Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh), secs. 1301, 1306, and 1310 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300e, 300e-5, and 300e-9), and 31 U.S.C. 9701.
As used in this part, unless the context indicates otherwise—
(1) Physician services (§ 417.101(a)(1));
(2) Outpatient services and inpatient hospital services (§ 417.101(a)(2));
(3) Medically necessary emergency health services (§ 417.101(a)(3)); and
(4) Diagnostic laboratory and diagnostic and therapeutic radiologic services (§ 417.101(a)(6)).
(1) That these health professionals will provide their professional services in accordance with a compensation arrangement established by the entity; and
(2) To the extent feasible, for the sharing by these health professionals of health (including medical) and other records, equipment, and professional, technical, and administrative staff.
(1) That is composed of health professionals licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy and of such other licensed health professionals (including dentists, optometrists, and podiatrists) as are necessary for the provision of health services for which the group is responsible;
(2) A majority of the members of which are licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy; and
(3) The members of which:
(i) After the end of the 48 month period beginning after the month in which the HMO for which the group provides health services becomes a qualified HMO, as their principal professional activity (over 50 percent individually) engage in the coordinated practice of their profession and as a group responsibility have substantial responsibility (over 35 percent in the aggregate of their professional activity) for the delivery of health services to enrollees of an HMO;
(ii) Pool their income from practice as members of the group and distribute it among themselves according to a prearranged salary or drawing account or other similar plan unrelated to the provision of specific health services;
(iii) Share health (including medical) records and substantial portions of major equipment and of professional, technical, and administrative staff;
(iv) Establish an arrangement whereby an enrollee's enrollment status is not known to the health professional who provides health services to the enrollee.
(2) Any entity in which a person described in paragraph (1):
(i) Is an officer or director;
(ii) Is a partner (if the entity is organized as a partnership);
(iii) Has directly or indirectly a beneficial interest of more than 5 percent of the equity; or
(iv) Has a mortgage, deed of trust, note, or other interest valuing more than 5 percent of the assets of such entity;
(3) Any spouse, child, or parent of an individual described in paragraph (1).
(1) Provide services to HMO enrollees at an HMO facility subject to the staff policies and operational procedures of the HMO;
(2) Engage in the coordinated practice of their profession and provide to enrollees of the HMO the health services that the HMO has contracted to provide;
(3) Share medical and other records, equipment, and professional, technical, and administrative staff of the HMO; and
(4) Provide their professional services in accordance with a compensation arrangement, other than fee-for-service, established by the HMO. This arrangement may include, but is not limited to, fee-for-time, retainer or salary.
(1) Those health services that are projected to involve fewer than 1 percent of the encounters per year for the entire HMO enrollment, or,
(2) Those health services the provision of which, given the enrollment projection of the HMO and generally accepted staffing patterns, is projected will require less than 0.25 full time equivalent health professionals.
(a) Subparts B through F of this part pertain to the Federal qualification of HMOs under title XIII of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act.
(b) Subparts G through R of this part set forth the rules for Medicare contracts with, and payment to, HMOs and competitive medical plans (CMPs) under section 1876 of the Act.
(c) Subpart U of this part pertains to Medicare payment to health care prepayment plans under section 1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
(d) Subpart V of this part applies to the administration of outstanding loans and loan guarantees previously granted under title XIII of the PHS Act.
(a) An HMO must provide or arrange for the provision of basic health services to its enrollees as needed and without limitations as to time and cost other than those prescribed in the PHS Act and these regulations, as follows:
(1) Physician services (including consultant and referral services by a physician), which must be provided by a licensed physician, or if a service of a physician may also be provided under applicable State law by other health professionals, an HMO may provide the service through these other health professionals;
(2)(i) Outpatient services, which must include diagnostic services, treatment services and x-ray services, for patients who are ambulatory and may be provided in a non-hospital based health care facility or at a hospital;
(ii) Inpatient hospital services, which must include but not be limited to, room and board, general nursing care, meals and special diets when medically necessary, use of operating room and related facilities, use of intensive care unit and services, x-ray services, laboratory, and other diagnostic tests, drugs, medications, biologicals, anesthesia and oxygen services, special duty nursing when medically necessary, radiation therapy, inhalation
(iii) Outpatient services and inpatient hospital services must include short-term rehabilitation services and physical therapy, the provision of which the HMO determines can be expected to result in the significant improvement of a member's condition within a period of two months;
(3) Instructions to its enrollees on procedures to be followed to secure medically necessary emergency health services both in the service area and out of the service area;
(4) Twenty outpatient visits per enrollee per year, as may be necessary and appropriate for short-term evaluative or crisis intervention mental health services, or both;
(5) Diagnosis, medical treatment and referral services (including referral services to appropriate ancillary services) for the abuse of or addiction to alcohol and drugs:
(i) Diagnosis and medical treatment for the abuse of or addiction to alcohol and drugs must include detoxification for alcoholism or drug abuse on either an outpatient or inpatient basis, whichever is medically determined to be appropriate, in addition to the other required basic health services for the treatment of other medical conditions;
(ii) Referral services may be either for medical or for nonmedical ancillary services. Medical services must be a part of basic health services; nonmedical ancillary services (such as vocational rehabilitation and employment counseling) and prolonged rehabilitation services in a specialized inpatient or residential facility need not be a part of basic health services;
(6) Diagnostic laboratory and diagnostic and therapeutic radiologic services in support of basic health services;
(7) Home health services provided at an enrollee's home by health care personnel, as prescribed or directed by the responsible physician or other authority designated by the HMO; and
(8) Preventive health services, which must be made available to members and must include at least the following:
(i) A broad range of voluntary family planning services;
(ii) Services for infertility;
(iii) Well-child care from birth;
(iv) Periodic health evaluations for adults;
(v) Eye and ear examinations for children through age 17, to determine the need for vision and hearing correction; and
(vi) Pediatric and adult immunizations, in accord with accepted medical practice.
(b) In addition, an HMO may include a health service described in § 417.102 as a supplemental health service in the basic health services that it provides or arranges for its enrollees for a basic health services payment.
(c) To the extent that a natural disaster, war, riot, civil insurrection, epidemic or any other emergency or similar event not within the control of an HMO results in the facilities, personnel, or financial resources of an HMO being unavailable to provide or arrange for the provision of a basic or supplemental health service in accordance with the requirements of §§ 417.101 through 417.106 and §§ 417.168 and 417.169, the HMO is required only to make a good-faith effort to provide or arrange for the provision of the service, taking into account the impact of the event. For purposes of this paragraph, an event is not within the control of an HMO if the HMO cannot exercise influence or dominion over its occurrence.
(d) The following are not required to be provided as basic health services:
(1) Corrective appliances and artificial aids;
(2) Mental health services, except as required under section 1302(1)(D) of the PHS Act and paragraph (a)(4) of this section;
(3) Cosmetic surgery, unless medically necessary;
(4) Prescribed drugs and medicines incidental to outpatient care;
(5) Ambulance services, unless medically necessary;
(6) Care for military service connected disabilities for which the enrollee is legally entitled to services and for which facilities are reasonably available to this enrollee;
(7) Care for conditions that State or local law requires be treated in a public facility;
(8) Dental services;
(9) Vision and hearing care except as required by sections 1302(1)(A) and 1302(1)(H)(vi) of the PHS Act and paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(8) of this section;
(10) Custodial or domiciliary care;
(11) Experimental medical, surgical, or other experimental health care procedures, unless approved as a basic health service by the policymaking body of the HMO;
(12) Personal or comfort items and private rooms, unless medically necessary during inpatient hospitalization;
(13) Whole blood and blood plasma;
(14) Long-term physical therapy and rehabilitation;
(15) Durable medical equipment for home use (such as wheel chairs, surgical beds, respirators, dialysis machines); and
(16) Health services that are unusual and infrequently provided and not necessary for the protection of individual health, as approved by CMS upon application by the HMO.
(e) An HMO may not offer to provide or arrange for the provision of basic health services on a prepayment basis that do not include all the basic health services set forth in paragraph (a) of this section or that are limited as to time and cost except in a manner prescribed by this subpart.
(a) An HMO may provide to its enrollees any health service that is not included as a basic health service under § 417.101(a). These health services may be limited as to time and cost.
(b) An HMO must determine the level and scope of supplemental health services included with basic health services provided to its enrollees for a basic health services payment or those services offered to its enrollees as supplemental health services.
(a)(1) The HMO must provide that the services of health professionals that are provided as basic health services will, except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, be provided or arranged for through (i) health professionals who are staff of the HMO, (ii) a medical group or groups, (iii) an IPA or IPAs, (iv) physicians or other health professionals under direct service contracts with the HMO for the provision of these services, or (v) any combination of staff, medical group or groups, IPA or IPAs, or physicians or other health professionals under direct service contracts with the HMO.
(2) A staff or medical group model HMO may have as providers of basic health services physicians who have also entered into written services arrangements with an IPA or IPAs, but only if either (i) these physicians number less than 50 percent of the physicians who have entered into arrangements with the IPA or IPAs, or (ii) if the sharing is 50 percent or greater, CMS approves the sharing as being consistent with the purposes of section 1310(b) of the PHS Act.
(3) After the 4 year period beginning with the month following the month in that an HMO becomes a qualified HMO, an entity that meets the requirements of the definition of medical group in § 417.100, except for subdivision (3)(i) of that definition, may be considered a medical group if CMS determines that the principal professional activity (over 50 percent individually) of the entity's members is the coordinated practice of their profession, and if the HMO has demonstrated to the satisfaction of CMS that the entity is committed to the delivery of medical services on a prepaid group practice basis by either:
(i) Presenting a reasonable time-phased plan for the entity to achieve compliance with the “substantial responsibility” requirement of subdivision (3)(i) of the definition of “medical group” in § 417.100. The HMO must update the plan annually and must demonstrate to the satisfaction of CMS that the entity is making continuous efforts and progress towards compliance with the requirements of the definition of “medical group,” or
(ii) Demonstrating that compliance by the entity with the “substantial responsibility” requirement is unreasonable or impractical because (A) the HMO serves a non-metropolitan or rural area as defined in § 417.100, or (B) the entity is a multi-speciality group that provides medical consultation upon referral on a regional or national basis, or (C) the majority of the residents of the HMO's service area are not eligible for employer-employee health benefits plans and the HMO has an insufficient number of enrollees to require utilization of at least 35 percent of the entity's services.
(b) HMOs must have effective procedures to monitor utilization and to control cost of basic and supplemental health services and to achieve utilization goals, which may include mechanisms such as risk sharing, financial incentives, or other provisions agreed to by providers.
(c) Paragraph (a) of this section does not apply to the provision of the services of a physician:
(1) Which the HMO determines are unusual or infrequently used services; or
(2) Which, because of an emergency, it was medically necessary to provide to the enrollee other than as required by paragraph (a) of this section; or
(3) Which are provided as part of the inpatient hospital services by employees or staff of a hospital or provided by staff of other entities such as community mental health centers, home health agencies, visiting nurses' associations, independent laboratories, or family planning agencies.
(d) Supplemental health services must be provided or arranged for by the HMO and need not be provided by providers of basic health services under contract with the HMO.
(e) Each HMO must:
(1) Pay the provider, or reimburse its enrollees for the payment of reasonable charges for basic health services (or supplemental health services that the HMO agreed to provide on a prepayment basis) for which its enrollees have contracted, which were medically necessary and immediately required to be obtained other than through the HMO because of an unforeseen illness, injury, or condition, as determined by the HMO;
(2) Adopt procedures to review promptly all claims from enrollees for reimbursement for the provision of health services described in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, including a procedure for the determination of the medical necessity for obtaining the services other than through the HMO; and
(3) Provide instructions to its enrollees on procedures to be followed to secure these health services.
(a)
(1) Is to be paid on a periodic basis without regard to the dates these services are provided;
(2) Is fixed without regard to the frequency, extent, or kind of basic health services actually furnished;
(3) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, is fixed under a community rating system, as described in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(4) May be supplemented by nominal copayments which may be required for the provision of specific basic health services. Each HMO may establish one or more copayment options calculated on the basis of a community rating system.
(i) An HMO may not impose copayment charges that exceed 50 percent of the total cost of providing any single service to its enrollees, nor in the aggregate more than 20 percent of the total cost of providing all basic health services.
(ii) To insure that copayments are not a barrier to the utilization of health services or enrollment in the
(b)
(1) A system of fixing rates of payment for health services may provide that the rates will be fixed on a per person or per family basis and may vary with the number of persons in a family. Except as otherwise authorized in this paragraph, these rates must be equivalent for all individuals and for all families of similar composition. Rates of payment may be based on either a schedule of rates charged to each subscriber group or on a per-enrollee-per-month (or per-subscriber-per-month) revenue requirement for the HMO. In the former event, rates may vary from group to group if the projected total revenue from each group is substantially equivalent to the revenue that would be derived if the schedule of rates were uniform for all groups. In the latter event, the payments from each group of subscribers must be calculated to yield revenues substantially equivalent to the product of the total number of enrollees (or subscribers) expected to be enrolled from the group and the per-enrollee-per-month (or per-subscriber-per-month) revenue requirement for the HMO. Under the system described in this paragraph, rates of payment may not vary because of actual or anticipated utilization of services by individuals associated with any specific group of subscribers. These provisions do not preclude changes in the rates of payment that are established for new enrollments or re-enrollments and that do not apply to existing contracts until the renewal of these contracts.
(2) A system of fixing rates of payment for health services may provide that the rates will be fixed for individuals and families by groups. Except as otherwise authorized in this paragraph, such rates must be equivalent for all individuals in the same group and for all families of similar composition in the same group. If an HMO is to fix rates of payment for individuals and families by groups, it must:
(i) Classify all of the enrollees of the organization into classes based on factors that the HMO determines predict the differences in the use of health services by the individuals or families in each class and which have not been disapproved by CMS,
(ii) Determine its revenue requirements for providing services to the enrollees of each class established under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, and
(iii) Fix the rates of payment for the individuals and families of a group on the basis of a composite of the organization's revenue requirements determined under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section for providing services to them as members of the classes established under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section. CMS will review the factors used by each HMO to establish classes under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section. If CMS determines that any such factor may not reasonably be used to predict the use of the health services by individuals and families, CMS will disapprove the factor for that purpose.
(3)(i) Nominal differentials in rates may be established to reflect differences in marketing costs and the different administrative costs of collecting payments from the following categories of potential subscribers:
(A) Individual (non-group) subscribers (including their families).
(B) Small groups of subscribers (100 subscribers or fewer).
(C) Large groups of subscribers (over 100 subscribers).
(ii) Differentials in rates may be established for subscribers enrolled in an HMO: (A) Under a contract with a governmental authority under section 1079 (“Contracts for Medical Care for Spouses and Children: Plans”) or section 1086 (“Contracts for Health Benefits for Certain Members, Former Members and their Dependents”) of title 10 (“Armed Forces”), United States Code; or (B) under any other governmental program (other than the health benefits program authorized by chapter 89 (“Health Insurance”) of title 5 (“Government Organization and Employees”), United States Code; or (C) under any health benefits program for employees of States, political subdivisions of states, and other public entities.
(4) An HMO may establish a separate community rate for separate regional components of the organization upon satisfactory demonstration to CMS of the following:
(i) Each regional component is geographically distinct and separate from any other regional component; and
(ii) Each regional component provides substantially the full range of basic health services to its enrollees, without extensive referral between components of the organization for these services, and without substantial utilization by any two components of the same health care facilities. The separate community rate for each regional component of the HMO must be based on the different costs of providing health services in the respective regions.
(c)
(2) The requirement of community rating does not apply to the basic health services payment for basic health services provided an enrollee who is a full-time student at an accredited institution of higher education.
(d)
(e)
(1) An HMO must make a written request to CMS, listing the factors to be used in the community rating by class system under paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(2) CMS will notify each HMO within 30 days of receipt of the request and application of one of the following:
(i) The application is approved;
(ii) Additional information or data are required and CMS will notify the HMO of its decision within 30 days from the date of receipt of this information or data; or
(iii) CMS needs additional time to review the written request and the HMO will be notified of CMS's decision within 90 days.
(a) An HMO may require supplemental health services payments, in addition to the basic health services payments, for the provision of each health service included in the supplemental health services set forth in
(b) Supplemental health services payments may be made in any agreed upon manner, such as prepayment or fee-for-service. Supplemental health services payments that are fixed on a prepayment basis, however, must be fixed under a community rating system, unless the supplemental health services payment is for a supplemental health service provided an enrollee who is a full-time student at an accredited institution of higher education. In the case of an HMO that provided comprehensive health services on a prepaid basis before it became a qualifed HMO, the community rating requirement shall not apply to that HMO during the forty-eight month period beginning with the month following the month in which it became a qualifed HMO.
(a)
(1) Stresses health outcomes to the extent consistent with the state of the art.
(2) Provides review by physicians and other health professionals of the process followed in the provision of health services.
(3) Uses systematic data collection of performance and patient results, provides interpretation of these data to its practitioners, and institutes needed change.
(4) Includes written procedures for taking appropriate remedial action whenever, as determined under the quality assurance program, inappropriate or substandard services have been provided or services that ought to have been furnished have not been provided.
(b)
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the services must be available to each enrollee within the HMO's service area.
(2)
(3) The services must be available and accessible with reasonable promptness to each of the HMO's enrollees as ensured through—
(i) Staffing patterns within generally accepted norms for meeting the projected enrollment needs; and
(ii) Geographic location, hours of operation, and arrangements for after-hours services. (Medically necessary emergency services must be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.)
(c)
(1) Use of a health professional who is primarily responsible for coordinating the enrollee's overall health care.
(2) A system of health and medical records that accumulates pertinent information about the enrollee's health care and makes it available to appropriate professionals.
(3) Arrangements made directly or through the HMO's providers to ensure that the HMO or the health professional who coordinates the enrollee's overall health care is kept informed about the services that the referral resources furnish to the enrollee.
(d)
(a)
(i) Total assets greater than total unsubordinated liabilities. In evaluating assets and liabilities, loan funds awarded or guaranteed under section 1306 of the PHS Act are not included as liabilities.
(ii) Sufficient cash flow and adequate liquidity to meet obligations as they become due.
(iii) A net operating surplus, or a financial plan that meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(iv) An insolvency protection plan that meets the requirements of § 417.122(b) for protection of enrollees.
(v) A fidelity bond or bonds, procured and maintained by the HMO, in an amount fixed by its policymaking body but not less than $100,000 per individual, covering each officer and employee entrusted with the handling of its funds. The bond may have reasonable deductibles, based upon the financial strength of the HMO.
(vi) Insurance policies or other arrangements, secured and maintained by the HMO and approved by CMS to insure the HMO against losses arising from professional liability claims, fire, theft, fraud, embezzlement, and other casualty risks.
(2)
(ii) This plan must include—
(A) A detailed marketing plan;
(B) Statements of revenue and expense on an accrual basis;
(C) Sources and uses of funds statements; and
(D) Balance sheets.
(b)
(1) For the cost of providing to any enrollee basic health services with an aggregate value of more than $5,000 in any year.
(2) For the cost of basic health services obtained by its enrollees from sources other than the HMO because medical necessity required that they be furnished before they could be secured through the HMO.
(3) For not more than 90 percent of the amount by which its costs for any of its fiscal years exceed 115 percent of its income for that fiscal year.
(4) For physicians or other health professionals, health care institutions, or any other combination of such individuals or institutions to assume all or part of the financial risk on a prospective basis for their furnishing of basic health services to the HMO's enrollees.
(a)
(i) Contractual arrangements that prohibit health care providers used by the enrollees from holding any enrollee
(ii) Insurance, acceptable to CMS.
(iii) Financial reserves, acceptable to CMS, that are held for the HMO and restricted for use only in the event of insolvency.
(iv) Any other arrangements acceptable to CMS.
(2) The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to an HMO if CMS determines that State law protects the HMO enrollees from liability for payment of any fees that are the legal obligation of the HMO.
(b)
(1) For all enrollees, for the duration of the contract period for which payment has been made.
(2) For enrollees who are in an inpatient facility on the date of insolvency, until they are discharged from the facility.
(a)
(1) A policymaking body that exercises oversight and control over the HMO's policies and personnel to ensure that management actions are in the best interest of the HMO and its enrollees.
(2) Personnel and systems sufficient for the HMO to organize, plan, control and evaluate the financial, marketing, health services, quality assurance program, administrative and management aspects of the HMO.
(3) At a minimum, management by an executive whose appointment and removal are under the control of the HMO's policymaking body.
(b)
(i) Benefits (including limitations and exclusions).
(ii) Coverage (including a statement of conditions on eligibility for benefits).
(iii) Procedures to be followed in obtaining benefits and a description of circumstances under which benefits may be denied.
(iv) Rates.
(v) Grievance procedures.
(vi) Service area.
(vii) Participating providers.
(viii) Financial condition including at least the following most recently audited information: Current assets, other assets, total assets; current liabilities, long term liabilities; and net worth.
(2)
(ii) The description of benefits and coverage may be in general terms if reference is made to a detailed statement of benefits and coverage that is available without cost to any person who enrolls in the HMO or to whom the opportunity for enrollment is offered.
(iii) The HMO must provide the description to any enrollee or person who is eligible to elect the HMO option and who requests the material from the HMO or the administrator of a health benefits plan. For purposes of this requirement, “administrator” (of a health benefits plan) has the meaning it is given in the Employment Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) at 29 U.S.C. 1002(16)(A).
(iv) If the HMO provides health services through individual practice associations (IPAs), the HMO must specify the number of member physicians by specialty, and a listing of the hospitals where HMO enrollees will receive basic and supplemental health services.
(v) If the HMO provides health services other than through IPAs, the HMO must specify, for each ambulatory care facility, the facility's address, days and hours of operation, and the number of physicians by specialty, and a listing of the hospitals where HMO enrollees will receive basic and supplemental health services.
(c)
(2) If an HMO has a medically underserved population located in its service area, not more than 75 percent of its enrollees may be from the medically underserved population unless the area in which that population resides is a rural area.
(d)
(i) Expel or refuse to reenroll any enrollee; or
(ii) Refuse to enroll individual members of a group.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph, a “group” is composed of individuals who enroll in the HMO under a contract or other arrangement that covers two or more subscribers. Examples of groups are employees who enroll under a contract between their employer and the HMO, or members of an organization that arranges coverage for its membership.
(3) Nothing in this subpart prohibits an HMO from requiring that, as a condition for continued eligibility for enrollment, enrolled dependent children, upon reaching a specified age, convert to individual enrollment, consistent with paragraph (e) of this section.
(e)
(i) Each enrollee (and his or her enrolled dependents) leaving a group.
(ii) Each enrollee who would otherwise cease to be eligible for HMO enrollment because of his or her age, or the death or divorce of an enrollee.
(2) The individual enrollment offered must meet the conditions of subpart B of this part and this subpart C.
(3) The HMO is not required to offer individual enrollment except to the enrollees specified in this paragraph.
(4) The HMO must offer the enrollment on the same terms and conditions that it makes available to other nongroup enrollees.
(f) [Reserved]
(g)
(1) Grievances and complaints are transmitted in a timely manner to appropriate HMO decisionmaking levels that have authority to take corrective action; and
(2) Appropriate action is taken promptly, including a full investigation if necessary and notification of concerned parties as to the results of the HMO's investigation.
(h)
(1) In the case of hospitals, are either accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, or certified by Medicare.
(2) In the case of laboratories, are either CLIA-exempt, or have in effect a valid certificate of one of the following types, issued by CMS in accordance with section 353 of the PHS Act and part 493 of this chapter:
(i) Registration certificate.
(ii) Certificate.
(iii) Certificate of waiver.
(iv) Certificate of accreditation.
(3) In the case of other affiliated institutional providers, are certified for participation in Medicare and Medicaid in accordance with part 405, 416, 418, 488, or 491 of this chapter, as appropriate.
(a)
(1) The cost of its operations.
(2) The patterns of utilization of its services.
(3) The availability, accessibility, and acceptability of its services.
(4) To the extent practical, developments in the health status of its enrollees.
(5) Information demonstrating that the HMO has a fiscally sound operation.
(6) Other matters that CMS may require.
(b)
(1) A description of significant business transactions (as defined in paragraph (c) of this section) between the HMO and a party in interest.
(2) With respect to those transactions—
(i) A showing that the costs of the transactions listed in paragraph (c) of this section do not exceed the costs that would be incurred if these transactions were with someone who is not a party in interest; or
(ii) If they do exceed, a justification that the higher costs are consistent with prudent management and fiscal soundness requirements.
(3) A combined financial statement for the HMO and a party in interest if either of the following conditions is met:
(i) Thirty-five percent or more of the costs of operation of the HMO go to a party in interest.
(ii) Thirty-five percent or more of the revenue of a party in interest is from the HMO.
(c)
(1) Business transaction means any of the following kinds of transactions:
(i) Sale, exchange or lease of property.
(ii) Loan of money or extension of credit.
(iii) Goods, services, or facilities furnished for a monetary consideration, including management services, but not including—
(A) Salaries paid to employees for services performed in the normal course of their employment; or
(B) Health services furnished to the HMO's enrollees by hospitals and other providers, and by HMO staff, medical groups, or IPAs, or by any combination of those entities.
(2)
(d)
(2) Inter-entity transactions must be eliminated in the consolidated column.
(3) These statements must have been examined by an independent auditor in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and must include appropriate opinions and notes.
(4) Upon written request from an HMO showing good cause, CMS may waive the requirement that its combined financial statement include the financial information required in this paragraph (d) with respect to a particular entity.
(e)
(i) The HMO must furnish the information to the employer or the employer's designee, or to the plan administrator, as the term “administrator” is defined in ERISA.
(ii) Loan of money or extension of credit.
(iii) Goods, services, or facilities furnished for a monetary consideration, including management services, but not including—
(A) Salaries paid to employees for services performed in the normal course of their employment; or
(B) Health services furnished to the HMO's enrollees by hospitals and other providers, and by HMO staff, medical groups, or IPAs, or by any combination of those entities.
(2)
(d)
(2) Inter-entity transactions must be eliminated in the consolidated column.
(3) These statements must have been examined by an independent auditor in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and must include appropriate opinions and notes.
(4) Upon written request from an HMO showing good cause, CMS may waive the requirement that its combined financial statement include the financial information required in this paragraph (d) with respect to a particular entity.
(e)
(2) The HMO must furnish the information to the employer or the employer's designee, or to the plan administrator, as the term “administrator” is defined in ERISA.
This subpart sets forth—
(a) The requirements for—
(1) Entities that seek qualification as HMOs under title XIII of the PHS Act; and
(2) HMOs that seek—
(i) Qualification for their regional components; or
(ii) Expansion of their service areas;
(b) The procedures that CMS follows to make determinations; and
(c) Other related provisions, including application fees.
(a)
(2) CMS determines whether the entity is an HMO on the basis of the entity's application and any additional information and investigation (including site visits) that CMS may require.
(3) CMS may determine that an entity is any of the following:
(i) An operational qualified HMO.
(ii) A preoperational qualified HMO.
(iii) A transitional qualified HMO.
(b)
(1) CMS finds that the entity meets the requirements of subparts B and C of this part.
(2) The entity, within 30 days of CMS's determination, provides written assurances, satisfactory to CMS, that it—
(i) Provides and will provide basic health services (and any supplemental health services included in any contract) to its enrollees;
(ii) Provides and will provide these services in the manner prescribed in sections 1301(b) and 1301(c) of the PHS Act and subpart B of this part;
(iii) Is organized and operated and will continue to be organized and operated in the manner prescribed in section 1301(c) of the PHS Act and subpart C of this part;
(iv) Under arrangements that safeguard the confidentiality of patient information and records, will provide access to CMS and the Comptroller General or any of their duly authorized representatives for the purpose of audit, examination or evaluation to any books, documents, papers, and records of the entity relating to its operation as an HMO, and to any facilities that it operates; and
(v) Will continue to comply with any other assurances that it has given to CMS.
(c)
(2) Within 30 days after receiving notice that the entity has begun operation, CMS determines whether it is an operational qualified HMO. In the absence of this determination, the entity is not an operational qualified HMO even though it becomes operational.
(d)
(i) Meets the requirements of paragraph (d)(2) through (d)(4) of this section; and
(ii) Provides the assurances specified in paragraphs (d)(5) through (d)(7) of this section within 30 days of CMS's determination.
(2)
(i) Assume full financial risk for the provision of basic health services as required by § 417.120(b); or
(ii) Comply with the limitations that are imposed on insurance by § 417.120(b)(1).
(3)
(i) Physician services.
(ii) Outpatient services and inpatient hospital services. (The entity need not provide or pay for hospital inpatient or outpatient services that it can show are being provided directly, through insurance, or under arrangements, by other entities.)
(iii) Medically necessary emergency services.
(iv) Diagnostic laboratory services and diagnostic and therapeutic radiologic services.
(4)
(ii)
(5)
(i) Continue to provide services in accordance with paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
(ii) Continue to be organized and operated and to pay for basic health services in accordance with paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(4) of this section, respectively.
(6)
(i) It will implement a time-phased plan acceptable to CMS that—
(A) May not extend for more than 3 years from the date of CMS's determination; and
(B) Specifies definite steps for meeting, at the time of renewal of each group or individual contract, all the requirements of subparts B and C of this part.
(ii) Upon completion of this time-phased plan, it will—
(A) Provide basic and supplemental services to all of its enrollees; and
(B) Be organized and operated, and provide services, in accordance with subparts B and C of this part.
(7)
(i) Be organized and operated in accordance with subpart C of this part; and
(ii) Provide basic health services and any supplemental health services included in the contract, in accordance with subpart B of this part.
(e)
(f)
(g)
(1) The requirements of titles XVIII and XIX of the Act, as appropriate, take precedence over conflicting requirements of sections 1301(b) and 1301(c) of the PHS Act.
(2) The HMO must, with respect to its enrollees entitled to Medicare or Medicaid, comply with the applicable requirement of title XVIII or XIX, including those that pertain to—
(i) Deductibles and coinsurance;
(ii) Enrollment mix and enrollment practices;
(iii) State plan rules on copayment options; and
(iv) Grievance procedures.
(3) An HMO that complies with paragraph (g)(2) of this section may obtain and retain Federal qualification if, for its other enrollees, the HMO meets the requirements of sections 1301(b) and 1301(c) of the PHS Act and implementing regulations in this subpart D and in subparts B and C of this part.
(h)
(a)
(b)
(2) The authorized individual must describe thoroughly how the entity meets, or will meet, the requirements for qualified HMOs described in the PHS Act and in subparts B and C of this part, this subpart D, and 417.168 and 417.169 of subpart F.
(c)
(1) The fee is reasonably related to the Federal government's cost of qualifying an entity and may vary based on the type of application.
(2) Each type of application has one set fee rather than a charge based on the specific cost of each determination. (For example, each Federally qualified HMO applicant seeking Federal qualification of one of its regional components as an HMO is charged the same amount, unless the amount of the fee has been changed under paragraph (f) of this section.)
(d)
(1) $18,400 for an entity seeking qualification as an HMO or qualification of a regional component of an HMO.
(2) $6,900 for an HMO seeking expansion of its service area.
(3) $3,100 for a CMP seeking qualification as an HMO.
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
(a)
(2) If the application is incomplete, CMS notifies the entity and allows 60 days from the date of the notice for the entity to furnish the missing information.
(3) After evaluating all relevant information, CMS determines whether the entity meets the applicable requirements of §§ 417.142 and 417.143.
(b)
(c)
(2) Within 60 days from the date of the notice, the entity may respond in writing to the issues or other matters that were the basis for CMS's preliminary finding, and may revise its application to remedy any defects identified by CMS.
(d)
(2) A request for reconsideration must—
(i) Be submitted in writing, within 60 days following the date of the notice of denial;
(ii) Be addressed to the CMS officer or employee who denied the application; and
(iii) Set forth the grounds upon which the entity requests reconsideration, specifying the material issues of fact and of law upon which the entity relies.
(3) CMS bases its reconsideration upon the record compiled during the qualification review proceedings, materials submitted in support of the request for reconsideration, and other relevant materials available to CMS.
(4) CMS gives the entity written notice of the reconsidered determination and the basis for the determination.
(e)
(2)
As used in this subpart, unless the context indicates otherwise—
(1) Includes non-appropriated fund instrumentalities of the United States Government; and
(2) Excludes the following:
(i) The governments of the United States, the District of Columbia and the territories and possessions of the United States, the 50 States and their political subdivisions, and any agencies or instrumentalities of any of the foregoing, including the United States Postal Service and Postal Rate Commission.
(ii) Any church, or convention or association of churches, and any organization operated, supervised, or controlled by a church, or convention or association of churches that meets the following conditions:
(A) Is an organization that is described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
(B) Does not discriminate, in the employment, compensation, promotion or termination of employment of any personnel, or in the granting of staff and other privileges to physicians or other health personnel, on the grounds that the individuals obtain health care through HMOs, or participate in furnishing health care through HMOs.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(i) Must first be presented to the bargaining representative; and
(ii) If the representative accepts the option, must then be offered to each represented employee.
(2) For employees not represented by a bargaining representative, the option must be offered directly to those employees.
(a)
(ii)
(2)
(ii) Access may not be more restrictive or less favorable than the access the employing entity provides to other offerors of options included in the health benefits plan, whether or not those offerors elect to avail themselves of that access.
(b)
(2) Revisions must be limited to correcting factual errors and misleading or ambiguous statements, unless—
(i) The HMO and the employing entity agree otherwise; or
(ii) Other revisions are required by law.
(3) The employing entity or designee must complete revision of the materials promptly so as not to delay or otherwise interfere with their use during the group enrollment period.
(c)
(2)
(3)
(d)
(2)
(i) Is not integrated or incorporated into a basic health benefits package or major medical plan, and
(ii) Is—
(A) Offered by a carrier other than the one offering the basic health benefits package or major medical plan; or
(B) Subject to a premium separate from the premium for the basic health benefits package or major medical plan.
(3)
(ii) The non-HMO option provides free-standing coverage for optical services (such as refraction and the provision of eyeglasses), and the HMO does not. The employing entity must provide that employees who select the HMO option continue to be eligible for optical coverage.
(iii) The non-HMO option includes dental coverage in its major medical package, with a common deductible applied to dental as well as non-dental benefits. The HMO provides no dental coverage as part of its pre-paid health services. Because the dental coverage is not free-standing, the employing entity is not required to provide that employees who select the HMO option continue to be eligible for dental coverage, but is free to do so.
(e)
(i) Are new employees.
(ii) Have been transferred or have changed their place of residence, resulting in—
(A) Eligibility for enrollment in a qualified HMO for which they were not previously eligible by place of residence; or
(B) Residence outside the service area of a qualified HMO in which they were previously enrolled.
(iii) Are covered by any coverage option that ceases operation.
(2)
(3)
(i) Enrollment in a particular qualified HMO is offered for the first time.
(ii) The eligible employee elects to change from one option to another.
(iii) The eligible employee is one of those specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(f)
(1) For employees represented by a collective bargaining representative, the selection of copayment levels and supplemental health services is subject to the collective bargaining process.
(2) For employees not represented by a bargaining representative, the selection of copayment levels and supplemental health services is subject to the same decisionmaking process used by the employing entity with respect to the non-HMO option in its health benefits plan.
(3) In all cases, the HMO has the right to include, with the basic benefits package it provides to its enrollees for a basic health services payment, on a non-negotiable basis, those supplemental health services that meet the following conditions:
(i) Are required to be offered under State law.
(ii) Are included uniformly by the HMO in its prepaid benefit package.
(iii) Are available to employees who select the non-HMO option but not available to those who select the HMO option.
(a)
(2) If the HMO's request for inclusion in a health benefits plan is received at a time when existing contracts or agreements do not provide for inclusion, the employing entity must include the HMO option in the health benefits plan at the time that new agreements or contracts are offered or negotiated.
(b)
(1)
(i) When a new agreement is negotiated;
(ii) At the time prescribed, in an agreement with a fixed term of more than 1 year, for discussion of change in health benefits; or
(iii) In accordance with a specific process for review of HMO offers.
(2)
(i) If a contract has no fixed term or has a term in excess of 1 year, the contract must be treated as renewable on its earliest anniversary date.
(ii) If the employing entity or designee is self-insured, the budget year must be treated as the term of the existing contract.
(3)
(i) At the time each contract or arrangement is renewed or reissued; or
(ii) The benefits provided under the contract or arrangement are offered to employees.
(a)
(2)
(3)
(i) The employer contribution to the HMO is the same, per employee, as the contribution to non-HMO alternatives.
(ii) The employer contribution reflects the composition of the HMO's enrollment in terms of enrollee attributes that can reasonably be used to predict utilization, experience, costs, or risk. For each enrollee in a given class established on the basis of those attributes, the employer contributes an equal amount, regardless of the health benefits plan chosen by the employee.
(iii) The employer contribution is a fixed percentage of the premium for each of the alternatives offered.
(iv) The employer contribution is determined under a mutually acceptable arrangement negotiated by the HMO and the employer. In negotiating the arrangement, the employer may not insist on terms that would cause the HMO to violate any of the requirements of this part.
(4)
(b)
(2) However, if the employing entity or designee has special requirements for other than standard solicitation brochures and enrollment literature, it must, in the case of the HMO alternative, determine and distribute any administrative costs attributable to those requirements in a manner consistent with its method of determining and distributing those costs for the non-HMO alternatives.
(c)
(1) For which eligible employees and their eligible dependents are covered notwithstanding selection of the HMO alternative; and
(2) That are not offered on a prepayment basis by the HMO to the employing entity's employees.
(d)
(e)
(f)
(1) The data used to compute the level of contribution for each of the plans offered to employees.
(2) Related data about the employees who are eligible to enroll in a plan.
(3) A description of the methodology for computation.
(g)
(2) The purpose of CMS's review is to determine whether the methodology and the level of contribution comply with the requirements of this subpart.
(3) HMOs and employees that request CMS to review must set forth reasonable grounds for making the request.
Each employing entity that provides payroll deductions as a means of paying employees' contributions for health benefits or provides a health benefits plan that does not require an employee contribution must, with the consent of an employee who selects the HMO option, arrange for the employee's contribution, if any, to be paid through payroll deductions.
The decision of an employing entity subject to this subpart to include the HMO alternative in any health benefits plan offered to its eligible employees must be carried out consistently with the obligations imposed on that employing entity under the National Labor Relations Act, the Railway
This subpart applies to any entity that has been determined to be a qualified HMO under subpart D of this part.
Any entity subject to this subpart must comply with the assurances that it provided to CMS, unless compliance is waived under § 417.166.
Entities subject to this subpart must submit:
(a) The reports that may be required by CMS under § 417.126, and
(b) Any additional reports CMS may reasonably require.
(a)
(1) State the grounds and underlying facts of the complaint;
(2) Give the names of all persons involved; and
(3) Assure that all appropriate grievance and appeals procedures established by the HMO and available to the complainant have been exhausted.
(b)
(2) When CMS initiates an investigation, it gives the HMO written notice that includes a full statement of the pertinent facts and of the matters being investigated and indicates that the HMO may submit, within 30 days of the date of the notice, a written report concerning these matters.
(3) CMS obtains any information it considers necessary to resolve issues related to the assurances, and may use site visits, public hearings, or any other procedures that CMS considers appropriate in seeking this information.
(c)
(ii) CMS publishes in the
(2)
(ii) The notice specifies the manner in which the HMO has not complied with its assurances and directs the HMO to initiate the corrective action that CMS considers necessary to bring the HMO into compliance.
(iii) The HMO must initiate this corrective action within 30 days of the date of the notice from CMS, or within any longer period that CMS determines to be reasonable and specifies in the notice. The HMO must carry out the corrective action within the time period specified by CMS in the notice.
(iv) The notice may provide the HMO an opportunity to submit, for CMS's approval, proposed methods for achieving compliance.
(d)
(2) In the notice, CMS provides the HMO with an opportunity for reconsideration of the revocation, including, at the HMO's election, a fair hearing.
(3) The revocation of qualification is effective on the tenth calendar day
(4) If after reconsideration CMS again determines to revoke the HMO's qualification, this revocation is effective on the tenth calendar day after the date of the notice of reconsidered determination.
(5) CMS publishes in the
(6) A revocation under this paragraph (d) has the effect described in § 417.164.
(e)
(1) The HMO's enrollees.
(2) Each employer or public entity that has offered enrollment in the HMO in accordance with subpart E of this part.
(3) Each lawfully recognized collective bargaining representative or other representative of the employees of the employer or public entity.
(f)
(i) Expenses for basic or supplemental health services that the enrollee obtained from other sources because the HMO failed to provide or arrange for them in accordance with its assurances.
(ii) Any amounts the HMO charged the enrollee that are inconsistent with its assurances. (Rules applicable to charges for all enrollees are set forth in §§ 417.104 and 417.105. The additional rules applicable to Medicare enrollees are in § 415.454.)
(2) This paragraph applies regardless of when the HMO failed to comply with the appropriate assurances.
(g)
(2)
When an HMO's qualification is revoked under § 417.163(d), the following rules apply:
(a) The HMO may not seek inclusion in employees health benefits plans under subpart E of this part.
(b) Inclusion of the HMO in an employer's health benefits plan—
(1) Is disregarded in determining whether the employer is subject to the requirements of subpart E of this part; and
(2) Does not constitute compliance with subpart E of this part by the employer.
An entity whose qualification as an HMO has been revoked by CMS for purposes of section 1310 of the PHS Act may, after completing the corrective action required under § 417.163(c)(2), reapply for a determination of qualification in accordance with the procedures specified in subpart D of this part.
(a)
(1) The qualification requirements are changed by Federal law; or
(2) The HMO shows good cause, consistent with the purposes of title XIII of the PHS Act.
(b)
(i) The HMO has filed for reorganization under Federal bankruptcy provisions and the reorganization can only be approved with the waiver of the assurances.
(ii) State laws governing the entity have been changed after it signed the assurances so as to prohibit the HMO from being organized and operated in a manner consistent with the signed assurances.
(2) Changes in State laws do not constitute good cause to the extent that the changes are preempted by Federal law under section 1311 of the PHS Act.
(c)
(a)
(b)
(2) The rules for payment to HMOs and CMPs are set forth in subparts N, O, and P of this part.
(3) The rules for HCPP participation in Medicare under section 1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act are set forth in subpart U of this part.
As used in this subpart and subparts K through R of this part, unless the context indicates otherwise—
(1) The other entity agrees to furnish specified services to the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees;
(2) The HMO or CMP retains responsibility for the services; and
(3) Medicare payment to the HMO or CMP discharges the beneficiary's obligation to pay for the services.
(1) Are needed immediately because of an injury or sudden illness.
(2) Are such that the time required to reach the HMO's or CMP's providers or suppliers (or alternatives authorized by the HMO or CMP) would mean risk of permanent damage to the enrollee's health.
(1) Enrolls with an HMO or CMP after the date on which the HMO or CMP first enters into a risk contract under subpart L of this part; and
(2) Was not enrolled with the HMO or CMP at the time he or she became entitled to benefits under Part A or eligible to enroll in Part B of Medicare.
(1) Are required in order to prevent serious deterioration of the enrollee's health as a result of unforeseen injury or illness; and
(2) Cannot be delayed until the enrollee returns to the HMO's or CMP's geographic area.
(a) The changes made to section 1876 of the Act by section 114 of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 became effective on February 1, 1985, the effective date of the initial implementing regulations.
(b) No new cost plan contracts are accepted by CMS. CMS will, however, accept and approve applications to modify cost plan contracts in order to expand service areas, provided they are submitted on or before September 1, 2006, and CMS determines that the organization continues to meet regulatory requirements and the requirements in its cost plan contract. Section 1876 cost plan contracts will not be extended or renewed beyond December 31, 2007, where conditions in paragraph (c) of this section are present.
(c)
(1) There were two or more coordinated care plan-model MA regional plans not offered by the same MA organization in the same service area or portion of a service area for the entire previous calendar year meeting the conditions in paragraph(c)(3) of this section; or
(2) There were two or more coordinated care plan-model MA local plans not offered by the same MA organization in the same service area or portion of a service area for the entire previous calendar year meeting the conditions in paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
(3)
(a) In order to contract with CMS under the Medicare program, an entity must—
(1) Be determined by CMS to be an HMO or CMP (in accordance with §§ 117.142 and 417.407, respectively); and
(2) Comply with the contract requirements set forth in subpart L of this part.
(b) CMS enters into or renews a contract only if it determines that action would be consistent with the effective and efficient implementation of section 1876 of the Act.
(a)
(b)
(2) The requirements of § 417.143 also apply to CMPs except that there are no application fees.
(c)
(d)
(2) If an entity no longer meets those requirements, CMS terminates the contract of that entity in accordance with § 417.494.
(a)
(b)
(i) Physicians' services performed by physicians.
(ii) Laboratory, x-ray, emergency, and preventive services.
(iii) Out-of-area coverage.
(iv) Inpatient hospital services.
(2) Exception for Medicaid prepayment risk contracts. An entity that had, before 1970, a Medicaid prepayment risk contract that did not include provision of inpatient hospital services is not required to provide those services.
(c)
(d)
(1) Physicians who are employees or partners of the entity; or
(2) Physicians or groups of physicians (organized on a group or individual practice basis) under contract with the entity to provide physicians' services.
(e)
(f)
(a)
(b)
(2) If the HMO or CMP is dissatisfied with a determination that it meets the requirements only for a reasonable cost contract, it may request reconsideration in accordance with the procedures specified in subpart R of this part.
(c)
(1) That it does not meet the contract requirements under section 1876 of the Act;
(2) The reasons why the HMO or CMP does not meet the contract requirements; and
(3) The HMO's or CMP's right to request reconsideration in accordance with the procedures specified in subpart R of this part.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(1) The HMO's or CMP's activities;
(2) The extent to which the HMO or CMP complies with each condition;
(3) The nature and extent of any deficiencies; and
(4) The need for improvement if CMS should enter into a contract with the HMO or CMP.
(e)
(1) Meets all the applicable requirements in the statute and regulations;
(2) Has at least 5,000 enrollees or 1,500 enrollees if it serves a primarily rural area as defined in § 417.413(b)(3);
(3) Has at least 75 Medicare enrollees or has an acceptable plan to achieve this Medicare membership within 2 years;
(4) Satisfies CMS that it can bear the potential losses of a risk contract; and
(5) Has not previously terminated or failed to renew a risk contract within the preceding 5 years, unless CMS determines that circumstances warrant special consideration.
(f)
(1) The HMO or CMP qualifies for a risk contract, but chooses a reasonable cost contract.
(2) The HMO or CMP meets the conditions for entering into a risk contract specified in paragraph (e) of this section except that CMS does not judge the HMO or CMP capable of bearing the potential losses of a risk contract.
(g) Regulations on reasonable cost and risk reimbursement are set forth in subparts O and P of this part.
The HMO or CMP must demonstrate that it—
(a) Has sufficient administrative capability to carry out the requirements of the contract; and
(b) Does not have any agents or management staff or persons with ownership or control interests who have been convicted of criminal offenses related to their involvement in Medicaid, Medicare, or social service programs under title XX of the Act.
(a)
(b)
(1) A nonrural HMO or CMP must currently have the following:
(i) At least 5,000 enrollees; and
(ii) At least 75 Medicare enrollees or a plan acceptable to CMS for achieving a Medicare enrollment of 75 within 2 years from the beginning of its initial contract period.
(2) A rural HMO or CMP must currently have—
(i) At least 1,500 enrollees; and
(ii) At least 75 Medicare enrollees or a plan acceptable to CMS for achieving a Medicare enrollment of 75 within 2 years from the beginning of its initial contract period.
(3) For purposes of this paragraph, an HMO or CMP is considered rural if at least 50 percent of its enrollees reside in nonmetropolitan areas. A nonmetropolitan area is an area—
(i) No part of which is within a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) as designated by the Executive Office of Management and Budget; and
(ii) That does not contain a city whose population exceeds 50,000 individuals.
(4) A subdivision or subsidiary of an HMO or CMP that meets the requirements of paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section need not demonstrate that it meets those requirements as an independent unit if the HMO or CMP assumes responsibility for the financial risk, and adequate management and supervision of health care services furnished by its subdivision or subsidiary.
(c)
(1) At least 1,500 enrollees.
(2) At least 75 Medicare enrollees, or a plan acceptable to CMS for achieving—
(i) A Medicare enrollment of 75 within 2 years from the beginning of its initial contract period; and
(ii) At least 250 Medicare enrollees by the beginning of its fourth contract period.
(d)
(2)
(i) The HMO or CMP serves a geographic area in which Medicare beneficiaries and Medicaid beneficiaries constitute more than 50 percent of the population. (CMS does not grant a waiver that would permit the percentage of Medicare and Medicaid enrollees to exceed the percentage of Medicare beneficiaries and Medicaid beneficiaries in the population of the geographic area.)
(ii) The HMO or CMP is owned and operated by a government entity. The waiver may be for a period up to three years after the date the HMO or CMP first enters into a contract under this subpart, and may not be extended.
(iii) The HMO or CMP requests waiver of the composition rule because it is in the public interest. The organization provides documentation that supports one of the following:
(A) The organization serves a medically underserved rural or urban area.
(B) The organization demonstrates a long-term business and community service commitment to the area.
(C) The organization believes that a waiver is necessary to promote managed care choices in an area with limited or no managed care choices.
(3)
(i) If CMS determines that the HMO or CMP has complied, or made significant progress toward compliance, with the approved schedule, and that an extension is in the best interest of the Medicare program, CMS may extend the waiver of modification.
(ii) If CMS determines that the HMO or CMP has not complied with the approved schedule, CMS may apply the sanctions described in paragraphs (d)(6) and (d)(7) of this section.
(4)
(5)
(6)
(i) Require the HMO or CMP to stop accepting new enrollment applications after a date specified by CMS.
(ii) Deny payment for individuals who are formally added or “accreted” to CMS's records as Medicare enrollees after a date specified by CMS.
(7)
(8)
(e)
(2) CMS may waive the requirement of paragraph (e)(1) of this section if
(a)
(b)
(2)
(i) The sources are located within the HMO's or CMP's geographic area; or
(ii) It is common practice to refer patients to sources outside that geographic area.
(3)
(i) A hospice participating in Medicare is located within the HMO's or CMP's geographic area; or
(ii) It is common practice to refer patients to hospices outside the geographic area.
(c)
(2) An HMO or CMP must assume financial responsibility for services that the Medicare enrollee attempted to obtain from the HMO or CMP, but that the HMO or CMP failed to furnish or unreasonably denied, and that are found, upon appeal by the enrollee under subpart Q of this part, to be services that the enrollee was entitled to have furnished to him or her by the HMO or CMP.
(a)
(b)
(2) Suppliers must meet the conditions for coverage or conditions for certification of their services, as set forth elsewhere in this chapter.
(3) If more than one type of practitioner is qualified to furnish a particular service, the HMO or CMP may select the type of practitioner to be used.
(c)
(1) Services furnished by paramedical, ancillary, and other nonphysician personnel are furnished under the direct supervision of a physician;
(2) A physician is present to perform medical (as opposed to administrative) services whenever the clinics or offices are open; and
(3) Each patient is under the care of a physician.
(d)
(1) Services of physician assistants and nurse practitioners (as defined in § 491.2 of this chapter), and the services and supplies incident to their services. The conditions for payment, as set forth in §§ 405.2414 and 405.2415 of this chapter for services furnished by rural health clinics and Federally qualified health centers, respectively, also apply when those services are furnished by an HMO or CMP.
(2) When furnished by an HMO or CMP, services of clinical psychologists who meet the qualifications specified in § 410.71(d) of this chapter, and the services and supplies incident to their professional services.
(3) When an HMO or CMP contracts on—
(i) A risk basis, the services of a clinical social worker (as defined at § 410.73 of this chapter) and the services and supplies incident to their professional services; or
(ii) A cost basis, the services of a clinical social worker (as defined in § 410.73 of this chapter). Services incident to the professional services of a clinical social worker furnished by an HMO or CMP contracting on a cost basis are not covered by Medicare and payment will not be made for these services.
(e)
(2) The HMO or CMP must maintain a health (including medical) recordkeeping system through which pertinent information relating to the health care of its Medicare enrollees is accumulated and is readily available to appropriate professionals.
(a)
(b)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(2) As described in § 417.448, Medicare enrollees of risk HMOs or CMPs are liable for services that they obtain from sources other than the HMO or CMP, unless the services are—
(i) Emergency or urgently needed; or
(ii) Determined, on appeal under subpart Q of this part, to be services that should have been furnished by the HMO or CMP.
Except as specified in §§ 417.423 and 417.424, an HMO or CMP must enroll, either for an indefinite period or for a specified period of at least 12 months, any individual who—
(a) Is entitled to Medicare benefits under Parts A and B or under Part B only;
(b) Lives within the geographic area served by the HMO or CMP;
(c) Is not enrolled in any other HMO or CMP that has entered into a contract under subpart L of this part;
(d) During an enrollment period of the HMO or CMP, completes the HMO's or CMP's application form or another CMS-approved election mechanism and gives whatever information is required for enrollment;
(e) Agrees to abide by the HMO's or CMP's rules after they are disclosed to him or her in connection with the enrollment process;
(f) Is not denied enrollment by the HMO or CMP under a selection policy, if any, that has been approved by CMS under § 417.424(b); and
(g) Is not denied enrollment by the HMO or CMP on the basis of any of the administrative criteria concerning denial of enrollment in § 417.424(a).
(a)
(2) However, if a beneficiary is already enrolled in an HMO or CMP when he or she is determined to have end-stage renal disease, the HMO or CMP—
(i) Must reenroll the beneficiary as required by § 417.434; and
(ii) May not disenroll the beneficiary except as provided in § 417.460.
(b)
(a)
(1) Cause the number of enrollees who are Medicare or Medicaid beneficiaries to exceed 50 percent of the HMO's or CMP's total enrollment;
(2) Prevent the HMO or CMP from complying with any of the other contract qualifying conditions set forth in subpart J of this part;
(3) Require the HMO or CMP to exceed its enrollment capacity; or
(4) Cause the enrollment to become substantially nonrepresentative of the general population in the HMO's or CMP's geographic area.
(b)
(a)
(2) During open enrollment, the HMO or CMP must enroll eligible Medicare beneficiaries in the order in which their applications are received and until its enrollment capacity is reached.
(3) The HMO or CMP may accept applications from Medicare beneficiaries after it has reached capacity if it places those individuals on a waiting list and enrolls them in chronological order as vacancies occur.
(4) An HMO or CMP with a risk contract must accept applications from eligible Medicare beneficiaries during the month of November 1998.
(b)
(2) CMS evaluates the HMO's or CMP's submittal under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(3) The HMO or CMP must promptly notify CMS if there is any change in its enrollment capacity.
(c)
(2) Any set aside vacancies that are not filled within a reasonable time after the beginning of the group contract enrollment period must be made available to Medicare beneficiaries and other nongroup applicants under the requirements of this subpart.
(a) The procedures and requirements relating to disclosure in § 422.111 and § 423.128 apply to Medicare contracts with HMOs and CMPs under section 1876 of the Act.
(b) In applying the provisions of §§ 422.111 and 423.128, references to part 422 and part 423 of this chapter must be read as references to this part, and references to MA organizations and Part D sponsors as references to HMOs and CMPs.
(a) With the exception of § 422.2276 of this chapter, the procedures and requirements relating to marketing requirements set forth in subpart V of part 422 of this chapter also apply to Medicare contracts with HMOs and CMPs under section 1876 of the Act.
(b) In applying those provisions, references to part 422 of this chapter must be read as references to this part, and references to MA organizations as references to HMOs and CMPs.
(a)
(2) The HMO or CMP must file and retain application forms for the period specified in CMS instructions.
(b)
(1) Each application is dated as of the day it is received.
(2) Applications are processed in chronological order by date of receipt.
(3) The HMO or CMP gives the beneficiary prompt notice of acceptance or denial in a format specified by CMS.
(4) The notice of acceptance. If the HMO or CMP is currently enrolled to capacity, explains the procedures that will be followed when vacancies occur.
(5) The notice of denial explains the reason for denial.
(6) The HMO or CMP transmits the information necessary for CMS to add the beneficiary to its records of the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees—
(i) Within 30 days from the date of application or from the date a vacancy occurs for an applicant who was accepted (for future enrollment) while there were no vacancies; or
(ii) Within an additional period of time approved by CMS on a showing by the HMO or CMP that it needs more time.
(7) The HMO or CMP promptly notifies the beneficiary of the effective month of his or her enrollment as a Medicare enrollee, when it receives that information from CMS.
(8) If the HMO or CMP accepts applications while it is enrolled to capacity, its procedures ensure that vacancies are filled in chronological order by date of application of beneficiaries who are still eligible to enroll, unless that would result in failure to comply with any of the qualifying conditions set forth in § 417.413.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(1) At least 30, but no earlier than 90, days before the enrollee—
(i) Attains age 65; or
(ii) Reaches his or her 25th month of entitlement to social security disability benefits under title II of the Act or railroad retirement disability benefits under section 7(d) of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1974.
(2) Within 30 days after the enrollee initiates a course of renal dialysis, or on or before the day he or she enters a hospital in anticipation of a kidney transplant.
If an HMO or CMP requires periodic reenrollment, it must reenroll Medicare enrollees unless there is a basis for disenrollment as set forth in § 417.460.
(a)
(1) All benefits provided under the contract, as described in § 417.440.
(2) How and where to obtain services from or through the HMO or CMP.
(3) The restrictions on coverage for services furnished from sources outside a risk HMO or CMP, other than emergency services and urgently needed services (as defined in § 417.401).
(4) The obligation of the HMO or CMP to assume financial responsibility and provide reasonable reimbursement for emergency services and urgently needed services as required by § 417.414(c).
(5) Any services other than the emergency or urgently needed services that the HMO or CMP chooses to provide as permitted by this part, from sources outside the HMO or CMP. A cost HMO or CMP must disclose that the enrollee may receive services through any Medicare providers and suppliers.
(6) Premium information, including the amount (or if the amount cannot be included, the telephone number of the source from which this information may be obtained) and the procedures for paying premiums and other charges for which enrollees may be liable.
(7) Grievance and appeal procedures.
(8) Disenrollment rights.
(9) The obligation of an enrollee who is leaving the HMO's or CMP's geographic area for more than 90 days to notify the HMO or CMP of the move or extended absence and the HMO's or CMP's policies concerning retention of enrollees who leave the geographic area for more than 90 days, as described in § 417.460(a)(2).
(10) The expiration date of the Medicare contract with CMS and notice that both CMS and the HMO or CMP are authorized by law to terminate or refuse to renew the contract, and that termination or nonrenewal of the contract may result in termination of the individual's enrollment in the HMO or CMP.
(11) Advance directives as specified in paragraph (d) of this section.
(12) Any other matters that CMS may prescribe.
(b)
(c)
(d)
(i) Provide written information to those individuals concerning—
(A) Their rights under the law of the State in which the organization furnishes services (whether statutory or recognized by the courts of the State) to make decisions concerning such medical care, including the right to accept or refuse medical or surgical treatment and the right to formulate, at the individual's option, advance directives. Providers are permitted to contract with other entities to furnish this information but are still legally responsible for ensuring that the requirements of this section are met. Such information must reflect changes in State law as soon as possible, but no later than 90 days after the effective date of the State law; and
(B) The HMO's or CMP's written policies respecting the implementation of those rights, including a clear and precise statement of limitation if the HMO or CMP cannot implement an advance directive as a matter of conscience. At a minimum, this statement should:
(
(
(
(ii) Provide the information specified in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) of this section to each enrollee at the time of initial enrollment. If an enrollee is incapacitated at the time of initial enrollment
(iii) Document in the individual's medical record whether or not the individual has executed an advance directive;
(iv) Not condition the provision of care or otherwise discriminate against an individual based on whether or not the individual has executed an advance directive;
(v) Ensure compliance with requirements of State law (whether statutory or recognized by the courts of the State) regarding advance directives;
(vi) Provide for education of staff concerning its policies and procedures on advance directives; and
(vii) Provide for community education regarding advance directives that may include material required in paragraph (d)(1)(i)(A) of this section, either directly or in concert with other providers or entities. Separate community education materials may be developed and used, at the discretion of the HMO or CMP. The same written materials are not required for all settings, but the material should define what constitutes an advance directive, emphasizing that an advance directive is designed to enhance an incapacitated individual's control over medical treatment, and describe applicable State law concerning advance directives. An HMO or CMP must be able to document its community education efforts.
(2) The HMO or CMP—(i) Is not required to provide care that conflicts with an advance directive.
(ii) Is not required to implement an advance directive if, as a matter of conscience, the HMO or CMP cannot implement an advance directive and State law allows any health care provider or any agent of such provider to conscientiously object.
(3) The HMO or CMP must inform individuals that complaints concerning non-compliance with the advance directive requirements may be filed with the State survey and certification agency.
(a)
(2) A Medicare enrollee is also entitled to receive timely and reasonable payment directly (or have payment made on his or her behalf) for services he or she obtained from a provider or supplier outside the HMO or CMP if those services are—
(i) Emergency services or urgently needed services as defined § 417.401;
(ii) Services denied by the HMO or CMP and found (upon appeal under subpart Q of this part) to be services the enrollee was entitled to have furnished by the HMO or CMP.
(b)
(i) Medicare Part A and Part B services if the enrollee is entitled to benefits under both programs.
(ii) Medicare Part B services if the enrollee is entitled only under that program.
(2)
(ii) An HMO or CMP may elect to provide qualified prescription drug coverage (as defined at § 423.104 of this chapter) as an optional supplemental service in accordance with the applicable requirements under part 423 of this chapter, including § 423.104(f)(4) of this chapter.
(iii) The HMO or CMP may not set health status standards for those enrollees whom it accepts for these optional supplemental services.
(3)
(4)
(i) A reduction in the HMO's or CMP's premium rate or in other charges for services furnished to Medicare enrollees.
(ii) Provision of health benefits or services beyond the required Part A and Part B coverage.
(5)
(c)
(ii)
(A) Is an employee or contractor of the HMO or CMP; and
(B) Is not an employee of the designated hospice and does not receive compensation from the hospice for those services.
(2)
(i) The effective date of the enrollee's revocation of the election of hospice care as described in § 418.28 of this chapter.
(ii) The date the enrollee exhausts his or her hospice benefits.
(3)
(d)
(1) Is not responsible for the provision of any of the inpatient hospital services under Part A during the stay and is not required to pay for those services;
(2) Must assume responsibility for payment for or provision of inpatient hospital services under Part A on the day after the day of discharge from the inpatient stay; and
(3) Is responsible for the full scope of services under paragraph (b) of this section, other than inpatient hospital
(e)
(1) Is financially responsible for payment of the inpatient services under Part A through the date the beneficiary is discharged from the inpatient stay; and
(2) Is not responsible for the provision of services, furnished on or after the effective date of disenrollment, other than inpatient hospital services under Part A.
(f)
(2) Before giving notice of noncoverage, the HMO or CMP must obtain the concurrence of its affiliated physician responsible for the hospital care of the enrollee, or other physician as authorized by the HMO or CMP.
(3) The HMO or CMP must give the enrollee written notice that includes the following:
(i) The reason why inpatient hospital care is no longer needed.
(ii) The effective date of the enrollee's liability for continued inpatient care.
(iii) The enrollee's appeal rights.
(4) If the HMO or CMP delegates to the hospital the determination of noncoverage of inpatient care, the hospital obtains the concurrence of the HMO- or CMP-affiliated physician responsible for the hospital care of the enrollee, or other physician as authorized by the HMO or CMP, and sends notice, following the procedures set forth in § 412.42(c)(3) of this chapter.
(a)
(b)
(i) Elects to receive reduced payment so that there is no difference between the average of its per capita rates of payment and its ACR; or
(ii) Elects to receive partially reduced payment and furnish Medicare enrollees with additional benefits described in § 417.440 (b)(4) so that the combined value of benefits and reduced payment is equivalent to the difference between the average of its per capita rates of payment and its ACR.
(2)
(a)
(1) On February 1, 1985, was enrolled—
(i) In an HMO or CMP that had in effect a cost contract entered into under section 1876 of the Act in accordance with regulations in effect before February 1, 1985; or
(ii) In an HCPP that was being reimbursed on a reasonable cost basis under section 1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act.
(2) Has continued enrollment in the same entity without interruption or disenrolled after February 1, 1985, and later reenrolled in the same entity.
(b)
(2) A nonrisk enrollee of a risk HMO or CMP is not entitled to additional benefits under § 417.442.
(c)
(i) CMS notifies each affected enrollee of the decision at least 90 days prior to the effective date.
(ii) The nonrisk Medicare enrollees complete and sign forms stating that they understand and accept the new rules and benefits that will be applicable to them.
(iii) The HMO or CMP notifies each affected enrollee, in writing, at least 30 days in advance, of the date upon which his or her coverage under the risk portion of the contract takes effect.
(2)
(d)
(a)
(1) Directly by the HMO or CMP; or
(2) Through arrangements made by the HMO or CMP.
(b)
(1) New Medicare enrollees;
(2) Nonrisk Medicare enrollees who convert to risk reimbursement; and
(3) Nonrisk Medicare enrollees who elect special supplemental benefit plans.
(c)
(d)
(a)
(1) CMS's liability for payments to an HMO or CMP on behalf of a Medicare
(i) Entitled to Medicare benefits; and
(ii) Enrolled in an HMO or CMP; and
(2) The effective month of coverage may not be earlier than the first month after, nor later than the third month after the month in which CMS receives the information necessary to include the beneficiary as a Medicare enrollee of the HMO or CMP in CMS records.
(b)
(2) If an individual becomes an HMO or CMP enrollee before becoming entitled to Medicare Part B benefits, the effective month of coverage is the first month for which he or she becomes entitled to Medicare Part B benefits.
(c)
(a)
(2) The deductible and coinsurance amounts may be paid by or on behalf of the enrollee in the form of a premium, membership fee, charge per unit, or other similar charge.
(3) The sum of the amounts the HMO or CMP charges its Medicare enrollees for Medicare deductibles and coinsurance may not exceed, on the average, the actuarial value of the deductible and coinsurance the Medicare enrollees otherwise would have been liable for had they not enrolled in the HMO or CMP or in another HMO or CMP.
(b)
(1) All services that are not covered under Medicare Part A or Part B; or
(2) If entitled only to Medicare Part B benefits, all services that are not covered under Medicare Part B.
(c)
(d)
(2) If a supplemental benefit plan premium includes charges for both noncovered services and the deductible and coinsurance amounts applicable to covered services, the portion of the premium that is for deductibles and coinsurance must be computed separately and must be disclosed to the beneficiary during the enrollment process and before he or she elects coverage options.
(3) The sum of the amounts an HMO or CMP charges its Medicare enrollees for services that are not covered under Part A or Part B may not exceed the ACR for these services.
(e)
(a)
(1) Deductible and coinsurance amounts applicable to furnished covered services;
(2) Charges for noncovered services or services for which the enrollee is liable as described in § 417.452; and
(3) Services for which Medicare is not the primary payor as provided in § 417.528.
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(1) Chemotherapy administration services to include chemotherapy drugs and radiation therapy integral to the treatment regimen.
(2) Renal dialysis services as defined at section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act.
(3) Skilled nursing care defined as services provided during a covered stay in a skilled nursing facility during the period for which cost sharing would apply under Original Medicare.
(a)
(1) Emergency services;
(2) Urgently needed services for which the HMO or CMP has assumed financial responsibility; or
(3) On appeal under subpart Q of this part, found to be services the enrollee was entitled to have furnished by the HMO or CMP.
(b)
(c)
(1) Incorrectly collected amounts that were not collected as premiums.
(2) Other amounts due.
(3) All amounts due, if the HMO or CMP is going out of business.
(d)
(e)
(f)
An HMO or CMP agrees not to recoup deductible and coinsurance amounts for which Medicare enrollees were liable in a previous contract period except in the following circumstances:
(a) The HMO or CMP failed to collect the deductible and coinsurance amounts during the contract period in which they were due because of—
(1) Underestimation of the actuarial value of the deductible and coinsurance amounts; or
(2) A billing error.
(b) The HMO or CMP has identified the amounts and obtained advance CMS approval of the recoupment and the method and timing of recoupment.
(c) The HMO or CMP collects these amounts no later than the end of the contract period following the contract period during which they were found to be due.
(a)
(1) Disenroll a Medicare beneficiary; or
(2) Orally or in writing, or by any action or inaction, request or encourage a Medicare enrollee to disenroll.
(b)
(i) Fails to pay the required premiums or other charges;
(ii) Commits fraud or permits abuse of his or her enrollment card; or
(iii) Behaves in a manner that seriously impairs the HMO's or CMP's ability to furnish health care services to the particular enrollee or to other enrollees.
(2)
(i) Moves out of the HMO's or CMP's geographic area;
(ii) Fails to convert to the risk provisions of the HMO's or CMP's Medicare contract;
(iii) Loses entitlement to Medicare Part B benefits; or
(iv) Dies.
(3)
(c)
(i) Can demonstrate to CMS that it made reasonable efforts to collect the unpaid amount;
(ii) Gives the enrollee written notice of disenrollment, including an explanation of the enrollee's right to a hearing under the HMO's or CMP's grievance procedures; and
(iii) Sends the notice of disenrollment to the enrollee before it notifies CMS.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(d)
(i) Knowingly provides, on the application form, fraudulent information that materially affects the beneficiary's eligibility to enroll in the HMO or CMP; or
(ii) Intentionally permits others to use his or her enrollment card to obtain services from the HMO or CMP.
(2)
(i) The notice must be mailed to the enrollee before submission of the disenrollment notice to CMS.
(ii) The notice must include an explanation of the enrollee's right to have the disenrollment heard under the grievance procedures established in accordance with § 417.436.
(3)
(e)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(ii) CMS makes this decision within 20 working days after receipt of the documentation material, and notifies the HMO or CMP within 5 working days after making its decision.
(6)
(f)
(ii)
(iii)
(2)
(i) An absence for an extended period means an uninterrupted absence from the HMO's or CMP's geographic area for more than 90 days but less than 1 year.
(ii) The HMO or CMP and the enrollee may mutually agree upon restrictions for obtaining services while the enrollee is absent for an extended period from the HMO's or CMP's geographic area. However, restrictions may not be imposed on the scope of services described in § 417.440.
(iii) HMOs and CMPs that choose to exercise this exception must make the option available to all Medicare enrollees who are absent for an extended period from their geographic areas. However, HMOs and CMPs may limit this option to enrollees who go to a geographic area served by an affiliated HMO or CMP.
(iv) As used in this paragraph, “affiliated HMO or CMP” means an HMO or CMP that—
(A) Is under common ownership or control of the HMO or CMP that seeks to retain the absent enrollees; or
(B) Has in effect an agreement to furnish services to enrollees who are on an extended absence from the geographic area of the HMO or CMP that seeks to retain them.
(v) When the enrollee returns to the HMO's or CMP's geographic area (even temporarily), the restrictions of § 417.448(a) (which limit payment for services not provided or arranged for by the HMO or CMP) apply again immediately.
(vi) If the enrollee fails to return to the HMO's or CMP's geographic area within 1 year from the date he or she left that area, the HMO or CMP must disenroll the beneficiary on the first day of the month following the anniversary of the date the enrollee left that area in accordance with paragraph (f)(1) of this section.
(g)
(2)
(h)
(2)
(i)
(a)
(2) The enrollee may request a certain disenrollment date but it may be no earlier than the first day of the month following the month in which the HMO or CMP receives the request.
(b)
(1) Submit a disenrollment notice to CMS promptly;
(2) Provide the enrollee with a copy of the request for disenrollment; and
(3) In the case of a risk HMO or CMP, also provide the enrollee with a statement explaining that he or she—
(i) Remains enrolled until the effective date of disenrollment; and
(ii) Until that date, is subject to the restrictions of § 417.448(a) under which neither the HMO or CMP nor CMS pays for services not provided or arranged for by the HMO or CMP.
(c)
(a)
(2) Disenrollment is effective no earlier than the month immediately after, and no later than the third month after, the month in which CMS receives the disenrollment notice in acceptable form.
(b)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(c)
(2)
(i) Determines the month in which its liability for payments ends; and
(ii) Notifies the HMO or CMP and all affected Medicare enrollees as soon as practicable.
(a)
(b)
(1) Specific contract requirements; and
(2) Procedures for renewal, nonrenewal, or termination of a contract.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
(2) In applying the part 422 rules, references to “M+C organizations” or “M+C plans” must be read as references to “risk HMOs and CMPs”.
(i) The HMO or CMP must comply with the requirements at § 422.152(b)(5).
(j) All coordinated care contracts (including local and regional PPOs, contracts with exclusively SNP benefit packages, private fee-for-service contracts, and MSA contracts), and all cost contracts under section 1876 of the Act, with 600 or more enrollees in July of the prior year, must contract with approved Medicare Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) survey vendors to conduct the Medicare CAHPS satisfaction survey of Medicare plan enrollees in accordance with CMS specifications and submit the survey data to CMS.
(a)
(b)
(1) For the initial term, at least 12 months, but no more than 23 months.
(2) For any subsequent term, 12 months.
If CMS waives any of the qualifying conditions required under subpart J of this part, the contract must specify the following information for each waived condition:
(a) The specific terms of the waiver.
(b) The expiration date of the waiver.
(c) Any other information required by CMS.
The contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to comply with—
(a) The requirements for QIO review of services furnished to Medicare enrollees as set forth in subchapter D of this chapter;
(b) Sections 1318(a) and (c) of the PHS Act, which pertain to disclosure of certain financial information;
(c) Section 1301(c)(8) of the PHS Act, which relates to liability arrangements to protect enrollees of the HMO or CMP; and
(d) The reporting requirements in § 417.126(a), which pertain to the monitoring of an HMO's or CMP's continued compliance.
(a) The contract must specify that an HMO or CMP may operate a physician incentive plan only if—
(1) No specific payment is made directly or indirectly under the plan to a physician or physician group as an inducement to reduce or limit medically necessary services furnished to an individual enrollee; and
(2) The stop-loss protection, enrollee survey, and disclosure requirements of this section are met.
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(1) Withholds greater than 25 percent of potential payments.
(2) Withholds less than 25 percent of potential payments if the physician or physician group is potentially liable for amounts exceeding 25 percent of potential payments.
(3) Bonuses that are greater than 33 percent of potential payments minus the bonus.
(4) Withholds plus bonuses if the withholds plus bonuses equal more than 25 percent of potential payments. The threshold bonus percentage for a particular withhold percentage may be calculated using the formula—
(5) Capitation, arrangements, if—
(i) The difference between the maximum potential payments and the minimum potential payments is more than 25 percent of the maximum potential payments; or
(ii) The maximum and minimum potential payments are not clearly explained in the physician's or physician group's contract.
(6) Any other incentive arrangements that have the potential to hold a physician or physician group liable for more than 25 percent of potential payments.
(g)
(1) Conduct enrollee surveys. These surveys must—
(i) Include either all current Medicare/Medicaid enrollees in the HMO or CMP and those who have disenrolled (other than because of loss of eligibility in Medicaid or relocation outside the HMO's or CMP's service area) in the past 12 months, or a sample of these same enrollees and disenrollees;
(ii) Be designed, implemented, and analyzed in accordance with commonly accepted principles of survey design and statistical analysis;
(iii) Address enrollees/disenrollees satisfaction with the quality of the services provided and their degree of access to the services; and
(iv) Be conducted no later than 1 year after the effective date of the Medicare contract and at least annually thereafter.
(2) Ensure that all physicians and physician groups at substantial financial risk have either aggregate or per-patient stop-loss protection in accordance with the following requirements:
(i) If aggregate stop-loss protection is provided, it must cover 90 percent of the costs of referral services (beyond allocated amounts) that exceed 25 percent of potential payments.
(ii) If the stop-loss protection provided is based on a per-patient limit, the stop-loss limit per patient must be determined based on the size of the patient panel and may be a single combined limit or consist of separate limits for professional services and institutional services. In determining patient panel size, the patients may be pooled in accordance with paragraph (h)(2) of this section. Stop-loss protection must cover 90 percent of the costs of referral services that exceed the per patient limit. The per-patient stop-loss limit is as follows:
(h)
(2)
(i) It is otherwise consistent with the relevant contracts governing the compensation arrangements for the physician or physician group;
(ii) The physician or physician group is at risk for referral services with respect to each of the categories of patients being pooled;
(iii) The terms of the compensation arrangements permit the physician or physician group to spread the risk across the categories of patients being pooled;
(iv) The distribution of payments to physicians from the risk pool is not calculated separately by patient category; and
(v) The terms of the risk borne by the physicians or physician group are comparable for all categories of patients being pooled.
(3)
(i) Whether the prepaid plan uses a physician incentive plan that affects the use of referral services.
(ii) The type of incentive arrangement.
(iii) Whether stop-loss protection is provided.
(iv) If the prepaid plan was required to conduct a survey, a summary of the survey results.
(i)
(i) Disclose to CMS any incentive plan between the physician group and its individual physicians that bases compensation to the physician on the use or cost of services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries or Medicaid beneficiaries. The disclosure must include the information specified in paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (h)(1)(vii) of this section and be made at the times specified in paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
(ii) Provide adequate stop-loss protection to the individual physicians.
(iii) Conduct enrollee surveys as specified in paragraph (g)(1) of this section.
(2)
(i) Disclose to CMS any incentive plan between the entity and a physician or physician group that bases compensation to the physician or physician group on the use or cost of services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries or Medicaid beneficiaries. The disclosure must include the information required to be disclosed under paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (h)(1)(vii) of this section and be made at the times specified in paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
(ii) If the physician incentive plan puts a physician or physician group at substantial financial risk for the cost of services the physician or physician group does not furnish—
(A) Meet the stop-loss protection requirements of this subpart; and
(B) Conduct enrollee surveys as specified in paragraph (g)(1) of this section.
(3) For purposes of paragraph (i)(2) of this section, an entity includes, but is not limited to, an individual practice association that contracts with one or more physician groups and a physician hospital organization.
(j)
A reasonable cost contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to maintain books, records, documents, and other evidence of accounting procedures and practices that—
(a) Are sufficient to—
(1) Ensure an audit trail; and
(2) Properly reflect all direct and indirect costs claimed to have been incurred under the contract; and
(b) Include at least records of the following:
(1) Ownership, HMO or CMP, and operation of the HMO's or CMP's financial, medical, and other recordkeeping systems.
(2) Financial statements for the current contract period and three prior periods.
(3) Federal income tax or information returns for the current contract period and three prior periods.
(4) Asset acquisition, lease, sale, or other action.
(5) Agreements, contracts, and subcontracts.
(6) Franchise, marketing, and management agreements.
(7) Schedules of charges for the HMO's or CMP's fee-for-service patients.
(8) Matters pertaining to costs of operations.
(9) Amounts of income received by source and payment.
(10) Cash flow statements.
(11) Any financial reports filed with other Federal programs or State authorities.
A risk contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to maintain and make available to CMS upon request, books, records, documents, and other evidence of acounting procedures and practices that—
(a) Are sufficient to—
(1) Establish component rates of the ACR for determining additional and supplementary benefits; and
(2) Determine the rates utilized in setting premiums for State insurance agency purposes; and
(b) Include at least any records or financial reports filed with other Federal agencies or State authorities.
The contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to the following:
(a) HHS may evaluate, through inspection or other means, the quality, appropriateness, and timeliness of services furnished under the contract to its Medicare enrollees.
(b) HHS may evaluate, through inspection or other means, the facilities of the HMO or CMP when there is reasonable evidence of some need for that inspection.
(c) HHS, the Comptroller General, or their designees may audit or inspect any books and records of the HMO or CMP or its transferee that pertain to any aspect of services performed, reconciliation of benefit liabilities, and determination of amounts payable under the contract.
(d) HHS may evaluate, through inspection or other means, the enrollment and disenrollment records for the current contract period and three prior periods, when there is reasonable evidence of some need for that inspection.
(e) In the case of a reasonable cost HMO or CMP to make available for the
(f) That the right to inspect, evaluate, and audit, will extend through three years from the date of the final settlement for any contract period unless—
(1) CMS determines there is a special need to retain a particular record or group of records for a longer period and notifies the HMO or CMP at least 30 days before the normal disposition date;
(2) There has been a termination, dispute, fraud, or similar fault by the HMO or CMP, in which case the retention may be extended to three years from the date of any resulting final settlement; or
(3) CMS determines that there is a reasonable possibility of fraud, in which case it may reopen a final settlement at any time.
(a)
(1) Performs some of the HMO's or CMP's management functions under contract or delegation;
(2) Furnishes services to Medicare enrollees under an oral or written agreement; or
(3) Leases real property or sells materials to the HMO or CMP at a cost of more than $2,500 during a contract period.
(b)
(1) HHS, the Comptroller General, or their designees have the right to inspect, evaluate, and audit any pertinent books, documents, papers, and records of the subcontractor involving transactions related to the subcontract; and
(2) The right under paragraph (b)(1) of this section to information for any particular contract period will exist for a period equivalent to that specified in § 417.482(f).
The contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to the following:
(a) To submit to CMS—
(1) All financial information required under subpart O of this part and for final settlement; and
(2) Any other information necessary for the administration or evaluation of the Medicare program.
(b) To comply with the requirements set forth in part 420, subpart C, of this chapter pertaining to the disclosure of ownership and control information.
(c) To comply with the requirements of the Privacy Act, as implemented by 45 CFR part 5b and subpart B of part 401 of this chapter, with respect to any system of records developed in performing carrier or intermediary functions under §§ 417.532 and 417.533.
(d) To meet the confidentiality requirements of § 482.24(b)(3) of this chapter for medical records and for all other enrollee information that is—
(1) Contained in its records or obtained from CMS or other sources; and
(2) Not covered under paragraph (c) of this section.
A risk contract must provide that the HMO or CMP agrees to give notice as follows if the contract is terminated:
(a) At least 60 days before the effective date of termination, to give its Medicare enrollees a written notice that—
(1) Specifies the termination date; and
(2) Describes the alternatives available for obtaining Medicare services after termination.
(b) To pay the cost of the written notices.
A contract with an HMO or CMP is renewed automatically for the next 12-month period unless CMS or the HMO or CMP decides not to renew, in accordance with § 417.492.
(a)
(i) Give written notice to CMS at least 90 days before the end of the current contract period; and
(ii) Notify each Medicare enrollee by mail at least 60 days before the end of the contract period.
(2) CMS may accept a nonrenewal notice submitted less than 90 days before the end of a contract period if—
(i) The HMO or CMP notifies its Medicare enrollees and the public in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of this section; and
(ii) Acceptance would not otherwise jeopardize the effective and efficient administration of the Medicare program.
(b)
(i) To the HMO or CMP at least 90 days before the end of the contract period.
(ii) To the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees at least 60 days before the end of the contract period.
(2)
(a)
(2) If the contract is modified, the HMO or CMP must notify its Medicare enrollees of any changes that CMS determines are appropriate for notification.
(3) If the contract is terminated, the HMO or CMP must notify its Medicare enrollees, and CMS notifies the general public, at least 30 days before the termination date.
(b)
(i) The HMO or CMP has failed substantially to carry out the terms of the contract.
(ii) The HMO or CMP is carrying out the contract in a manner that is inconsistent with the effective and efficient implementation of section 1876 of the Act.
(iii) The HMO or CMP has failed substantially to comply with the composition of enrollment requirements specified in § 417.413(d).
(iv) CMS determines that the HMO or CMP no longer meets the requirements of section 1876 of the Act and this subpart for being an HMO or CMP.
(2) If CMS decides to terminate a contract, it sends a written notice informing the HMO or CMP of its right to appeal the termination in accordance with part 422 subpart N of this chapter.
(3) An HMO or CMP with a risk contract must notify its Medicare enrollees of the termination as described in § 417.488.
(4) CMS notifies the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees and the general public of the termination at least 30 days before the effective date of termination.
(c)
(1) The HMO or CMP must notify CMS at least 90 days before the effective date of the termination and must
(2) The HMO or CMP must notify its Medicare enrollees of the termination at least 60 days before the termination date. Risk HMOs or CMPs must also provide a written description of alternatives available for obtaining Medicare services after termination of the contract. The HMO or CMP is responsible for the cost of these notices.
(3) The HMO or CMP must notify the general public of the termination at least 30 days before the termination date.
(4) The contract is terminated effective 60 days after the HMO or CMP mails the notice to Medicare enrollees as required in paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(5) CMS's liability for payment ends as of the first day of the month after the last month for which the contract is in effect.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, the rights, procedures, and requirements related to intermediate sanctions and civil money penalties set forth in part 422 subparts O and T of this chapter also apply to Medicare contracts with HMOs or CMPs under sections 1876 of the Act.
(b) In applying paragraph (a) of this section, references to part 422 of this chapter must be read as references to this part and references to MA organizations must be read as references to HMOs or CMPs.
(c) In applying paragraph (a) of this section, the amounts of civil money penalties that can be imposed are governed by section 1876(i)(6)(B) and (C) of the Act, not by the provisions in part 422 of this chapter.
(a) The provisions set forth in subpart L of part 422 of this chapter also apply to Medicare contracts with HMOs and CMPs under section 1876 of the Act.
(b) In applying these provisions, references to “M+C organizations” must be read as references to “HMOs and CMPs”.
(c) In § 422.550, reference to “subpart K of this part” must be read as reference to “subpart L of part 417 of this chapter”.
(d) In § 422.553, reference to “subpart K of this part” must be read as reference to “subpart J of part 417 of this chapter”.
(a)
(b)
(2) In certain cases a risk HMO or CMP also receives payments on a reasonable cost basis for certain Medicare enrollees who retain nonrisk status, as provided in § 417.444, after the HMO or CMP enters into a risk contract.
Subpart O of this part set forth the principles that CMS follows in determining Medicare payment to an HMO
(a)
(2) The circumstances under which an HMO or CMP may charge, or authorize a provider to charge, for covered Medicare services for which Medicare is not the primary payer are stated in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b)
(1) The insurance carrier, employer, or other entity that is liable to pay for these services; or
(2) The Medicare enrollee, to the extent that he or she has been paid by the carrier, employer, or other entity.
(c)
(1) The Medicare enrollee is covered under the plan; and
(2) Under section 1862(b) of the Act, CMS is precluded from paying for the covered services .
(d)
(1) Identify payers that are primary to Medicare under section 1862(b) of the Act;
(2) Determine the amounts payable by these payers; and
(3) Coordinate the benefits of its Medicare enrollees with these payers.
This subpart sets forth the principles that CMS follows to determine the amount it pays for services furnished by a cost HMO or CMP to its Medicare enrollees. These principles are based on sections 1861(v) and 1876 of the Act and are, for the most part, the same as those set forth—
(a) In part 412 of this chapter, for paying the costs of inpatient hospital services which, for cost HMOs and CMPs, are considered “reasonable” only if they do not exceed the amounts allowed under the prospective payment system; and
(b) In part 413 of this chapter, for the costs of all other covered services.
(a) If a Medicare enrollee of an HMO or CMP with a reasonable cost contract makes an election under § 418.24 of this chapter to receive hospice care services, payment for these services is made to the hospice that furnishes the services in accordance with part 418 of this chapter.
(b) While the enrollee's hospice election is in effect, CMS pays the HMO or CMP on a reasonable cost basis for only the following covered Medicare services furnished to the Medicare enrollee:
(1) Services of the enrollee's attending physician if the physician is an employee or contractor of the HMO or CMP and is not employed by or under contract to the enrollee's hospice.
(2) Services not related to the treatment of the terminal condition for which hospice care was elected or a
(a)
(i) Proper and necessary;
(ii) Reasonable in amount; and
(iii) Except as provided in § 417.550, appropriately apportioned among the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees, other enrollees, and nonenrolled patients.
(2) In determining fair and equitable payment for the HMOs or CMPs, CMS generally applies the cost payment principles set forth in § 413.5 of this chapter.
(3) In judging whether costs are reasonable, CMS applies the weighted average of the AAPCCs of each class of the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees (as defined in § 417.582) for the HMO's or CMP's geographic area as an absolute limitation on the total amount payable.
(b)
(2) CMS adjusts the interim per capita rate as necessary during the contract period and makes final adjustments at the end of the contract period.
(3) In determining the amount due the HMO or CMP, CMS deducts from the reasonable cost actually incurred by the HMO or CMP for covered services furnished to its Medicare enrollees, an amount equal to the actuarial value of the applicable Medicare Part A and Part B deductible and coinsurance amounts that would have applied to the covered services for which payment is being made if these enrollees had not enrolled in the HMO or CMP or another HMO or CMP.
(c)
(1) Direct payment by CMS.
(2) Direct payment by the HMO or CMP.
(d)
(e)
(1) Determine the eligibility of its Medicare enrollees to receive covered services through the HMO or CMP;
(2) Make proper coverage decisions and appropriate payments, in accordance with §§ 421.100 and 421.200 of this chapter, for the services furnished to its Medicare enrollees;
(3) Ensure that providers maintain and furnish appropriate documentation of physician certification and recertification, to the extent required under subpart B of part 424 of this chapter; and
(4) Carry out any other procedures required by CMS.
(f)
(g)
(2) In computing the Medicare payment to the HMO or CMP, CMS deducts these payments and any other payments made by the Medicare intermediary or carrier on behalf of the HMO or CMP (such as payment for emergency or urgently needed services under § 417.558).
(h)
In paying for Part B services furnished to its enrollees by suppliers, the HMO or CMP must—
(a) Determine the eligibility of individuals to receive those services through the HMO or CMP;
(b) Make proper coverage decisions and appropriate payment as authorized under § 421.200 of this chapter for the services for which its Medicare enrollees are eligible; and
(c) Carry out any other procedures that CMS may require.
(a)
(b)
(2) The allowability of other costs is determined in accordance with principles set forth in §§ 417.538 through 417.550.
(3) Costs for covered services for which Medicare is not the primary payor, as described in § 417.528, are not allowable.
(c)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(2) If all or part of the deductible and coinsurance amounts is payable through a monthly premium or other periodic payment, the amount allowed as a bad debt may not exceed three times the monthly rate for the actuarial value of the deductible and coinsurance amounts, or its equivalent, if
(3) Any bad debt related to a service furnished to a Medicare enrollee of the HMO or CMP, and claimed on a cost report submitted for payment by a provider or other facility reimbursed on a cost basis, may not be claimed as a bad debt by the HMO or CMP.
(g)
(h)
(i)
(j)
(k)
(2) An entity is not considered related to the HMO or CMP merely because—
(i) It has a risk or incentive agreement under which the HMO or CMP reimburses or compensates the entity for services it furnishes to the HMOs' or CMPs' enrollees; or
(ii) Substantially all the services the entity furnishes are furnished to the HMO's or CMP's enrollees.
(3) However, an entity described in paragraph (k)(2) of this section and an HMO or CMP are considered related if either of them is in a position to exercise significant management or ownership influence or control over the other.
(l)
(m)
(1) For ESRD treatment, the limitations authorized under § 413.170 of this chapter.
(2) For services of physical, occupational, and speech therapists and other therapists and nonphysician health specialists, the limitations set forth in § 413.106 of this chapter.
(3) For drugs, the allowable cost as determined under §§ 405.517 and 410.29 of this chapter.
(4) The overall cost limits established in accordance with § 413.30 of this chapter.
(5) The limitation to the lesser of reasonable cost or customary charges, as set forth in § 413.13 of this chapter.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(a)
(b)
Reinsurance costs are not allowable.
(a)
(2) Physician compensation may take various forms, but the aggregate compensation allowable must be reasonable in relation to the services personally furnished.
(3) If aggregate physician compensation costs exceed what is normally incurred, the excess is not a reasonable cost.
(b)
(2) To be allowable, compensation must be reasonable in relation to the personal services furnished.
(a) Do not exceed those that a prudent and cost-conscious buyer would incur to purchase those services; and
(b) Are comparable to costs incurred for similar services furnished by similar physicians or other suppliers in the same or a similar geographic area.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(1) The provider furnishes services to the HMO's or CMP's enrollees infrequently;
(2) The charges represent an insignificant portion of total Medicare reimbursement to the HMO or CMP; and
(3) The charges do not exceed the customary charges by the provider to its other patients for similar services.
(a)
(b)
(1) Reporting increases and decreases in the number of Medicare enrollees.
(2) Obtaining independent certification of the HMO's or CMP's cost report to the extent that it is for Medicare purposes.
(3) Reporting special data that CMS requires solely for program planning and evaluation.
(c)
(d)
(a)
(1) In accordance with this subpart; and
(2) Using methods approved by CMS.
(b)
(1) The cost of services furnished to Medicare enrollees is not borne by other enrollees and nonenrolled patients; and
(2) The cost of the services furnished to other enrollees and nonenrolled patients is not borne by Medicare.
The Medicare share of the cost of covered services furnished to Medicare enrollees by providers that are owned or operated by the HMO or CMP or are related to the HMO or CMP by common ownership or control must be determined in accordance with the apportionment methods set forth in part 412, §§ 413.24, 413.55, and 415.55 of this chapter.
The Medicare share of the cost of covered services furnished to Medicare enrollees through arrangements with providers other than those specified in § 417.554 must be determined as follows:
(a) The Medicare share must be based on the cost the HMO or CMP pays the provider under their arrangement, to the extent that cost is reasonable and within the limits established by §§ 417.534 through 417.548.
(b) Except as specified in paragraph (c) of this section, apportionment must
(c) If, because of the special nature or terms of the HMO's or CMP's arrangement with the provider, apportionment on the basis specified in paragraph (b) of this section would result in Medicare's bearing the costs of furnishing services to individuals other than the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees, apportionment must be on another basis that is approved by CMS and that will ensure that Medicare does not pay any of the cost of furnishing services to individuals who are not Medicare enrollees of the HMO or CMP.
(d) If the HMO or CMP elects to have providers reimbursed by the HMO's or CMP's Medicare intermediary, the Medicare share is the amount the intermediary paid the provider.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(a)
(1) Results in an accurate and equitable allocation of allowable costs; and
(2) Is justifiable from an administrative and cost efficiency standpoint.
(b)
(c)
(d)
(a)
(b)
(i) Facility costs.
(ii) Interest expense.
(iii) Medical record costs.
(iv) Centralized purchasing costs.
(v) Accounting and data processing costs.
(vi) Other administrative and general costs that are not included in paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) The allocation or distribution process must be as follows:
(i) If a separate entity or department of an HMO or CMP performs administrative functions the benefit of which can be quantitatively measured (such as centralized purchasing and data processing), the total allowable costs of this entity or department must be allocated or distributed to the components of the HMO or CMP in reasonable proportion to the benefits received by these components.
(ii) If a separate entity or department of an HMO or CMP performs administrative functions the benefit of which cannot be quantitatively measured (such as facility costs), the total allowable costs of this entity or department must be allocated or distributed to the components of the HMO or CMP on the basis of a ratio of total incurred and distributed costs per component to the total incurred and distributed costs for all components.
(iii) For the costs incurred under paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section that include personnel costs, the organization must be able to identify the person hours expended for each administrative task and the rate of pay for those persons performing the tasks. Administrative tasks performed and rate of pay for the persons performing those tasks must match in terms of the skill level needed to accomplish those tasks. This information must be made available to CMS upon request.
(c)
(1) Donations.
(2) Fines and penalties.
(3) Political and lobbying activities.
(4) Charity or courtesy allowances.
(5) Spousal education.
(6) Entertainment.
(7) Return on equity.
(a)
(b)
(2) If CMS approves use of a different method, the HMO or CMP may not revert to another method without first obtaining CMS's approval.
(a)
(2) Unless otherwise provided for in this subpart, the HMO or CMP must follow standardized definitions and accounting, statistics, and reporting practices that are widely accepted in the health care industry.
(b)
(2) The cost data must be based on an approved method of cost finding and, except as provided in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, on the accrual method of accounting.
(3) For governmental institutions that use a cash basis of accounting, cost data developed on this basis is acceptable. However, only depreciation on capital assets, rather than the expenditure for the capital asset, is allowable.
(c)
(d)
(e)
(a)
(2) Additional lump-sum payments may be made at other times during the contract period, at CMS's discretion, to adjust the total amounts paid during the contract period to the level of incurred costs.
(b)
(c)
(1) A change in the number of Medicare enrollees that affects the per capita rate;
(2) A material variation from the costs estimated when the annual operating budget was prepared; or
(3) A significant change in the use of covered services by the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees.
(d)
(a)
(b)
(1) Establish an interim per capita rate of payment on the basis of the best available data and adjust payments on the basis of that rate until the required reports are submitted and a new interim per capita rate can be established; or
(2) If there is not enough data on which to base an interim per capita rate, inform the HMO or CMP that interim payments will not be made until the required reports are submitted.
(c)
(2) CMS may reduce the frequency of the reports required under paragraph (c)(1) of this section if CMS determines that, on the basis of the HMO's or CMP's reporting experience, there is good cause to do so.
(a)
(b)
(a)
(b)
(2)
(i) The per capita costs incurred in furnishing covered services to its Medicare enrollees, determined in accordance with subpart O of this part and including—
(A) The costs incurred by entities related to the HMO or CMP by common ownership or control; and
(B) For reports for cost-reporting periods that begin on or after January 1, 1996, the costs of hospital and SNF services paid by Medicare's intermediaries under the option provided by § 417.532(d).
(ii) The HMO's or CMP's methods of apportioning cost among Medicare enrollees, and nonenrolled patients, in accordance with the payment procedures specified in this subpart (as, applicable, in parts 412 and 413 of this chapter); and
(iii) Any other information required by CMS.
(3)
(i) Consider the failure to report as evidence of likely overpayment; and
(ii) Initiate recovery of amounts previously paid, or reduce interim payments, or both.
(c)
(2) A final settlement may be made with the HMO or CMP even though a provider that is not owned or operated by the HMO or CMP or related to the HMO or CMP by common ownership or control and that provides services to the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees has not had a final settlement with CMS under parts 412 and 413 of this chapter for services furnished by the provider to Medicare beneficiaries who are not enrolled in the HMO or CMP. In this situation—
(i) CMS must be satisfied that the costs of covered services furnished to the HMO's or CMP's Medicare enrollees, as shown in the reports specified in paragraph (b) of this section, are reasonable and that the interest of the Medicare program would best be served by not delaying final settlement with the HMO or CMP until there is a final settlement with the provider for services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries not enrolled in the HMO or CMP; and
(ii) Prompt settlement with the HMO or CMP would be in the best interest of the Medicare program if, for instance, the provider's costs represent an insignificant portion of total payment due to the HMO or CMP; or if CMS is satisfied that the provider's costs, as shown in the reports specified in paragraph (b) of this section, will not be modified, to any significant extent, by the final settlement with the provider under parts 412 and 413 of this chapter.
(d)
(1) Explains CMS's determination regarding total Medicare payment due the HMO or CMP for the contract period covered by the financial information specified in paragraph (b) of this section;
(2) Relates this determination to the HMO's or CMP's claimed total payable cost for that period;
(3) Explains the amounts and reasons, by appropriate reference to law, regulations, and Medicare program policy and procedures, if the determined amounts differ from the HMO's or CMP's claim; and
(4) Informs the HMO or CMP of its right to a hearing in accordance with the requirements specified in § 405.1801(b)(2) of this chapter
(e)
(2) Further payments to the HMO or CMP may be withheld or offset in order to recover, or to aid in the recovery of, any overpayment identified in the determination as having been made to the HMO or CMP, even if the HMO or CMP requests a hearing in accordance with the requirements specified in § 405.1801(b)(2) of this chapter.
(3) Any withholding continues until the earliest of the following occurs:
(i) The overpayment is liquidated.
(ii) The HMO or CMP enters into an agreement with CMS to refund the overpaid amount.
(iii) CMS, on the basis of subsequently acquired information, determines that there was no overpayment.
(iv) The decision of a hearing specified in paragraph (d)(4) of this section is that there was no overpayment.
(a)
(b)
(1) Method of payment;
(2) Procedures for determining the HMO's or CMP's payment rate; and
(3) Procedures for determining the additional benefits (and their value) the HMO or CMP must provide to its Medicare enrollees.
As used in this subpart—
Except in the circumstances specified in § 417.440(d) for inpatient hospital care, and as provided in § 417.585 for hospice care, CMS makes payment for covered services only to the HMO or CMP.
(a)
(b)
(2) CMS furnishes each HMO or CMP with its per capita rate of payment for each class of Medicare enrollees not later than 90 days before the beginning of the HMO's or CMP's contract period.
(c)
(d)
(e)
(a) No payment is made to an HMO or CMP on behalf of a Medicare enrollee who has elected hospice care under § 418.24 of this chapter except for the portion of the payment applicable to the additional benefits described in § 417.592. This no-payment rule is effective from the first day of the month following the month of election to receive hospice care, until the first day of the month following the month in which the enrollee resumes normal Medicare coverage.
(b) During the time the election is in effect, the HMO or CMP may bill CMS on a fee-for-service basis (subject to the usual Medicare rules of payment) but only for the following covered Medicare services:
(1) Services of the enrollee's attending physician if the physician is an employee or contractor of the HMO or CMP and is not employed by or under contract to the enrollee's hospice.
(2) Services not related to the treatment of the terminal condition for which the enrollee elected hospice care or a condition related to the terminal condition.
(3) Services furnished after the revocation or expiration of the enrollee's hospice election until the full monthly capitation payments begin again.
(c) Payment for hospice care services furnished to Medicare enrollees of an HMO or CMP is made to the Medicare-participating hospice elected by the enrollee.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(a)
(b)
(a)
(2) The dollar value of the elected option must, over the course of a contract period, be at least equal to the difference between the APCRP and the proposed ACR.
(b)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(c)
(2) The HMO or CMP may elect to provide additional benefits in any of the following forms—
(i) A reduction in the HMO's or CMP's premium or in other charges it imposes in the form of deductibles or coinsurance.
(ii) Health benefits in addition to the required Part A and Part B covered services.
(iii) A combination of reduced charges and additional benefits.
(d)
(2) An HMO or CMP that elects the option of providing additional benefits must include in its submittal—
(i) A description of the additional benefits it will provide to its Medicare enrollees; and
(ii) Supporting evidence to show that the selected benefits meet the requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this section with respect to dollar value equivalence.
(a)
(1) Compute an initial rate in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) Adjust and reduce the initial rate in accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(b)
(i) A community rating system as defined in § 417.104(b); or
(ii) A system, approved by CMS, under which the HMO or CMP develops an aggregate premium for all its enrollees and weights the aggregate by the size of the various enrolled groups that compose its enrollment.
(2) Regardless of which method the HMO or CMP uses—
(i) The initial rate must be equal to the premium it would charge its non-Medicare enrollees for the Medicare-covered services;
(ii) The HMO or CMP must compute the rates separately for enrollees entitled to Medicare Part A and Part B and for those entitled only to Part B; and
(iii) The HMO or CMP must identify and take into account anticipated revenue from health insurance payers for those services for which Medicare is not the primary payer as provided in § 417.528.
(3) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the HMO or CMP must identify in its initial rate calculation, the following components whose rates must be consistent with rates used by the HMO or CMP in calculating premiums for non-Medicare enrollees:
(i) Hospital services (services covered under Medicare Part A and Part B shown separately).
(ii) Physicians' services.
(iii) Other medical services (for example, X-ray and laboratory services).
(iv) Home health services.
(v) Out-of-plan claims for emergency services.
(vi) Skilled nursing care services.
(vii) Ambulance services.
(viii) Other Medicare covered services.
(ix) General and administrative.
(x) Noncovered Medicare services (for example, eyeglasses).
(xi) Services for which Medicare is the secondary payer.
(xii) Enrollee liabilities (for example, deductibles, coinsurance, or copayments) for covered services.
(4) An HMO or CMP that does not usually separate its premium components as described in paragraph (b)(3) of this section may calculate its initial rate with the methods it uses for its other enrolled groups if the HMO or CMP provides CMS with the documentation necessary to support any adjustments the HMO or CMP makes to the initial rate in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section.
(5) The initial rate calculation must not carry forward any losses experienced by the HMO or CMP during prior contract periods. The HMO or CMP must submit supporting documentation to assure CMS that rates do not include past losses but only premiums for the price of additional benefits and services of the upcoming contract period.
(c)
(2)
(i)
(ii)
(3)
(4)
(i) Medicare and non-Medicare enrollees in other HMOs or CMPs; or
(ii) Medicare beneficiaries (in the HMO's or CMP's area, or State, or the United States) who are eligible to enroll in an HMO or CMP and other individuals in that same area, or State, or the United States.
(d)
(e)
(2)
(ii) The request must state why the HMO or CMP believes the determination is incorrect, and include any supporting evidence the HMO or CMP considers pertinent.
(iii) A hearing officer designated by CMS conducts the hearing in accordance with the hearing procedures set forth in §§ 405.1819 through 405.1833 of this chapter.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(2)
(3)
(d)
(2) The amounts withheld in a benefit stabilization fund are accounted for by CMS in accounts in which interest does not accrue to the HMO or CMP.
(a)
(1) Indicate how it intends to use the withdrawn amounts;
(2) Justify the need for the withdrawal in terms of stabilizing the additional benefits it provides to Medicare enrollees;
(3) Document the HMO's or CMP's experience with fluctuations of revenue requirements relative to the additional benefits it provides to Medicare enrollees; and
(4) Document its experience during the contract period previous to the one for which it requests withdrawal to ensure that the HMO or CMP will not be using the withdrawn amounts to refinance losses suffered during that previous contract period.
(b)
(1) The HMO's or CMP's average of its per capita rates of payment for the next contract period is less than that of the previous contract period;
(2) The HMO's or CMP's ACR for the next contract period is significantly higher than that of the previous contract period; or
(3) The HMO's or CMP's revenue requirements for the next contract period for providing the additional benefits it provided during the previous contract period is significantly higher than the requirements for that previous period and the ACR for the next contract period results in an additional benefits package that is less in total value than that of the previous contract period.
(c)
(1) Offer without charge the supplemental services it provides to its Medicare enrollees under the provisions of § 417.440 (b)(2) or (b)(3); or
(2) Refinance prior contract period losses or to avoid losses in the upcoming contract period.
(d)
CMS's payment to an HMO or CMP may be subject to an enrollment reconciliation at least annually. CMS conducts this reconciliation as necessary to ensure that the payments made do not exceed or fall short of the appropriate per capita rate of payment for each Medicare enrollee of the HMO or CMP during the contract period. The HMO or CMP must submit any information or reports required by CMS to conduct the reconciliation.
(a)
(2) Section 1876 of the Act provides for Medicare payments to HMOs and CMPs that contract with CMS to enroll Medicare beneficiaries and furnish Medicare-covered health care services to them.
(3) Section 234 of the MMA requires section 1876 contractors to operate under the same provisions as MA plans where two plans of the same type enter the cost plan contract's service area.
(b)
(2) In applying those provisions, references to section 1852 of the Act must be read as references to section 1876 of the Act, and references to MA organizations as references to HMOs and CMPs.
(a) The rights, procedures, and requirements relating to contract determinations and appeals set forth in part
(b) In applying paragraph (a) of this section, references to part 422 of this chapter must be read as references to this part and references to MA organizations must be read as references to HMOs or CMPs.
(a)
(1) Effective January 1, 1999, (or on the effective date of the HCPP agreement in the case of a 1998 applicant) either—
(A) Is union or employer sponsored; or
(B) Does not provide, or arrange for the provision of, any inpatient hospital services.
(2) Is responsible for the organization, financing, and delivery of covered Part B services to a defined population on a prepayment basis.
(3) Meets the conditions specified in paragraph (b) of this section.
(4) Elects to be reimbursed on a reasonable cost basis.
(b)
(i) Enter into a written agreement with CMS as specified in § 417.801;
(ii) Furnish physicians' services through its employees or under a formal arrangement with a medical group, independent practice association or individual physicians; and
(iii) Furnish covered Part B services to its Medicare enrollees through institutions, entities, and persons that have qualified under the applicable requirements of title XVIII of the Social Security Act and section 353 of the PHS Act.
(2) An organization that, as of January 31, 1983, was being reimbursed on a reasonable cost basis under section 1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act, and that would not otherwise meet the conditions specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, may receive reimbursement on a reasonable cost basis as an HCPP, provided it files an agreement with CMS as required by § 417.801.
(c)
(2)
(ii)
(A) The actuarial value of the Part B deductible.
(B) An amount equal to 20 percent of the cost incurred for any service that is subject to the Medicare coinsurance.
(d)
(2) Covered Part B services furnished by a provider of services to an HCPP's Medicare enrollees are not payable to the HCPP. CMS makes payment for these services to the provider on behalf of the Medicare enrollee through the provider's Medicare fiscal intermediary. This requirement does not affect Medicare payment to the HCPP for physicians' services furnished to its Medicare enrollees for which the physicians are compensated by the HCPP.
(e)
(a)
(2) An existing group practice prepayment plan (GPPP) that continues as an HCPP under this subpart U must have entered into a written agreement with CMS within 60 days of January 31, 1983.
(b)
(1) Maintain compliance with the requirements for participation and reimbursement on a reasonable cost basis of HCPPs as specified in § 417.800;
(2) Not charge the Medicare enrollee or any other person for items or services for which that enrollee is entitled to have payment made under the provisions of this part, except for any deductible or coinsurance amounts for which the enrollee is liable;
(3) Refund, as promptly as possible, any money incorrectly collected as charges or premiums, or in any other way from Medicare enrollees in the HCPP in accordance with the requirements specified in § 417.456;
(4) Not impose any limitations on the acceptance of Medicare enrollees or beneficiaries for care and treatment that it does not impose on all other individuals;
(5) Meet the advance directives requirements specified in § 417.436(d) of this part;
(6) Establish administrative review procedures in accordance with §§ 417.830 through 417.840 for Medicare enrollees who are dissatisfied with denied services or claims; and
(7) Consider any additional requirements that CMS finds necessary or desirable for efficient and effective program administration.
(c)
(d)
(i) The HCPP no longer meets the requirements for participation and reimbursement as an HCPP as specified in § 417.800;
(ii) The HCPP is not in substantial compliance with the provisions of the agreement, applicable CMS regulations, or applicable provisions of the Medicare law. This includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(A) Failure to provide for and document adequate access to providers.
(B) Failure to comply with CMS requirements concerning provision of data and maintenance of records.
(C) Failure to comply with financial requirements specified at § 417.806; or
(iii) The HCPP undergoes a change in ownership as specified in subpart M of this part.
(2) CMS will give notice of termination or nonrenewal to the HCPP at least 90 days before the effective date stated in the notice.
(e)
(2) CMS may approve the termination date proposed by the HCPP, or set a different date no later than 6 months after that date. CMS makes this decision based on a finding that termination on a specific date would not—
(i) Unduly disrupt the furnishing of services to the community serviced by the HCPP; or
(ii) Otherwise interfere with the efficient administration of the Medicare program.
(a)
(b)
(2)
(i) Except as specified in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, the costs incurred by the HCPP may be considered reasonable if they—
(A) Do not exceed those that a prudent and cost-conscious buyer would incur to purchase those services; and
(B) Are comparable to costs incurred for similar services furnished by similar physicians and other suppliers in the same or a similar locality.
(ii)(A) If a physician group to whom the HCPP makes payment compensates its physicians on a fee-for-service basis, the HCPP's payment to the group may not exceed the reasonable charges for those services, as defined in subpart E of part 405 of this chapter.
(B) Payment in excess of the limits specified in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section is allowable if the group has procedures under which members of the group accept effective incentives, such as risk-sharing, designed to avoid unnecessary or unduly costly utilization of health services. In such cases, the amount paid by the HCPP is considered reasonable if it meets the conditions specified in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(3)
(i) Except as specified in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section, the costs incurred by the HCPP are considered reasonable if they do not exceed—
(A) The reasonable charges for those services, as defined in subpart E of part 405 of this chapter; and
(B) The amount that CMS would pay for those services if they were furnished to beneficiaries who are not enrolled in the HCPP and who receive the services from sources other than providers of services or other entities that are reimbursed on a reasonable cost basis.
(ii) Payment to a physician group organized on an individual-practice basis is not subject to the paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section if the group pays its physicians on a fee-for-service basis and has procedures under which the members of the group accept effective incentives, such as risk-sharing, designed to avoid unnecessary or unduly costly utilization of health services. In these cases, the amount paid by an HCPP is considered reasonable if it meets the conditions specified in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(a) The HCPP follows the cost apportionment principles specified in
(b) The HCPP may use a method for reporting costs that is approved by CMS. CMS bases its approval on a finding that the method—
(1) Results in an accurate and equitable allocation of allowable costs; and
(2) Is justifiable from an administrative and cost efficiency standpoint.
(a) The principles specified in § 417.568 apply to HCPPs, except those in paragraph (c) of that section.
(b) The HCPP may use a method for reporting costs that is approved by CMS. CMS bases its approval on a finding that the method—
(1) Results in an accurate and equitable allocation of allowable costs; and
(2) Is justifiable from an administrative and cost efficiency standpoint.
(c) An HCPP must permit the Department and the Comptroller General to audit or inspect any books and records of the HCPP and of any related organization that pertain to the determination of amounts payable for covered Part B services furnished its Medicare enrollees. For purposes of this requirement, the principles specified in § 417.486 apply to HCPPs.
The HCPP follows the principles specified in §§ 417.570 and 417.572 on interim per capita payments, except for the following:
(a) When applying these principles to HCPPs, the term “reporting period” should be used instead of the term “contract period” contained in that section.
(b) An HCPP must submit to CMS an annual operating budget and enrollment forecast, in the form and detail specified by CMS, at least 60 days before the beginning of each reporting period. A reporting period must be 12 consecutive months, except that the HCPP's initial reporting period for participating in Medicare may be as short as 6 months or as long as 18 months.
(c) An HCPP must submit to CMS an interim cost report and enrollment data applicable to the first 6-month period of the HCPP's reporting period in the form and detail specified by CMS. The interim cost report must be submitted not later than 45 days after the close of the first 6-month period of the HCPP's reporting period.
(d) In lieu of an interim payment based on the actual monthly enrollment in an HCPP, CMS and the HCPP may agree to a uniform monthly interim reimbursement rate for a reporting period. This interim rate is based on the HCPP's budget and enrollment forecast, if CMS is satisfied that the rate is consistent with efficiency and economy, and will not result in excessive adjustment at the end of the reporting period.
(a)
(b)
(2)
(i) The HCPP's per capita incurred costs of providing covered Part B services to its Medicare enrollees during the reporting period, including any costs incurred by another organization related to the HCPP by common ownership or control;
(ii) The HCPP's methods of apportioning costs among its Medicare enrollees, enrollees who are not Medicare beneficiaries, and other nonenrollees, including Medicare beneficiaries receiving health care services on a fee-for-service or other basis; and
(iii) Information on enrollment and other data as specified by CMS.
(3)
(4)
(i) Regard the failure to report this information as evidence of likely overpayment and reduce or suspend interim payments to the HCPP; and
(ii) Determine that amounts previously paid are overpayments, and make appropriate recovery.
(c)
(1) Explains CMS's determination of total reimbursement due the HCPP for the reporting period; and
(2) Informs the HCPP of its right to have the determination reviewed at a hearing in accordance with the requirements specified in § 405.1801(b)(2) of this chapter.
(d)
(2) If the HCPP does not pay CMS within 30 days of CMS's determination of any amounts the HCPP owes CMS, CMS may offset further payments to the HCPP to recover, or to aid in the recovery of, any overpayment identified in its determination.
(3) Any offset of payments CMS makes under paragraph (d)(2) of this section will remain in effect even if the HCPP has requested a hearing in accordance with the requirements specified in § 405.1801(b)(2) of this chapter.
(e)
(2) CMS or the HCPP will make payment within 30 days of CMS's determination under the tentative settlement of any estimated amounts due.
(3) The tentative settlement is subject to adjustment at the time of a final settlement.
Sections 417.832 through 417.840 establish procedures for the presentation and resolution of organization determinations, reconsiderations, hearings, Departmental Appeals Board review, court reviews, and finality of decisions that are applicable to Medicare enrollees of an HCPP.
(a) The administrative review rights and procedures specified in §§ 417.834 through 417.840 pertain to disputes involving an organization determination, as defined in § 417.838, with which the enrollee is dissatisfied.
(b) Physicians and other individuals who furnish items or services under arrangements with an HCPP have no right of administrative review under §§ 417.834 through 417.840.
(c) The provisions of part 405 dealing with the representation of parties apply to organization determinations and appeals.
(d) The provisions of part 405 dealing with administrative law judge hearings, Medicare Appeals Council review, and judicial review are applicable, unless otherwise provided.
The HCPP is responsible for establishing and maintaining the administrative review procedures that are specified in §§ 417.830 through 417.840.
Each HCPP is responsible for ensuring that all Medicare enrollees are informed in writing of the administrative review procedures that are available to them.
(a)
(b)
(1) A determination regarding services that were furnished by the HCPP, either directly or under arrangement, for which the enrollee has no further obligation for payment.
(2) A determination regarding services that are not covered under the HCPP's agreement with CMS.
The HCPP must apply § 422.568 through § 422.626 of this chapter to—
(a) Organization determinations and fast-track appeals that affect its Medicare enrollees; and
(b) Reconsiderations, hearings, Medicare Appeals Council review, and judicial review of the organization determinations and fast-track appeals specified in paragraph (a) of this section.
The regulations in this subpart apply, as appropriate, to public and private entities that have loans or loan guarantees that—
(a) Were awarded to them before October 1986 under section 1304 or section 1305 of the PHS Act; and
(b) Are still outstanding.
As used in this subpart—
(1) The addition of any health service not previously provided by or through the HMO, that requires an increase in the facilities, equipment, or health professionals of the HMO; or
(2) The improvement or upgrading of existing facilities or equipment, or an increase in the number of categories of health professionals, of the HMO so that the HMO could provide directly services that it previously provided through contract or referral or which it could not previously provide with its existing facilities or equipment.
(1) Under generally accepted accounting principles or under accounting practices prescribed or permitted by
(2) Was required by State regulatory authority to meet reserves or tangible net equity requirements.
(3) Was for a payment made to reduce balance sheet liabilities existing at the beginning of the 60-month period, but only if—
(i) The payment had been approved in writing by the Secretary; and
(ii) The total of these payments did not exceed 20 percent of the amount of the loan.
(4) Was for a small capital expenditure, but only if—
(i) The cost had been approved in writing by the Secretary; and
(ii) The total of these costs did not exceed $200,000 in any 12-month period, and $400,000 during the first 60 months of operation or expansion.
(1) A planned substantial increase in the enrollment of the HMO, that requires an increase in the number of health professionals serving enrollees of the HMO or an expansion of the physical capacity of the HMO's total health facilities; or
(2) A planned expansion of the service area beyond the current service area, that would be made possible by the addition of health service delivery facilities and health professionals to serve enrollees at a new site or sites in areas previously without service sites.
(1) Equipment as defined in 45 CFR 74.132; or
(2) Alterations and renovations required to change the interior arrangements or other physical characteristics of an existing facility or installed equipment, so that it may be more effectively used for its currently designated purpose, or adapted to a changed use.
(a) Under section 1304 of the PHS Act, grants and loan guarantees were awarded for projects for planning and initial development of HMOs.
(b) Planning projects included projects for any of the following:
(1) Establishment of an HMO.
(2) Significant expansion of the HMO's enrollment or geographic area.
(c) Initial development projects included projects for any of the following:
(1) Establishment of an HMO.
(2) Significant expansion of the HMO's enrollment or geographic area.
(3) Expansion of the range or amount of services furnished by the HMO.
Under section 1305 of the PHS, loans and loan guarantees were awarded for initial costs of operation of HMOs.
(a)
(1) When the HMO's revenues and costs of operation reached the break-even point.
(2) At the end of the 60-month period following the Secretary's endorsement of the loan or loan guarantee.
(b)
(a)
(b)
(c)
The provisions of § 417.163(g) apply to entities that have outstanding loans or loan guarantees administered under this subpart.