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Posts Tagged ‘RAC / Recovery Audit Contractors’

The RAConteur: Pummeling Them With Paperwork

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

I enjoy inundating people with my large memory bank of useless information. I have inserted myself into a line of work that at first was not that interesting, but has now become an enabling force for my long memory. At moments in the public sphere, the presentation of arcane facts can be quite dazzling. When I’m at home with my wife, I usually hear, “I know; you’ve told me that before”. I desperately need new audiences for my material.

In the RAC universe, we are facing a new reality. Because demand letters are now coming from the MACs, the road map for the handling of disputes of RAC determinations has been redrawn. The new route can be best described as an interstate bypass.

Before it becomes a quaint memory of the past, I’ll remind the reader that the Discussion Period is an opportunity to provide additional information to the RAC to indicate why recoupment based on a RAC determination should not take place. This archaic piece of the process could have been useful going forward, were it not for the fact that Demand letters are now being received long after the RAC determinations, due to address issues within the HIGLAS system.

The rebuttal period, which was designed for the provider to show why a recoupment would cause a financial hardship, is similarly compromised by the new demand letter process. A rebuttal would need to be filed within 15 days of the date on the demand letter. Given that the demand letters now need to be hunted down by RAC coordinators nationwide, unless the 15-day window is expanded, the rebuttal period will die of neglect.

So here we are on the newly drawn road, left only with the Medicare appeal process. Because the overpayment redetermination period is our only path, it becomes important that the submission of documentation be correct from the beginning of the process. The commencement of the appeal provides the opportunity to pummel your MAC with paperwork, so long as it has at least been looked at prior to submission of the appeal.

Before the deluge, it is recommended that the documentation be reviewed to verify that the identified issue is legitimate. If after review, the RAC turns out to have been correct regarding the issue in question, it’s time to allow a recoup. If the RAC turns out to be wrong about the issue in question, you are not quite done. The MACs have recently displayed an annoying habit of reviewing the documentation, overturning the issue identified by the RAC, and then subsequently asking for a recoup on a previously unidentified issue for the same charge. This is your reminder to review the documentation thoroughly prior to sending the appeal.

After this review, if you believe you have grounds for appeal, I stand by the advice that I have dispensed to providers since the beginning of the RAC program, which is to open an appeal and defend it forcefully. The numbers remain on the side of providers until such time as the RACs demonstrate that they know what they are doing, which simply hasn’t happen yet. In the latest AHA RACTrac survey, hospitals reported appealing one-third of all RAC denials, with 74% being overturned in the provider’s favor.

All of the claim information, as well as the demonstrated value of persistence, show that the odds are on your side. CMS has virtually cut off the paths to discussion periods and rebuttals, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t make them suffer. If appeal is the only road available to you going forward, as Todd Rundgren once put it, “just draw a bead on that mother, and drive”.

The RAConteur: The .0001% Solution

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

Three thousand five-hundred miles and change later, I find myself back at my desk after a productive and enjoyable week off. For an ongoing summation of my time away, feel free to visit this blog. I promise that I spent my time in a mostly virtuous fashion.

I’d like to re-enter the discussion of the audit universe today with another in a stream of salient examples of corporate payola from the Medicare program. Last Summer, CMS launched a new predictive modeling computer system to pre-emptively stop fraudulent Medicare payments. The total cost of the computer system is estimated to be roughly $100 million, with $77 million having been spent thus far. Northrup Grumman and IBM are two of the main corporations behind the system.

As of the end of 2011, this grand investment has halted exactly one payment for $7,591. On a related note, there was a fly in my house the other day, so I called a company with a wrecking ball rather than reaching for a flyswatter.

Like any other human being, I like being proved right from time to time. I observe every governmental investment in something new and flashy through the lens of what’s in it for private enterprise. Being a citizen of a kleptocratic oligarchy, I have become far too used to industry skimming tax dollars out of the till for no apparent payback. We have all seen this with the rather poor RAC results after nearly 2 1/2 years of audits, with successful provider appeal rates still astronomically high. Given the reams of anecdotal evidence, it makes perfect sense to me that private enterprise gets a government check for very little demonstrated benefit.

I like things that work, and one method that has worked well among CMS’ many blind skeet shooting expeditions is human investigations. The Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action (HEAT) Team continues to see tremendous success from their efforts. Through the first 8 days of February alone, the HEAT teams either released indictments or gained guilty verdicts against entities involved in roughly $139 million in health care fraud. Yesterday in Texas, an indictment was unsealed on seven defendants involved in over $375 million in either phony or unnecessary home visits. As part of the investigation into the physician at the center of the fraud, 78 home health care agencies found their Medicare payments suspended. I don’t know about you, but this represents success to me. I’m fairly certain that the payroll of the government-employed human investigators is significantly lower than $77 million.

The deputy director of Medicare’s anti-fraud program called the act of judging their efforts solely from payment suspensions as “unsophisticated”. I find this wording to be alarmingly typical of the institutional arrogance I encounter as a citizen whenever I ask questions about why someone is being paid by tax dollars for providing nothing. Predictive modeling, if designed properly, holds great promise. Yet if the brains of Northrup Grumman and IBM can’t get immediate results in the year 2012 right out of the gate, it bears asking, “who can?”.

When all of the checks are cut, Medicare is in need of much better than a 1/10,000 return on investment.

Paul Spencer will be presenting at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Visit the Summit website for further information.  

The RAConteur: Questionable Results, Repercussions and SGR (Just For Kicks)

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

There’s no longer any way around it; I need a vacation.

According to the calendar, we now have 301 days left until the theorized Mayan Apocalypse. In the last week, the news cycle in the real, personal and professional worlds that surround me have taken a marked turn for the weird. It’s time to get out of here and explore such things as music, grilled meats and beverages unfit for your children.

Before I lock the doors of my car to prevent further interruption, I have a few updates involving government audits and (since I’m here and I have the floor) a timely news update about the “Doc Fix”.

First, CMS released the RAC results from the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2012. For the last month of 2011,  $422.7 million in corrections were identified. Of the four regional contractors, HDI (soon to be HMS) in Region D set the pace with $152.7 million identified. The total for the quarter represents the highest quarterly number yet to be reported under the RAC program. When reviewing these regularly reported numbers, remember that these do not include completed appeals and, more importantly, do not include any estimate of the administrative costs to providers for every documentation request from the RACs that ends up going nowhere

Yet, there’s more to the story…

If you remember, in the final quarter of FY 2011, there were $76.6 million in underpayments identified, with Connolly, the Region C contractor, identifying $60.7 million from that total. Suddenly, we have evidence of a shift in strategy, as the combined total for underpayments plummeted to $24.9 million, with Connolly only identifying $2.6 million in underpayments in the last quarter. You’ll excuse the provider community in Region C for their muted response to this bit of news.

One other issue involving RACs that has come to the surface of late has to do with the MACs taking over the demand letter process. For many months, RAC coordinators nationwide, especially those affiliated with hospital systems stretched across many miles, worked diligently to centralize RAC correspondence under one address. Thanks to the Healthcare Integrated General Ledger Accounting System (HIGLAS) not being able to store more than one address per provider number, all of that hard work has now been undermined. All demand letters are now going to the payment address for the facility in question.

This opens up multiple cans of worms. If the RAC coordinator now has to flag down demand letters from several locations, any dreams of opening up a discussion period within 40 days begin to disappear. This is ironic, in that CGI, the Region B RAC,  publicly stated at an outreach session in Wisconsin recently that they would like to see providers request discussion periods more than they currently do, based on the numbers in the region being low. Given the new hurdles encountered with demand letters, it’s hard to see how CGI gets their wish on that count.

Second, appeals that are now filed prior to recoup on the 41st day after the date on the demand letter will drop dramatically. Any savings that CMS may have hoped to gain from this fact is negated by two realities, one being the 10.5% interest rate every 30 days on successful provider appeals, and the other being the fact that providers are winning a lot of RAC appeals.

Finally, my e-mail inbox has been lighting up today regarding an imminent and (once again) temporary fix to the Sustainable Growth Rate cuts set to take hold on March 1st. The Deal of the Moment delays the scheduled cut until January 1, 2013 (a full 20 days after the scheduled Mayan Apocalypse), when physicians will face a cut of 35% if SGR has yet to be repealed by that time. The money for this latest desperate edition of the extension is coming mostly from reductions in Medicaid spending.

It has been a busy Leap Year February. I now happily leave you to the audit wolves for a fortnight.

The RAConteur will not appear next Wednesday, February 22nd. It will return on February 29th. In the meantime, consider meeting Paul Spencer live at the Fi-Med RAC Summit on April 16th and 17th in Milwaukee. Visit the Summit website for further details.

The RAConteur: Early Previews of a Long Summer

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

Over the first six weeks of 2012, RAC coordinators nationwide have learned the hard way about the lack of effectiveness of an advanced warning.

Late last year, it was announced that the responsibility of issuing demand letters was being transferred from the RAC contractors to the Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs). As the process revealed itself in January, what seemed like a simple transfer of duties has turned into mayhem. Information as simple as a common mailing address for RAC requests has been lost in the transfer, leading to short-term disintegration of the established RAC process.

In the past few weeks, two signal flares of changes on the horizon related to RAC activities have been announced by CMS that have the potential to cause a similar disruption.

On January 26, CMS released Change Request 7673. According to this document, effective July 1, 2012, the Multi-Carrier System (MCS) will include edits for common improper payment issues identified by the RAC contractors. These issues include pulmonary diagnostic procedures on the same date as an E/M encounter, IV hydration procedure reporting as it relates to total time, new vs. established patient services, and incorrect reporting using the -62 modifier.

These edits are mostly the result of findings from automated reviews, which I have stated before could be determined by training a pigeon to hit a button. It should also be pointed out that every one of these issues could be solved on the provider end with education of the billing staff. Remembering to place a -25 modifier on E/M services on the same day as unplanned pulmonary diagnostic procedures could be the solution to the first issue indicated above. If there is a certified coder on your staff, this person should know this and has no reason to be unaware of how to correctly use a modifier in this situation.

The second warning sign was one we all briefly became aware of at the end of 2011. To hearken back to a few weeks ago, CMS announced that the planned demonstration project that would have enabled Medicare RAC contractors to conduct pre-payment audits was being delayed from its original implementation date of January 1, 2012. CMS has now subsequently announced that these type of audits should begin “on or around June 1, 2012″.

Upon the initial announcement of prepayment audits, there was consternation throughout the industry that a complex review process that by some sources is unsuccessful in their task 67% of the time was now going to expand into prepayment audits due to the “success” of post-payment review. I for one am not setting aside my animus towards the RAC program simply because prepayment audits have been delayed by 5 months. The Medicare RAC program has demonstrated itself to be the solution to Medicare overpayments in the same way that random placement of land mines on highways is the panacea to rush hour traffic congestion. The simple task of changing which entity sends out demand letters has led to 6 weeks of chaos. How can I possibly believe that adding difficult tasks to the work that is clearly overwhelming those who are doing it will lead us all to a good place? 

Add to this the fact that RAC contractors now appear to be chasing underpayments based on the promise of higher contingency fees, and 2012, the alleged year of the Mayan Apocalypse, appears to have its first plague ready to go in the starting gate. It is worth noting that getting advanced notice of turmoil is never a guarantee of a solution to the problem.

Paul Spencer will be a presenter at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Go to the Summit website for further information on this unique educational opportunity.

The RAConteur: Acknowledging Shouts of “LOOK OUT!”

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

As you know, I cover RAC and audit issues every Wednesday in this tiny corner of the world wide web. Based on the spike in government audit activity over the last 28 months, I have continued to do this based on my belief that I am addressing a need in the greater provider community. While the Recovery Audit Contractor program has been at the forefront of CMS’ efforts, I have also tried to demonstrate the road map that is followed by the alphabet soup of government audit entities, showing how certain issues rise to the top of the attention chain.

Despite all of my efforts, I have a large ongoing problem, that being my futile attempts to get physicians to pay attention to government audit issues. Perhaps it is the landscape in which large numbers of physicians are seeking employment under the assumed safety of hospitals, but my general feeling is that physicians are largely ignoring the message.

Just this morning, I received yet another reminder of this battle in my e-mail box. I subscribe to updates from multiple sources, most notably Medicare Administrative Carriers for assorted issues of interest to the provider community. Today’s electronic missive comes from WPS, the legacy Part B MAC for Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin. For a few years, WPS has been a few steps ahead of other MACs with regard to conducting service specific probes on the heels of CERT testing discoveries under their jurisdiction. Of note, CPT code 99233 (Level III Subsequent Hospital Visits) has been on WPS’ radar for nearly two years across multiple specialties. Yet if today’s e-mail is any indication, the message of the importance to attention to review issues continues to fall on deaf ears with regard to the physician community.

WPS looked at this CPT code for the specialties of Neurology and Family Practice. Over the past 15 months, initial probes for these specialties revealed an error rate of 96.24% for Neurology and 89.54% for Family Practice, which quite obviously necessitated a follow-up review for both specialties. While there has been some improvement since the initial probes, a simple glance at the latest numbers show that physicians aren’t giving these reviews proper attention.

For Neurology, 128 line items across 98 claims were selected to review prior to payment. Of these, 102 line items were denied, for a cumulative error rate of nearly 80%. For Family Practice, 157 line items across 100 claims were selected, with 113 line items being denied, for an error rate of just under 72%. These numbers are bad enough, but a closer look reveals that roughly 60% of the denied claims for both specialties were due to physicians not providing the requested documentation for review. This means that 6 out of every 10 complex inpatient follow-up visits were denied because no one opened the envelope and/or read the correspondence inside of it.

I have limited amounts of free time in the coming year. I have people to educate face-to-face, networking opportunities with others in my profession, personal trips to various parts of North America between now and the end of Summer and a 5-year-old to keep on the straight and narrow. Nowhere in my small, handwritten pocket calendar do the words “BEAT HEAD AGAINST WALL” appear. From the moment The RAConteur began in September of 2010, I have been warning providers that the auditing landscape is changing, and not in a way that will be beneficial to either the delivery of care to their patients or their financial bottom line. Perhaps, someday, the physicians of America will begin to take a small step towards increased awareness. Might I suggest that the first part of that process to be the purchase of a letter opener?

Paul Spencer will be a presenter at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Go to the Summit website for further information on this unique educational opportunity. Use promo code “SPENCER” to receive $50 off the registration price for a limited time.

The RAConteur: A Difficult Lesson In Outreach Education

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

Last Wednesday in this space, I shared information with my reading audience pre-emptively from a provider outreach presentation from CGI, the Region B RAC, that took place one day later at a meeting of health care financial professionals in the State of Wisconsin.

Before I do my level best to attempt to erase all memories from last week’s posting, let me start by saying that I grew up in an urban environment. I say this because I want everyone to know that I’m not a fan of camping. Having never started a literal or figurative fire before in my life, I’m not particularly well-versed in controlling a conflagration before it takes out the surrounding trees. I have come to believe that the biggest part of the survival instinct is knowing where you don’t belong and seeing that you never arrive there.

In the realm of accuracy, last week’s post might as well have been a wicker man soaked in gasoline dancing in dry brush. 

As many readers almost immediately pointed out, the data supplied in last week’s posting, which was taken directly from a CGI PowerPoint presentation, was about as accurate as Kim Jong Il’s state-sanctioned official biography. While I have already posted the corrected information on a Google group board dedicated to RAC issues, I shall repeat them here for everyone’s benefit.

The original information posted stated that there had been only 7,919 audits conducted through December of 2011, with only 5 yielding no findings. The correct number of audits completed is actually 23, 594, with 17,984 of these lacking findings. For the math challenged, that represents an increase in lack of findings from the original number of nearly 3600%, or as Bob Uecker put it in the movie Major League, “Juuuuust a bit outside”. Of note is the fact that over 22,000 of the claims reviewed thus far have been for inpatient services, but this too was patently obvious to those who have had the most interaction with CGI in Wisconsin.

With regard to discussion periods, CGI’s original number of 502 discussions requested was actually revised downward to 216. According to my source in attendance, when CGI presented this number at last Thursday’s session, they followed it up by saying that 200 discussions were “affirmed” while 8 were “dismissed”. Unfortunately, they did not offer clear definitions regarding the true meaning of these terms. I reviewed the modified Statement of Work from this past September, and this also shed no light on any possible definitions.

There is one additional slice of information that CGI shared regarding discussion periods. My source states that the CGI educator conducting the outreach session last Thursday made a point of encouraging providers in Wisconsin to enter discussion periods based on the low number requested statewide thus far. I have come to learn that based on the compressed time frames of both discussion periods and recoupment, providers are finding it to be a nearly impossible task to track dollars that were first determined to be overpaid, then either slated for recoupment or recouped, only to be subsequently reversed by a discussion period and repaid to the providers. As it is currently configured, providers are finding the discussion period to be a useless level of bureaucracy in an already laborious process. Until this paradox is meaningfully addressed, CGI should not be looking for an increase in requested discussions.

The above numbers were not the only piece of information provided by CGI in their presentation that was found to be incorrect. As part of their printed materials, CGI offered addresses for providers to enter Extended Repayment Plans with their Medicare Administrative Carriers (MACs)that were incorrect. The person conducting the outreach session did not have the correct information on hand.

One of my pet peeves about the RAC program is that the contractors are not telegraphing when outreach sessions are taking place. Based on my fire-fighting experiences of the last week, I can add an addendum to this frustration, that being that when the contractors do conduct outreach sessions, the information brought forth is self-serving and inaccurate. This whole episode serves as a lesson to the provider community to cast a skeptical eye on future outreach efforts. That is, if anyone even lets you know when they are occurring in the first place.

Paul Spencer will be a presenter at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Go to the Summit website for further information on this unique educational opportunity. Use promo code “SPENCER” to receive $50 off the registration price for a limited time.

Healthcare & The Value Of Memory

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in Fi-Med Services

Back in 1966, Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys decided that he no longer wanted to tour with the band, instead wanting to concentrate on composition. The band needed someone to fill in on bass and the ridiculously high harmonies usually supplied by Brian for an upcoming tour of Japan. They found a man who was born in Arkansas to fulfill the task, but he only lasted on that one tour. This same man went on to record with a studio band named Sagittarius, before littering the pop and country charts for many years afterward with assorted hits under his own name: Glen Campbell.

Tomorrow night in Milwaukee, I am going to see Glen Campbell perform in concert, but the occasion will more than likely be bittersweet. The man who has given his music to the world for a majority of my lifetime is on his final tour, having recently been diagnosed as being in the early stages of Alzheimer’s Disease. It is not lost on me that all of the facts in the above paragraph, which my lifetime of music as a hobby has allowed me to commit to memory, will someday be foreign to the very person who made them possible.

As someone who has been involved with the health care industry for over 20 years, I have learned that based on the sheer volume of facts that inundate me on a daily basis, it has become nearly impossible for me to forget key elements of my job. As the cost of health care has become a central focus for cuts in a post-war economy, a number of  memories of failed policies of the past are skipping to the front of my mental line. Nowhere is this memory more acute that in the realm of physician reimbursement from the Medicare program.

Forty-one days from now, a song-and-dance act that has been running longer than Cats will repeat itself, as the increasingly polarized sides of our government once again raise the curtain on this year’s performance of Doc Fix. There are slight casting changes with every performance, but the script is the same. In the torch-lit Temple of SGR, an automated computer program threatens to take money away from the white-coated sailors on the HMS Doctor. As the sailors fight off armies of infirmed elderly waving checkbooks from behind the wheels of their Buicks, an unlikely set of heroes, wearing bad suits and American Flag lapel pins, short circuit the program with a stack of paper. As they stand in the setting sun, they promise to one day rid the world of the computer, but vow to be ready for anything else it plans to offer.

Oklahoma it ain’t……

Medicare reimbursement has gone from “pay everything” at the beginning of the program in 1966, to RBRVS and Gramm-Rudman-Hollings reductions in the ’80’s, subsequently to SGR in the late ’90’s, and finally to a yearly hostage crisis, with the only missing element seemingly being the security camera shot of Patty Hearst with a machine gun. We know this because it has affected us all in one form or another over the years and we have internalized the memories of the negative results of every one of these “solutions”.

Might I suggest that the solution doesn’t lie with finding a new payment methodology, but in finding savings from outside contractors for the Medicare program that (because I have it committed to memory) continuously take money needlessly from the program.

You can start by eliminating Medicare Part C. Virtually all of the “preventive benefits” offered to patients under these plans are now codified into traditional Medicare, which leaves Medicare Part C as nothing more than a government subsidy designed to prop up the insurance industry with billions of dollars that it doesn’t require for its survival.

Next we can go to Average Wholesale Price for reimbursement under Medicare Part D, rather than Average Sale Price. Additionally, pick one formulary and take the program out of many of the same hands that currently pollute Medicare Part C.

As for fraud investigations, leave in place predictive modeling and the HEAT teams, because these methods are actually getting to the root of the problem and are returning ill-gotten dollars to the Medicare program. When it comes to outside entities, we need not develop memories of the Recovery Audit  Contractors, because their abhorrent work product is currently on display for all the world to see. Roughly 2/3rds of everything they do is dedicated to purposeless paper shuffling, rather than the detection of actual improper payments. One marvels at the thought of the massive celebrations that would result if the RACs suddenly disappeared. Farther up the chain, the ZPICs on average collect about 2% of everything they extrapolate as an overpayment, but we don’t really know the actual number because the OIG has stated that the baseline data to measure their performance is fatally flawed. This reminds me that until that data is purified, the ZPICs will continue to mainly operate as a middle man for government-sponsored subsidies to the legal industry. Ask your typical taxpayer if that is something they wish to continue.

The development of the human memory keeps one from being fascinated by the latest shiny pocket watch issue being pendulated in our faces by the self-absorbed politician of the moment. Much like Glen Campbell, there may come a day that the many facts parading in our minds will begin to slip away. Until that day comes, in the realm of health care, memories are not just a rudimentary tool of assistance, but a blunt weapon against the many forces attempting to shove unwelcome schemes into an arena currently collapsing from the bad ideas of the past.

Paul Spencer will be a presenter at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Go to the Summit website for further information on this unique educational opportunity. Use promo code “SPENCER” to receive $50 off the registration price for a limited time.

The RAConteur: A Brief Window Into Outreach

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

Given my natural level of unending curiosity, I can think of no other thing as frustrating in this line of work than attending a seminar designed to relate new and important information, only to find that I have just spent good money learning well-aged facts. If I sit and think of it, this goes a long way in explaining my less-than-stellar academic career.

In past postings in this space, I have touched on the lack of useful provider outreach on the RAC program. This week, thanks to one of my contacts roaming the landscape in the land above my sealed concrete and steel bunker somewhere outside Milwaukee, Wisconsin, I received a PowerPoint presentation from CGI, the Region B RAC, that will be presented tomorrow to a meeting of health care finance professionals in my state. The slides represent further proof not only of the sporadic nature of current provider outreach, but through the use of statistics, also show that the RAC program still has a long way to go to prove the quality of its work product.

The presentation begins with RAC statistics just for the state of Wisconsin in Region B, which are quite revealing. Through the month of December just passed, CGI has completed 7,919 audits. Amazingly, only 5 of these audits have been without a finding of some type of improper payment, which on the surface appears to be a testament to the accuracy of the approved issues listing in Region B.

Of the completed audits, 502, or just over 6%, have had a discussion period requested by the provider in question. Of these claims, 258, or over 51%, have resulted in determinations of either a full reversal or findings  ”partially favorable” to the provider. These particular statistics appear to indicate that the discussion period is being under-utilized by the provider community in Wisconsin. It is worth remembering that providers can initiate a discussion up to 40 days from the date on the demand letter. Because the RACs do not directly handle claims appeals, it shouldn’t be surprising that this presentation does not contain appeal statistics.

There is one additional important bullet point in CGI’s presentation related to discussion periods. There may be some cases where due to the length of the discussion period, an adjustment request will be processed by the Medicare Administrative Carrier (MAC) prior to the issuance of a Discussion Results Letter. In these cases, if the discussion period yields a reversal, the provider will see the overpayment on a subsequent remittance advice and will receive a Demand Letter from the MAC, but the reversal will be processed and seen on a future remittance.   

There are slides in the CGI presentation that remind providers of time lines like the one in the previous paragraph above. There are 5 slides concentrating on how to best use the CGI RAC website. In checking the site, there is an update regarding the demand letter process on their front page. Other updates will have to be discovered under the Provider tab by individuals handling the RAC process for physicians and facilities.

The slides contain overviews of semi-automated review, current approved issues in Region B and the new process by which MACs issue Demand Letters. One interesting point found near the end of the presentation is related to Extended Repayment Plans. The MACs are now the point of contact for initiating such plans rather than the RACs, which is consistent with the Demand Letter change. Remember that the RACs are responsible for claims issues, and MACs cover the financial implications of those claims.

I have been critical of RAC outreach efforts in the past, but I can honestly say that there is some useful information in the slides. After reviewing the presentation in full, I do have two complaints about this process. First, it is long since past the time that the contractors update the outreach sections of their websites to reflect current and future sessions. In CGI’s case, there have been no updates to this particular schedule in 10 months. Second, while the time lines in the presentation have long been part of the RAC Statement of Work, there is increasing anecdotal evidence that there are common breakdowns in the process. Based on the volume of requests being received by some facilities, these “improvised” timelines are creating havoc even for those providers who have put a technological tracking tool in place. Many questions remain unanswered, and a few occasional PowerPoint bullets are proving insufficient to explain why.

I have sent some questions to ask of the presenter at tomorrow’s session through my contact. It is hoped that I can address my questions in a future edition of The RAConteur. Until then, from deep in the dimly-lit hallways of the compound, I bid you a temporary farewell.

Paul Spencer will be a presenter at the Fi-Med RAC Summit in Milwaukee, WI on April 16th and 17th, 2012. Go to the Summit website for further information on this unique educational opportunity. Use promo code “SPENCER” to receive $50 off the registration price for a limited time.

The RAConteur: The Year Begins With Snafus and FAQs

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

The beginning of a new year always offers hope. We spend the first day of the year resolving to change past behaviors. Subsequently, we spend the second week of the year eating a pint of Ben & Jerry’s, wondering how it all went wrong.  

Those of us affected by the gravitational pull of government audits are entering the new year with two challenges right out of the starting blocks.

One important change that occurred was widely known prior to implementation, but fell apart in execution. Beginning on January 1, Medicare Administrative Carriers (MACs) took over the process of issuing demand letters for Medicare RAC overpayments. Given the fact that the RACs exist because the MACs make claims adjudication mistakes, it was perhaps inevitable that this seemingly simple task would become a problem.

The demand letters, as issued by the RACs, would include multiple claims issues for one provider on one demand letter. The MACs, demonstrating the administrative acumen that launched 1,000 fraud investigations, have been issuing a demand letter for every identified RAC overpayment. This was followed by urgent e-mails from each MAC stating that they were “working with the system maintainer to ensure transactions are aggregated at the provider level on a daily basis”. This is legalese meaning that for the short term, demand letters will pile up in provider mail rooms like vacation junk mail.

The second challenge facing providers has yet to truly reveal itself to the provider community. The Medicaid RAC program has officially reached its implementation date as of January 1, 2012. Because there was very little guidance on the provider level leading up to this date, most providers find themselves in the dark with regard to the Medicaid RAC program, save for what appeared in the Final Rule released back in September.

To fill in the blanks, CMS released an 18-page Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) document addressing the Medicaid RAC program and what can be expected. In all, there are 53 questions and answers within the pages. As is my custom, I did some reading so you can go do something else. I’ll go in semi-numerical order covering the high points, as some of the questions have information that is duplicative as compared to the Final Rule.

FAQ 5 asks what a state can do to prepare providers for Medicaid RAC audits, and whether physicians will need to implement new compliance procedures due to the program. The answer was that states should be “as informative as possible” about implementation, with the minimum information being the name of the RAC contractor with contact information, when the RAC will begin to identify improper payments and “a general description of the scope of its RAC program”. From what I’ve seen, while more than 50% of the states have an identified Medicaid RAC contractor, information on the contractors emanating from the Medicaid programs themselves is virtually absent.

The second part of FAQ 5 was answered with what I found to be curious wording; “We do not expect that providers will have to undertake any major activities to prepare for Medicaid RACs”. We have all seen the glaring weaknesses of the Medicare RAC program, and if current appeal trends continue apace, we are in for about 5 solid years of endless paper shuffling. For CMS to once again soft-peddle the effect of expanding the process on providers to Medicaid borders on irresponsible.

FAQ 10 was the next to catch my eye. Already, there are auditing entities that have gained more than one state RAC contract. This particular FAQ focused on the need for a unique Contractor Medical Director that is licensed in the state covered by the contractual agreement. To illustrate, let’s say Company A has contracted with states B and C to do the Medicaid RAC work. Because these are two separate contracts, Company A would have to hire two full-time Medical Directors, with one being licensed to practice medicine in State B and the other being licensed in State C. However, the FAQ does make one distinction. If States E, F, and G wish to be bundled into one contractual arrangement with a contractor, more than one Medical Director may not be necessary. CMS indicates that the volume of claims in this particular arrangement could be a determining factor in deciding how many medical directors are needed.

FAQ 13 is the “Who’s The Watcher?” Question, asking how CMS will monitor and evaluate Medicaid RAC programs. Apparently, CMS will conduct program integrity reviews, collect a State Program Integrity Assessment and review overpayments collected, with states being required to “comply with reporting requirements as specified by CMS”. Note the big divergence from Medicare in this case. There is no single Validation Contractor to judge the work product of the Medicaid RACs, as is employed for the Medicare side. I’ve spoken about the comic nature of the RAC Accuracy scores in the last Report to Congress on RAC activities in the past, so I am on the fence as to whether this is either a good or bad thing at the present time.

This issue dovetails nicely into FAQ 17, which asks whether states are required to perform quality assurance of the RAC work product. States ”should” determine how it will validate the accuracy of overpayment determinations and include it in the Statement of Work in their RAC contract. Given that there are 50 states and 5 territories, all with different ways of measuring effectiveness, we should not expect one overarching accuracy score for the Medicaid RAC program as a whole, but rather dozens of bits of individualized data. 

FAQ 19 is the Duplication Question, asking how CMS will enforce multiple integrity efforts in addition to the Medicaid RAC, and how duplication of efforts can be avoided. With whitewash brush in hand, CMS states that they “intend to make every effort to incorporate and consolidate questions related to program integrity into scheduled reviews so as not to overburden states”. To be clear, there is nothing in that statement that gives any indication at all as to how CMS will avoid duplicate integrity reviews, thereby reducing provider burden. It is a new standard by which to measure a non-answer.

There were several FAQs about potential conflicts of interest, notably in cases when the RAC contractor already performs an integrity function in that state. CMS warns states to be cognizant of conflicts that may reveal themselves, but does not specifically ban one entity from performing multiple integrity functions for a single state.

I’ll wrap up the review with FAQ 28, which is of particular interest. What happens if a State does not receive any responses to its RAC Request for Proposal? CMS presents the options of either requesting an exception to the program, or “consider partnering with other states in order to attract a RAC” (I call this “The Wingman Option”). There are a few states who have requested exceptions to the RAC program, according to the Medicaid RACs At-A-Glance website created by CMS, but it is unclear whether these states have done so based on their inability to find a RAC contractor.

I recommend downloading the FAQ document, reviewing what I have omitted and keeping it safely on file, until such time as certain states catch up to the implementation date, now 10 days in the past. We need not hit the ice cream just yet, for all is not (quite) lost.

Paul Spencer will be appearing at the Fi-Med RAC Summit on April 16 and 17th in Milwaukee, WI. Information on this unique learning opportunity can be found here.

The RAConteur: Finally, One Bad Idea Dies

Posted by J. Paul Spencer, CPC, CPC-H in The RAConteur™

We now find ourselves four days into the year the Mayans marked as the end of the world (or not). Despite all evidence surrounding us to the contrary, it is in our conditioned nature to hope for the best in any coming year. An ancient calculation of a lethal comet notwithstanding, I can start 2012 off with at least one piece of good news.

Back in November, CMS announced that on January 1, they would begin a demonstration project wherein the Recovery Audit Contractors would review claims before they are paid in 11 states with high established error rates. Yesterday, almost as quickly as it was announced, CMS decided that this project has been delayed until further notice. CMS instead stated that it will provide 30 days notice in the future before implementing the project.

I stated at the time that based on the quality of the RAC work product to date, it hardly seemed like a good idea to expand their audit mission when the contractors clearly have not shown the baseline acumen necessary for post-payment review, despite the vaunted “accuracy scores” that were reported in the RAC Report to Congress back in September.

It’s a short piece of good news to start off the year, but given the administrative burden the RACs have already placed on hospitals due to complex review, even the smallest flicker of light in a storm is welcome.