Medicare Payment Fiasco Causes Delay in Claims Processing

Action Should Not Mean Delayed Payments

By James Arvantes | AAFP News Now
7/1/2008

The Bush administration has announced it will delay the processing, but not necessarily the payment, of Medicare claims to give Congress more time to pass a bill blocking a 10.6 percent reduction in the Medicare payment rate. However, the administration's action should not result in delayed Medicare payments to physicians, said Kent Moore, the AAFP's manager of health financing and delivery systems.

CMS is required by law to hold Medicare claims it receives for 14 days before issuing payment on the claims. In normal circumstances, the agency starts to process claims within a few days of receiving them, paying them by the end of the 14-day time frame, Moore said. CMS now plans to hold Medicare claims for 10 business days before processing them to give Congress more time to pass Medicare payment legislation that is expected to negate a 10.6 percent payment cut effective July 1.

"CMS will use that 14-day window they have statutorily and refrain from processing the claim," Moore said. "Instead of processing (a claim) at the front end of that 14 days, they will process it 10 days later on the hope that Congress will act within the first days of July," said Moore. "Physicians should not see a delay in payment," he added.

In late June, the House overwhelming passed an 18-month Medicare physician payment bill that would have prevented the 10.6 percent reduction scheduled for the remainder of this year, along with a 5.4 percent cut scheduled for 2009. But the Senate failed to pass the legislation, allowing the 10.6 percent cut to take effect on July 1. Congress adjourned for a weeklong July 4 recess on June 27 and will return on July 7. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., in a prepared statement, said the Senate would address the Medicare legislation shortly after returning from the July 4 break.

Many physicians, meanwhile, are upset and angry, said Moore, thinking CMS will withhold Medicare payments, a perception that he characterizes as a misunderstanding.

"CMS is simply saying that they are going to take advantage of the 14-day payment floor they already have by law," Moore said. "They still intend to pay claims in a timely manner."

Although physicians will experience a reduction in their Medicare payment levels if Congress and the Bush administration cannot agree on a Medicare payment bill by mid-July, there is an expectation that they will agree on a payment bill by then and will make the legislation retroactive to July 1.

CMS has said that physicians should submit their Medicare claims for services on or after July 1 using the pre-July 1 scheduled amount. Claims submitted after June 30 that reflect the 10.6 percent reduction will be paid based on that amount, and "will likely require providers to resubmit a revised claim," said CMS in a June 30 press release.

Submitting claims with pre-July 1 amounts "will facilitate reprocessing of the claims by CMS, if needed, and will ensure that physicians are able to collect the full pre-July 1 allowed amount, when or if the cut is retroactively negated," said Moore.

However, noted Moore, "physician practices may only collect copayments and deductibles from Medicare beneficiaries based on the reduced (Medicare) rate, even if they are charging the pre-July 1 rate to Medicare."

Physician practices wishing to avoid confusion may choose to hold their Medicare claims in-house until it becomes clear that new legislation will be enacted or until cash flow becomes a problem, said Moore. "This will reduce the need for (physicians) to reconcile two payments -- the initial claim and the reprocessed claim -- and it will simplify physician billings of beneficiary co-insurance and payment calculations for payers that are secondary to Medicare," said Moore.

No comments: