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Master Core Curriculum. Part A Basic Module 1 Overview of Medicare. Agenda. Overview of Medicare 1.5 hours. Learning Outcomes. At the end of this module, participants will be able to: describe enrollment processes describe facility types and reimbursement methodology
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Master Core Curriculum Part A Basic Module 1 Overview of Medicare
Agenda • Overview of Medicare • 1.5 hours
Learning Outcomes At the end of this module, participants will be able to: • describe enrollment processes • describe facility types and reimbursement methodology • describe entitlement and eligibility regulations/criteria • describe premiums, deductibles, and benefit periods • understand the basic difference between Part A and Part B
What is Medicare? • Medicare is a federal health insurance program providing medical coverage to 95 percent of the nation’s aged population and to other individuals • 42.1 million Medicare beneficiaries • 295.4 billion dollars paid in the year 2004
What is CMS ? • Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services • Federal agency within the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services • Administers Medicare & Medicaid • Contracts with private insurance companies to administer the programs
Fiscal Intermediary (FI) Regional Home Health Intermediary (RHHI) Carrier Durable Medical Equipment Regional Carrier ( DMERC) Program Safeguard Contractor (PSC) Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC) Quality Improvement Organizations (QIO) State Agency (SA) Medicare Administrative Contractors (MAC) Medicare Contractor Terms
Medicare • Health Insurance for the Aged and Disabled Act (title XVIII of the Social Security Act) • Two parts • Part A - Hospital Insurance (HI) • Part B – Supplemental Medical Insurance (SMI) • Beneficiaries may elect • Part C - Medicare Advantage (MA) program • Part D – Prescription Drug Coverage
Medicare Eligibility Three types of Medicare beneficiaries • Aged Insured • 65 years or older • Disabled Insured • Eligible for coverage after 24 months of disability • End-Stage Renal Disease (kidney transplant or dialysis patients)/ALS patients
Eligible for premium-free Part A when Medicare taxes paid for at least 10 years. • Premium for Part A in 2006 is $393.00 • Inpatient hospital, • Including Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) • Inpatient Rehabilitation Hospitals (IRF)Inpatient Psychiatric Hospitals (IPF) • Long Term Care Hospital (LTCH) • Inpatient Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) and Swingbed • Home Health • Hospice
Medicare Part B • Physician • Lab • Ambulance • Outpatient • Including hospitals, SNFs, home health • X-ray • Vaccine
Medicare Part B • Eligible individual enrolls and pays premiums • Year 2006 • Deductible: $124.00 per year • Coinsurance: 20 percent • Premium per month: $88.50
Medicare Part C • A set of healthcare options to give beneficiaries more choices in healthcare and contractors • Beneficiaries choose to have covered services furnished through a managed care plan, rather than through traditional Medicare • Does not include hospice care
Medicare Part D • Beneficiary chooses to receive prescription drug coverage • Effective January 2006
Inpatient Hospital & SNF Coverage • Based on benefit period • Begins with beneficiary admission to hospital/ SNF • Ends when beneficiary has not received hospital or SNF care for 60 consecutive days
Inpatient Hospital & SNF Coverage Reminders • Available days do not ensure Medicare payment • Criteria must be met for coverage • Benefit days do not renew until one of the following occurs • Beneficiary out of hospital/SNF for 60 consecutive days • Beneficiary has 60 consecutive days of “non-skilled” care in a SNF/SB • Beneficiary may have multiple deductibles ($912) in one year
Inpatient Hospital & SNF Benefits Covered Services • Semi-private rooms • Meals • General nursing • Drugs administered during stay • Oxygen • Other services & supplies
Inpatient Hospital & SNF Benefits Non covered Services • Private rooms (unless medically necessary) • Take home drugs • Private duty nursing
Reimbursement of Hospital Benefits • Prospective Payment System (PPS) • Paid fixed dollar amount according to Diagnostic Related Group (DRG) • Hospital’s geographic location • Diagnoses/procedures • Patient’s age, sex, discharge status • Not necessarily impacted by patient’s length of stay or amount billed • Outlier payment may be made when actual charges exceed DRG formula
SNF Coverage Criteria • Physician certifies need for daily skilled care • Daily skilled nursing • Daily rehabilitation (therapy) services • Must require the skills of nurse or therapist • 3-day inpatient hospital stay (not including day of discharge) • SNF care related to inpatient hospital condition • Admitted within 30 days of hospital discharge • Unless medically inappropriate; AND • Medically predictable
Reimbursement of SNF Benefits • Skilled Nursing Facility Prospective Payment System (SNF PPS) • Paid fixed dollar amount according to Resource Utilization Group (RUG) • Determined by Minimum Data Set (MDS) • Screening status • Clinical status • Functional status
Outpatient Hospital Benefits • Part B benefit • Patient must have Part B for coverage • Services billed to Part A contractor (FI) • Physician’s order determines whether service provided on inpatient or outpatient basis • Some services only covered on inpatient basis • Self-administered drugs are not covered
Reimbursement of Outpatient Hospital Benefits Services • Provided at acute care hospital • Reimbursed under Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) • Similar services grouped into Ambulatory Payment Classifications (APCs) • Fixed amounts for each APC • Reimbursement amount • Coinsurance amount • Multiple APCs may be performed in one procedure
Reimbursement of Outpatient Hospital Benefits • Services provided at Critical Access Hospital (CAH) • Outpatient services are reimbursed at cost • Reference laboratory services are paid at fee schedule
Home Health Benefits • Services must be ordered by physician • Services must be reasonable and medically necessary • Beneficiary must be homebound • Beneficiary must need skilled care • Skilled nursing • Physical therapy • Speech therapy • Continuing occupational therapy
Home Health Benefits Covered Services • Intermittent skilled nursing • Part-time skilled nursing and aides • Physical, speech or occupational therapy • Medical social services • Medical supplies
Home Health Non-covered Services • 24-hour care • Prescription drugs • Meals • Homemaker services • Shopping, cleaning, laundry
Reimbursement of Home Health Benefits • Paid under Home Health Prospective Payment System (HHPPS) • Based on 60-day episode care • Amount based on Health Insurance Prospective Payment System (HIPPS) code • Determined by OASIS assessment • Clinical severity • Functional status • Service utilization • Regardless of number of visits • Exception: 4 or fewer visits, paid based on type/number of visits
Hospice Benefits • Physician certifies beneficiary terminally ill • Defined as 6 months or less to live if illness runs its normal course • Beneficiary elects hospice care • Sign Notice of Election (NOE) • Give up right to active treatment for terminal illness • Services provided under plan of care • Beneficiary must have Medicare Part A
Hospice Benefits Covered Services • Nursing, aide and homemaker services • Physical, speech and occupational therapy • Medical equipment and supplies • Social worker services • Grief counseling • Drugs for pain/ symptom control
Hospice Non covered Services • Curative treatment • Room and board • Services not coordinated through hospice agency
Reimbursement of Hospice Benefits • Paid daily rate based on level of care provided • 4 levels of care • Routine home care • Continuous home care • Inpatient respite care • General inpatient care • Hospice reimbursed for each day beneficiary on hospice, regardless of whether service provided
Medicare Enrollment for Institutional Providers • Must enroll to receive Medicare payments • Requires completion of the CMS-855A form • http://www.cms.hhs.gov/providers/enrollment/forms • Collects payment & general information • Secures documentation to ensure qualifications and eligibility to be a Medicare provider • Submit CMS-855A to local Fiscal Intermediary • http://www.cms/hhs/gov/providers/enrollment/contacts • FI reviews and makes recommendation to CMS RO
Medicare Enrollment for Institutional Providers • State Agency (SA) • http://www.cms.hhs.gov/providers/enrollment/contacts • Determines if site survey is required for your provider type • Provides information about State requirements • Conducts survey of your operations • Determines if applicable requirements for participation in Medicare is met • Determines if State requirements are met • Evaluates performance and effectiveness in providing safe and acceptable quality of care • Submits findings to CMS RO
Medicare Enrollment for Institutional Providers • CMS Regional Office makes final determination • Review state survey and CMS-855A results • Prepares an agreement for signature • Issues OSCAR number • 6 digit number Medicare billing number with unique identifier • Ready to submit claims to FI
CMS-855A • CMS-855A submission also required to request general enrollment changes • Address changes • Director/manager change • Acquisition/merger • Change of ownership • Transfer of stock • Additional location • Conversion from provider based to free standing and vice versa • Voluntary termination • Reactivation of a previously deactivated OSCAR (provider number)
Chapter Review Slide • What are Medicare’s four parts? • What types of individuals are eligible to receive Medicare benefits? • What two government contracted agencies must you work with to become a certified Medicare provider?
References CMS IOM, Pub. 100-1, Medicare General Information, Eligibility, and Entitlement • www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/101_general/ge101index.asp Medicare Resident and New Physician Training, Overview of Medicare • www.cms.hhs.gov/medlearn/mrnp-guide.pdf Issue Paper #31, Alternative Part D Benefit Designs and Options for Enhancing Medicare Drug Coverage (January 19, 2005 • www.cms.hhs.gov/medicarereform/issuepapers/ Medicare Enrollment for Institutional Providers, CMS Publication Number 11047, September 2003 • www.cms.hhs.gov/medlearn/medenrlinstbro.pdf 2005 CMS Statistics • www.cms.hhs.gov/researchers/pubs/CMSstatistics/2005CMSstat.pdf