SHELBY LIVINGSTON April 05, 2019 04:54 PM
The CMS
finalized a rule on Friday that would give Medicare Advantage plans more
flexibility to offer additional telehealth services to seniors as part of their
basic benefits package starting in 2020.
The
rule, proposed in October 2018, allows seniors to use telehealth
services in their homes, rather than being required to go to a healthcare
facility.
While
previously Medicare Advantage plans could include additional telehealth
services only as a supplemental benefit to be paid for with rebate dollars or
enrollee premiums, they will now be able to include telehealth as a basic
government-funded benefit beyond what the original Medicare program offers. The
change was called for by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018.
"Today's
policies represent a historic step in bringing innovative technology to
Medicare beneficiaries," CMS Administrator Seema Verma said in the
announcement. "With these new telehealth benefits, Medicare Advantage
enrollees will be able to access the latest technology and have greater access
to telehealth."
The CMS
also said it is streamlining grievance and appeals process for patients
enrolled in certain dual-eligible special needs plans and affiliated Medicaid
managed care plans, as required by the Bipartisan Budget Act.
And to
better integrate benefits for dual-eligible patients, the CMS is finalizing a
new minimum criteria for Medicare and Medicaid integration in the so-called
D-SNPs starting in 2021. It will require D-SNPs to either cover Medicaid
long-term services and supports or behavioral health services through a
capitated payment from a state Medicaid agency, or D-SNPs will have to notify a
state Medicaid agency of its hospital and skilled nursing facility admissions
for a group of high-risk, full-benefit dual-eligibles.
The CMS
did not address in the final rule a dramatic change to the way it audits Medicare
Advantage plans, given it extended the comment period to April 30. But it notes
it will address the audits in later rulemaking.
In the
October proposal, the agency also told insurers it wants to start recouping
payments to Medicare Advantage plans based on a risk-adjustment data validation
audit methodology proposed back in 2012. Under that methodology, the CMS would
extrapolate the results of an audit of a sample of enrollees across the entire
plan population, which could dramatically increase the recoupments of improper
payments to plans.
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