1 / 57

Medicare Secondary Payer Statute

Medicare Compliance Updates for Workers’ Compensation Cases Melisa Zwilling, Esq. Carr Allison Medicare Compliance Group www.carrallisonmsa.com www.carrallisonmsa.blogspot.com. Medicare Secondary Payer Statute.

orea
Télécharger la présentation

Medicare Secondary Payer Statute

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. Medicare Compliance Updates for Workers’ Compensation CasesMelisa Zwilling, Esq.Carr Allison Medicare Compliance Groupwww.carrallisonmsa.comwww.carrallisonmsa.blogspot.com

  2. Medicare Secondary Payer Statute • Medicare (CMS) may not make payments for a beneficiary if “primary plan” is responsible. • If Medicare does make a payment, it is “conditioned” upon reimbursement

  3. Conditional Payment Claims (CPCs) • Research and resolve CPCs when any case with a Medicare beneficiary settles or judgment is entered, etc.

  4. SMART Act • Beginning in January, 2014, CMS must establish minimum thresholds in certain liability casesabove which CMS may seek reimbursement. • Cost of collection cannot be greater than amount to be reimbursed. • Does not apply to workers’ compensation initially, however, it may in future

  5. Researching CPCs • Research CPCs prior to settlement • Report all injuries being settled, including disputed ones • How is research conducted?

  6. Current Process: MSP Recovery Portal • Available July 2012 • Access and update information online

  7. Current Time Frame for CPC Research • 2 ½-3 months • Allow adequate time to obtain CPL prior to settlement.

  8. SMART Act • Provisions regarding: • Notice to Medicare • Establishment of Website • Resolution of Discrepancies • Right of Appeal

  9. Notice to Medicare • To determine amount owed to CMS, a claimant, liability insurer, self insurer, no-fault insurer, or WC plan (or TPA) MAY, beginning 120 days before the reasonably expected date of a settlement, judgment, award, or other payment, notify CMS of the same

  10. Establishment of Website • CMS must establish a website for conditional payment claim purposes. • Web portal was established in 2012, so this concept is not entirely new

  11. Website Availability • Must be available to • Beneficiaries (family & representatives) • An applicable plan which has obtained the consent of a beneficiary • Liability insurance (including self-ins.); • No fault insurance; • WC laws or plans; and • TPAs

  12. SMART Act: Website Benefits • Information must be updated within 15 days from the date Medicare makes a payment. • With current web portal, CMS takes much longer.

  13. Final Claim Amount • If the website is used, final conditional payment claim amount may be determined without additional communication from Medicare during a “protected period.”

  14. Protected Period • Provide notice to Medicare 120 days before settlement • CMS has 65 days to respond as to amount owed • Additional 30 days if exceptional circumstances exist, but must be less than one percent of the time • If statement is downloaded within three business days before settlement, it will be considered the final amount due

  15. Website Use • Optional • Current method will likely remain the same.

  16. SMART Act: Resolving Discrepancies • CMS must provide a timely process to resolve discrepancies concerning the amount due when such amount is obtained through the website.

  17. Website Dispute Resolution Process • The beneficiary or representative must provide: • documentation explaining the discrepancy and • a proposal to resolve the same

  18. Dispute Resolution Process (cont.) • Within 11 business days, CMS shall determine if there is a reasonable basis to include or remove disputed claims • CMS may accept or reject the proposal • If no determination made within 11 days, the proposal to resolve discrepancies shall be accepted

  19. Important! • Discrepancy process under website option is not an “appeals process” nor does a right of appeal exist for a statement obtained through website! • If potential issues exist, traditional process may be better option

  20. CMS must promulgate regulations to establish website, notice, response and resolution sections by September 10, 2013.

  21. SMART Act: Right of Appeal • Gives primary plans a right to appeal conditional payment claims! • Consent of beneficiary is not required • Must only provide beneficiary with notice of intent to appeal

  22. Timing • Questions remain concerning when CMS must promulgate regulations to establish the right of appeal.

  23. Risk Mitigation Strategies - CPCs • Maintain accurate, current information about injuries • Carefully report injuries • Do not pay bills for unrelated treatment • Start early enough

  24. CMS Recovery of CPCs • Reimbursement is due to CMS within 60 days of notice. • After that, interest may be charged. • United States may bring an action against primary payers/responsible entities and may collect double damages.

  25. SMART Act: Statute of Limitations • 3 years after receipt of notice of a settlement, judgment, award or other payment under Section 111. • Applies to WC and liability cases • Applies to actions brought and penalties sought on or after July 10, 2013 (six months after enactment)

  26. Medicare Advantage Plans (Part C) • MA Plans have right to reimbursement under MSPA • Courts disagree about whether MSPA provides MA plans with federal private right of action.

  27. 3rd Circuit allows MA plans to seek reimbursement in federal court (Avandia). • Covers Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virgin Islands • Outside 3rd Circuit, MA plans must seek reimbursement through contract actions in state court.

  28. Section 111 Reporting Requirements • Electronic transmission of data to CMS related to certain settlements, judgments, awards and other payments • Assist CMS with recovery of CPCs and keep CMS from paying when primary payer exists. • Duty to “notify” CMS has existed since 1980. Section 111 imposes a penalty of $1,000 per day per claim for failing to do so.

  29. SMART Act: Section 111 • By July 2014, CMS must modify Section 111 to provide that RREs may but are not required to report Social Security or health identification claim numbers. • However, apparently indefinite extensions granted to CMS to do this

  30. SMART Act: Enforcement of Reporting Requirements • Mandatory $1,000.00 per day, per claimant penalty will become optional • By March 10, 2013, CMS must solicit proposals concerning specific practices for which sanctions will and will not be imposed.

  31. SMART Act: Section 111 Reporting Thresholds • Threshold for reporting certain liability claims beginning in 2014 • Cost of collection must not exceed amount to be collected • CMS must establish a threshold each year by November 15th and report calculation methodology to Congress.

  32. Workers’ Comp Threshold? • WC cases are not initially covered by the SMART Act Reporting threshold but may be at some point

  33. Are Thresholds New News? • Not really. They are good, but reporting thresholds are already in place.

  34. Medicare Set-asides (MSAs) • Money for future medical expenses Medicare would otherwise pay

  35. Are MSAs Required? • MSAs are not required by law • However, the burden of paying future medical expenses may not be shifted from a primary payer to Medicare

  36. Why Utilize MSAs? • CMS recommends them in certain cases • Best way to evidence that Medicare’s interests were adequately considered and protected at the time of settlement

  37. CMS Review Thresholds in WC Cases • CLASS I • Medicare beneficiary AND • total settlement exceeds $25,000 • CLASS II • Total settlement exceeds $250,000 AND • claimant has “reasonable expectation” of becoming Medicare beneficiary w/in 30 months

  38. Reasonable Expectation of Entitlement • If the claimant: • Is currently receiving SSD benefits • Has applied for SSD benefits • Is appealing a denial of SSD benefits • Is 62.5 years old or older • Has End Stage Renal Disease

  39. CMS Submission Process • Allocation reports should be less than six months old • CMS guidelines change frequently • Review allocation report carefully before submission to make sure that all appropriate treatment, but nothing more, was included • Web portal for submissions as of 2012

  40. Below Review Threshold Cases • To determine if need MSA: • Consider amount of settlement • Likelihood of future treatment • May obtain allocation report OR • If future medicals easy to ascertain, agree between the parties on amount for future medicals

  41. Time Frame for CMS Review • On July 2, 2012, new Workers’ Compensation Review Contractor. • Turnaround time on most proposals submitted after July - 60 days or less

  42. When to Obtain CMS Approval • Best to start early and obtain CMS approval first, if possible • Goal is to submit lowest defensible amount to CMS for approval • May exclude some treatments or medications from submission if chance CMS may approve lower amount • Must provide CMS with documentation that account was funded as CMS approved, to finalize process

  43. When CMS Wants More • Claimant fund • Carrier fund • Best to address potential issues first

  44. Risk Mitigation Strategies for MSAs • Consider physician involvement: • To clarify future treatment needs • CMS may require money for treatment/procedure noted in records, even if not official recommendation • Be careful! Best to know what physician will say. Vague records are better than harmful ones. • When records are unclear on medications • Current prescribed medications must be clearly indicated, including dosage and frequency

  45. Risk Mitigation Strategies (cont.) • To state that generics are acceptable/prescribed if brand only was prescribed initially • Otherwise, pricing for brand will be required • To clarify condition for which medication is prescribed • If off-label use, may exclude from MSA • When current treatment or medication not appropriate for lifetime • Otherwise, CMS will assume lifetime care/medication needed

  46. Risk Mitigation Strategies (cont.) • Consider involving claimant’s attorney: • if physician’s recommendations are unreasonable • CMS will not accept letter from claimant stating that he/she will not undergo recommended treatment

  47. Changes in Medicare’s Coverage Guidelines • Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) unit no longer covered by Medicare for treatment of chronic low back pain • Benzodiazepines will be covered by Medicare beginning January 1, 2013. • Such as: Alprazolam, Clonazepam, Lorazepam, etc. • Medicare will also begin covering barbiturates, but only when prescribed to treat epilepsy, cancer, or a chronic mental disorder.

More Related