CMS NEWS
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 11, 2020
Contact:
CMS Media Relations CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Proposes New Rules to Address Prior
Authorization and Reduce Burden on Patients and Providers
Improving patient and provider access
to medical records and reforming prior authorization processes
critical in a public health emergency
Today,
under President Trump’s leadership, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a proposed rule that would improve the
electronic exchange of health care data among payers, providers, and
patients, and streamline processes related to prior authorization to
reduce burden on providers and patients. By both increasing data
flow, and reducing burden, this proposed rule would give providers
more time to focus on their patients, and provide better quality
care.
The
COVID-19 pandemic has shone a harsh light on many longstanding
inefficiencies in the health care system—including the lack of data
sharing and access. Today’s proposed rule aims to improve this for
patients navigating care. The proposed rule would build on the Trump
Administration’s Interoperability and Patient Access final rule
published by the CMS in May.
“This
proposed rule ushers in a new era of quality and lower costs in
health care as payors and providers will now have access to complete
patient histories, reducing unnecessary care and allowing for more
coordinated and seamless patient care. Each element of this proposed
rule would play a key role in reducing onerous administrative
burden on our frontline providers while improving patient access to
health information,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Prior
authorization is a necessary and important tools for payors to ensure
program integrity, but there is a better way to make the process work
more efficiently to ensure that care is not delayed and we are not
increasing administrative costs for the whole system.” Prior
authorization is not only a leading source of burden, it is also a
primary source of provider burnout, and takes time away from treating
patients. If just a quarter of providers took advantage of the new
electronic solutions that this proposal would make available, the
proposed rule would save between 1 and 5 billion dollars over the
next ten years. With the pandemic placing even greater strain on our
health care system, the policies in this rule are more vital than
ever.”
The rule
would require payers in Medicaid, CHIP and QHP programs to build
application programming interfaces (APIs) to support data exchange
and prior authorization. APIs allow two systems, or a payer’s system
and a third-party app, to communicate and share data electronically
Payers would be required to implement and maintain these APIs using
the Health Level 7 (HL7) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources
(FHIR) standard. The FHIR standard is an innovative technology
solution that helps bridge the gaps between systems so both systems
can understand and use the data they exchange.
On behalf
of HHS, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) is
also proposing to adopt certain standards through an HHS rider on the
CMS proposed rule.
Improving Prior Authorization
Prior
authorization is an administrative process used in healthcare for
providers to request approval from payers to provide a medical
service, prescription, or supply. This process takes place before a
service is rendered. The rule proposes significant changes to improve
the patient experience and alleviate some of the administrative
burden prior authorization causes health care providers. Medicaid,
CHIP and QHP payers would be required to build and implement
FHIR-enabled APIs that could allow providers to know in advance what
documentation would be needed for each different health insurance
payer, streamline the documentation process, and enable providers to
send prior authorization requests and receive responses
electronically, directly from the provider’s EHR or other practice
management system. While Medicare Advantage plans are not included in
today’s proposals, CMS is considering whether to do so in future
rulemaking.
The
proposed rule would also reduce the amount of time providers wait to
receive prior authorization decisions from payers—the rule proposes a
maximum of 72 hours for payers, with the exception of QHP issuers on
the FFEs, to issue decisions on urgent requests and seven calendar
days for non-urgent requests. Payers would also be required to
provide a specific reason for any denial, which will allow providers
some transparency into the process. To promote accountability for
plans, the rule also requires them to make public certain metrics
that demonstrate how many procedures they are authorizing.
These
policies, taken together, could lead to fewer prior authorization
denials and appeals, while improving communication and understanding
between payers, providers, and patients. They are the result of
numerous listening sessions with plans and providers aimed at
crafting a new process that balances the need for greater efficiency
and consistency in prior authorization and its important role in
preventing fraud, abuse, and unnecessary expenditures.
Increasing Patient Access to Health
Information
Building
on that foundational policy, this rule would require impacted payers
to implement and maintain a FHIR-based API to exchange patient data
as patients move from one payer to another. In this way, patients who
would otherwise not have access to their historic health information
would be able to bring their information with them when they move
from one payer to another, and would not lose that information simply
because they changed payers.
These
proposed changes would also allow payers, providers and patients to
have access to more information including pending and active prior
authorization decisions, potentially allowing for fewer repeat prior
authorizations, reducing burden and cost, and ensuring patients have
better continuity of care. To read more on the importance of these
proposed changes, please visit CMS Administrator Seema Verma’s blog
post here: https://www.cms.gov/blog/reducing-provider-and-patient-burden-and-promoting-patients-electronic-access-health-information
The
proposed rule is available to review today at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/121020-reducing-provider-and-patient-burden-cms-9123-p.pdf
The comment period will close on January 4, 2021.
For a
copy of the Fact Sheet, visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/reducing-provider-and-patient-burden-improving-prior-authorization-processes-and-promoting-patients
For more
information on the CMS proposed rule, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Interoperability/index
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