In The News

Hospice CAP Liability and Claims Denials

The Health Group 

As hospices become subjected to claims denials, whether such denials are the result of a UPIC or not, the hospice may be entitled to a refund of previously paid CAP liabilities.  We reported on this in 2021; however, The Health Group, LLC ("THG") recently has identified several hospices that are entitled to a CAP liability refund.

When a claim is retroactively denied for a completed CAP Year, the denied claims impact Medicare payments and beneficiary counts used in the determination of the aggregate payment limitation (“CAP”).

If your hospice has incurred a CAP liability in completed CAP Years, but has experienced claim denials for whatever reason, you should be tracking the CAP liability monthly for purposes of identifying the status of that CAP liability.  This monthly tracking allows you to monitor the increasing CAP liability, but also allows you to identify the impact of claim denials, if any, on that liability.

If you identify an overpayment, notify the Medicare Administrative Contractor (“MAC”) immediately of the overpayments, including calculations, and request a refund of the overpayment.  Remember, if you have overpaid a CAP liability because of denied claims, then Medicare has recovered from you twice; once when the claim was denied and again when the CAP overpayment was demanded for repayment.

CMS is aware of the potential of a double recovery of amounts from hospices.  On April 19, 2021, the following was added to the Medicare Program Integrity Manual, Chapter 4: 4.17 – UPIC Hospice Cap Liability Process – Coordination with the MAC (Rev. 10711; Issued: 04-01-21; Effective: 04-19-21; Implementation: 04-19-21). . .

See https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r10711pi.pdf  for the changes.

Read Full Article at https://healthgroup.com/hospice-cap-liability-and-claim-denials/

 

Medicare Advantage Plans Often Deny Needed Care, Federal Report Finds

New York Times

Investigators urged increased oversight of the program, saying that insurers deny tens of thousands of authorization requests annually.

Every year, tens of thousands of people enrolled in private Medicare Advantage plans are denied necessary care that should be covered under the program, federal investigators concluded in a report published on Thursday.

The investigators urged Medicare officials to strengthen oversight of these private insurance plans, which provide benefits to 28 million older Americans, and called for increased enforcement against plans with a pattern of inappropriate denials.

Advantage plans have become an increasingly popular option among older Americans, offering privatized versions of Medicare that are frequently less expensive and provide a wider array of benefits than the traditional government-run program offers.

Enrollment in Advantage plans has more than doubled over the last decade, and half of Medicare beneficiaries are expected to choose a private insurer over the traditional government program in the next few years.

The industry’s main trade group claims people choose Medicare Advantage because “it delivers better services, better access to care and better value.” But federal investigators say there is troubling evidence that plans are delaying or even preventing Medicare beneficiaries from getting medically necessary care.

The new report, from the inspector general’s office of the Health and Human Services Department, looked into whether some of the services that were rejected would probably have been approved if the beneficiaries had been enrolled in traditional Medicare.

Tens of millions of denials are issued each year for both authorization and reimbursements, and audits of the private insurers show evidence of “widespread and persistent problems related to inappropriate denials of services and payment,” the investigators found.

The report echoes similar findings by the office in 2018 showing that private plans were reversing about three-quarters of their denials on appeal. Hospitals and doctors have long complained about the insurance company tactics, and Congress is considering legislation aimed at addressing some of these concerns.

In its review of 430 denials in June 2019, the inspector general’s office said that it had found repeated examples of care denials for medical services that coding experts and doctors reviewing the cases determined were medically necessary and should be covered.

Based on its finding that about 13 percent of the requests denied should have been covered under Medicare, the investigators estimated as many as 85,000 beneficiary requests for prior authorization of medical care were potentially improperly denied in 2019.

Advantage plans also refused to pay legitimate claims, according to the report. About 18 percent of payments were denied despite meeting Medicare coverage rules, an estimated 1.5 million payments for all of 2019. In some cases, plans ignored prior authorizations or other documentation necessary to support the payment.

Read Full Article

 

COVID-19 Tests Back in Stock - bttn Has POC and OTC Covid Tests

HHAC's partner, bttn, is seeing increased demand for COVID-19 testing. These trends correspond with data from the CDC noting infections are once again on the rise. 

As China enforces its Zero COVID policy and cities are being shut down again, products that are heavily used in the diagnosis and treatment of hospitalized patients are seeing heavy demand and supply is being pinched her in the United States. We are seeing nationwide backorders of  the following products:

  • Saline Flushes 
  • Blood Tubes
  • IV Solutions

bttn is working hard to continuously stock the products you want and need. If you don’t see what you need, please reach out to bttn or call 206.984.8958. 

What does bttn have in stock for COVID-19 tests?

 

More Info. Regarding Employee Retention Credit

Hopefully, every agency has at least looked into the Employee Retention Credit, a refundable credit that businesses can claim on qualified wages, including certain health insurance costs, paid to employees. If not, you should!

The ERC can be a complex credit, especially if you want to get all that you can out of it, but there are a number of businesses structured to help. HHAC does not vouch for nor endorse any particular tax consulting or service group, but we have been approached by several re: the ERC.

Many of the businesses will charge 10% - 20% to assist you with the credit, but we have found one business, roundpeg, that only charges 6% of monies that are actually recovered (they do not charge their fee until you obtain the credit). Plus, they do a free analysis of your situation. Contact Kris Sanford at [email protected] or m: 801-678-3635. 

NAHC also recently announced a partnership with ERC Today (see erctoday.com). NAHC members receive a 20% discount on the company's normal fees - posted below: 

Client Credit                               Deposit          Fee %

$0 - $50,000.00                            $1,000            15% 

$50,000.01 - $250,000.00            $2,500            15%

$250,000.01 - $500,000.00          $5,000            15% 

$500,000.01 - $1,000,000.00       $7,500            10% 

$1,000,000.01  and up                $10,000           7.5% 

 

See https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/new-law-extends-covid-tax-credit-for-employers-who-keep-workers-on-payroll to learn more.

 

NAHC COVID-19 Updates

Cases are Rising in Nearly Every Corner of the United States

Coronavirus cases and hospitalizations are rising in a majority of American states, in what appears to be the first widespread increase since the peak of the Omicron surge in January.

Reports of new cases were nearly flat in the United States at the beginning of April, but as the month draws to a close, they are increasing in all but three states, signaling a wave that is increasingly national in scope.

“Most of the cases are relatively mild,” said Dr. Eric S. Toner, a senior scholar at the Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Read more @ NY Times

COVID Deaths No Longer Overwhelmingly Among the Unvaccinated as Toll on Elderly Grows

Unvaccinated people accounted for the overwhelming majority of deaths in the United States throughout much of the coronavirus pandemic. But that has changed in recent months, according to a Washington Post analysis of state and federal data.

The pandemic’s toll is no longer falling almost exclusively on those who chose not to or could not get shots, with vaccine protection waning over time and the elderly and immunocompromised — who are at greatest risk of succumbing to covid-19, even if vaccinated — having a harder time dodging increasingly contagious strains.

Read more @ Washington Post

Virus Mutations Aren’t Slowing Down. New Omicron Subvariant Proves It

During those terrifying early days of the pandemic, scientists offered one piece of reassuring news about the novel coronavirus: It mutated slowly. The earliest mutations did not appear to be consequential. A vaccine, if and when it was invented, might not need regular updating over time.

This proved overly optimistic.

The coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, has had billions of chances to reconfigure itself as it has spread across the planet, and it continues to evolve, generating new variants and subvariants at a clip that has kept scientists on their toes. Two-and-a-half years after it first spilled into humans, the virus has repeatedly changed its structure and chemistry in ways that confound efforts to bring it fully under control.

Read more @ Washington Post

COVID's New Omicron Sub-Lineages Can Dodge Immunity from Past Infection, Study Says

Two new sublineages of the Omicron coronavirus variant can dodge antibodies from earlier infection well enough to trigger a new wave, but are far less able to thrive in the blood of people vaccinated against COVID-19, South African scientists have found.

The scientists from multiple institutions were examining Omicron's BA.4 and BA.5 sublineages - which the World Health Organization last month added to its monitoring list. They took blood samples from 39 participants previously infected by Omicron when it first showed up at the end of last year.

Read more @ Reuters

 
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