1 / 34

Cost Report 101 – It’s Not Just for Accountants

Cost Report 101 – It’s Not Just for Accountants. Cost Report 101:. History of Transplant R elated L egislation. 2007 - Medicare conditions of coverage for participation for transplant centers. 1984 – NOTA (revised 1988 & 1990) Final rule 2000. 1999 – Medicare coverage for pancreas.

gratia
Download Presentation

Cost Report 101 – It’s Not Just for Accountants

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. Cost Report 101 – It’sNot Just for Accountants

  2. Cost Report 101: History of Transplant Related Legislation 2007 - Medicare conditions of coverage for participation for transplant centers 1984 – NOTA (revised 1988 & 1990) Final rule 2000 1999 – Medicare coverage for pancreas 1991 – Medicare coverage for liver 1968 – Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (revised 2006) 2000s 1960s 1970s 1990s 1980s 1956 – Social Security Act 1987 – Medicare coverage for heart 1995 – Medicare coverage for lung 2001 – Medicare coverage for intestine 1972 – Medicare Benefits extended to ESRD patients

  3. Cost Report 101: CMS • Conditions of Participation • Reimbursement • DRG • Cost report • Physician

  4. What is the Medicare Cost Report and Why does it exist? It is how hospitals who serve Medicare beneficiaries report costs to CMS It exists so that my friend who is a Congressman and my nephew who is an accountant always have jobs

  5. What is the Medicare Cost Report and Why does it exist?? (Real Answers) Established in 1965 with the Social Security Act Intended to pay hospitals for the cost of providing services to Medicare beneficiaries Became less important when CMS adopted the PPS method of reimbursement All Medicare participating hospitals submit once a year (in general)

  6. What is the Medicare Cost Report and Why does it exist?? • Establishes cost to charge ratio and wage index • Outlier payments • PPS geographic adjustments • Enables hospitals to recover some costs (settlement): • Medicare Bad Debts • Critical Access Hospitals • GME • Disproportionate Share reimbursement • AND organ acquisition costs on the D 6 Worksheet • Medicare secondary payments

  7. So what is this “pass-through” talk about ? Hospitals “pass-through” their costs to Medicare It also generally is meant that FULL COSTS are reimbursed It does not really work this way for transplant Why? Because transplant costs are reimbursed by way of a Standard Acquisition Charge or SAC

  8. What is a Standard Acquisition Charge (SAC) Not a charge representing the cost of a specific organ but a charge that represents the AVERAGE cost associated with acquiring that type of organ All-inclusive (direct & indirect) Includes physician services up to the admission to the hospital for donation Medicare settles with the transplant hospital for its share of the costs 5

  9. Standard Acquisition Charge All organ-specific acquisition costs # of organs transplanted = organ SAC for your institution This is a COST not a CHARGE The actual charge on the patient’s bill is usually marked up (so this is a CHARGE not a COST) 6

  10. WHAT? It is a called a charge but it is really a cost?I am confused! Join the club…. Remember the Cost Report establishes the Cost to Charge Ratio – so the CHARGE is reduced to cost with the ratio

  11. WAIT? Don’t OPOs have a SAC also?? YES – and it works the same way You record the OPO SAC on your cost report 5

  12. WAIT? What do I put on the Patient’s Bill? Isn’t that a SAC also? Well, yes but this SAC should be a charge Your full cost plus mark-up Medicare does not pay this but uses cost report to reimburse hospital Only relevant for “fee for services” or “discount off charges” payors 5

  13. So what kind of costs can I put on this cost report? • Includes costs for acquisition of live donor and deceased donor organs • Allowable transplant center organ acquisition costs include: • Salaries of staff • Rent associated with acquisition activities • Procurement related costs – the OPO SAC • Procurement related costs – your costs (transportation, etc) • Evaluation testing - facilities fee and professional fees • UNOS registration fees • Tissue typing, including by an independent laboratory • Costs associated with professional and patient education (pre)

  14. Transplant 101: What’s MY Role? • Allocate costs correctly • Separate Cost Centers • Disease Management vs. Evaluation • Pre vs. Post transplant • Assign Costs to Recipients • Reasonable Costs • Special Considerations • Time studies • Physician reimbursement • Live Donors

  15. How do the costs get to the Cost Report? AcquisitionCost Center

  16. What’s MY Role? Allocating Costs • Cardiac Catheterization Now WHERE should this go?

  17. What’s MY Role? Assigning Costs • UNOS Registry Fee This belongs to John Smith

  18. What’s MY Role? Reasonable Cost • WHAT does that mean? • For costs incurred at your facility, it means full cost as determined by your cost report • For costs that you pay others for on behalf of your recipient, it is whatever you paid • Generally, this is interpreted as Medicare participating rate BUT not necessarily • Key is consistency

  19. What’s MY Role? Reasonable Cost – Physician Payments Physician reimbursement: • Reasonable Cost - Use hourly practice rate OR benchmark (AAMC) • Must be for evaluation services only • Medical directors: - Job description with evaluation duties - Must report actual hours – time studies • Evaluation services: - Must be able to identify a specific service given to a specific patient • Examples: Selection Committee, patient visits, consultation to RNs • No provider services once recipient OR live donor enter hospital for transplant event

  20. What’s MY Role? Reasonable Cost Accounts Payable – Payment policy

  21. What’s MY Role? Salaries Time Studies

  22. What’s MY Role: Management Strategies Should I record costs that are related to recipients with commercial payors? Should payor mix be considered in overall cost report strategy? What about KPD? How does that work?

  23. What’s MY Role: Management Strategies Little Pie BIG Pie Should I record costs that are related to recipients with commercial payors? YES!!!!! Medicare settles for their share of the acquisition costs So if you ONLY record Medicare recipients'’ costs what is going to happen?

  24. What’s MY Role: Management Strategies Should payor mix be considered in overall cost report strategy?

  25. What’s MY Role? Live Donors General Principles Donor should not incur any hospital or physician costs All hospital and physician costs follow the recipient Payors generally follow CMS lead

  26. What’s MY Role? Live Donor • Donor Evaluation: • Facility Costs – recipient center cost report • Professional Fees – recipient center cost report • Donor Hospitalization: • Facility costs - recipient center cost report • Professional fees – recipient Medicare part B • Live donor transportation and housing not allowable • After Donation: • Routine follow-up • Complications must ALL be billed directly (NOT cost report) • Physician unchanged

  27. Donor Costs Can Be Recorded in 2 ways What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD • Standard • Acquisition • Charge • (SAC) • CMS preferred • Departmental • charges

  28. Standard Acquisition Charge – PDE What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD All live donor costs (donor only NO recipient costs) # of live kidneys successfully donated = live donor SAC for your institution 6

  29. Disadvantages of SAC Advantages of SAC What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD • Maximizes CMS reimbursement • Provides for costs in pre-emptive, • not yet on Medicare • Eliminates questions of when • individual donor costs were incurred • Dilutes issues of multiple donors • for a single recipient, etc… • Can be transparent between • centers as soon as match is made (PDE) • Differences in overhead could cause • difficulties in PDE • How are “extra” costs treated • ( i.e. recipient center requests • additional tests in PDE)? • Isolating donor costs may represent • new administrative processes • for some centers (PDE)

  30. Departmental Charges What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD • Itemized bill for costs associated with a specific donor for a specific recipient can be billed to the recipient transplant center • Transplant centers must bill SAC to Medicare or third-party payors for organs acquired and transplanted 9

  31. Departmental Charges What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD 10

  32. Disadvantages of DC Advantages of DC What’s MY Role: Special Considerations in KPD • Maximizes commercial • Reimbursement • Allows for exact costing of the • specific donor in PDE • May reduce reimbursement • opportunities from Medicare • Adds complexity in determining • when/which donor costs should be • Included in PDE • Assigning overhead may represent • new administrative processes • for some centers (PDE)

  33. I Don’t Believe You – Who else can I talk to ? CMS Reference Documents • Provider Reimbursement Manual 2771.A • Medicare Claim Processing Manual Publication 100-04, Chapter 3, Section 90.1.1 – 90.1.3 • Program Memorandum 9-26-2003 3

  34. Cost Report 101: QUESTIONS?

More Related