Delores L. Galias, RN, RHIT

STATEMENT OF CONFIDENTIALITY:
The information contained in this electronic message and any attachments to this message are intended for the exclusive use of the addressee(s) and may contain confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify D. Galias, RN, RHIT immediately at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and destroy all copies of this message and any attachments.  Thank you for your cooperation

--- Begin Message ---
MEDICARE NEWS

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CMS Public Affairs
November 14,
2003

CMS ANNOUNCES MEDICARE IMPROPER PAYMENTS RATE FOR 2003

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today announced the
national Medicare improper payments rate for 2003, based on a new and
expanded program for measuring the rate and helping prevent future
errors.  The error rate for fiscal year 2003 was estimated at 5.8
percent, or $11.6 billion, when adjusted to reflect a high non-response
rate experienced in the first year of the new program. This is about the
same as last year's rate as measured by the HHS Office of Inspector
General (OIG).

"The annual error rate gives us an estimate of how much billing
mistakes cost the American taxpayer, and that number is always too
high," said CMS Administrator Tom Scully.  "The information we now have
available will help us to better understand the problem, better manage
the program, and better educate providers and contractors to prevent
errors in payment.  It also underscores the need for us to modernize
Medicare by allowing us to make the contractors more accountable to CMS
and the taxpayers."

Since 1996, HHS has annually determined the rate of improper payments
for fee-for-service claims paid by Medicare contractors.  The survey
measures claims found to be medically unnecessary, inadequately
documented or improperly coded.  From 1996 until last year, the survey
was conducted by the OIG based on a survey of some 6,000 claims.  In
those years, the rate declined from 13.8 percent in 1996 to 6.3 percent
in 2001 and 2002.

This year CMS launched the expanded effort, reviewing approximately
128,000 Medicare claims to learn more precisely where errors are being
made.  The new effort provides CMS with contractor-specific error rates,
error rates by provider type and error rates by service type. This
information is critical for CMS to better identify where problems exist
and target improvement efforts more precisely.

The national error rate helps CMS identify a problem, but does not
provide sufficient information for the problem to be solved. For the
first time CMS will have information at a sufficiently detailed level so
that problems can be better assessed and corrected.  The error rate may
now be viewed at a contractor specific and a provider specific level,
enhancing CMS's ability to oversee and manage Medicare payments.

CMS initially calculated the Medicare fee-for-service error rate and
estimate of improper claim payments using a methodology approved by the
OIG.   The methodology includes randomly selecting a sample of claims
submitted in 2002; requesting medical records from providers who
submitted the claims; and reviewing the claims and medical records to
see if the claims complied with the Medicare coverage, coding, and
billing rules.

However, in this first year of the new program, CMS experienced a
significant unexpected increase in the rate of non-responders to the
survey.   Counting all non-responders as errors, the initial CMS review
found an error rate of 9.8 percent.  More than half this rate was
accountable to non-responders. In order to achieve a more reasonable
estimate, CMS adjusted the non-response rate based on OIG's past
experience with non-responders and other error categories.  CMS'
measurement of a 5.8 percent rate is based on OIG's experience-based
ratio, with 82 percent of the rate due to errors other than lack of
documentation and the remaining 18 percent due to non-responses to
request for medical records.  To improve the response rate in future
years, CMS will make several improvements to its process, such as asking
the OIG to send a follow-up letter to providers who don't respond.

"These results tell us that there is still much work to be done to
identify and prevent payment errors," said Scully.  "Now that CMS has
detailed error rates, we can aggressively target our efforts by
strengthening the management of our contractors and to concentrate on
the problems indicated by the error rate. Our goal is to bring about a
dramatic reduction in the Medicare payment errors in the next 24
months."

CMS will take significant steps to further reduce the error rate, using
the far more detailed information as a guide.  CMS' enhanced management
of the Medicare contactors improves the contractors' accountability to
CMS and the taxpayers.  CMS's efforts will include incorporating the
contractor specific error rates into the Contractor Performance
Evaluation System, educating health care providers on the proper coding
and documentation of medical procedures, and ensuring that Medicare
rules are accessible and understandable.  CMS will focus on contractors
and providers with particularly high error rates.

As shown by the new detail in this year's report, the provider types
that had the most errors nationally were chiropractors (11.3 percent),
physical therapists (18.2 percent) and internists (13.5 percent).
Providers with the lowest errors were ambulance services (4.7 percent),
podiatrists (4 percent) and urologists (5.3 percent).  The findings also
indicate which contractors have a large number of providers that submit
improper claims.

CMS is continuing to work with the contractors that pay Medicare claims
and the quality improvement organizations on aggressive efforts to lower
the error rate, including:

*     Improving education and outreach efforts to providers.
*     Making it easier for providers to submit documents.
*     Making it easier for providers to find Medicare rules by adding a
section to the Medicare Coverage Database (www.cms.hhs.gov/med) that
contains coverage and coding information.
*     Developing a computerized tool that generates state-specific
hospital billing reports to help quality improvement organizations
analyze administrative claims data.
*     Developing projects with the quality improvement organizations
addressing state-specific admissions necessity and coding concerns as
well as monitoring inpatient payment error trends by error type.
*     Ensuring better understanding of the role of the CMS contractor,
who estimates the error rates, including its role in requests for
medical records and follow-up efforts to make sure providers are
complying with those requests.

In addition, CMS has directed the Medicare contractors that pay
Medicare claims to develop local efforts to lower the error rate by
addressing the cause of the errors, the steps they are taking to fix the
problems, and other recommendations that will ultimately lower the error
rate.

"Over the past years, HHS and CMS have issued similar reviews on the
quality of care provided in nursing homes and home health agencies,"
said Scully.  "This information will provide us with the fundamental
structure to hold the fee-for-service contractors accountable for the
services they provide as we move to performance-based contracting from
simply paying contractors to process Medicare claims."


# # #

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to