1 / 17

Introduction to Reimbursement 101

Iowa Medicaid Project & CHSC Nutrition Billing Legislative Day February 16, 2010 Jody Kealey, RD/LD Nutrition Program Coordinator Jody-kealey@uiowa.edu. Introduction to Reimbursement 101. MNT Legislation National Coverage Determination. Social Security Act, November 1, 2001

barth
Download Presentation

Introduction to Reimbursement 101

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Iowa Medicaid Project&CHSC Nutrition BillingLegislative DayFebruary 16, 2010Jody Kealey, RD/LDNutrition Program Coordinator Jody-kealey@uiowa.edu

  2. Introduction to Reimbursement 101

  3. MNT Legislation National Coverage Determination • Social Security Act, November 1, 2001 • CFR 410.130 - 410.134 • CFR 414.64 • Diabetes and Renal disease • Further coverage requires act of Congress • ADA Strongly works on MNT at a national level – Need Grassroots Locally • Utilize ADA to support state work on MNT

  4. 65 and older Disability Regardless of income Federally funded MNT coverage Already have Strong ADA Leadership Children under age 21 65 and older Pregnant women Federal and State funds Limited income Multiple programs Need to include ADA leadership/support The Difference BetweenMedicare Medicaid

  5. History of IDA work • May 2006 - Meeting with Mr. Gene Gessow • June 2006 – Follow-up memo to Gene Gessow • Fall 2007 – IDA Report on Medicaid Issues by Schulte and Roberts * • May 2009 - Memo to Jennifer Vermeer, Director Iowa Medicaid – barriers to reimbursement *Survey “No payment” “Limited payment” “Don’t know” “MNT not covered”

  6. Iowa Medicaid Meetings • April 30, 2009 meeting with Jennifer Vermeer, Director and Julie Lovelady, Assistant Director of Iowa Medicaid Enterprises • IDA identified disparities • July 10, 2009 Medicaid response letter

  7. Key Discussion Issues • Replace wording: MNT in place of “nutrition counseling” • Representation on an advisory council • Increase reimbursement rate ($21.57/unit (MNT-Medicare, $65.97/u PT compared to $8-Medicaid) • Change strict NIP criteria REQUIREMENTS TO APPLY FOR NONINPATIENT PROGRAM STATUS IN ORDER TO BE ELIGIBLE TO SUBMIT CHARGES FOR NUTRITION COUNSELING NIP criteria • Allow for reimbursement of nutrition counseling provided by dietitians employed by a local public health agency. • Remove the restrictive language in the manual Change the wording of “severity” Legislative and Regulatory Issues on Iowa Medicaid Reimbursement for Medical Nutrition Therapy By Jennifer Schulte and Susan Roberts, JD, MS, RD For The Iowa Dietetic Association Special Edition Submitted to Jennifer Vermeer, Director Iowa Medicaid

  8. Medicaid Provider Manuals • http://www.dhs.state.ia.us/policyanalysis/PolicyManualPages/MedProvider.htm#All%20Provider%20Chapters • http://www.ime.state.ia.us/Providers/index.html • http://www.dhs.state.ia.us/policyanalysis/PolicyManualPages/Manual_Documents/Provman/fedqhc.pdf Compare to Legislative Regulatory

  9. Barriers to Services • Nutritional counseling services provided by licensed dietitians for recipients age 20 and under are covered when a nutritional problem or condition of such severity exists that nutritional counseling beyond that normally expected as part of the standard medical management is warranted.

  10. Barriers to Billing Quote from screening manual Families that are eligible for nutritional counseling through the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) must provide a statement that the need for nutritional counseling exceeds the services available through WIC. Maintain a copy of the statement in the child’s record.

  11. CHSC/Medicaid Billingone example • CHSC chose to access our patient population to nutrition services by billing Medicaid for our services through a MCH screening center WHO IS CHSC????

  12. Who We Serve children & youth who have special health care needs birth through age 21 live in Iowa have a chronic condition (physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional) or have increased risk for a chronic condition have a need for special services. Our MissionThe Child Health Specialty Clinics (CHSC) mission is to improve the health, development, and well-being of children and youth with special health care needs in partnership with families, service providers, communities, and policymakers.

  13. CHSC Regional Centers

  14. One Path to Reimbursement • Family stories value nutrition services • White paper, “Did you know….not covered” • Data outcomes, cost and cost savings • Who can help me, who will listen, its who you know • Begin the steps that can be done

  15. Nutrition Care Process • Links what RD is doing to $ • Language • Framework care • Intervention • Monitor/Evaluation • Outcomes • Deal Breaker!

  16. Outcome data on Nutrition Billing • 145 units billed for one quarter • Nearly $4000 amount submitted • Approved dollar amount 75% • 25% paid out avg <$1000/qtr • Math shows nearly $55,000 in RD salary CHSC 2010 data sampling

  17. Grass Roots • Obtain and Utilize Iowa Medicaid Report • By Schulte & Roberts • Establish “lack of reimbursement” as an issue of quality and access (to your state, your agency, to your providers, to you clients) • Show the disparity impact (be it in the interest of clients, self interest, both) • Petition the support of key decision makers • Go after Reimbursement

More Related