that the separateness and control
[[Page 20213]]
requirements would only apply to IPPS-excluded HwHs that are co-
located with IPPS hospitals beginning in FY 2018. This proposal is
premised on the belief that the policy concerns that underlie our
existing HwH regulations (that is, inappropriate patient shifting
and hospitals acting as illegal de facto units) are sufficiently
moderated in situations where IPPS-excluded hospitals are co-located
with each other but not IPPS hospitals, in large part due to the
payment system changes that have occurred over the intervening years
for IPPS-excluded hospitals. In addition, we are proposing to revise
the HwH requirements to no longer require the provisions that
outline performance of basic hospital functions in order to maintain
IPPS-exclusion beginning in FY 2018. This proposed revision would
not result in a practical change to how HwHs are currently operated
because the performance of basic hospital functions that are
required under the HwH regulations are currently addressed under
CMS' interpretative guidelines for the hospital conditions of
participation. We do not expect any significant payment impact
because these proposals are primarily administrative in nature or in
line with current guidance.
12. Effects of Continued Implementation of the Frontier Community
Health Integration Project (FCHIP) Demonstration
In section VIII.C.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the implementation of the FCHIP demonstration, which allows
eligible entities to develop and test new models for the delivery of
health care services in eligible counties in order to improve access
to and better integrate the delivery of acute care, extended care,
and other health care services to Medicare beneficiaries in no more
than four States. Section 123(g)(1)(B) of Public Law 110-275
requires that the demonstration be budget neutral. Specifically this
provision states that, in conducting the demonstration, the
Secretary shall ensure that the aggregate payments made by the
Secretary do not exceed the amount which the Secretary estimates
would have been paid if the demonstration were not implemented.
Furthermore, section 123(i) of Public Law 110-275 states that the
Secretary may waive the requirements of Titles XVIII and XIX of the
Act as may be necessary and appropriate for the purpose of carrying
out the demonstration, thus allowing the waiver of Medicare payment
rules encompassed in the demonstration. Budget neutrality estimates
for the demonstration will be based on the demonstration period of
August 1, 2016 through July 31, 2019. The demonstration includes
three intervention prongs, under which specific waivers of Medicare
payment rules will allow for enhanced payment: Telehealth, skilled
nursing facility/nursing facility services, and ambulance services.
These waivers are being implemented with the goal of increasing
access to care with no net increase in costs. (We initially
addressed this demonstration in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(81 FR 57064 through 57065).)
We specified waivers and payment enhancements for the
demonstration and selected CAHs for participation with the goal of
maintaining the budget neutrality of the demonstration on its own
terms (that is, the demonstration will produce savings from reduced
transfers and admissions to other health care providers, thus
offsetting any increase in payments resulting from the
demonstration). However, because of the small size of this
demonstration and uncertainty associated with projected Medicare
utilization and costs, in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57064 through 57065), we adopted a contingency plan to ensure
that the budget neutrality requirement in section 123 of Public Law
110-275 is met. Accordingly, if analysis of claims data for the
Medicare beneficiaries receiving services at each of the
participating CAHs, as well as of other data sources, including cost
reports, shows that increases in Medicare payments under the
demonstration during the 3-year period are not sufficiently offset
by reductions elsewhere, we will recoup the additional expenditures
attributable to the demonstration through a reduction in payments to
all CAHs nationwide. The demonstration is projected to impact
payments to participating CAHs under both Medicare Part A and Part
B. Thus, in the event that we determine that aggregate payments
under the demonstration exceed the payments that would otherwise
have been made, CMS will recoup payments through reductions of
Medicare payments to all CAHs under both Medicare Part A and Part B.
Because of the small scale of the demonstration, it would not be
feasible to implement budget neutrality by reducing payments only to
the participating CAHs. Therefore we will make the reduction to
payments to all CAHs, not just those participating in the
demonstration, because the FCHIP demonstration is specifically
designed to test innovations that affect delivery of services by
this provider category. As we explained in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (81 FR 57065), we believe that the language of the
statutory budget neutrality requirement at section 123(g)(1)(B) of
the Act permits the agency to implement the budget neutrality
provision in this manner. The statutory language merely refers to
ensuring that aggregate payments made by the Secretary do not exceed
the amount which the Secretary estimates would have been paid if the
demonstration project was not implemented, and does not identify the
range across which aggregate payments must be held equal.
Given the 3-year period of performance of the FCHIP
demonstration and the time needed to conduct the budget neutrality
analysis, in the event the demonstration is found not to have been
budget neutral, we plan to recoup any excess costs over a period of
three cost report periods, beginning in CY 2020. Therefore, this
policy has no impact for any national payment system for FY 2018.
I. Effects of Proposed Changes in the Capital IPPS
1. General Considerations
For the impact analysis presented below, we used data from the
December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR file and the December
2016 update of the Provider-Specific File (PSF) that is used for
payment purposes. Although the analyses of the proposed changes to
the capital prospective payment system do not incorporate cost data,
we used the December 2016 update of the most recently available
hospital cost report data (FYs 2013 and 2014) to categorize
hospitals. Our analysis has several qualifications. We use the best
data available and make assumptions about case-mix and beneficiary
enrollment as described later in this section.
Due to the interdependent nature of the IPPS, it is very
difficult to precisely quantify the impact associated with each
change. In addition, we draw upon various sources for the data used
to categorize hospitals in the tables. In some cases (for instance,
the number of beds), there is a fair degree of variation in the data
from different sources. We have attempted to construct these
variables with the best available sources overall. However, it is
possible that some individual hospitals are placed in the wrong
category.
Using cases from the December 2016 update of the FY 2016 MedPAR
file, we simulated payments under the capital IPPS for FY 2017 and
proposed payments for FY 2018 for a comparison of total payments per
case. Any short-term, acute care hospitals not paid under the
general IPPS (for example, hospitals in Maryland) are excluded from
the simulations.
The methodology for determining a capital IPPS payment is set
forth at Sec. 412.312. The basic methodology for calculating the
proposed capital IPPS payments in FY 2018 is as follows:
(Standard Federal Rate) x (DRG weight) x (GAF) x (COLA for
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii) x (1 + DSH Adjustment Factor
+ IME adjustment factor, if applicable).
In addition to the other adjustments, hospitals may receive
outlier payments for those cases that qualify under the threshold
established for each fiscal year. We modeled payments for each
hospital by multiplying the capital Federal rate by the GAF and the
hospital's case-mix. We then added estimated payments for indirect
medical education, disproportionate share, and outliers, if
applicable. For purposes of this impact analysis, the model includes
the following assumptions:
We estimate that the Medicare case-mix index will
increase by 0.5 percent in both FYs 2017 and 2018.
We estimate that Medicare discharges will be
approximately 11.1 million in FY 2017 and 11.3 million in FY 2018.
The capital Federal rate was updated beginning in FY
1996 by an analytical framework that considers changes in the prices
associated with capital-related costs and adjustments to account for
forecast error, changes in the case-mix index, allowable changes in
intensity, and other factors. As discussed in section III.A.1.a. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule, the proposed update is 1.2
percent for FY 2018.
In addition to the proposed FY 2018 update factor, the
proposed FY 2018 capital Federal rate was calculated based on a
proposed GAF/DRG budget neutrality
[[Page 20214]]
adjustment factor of 0.9992, a proposed outlier adjustment factor of
0.9434, and an adjustment to remove the one-time prospective
adjustment of 1.006 made in FY 2017 to address the effect of the 0.2
percent reduction to the national capital Federal rates in effect
for FY 2014, FY 2015, and FY 2016 relating to the 2-midnight policy.
The 2-midnight adjustment that was finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR 57294) is discussed in section V.C. of
the preamble of this proposed rule as it relates to the capital
Federal rate. As also discussed in section V.C. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we are not proposing to make an additional MS-
DRG documentation and coding adjustment to the capital IPPS Federal
rate for FY 2018.
2. Results
We used the actuarial model previously described in section I.I.
of Appendix A of this proposed rule to estimate the potential impact
of our proposed changes for FY 2018 on total capital payments per
case, using a universe of 3,292 hospitals. As previously described,
the individual hospital payment parameters are taken from the best
available data, including the December 2016 update of the FY 2016
MedPAR file, the December 2016 update to the PSF, and the most
recent cost report data from the December 2016 update of HCRIS. In
Table III, we present a comparison of estimated total payments per
case for FY 2017 and estimated proposed total payments per case for
FY 2018 based on the proposed FY 2018 payment policies. Column 2
shows estimates of payments per case under our model for FY 2017.
Column 3 shows estimates of proposed payments per case under our
model for FY 2018. Column 4 shows the total percentage change in
payments from FY 2017 to FY 2018. The change represented in Column 4
includes the proposed 1.2 percent update to the capital Federal rate
and other proposed changes in the adjustments to the capital Federal
rate. The comparisons are provided by: (1) Geographic location; (2)
region; and (3) payment classification.
The simulation results show that, on average, proposed capital
payments per case in FY 2018 are expected to increase as compared to
capital payments per case in FY 2017. This expected increase overall
is due to the proposed approximately 1.2 percent update to the
capital Federal rate for FY 2018, as well as the proposed outlier
adjustment of 0.9434 which is a 0.51 percent change from the FY 2017
outlier adjustment of 0.9386. The change in the outlier adjustment
is expected to increase capital payments per case for most hospitals
to a lesser or greater extent, as are changes in the DRGs. The
expected increase in capital payments per case as a result of MS-DRG
changes is somewhat larger for hospitals in rural areas than for
hospitals in rural areas. (For a discussion of the determination of
the capital Federal rate and adjustments, we refer readers to
section III.A. of the Addendum to this proposed rule.) Over all
hospitals, the proposed changes to the GAFs have no effect on
capital payments per case. However, by region, hospitals within both
rural and urban regions may experience an increase or a decrease in
capital payments per case due to proposed changes in the GAFs. These
regional effects of the proposed changes to the GAFs on capital
payments are consistent with the projected changes in payments due
to proposed changes in the wage index (and policies affecting the
wage index) as shown in Table I in section I.G. of this Appendix A.
The net impact of these proposed changes is an estimated 2.4
percent change in capital payments per case from FY 2017 to FY 2018
for all hospitals (as shown in Table III).
The geographic comparison shows that, on average, most hospitals
in all classifications (urban and rural) would experience an
increase in capital IPPS payments per case in FY 2018 as compared to
FY 2017. Capital IPPS payments per case for hospitals in large urban
areas would increase by an estimated 2.8 percent, while hospitals in
rural areas, on average, are expected to experience a 2.6 percent
increase in capital payments per case from FY 2017 to FY 2018.
Capital IPPS payments per case for other urban hospitals are
estimated to increase 1.7 percent.
The comparisons by region show that the estimated increases in
capital payments per case from FY 2017 to FY 2018 in urban areas
would range from a 3.6 percent increase for the West South Central
urban region to a 1.1 percent increase for the Mountain urban
region. For rural regions, the New England rural region is projected
to experience the largest increase in capital IPPS payments per case
of 5.0 percent, while the South Atlantic rural region is projected
to experience an increase in capital IPPS payments per case of 1.4
percent.
Hospitals of all types of ownership (that is, voluntary
hospitals, government hospitals, and proprietary hospitals) are
expected to experience an increase in capital payments per case from
FY 2017 to FY 2018. The proposed increase in capital payments for
voluntary hospitals is estimated to be 2.0 percent and for
government hospitals, the increase is estimated to be 3.4 percent.
Proprietary hospitals are expected to experience an increase in
capital IPPS payments of 3.0 percent.
Section 1886(d)(10) of the Act established the MGCRB. Hospitals
may apply for reclassification for purposes of the wage index for FY
2018. Reclassification for wage index purposes also affects the GAFs
because that factor is constructed from the hospital wage index. To
present the effects of the hospitals being reclassified as of the
publication of this proposed rule for FY 2018, we show the average
capital payments per case for reclassified hospitals for FY 2018.
Urban reclassified hospitals are expected to experience an increase
in capital payments of 1.6 percent; urban nonreclassified hospitals
are expected to experience an increase in capital payments of 2.8
percent. The estimated percentage increase for rural reclassified
hospitals is 2.4 percent, and for rural nonreclassified hospitals,
the estimated increase is 2.6 percent. Hospitals reclassified under
section 401 are among the few groups of hospitals not expected to
experience an increase in capital payments--it is expected that
these hospitals would experience a decrease in capital payments of
1.8 percent, while capital payments for other reclassified hospitals
are expected to increase an estimated 6.1 percent.
Table III--Comparison of Total Payments per Case
[FY 2017 payments compared to FY 2018 payments]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average FY Average FY
Number of 2017 payments/ 2018 payments/ Change
hospitals case case
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Geographic Location:
All hospitals............................... 3,292 921 943 2.4
Large urban areas (populations over 1 1,349 1,016 1,044 2.8
million)...................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million 1,142 886 902 1.7
of fewer)..................................
Rural areas................................. 801 625 642 2.6
Urban hospitals............................. 2,491 955 977 2.3
0-99 beds............................... 638 769 799 4.0
100-199 beds............................ 765 826 848 2.7
200-299 beds............................ 445 877 892 1.8
300-499 beds............................ 431 969 993 2.4
500 or more beds........................ 212 1,141 1,166 2.2
Rural hospitals............................. 801 625 642 2.6
0-49 beds............................... 313 522 541 3.5
50-99 beds.............................. 285 585 598 2.2
100-149 beds............................ 117 621 636 2.4
150-199 beds............................ 46 668 689 3.1
[[Page 20215]]
200 or more beds........................ 40 745 764 2.5
By Region:
Urban by Region............................. 2,491 955 977 2.3
New England............................. 114 1,037 1,052 1.4
Middle Atlantic......................... 315 1,059 1,082 2.1
South Atlantic.......................... 404 850 867 2.0
East North Central...................... 385 918 937 2.1
East South Central...................... 147 801 813 1.5
West North Central...................... 160 932 953 2.3
West South Central...................... 378 863 895 3.6
Mountain................................ 162 1,005 1,016 1.1
Pacific................................. 375 1,211 1,254 3.5
Puerto Rico............................. 51 436 449 3.0
Rural by Region............................. 801 625 642 2.6
New England............................. 20 861 905 5.0
Middle Atlantic......................... 53 603 618 2.4
South Atlantic.......................... 125 584 593 1.4
East North Central...................... 115 645 659 2.1
East South Central...................... 154 575 591 2.7
West North Central...................... 97 666 686 3.0
West South Central...................... 154 554 570 2.9
Mountain................................ 59 697 717 2.9
Pacific................................. 24 807 836 3.6
By Payment Classification:
All hospitals............................... 3,292 921 943 2.4
Large urban areas (populations over 1 1,363 1,014 1,043 2.8
million)...................................
Other urban areas (populations of 1 million 1,028 885 907 2.4
of fewer)..................................
Rural areas................................. 901 730 733 0.3
Teaching Status:
Non-teaching............................ 2,211 779 799 2.6
Fewer than 100 Residents................ 835 893 910 1.9
100 or more Residents................... 246 1,288 1,321 2.6
Urban DSH:
100 or more beds.................... 1,563 982 1,007 2.6
Less than 100 beds.................. 357 692 720 4.1
Rural DSH:
Sole Community (SCH/EACH)........... 259 623 632 1.5
Referral Center (RRC/EACH).......... 271 772 775 0.4
Other Rural:
100 or more beds................ 41 862 834 -3.3
Less than 100 beds.............. 240 507 516 1.8
Urban teaching and DSH:
Both teaching and DSH................... 870 1,054 1,082 2.6
Teaching and no DSH..................... 94 928 941 1.4
No teaching and DSH..................... 1,050 822 844 2.6
No teaching and no DSH.................. 377 833 865 3.8
Rural Hospital Types:
Non special status hospitals............ 2,601 953 977 2.6
RRC/EACH................................ 243 801 804 0.3
SCH/EACH................................ 317 716 731 2.0
SCH, RRC and EACH....................... 129 756 773 2.2
Hospitals Reclassified by the Medicare
Geographic Classification Review Board:
FY 2018 Reclassifications:
All Urban Reclassified.................. 629 956 971 1.6
All Urban Non-Reclassified.............. 1,814 956 983 2.8
All Rural Reclassified.................. 271 660 675 2.4
All Rural Non-Reclassified.............. 482 580 595 2.6
All Section 401 Reclassified Hospitals.. 148 873 857 -1.8
Other Reclassified Hospitals (Section 42 600 637 6.1
1886(d)(8)(B)).........................
Type of Ownership:
Voluntary............................... 1,914 938 957 2.0
Proprietary............................. 862 823 848 3.0
Government.............................. 514 960 993 3.4
Medicare Utilization as a Percent of
Inpatient Days:
0-25.................................... 509 1,096 1,129 3.1
25-50................................... 2,113 927 948 2.2
50-65................................... 535 756 772 2.1
Over 65................................. 135 582 639 9.8
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20216]]
J. Effects of Proposed Payment Rate Changes and Proposed Policy
Changes Under the LTCH PPS
1. Introduction and General Considerations
In section VIII. of the preamble of this proposed rule and
section V. of the Addendum to this proposed rule, we set forth the
proposed annual update to the payment rates for the LTCH PPS for FY
2018. In the preamble of this proposed rule, we specify the
statutory authority for the provisions that are presented, identify
the proposed policies, and present rationales for our decisions as
well as alternatives that were considered. In this section of
Appendix A to this proposed rule, we discuss the impact of the
proposed changes to the payment rate, factors, and other payment
rate policies related to the LTCH PPS that are presented in the
preamble of this proposed rule in terms of their estimated fiscal
impact on the Medicare budget and on LTCHs.
There are 415 LTCHs included in this impacts analysis, which
includes data for 72 nonprofit (voluntary ownership control) LTCHs,
328 proprietary LTCHs, and 15 LTCHs that are government-owned and
operated. (We note that, although there are currently approximately
425 LTCHs, for purposes of this impact analysis, we excluded the
data of all-inclusive rate providers consistent with the development
of the proposed FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG relative weights (discussed in
section VIII.B.3.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule).
Moreover, in the claims data use for this proposed rule, 3 of these
415 LTCHs only have claims for site neutral payment rate cases and
are therefore not included in our impact analysis for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases.) In the impact analysis, we
used the proposed payment rate, factors, and policies presented in
this proposed rule, which include the rolling end to transition to
the site neutral payment rate required by section 1886(m)(6)(A) of
the Act (as described below), the proposed 1.0 percent annual update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate required by section
411 of Public Law 114-10, the proposed update to the MS-LTC-DRG
classifications and relative weights, the proposed update to the
wage index values and labor-related share, the proposed change to
the SSO payment methodology (discussed in VIII.E. of the preamble of
this proposed rule), our proposal to adopt a 1-year regulatory delay
of the full implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for FY
2018, and our proposals to implement certain provisions of the 21st
Century Cures Act, and the best available claims and CCR data to
estimate the proposed change in payments for FY 2018.
Under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure, payment for LTCH
discharges that meet the criteria for exclusion from the site
neutral payment rate (that is, LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases) is based on the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate.
Consistent with the statute, the site neutral payment rate is the
lower of the IPPS comparable per diem amount as determined under
Sec. 412.529(d)(4), including any applicable outlier payments as
specified in Sec. 412.525(a); or 100 percent of the estimated cost
of the case as determined under existing Sec. 412.529(d)(2). In
addition, there are two separate HCO targets--one for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases and one for site neutral payment
rate cases. The statute also establishes a transitional payment
method for cases that are paid the site neutral payment rate for
LTCH discharges occurring in cost reporting periods beginning during
FY 2016 and FY 2017. For FY 2018, the applicability of this
transitional payment method for site neutral payment rate cases is
dependent upon both the discharge date and the start date of the
LTCH's FY 2018 cost reporting period. Specifically, the transitional
payment method only applies to those site neutral payment rate cases
that occur in cost reporting periods that begin before October 1,
2017. The transitional payment amount for site neutral payment rate
cases is a blended payment rate, which is calculated as 50 percent
of the applicable site neutral payment rate amount for the discharge
as determined under Sec. 412.522(c)(1) and 50 percent of the
applicable LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for the discharge
determined under Sec. 412.523, while site neutral payment rate
cases in cost reporting periods beginning on or after October 1,
2017 are paid the site neutral payment rate amount determined under
Sec. 412.522(c)(1).
Based on the best available data for the 415 LTCHs in our
database that were considered in the analyses used for this proposed
rule, we estimate that overall LTCH PPS payments in FY 2018 would
decrease by approximately 5.2 percent (or approximately $238
million) based on the proposed rates and factors presented in
section VIII. of the preamble and section V. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule. (We note that this estimate does not reflect our
proposal to adopt a 1-year regulatory delay of the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for FY 2018 and,
with the exception of changes to the HCO payment policy, does not
reflect our proposals regarding the implementation of certain
provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act. As discussed in greater
detail below, our actuaries estimate these proposals would increase
spending by approximately $65 million in FY 2018.) This projection
takes into account estimated payments for LTCH cases in our database
that met or would have met the patient-level criteria and been paid
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate if those criteria had
been in effect at the time of the discharge, and estimated payments
for LTCH cases that did not meet or would not have met the patient-
level criteria and been paid under the site neutral payment rate if
that rate had been in effect at the time of the discharge, as
described in the following paragraph.
The statutory transitional payment method for cases that are
paid the site neutral payment rate for LTCH discharges occurring in
cost reporting periods beginning during FY 2016 or FY 2017 uses a
blended payment rate, which is determined as 50 percent of the site
neutral payment rate amount for the discharge and 50 percent of the
standard Federal prospective payment rate amount for the discharge
(Sec. 412.522(c)(3)). The transitional blended payment rate uses
the same blend percentages (that is, 50 percent) for both years of
the 2-year transition period. Therefore, when estimating FY 2017
LTCH PPS payments for site neutral payment rate cases for this
impact analysis, the transitional blended payment rate was applied
to all such cases because all discharges in FY 2017 are either in
the hospital's cost reporting period that began during FY 2016 or in
the hospital's cost reporting period that will begin during FY 2017.
However, when estimating FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments for site neutral
payment rate cases for this impact analysis, because the statute
specifies that the site neutral payment rate effective date (and 2-
year transitional period) for a given LTCH is based on the date that
LTCH's cost reporting period begins during FY 2018, we included an
adjustment to account for this rolling effective date, consistent
with the general approach used for the LTCH PPS impact analysis
presented in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49831).
This approach accounts for the fact that site neutral payment rate
cases in FY 2018 that are in a LTCH's cost reporting period that
begin before October 1, 2017 continue to be paid under the
transitional payment method until the start of the LTCH's first cost
reporting period beginning on or after October 1, 2017. Site neutral
payment rate cases in a LTCH's cost reporting period beginning on or
after October 1, 2017 will no longer be paid under the transitional
payment method and will instead be paid the site neutral payment
rate amount as determined by Sec. 412.522(c)(1).
For purposes of this impact analysis, to estimate proposed total
FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments for site neutral payment rate cases, we
used the same general approach as was used in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule with modifications to account for the rolling end
date to the transitional site neutral payment rate in FY 2018
instead of the rolling effective date for implementation of the
transitional site neutral payment rate in FY 2016. In summary, under
this approach, we grouped LTCHs based on the quarter their cost
reporting periods would begin during FY 2018. For example, LTCHs
with cost reporting periods that begin during October through
December 2017 begin during the first quarter of FY 2018. For LTCHs
grouped in each quarter of FY 2018, we modeled those LTCHs'
estimated FY 2018 site neutral payment rate payments under the
transitional blended payment rate based on the quarter in which the
LTCHs in each group would continue to be paid the transitional
payment method for the site neutral payment rate cases.
For purposes of this estimate, then, we assume the cost
reporting period is the same for all LTCHs in each of the quarterly
groups and that this cost reporting period begins on the first day
of that quarter. (For example, our first group consists of 41 LTCHs
whose cost reporting period will begin in the first quarter of FY
2018 so that, for purposes of this estimate, we assume all 41 LTCH
will begin their FY 2018 cost reporting period on October 1, 2017.)
Second, we estimated the proportion of FY 2018 site neutral payment
rate cases in each of the quarterly groups, and we then assume this
proportion is applicable
[[Page 20217]]
for all four quarters of FY 2018. (For example, as discussed in more
detail below, we estimate the first quarter group will discharge 6.3
percent of all FY 2018 site neutral payment rate cases and
therefore, we estimate that group of LTCHs will discharge 6.3
percent of all FY 2018 site neutral payment rate cases in each
quarter of FY 2018.) Then, we modeled estimated FY 2018 payments on
a quarterly basis under the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
based on the assumptions described above. We continue to believe
that this approach is a reasonable means of taking the rolling
effective date into account when estimating FY 2018 payments.
Based on the fiscal year begin date information in the December
2016 update of the PSF and the LTCH claims from the December 2016
update of the FY 2016 MedPAR files for the 415 LTCHs in our database
used for this proposed rule, we found the following: 6.3 percent of
site neutral payment rate cases are from 41 LTCHs whose cost
reporting periods will begin during the first quarter of FY 2018;
23.7 percent of site neutral payment rate cases are from 106 LTCHs
whose cost reporting periods will begin in the second quarter of FY
2018; 9.3 percent of site neutral payment rate cases are from 55
LTCHs whose cost reporting periods will begin in the third quarter
of FY 2018; and 60.7 percent of site neutral payment rate cases are
from 213 LTCHs whose cost reporting periods will begin in the fourth
quarter of FY 2018. Therefore, the following percentages apply in
the approach described above:
First Quarter FY 2018: 6.3 percent of site neutral
payment rate cases (that is, the percentage of discharges from LTCHs
whose FY 2018 cost reporting will begin in the first quarter of FY
2018) are no longer eligible for the transitional payment method,
while the remaining 93.7 percent of site neutral payment rate
discharges are eligible to be paid under the transitional payment
method.
Second Quarter FY 2018: 30.0 percent of site neutral
payment rate second quarter discharges (that is, the percentage of
discharges from LTCHs whose FY 2018 cost reporting will begin in the
first or second quarter of FY 2018) are no longer eligible for the
transitional payment method while the remaining 70.0 percent of site
neutral payment rate second quarter discharges are eligible to be
paid under the transitional payment method.
Third Quarter FY 2018: 39.3 percent of site neutral
payment rate third quarter discharges (that is, the percentage of
discharges from LTCHs whose FY 2018 cost reporting will begin in the
first, second, or third quarter of FY 2018) are no longer eligible
for the transitional payment method while the remaining 60.7 percent
of site neutral payment rate third quarter discharges are eligible
to be paid under the transitional payment method.
Fourth Quarter FY 2018: 100.0 percent of site neutral
payment rate fourth quarter discharges (that is, the percentage of
discharges from LTCHs whose FY 2018 cost reporting will begin in the
first, second, third, or fourth quarter of FY 2018) are no longer
eligible for the transitional payment method so that no site neutral
payment rate case discharges are eligible be paid under the
transitional payment method.
Based on the FY 2016 LTCH cases that were used for the analyses
in this proposed rule, approximately 42 percent of those cases were
or would have been classified as site neutral payment rate cases if
the site neutral payment rate had been in effect at the time of the
discharge (that is, 42 percent of LTCH cases did not or would not
have met the patient-level criteria for exclusion from the site
neutral payment rate). Our Office of the Actuary estimates that the
percent of LTCH PPS cases that will be paid at the site neutral
payment rate in FY 2018 will not change significantly from the
historical data. Taking into account the transitional blended
payment rate and other changes that would apply to the site neutral
payment rate cases in FY 2018, we estimate that aggregate LTCH PPS
payments for these site neutral payment rate cases would decrease by
approximately 22 percent (or approximately $252 million).
Approximately 58 percent of LTCH cases are expected to meet the
patient-level criteria for exclusion from the site neutral payment
rate in FY 2018, and would be paid based on the proposed LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for the full year. We estimate that
total LTCH PPS payments for these LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases in FY 2018 would increase approximately 0.4 percent (or
approximately $15 million). This estimated increase in LTCH PPS
payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases in FY 2018
is primarily due to the combined effects of the 1.0 percent annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018
required by section 411 of Public Law 114-10 (discussed in section
V.A. of the Addendum to this proposed rule) and an estimated
proposed decrease in HCO payments for these cases (discussed in
section V.D. of the Addendum to this proposed rule). (We note that
because our proposed SSO payment methodology discussed in VIII.E. of
the preamble of this proposed rule incorporates a proposed budget
neutrality adjustment, this proposal does not increase or decrease
aggregate payments, and therefore does not factor into the 0.4
percent increase in aggregate payments.)
Based on the 415 LTCHs that were represented in the FY 2016 LTCH
cases that were used for the analyses in this proposed rule
presented in Table IV in section I.J.4. of this Appendix, we
estimate that aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments would be
approximately $4.371 billion, as compared to estimated aggregate FY
2017 LTCH PPS payments of approximately $4.609 billion, resulting in
an estimated overall decrease in LTCH PPS payments of approximately
$238 million. Furthermore, as discussed in more detail below, our
Office of the Actuary is estimating an additional increase in
aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments of approximately $65 million for
our proposal to delay full implementation of the 25-percent
threshold policy for FY 2018 and our proposed implementation of
certain provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act. Therefore, in
total we project an overall decrease in LTCH PPS payments of
approximately $173 million (-$238 million + $65 million) or
approximately a 3.75 percent decrease in LTCH PPS payments in FY
2018 as compared to FY 2017. Because the proposed combined
distributional effects and estimated payment changes exceed $100
million, this proposed rule is a major economic rule. We note that
the estimated $238 million decrease in LTCH PPS payments in FY 2018
(which includes proposed estimated payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases and site neutral payment rate cases, but
does not include estimated payments for our proposal to delay full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for FY 2018 or the
certain provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act) does not reflect
changes in LTCH admissions or case-mix intensity, which would also
affect the overall payment effects of the policies in this proposed
rule.
The LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2017 is
$42,476.41. For FY 2018, we are proposing to establish an LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate of $41,497.20, which reflects the
proposed 1.0 percent annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate, the proposed area wage budget neutrality factor of
1.000077 to ensure that the changes in the wage indexes and labor-
related share do not influence aggregate payments, and the proposed
budget neutrality adjustment of 0.9672 to ensure that our proposed
changes to the SSO payment methodology (discussed in VIII.E. of the
preamble of this proposed rule) do not influence aggregate payments.
For LTCHs that fail to submit data for the LTCH QRP, in accordance
with section 1886(m)(5)(C) of the Act, we are proposing to establish
an LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of $40,675.49. This
proposed reduced LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate reflects the
proposed updates and factors previously described as well as the
required 2.0 percentage point reduction to the annual update for
failure to submit data under the LTCH QRP. We note that the factors
previously described to determine the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate are applied to the FY 2017 LTCH PPS
standard Federal rate set forth under Sec. 412.523(c)(3)(xiv) (that
is, $42,476.41).
Table IV shows the estimated impact for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases. The estimated change attributable solely
to the annual update of 1.0 to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate is projected to result in an increase of 0.9 percent in
payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018, on average, for all LTCHs (Column 6).
In addition to the proposed annual update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate for FY 2018, the estimated increase of 0.9
percent shown in Column 6 of Table IV also includes estimated
payments for SSO cases that would be paid using special
methodologies that are not affected by the proposed annual update to
the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate (without incorporating
our proposed SSO payment methodology as discussed in VIII.E. of the
preamble of this proposed rule),
[[Page 20218]]
as well as the proposed reduction that is applied to the annual
update of LTCHs that do not submit the required LTCH QRP data.
Therefore, for all hospital categories, the projected increase in
payments based on the proposed LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases is somewhat
less than the proposed 1.0 percent annual update for FY 2018
required under section 411 of Public Law 114-10.
For FY 2018, we are proposing to update the wage index values
based on the most recent available data, and we are proposing to
continue to use labor market areas based on the OMB CBSA
delineations (as discussed in section V.B. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule). In addition, we are proposing to reduce the labor-
related share from 66.5 percent to 66.3 percent under the LTCH PPS
for FY 2018, based on the most recent available data on the relative
importance of the labor-related share of operating and capital costs
of the 2013-based LTCH market basket. We also are proposing to apply
a proposed area wage level budget neutrality factor of 1.000077 to
ensure that the proposed changes to the wage data and labor-related
share do not result in a change in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases.
As we discuss in VIII.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule,
we are proposing to simplify our SSO payment methodology in order to
alleviate potential incentives to improperly hold patients beyond
the SSO threshold. We also note we do not believe aggregate payments
to LTCHs should increase or decrease as a result of our policy, and
thus, we are proposing to apply a proposed budget neutrality factor
of 0.9672 to ensure the proposed changes to the SSO payment
methodology does not result in a change in estimated aggregate LTCH
PPS payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases.
We currently estimate total HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases would decrease from FY 2017 to FY 2018.
Based on the FY 2016 LTCH cases that were used for the analyses in
this proposed rule, we estimate that the FY 2017 HCO threshold of
$21,943 (as established in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule)
would result in estimated HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases in FY 2017 that are above the estimated 8 percent
target. Specifically, we currently estimate that HCO payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases would be approximately
8.6 percent of the estimated total LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate payments in FY 2017. Combined with our estimate that proposed
FY 2018 HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases would be 7.975 percent of estimated total LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate payments in FY 2018 as required by section
15004 of the 21st Century Cures Act, this would result in the
estimated decrease in HCO payments of approximately 0.6 percent
between FY 2017 and FY 2018.
In calculating these estimated HCO payments, we increased
estimated costs by our actuaries' projected market basket percentage
increase factor. Without our proposed SSO payment methodology, this
increase in estimated costs would result in a projected increase in
SSO payments in FY 2018 (because 100 percent of the estimated cost
of the case is an option in the SSO payment formula (Sec.
412.529)). We estimate that those increased SSO payments in FY 2018
would increase total payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases by approximately 0.2 percent.
Table IV shows the estimated impact of the proposed payment rate
and policy changes on LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases for FY 2018 by comparing estimated FY
2017 LTCH PPS payments to estimated proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS
payments. (As noted earlier, our analysis does not reflect changes
in LTCH admissions or case-mix intensity.) The proposed projected
increase in payments from FY 2017 to FY 2018 for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases of 0.4 percent is attributable to the
impacts of the proposed change to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate (0.9 percent in Column 6) and the effect of the
proposed estimated decrease in HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment cases (-0.6 percent), and the proposed estimated
increase in payments for SSO cases (0.2 percent) prior to
incorporation of our proposed SSO payment methodology. We note that
these impacts do not include LTCH PPS site neutral payment rate
cases for the reasons discussed in section I.J.4. of this Appendix.
As we discuss in detail throughout this proposed rule, based on
the most recent available data, we believe that the provisions of
this proposed rule relating to the LTCH PPS, which are projected to
result in an overall decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS
payments, and the resulting LTCH PPS payment amounts would result in
appropriate Medicare payments that are consistent with the statute.
2. Impact on Rural Hospitals
For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a small
rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside of an urban
area and has fewer than 100 beds. As shown in Table IV, we are
projecting a 0.4 percent increase in estimated payments for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases. This estimated impact is based
on the FY 2016 data for the 21 rural LTCHs (out of 415 LTCHs) that
were used for the impact analyses shown in Table IV.
3. Impact of Other Proposed Changes Under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018
Overall, our actuaries estimate the provisions of the 21st
Century Cures Act that affect LTCH PPS payments will increase
aggregate spending to LTCHs by approximately $15 million in FY 2018.
Specifically, they estimate the provisions in section 15004, which
provide for certain exceptions to the moratorium on an increase in
beds in LTCH or LTCH satellite locations (discussed in section
VIII.H of the preamble of this proposed rule) and a change in the
treatment of HCO payments to LTCH PPS standard rate cases (discussed
in section V.D. of the Addendum of this proposed rule) to result in
an aggregate increase in Medicare spending of $10 million. The
remaining estimated increase of $5 million in Medicare spending
comes from the temporary exception to the site neutral payment rate
for certain spinal cord hospitals provided for under section 15009
(as discussed in section VIII.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule). Our actuaries estimate the remaining provisions of the 21st
Century Cures Act applicable to LTCHs (that is, sections 15007,
15008, and 15010, discussed in sections VIII.I., VIII.J., and
VIII.F., respectively, of the preamble of this proposed rule) will
have negligible impact on aggregate Medicare spending in FY 2018.
(We note that section 15006, which provides for an additional delay
in the full implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy
(discussed in VIII.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule), does
not impact FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments.) In addition, if adopted, our
actuaries estimate that our proposal to further delay the full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for FY 2018 would
increase aggregate Medicare spending by $50 million.
As discussed in section VIII.E. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, section 15009 of the 21st Century Cures Act provides for a
temporary exception to the site neutral payment rate for certain
spinal cord specialty hospitals for discharges occurring in cost
reporting periods beginning during FY 2018 and FY 2019. To qualify
for this temporary exception, an LTCH must, among other things, meet
the ``significant out-of-state admissions criterion'' at section
1886(m)(6)(F)(iii) of the Act. The statute further provides
authority for the Secretary to implement the significant out-of-
state admissions criterion at section 1886(m)(6)(F)(iii) of the Act
by program instruction or otherwise, and exempts the policy
initiatives from any information collection requirements under the
Paperwork Reduction Act. Although exempt from these information
collection requirements, we estimate that each application will
require 2.5 hours of work from each LTCH (to review the billing
addresses of the hospital's Medicare and non-Medicare inpatients).
This information will be collected on a one-time basis. Based on the
best information available to CMS, we estimate that only two
hospitals meet the other requirements for this exception. Therefore,
we estimate that the total number of hours associated with this
request will be 5 (2.5 hours per hospital for 2 hospitals). We
estimate a current, average salary of $29 per hour plus 100 percent
for fringe benefits ($58 per hour). Therefore, we estimate the total
costs associated with this information collection will be $290 (5
hours at $58 per hour).
4. Anticipated Effects of Proposed LTCH PPS Payment Rate Changes and
Policy Changes
a. Budgetary Impact
Section 123(a)(1) of the BBRA requires that the PPS developed
for LTCHs ``maintain budget neutrality.'' We believe that the
statute's mandate for budget neutrality applies only to the first
year of the implementation of the LTCH PPS (that is, FY 2003).
Therefore, in calculating the FY 2003
[[Page 20219]]
standard Federal payment rate under Sec. 412.523(d)(2), we set
total estimated payments for FY 2003 under the LTCH PPS so that
estimated aggregate payments under the LTCH PPS were estimated to
equal the amount that would have been paid if the LTCH PPS had not
been implemented.
Section 1886(m)(6)(A) of the Act establishes a dual rate LTCH
PPS payment structure with two distinct payment rates for LTCH
discharges beginning in FY 2016. Under this statutory change, LTCH
discharges that meet the patient-level criteria for exclusion from
the site neutral payment rate (that is, LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases) are paid based on the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate. LTCH discharges paid at the site neutral payment rate
are generally paid the lower of the IPPS comparable per diem amount,
including any applicable HCO payments, or 100 percent of the
estimated cost of the case. The statute also establishes a
transitional payment method for cases that are paid at the site
neutral payment rate for LTCH discharges occurring in cost reporting
periods beginning during FY 2016 or FY 2017, under which the site
neutral payment rate cases are paid based on a blended payment rate
calculated as 50 percent of the applicable site neutral payment rate
amount for the discharge and 50 percent of the applicable LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for the discharge. As discussed in
more detail in section I.J. of this Appendix, some LTCH discharges
in FY 2018 will still be eligible to be paid based on the blended
payment rate.
As discussed in section I.J. of this Appendix, we project a
decrease in aggregate LTCH PPS payments in FY 2018 of approximately
$238 million based on Table IV. This estimated decrease in payments
reflects the projected increase in payments to LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases of approximately $15 million and the
projected decrease in payments to site neutral payment rate cases of
approximately $252 million under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment rate
structure required by the statute beginning in FY 2016. (As stated
previously, this estimate does not include the estimated increase in
aggregate FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments for our proposal to delay full
implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy or certain
provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act, which are discussed in
section I.J.3. of this Appendix.)
As discussed in section V.D. of the Addendum of this proposed
rule, our actuaries project cost and resource changes for site
neutral payment rate cases due to the site neutral payment rates
required under the statute. Specifically, our actuaries project that
the costs and resource use for cases paid at the site neutral
payment rate will likely be lower, on average, than the costs and
resource use for cases paid at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate, and will likely mirror the costs and resource use for IPPS
cases assigned to the same MS-DRG. While we are able to incorporate
this projection at an aggregate level into our payment modeling,
because the historical claims data that we are using in this
proposed rule to project estimated FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments (that
is, FY 2016 LTCH claims data) do not reflect this actuarial
projection, we are unable to model the impact of the proposed change
in LTCH PPS payments for site neutral payment rate cases at the same
level of detail with which we are able to model the impacts of the
proposed changes to LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases. Therefore, Table IV only reflects proposed
changes in LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases and, unless otherwise noted, the remaining discussion in
section I.J.4. of this Appendix refers only to the impact on
proposed LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases. In the following section, we present our provider impact
analysis for the proposed changes that affect LTCH PPS payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases.
b. Impact on Providers
Under the dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure, there are two
distinct payment rates for LTCH discharges occurring in cost
reporting periods beginning on or after October 1, 2016. Under that
statute, any discharges that occur on or after October 1, 2015, but
prior to the start of the LTCH's FY 2016 cost reporting period, will
be paid at the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate. On or after
the start of an LTCH's FY 2017 cost reporting period, discharges are
paid based on whether or not the discharge meets the patient-level
criteria to be excluded from the site neutral payment rate. That is,
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases are defined as LTCH
discharges that meet the patient-level criteria to be excluded from
the typically lower site neutral payment rate, and site neutral
payment rate cases are defined as LTCH discharges that do not meet
the patient-level criteria and generally will be paid the lower site
neutral payment rate. However, for discharges occurring in cost
reporting periods beginning in FY 2016 or 2017, the statute
specifies that site neutral payment rate cases are paid based on a
transitional payment method that is calculated as 50 percent of the
applicable site neutral payment rate amount and 50 percent of the
applicable LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate (which, as
discussed earlier, will continue to apply to certain discharges
occurring during FY 2018).
The basic methodology for determining a per discharge payment
for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases is currently set
forth under Sec. Sec. 412.515 through 412.538. In addition to
adjusting the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate by the MS-LTC-
DRG relative weight, we make adjustments to account for area wage
levels and SSOs (including our proposed SSO payment methodology).
LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii also have their payments adjusted
by a COLA. Under our application of the dual rate LTCH PPS payment
structure, the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate is generally
only used to determine payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases (that is, those LTCH PPS cases that meet the
statutory criteria to be excluded from the site neutral payment
rate). LTCH discharges that do not meet the patient-level criteria
for exclusion are paid the site neutral payment rate, which we are
calculating as the lower of the IPPS comparable per diem amount as
determined under Sec. 412.529(d)(4), including any applicable
outlier payments, or 100 percent of the estimated cost of the case
as determined under existing Sec. 412.529(d)(2). In addition, when
certain thresholds are met, LTCHs also receive HCO payments for both
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases and site neutral
payment rate cases that are paid at the IPPS comparable per diem
amount.
To understand the impact of the proposed changes to the LTCH PPS
payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases presented
in this proposed rule on different categories of LTCHs for FY 2018,
it is necessary to estimate payments per discharge for FY 2017 using
the rates, factors, and the policies established in the FY 2017
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule and estimate payments per discharge for FY
2018 using the proposed rates, factors, and the policies in this FY
2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (as discussed in section VIII. of
the preamble of this proposed rule and section V. of the Addendum to
this proposed rule). As discussed elsewhere in this proposed rule,
these estimates are based on the best available LTCH claims data and
other factors, such as the application of inflation factors to
estimate costs for HCO cases in each year. The resulting analyses
can then be used to compare how our policies applicable to LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases affect different groups of
LTCHs.
For the following analysis, we group hospitals based on
characteristics provided in the OSCAR data, cost report data in
HCRIS, and PSF data. Hospital groups included the following:
Location: Large urban/other urban/rural.
Participation date.
Ownership control.
Census region.
Bed size.
c. Calculation of Proposed LTCH PPS Payments for LTCH PPS Standard
Federal Payment Rate Cases
For purposes of this impact analysis, to estimate the per
discharge payment effects of our proposed policies on proposed
payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases, we
simulated FY 2017 and proposed FY 2018 payments on a case-by-case
basis using historical LTCH claims from the FY 2016 MedPAR files
that met or would have met the criteria to be paid at the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate if the statutory patient-level
criteria had been in effect at the time of discharge for all cases
in the FY 2016 MedPAR files. For modeling FY 2017 LTCH PPS payments,
we used the FY 2017 standard Federal payment rate of $42,476.41 (or
$41,641.49 for LTCHs that failed to submit quality data as required
under the requirements of the LTCH QRP). Similarly, for modeling
payments based on the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate, we used the proposed FY 2018 standard Federal payment
rate of $41,497.20 (or $40,675.49 for LTCHs that failed to submit
quality data as required under the requirements of the LTCH QRP). In
each case, we applied the applicable adjustments for area wage
levels and the
[[Page 20220]]
COLA for LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii. Specifically, for
modeling FY 2017 LTCH PPS payments, we used the current FY 2017
labor-related share (66.5 percent); the wage index values
established in the Tables 12A and 12B listed in the Addendum to the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (which are available via the
Internet on the CMS Web site); the FY 2017 HCO fixed-loss amount for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases of $21,943 (as
discussed in section V.D. of the Addendum to that final rule) and
the FY 2017 COLA factors (shown in the table in section V.C. of the
Addendum to that final rule) to adjust the FY 2017 nonlabor-related
share (33.5 percent) for LTCHs located in Alaska and Hawaii.
Similarly, for modeling proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments, we used
the proposed FY 2018 LTCH PPS labor-related share (66.3 percent),
the proposed FY 2018 wage index values from Tables 12A and 12B
listed in section VI. of the Addendum to this proposed rule (which
are available via the Internet on the CMS Web site), the proposed FY
2018 fixed-loss amount for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases of $30,081 (as discussed in section V.D.3. of the Addendum to
this proposed rule), and the proposed FY 2018 COLA factors (shown in
the table in section V.C. of the Addendum to this proposed rule) to
adjust the FY 2018 nonlabor-related share (33.7 percent) for LTCHs
located in Alaska and Hawaii.
As previously discussed, our impact analysis reflects an
estimated change in payments for SSO cases (including our proposed
changes to the SSO payment methodology), as well as an estimated
decrease in HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases (as described previously in section I.J.1. of this Appendix).
In modeling payments for SSO cases prior to accounting for our
proposed SSO payment methodology and for HCO cases for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases, we applied a proposed inflation
factor of 5.6 percent (determined by the Office of the Actuary) to
update the 2016 costs of each case.
The impacts that follow reflect the estimated ``losses'' or
``gains'' among the various classifications of LTCHs from FY 2017 to
FY 2018 based on the proposed payment rates and proposed policy
changes applicable to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases
presented in this proposed rule. Table IV illustrates the estimated
aggregate impact of the proposed change in LTCH PPS payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases among various
classifications of LTCHs. (As discussed previously, these impacts do
not include LTCH PPS site neutral payment rate cases.)
The first column, LTCH Classification, identifies the
type of LTCH.
The second column lists the number of LTCHs of each
classification type.
The third column identifies the number of LTCH cases
expected to meet the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
criteria.
The fourth column shows the estimated FY 2017 payment
per discharge for LTCH cases expected to meet the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate criteria (as described previously).
The fifth column shows the estimated FY 2018 payment
per discharge for LTCH cases expected to meet the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate criteria (as described previously).
The sixth column shows the percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH cases expected to meet the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate criteria from FY 2017 to FY
2018 due to the proposed annual update to the standard Federal rate
(as discussed in section V.A.2. of the Addendum to this proposed
rule).
The seventh column shows the percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018 for proposed changes to
the area wage level adjustment (that is, the wage indexes and the
labor-related share), including the application of the proposed area
wage level budget neutrality factor (as discussed in section V.B. of
the Addendum to this proposed rule).
The eighth column shows the percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases for changes resulting from our proposed SSO
payment methodology and associated budget neutral adjustment to the
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate (column 7).
The ninth column shows the percentage change in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases from FY 2017 (Column 4) to FY 2018 (Column 5) for
all proposed changes (and includes the effect of estimated changes
to HCO and SSO payments).
Table IV--Impact of Proposed Payment Rate and Proposed Policy Changes to LTCH PPS Payments for Standard Payment Rate Cases for FY 2018
[Estimated FY 2017 payments compared to estimated FY 2018 payments]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed
percent Proposed Proposed
Average change due percent percent Proposed
Average FY proposed FY to change change due change due percent
Number of 2017 LTCH 2018 LTCH to the to proposed to proposed change due
Number of LTCH PPS PPS payment PPS payment proposed changes to change to to all
LTCH classification LTCHS standard per per annual area wage the short proposed
payment standard standard update to adjustment stay standard
rate cases payment payment the with wage outlier payment
rate rate \1\ standard budget payment rate
federal neutrality methodology changes \5\
rate \2\ \3\ change \4\
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Providers................................... 415 73,231 $46,947 $47,149 0.9 0.0 0.0 0.4
By Location:
Rural....................................... 21 2,214 37,951 37,702 0.9 -0.3 0.1 -0.7
Urban....................................... 394 71,017 47,227 47,443 0.9 0.0 0.0 0.5
Large................................... 200 40,843 49,951 50,249 0.9 0.1 0.1 0.6
Other................................... 194 30,174 43,541 43,645 0.9 -0.1 -0.2 0.2
By Participation Date:
Before Oct. 1983............................ 16 2,509 42,228 43,135 0.9 -0.5 2.0 2.1
Oct. 1983-Sept. 1993........................ 45 9,580 52,603 52,668 0.8 -0.1 -0.2 0.1
Oct. 1993-Sept. 2002........................ 169 30,469 45,835 46,061 0.9 0.0 -0.1 0.5
After October 2002.......................... 185 30,673 46,671 46,834 0.9 0.0 0.0 0.3
By Ownership Type:
Voluntary................................... 72 9,536 49,476 49,458 0.9 -0.1 -0.3 0.0
Proprietary................................. 328 62,236 46,393 46,647 0.9 0.0 0.0 0.5
Government.................................. 15 1,459 54,034 53,468 0.9 -0.2 -1.0 -1.0
By Region:
New England................................. 12 2,748 44,003 44,457 0.9 -0.3 0.3 1.0
Middle Atlantic............................. 25 5,845 51,781 52,133 0.9 -0.2 0.4 0.7
South Atlantic.............................. 66 13,245 46,739 47,089 0.9 -0.1 0.4 0.7
East North Central.......................... 68 11,419 46,589 46,717 0.9 0.0 -0.1 0.3
East South Central.......................... 34 5,209 43,878 44,214 0.9 0.0 0.6 0.8
West North Central.......................... 27 4,325 45,735 45,380 0.9 0.2 -1.2 -0.8
[[Page 20221]]
West South Central.......................... 127 18,398 41,960 41,929 0.9 0.2 -0.6 -0.1
Mountain.................................... 31 4,184 49,112 49,256 0.9 -0.2 -0.2 0.3
Pacific..................................... 25 7,858 58,479 59,128 0.8 0.0 0.3 1.1
By Bed Size:
Beds: 0-24.................................. 26 1,753 46,440 46,297 0.9 0.5 -0.7 -0.3
Beds: 25-49................................. 193 25,450 43,767 43,898 0.9 -0.1 0.0 0.3
Beds: 50-74................................. 117 20,112 48,449 48,509 0.9 0.0 -0.2 0.1
Beds: 75-124................................ 47 13,018 50,260 50,681 0.9 0.1 0.0 0.8
Beds: 125-199............................... 23 8,013 48,199 48,375 0.9 0.0 -0.1 0.4
Beds: 200+.................................. 9 4,885 46,633 47,363 0.8 0.1 0.7 1.6
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Estimated FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate criteria based on the proposed payment rate and factor changes
applicable to such cases presented in the preamble of and the Addendum to this proposed rule.
\2\ Percent change in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018 for the proposed annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate.
\3\ Percent change in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018 for proposed changes to
the area wage level adjustment under Sec. 412.525(c) (as discussed in section V.B. of the Addendum to this proposed rule).
\4\ Percent change in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018 for proposed change to
the SSO payment methodology.
\5\ Percent change in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 (shown in Column 4) to FY 2018
(shown in Column 5), including all of the proposed changes to the rates and factors applicable to such cases presented in the preamble and the
Addendum to this proposed rule. We note that this column, which shows the proposed percent change in estimated payments per discharge for all proposed
changes, does not equal the sum of the proposed percent changes in estimated payments per discharge for the proposed annual update to the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate (Column 6) and the proposed changes to the area wage level adjustment with budget neutrality (Column 7) due to the
effect of estimated changes in both estimated payments to SSO cases (prior to accounting for the proposed change to the SSO payment methodology) and
aggregate HCO payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases (as discussed in this impact analysis), as well as other interactive effects
that cannot be isolated.
d. Results
Based on the FY 2016 LTCH cases (from 415 LTCHs) that were used
for the analyses in this proposed rule, we have prepared the
following summary of the impact (as shown in Table IV) of the
proposed LTCH PPS payment rate and proposed policy changes for LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases presented in this proposed
rule. The impact analysis in Table IV shows that estimated payments
per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases are
projected to increase 0.4 percent, on average, for all LTCHs from FY
2017 to FY 2018 as a result of the proposed payment rate and
proposed policy changes applicable to LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases presented in this proposed rule. This estimated
0.4 percent increase in LTCH PPS payments per discharge was
determined by comparing estimated FY 2018 LTCH PPS payments (using
the proposed payment rates and factors discussed in this proposed
rule) to estimated FY 2017 LTCH PPS payments for LTCH discharges
which will be LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases if the
dual rate LTCH PPS payment structure was or had been in effect at
the time of the discharge (as described in section I.J.4. of this
Appendix).
As stated previously, we are proposing to update the LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018 by 1.0 percent as required
by statute. For LTCHs that fail to submit quality data under the
requirements of the LTCH QRP, as required by section 1886(m)(5)(C)
of the Act, a 2.0 percentage point reduction is applied to the
annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate.
Consistent with Sec. 412.523(d)(4), we also are proposing to apply
an area wage level budget neutrality factor to the proposed FY 2018
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate of 1.000077, based on the
best available data at this time, to ensure that any proposed
changes to the area wage level adjustment (that is, the proposed
annual update of the wage index values and labor-related share)
would not result in any change (increase or decrease) in estimated
aggregate LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate payments. Finally,
we are proposing a budget neutrality adjustment of 0.9672 for our
proposed changes to the SSO payment methodology (discussed in
VIII.E.2.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule). As we also
explained earlier in this section, for most categories of LTCHs (as
shown in Table IV, Column 6), the estimated payment increase due to
the proposed 1.0 percent annual update to the LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate is projected to result in approximately a 0.9
percent increase in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases for all LTCHs from FY 2017 to FY
2018. This is because our estimate of the proposed changes in
payments due to the proposed update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate also reflects estimated payments for SSO cases that are
paid using special methodologies that are not affected by the update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate (prior to accounting
for the proposed change to the SSO payment methodology).
Consequently, for certain hospital categories, we estimate that
payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases may
increase by less than 1.0 percent due to the proposed annual update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate for FY 2018.
(1) Location
Based on the most recent available data, the vast majority of
LTCHs are located in urban areas. Only approximately 5 percent of
the LTCHs are identified as being located in a rural area, and
approximately 3 percent of all LTCH PPS standard Federal payment
rate cases are expected to be treated in these rural hospitals. The
impact analysis presented in Table IV shows that the proposed
overall average percent increase in estimated payments per discharge
for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY
2018 for all hospitals is 0.4 percent. However, for rural LTCHs, the
proposed overall percent change for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases is estimated to be a 0.7 percent decrease. This
projected decrease is primarily driven by a projected decrease
resulting from changes to the proposed changes to the FY 2018 MS-
LTC-DRGs and relative weights as well as from the projected 0.3
percent decrease resulting from the proposed changes to the area
wage index adjustment. For urban LTCHs, we estimate an increase of
0.5
[[Page 20222]]
percent from FY 2017 to FY 2018. Among the urban LTCHs, large urban
LTCHs are projected to experience an increase of 0.6 percent in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018, and the remaining urban
LTCHs are projected to experience an increase of 0.2 percent in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018, as shown in Table IV.
(2) Participation Date
LTCHs are grouped by participation date into four categories:
(1) Before October 1983; (2) between October 1983 and September
1993; (3) between October 1993 and September 2002; and (4) October
2002 and after. Based on the most recent available data, the
categories of LTCHs with the largest expected percentage of LTCH PPS
standard Federal payment rate cases (approximately 42 percent) are
in LTCHs that began participating in the Medicare program after
September 2002, and they are projected to experience a 0.3 percent
increase in estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018, as shown in
Table IV.
Approximately 4 percent of LTCHs began participating in the
Medicare program before October 1983, and these LTCHs are projected
to experience an average percent increase of 2.1 percent in
estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018, as shown in Table IV
with a large portion of this increase among this small group of
LTCHs to be a projected 2.0 percent increase resulting from our
proposed SSO payment method. Approximately 11 percent of LTCHs began
participating in the Medicare program between October 1983 and
September 1993, and these LTCHs are projected to experience an
increase of 0.1 percent in estimated payments for LTCH PPS standard
Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY 2018. LTCHs that began
participating in the Medicare program between October 1993 and
October 1, 2002, which treat approximately 42 percent of all LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases, are projected to experience
a 0.5 percent increase in estimated payments from FY 2017 to FY
2018. Lastly, LTCHs that began participating in Medicare program
after October, 2002 also treat approximately 42 percent of all LTCH
PPS standard Federal payment rate cases and are projected to
experience a 0.3 percent increase in estimated payments from FY 2017
to FY 2018.
(3) Ownership Control
LTCHs are grouped into four categories based on ownership
control type: Voluntary, proprietary, government and unknown. Based
on the most recent available data, approximately 17 percent of LTCHs
are identified as voluntary (Table IV). The majority (approximately
79 percent) of LTCHs are identified as proprietary, while government
owned and operated LTCHs represent approximately 4 percent of LTCHs.
Based on ownership type, voluntary LTCHs are expected to experience
no change in payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases, while proprietary LTCHs are expected to experience an average
increase of 0.5 percent in payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases. Government owned and operated LTCHs, meanwhile,
are expected to experience a 1.0 percent decrease in payments to
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY 2017 to FY
2018.
(4) Census Region
Estimated payments per discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate cases for FY 2017 are projected to experience a
decrease from FY 2017 for LTCHs located in the West South Central
and West North Central regions, while LTCHs located in all other
regions are projected to experience an increase in estimated
payments per discharge in comparison to FY 2017. Of the 9 census
regions, we project that the increase in estimated payments per
discharge to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases would have
the largest positive impact on LTCHs in the Pacific and New England
regions (1.1 percent and 1.0 percent, respectively, as shown in
Table IV), which is largely attributable to the proposed changes in
the proposed changes to the SSO payment method. In contrast, LTCHs
located in the East North Central and Mountain regions are projected
to experience the smallest increase in estimated payments per
discharge for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases from FY
2017 to FY 2018.
(5) Bed Size
LTCHs are grouped into six categories based on bed size: 0-24
beds; 25-49 beds; 50-74 beds; 75-124 beds; 125-199 beds; and greater
than 200 beds. We project that LTCHs with 0-24 beds would experience
a decrease in payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases of 0.3 percent, and LTCHs with 25-49 beds would experience an
increase in payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases of 0.3 percent. LTCHs with 50-74 beds would experience an
increase in payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases of 0.1 percent. We project the largest increases in payments
to occur in LTCHs with at least 75 beds. In particular, we project
LTCHs with 75-124 beds woud experience an increase in payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases of 0.8 percent while
LTCHs with 125-199 beds would experience an increase in payments for
LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases of 0.4 percent.
Finally, LTCHs with 200 or more beds would experience the largest
increase in payments for LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate
cases of 1.6 percent mostly due to estimated increase in payments
from proposed changes to the FY 2018 MS-LTC-DRG classifications and
relative weights and our proposed SSO payment method.
4. Effect on the Medicare Program
As stated previously, we project that the provisions of this
proposed rule would result in an increase in estimated aggregate
LTCH PPS payments to LTCH PPS standard Federal payment rate cases in
FY 2018 relative to FY 2017 of approximately $15 million (or
approximately 0.4 percent) for the 415 LTCHs in our database.
Although, as stated previously, the hospital-level impacts do not
include LTCH PPS site neutral payment rate cases, we estimate that
the provisions of this proposed rule would result in a decrease in
estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments to site neutral payment rate
cases in FY 2018 relative to FY 2017 of approximately $252 million
(or approximately 22 percent) for the 415 LTCHs in our database.
Therefore, we project that the provisions of this proposed rule
would result in a decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments
to all LTCH cases in FY 2018 relative to FY 2017 of approximately
$238 million (or approximately 5.2 percent) for the 415 LTCHs in our
database. Furthermore, as stated previously, our Office of the
Actuary estimates an additional estimated increase in aggregate FY
2018 LTCH PPS payments of approximately $65 million for our proposal
to delay full implementation of the 25-percent threshold policy for
FY 2018 and our proposed implementation of certain provisions of the
21st Century Cures Act. Therefore, in total, we project an overall
decrease in LTCH PPS payments of approximately $173 million ($238
million decrease + $65 million increase) or approximately a 3.75
percent decrease in LTCH PPS payments in FY 2018 as compared to FY
2017.
5. Effect on Medicare Beneficiaries
Under the LTCH PPS, hospitals receive payment based on the
average resources consumed by patients for each diagnosis. We do not
expect any changes in the quality of care or access to services for
Medicare beneficiaries as a result of this proposed rule, but we
continue to expect that paying prospectively for LTCH services will
enhance the efficiency of the Medicare program.
K. Effects of Proposed Requirements for the Hospital Inpatient
Quality Reporting (IQR) Program
1. Background
In section IX.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our requirements for hospitals to report quality data under
the Hospital IQR Program in order to receive the full annual
percentage increase for the FY 2020 payment determination.
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to: (1) Update the
electronic clinical quality measure (eCQM) reporting requirements
with regard to the number of eCQMs and quarters of data for the FY
2019 and FY 2020 payment determinations; (2) update the eCQM
certification requirements for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 payment
determinations; (3) update our previously finalized eCQM validation
processes for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years; (4) allow hospitals to use an educational review process to
correct incorrect validation results for the first three quarters of
validation for chart-abstracted measures beginning with the FY 2020
payment determination and for subsequent years; (5) begin voluntary
reporting on the new Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission measure
for the CY 2018 reporting period; (6) refine the Hospital Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey
[[Page 20223]]
measure to replace the questions on pain management for the FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years; (7) refine the Hospital
30-Day Mortality Following Acute Ischemic Stroke Hospitalization
measure to include NIH stroke scale for the FY 2023 payment
determination and subsequent years; (8) provide confidential reports
of measure data stratified by dual eligible status for the Hospital
30-day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate Following
Pneumonia Hospitalization and Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk
Standardized Mortality Rate (RSRR) for Pneumonia measures; and (9)
update the Extraordinary Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy for
the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years.
As further explained in section XIII.B.6. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we believe that there will be an overall
decrease in burden for hospitals due to the proposals discussed
above. We refer readers to section XIII.B.6. of the preamble of this
proposed rule for a summary of our burden estimates.
2. Impact of the Proposed Updates to the eCQM Reporting Requirements
(a) Impact for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019 Payment
Determination
In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we finalized policies
to require hospitals to submit a full year (four quarters) of data
(81 FR 57159) for at least eight eCQMs (81 FR 57157) for both the FY
2019 and FY 2020 payment determinations. In section IX.A.8. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing the following
changes to this finalized policy: (1) Revise the CY 2017 reporting
period/FY 2019 payment determination eCQM reporting requirements,
such that hospitals are required to report six eCQMs and to submit
two, self-selected, calendar quarters of data; and (2) revise the CY
2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination eCQM reporting
requirements such that hospitals are required to report six eCQMs
for the first three quarters of CY 2018. As described in section
XIII.B.6.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we believe that
the reduction in the required number of eCQMs for the CY 2017
reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination will result in a
reduction of 200 minutes per hospital per year, or 3 hours and 20
minutes per hospital per year, for the FY 2019 payment
determination.
In total, for the FY 2019 payment determination, we expect our
proposal to require hospitals to report data on six eCQMs for two
quarters (as compared to our previously finalized requirements to
report data on eight eCQMs for four quarters) to represent an annual
burden reduction of 11,000 hours across all 3,300 IPPS hospitals
participating in the Hospital IQR Program. Using the wage estimate
described in section XIII.B.6.a. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we expect this to represent a cost reduction of $361,240
across all 3,300 IPPS hospitals participating in the Hospital IQR
Program.
(b) Impact for the CY 2017 Reporting Period/FY 2019 Payment
Determination
Using the same estimate as described above of 10 minutes per
record per quarter, we note that if our proposed updates to the CY
2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment determination are finalized as
proposed, we anticipate our proposal to require: (1) Reporting on
six of the available eCQMs; and (2) submission of the first three
quarters of CY 2018 eCQM data, will result in a burden reduction of
2 hours and 20 minutes (140 minutes) per hospital for the FY 2020
payment determination as compared to the previously finalized
requirements to report eight eCQMs for four quarters for the FY 2020
payment determination (81 FR 57157 through 57159). In total, this
would represent an annual burden reduction of 7,700 hours across all
3,300 IPPS hospitals participating in the Hospital IQR Program and a
cost reduction of $252,868 ($32.84 hourly wage x 7,700 annual hours
reduction) across all 3,300 IPPS hospitals.
3. Impact of the Proposed Modifications to eCQM Certification
Requirements for the FY 2019 and FY 2020 Payment Determinations and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.10.d. of the preamble of this proposed rule we
discuss our proposed changes to the Hospital IQR Program eCQM
submission requirements to align with the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs. Specifically, for the CY
2017 reporting period/FY 2019 payment determination, we are
proposing that: (1) A hospital using EHR technology certified to the
2014 or 2015 Edition, but for which such EHR technology is not
certified to all available eCQMs, would be required to have its EHR
technology certified to all eCQMs that are available to report; and
(2) EHR technology that is certified to all available eCQMs does not
need to be recertified each time it is updated to a more recent
version of the eCQM specifications. For the CY 2018 reporting
period/FY 2020 payment determination, we are proposing that: (1) A
hospital using EHR technology certified to the 2015 Edition, but
such EHR technology is not certified to all available eCQMs, would
be required to have its EHR technology certified to all of the eCQMs
that are available to report; and (2) an EHR certified for all
available eCQMs under the 2015 Edition of CEHRT would not need to be
recertified each time it is updated to a more recent version of the
eCQM specifications.
Further, we are proposing that: (1) For the CY 2017 reporting
period/FY 2019 payment determination, hospitals would be required to
use the most recent version of the CQM electronic specifications;
Spring 2016 version of the eCQM specifications and any applicable
addenda; and (2) for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020 payment
determination, hospitals be required to use the most recent version
of the CQM electronic specifications; Spring 2017 version of the
eCQM specifications and any applicable addenda. Because the use of
certified EHR technology is already required for the Medicare EHR
Incentive Program for eligible hospitals and CAHs, we believe that
these proposals will have no effect on burden for hospitals under
the Hospital IQR Program.
4. Impact of the Proposed Modifications to the Existing Validation
Processes for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
(a) Impact of the Proposed Modifications to the Validation of eCQM Data
for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to adopt a modification to the existing eCQM
data validation process for the Hospital IQR Program data beginning
with validation for the FY 2020 payment determination. First, we are
proposing to require eight cases to be submitted per quarter for
eCQM validation for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years. We are making this proposal in conjunction with our proposal
to require two quarters of data for the CY 2017 eCQM reporting
period and our proposal to require three quarters of data for the CY
2018 eCQM reporting period. Accordingly, if those eCQM reporting
proposals are finalized, we are proposing that the number of
required case files for validation would be 16 records (eight cases
per quarter over two quarters) for the FY 2020 payment determination
and 24 records (eight cases per quarter over three quarters) for the
FY 2021 payment determination. Second, we are proposing to add
additional exclusion criteria to our hospital and case selection
process for eCQM validation for the CY 2018 reporting period/FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years. Third, we are proposing
to extend to the FY 2021 payment determination and subsequent years
our previously finalized medical record submission policy for eCQM
validation, as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57181), requiring submission of at least 75 percent of sampled
eCQM measure medical records in a timely and complete manner. We are
proposing to extend to the FY 2021 payment determination our
previously finalized medical record submission policy for eCQM
validation, as finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 57181), that the accuracy of eCQM data submitted for validation
would not affect a hospital's validation score. We are also
proposing to clarify our finalized policy.
We believe the updates to the exclusions and maintaining
previously finalized medical record submission requirements will
have no effect on burden for hospitals. We believe that the changes
associated with the proposed eCQM validation process will result in
a burden reduction of approximately 4,333 hours across up to 200
hospitals selected for eCQM validation. Using the estimated hourly
labor cost of $32.84, we estimate an annual cost reduction of
$142,296 (4,333 hours x $32.84 per hour) across the 200 hospitals
selected for eCQM validation due to our proposal to decrease the
number of records collected for validation from 32 records to 16
records for the FY 2020 payment determination. We refer readers to
section XIII.B.6.d.(1) of the preamble of this proposed rule for
more detail on these calculations.
[[Page 20224]]
(b) Impact of the Proposed Modifications to the Validation of eCQM Data
for the FY 2021 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
Applying the time per individual submission of 1 hour and 20
minutes (or 80 minutes) per record for the 24 records we are
proposing that hospitals submit for eCQM validation for the FY 2021
payment determination, we estimate a burden reduction of
approximately 2,133 hours across up to 200 hospitals selected for
eCQM validation for the FY 2021 payment determination. Using the
estimated hourly labor cost of $32.84, we estimate an annual cost
reduction of $70,048 (2,133 hours x $32.84 per hour) across the 200
hospitals selected for eCQM validation due to our proposal to reduce
the number of records collected from 32 records as finalized in the
FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to 24 records for the FY 2021
payment determination. We refer readers to section XIII.B.6.d.(2) of
the preamble of this proposed rule for more detail on these
calculations.
(c) Impact of the Proposed Modifications to the Validation Exclusions
for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing a new eCQM validation exclusion criterion.
Specifically, hospitals that do not have at least five discharges
for at least one reported measure (among the six required eCQMs
proposed for the CY 2017 and CY 2018 eCQM reporting periods)
included in their QRDA I file submissions would be excluded from the
random sample of up to 200 hospitals selected for eCQM validation
for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent years. We also
are proposing, for the FY 2020 payment determination and subsequent
years, to exclude hospitals meeting the newly proposed exclusion
criterion discussed above and/or either of the two exclusion
criteria finalized in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
57178). Lastly, we are proposing that the three exclusions would be
applied before the random selection of 200 hospitals for eCQM
validation, such that hospitals meeting any of these exclusions
would not be eligible for selection.
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
also are proposing to exclude the following cases from validation
for those hospitals that are chosen to participate in eCQM
validation: (1) Episodes of care that are longer than 120 days; and
(2) cases with a zero denominator for each measure, for the FY 2020
payment determination and subsequent years.
We do not believe that these proposals will impact the burden
experienced by hospitals because, while they influence which
hospitals and cases would be selected, they would not change the
number of hospitals that must participate in eCQM validation, the
number of records that would be collected for validation, or the
validation reporting requirements for the hospitals selected.
(d) Impact of the Proposed Modifications to the Medical Record
Submission Requirements for the FY 2021 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing that for hospitals participating in eCQM validation
we: (1) Require submission of at least 75 percent of sampled eCQM
measure medical records in a timely and complete manner; and (2)
that the accuracy of eCQM data submitted for validation would not
affect a hospital's validation score (81 FR 57180). We do not expect
these proposals to impact the burden experienced by hospitals, as we
are continuing existing policies.
(e) Impact of the Proposed Educational Review Process for Chart-
Abstracted Measures for the FY 2020 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.11.c. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to formalize the process of allowing hospitals to use
an educational review process to correct validation results for the
first three quarters of validation for chart-abstracted measures.
Second, we are proposing to update the process to specify that if
the results of an educational review indicate that we incorrectly
scored a hospital, the corrected score would be used to compute the
hospital's final validation score whether or not the hospital
submits a reconsideration request. As stated in the FY 2016 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49762), we estimate a burden of 15
minutes per hospital to report structural measure data and to
complete all forms, including the reconsideration request form and
the educational review form. We refer readers to the FY 2017 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule for more detailed information on the burden
associated with the chart-abstracted validation requirements (81 FR
57260). Although this proposal may allow hospitals to avoid the
formal reconsideration process, we do not expect this proposal to
change our previously finalized burden estimates for the chart-
abstracted measures validation process or add any additional burden,
as it would not change the requirements for selecting hospitals for
validation of chart-abstracted measures nor change the chart-
abstracted validation reporting requirements for the selected
hospitals.
5. Impact of the Proposed Voluntary Reporting on the Hybrid Hospital-
Wide 30-Day Readmission Measure for the CY 2018 Reporting Period
In section IX.A.7.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing voluntary reporting on the Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day
Readmission measure for the CY 2018 reporting period. This measure
uses both claims-based data as well as a set of 13 core clinical
data elements from patient electronic health records (EHRs) and
linking variables. We do not expect any additional burden to
hospitals to report the claims-based portion of this measure because
these data are already reported to the Medicare program for payment
purposes.
As described in section IX.A.7.b. of the preamble of this
proposed rule, we are proposing that hospitals submit the 13 core
clinical data elements and the six data elements required for
linking with claims data for this measure using the same submission
process required for eCQM reporting, specifically, that these data
be reported using QRDA I files submitted to the CMS data receiving
system. Accordingly, we expect the burden associated with
voluntarily reporting this measure to be similar to our estimates
for eCQM reporting (that is 10 minutes per measure, per quarter). We
anticipate that approximately 100 hospitals would voluntarily report
the Hybrid Hospital-Wide 30-Day Readmission measure. As such, this
proposal represents an annual burden increase of 67 hours across up
to 100 hospitals voluntarily participating. Using the wage estimate
described above, we estimate this to represent a cost increase of
$2,200 ($32.84 hourly wage x 67 annual hours) across up to 100
hospitals voluntarily reporting data for this measure. We refer
readers to section XIII.B.6.e. of the preamble of this proposed rule
for more detail on these burden calculations.
6. Impact of the Proposed Refinement of the HCAHPS Survey Measure for
the FY 2020 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.6.a. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to refine and update the HCAHPS Survey measure by
replacing the set of three current Pain Management questions with
the ``Communication About Pain'' composite measure beginning with
the FY 2020 payment determination. There is no additional burden
associated with the refinement of these questions because we are
rewording the existing questions to include language that focuses on
communication about pain. In addition, consistent with previous
years (81 FR 57261), the burden estimate for the Hospital IQR
Program excludes the burden associated with the HCAHPS Survey
measure, which is submitted under a separate information collection
request and approved under OMB control number 0938-0981.
7. Impact of the Proposed Update to the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause,
Risk-Standardized Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic Stroke
Measure for the FY 2023 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.6.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to update the Hospital 30-Day, All-Cause, Risk-
Standardized Mortality Rate Following Acute Ischemic Stroke measure
to include the use of NIH stroke scale claims data for risk
adjustment beginning with the FY 2023 payment determination. Because
this proposed update would result only in the inclusion of
additional claims-based data that are already reported to the
Medicare program for payment purposes, we believe no additional
burden on hospitals would result from the update to the stroke
mortality measure.
[[Page 20225]]
8. Impact of Confidential and Potential Future Public Reporting of
Readmission Measure Data Stratified by Social Risk Factors
In section IX.A.13. of the preamble of this proposed rule we
discuss our intent to provide confidential reports to hospitals that
include measure data stratified by dual eligible status for the
Hospital 30-day, All-Cause, Risk-Standardized Readmission Rate
Following Pneumonia Hospitalization and Hospital 30-day, All-Cause,
Risk Standardized Mortality Rate (RSRR) for Pneumonia measures.
Because this proposal is related to the way we would display data,
and not the methods of data collection implemented by the hospitals,
we believe no additional burden on hospitals would result from the
confidential reporting of stratified measure data using social risk
factor indicators. We note that all measures for which we might
consider confidential reporting or public display of stratified
measure data would already be included in the Hospital IQR Program,
and as claims-based measures, we do not expect any additional burden
because these data are already reported to the Medicare program for
payment purposes.
9. Impact of Changes to the Hospital IQR Program Extraordinary
Circumstances Exceptions (ECE) Policy for the FY 2020 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
In section IX.A.15.b. of the preamble of this proposed rule we
discuss our intent to align the naming of this exception policy and
update CFR 412.140 to reflect our current ECE policies. We also are
clarifying the timing of CMS response to ECE requests. Because we
are not seeking any new or additional information in our ECE
proposals, we believe the updates will have no effect on burden for
hospitals.
10. Summary of Effects
Historically, 100 hospitals, on average, that participate in the
Hospital IQR Program do not receive the full annual percentage
increase in any fiscal year due to the requirements of this program.
We anticipate that, because of the new requirements for reporting we
are proposing for the FY 2020 payment determination, the number of
hospitals not receiving the full annual percentage increase may
increase, due to the changes in policy described above. At this
time, information is not available to determine the precise number
of hospitals that will not meet the requirements to receive the full
annual percentage increase for the FY 2020 payment determination. If
the number of hospitals failing to receive the full annual
percentage increase does increase because of the new requirements,
we anticipate that, over the long run, this number will decline as
hospitals gain more experience with these requirements.
In implementing the Hospital IQR Program and other quality
reporting programs, we have focused on measures that have high
impact and support CMS and HHS priorities for improving the quality
of care and value for Medicare beneficiaries.
L. Effects of Proposed Requirements for the PPS-Exempt Cancer
Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program
In section IX.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposed policies for the quality data reporting program
for PPS-exempt cancer hospitals (PCHs), which we refer to as the
PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR) Program. The
PCHQR Program is authorized under section 1866(k) of the Act, which
was added by section 3005 of the Affordable Care Act. There is no
financial impact to PCH Medicare reimbursement if a PCH does not
submit data.
In section IX.B.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to adopt four claims-based measures beginning with the FY
2020 program: (1) Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer
Receiving Chemotherapy in the Last 14 Days of Life (NQF #0210); (2)
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to the ICU in
the Last 30 Days of Life (NQF #0213); (3) Proportion of Patients Who
Died from Cancer Not Admitted to Hospice (NQF #0215); and (4)
Proportion of Patients Who Died from Cancer Admitted to Hospice for
Less Than Three Days (NQF #0216)). In conjunction with our proposal
in section IX.B.4. of the preamble of this proposed rule to remove
three existing chart-abstracted measures beginning with the FY 2020
program--(1) Adjuvant Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered
Within 4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis to Patients Under the Age of
80 with AJCC III (Lymph Node Positive) Colon Cancer (PCH-01/NQF
#0223); (2) Combination Chemotherapy is Considered or Administered
Within 4 Months (120 Days) of Diagnosis for Women Under 70 with AJCC
T1c, or Stage II or III Hormone Receptor Negative Breast Cancer
(PCH-02/NQF #0559); and (3) Adjuvant Hormonal Therapy (PCH-03/NQF
#0220))--if finalized, the PCHQR Program measure set would consist
of 18 measures for the FY 2020 program.
As further explained in section XIII.B.7. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, we anticipate that these proposed new
requirements would reduce overall burden on participating PCHs. In
the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53667), we estimated a
burden of 2.5 hours to abstract the information from medical records
and submit it for each case, which equates a reduction in burden of
40,910 hours total across the 11 centers. Based on the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53667) finalized estimates of the burden
of collecting measure information, submitting measure information,
and training personnel, we estimate the reduction in burden for
collecting measure information, submitting measure information, and
training personnel provided by the proposed removal of the three
measures to be approximately 3,776 hours per year for each PCH, or
an average reduction in burden of 315 hours per month per PCH, or a
total of 41,536 hours across all 11 PCHs. Our proposal to remove
three chart-abstracted measures would reduce the burden associated
with quality data reporting on PCHs by reducing quality measure
chart abstraction by approximately 16,364 cases across all 11 PCHs.
We do not anticipate any increase in burden on the PCHs
corresponding to our proposal to adopt four claims-based measures
into the PCHQR Program beginning with the FY 2020 program year.
These measures are claims-based and therefore do not require
facilities to report any additional data. Because these measures do
not require facilities to submit any additional data, we do not
believe that there is any associated burden with this proposal.
M. Effects of Proposed Requirements for the Long-Term Care Hospital
Quality Reporting Program (LTCH QRP)
In section IX.C.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss the implementation of the LTCH QRP. At the time that this
analysis was prepared, 41, or approximately 9.7 percent, of 424
eligible LTCHs were determined to be noncompliant and therefore
received a 2 percentage point reduction to their FY 2017 annual
payment update. We anticipate that fewer LTCHs would receive the
reduction for FY 2018 as LTCHs become more familiar with the
requirements. In addition, we believe that continued trainings, as
well as utilization of new reports for LTCHs will help LTCHs comply
with the LTCH QRP requirements. Thus, we estimate that our proposals
will have a negligible impact on overall LTCH payments for FY 2018.
In section IX.C.7. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we are
proposing to replace the current pressure ulcer measure (Percent of
Residents or Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened
(Short Stay) (NQF #0678)) with a new modified version of the
measure, Changes in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer/
Injury, beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. We are also proposing
to adopt two additional measures: Compliance with Spontaneous
Breathing Trial (SBT) by Day 2 of the LTCH Stay; and Ventilator
Liberation Rate, beginning with the FY 2020 LTCH QRP. In addition,
we are proposing that data for these measures will be collected and
reported using the LTCH CARE Data Set (LTCH CARE Data Set Version
4.00, effective April 1, 2018).
We also are proposing to remove the All-Cause Unplanned
Readmission Measure for 30 Days Post-Discharge from LTCHs (NQF
#2512). However, because LTCHs will still be required to report data
on this measure for payment purposes, we believe that the removal of
this measure will not affect the burden estimate for the LTCH QRP.
In addition, adoption of the proposed pressure ulcer measure,
Change in Skin Integrity Post-Acute Care: Pressure Ulcer Injury, to
replace the current pressure ulcer measure, Percent of Residents or
Patients with Pressure Ulcers That Are New or Worsened (Short Stay)
(NQF #0678), would result in the removal of some data elements
related to pressure ulcer assessment that we believe are duplicative
or no longer necessary. As a result, the estimated burden and cost
for LTCHs to report the proposed measure would be reduced from the
burden and cost to report the current measure.
We also are proposing to remove the program interruption items
from the LTCH
[[Page 20226]]
CARE Data Set. Specifically, we are proposing to remove the
following items: A2500, Program Interruption(s); A2510, Number of
Program Interruptions During This Stay in This Facility; and A2525,
Program Interruption Dates, because we do not currently utilize this
information and do not have plans to utilize this information for
the LTCH QRP. As a result, the estimated burden and cost for LTCHs
would be reduced.
In section IX.C.10. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing requirements related to the reporting of standardized
patient assessment data beginning with the FY 2019 LTCH QRP. Some of
the proposed data elements are already included on the LTCH CARE
Data Set and are already included in current burden estimates.
However, we are proposing to require LTCHs to report 25 new
standardized patient assessment data elements with respect to LTCH
admissions and 17 new standardized patient assessment data elements
with respect to LTCH discharges.
In summary, the 4.5-minute increase in burden for the two
proposed ventilator weaning quality measures is offset with the 3
minute reduction in burden for the proposed pressure ulcer quality
measure and the 3.6 minute reduction in burden for the program
interruption items. This results in a net reduction in burden of 2.1
minutes. In addition, we are proposing that data for the new
standardized data elements will be collected by LTCHs and reported
to CMS using the LTCH CARE Data Set (LTCH CARE Data Set Version
4.00, effective April 1, 2018) for the purpose of fulfilling the
requirements of the IMPACT Act. This results in an additional 12.6
minutes of burden for the proposed standardized data elements, with
a net burden of 10.5 minutes. Overall, the cost associated with the
proposed changes to the LTCH QRP is estimated at an additional
$3,187.15 per LTCH annually, or $1,357,726 for all LTCHs annually.
While the reporting of data on quality measures and standardized
patient assessment data involves collecting information, we believe
that the burden associated with modifications to the LTCH CARE Data
Set discussed in this proposed rule fall under the PRA exceptions
provided in section 1899B(m) of the Act. Section 1899B(m) of the
Act, which was added by the IMPACT Act, states that the PRA
requirements do not apply to section 1899B of the Act. However, the
PRA requirements and burden estimates will be submitted to OMB for
review and approval when modifications to the LTCH CARE Data Set or
other applicable PAC assessment instruments are not used to achieve
standardized patient assessment data.
For a detailed discussion of information collection requirements
related to our proposals, we refer readers to section XIII.B.9. of
the preamble of this proposed rule.
N. Effects of Proposed Updates to the Inpatient Psychiatric
Facility Quality Reporting (IPFQR) Program
As discussed in section IX.D. of the preamble of this proposed
rule and in accordance with section 1886(s)(4)(A)(i) of the Act, we
will implement a 2 percentage point reduction in the FY 2020 market
basket update for IPFs that have failed to comply with the IPFQR
Program requirements for the FY 2020 payment determination. In
section IX.D. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we discuss how
the 2 percentage point reduction will be applied. For the FY 2017,
payment determination (that is, data collected during CY 2015 and
submitted in CY 2016) of the 1,647 IPFs eligible for the IPFQR
Program, 49 did not receive the full market basket update due to
reasons specific to the IPFQR Program; 22 of these IPFs chose not to
participate and 27 did not meet the requirements of the Program. We
anticipate that even fewer IPFs would receive the reduction for FY
2018 as IPFs become more familiar with the requirements. Thus, we
estimate that the IPFQR Program will have a negligible impact on
overall IPF payments for FY 2018.
We intend to closely monitor the effects of this quality
reporting program on IPFs and help facilitate successful reporting
outcomes through ongoing stakeholder education, national trainings,
and a technical help desk.
We are proposing provisions that impact the FY 2018 procedural
requirements and subsequent years, and the FY 2020 payment
determinations and subsequent years. We refer readers to section
XIII.B.10. of the preamble of this proposed rule for details
discussing information collection requirements for the IPFQR
Program.
O. Effects of Proposed Requirements Regarding the Electronic Health
Record (EHR) Incentive Programs and Meaningful Use
In section IX.E. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss proposed policies for eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting
CQMs electronically under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive
Programs in 2017. As outlined in this proposed rule, we are
proposing the following modifications to the CY 2017 final CQM
policies: (1) Revise the CY 2017 reporting period for eligible
hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs electronically to require the
submission of 2 self-selected quarters of data; and (2) revise the
number of CQMs eligible hospitals and CAHs are required to report
electronically for CY 2017 to 6 (self-selected) available CQMs. In
addition, we are proposing the following CQM reporting requirements
for CY 2018: (1) Eligible hospitals and CAHs reporting CQMs
electronically that demonstrate meaningful use for the first time in
2018 or that have demonstrated meaningful use in any year prior to
2018, the reporting period would be the first 3 quarters of data of
CY 2018 with a submission period (Medicare EHR Incentive Program
only) consisting of the 2 months following the close of the calendar
year, ending on February 28, 2019; (2) eligible hospitals and CAHs
reporting CQMs electronically would be required to report at least 6
(self-selected) of the available CQMs; (3) eligible hospitals and
CAHs that report CQMs by attestation under the Medicare EHR
Incentive Program because electronic reporting is not feasible, and
eligible hospitals and CAHs that report CQMs by attestation under
their State's Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, would be required to
report on all 16 available CQMs; and (4) eligible hospitals and CAHs
reporting CQMs by attestation under the Medicare EHR Incentive
Program would have a submission period that would be the 2 months
following the close of the CY 2018 CQM reporting period, ending
February 28, 2019.
Because the proposed reporting requirements for data collection
regarding the reporting of CQMs electronically under the Medicare
and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs would align with the reporting
requirements under the Hospital IQR Program, we do not believe that
there is any additional burden for the collection of such
information. We are not proposing modifications for the CQMs
reporting requirements by attestation. Therefore, there would be no
change in burden associated with attestation of CQMs.
In section IX.F. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss proposed policies regarding clinical quality measurement for
EPs participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. We note
that there may be costs incurred by States associated with systems
development as a result of the proposed policies. State attestation
systems would likely require minor updates, which may be eligible
for support through enhanced Federal funding, subject to CMS prior
approval, if outlined in an updated Implementation Advance Planning
Document (IAPD). We anticipate that eligible professionals (EPs) may
also face minor burden and incremental capital cost for updating
clinical quality measures and reporting capabilities in the EHR.
However, we intend to reduce EP burden and simplify the program
through these proposals, which are intended to better align CQM
reporting periods and CQM reporting for the Medicaid EHR Incentive
Program with policies under MIPS. Overall, we believe the proposed
CQM alignment at the State attestation system and EP levels would
both reduce burden associated with reporting on multiple CMS
programs and enhance State and CMS operational efficiency.
In section IX.G.1. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals to change the EHR reporting period in 2018
from the full CY 2018 to any continuous 90-day period within CY 2018
for all returning EPs, eligible hospitals and CAHs in the Medicare
and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. We do not believe that
modifying the EHR reporting period would cause an increase in cost
as the reporting requirements for a 90 day reporting period are
virtually the same for a full calendar year reporting period as the
requirements for a full year calendar year reporting period and 90
day EHR reporting period requires the same number of objectives and
measures to be met.
In section IX.G.2. of the preamble of this proposed rule, as
required by the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255), we are
proposing an exemption from the payment adjustments under sections
1848(a)(7)(A), 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix)(I), and 1814(l)(4) of the Act for
EPs, eligible hospitals and CAHs, respectively, that demonstrate
through an application process that compliance with the
[[Page 20227]]
requirement for being a meaningful EHR user is not possible because
their certified EHR technology has been decertified under ONC's
Health IT Certification Program. The application process involves
participants completing an application form for an exception. While
the form is standardized, we believe it is exempt from the PRA. The
form is structured as an attestation. Therefore, we believe it is
exempt under 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(1) of the implementing regulations of
the PRA. The form is an attestation that imposes no burden beyond
what is required to provide identifying information and to attest to
the applicable information.
In section IX.G.3. of the preamble of this proposed rule, as
required by the 21st Century Cures Act, we are proposing to exempt
ambulatory surgical center-based EPs from the 2017 and 2018 payment
adjustments under section 1848(a)(7)(A) of the Act if they furnish
substantially all of their covered professional services in an
ambulatory surgical center. We do not believe this requirement would
cause an increase in burden as CMS would identify the EPs who might
meet this requirement.
For the information collection requirements relating to the
above proposals, we refer readers to section XIII.B.11. of the
preamble of this proposed rule.
P. Effects of Proposed Electronic Signature and Electronic
Submission of the Certification and Settlement Summary Page of
Medicare Cost Reports
In section X.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to allow providers to use an electronic
signature on the certification statement of the Certification and
Settlement Summary page of the Medicare cost report and submit it
electronically. This proposal would result in savings to providers.
Using the most current data from Medicare's System for Tracking
Audit and Reimbursement, approximately 51,000 providers file a
Medicare cost report and, therefore, must currently mail the
Certification and Settlement Summary page. Because most providers
mail the Certification and Settlement Summary page via certified
mail with return receipt (which includes delivery confirmation), at
the current U.S. Postal Service price of $7.10, if all of these
providers elect to electronically submit the Certification and
Settlement Summary page with an electronic signature, this proposal
would collectively save these providers approximately $362,000 in
postage costs. This is an underestimate as it does not include
mailing costs when providers choose to mail the Certification and
Settlement Summary page to their contractors via overnight mail at a
significantly higher expense.
Q. Effects of Proposed Changes Relating to Survey and Certification
Requirements
In section XI.A. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals to revise the application and reapplication
procedures for national accrediting organizations (AOs) to require
them to post final survey results and acceptable plans of
corrections (PoCs) to the Web sites. The AO programs consist of 10
provider-supplier AO programs and 4 Advanced Diagnostic Imaging
(ADI) AO programs. All of these AO programs would be affected by the
proposal. As of the end of FY 2016, there were a total of 12,434
deemed providers and suppliers divided among 10 CMS provider/
supplier-approved AO programs. Accreditation surveys for deemed
provider and suppliers are conducted on a triennial basis, with a
varying number of surveys conducted annually by the AO, based on the
provider's or supplier's entry into the AO program. It is estimated
that approximately 5,492 survey reports and corresponding PoCs would
need to be posted annually across the 10 provider/supplier AOs. In
addition to the provider/supplier-approved AO programs, there were
16,873 ADI suppliers divided among 4 CMS-approved ADI AOs. It is
estimated that approximately 2,128 survey reports and corresponding
PoCs would need to be posted annually across the 4 ADI AOs. We are
not able to estimate the cost associated with the proposed
requirement for posting of the surveys reports and corresponding
PoCs at this time. We are seeking public comments, particularly from
AOs, regarding the potential initial cost of modifications to the
AOs' existing public Web sites and the ongoing cost associated with
uploading survey reports and PoCs. We recommend that AOs provide
public comments in response to this proposed rule on their estimated
costs for posting survey reports and corresponding PoCs. We will
consider any public comments received and address them in the final
rule.
There is no financial impact of the proposal on deemed
facilities as the survey reports and associated PoCs would not be
posted by the facilities, but would be posted by the AOs affiliated
with the providers or suppliers or ADIs. The overall impact would be
determined based on the total costs for posting of the survey
reports for the 10 provider-supplier AO programs and the 4 ADI AOs.
In section XI.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposals to eliminate the term ``newspaper'' from the
requirement to publish public notice upon a provider's involuntary
termination for RHCs, FQHCs, ASCs, and OPOs. Eliminating the term
``newspaper'' would allow greater flexibility for the CMS Regional
Offices in publishing public notices and would also reduce burden on
the CMS Regional Offices.
The print newspaper advertisements for an involuntary
termination are required to be purchased by the CMS Regional Office
assigned to that provider or supplier. The advertisement is placed
under the legal advertisement section of the local newspaper outlet.
A single CMS Regional Office may incur an average annual cost of
approximately $3,000 to $5,000 for the purchase of involuntary
termination notices for the providers or suppliers assigned to its
region. For example, from 2014 to 2016, the Dallas Regional Office
spent $14,331.89 on the publication of termination notices in local
newspapers, with costs of $3,949.45 in 2014, costs of $5,386.67 in
2015, and costs of $4,998.77 in 2016. In same timeframe of 2014 to
2016, the Philadelphia Regional Office spent a total of $7,114.75
and the Kansas Regional Office spent a total of $11,121.40. The
table below depicts the actual FY 2016 costs for all 10 CMS Regional
Offices.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regional office 2016 Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boston.................................................. $4,766
New York................................................ 645
Philadelphia............................................ 3,570
Atlanta................................................. 6,712
Chicago................................................. 10,853
Dallas.................................................. 4,252
Kansas City............................................. 3,098
Denver.................................................. 910
San Francisco........................................... 1,507
Seattle................................................. 707
---------------
Total Cost............................................ 37,020.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If one CMS Regional Office spends approximately $5,000 annually,
and there are 10 CMS Regional Offices, the average cost nationwide
per annum for termination notices could be as high as $50,000.
The cost associated with the involuntary termination notice is
assessed only to the CMS Regional Offices. The provider or supplier
is not required to post a notice for an involuntary termination.
Therefore, there would be no associated costs for the provider or
supplier.
All CMS Regional Offices have Web sites available to the public,
which are regularly maintained and updated. Creation of a subsite to
reflect termination notices for providers would be at no cost to
CMS. In addition, the use of Regional Press Officers to convey
termination of a provider would be a minimal cost to CMS and
absorbed through the Survey & Certification budget.
R. Effects of Clarification of Limitations on the Valuation of
Depreciable Assets Disposed of on or After December 1, 1997
In section X.B. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
discuss our proposal to revise the Medicare provider reimbursement
regulations to clarify our longstanding policy pertaining to
allowable costs and the limits on the valuation of a depreciable
asset that may be recognized in establishing an appropriate
allowance for depreciation for assets disposed of on or after
December 1, 1997. Specifically, we are clarifying that the
elimination of the gain or loss for depreciable assets applies to
assets a provider disposes of by sale or scrapping on or after
December 1, 1997, regardless of whether the asset is scrapped, sold
as an individual asset of a Medicare participating provider, or sold
incident to a provider change of ownership. Because we are not
proposing any change in policy, but rather are restating
longstanding Medicare policy, there is no economic impact on
providers resulting from this policy clarification.
S. Alternatives Considered
This proposed rule contains a range of proposed policies. It
also provides descriptions of the statutory provisions that are
addressed, identifies the proposed policies, and presents rationales
for our decisions and, where relevant, alternatives that were
considered.
[[Page 20228]]
As discussed in section III.H. of the preamble of this proposed
rule, we are not proposing to extend the imputed floor policy for
developing the hospital wage index. We note that if the imputed
floor policy were not to expire at the end of FY 2017, we estimate
that IPPS payments would increase by approximately $19 million in
New Jersey, $19 million in Rhode Island, and $9 million in Delaware.
Because the imputed floor policy is budget neutral nationally, these
additional IPPS payments as a result of the imputed floor policy not
expiring would reduce payments to all IPPS hospitals by
approximately $47 million.
T. Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs
Executive Order 13771, titled ``Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,'' was issued on January 30, 2017.
Section 2(a) of Executive Order 13771 requires an agency, unless
prohibited by law, to identify at least two existing regulations to
be repealed when the agency publicly proposes for notice and
comment, or otherwise promulgates, a new regulation. In furtherance
of this requirement, section 2(c) of Executive Order 13771 requires
that the new incremental costs associated with new regulations
shall, to the extent permitted by law, be offset by the elimination
of existing costs associated with at least two prior regulations.
OMB's implementation guidance, issued on April 5, 2017, explains
that ``Federal spending regulatory actions that cause only income
transfers between taxpayers and program beneficiaries (for example,
regulations associated with . . . Medicare spending) are considered
`transfer rules' and are not covered by EO 13771. . . . However . .
. such regulatory actions may impose requirements apart from
transfers. . . . In those cases, the actions would need to be offset
to the extent they impose more than de minimis costs. Examples of
ancillary requirements that may require offsets include new
reporting or recordkeeping requirements. . . . Analogously, if an
action reduces the stringency of requirements or conditions . . .
the action may qualify as an EO 13771 deregulatory action.'' Table I
of section I.G., Table III of section I.I., and Table IV of section
I.J. of this Appendix show the IPPS operating and capital costs and
LTCH PPS costs, respectively, on affected entities. The implications
of the rule's costs and cost savings will be further considered in
the context of our compliance with Executive Order 13771.
U. Overall Conclusion
1. Acute Care Hospitals
Table I of section I.G. of this Appendix demonstrates the
estimated distributional impact of the IPPS budget neutrality
requirements for the proposed MS-DRG and wage index changes, and for
the wage index reclassifications under the MGCRB. Table I also shows
a projected overall increase of 1.7 percent in operating payments
before accounting for the impact of the proposed changes in Medicare
DSH payments and uncompensated care payments. When combined with the
impact of those proposed changes, consistent with our policy
discussed in section V.G. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
estimate that operating payments would increase by approximately 2.9
percent in FY 2018, or approximately $3.2 billion. We also currently
estimate that the proposed changes in new technology add-on payments
for FY 2018 would decrease spending by approximately $52 million and
the proposed changes to the volume decrease adjustment would
increase in spending by approximately $15 million. In addition, we
estimate the change in low-volume hospital payments, including the
statutory expiration of the temporary increase in the low-volume
hospital payment adjustment in FY 2018 would decrease spending by
approximately $311 million in FY 2018. These estimates, combined
with our estimated increase in FY 2018 operating payment of $3.2
billion, would result in an estimated increase of approximately $2.8
billion for FY 2018. We estimate that hospitals would experience a
2.4 percent increase in capital payments per case, as shown in Table
III of section I.I. of this Appendix. We project that there would be
a $212 million increase in capital payments in FY 2018 compared to
FY 2017. The cumulative operating and capital payments would result
in a net increase of approximately $3.1 billion to IPPS providers.
The discussions presented in the previous pages, in combination with
the rest of this proposed rule, constitute a regulatory impact
analysis.
2. LTCHs
Overall, LTCHs are projected to experience a decrease in
estimated payments per discharge in FY 2018. In the impact analysis,
we are using the proposed rates, factors, and policies presented in
this proposed rule based on the best available claims and CCR data
to estimate the change in payments under the LTCH PPS for FY 2018.
Accordingly, based on the best available data for the 415 LTCHs in
our database, we estimate that FY 2017 LTCH PPS payments would
decrease approximately $173 million relative to FY 2017 as a result
of the proposed payment rates and factors presented in this proposed
rule.
V. Regulatory Review Costs
If regulations impose administrative costs on private entities,
such as the time needed to read and interpret this proposed rule, we
should estimate the cost associated with regulatory review. Due to
the uncertainty involved with accurately quantifying the number of
entities that will review this proposed rule, we assume that the
total number of commenters on last year's proposed rule will be the
number of reviewers of this proposed rule. We acknowledge that this
assumption may understate or overstate the costs of reviewing this
rule. It is possible that not all commenters reviewed last year's
rule in detail, and it is also possible that some reviewers chose
not to comment on the proposed rule. For these reasons, we believe
that the number of past commenters would be a fair estimate of the
number of reviewers of this proposed rule. We welcome any public
comments on the approach in estimating the number of entities that
will review this proposed rule.
We also recognize that different types of entities are in many
cases affected by mutually exclusive sections of this proposed rule.
Therefore, for the purposes of our estimate, we assume that each
reviewer reads approximately 50 percent of the proposed rule. We are
seek public comments on this assumption.
Using the wage information from the BLS for medical and health
service managers (Code 11-9111), we estimate that the cost of
reviewing this proposed rule is $90.16 per hour, including overhead
and fringe benefits (//www.bls.gov/oes/2015/may/naics4_621100.htm). Assuming an average reading speed, we estimate
that it would take approximately 16 hours for the staff to review
half of this proposed rule. For each IPPS hospital or LTCH that
reviews this proposed rule, the estimated cost is $1,442.56 (16
hours x $90.16). Therefore, we estimate that the total cost of
reviewing this proposed rule is $2,071,516 ($1,442.56 x 1,436
reviewers).
II. Accounting Statements and Tables
A. Acute Care Hospitals
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at //www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in the following
Table V, we have prepared an accounting statement showing the
classification of the expenditures associated with the provisions of
this proposed rule as they relate to acute care hospitals. This
table provides our best estimate of the change in Medicare payments
to providers as a result of the proposed changes to the IPPS
presented in this proposed rule. All expenditures are classified as
transfers to Medicare providers.
The costs to the Federal Government associated with the proposed
policies in this proposed rule are estimated at $3.1 billion.
Table V--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Expenditures
Under the IPPS From FY 2017 to FY 2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers......... $3.1 billion.
From Whom to Whom...................... Federal Government to IPPS
Medicare Providers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 20229]]
B. LTCHs
As discussed in section I.J. of this Appendix, the impact
analysis of the proposed payment rates and factors presented in this
proposed rule under the LTCH PPS is projected to result in a
decrease in estimated aggregate LTCH PPS payments in FY 2018
relative to FY 2017 of approximately $173 million based on the data
for 415 LTCHs in our database that are subject to payment under the
LTCH PPS. Therefore, as required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at
//www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf), in Table VI,
we have prepared an accounting statement showing the classification
of the expenditures associated with the provisions of this proposed
rule as they relate to the changes to the LTCH PPS. Table VI
provides our best estimate of the estimated change in Medicare
payments under the LTCH PPS as a result of the proposed payment
rates and factors and other provisions presented in this proposed
rule based on the data for the 415 LTCHs in our database. All
expenditures are classified as transfers to Medicare providers (that
is, LTCHs).
The savings to the Federal Government associated with the
policies for LTCHs in this proposed rule are estimated at $173
million.
Table VI--Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Expenditures
From the FY 2017 LTCH PPS to the FY 2018 LTCH PPS
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Transfers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Transfers......... -$173 million.
From Whom to Whom...................... Federal Government to LTCH
Medicare Providers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) Analysis
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory
relief of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small
government jurisdictions. We estimate that most hospitals and most
other providers and suppliers are small entities as that term is
used in the RFA. The great majority of hospitals and most other
health care providers and suppliers are small entities, either by
being nonprofit organizations or by meeting the SBA definition of a
small business (having revenues of less than $7.5 million to $38.5
million in any 1 year). (For details on the latest standards for
health care providers, we refer readers to page 36 of the Table of
Small Business Size Standards for NAIC 622 found on the SBA Web site
at: //www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf.)
For purposes of the RFA, all hospitals and other providers and
suppliers are considered to be small entities. Individuals and
States are not included in the definition of a small entity. We
believe that the provisions of this proposed rule relating to acute
care hospitals will have a significant impact on small entities as
explained in this Appendix. For example, we refer readers to ``Table
I--Impact Analysis of Proposed Changes to the IPPS for Operating
Costs for FY 2018.'' Because we lack data on individual hospital
receipts, we cannot determine the number of small proprietary LTCHs.
Therefore, we are assuming that all LTCHs are considered small
entities for the purpose of the analysis in section I.J. of this
Appendix. MACs are not considered to be small entities. Because we
acknowledge that many of the affected entities are small entities,
the analysis discussed throughout the preamble of this proposed rule
constitutes our regulatory flexibility analysis. This proposed rule
contains a range of proposed policies. It provides descriptions of
the statutory provisions that are addressed, identifies the proposed
policies, and presents rationales for our decisions and, where
relevant, alternatives that were considered.
In this proposed rule, we are soliciting public comments on our
estimates and analysis of the impact of our proposals on those small
entities. Any public comments that we receive and our responses will
be presented in the final rule.
IV. Impact on Small Rural Hospitals
Section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act requires us to
prepare a regulatory impact analysis for any proposed or final rule
that may have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals. This analysis must
conform to the provisions of section 603 of the RFA. With the
exception of hospitals located in certain New England counties, for
purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located outside of an urban area and
has fewer than 100 beds. Section 601(g) of the Social Security
Amendments of 1983 (Pub. L. 98-21) designated hospitals in certain
New England counties as belonging to the adjacent urban area. Thus,
for purposes of the IPPS and the LTCH PPS, we continue to classify
these hospitals as urban hospitals. (We refer readers to Table I in
section I.G. of this Appendix for the quantitative effects of the
proposed policy changes under the IPPS for operating costs.)
V. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104-4) also requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in
any 1 year of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. In 2017, that threshold level is approximately $146
million. This proposed rule would not mandate any requirements for
State, local, or tribal governments, nor would it affect private
sector costs.
VI. Executive Order 13175
Executive Order 13175 directs agencies to consult with Tribal
officials prior to the formal promulgation of regulations having
tribal implications. This proposed rule contains provisions
applicable to hospitals and facilities operated by the Indian Health
Service or Tribes or Tribal organizations under the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act and, thus, has tribal
implications. Therefore, in accordance with Executive Order 13175
and the CMS Tribal Consultation Policy (December 2015), CMS will
consult with Tribal officials on these Indian-specific provisions of
the proposed rule prior to the formal promulgation of this rule.
VII. Executive Order 12866
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, the
Executive Office of Management and Budget reviewed this proposed
rule.
Appendix B: Recommendation of Update Factors for Operating Cost Rates
of Payment for Inpatient Hospital Services
I. Background
Section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act requires that the Secretary,
taking into consideration the recommendations of MedPAC, recommend
update factors for inpatient hospital services for each fiscal year
that take into account the amounts necessary for the efficient and
effective delivery of medically appropriate and necessary care of
high quality. Under section 1886(e)(5) of the Act, we are required
to publish update factors recommended by the Secretary in the
proposed and final IPPS rules, respectively. Accordingly, this
Appendix provides the recommendations for the update factors for the
IPPS national standardized amount, the hospital-specific rate for
SCHs, and the rate-of-increase limits for certain hospitals excluded
from the IPPS, as well as LTCHs. In prior years, we have made a
recommendation in the IPPS proposed rule and final rule for the
update factors for the payment rates for IRFs and IPFs. However, for
FY 2018, consistent with approach for FY 2017, we are including the
Secretary's recommendation for the update factors for IRFs and IPFs
in separate Federal Register documents at the time that we announce
the annual updates for IRFs and IPFs. We also discuss our response
to MedPAC's recommended update factors for inpatient hospital
services.
II. Inpatient Hospital Update for FY 2018
A. Proposed FY 2018 Inpatient Hospital Update
As discussed in section V.B. of the preamble to this proposed
rule, consistent with section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, as amended
by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable Care Act, we are
setting the
[[Page 20230]]
applicable percentage increase by applying the following adjustments
in the following sequence. Specifically, the applicable percentage
increase under the IPPS is equal to the rate-of-increase in the
hospital market basket for IPPS hospitals in all areas, subject to a
reduction of one-quarter of the applicable percentage increase
(prior to the application of other statutory adjustments; also
referred to as the market basket update or rate-of-increase (with no
adjustments)) for hospitals that fail to submit quality information
under rules established by the Secretary in accordance with section
1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the Act and a reduction of three-quarters of
the applicable percentage increase (prior to the application of
other statutory adjustments; also referred to as the market basket
update or rate-of-increase (with no adjustments)) for hospitals not
considered to be meaningful electronic health record (EHR) users in
accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act, and then
subject to an adjustment based on changes in economy-wide
productivity (the multifactor productivity (MFP) adjustment), and an
additional reduction of 0.75 percentage point as required by section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act. Sections 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) and
(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act, as added by section 3401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act, state that application of the MFP adjustment
and the additional FY 2018 adjustment of 0.75 percentage point may
result in the applicable percentage increase being less than zero.
We note that, in compliance with section 404 of the MMA, in this
proposed rule, we are proposing to replace the FY 2010-based IPPS
operating and capital market baskets with the revised and rebased
2014-based IPPS operating and capital market baskets for FY 2018.
For this FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, in accordance with
section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, we are proposing to base the
proposed FY 2018 market basket update used to determine the
applicable percentage increase for the IPPS on the IHS Global
Insight, Inc.'s (IGI's) fourth quarter 2016 forecast of the proposed
2014-based IPPS market basket rate-of-increase with historical data
through third quarter 2016, which is estimated to be 2.9 percent. In
accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B) of the Act, as amended by
section 3401(a) of the Affordable Care Act, in section V.B. of the
preamble of this proposed rule, we are proposing an MFP adjustment
of 0.4 percent for FY 2018. Therefore, based on IGI's fourth quarter
2016 forecast of the proposed 2014-based IPPS market basket,
depending on whether a hospital submits quality data under the rules
established in accordance with section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii) of the
Act (hereafter referred to as a hospital that submits quality data)
and is a meaningful EHR user under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the
Act (hereafter referred to as a hospital that is a meaningful EHR
user), there are four possible applicable percentage increases that
can be applied to the standardized amount. Below we provide a table
summarizing the four proposed applicable percentage increases.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hospital Hospital Hospital did Hospital did
submitted submitted NOT submit NOT submit
quality data quality data quality data quality data
FY 2018 and is a and is NOT a and is a and is NOT a
meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR meaningful EHR
user user user user
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Market Basket 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9
Rate[dash]of[dash]Increase.....................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to Submit 0.0 0.0 -0.725 -0.725
Quality Data under Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(viii)
of the Act.....................................
Proposed Adjustment for Failure to be a 0.0 -2.175 0.0 -2.175
Meaningful EHR User under Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(ix) of the Act...................
Proposed MFP Adjustment under Section -0.4 -0.4 -0.4 -0.4
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi) of the Act...................
Statutory Adjustment under Section -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75
1886(b)(3)(B)(xii) of the Act..................
Proposed Applicable Percentage Increase Applied 1.75 -0.425 1.025 -1.15
to Standardized Amount.........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Proposed Update for SCHs for FY 2018
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iv) of the Act provides that the FY 2018
applicable percentage increase in the hospital-specific rate for
SCHs equals the applicable percentage increase set forth in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act (that is, the same update factor as for
all other hospitals subject to the IPPS).
(We note that, as discussed in section V.H. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, section 205 of the Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) (Pub. L. 114-10, enacted on
April 16, 2015) extended the MDH program (which, under previous law,
was to be in effect for discharges on or before March 31, 2015 only)
for discharges occurring on or after April 1, 2015, through FY 2017
(that is, for discharges occurring on or before September 30, 2017).
Therefore, under current law, the MDH program will expire at the end
of FY 2017. However, as discussed in section V.H. of the preamble of
this proposed rule, MDHs have the opportunity to apply for SCH
status in advance of the expiration of the MDH program and be paid
as such under certain conditions, as specified in the regulations at
42 CFR 412.92(b)(2)(i) and (b)(2)(v).)
As previously mentioned, the update to the hospital specific
rate for SCHs is subject to section 1886(b)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, as
amended by sections 3401(a) and 10319(a) of the Affordable Care Act.
Accordingly, depending on whether a hospital submits quality data
and is a meaningful EHR user, we are proposing the same four
possible applicable percentage increases in the table above for the
hospital-specific rate applicable to SCHs.
C. Proposed FY 2018 Puerto Rico Hospital Update
As discussed in the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
56939), prior to January 1, 2016, Puerto Rico hospitals were paid
based on 75 percent of the national standardized amount and 25
percent of the Puerto Rico-specific standardized amount. Section 601
of Public Law 114-113 amended section 1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act to
specify that the payment calculation with respect to operating costs
of inpatient hospital services of a subsection (d) Puerto Rico
hospital for inpatient hospital discharges on or after January 1,
2016, shall use 100 percent of the national standardized amount.
Because Puerto Rico hospitals are no longer paid with a Puerto Rico-
specific standardized amount under the amendments to section
1886(d)(9)(E) of the Act, there is no longer a need for us to
propose an update to the Puerto Rico standardized amount. Hospitals
in Puerto Rico are now paid 100 percent of the national standardized
amount and, therefore, are subject to the same update to the
national standardized amount discussed under section V.B.1. of the
preamble of this proposed rule. Accordingly, for FY 2018, we are
proposing an applicable percentage increase of 1.75 percent to the
standardized amount for hospitals located in Puerto Rico.
D. Proposed Update for Hospitals Excluded From the IPPS for FY 2018
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act is used for purposes of
determining the percentage increase in the rate-of-increase limits
for children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, and hospitals located
outside the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico
(that is, short-term acute care hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin
Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and America Samoa).
Section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act sets the percentage increase in
the rate-of-increase limits equal to the market basket percentage
increase. In accordance with Sec. 403.752(a) of the regulations,
RNHCIs are paid under the provisions of Sec. 413.40, which also use
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act to update the percentage
increase in the rate-of-increase limits.
Currently, children's hospitals, PPS-excluded cancer hospitals,
RNHCIs, and short-term acute care hospitals located in the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American
Samoa are among the remaining types of hospitals still paid under
the reasonable cost methodology, subject to the rate-of-increase
limits. As
[[Page 20231]]
discussed in section VII. of the preamble of this proposed rule, we
are proposing to use the percentage increase in the 2014-based IPPS
operating market basket to update the target amounts for children's
hospitals, PPS-excluded cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term
acute care hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa for FY 2018 and
subsequent fiscal years. Accordingly, for FY 2018, the rate-of-
increase percentage to be applied to the target amount for these
children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term acute
care hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa would be the FY 2018
percentage increase in the 2014-based IPPS operating market basket.
For this proposed rule, the current estimate of the IPPS operating
market basket percentage increase for FY 2018 is 2.9 percent.
E. Proposed Update for LTCHs for FY 2018
Section 123 of Public Law 106-113, as amended by section 307(b)
of Public Law 106-554 (and codified at section 1886(m)(1) of the
Act), provides the statutory authority for updating payment rates
under the LTCH PPS.
As discussed in section V.A. of the Addendum to this proposed
rule, we are proposing to update the LTCH PPS standard Federal
payment rate by 1.0 percent for FY 2018, consistent with the
amendments to section 1886(m)(3) of the Act provided by section 411
of MACRA. In accordance with the LTCHQR Program under section
1886(m)(5) of the Act, we are proposing to reduce the annual update
to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate by 2.0 percentage points for
failure of a LTCH to submit the required quality data. Accordingly,
we are proposing to apply an update factor of 1.01 percent in
determining the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for FY 2018. For
LTCHs that fail to submit quality data for FY 2018, we are proposing
to apply an annual update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate of -
1.0 percent (that is, the proposed annual update for FY 2018 of 1.0
percent less 2.0 percentage points for failure to submit the
required quality data in accordance with section 1886(m)(5)(C) of
the Act and our rules) by applying a proposed update factor of 0.99
percent in determining the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate for FY
2018.
III. Secretary's Recommendations
MedPAC is recommending an inpatient hospital update in the
amount specified in current law for FY 2018. MedPAC's rationale for
this update recommendation is described in more detail below. As
mentioned above, section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act requires that the
Secretary, taking into consideration the recommendations of MedPAC,
recommend update factors for inpatient hospital services for each
fiscal year that take into account the amounts necessary for the
efficient and effective delivery of medically appropriate and
necessary care of high quality. Consistent with current law,
depending on whether a hospital submits quality data and is a
meaningful EHR user, we are recommending the four applicable
percentage increases to the standardized amount listed in the table
under section II. of this Appendix B. We are recommending that the
same applicable percentage increases apply to SCHs.
In addition to making a recommendation for IPPS hospitals, in
accordance with section 1886(e)(4)(A) of the Act, we are
recommending update factors for certain other types of hospitals
excluded from the IPPS. Consistent with our policies for these
facilities, we are recommending an update to the target amounts for
children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, RNHCIs, and short-term acute
care hospitals located in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa of 2.9 percent.
For FY 2018, consistent with the amendments to section
1886(m)(3) of the Act provided by section 411 of MACRA, for LTCHs
that submit quality data, we are recommending an update of 1.0
percent to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate. For LTCHs that fail
to submit quality data for FY 2018, we are recommending an annual
update to the LTCH PPS standard Federal rate of -1.0 percent.
IV. MedPAC Recommendation for Assessing Payment Adequacy and Updating
Payments in Traditional Medicare
In its March 2017 Report to Congress, MedPAC assessed the
adequacy of current payments and costs, and the relationship between
payments and an appropriate cost base. MedPAC recommended an update
to the hospital inpatient rates in the amount specified in current
law. We refer the reader to the March 2017 MedPAC report, which is
available for download at www.medpac.gov for a complete discussion
on this recommendation. MedPAC expects Medicare margins to decline
from 2015 to 2017.
Response: We agree with MedPAC, and consistent with current law,
we are proposing an applicable percentage increase for FY 2018 of
1.75 percent, provided the hospital submits quality data and is a
meaningful EHR user, consistent with statutory requirements.
We note that, because the operating and capital prospective
payment systems remain separate, we are continuing to use separate
updates for operating and capital payments. The update to the
capital rate is discussed in section III. of the Addendum to this
proposed rule.
[FR Doc. 2017-07800 Filed 4-14-17; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
Which method instituted by Medicare in the 1980s has resulted in controlling health care costs?
Medicare's prospective payment system (PPS) for hospital inpatient care was implemented in October, 1983. Under this system, payment for care is made on a fixed price per case, based on the average cost for a patient in a given Diagnosis Related Group (DRG).
Which of the following reports from the Institute of Medicine helped launch the healthcare quality movement in the United States?
Published in 1998, the IOM's National Roundtable report “The Urgent Need to Improve Health Care Quality” included two notable contributions to the quality movement.
Which of the following is a good definition of Healthcare Quality?
The Institute of Medicine defines health care quality as "the degree to which health care services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge."
Which federal agency prompted the development and use of Hcahps?
How was the HCAHPS Survey developed? The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) partnered with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), another agency in the federal Department of Health and Human Services, to develop HCAHPS.