NEW MEDICARE HOME HEALTH REGULATIONS: IMPROVEMENT IS NOT REQUIRED TO
OBTAIN COVERAGE
The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) issued new regulations on November 17th
regarding coverage for home health services. The new regulations
clarify Medicare coverage for home health services, including
physical therapy, occupational therapy and speech-language pathology
services.[1] The
regulations are effective January 1, 2011; however, since they
clarify rather than change coverage rules, they are also applicable
to services prior to that time.
Most importantly for
people with long-term conditions, the new regulations "clarify" that
skilled care does include services that are intended to maintain a
person's condition and that no "rules of thumb" should be used to
deny care – including rules that require restoration potential.
[2] The regulations state:
"Rules of thumb" in the Medicare medical
review process are prohibited. … Any "rules of thumb" that would
declare a claim not covered solely on the basis of elements, such as
lack of restoration potential, … or degree of stability, is [sic]
unacceptable without individual review of all pertinent facts.[3]
To determine whether a
service is skilled, and therefore coverable, the new regulations
direct decision-makers to review accepted standards of clinical
practice and to consider whether a professional is needed for the
service to be safe and effective for the particular beneficiary.[4] These
considerations, rather than the ability to improve, are the key
factors to be considered in making coverage determinations. The
rules state that they do not alter coverage, but rather provide
additional detail for care planning, assessment, and reassessment.
They should help advocates in their efforts to ensure that necessary
services are covered, particularly for people with chronic
conditions.
To successfully use the
new rules to help obtain Medicare coverage, it will be important for
advocates to forge alliances with their clients' care providers to
make sure that care plans are comprehensive, well-documented, and
reflect the specific needs and therapeutic goals of the individual.
In this respect, the care plan can be an advocacy tool as well as a
necessary treatment guide.
Improvement Not
Required for Home Health Therapy
One of the most important
aspects of the revised home health coverage regulations includes a
more detailed explanation clarifying when Medicare covers
establishment or performance of therapy in the context of a
maintenance program. The regulation states:
The unique clinical condition of a patient
may require the specialized skills of a qualified therapist to
perform a safe and effective maintenance program required in
connection with the patient's specific illness or injury. When the
clinical condition of the patient is such that the complexity of the
therapy services required to maintain function involve the use of
complex and sophisticated therapy procedures…by the therapist…
or the clinical condition of the patient is such that the
complexity of the therapy services required to maintain function
must be delivered by the therapist… to ensure the patient's
safety and to provide an effective maintenance program, then those
reasonable and necessary services shall be covered.[5]
(emphasis added)
In response to the many
comments from advocacy organizations, CMS eliminated many references
to the requirements of "improvement" or "progress" that were
initially proposed in the therapy coverage regulations.[6]
CMS acknowledged that while progress might be an
indication of effective therapy, it was not the sole evidence that
therapy was necessary. Instead the coverage criteria needed to focus
on the inherent complexity of the therapy services needed by the
patient.[7] As
a result, several references in the text to improvement in function
and progress were replaced in the final version with references to
effectiveness of treatment.[8] The
regulations now clearly state that skilled, Medicare-coverable
therapy does not require progress or improvement.[9]
In addition, in the places where the regulations retain the
requirement that progress be made (for other forms of
non-maintenance therapy), specific exceptions exist if the therapy
meets the definition for maintenance.[10]
Finally the regulations
now specifically recognize that therapy for a maintenance program is
reasonable and necessary and covered by Medicare. The preamble
states:
Regarding the comment that the proposed
regulation does not define "reasonable and necessary" in a way that
clearly provides for coverage of maintenance therapy,…[i]n these
revisions we describe that therapy can be considered reasonable and
necessary when the criteria for maintenance therapy are met.[11]
The final version of the
regulations clearly acknowledges that a therapy maintenance program
may be reasonable and necessary without regard to progress:
The amount, frequency, and duration of the
services must be reasonable and necessary….
(B) …If progress cannot be measured,
…therapy services cease to be covered except when…
[m]aintenance therapy is needed.[12]
(emphasis added)
The final version of 42
CFR §409.44(c) contains additional language indicating when Medicare
will cover therapy for beneficiaries with chronic and long term
conditions.
Care Plan Requirement
For therapy services to
be covered, the patient's clinical record must contain a plan of
care established by a qualified therapist, in conjunction with the
physician, which describes a course of therapy treatment and goals
that are consistent with the patient's functional evaluation.[13] Documentation
in the clinical record must describe the goals of the treatment
plan,[14]
be measurable,[15]
and demonstrate that the method used to assess the patient's
function, including activities of daily living (ADLs), is in
accordance with acceptable practice standards.[16]
Assessment and Reassessment
The regulations require
more frequent assessments and reassessments of therapy treatment
plans. An initial functional assessment must be made by a qualified
therapist (instead of an assistant), and periodically reassessed at
least every 30 days.[17]
If more than one therapy discipline is involved, a qualified
therapist from each discipline must provide separate assessments and
(reassessments on a 30 day basis).[18] Additional
assessments by a qualified therapist are required if therapy visits
are expected to be extended to 13 or 19 visits.[19] Subsequent
therapy visits will not be covered until the qualified therapist has
completed the reassessment and objective measurement of the
effectiveness of the therapy as it relates to the therapy goals.
The new home health
clarifying regulations are much better than initially proposed. The
final regulations should be helpful to advocates in their efforts to
ensure that necessary Medicare-covered home health services are
initiated and continued. The Center for Medicare Advocacy and other
beneficiary advocates and organizations were very involved in
efforts to obtain these clarifications. We are grateful to CMS for
the important edits that were made to the final regulations.
For further discussion,
please contact executive director Judith Stein (jstein @
medicareadvocacy.org) or associate director Margaret Murphy (mmurphy
@ medicareadvocacy.org) in the Center for Medicare Advocacy's
Connecticut office at (860) 456-7790.
[1]75 Fed. Reg.
70461 (Nov. 17, 2010), amending 42 C.F. R. §409.44(c),
effective January 1, 2011
[2] 42 CFR §409.44(c)(2)(iii)(C); 75 FR 70395 (Nov. 17,
2010)
[3] 75 CFR 70395 (Nov. 17, 2010)
[4] §409.44(c)(2)(i)
[5] §409.44(c)(2)(iii)(C)
[6] 75 Fed. Reg. 70394
[7] 75 Fed. Reg. 70393
[8] 75 Fed. Reg. 70394
[9] Id.
[10] §409.44(c)(2)(i)(F)
[11] 75 Fed. Reg. 70395
[12] §409.44(c)(2)(iv)
[13] §409.44(c)(1)(i)
[14] §409.44(c)(1)(ii)
[15] §409.44(c)(1)(iii)
[16] §409.44(c)(1)(iv)
[17] §409.44(c)(2)(i)(A)
[18] §409.44(c)(2)(i)(B)
[19] §409.44(c)(2)(i)(C)-(D)
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Congress Passes the Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of 2010
With the passage by both
Houses of Congress of the Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of
2010, HR 4994, a number of provisions set to expire at the end of
2010 will continue through the end of 2011.
1. Medicare
Physician Payments
The Act's extension of
current Medicare payment rates to physicians through 2011 received
the most attention in the media. Without the extension, physicians
would have experienced a 25% reduction in their payments on January
1, 2011. The scheduled reduction in physician payment rates is based
on a formula, the sustainable growth rate or SGR, that was enacted
as part of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997.[1]
Congress has enacted delays to its implementation since 2003.
2. Other provisions
that were extended through 2011 in the Extenders Act
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The Qualified
Individual (QI) program, which pays the Part B premium for
individuals with incomes between 120% and 135% of the federal
poverty level. If QI had not been extended, individuals who lost
their QI benefits would have had to pay the standard Part B
premium of $115.40 starting in January.
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The Medicare
Therapy Cap Exception Process, which allows beneficiaries
and providers to seek coverage for medically necessary
outpatient therapy services provided by non-hospital providers
once the annual payment level is reached.
-
Transitional
Medical Assistance (TMA), which enables low-income families
who become employed to maintain their Medicaid during the
transition process.
3. Clarifications to
Provisions Enacted as Part of the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
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Clarifying that
revisions to the prospective payment system for skilled nursing
facilities, which were published in the Federal Register on
August 11, 2010 (74 Fed. Reg. 40288) and are known as RUGs-IV,
are fully implemented, effective October 1, 2010. The ACA had
delayed implementation of RUGs-IV from October 1, 2010 to
October 1, 2011, except for changes to concurrent therapy and
the look-back period. See our Alert, "Health Reform: The Nursing
Home Provisions,"
http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/InfoByTopic/Reform/10_06.17.SNFProvisions.htm.
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Clarifying that the
effective date of the provision concerning a 12-month Part B
special enrollment period (SEP) for disabled Medicare
beneficiaries who are also eligible for TRICARE is March 23,
2010, the date of enactment of the ACA.
The Extenders Act was
sent to President Obama for his signature on December 10, 2010. The
President is expected to sign the Act.
[1] Balanced Budget
Act of 1997 (BBA), Pub. L. 105-33 (Aug. 5, 1997), amending
42 U.S.C. § 1395w-4(f).
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CMS ISSUES CORRECTED "CHOOSERS" LETTER
"Choosers" are those
beneficiaries who are eligible for the Part D low-income subsidy
(LIS) and are in drug plans that they chose for themselves rather
than a benchmark plan assigned by CMS. The CMS letter, titled
"Corrected Information About Your Medicare Drug Plan Costs", which
comes on tan paper, was mailed between 12/15/10 and 12/17/10 to
approximately 246,000 beneficiaries nationwide. This notice corrects
errors that were discovered in the initial notice some choosers
received last month. You can view the corrected letter at:
www.medicareadvocacy.org\InfoByTopic\PartDandPrescDrugs\10_12.16.ChoosersCorrection_2010.pdf
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REMEMBER, YOU CAN GO HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS!
REMINDER: Your clients
can spend the Holidays with their families at home. See our Alert,
"You Can Leave the Nursing Home!"
http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/InfoByTopic/SkilledNursingFacility/SNF_YouCanLeaveTheSNF.htm.
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