CY 2019 OPPS and ASC Rule
Encourages More Choices and Lower Costs for Seniors
On November 2, CMS released a final rule that
strengthens the Medicare program by providing seniors more choices and lower
cost options in making the best decisions on their care. The policies adopted
in the Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) and Ambulatory
Surgical Center (ASC) Payment System final rule with comment period will help
lay the foundation for a patient-driven healthcare system.
“President Trump is committed to
strengthening Medicare and lowering costs for patients. Today’s rule advances
competition by creating a level playing field for providers so they can
compete for patients on the basis of quality and care,” said CMS
Administrator Seema Verma. “The final policies remove unnecessary and
inefficient payment differences so patients can have more affordable choices
and options.”
To increase the sustainability of the
Medicare program and improve the quality of care for patients, CMS is
finalizing its proposed method to control unnecessary volume increases for
certain clinical visits by utilizing site-neutral payments for these visits.
This change will be phased in over two years. Clinic visits are the most
common service billed under the OPPS. Currently, CMS and beneficiaries often
pay more for the same type of clinic visit in the hospital outpatient setting
than in the physician office setting. This policy would result in lower
copayments for beneficiaries and savings for the Medicare program in an
estimated amount of $380 million for 2019. For example, for a clinic visit
furnished in an excepted off-campus provider-based department (PBD),
average beneficiary cost sharing is currently $23. Under this final rule,
that cost sharing would be reduced to $16 (based on a two year phase-in),
saving beneficiaries an average of $7 each time they visit an off-campus
department in CY 2019.
Additionally, CMS is giving patients more
options on where to obtain care by increasing the services that can be
furnished in ASCs. These changes are intended to help improve access and
convenience and ensure that CMS policies are not favoring any particular
provider type. For 2019, CMS is finalizing policies that will:
As part of the agency’s “Patients Over
Paperwork” Initiative—a cross-cutting process that evaluates and streamlines
regulations with the goal of reducing burden—CMS is finalizing proposals to
remove measures from the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting Program and
from the Ambulatory Surgery Center Quality Reporting Program. These removals
are aimed at enabling providers to focus on tracking and reporting the
measures that are most impactful on patient care. This action will decrease
burden for providers by approximately $27 million over the next two years.
In 2018, CMS implemented a payment policy to
help beneficiaries save on coinsurance for drugs that were administered at
hospital outpatient departments that were acquired through the 340B program—a
program that allows certain hospitals to buy outpatient drugs at lower cost.
Due to CMS’ policy change, Medicare beneficiaries are now benefitting from
the discounts that 340B hospitals enjoy when they receive 340B-acquired
drugs. In 2018 alone, beneficiaries are saving an estimated $320 million on
out-of-pocket payments for these drugs. For 2019, CMS is expanding on this
policy by extending the 340B payment change to additional off-campus
provider-based hospital outpatient departments that are paid under the
Physician Fee Schedule.
In response to recommendations from the
President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis, to
comply with the requirements of the SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act
(P.L. 115-271), and to avoid any potential unintended consequences that would
encourage overprescribing of opioids, CMS is removing questions regarding
pain communication from the hospital patient experience survey. Additionally,
CMS is adopting a policy to encourage increased use of non-opioid drugs
following a surgical procedure in the ASC setting.
The President’s Commission on Combating Drug
Addiction and the Opioid Crisis also recommended that CMS review its payment
policies for certain drugs that function as a supply, specifically non-opioid
pain management treatments. Payment for drugs that function as a supply in
surgical procedures or diagnostic tests is packaged under the OPPS and ASC
payment systems. However, in response to this recommendation as well as
stakeholder comments and peer-reviewed evidence, for 2019, CMS is finalizing
the proposal to pay separately at average sales price plus 6 percent for
non-opioid pain management drugs that function as a supply when used in a
covered surgical procedure performed in an ASC.
For More Information:
Read the full text of this excerpted CMS Press Release (issued November 2)
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Friday, November 2, 2018
CY 2019 OPPS and ASC Rule Encourages More Choices and Lower Costs for Seniors
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