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 ---
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: CMS Press Office (202) 690-6145
December 31, 2003

MEDICARE ANNOUNCES SPECIAL GEOGRAPHIC
CLASSIFICATION APPEALS PROCEDURE

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today issued a
notice outlining procedures for hospitals meeting specific criteria to
follow to request reclassification to geographic areas with higher
payment rates under Medicare's inpatient prospective payment system
(IPPS).

The notice implements a one-time-only appeals process required by
Congress in the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization
Act of 2003 (DIMA). This appeals process will provide relief to certain
hospitals in rural areas that fall just outside Medicare's existing
criteria for reclassification to geographic areas that have higher
payment rates for Medicare services. Congress has allocated up to $900
million dollars over three years for the added payments to these
hospitals resulting from the reclassifications.

"It's important that we pay hospitals appropriately so they will be
able to retain the staff necessary to treat Medicare beneficiaries,"
said Dennis Smith, Acting CMS administrator.  "President Bush and
Congress agreed that hospitals should be given the opportunity to hire
the best nurses and other staff without having to worry about them
moving to another hospital just over the county line that is able to pay
higher wages."

To be considered for reclassification under the provision, hospitals
are required to file an appeal by February 15, 2004. Successful
reclassifications will become effective for discharges during the
three-year period beginning April 1, 2004. Priority under the notice
will be given to hospitals that have submitted quality data under
Medicare's National Voluntary Hospital Reporting Quality Initiative.

The reclassification appeals will be reviewed and decided by the
Medicare Geographic Classification Review Board based on criteria
included in today's notice. The law provides general guidance for
determining eligible hospitals and authorizes the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services to apply other criteria as
necessary.

Medicare pays hospitals for inpatient services provided to Medicare
beneficiaries according to the inpatient prospective payment system
(IPPS). Payment under the IPPS is based on the average cost of treating
patients with a similar diagnosis. However, the actual amount received
by a hospital for a particular case depends on a number of factors,
including the geographic area in which the hospital is located. As a
general rule, hospitals in urban areas, as defined by the Census
Bureau's Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), are paid at higher
rate than those in rural areas.

Regulations in effect since 1990 have provided hospitals meeting
certain criteria with the opportunity to seek reclassification to
another MSA with a higher wage index,, and every year since then,
several hundred hospitals have been able to avail themselves of this
process.

The current MSAs are based on Census data from 1990. Earlier this year,
the Census Bureau announced revisions to the MSA structure. CMS is
evaluating the impact of these changes on the hospital payment
methodology and will address these issues in a separate regulatory
proceeding.

The notice will be published in the January 6, 2004 Federal Register.

# # #

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to