Archive for e-Newsletters
Infusion clinic owners, employee plead guilty to healthcare fraud
By Judith Kares, JD, CPC, regulatory specialist for HCPro, Inc.
Medicare has been going through a number of transitions recently. One of these transitions relates to the appropriate form of notice when certain providers, including hospitals and physicians, believe that the outpatient services ordered by the patient’s physician fall under the limitation on liability provisions of the Social Security Act. Under these provisions, the provider must provide advance written notice to the beneficiary (or his or her representative) prior to the performance of the services in order to be able to bill the beneficiary for those services if Medicare denies coverage.
Limitation on liability is likely to arise in the outpatient setting when the services ordered fail to meet Medicare coverage criteria for one of the following reasons:
- They fail to meet Medicare’s medical necessity guidelines;
- They are screening services that are provided more frequently than Medicare provides a benefit for; or
- They are custodial services.
In order to successfully shift financial liability to the patient, the provider must provide a prescribed form of notice prior to the performance of the services. Medicare is currently phasing out the prior prescribed forms (ABN-G and ABN-L), which continue to be effective through February 28, 2009. On and after March 1, 2009, however, providers must use the revised ABN form (CMS-R-131) in order for the advance notice to be effective when limitation on liability applies to outpatient services.
The revised form initially became effective for services provided on and after March 3, 2008, which gave providers a year to transition to the revised form. There are a number of technical requirements set out in the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 30, that must be met if the ABN is to be effective. Most of the requirements that apply to the revised form are very similar to those that applied to the prior forms.
In September, 2008, Medicare issued Medicare Claims Processing Manual Transmittal 1587, which contained specific, updated instructions on completion and use of the revised ABN. The most significant change is the requirement that “Notifiers must make a good faith effort to insert a reasonable estimate for all of the items or services listed . . .” on the ABN. Nevertheless, Medicare permits a great deal of flexibility in meeting this standard. For example, so long as the estimate is within $100 or 25% of the actual costs, whichever is greater, the notifier will be considered compliant.
With just a month left during the ABN transition period, it is essential that providers assure that they are prepared to be fully compliant with the new requirements, including a good faith cost estimate, as set out in the updated sections in Chapter 30 of the Medicare Claims Processing Manual.
CMS publishes technical corrections to OPPS final rule
CMS issues corrections to 2009 OPPS final rule
On January 26, CMS published in the Federal Register technical corrections to the 2009 OPPS final rule.
View the 2009 OPPS final rule.
Frequently asked questions
On January 23, CMS issued new/updated frequently asked questions (FAQ) related to Medicare fee-for-service payment. CMS also issued FAQs related to the Correct Coding Initiative edits.
View the fee-for-service FAQs.
View the Correct Coding Initiative FAQs.
OIG reviews high-dollar payments for Medicare outpatient services processed by Pinnacle Business Solutions, Inc., during calendar year 2005
On January 16, the OIG issued a report on high-dollar payments processed by Pinnacle Business Solutions, Inc., a fiscal intermediary, for Medicare outpatient claims in 2005. The OIG found that all four of the high-dollar payments Pinnacle made during that period were inappropriate.
Iowa hospitals’ uninsured patient numbers increase
Iowa hospital leaders say increasing numbers of uninsured patients are seeking free care in their emergency rooms, the Des Moines Register reported January 21.
Fort Dodge-based Trinity Regional Medical Center’s charity care, for example, jumped from $3.3 million in 2007 to $5.9 million in 2008.
Read the full report in the Des Moines Register.
Growing need for Medicaid strains states
Medicaid enrollments are surging in some states because workers are losing their health insurance along with their jobs, The New York Times reported January 22.
Some states saw surges between 5% and 10% in the last 12 months. Growth rates doubled from the prior year in some states.
Read the full story in The New York Times.
Within days of taking office, President Barack Obama plans to rescind a Bush administration policy that has impeded state efforts to provide health insurance to children from low- and middle-income families through the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), aides and advisers announced. The policy is one of many that the new administration hopes to change or withdraw in its first weeks in office.
Obama has said, for example, that he objects to a Bush administration rule that grants sweeping new protections to health workers who refuse to provide care because of their “religious beliefs or moral convictions.”
Read the full story in The New York Times.


