MEDICARE ANNOUNCES PAYMENT RATES AND POLICY CHANGES FOR HOSPITAL OUTPATIENT SERVICES
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Medicare News
For Immediate Release
November 03, 2004
CMS Office of Public Affairs
202-690-6145
For questions about Medicare please call 1-800-MEDICARE or visit
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MEDICARE ANNOUNCES PAYMENT RATES AND POLICY CHANGES FOR HOSPITAL OUTPATIENT
SERVICES
MORE PREVENTIVE SERVICES, FASTER ACCESS TO NEW TECHNOLOGY AND LOWER COPAYMENTS
Starting January 1, 2006, Medicare beneficiaries will have greater access to
preventive benefits, quicker access to new technologies and lower copayments for
hospital outpatient services under a final rule announced today by the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).For hospitals, the final rule provides
for a 3.3 percent inflation update in payment rates for outpatient services.
The inflation update, together with other policies contained in the final
Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) rule, will increase projected
Medicare payments to hospitals for outpatient services to $24.6 billion compared
to projected payments of $23.1 billion in 2004.“The new rule makes it possible
for people with Medicare coverage to obtain quality preventive and treatment
services in hospital outpatient departments,” said CMS Administrator Mark B.
McClellan, M.D., Ph.D.
“The rule also will make it easier and faster for beneficiaries to receive state
of the art treatment.”The final rule implements provisions required by the
Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) for preventive services in hospital
outpatient departments. These include the “Welcome to Medicare Physical” for new
beneficiaries, which will provide baseline information to the physician on the
patient’s health status, allow for early detection and treatment of diseases,
and provide an opportunity to refer the patient to other Medicare-covered
services.
When this examination is provided in an outpatient department, Medicare will pay
the hospital about $78 for the use of the facility. The fee does not include
payment for the physician’s professional services, which will be separately paid
under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS).The final rule also
significantly increases payments for diagnostic mammograms by removing them from
payment under the OPPS, as required by the MMA.
Like screening mammograms performed in hospital outpatient departments,
diagnostic mammograms will be paid under the MPFS, resulting in increases of
nearly 40 percent over current OPPS rates for traditional mammograms, and about
60 percent for digital diagnostic mammograms. In addition to the new physical,
the rule increases payment rates to hospitals for screening examinations that
Medicare already covers. The final payment increases are as follows:
Pelvic and breast exams to detect cervical and breast cancer, 1.7 percent
Barium enema to detect colorectal cancer, 2.1 percent
Bone density studies, 4.5 percent
Flexible sigmoidoscopy to detect colorectal cancer, 6.8 percent
Screening colonoscopy, also for colorectal cancer, 8.3 percent
Glaucoma screening, 9.9 percent
“The new modernized Medicare helps beneficiaries get access to benefits that
help prevent illnesses. That additional access will help close the prevention
gap for seniors,” McClellan said.The final rule also implements provisions of
the MMA designed to speed beneficiary access to state-of-the-art treatments and
strengthens the financial viability of hospitals in rural areas.
For example, the rule makes it possible for hospitals to receive payment for new
drugs and biologicals upon Food and Drug Administration Approval, rather than
having to wait several months until a code and payment rate are assigned. In
addition, the rule continues into 2005 the MMA provision that sets rates for
brachytherapy sources on charges adjusted to cost, and establishes definitions
for new codes for high activity brachytherapy sources.
Brachytherapy is an advanced cancer treatment that involves the placement of
radioactive seeds near the tumor site, thus reducing the exposure of
non-cancerous tissue to radiation. "In this rule, we are also reducing
beneficiary out-of-pocket payments for outpatient services, which until now have
been as high as 50 percent of the charge,” Dr. McClellan said.
The final rule reduces the maximum coinsurance rate for outpatient services to
45 percent of the total payment to the hospital in 2005, down from 50 percent
this year. Under the Medicare law, the cap on coinsurance rates is to be reduced
gradually until all services have a coinsurance rate of 20 percent of the total
payment. Under the previous payment system, beneficiary coinsurance was set at
20 percent of the hospital’s charges, which were often significantly higher than
the Medicare payment rate.
he rule improves the accuracy of payments for blood and blood products used in
outpatient departments. For example, CMS will use a new method for calculating
appropriate payment rates, and creating individual ambulatory payment
classifications (APCs) for all blood products. In response to comments about
proposed reductions for low volume blood and blood products, the final rule
increases payment by using a 50/50 blend of the median costs used for payment in
2004 and the medians developed for 2005.
The final rule also responds to concerns raised during the comment period about
proposed reductions in payments for procedures that require expensive devices.
For 21 device-dependent APCs, the 2005 payment will be based on 95 percent of
the 2004 payment median.
The rule changes the criteria for hospitals to be eligible for additional
payments, known as outlier payments, for services that have unexpectedly high
costs. This will be achieved by applying a fixed dollar threshold in addition to
the current threshold based on a percentage relationship between the cost of the
service and the payment for the APC.
To be eligible for an outlier payment in the outpatient setting, the cost of
furnishing a service would have to exceed both thresholds. For 2005, these
thresholds are 1.75 times the payment of the APC and $1,175 over the APC payment
rate.
The final rule also:
The
rule will be published in the November 15 Federal Register. Comments will
be accepted regarding new codes and their APC assignment during the 60-day
period following publication. For more information, visit the CMS website at:
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/providers/hopps/2005fc/1427fc.asp
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)