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On Monday, January 12, 2009, the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published a final rule with
comment period addressing issues in the Medicare Advantage (Part C) and
Prescription Drug Benefit (Part D) Programs. 74 FR 1494 Matters addressed in
the rule include definitions relating to Special Needs Plans, certain
requirements for Medical Savings Accounts, cost-sharing for dual eligible
enrollees in Medicare Advantage plans, the definition of negotiated prices,
passive enrollment into Part C and Part D plans and other enrollment and appeals
process issues.
The final rule finalizes those
portions of the rule proposed on May 16, 2008, 73 FR 28556, that were not
addressed in other final rules published on September 18, 2008, 73 FR 54208 and
73 FR 54226. It appears from the Federal Register notice that CMS will accept
comments on only two portions of the rule: provisions relating to the statutory
definitions of Special Needs Plans and those relating to negotiated prices and
retained rebates under the Retiree Drug Subsidy program. Comments must be
received by March 13, 2009.
On January 20, 2009, President Barack
Obama's Chief of Staff directed agency heads to review all pending or recently
finalized rules and, in the case of final rules already published in the Federal
Register, to consider extending their effective date 60 days, pending review by
new administration appointees, and, if the effective date is extended, to include
a 30 day comment period.
http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/emanuel-regulatory-review.pdf).
Presumably, if these rules are treated under the President's directive, CMS will
so inform the public in the Federal Register. Otherwise, the rules are
effective March 13, 2009, though the practical effective date will be the 2010
plan year for many provisions.
This Alert will discuss some
provisions of the final rule that directly affect beneficiaries.
1. Provisions Affecting Parts C
and D
Passive Enrollment (42 C.F.R. §
422.60 Part C; § 423.32 Part D)
When a Part C or Part D plan is
terminated or chooses to end coverage, CMS will passively enroll the plan's
enrollees into another Part C or Part D plan. The new plan must provide a
CMS-approved notice to the affected beneficiaries informing them of the plan's
costs and benefits and how to access them, and of the beneficiary's right to
decline the plan or enroll in another plan. Beneficiaries who are passively
enrolled will have a three month special enrollment period. CMS declined to
accept the comment that it lacked authority to passively enroll beneficiaries
and that those in Part C plans should default to traditional Medicare. Nor did
CMS adopt the proposal of commenters that, for individuals losing their Part D
plans, CMS should rely on available prescription drug data to make "intelligent"
assignments to new Part D plans.
Disenrollment for failure to pay
premium (§ 422.74 Part C; § 423.44 Part D)
Neither MA plans nor PDPs may
disenroll a beneficiary for failure to pay a premium if that enrollee is having
premiums withheld from a monthly cash benefit check, but may do so if the
enrollee is in "direct pay" status, i.e., pays the premium directly to the
plan. CMS did not address commenters' concerns that CMS and the Social Security
Administration claim the right to put beneficiaries into "direct pay" status
when they are unable to effectuate the premium withhold option, a circumstance
that has existed with troubling consequences since Part D began in 2006.
Payment of Beneficiary Premiums (§
422.262 Part C; § 423.293 Part D)
MA plans and PDPs are prohibited from
billing enrollees whose premiums are being withheld from a benefit check. If an
enrollee in "direct bill" status is in arrears on premiums but is without fault
(not defined in the regulations), the plan must offer the enrollee the option to
repay the premiums over the same span of time for which they are owed, i.e.,
over seven months if seven months of premiums are owed. The rule contains no
limit on the number of months for which a plan can demand arrearages, nor is
there a hardship waiver of repayment, as requested by some commenters.
Notice of Non-Renewal of Contract
(§ 422.506 Part C; § 423.507 Part D)
The required notice to plan enrollees
and the general public from a plan not renewing its contract with CMS must be
made 60 days prior to the effective date of non-renewal. This is a reduction
from current requirements of 90 days. Despite concerns raised by commenters
that the new time frame is too short for affected beneficiaries to make informed
decisions about their options, CMS justified its decision by asserting that the
reduced time period allows for the non-renewal process and administrative
appeals, if any, to conclude.
Right to Reconsideration (Part
C)/Redetermination (Part D) (§ 422.578 Part C; § 423.580 Part D)
The right to request a standard first
level review of a plan decision is now available to an enrollee's physician,
after providing notice to the enrollee, without the physician having an
appointment of representative form filed with the plan. The physician's right
to seek review is for pre-service requests for coverage in an MA plan. A
physician taking appeals beyond the plan level must have an appointment of
representative form from the beneficiary.
Request for a Standard
Reconsideration (Part C)/Redetermination (Part D) (§ 422.582 Part C; § 423.582
Part D)
Plans may adopt policies to accept
oral requests for reconsiderations/redeterminations, but ultimately, requests
must be in writing. The request must be made within 60 days of the date on the
notice (not the date the notice was received, as requested by some commenters)
unless the requester shows good cause for late requests. CMS has not defined
"good cause." Though both were requested by commenters, CMS did not adopt either uniform processes for
reconsideration/redetermination or a process for monitoring plan compliance
with timeframes for processing reconsiderations/redeterminations.
Determinations Regarding the
Amount of Civil Money Penalties and Assessment Imposed by CMS (§ 422.760 Part C;
§ 423.760 Part D)
CMS may impose a civil money penalty
of up to $25,000 for each MA or PDP enrollee directly adversely affected or with
the substantial likelihood of being adversely affected by a plan's actions. The
rule includes no cap on the penalty, but CMS states in the preamble that it will
issue guidance with a range of penalties or caps if necessary.
2. Provisions Affecting Part C
only
Special Needs Plans (SNPs) –
Exclusive Enrollment (§ 422.2)
In conformance with the provisions
of the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA),
Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plans must limit their entire enrollment to
individuals meeting the definition of Special Needs Individual for which the
plan is designed. This is a change from the proposed rule, published
before the passage
of MIPPA, which required 90% enrollment of the designated special needs
individuals.
Special Needs Plans – Types of MA
Plans (§ 422.4)
Special Needs Plans for
Institutionalized Individuals may enroll those who meet an "institutionalized
equivalent." This term is defined as a person living in the community but
requiring an institutional level of care as determined using a state assessment
tool from the state in which the individual resides or the same methodology
that the state uses to determine institutional level of care for Medicaid
nursing home eligibility. The assessment must be conducted by "an impartial
entity and (sic) having the requisite knowledge and experience to accurately
identify whether the beneficiary meets the institutional LOC [level of care]
criteria."
To be eligible for a SNP for
individuals with chronic and disabling conditions, a person must have "one or
more co-morbid and medically complex chronic conditions that are substantially
disabling or life-threatening, [have] a high risk of hospitalization or other
significant adverse health outcomes, and [require] specialized delivery systems
across domains of care."
Special Needs Plans – Eligibility
to Elect an MA Plan for Special Needs Individuals (§ 422.52)
SNPs must verify that potential
enrollees meet the special needs definition pertinent to the plan, using a
process approved by CMS. The rule itself contains no additional detail, though
some is included in manual guidance. In October 2008, CMS issued a letter to
plans indicating that it would consider alternate approaches to eligibility
verification; the preamble to this rule affirms the content of that letter.
Special Needs Plans – Requirements
Relating to Basic Benefits (§ 422.101)
CMS included some requirements for
Models of Care required of SNPs in its September 18 rule and has included
additional requirements in this rule, though the requirements remain less
detailed than those requested by commenters. This rule requires that SNPs (1)
target one of the three special needs populations, (2) have staff trained in the
care model, (3) coordinate care across health care settings, providers and
services to assure continuity of care, (4) coordinate care to meet the needs of
the most vulnerable among their special needs population and (5) coordinate
communication among plan personnel, providers and beneficiaries.
Contract Provisions Relating to
Cost Sharing for Dual Eligibles (§ 422.504)
The rule requires plans to inform
plan providers of Medicare and Medicaid benefits and of rules relating to
cost-sharing for dual eligibles. The plans may not impose cost-sharing that
exceeds what the beneficiary would be required to pay if the individual were not
enrolled in a plan. Contracts with providers must state that providers will
accept the plan payment as payment in full or bill the appropriate State
source. This rule is broader than the language of MIPPA, which applied only to
Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plans for Dual Eligibles. The MIPPA language
was, in fact, more restrictive than pre-existing law.
3. Provisions Affecting Part D
Only
Enrollment of Full-Benefit Dual
Eligible Individuals with Qualifying Employer Coverage (§ 423.34)
The rule provides that full benefit
dual eligibles who have employer coverage for which a Part D subsidy is being
paid will be presumed to have declined their Part D auto enrollment if they do
nothing in response to a notice from CMS informing them of their option to
receive Part D. The rule directs beneficiaries to "discuss the potential impact
of Medicare Part D coverage on their group health plan coverage" but does not
tell them with whom to discuss this, as requested by commenters.
Definition of "Other
Prescriber" (§ 423.560)
The rule adds a category of
individuals who can participate in various aspects of coverage determination and
appeals processes: the "other prescriber." This term means a health care
professional other than a physician who is authorized under State law or other
applicable law to write prescriptions."
Relevant sections of this portion of
the regulations are amended to include the new term among those who can request
action by the plan.
What is presented here is a cursory
review of some provisions of the January 12 rule. Future Alerts will address
additional provisions and will inform readers whether CMS has acted in response
to President Obama's directive to review recent agency rules.
Special thanks to Michealle Carpenter
of the Medicare Rights Center whose excellent summary of the Final Rule was
invaluable in the preparation of this Alert.
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