Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Attention Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries (QMBs) – Increased Access to Care Beginning January 1, 2013


As many QMBs and Medicare counselors know, it can be difficult for QMBs to get access to physician care as in most states the Medicaid state agency (which runs the QMB program) will pay a physician (or other practitioner) only the difference between what Medicare pays for a service and what Medicaid would pay for the same service. In many cases, this is nothing, and, coupled with the fact that a physician or practitioner cannot balance bill a QMB, they often refuse to see one of these beneficiaries, as they believe their reimbursement is insufficient.

However, beginning January 1, 2013, a provision of the Affordable Care Act requires states to pay primary care physicians and practitioners at full Medicare rates. And among other things, this means that for QMBs, state agencies must pay the full difference between what Medicare allows and the (usual) 80% that it actually pays. So it well may be that your doctor or practitioner will now see you, as they will get reimbursed for their care for you at what they would for any other Medicare beneficiary (presuming they take assignment, of course). There is a catch, and it is that this provision in the law speaks only to those practicing family medicine, general internal medicine, and pediatric medicine, so you are not covered by this if you see a specialist. But it will quite possibly apply to someone you do go to seek care from, and you can bring this provision up when you try to make an appointment with a primary care physician or practitioner.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Renewal of the Outpatient Therapy Exceptions Process and of the Prepayment Review of and Preapproval Process for “Over-Limit” Outpatient Therapy Services

The just-signed American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 has several important provisions regarding outpatient therapy. Currently there is a statutory limit, or cap, on the dollar amount of outpatient therapy services a beneficiary can receive in a year. This limit has been in place for some years, and although the dollar amount changes each year, in 2013 the limit is $1,900 for physical and speech therapy combined, and a separate limit of $1,900 for occupational therapy. But for several years Congress has allowed exceptions to these limits, by permitting therapists, when these caps are exceeded, to certify that the additional, over-limit therapy services they are providing are medically necessary for the beneficiary. This act renews this exceptions process for all of 2013.


It also requires that, as in 2012, these therapies received in a hospital outpatient department be counted toward these caps, and imposes a new requirement that therapies received in the outpatient department of a critical access hospital also be included (these types of hospitals are often in rural areas).

And the law also renewed a requirement that outpatient therapy claims get special reviews. So if you have outpatient physical, speech language, and / or occupational therapy services covered by Medicare this calendar year, and Medicare has approved $3,700 or more for your therapy, you may get a notice from Medicare telling you that limits or caps are bring imposed on your outpatient therapy for the remainder of the year. (You may get this even if you are no longer actually getting therapy.)

What’s this all about?

Beneficiaries who are or will be receiving outpatient physical, speech language, and / or occupational therapy in 2013 need to be aware that the law requires Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), which are the companies that Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services contracts with to review and process Medicare claims, to individually review all therapy claims that exceed a limit of $3,700 for a beneficiary. This limit is, as are the statutory limits, imposed on physical and speech therapy services combined, and, separately, on occupational therapy. So there are two, separate $3,700 thresholds. In addition, it requires that the review must be made before the Medicare Administrative Contractor processes and pays the claim.

Because these reviews would hold up payments of appropriate claims, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is also permitting therapy providers to request, from the Medicare Administrative Contractors, preapproval of any therapy services they render to a beneficiary. In this way, when they have actually performed the therapy and submit a claim, the medical necessity of the services had already been approved, and the claim can go right to payment. And rather than preapprove each and every therapy session, therapists must request the preapproval of blocks or chunks of 20 therapy days at a time.

This should concern beneficiaries, but only to a limited extent. These limits do not apply to beneficiaries in Medicare Advantage (Part C), but only to those in Original (fee-for-service) Medicare. And they are only for outpatient therapy, not for therapy you may get in as an inpatient during a Medicare covered hospital or Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) stay. Nor does it apply to therapy you get under a home health plan of care.

But if these exceptions don’t apply, and you have gotten a lot of therapy this calendar year, you may get a voluntary Advance Beneficiary Notice (ABN) from your therapy provider that your services may not be covered. And whether you get one or not, beneficiaries need to understand that Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is taking the position that if you receive therapy over and above the statutory $1,900 limit and it is not medically necessary, you are not protected by the limitation-of-liability provision as the care is statutorily excluded, like eyeglasses or dental care. Normally, if a beneficiary gets a service that is not medically necessary, even when Medicare denies the claim, the beneficiary does not have to pay the provider for the care as it is assumed the beneficiary had no way of knowing that the care was not covered, unless of course they got an Advanced Beneficiary Notice saying that it wasn’t. So that’s why you may get one from your therapist, even if in this case they are not required to give it to you. But if you do get one, or if you think your therapy may exceed the $3,700 cap, you may wish to defer your therapy and ask that your therapist get preapproval from Medicare for your therapy. The Medicare Administrative Contractors have to OK or deny a preapproval request in 10 working days, or it is automatically approved, so the decision should not be too long in coming, and you may prefer waiting a bit to make sure whether or not you’ll be liable for the therapy services. And if it does deny the preapproval request, you may appeal its denial using the usual appeals process. (This is an exception to the usual rule that an appeal can be made only after a service has been given and the Medicare claim denied.)
Related Posts with Thumbnails