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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: CMS Media Relations Trump
Administration Finalizes Policies to Give Medicare Beneficiaries Outpatient
Prospective Payment System and Ambulatory Surgical Center final rule empowers
beneficiary choices and unleashes competition to lower costs and improve
innovation Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is
finalizing policy changes that will give Medicare patients and their doctors
greater choices to get care at a lower cost in an outpatient setting. The
Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) and Ambulatory Surgical Center
(ASC) final rules will increase value for Medicare beneficiaries and reflect
the agency’s efforts to transform the healthcare delivery system through
competition and innovation. These changes implement the Trump
Administration’s Executive Order on Protecting and Improving Medicare for Our
Nation’s Seniors, and will take effect on January 1, 2021. “President Trump’s term in office has been marked by an
unrelenting drive to level the playing field and boost competition at every
turn,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Today’s rule is no different. It
allows doctors and patients to make decisions about the most appropriate site
of care, based on what makes the most sense for the course of treatment and
the patient without micromanagement from Washington” In this final rule, CMS will begin eliminating the Inpatient
Only (IPO) list of 1,700 procedures for which Medicare will only pay when
performed in the hospital inpatient setting over a three-year transitional
period, beginning with some 300 primarily musculoskeletal-related
services. The IPO list will be completely phased out by CY 2024. This
will make these procedures eligible to be paid by Medicare when furnished in
the hospital outpatient setting when outpatient care is appropriate, as well
as continuing to be payable when furnished in the hospital inpatient setting
when inpatient care is appropriate, as determined by the physician. In
the short term, as hospitals face surges in patients with complications from
coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), being able to provide treatment in
outpatient settings will allow non-COVID-19 patients to get the care they
need. In addition to putting decisions on the best site of care in the
hands of physicians, allowing more procedures to be done in an outpatient
setting also provides for lower-cost options that benefit the patient.
For example, thromboendarterectomy (HCPCS code 35372) is a surgical procedure
that removes chronic blood clots from the arteries in the lung. If this
procedure is performed in an inpatient setting, a patient who has not had
other health care expenses that year would have a deductible of about $1500.
In contrast, the copayment for this procedure for the same patient in the
outpatient setting would be about $1150. Patient safety and quality of care
will be safeguarded by the doctor’s assessment of the risk of a procedure or
service to the individual beneficiary and their selection of the most
appropriate setting of care based on this risk. This is in addition to state
and local licensure requirements, accreditation requirements, hospital
conditions of participation (CoPs), medical malpractice laws, and CMS quality
and monitoring initiatives and programs. Beginning January 1, 2021, we are adding eleven procedures to
the ASC covered procedures list (CPL), including total hip arthroplasty (CPT
27130), under our standard review process. Additionally, we are
revising the criteria we use to add surgical procedures to the ASC CPL,
providing that certain criteria we used to add surgical procedures to the ASC
CPL in the past will now be factors for physicians to consider in deciding
whether a specific beneficiary should receive a covered surgical procedure in
an ASC. Using our revised criteria, we are adding an additional 267 surgical
procedures to the ASC CPL beginning January 1, 2021. Finally, we are adopting
a notification process for surgical procedures the public believes can be
added to the ASC CPL under the criteria we are retaining. CMS is announcing that it will continue its policy of paying for
340B-acquired drugs at Average Sales Price (ASP) minus 22.5% after the July
31, 2020 decision of the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upholding the
current policy. This policy lowers out-of-pocket drug costs for Medicare
beneficiaries by letting them share in the discount that hospitals receive
under the 340B program. Since this policy went into effect in 2018, Medicare
beneficiaries have saved nearly $1 billion on drug costs, with expected
Medicare beneficiary drug cost savings of over $300 million in CY 2021. As part of the agency’s Patients Over Paperwork Initiative,
which is aimed at reducing burden for healthcare providers, CMS is establishing
a simple updated methodology to calculate the Overall Hospital Quality Star
Rating (Overall Star Rating). The Overall Star Rating summarizes a variety of
quality measures published on the Medicare.gov Care Compare tool (the successor to Hospital Compare) for
common conditions that hospitals treat, such as heart attacks or pneumonia.
Along with publicly reported data on Care
Compare, the Overall Star Rating helps patients make
better-informed healthcare decisions. Veterans Health Administration
hospitals will be added to CMS’ Care Compare,
which will help veterans understand hospital quality within the VA system.
Overall, these changes will reduce provider burden, improve the
predictability of the star ratings, and make it easier for patients to
compare ratings between similar hospitals. In response to stakeholder feedback about the current methodology
used to calculate the Overall Star Rating, CMS is not finalizing its proposal
to stratify readmission measures under the new methodology based on dually
eligible patients, but will continue to study the issue to find the best way
to convey quality of care for this vulnerable population. Finally, in order to address the ongoing public health
emergency, CMS is finalizing a new requirement for the nation’s 6,200
hospitals and critical access hospitals to report information about their
inventory of therapeutics to treat COVID-19. This reporting will provide the
information needed to track and accurately allocate therapeutics to the
hospitals that need additional inventory to care for patients and meet surge
needs. For a fact sheet on the Calendar Year (CY) 2021 OPPS/ASC Payment
System final rule (CMS-1736-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/cy-2021-medicare-hospital-outpatient-prospective-payment-system-and-ambulatory-surgical-center-0 The proposed rule can be downloaded at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/12220-opps-final-rule-cms-1736-fc.pdf ### Get CMS
news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS and @CMSgov |
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Wednesday, December 2, 2020
CMS NEWS: Trump Administration Finalizes Policies to Give Medicare Beneficiaries More Choices around Surgery
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