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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 05-1586

RULES AND REGULATIONS

Title 55--PUBLIC WELFARE

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WELFARE

[55 PA. CODE CHS. 1101, 1123, 1149,
1151 AND 1153]

Revisions to General Assistance and Medical Assistance Benefit Packages and Recipient Copayments for Adults

[35 Pa.B. 4811]

   The Department of Public Welfare (Department), under the authority of sections 201(2), 403(b), 443.1, 443.3, 443.6, 448 and 454 of the Public Welfare Code (code) (62 P. S. §§ 201(2), 403(b), 443.1, 443.3, 443.6, 448 and 454), as amended by the act of July 7, 2005 (P. L. 177, No. 42) (Act 42), amends Chapters 1101, 1123, 1149, 1151 and 1153 to read as set forth in Annex A.

Omission of Proposed Rulemaking

   Act 42 amended the code by amending and adding several new provisions. Specifically, Act 42 amended section 443.1(4), added section 443.3(b) and (c), amended 443.6 (62 P. S. § 443.6) and added section 454. Sections 443.1(4) and 443.3(b) of the code were amended to provide for limits on behavioral health services for adults eligible for Medical Assistance (MA) under Title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.A. §§ 1396--1396v) and adults eligible for State-only funded General Assistance (GA) MA benefits in the MA fee-for-service (FFS) delivery system. Section 443.6 of the code amended prior authorization (PA) requirements for purchase and rental of durable medical equipment (DME). Section 454 of the code provides that the Department shall promulgate final-omitted regulations to establish the benefit packages and any copayments for adults eligible for MA under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and adults eligible for GA MA benefits. The basis for the final-omitted regulations is section 204(1)(iv) of the act of July 31, 1968 (P. L. 769, No. 240) (45 P. S. § 1204(1)(iv)), known as the Commonwealth Documents Law (CDL). That section authorizes an agency to omit or modify notice of proposed rulemaking when the regulation relates to Commonwealth grants or benefits. In addition, section 454 of the code expressly exempts the Department's regulations from review under the Regulatory Review Act (71 P. S. §§ 745.1--745.15) and from review by the Attorney General under section 205 of the CDL (45 P. S. § 1205) and section 204(b) of the Commonwealth Attorneys Act (71 P. S. § 732-204(b)).

   The Department is adopting this final-omitted rulemaking in accordance with section 454 of the code because the amendments pertain to the benefit packages and copayments for recipients 21 years of age and older who are eligible for MA under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and under the State-only-funded GA program.

Purpose

   The purpose of this final-omitted rulemaking is to:

   1.  Amend the current regulations in Chapters 1101, 1151 and 1153 (relating to general provisions; inpatient psychiatric services; and outpatient psychiatric services) to codify the MA benefit packages, including service limits and the criteria for granting exceptions to the limits, for inpatient and outpatient psychiatric services for MA and GA recipients 21 years of age and older in the FFS delivery system, as enacted in sections 2 and 3 of Act 42 (amending section 443.1(4) of the code and adding sections 443.3(a)(3) and (b) to the code).

   2.  Amend the current regulations in Chapter 1101 to specify the MA benefit packages, including service limits and the criteria for granting exceptions to the limits, for physical health services for MA and GA recipients 21 years of age and older as authorized in section 6 of Act 42 (adding section 454 to the Code) and to make technical changes to clarify the scope of benefits for MA recipients who are not affected by the regulation.

   3.  Amend the current regulations in Chapter 1101 to revise the copayments for pharmaceutical services for certain MA and GA recipients 18 years of age and older, as authorized in section 6 of Act 42 (adding section 454 to the code), and to permit the managed care organizations (MCOs) that contract with the Department to impose copayments for certain services, as authorized under Federal law. See 42 CFR 438.108 and 447.60 (relating to cost sharing; cost-sharing requirements for services furnished by MCOs).

   4.  Amend the current regulations in Chapter 1123 (relating to medical supplies) to codify amendments to MA payment policies for purchase and rental of DME as enacted in section 4 of Act 42 (amending section 443.6(b) of the code).

   5.  Amend the current regulations in Chapter 1101 to conform to existing MA policies as effected by earlier amendments to the code as well as a court-approved stipulation of settlement.

   6.  Make various technical revisions throughout Chapters 1101, 1123, 1149, 1151 and 1153 to add definitions, delete obsolete terms and add or amend cross-references to enhance the readability of the regulations.

Background

   The Department administers an MA Program under Title XIX of the Social Security Act for low-income, aged and disabled individuals, mothers with children, low-income workers with disabilities and women diagnosed with breast or cervical cancer. In addition, the Department administers an MA Program for GA recipients, principally single adults, that is funded solely by State funds and is not mandated by the Federal government. This Commonwealth is one of a few states that has a GA Program. Both MA programs provide a continuum of physical and behavioral health services, including long-term care, inpatient hospital, pharmacy, outpatient services such as physician, podiatric, medical and psychiatric clinic, chiropractic services, dental services, medical supplies and DME to approximately 1.8 million eligible MA recipients.

   In State Fiscal Year (SFY) 2002-2003, the most recent year for which complete data is available, the MA expenditures for the Federal program were more than $9.2 billion. For the same State fiscal year, MA expenditures for GA recipients were more than $399 million, of which almost $84 million was expended for acute inpatient hospital care. MA expenditures have continued to increase at an exponential rate. The MA caseload is projected to increase by 5.9% in SFY 2005-2006. MA costs for the State fiscal year are projected to increase by 6.7% while State revenues for the same period are projected to increase by only 2.8%. In the face of the ever-increasing caseload and expenditures, advances in medical technology and treatment and stagnant State revenues, the Department confronted the same challenge faced by Medicaid programs Nationwide to identify cost containment initiatives that would achieve the necessary savings without compromising the health care of the MA population by drastically reducing or even eliminating benefits.

   To meet this challenge, during SFY 2004-2005 the Department implemented several MA initiatives to contain costs, generate additional revenue and enhance the quality of care before considering the last resort of modifying recipient benefit packages. For example, the Department expanded its primary case management program to include MA recipients 21 years of age and older in counties that are not included in HealthChoices, the Department's mandatory managed care program. The expanded program, known as ACCESS Plus, not only provides a medical home to MA recipients who previously did not have one but also offers a voluntary disease management program to provide case management services to MA recipients who have asthma, diabetes, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or coronary artery disease. The Department increased the fees paid for primary care provider office visits by 30% to provide incentives to promote primary care.

   The Department also began an initiative to expand PA of certain pharmaceuticals based on its assessment--informed by input from practitioners with expertise in the field--of the most efficacious and cost-effective drugs in a therapeutic class. The increased use of PA is intended in the first instance to minimize the use of unnecessary drug regimens. As part of the same initiative, the Department issued a Request for Proposals to implement a preferred drug list (PDL). By establishing a PDL, the Department will not only afford MA recipients the benefit of experts' review of the most efficacious and cost-effective drugs but also expects to generate additional revenue of $25 million to $37.5 million annually in supplemental rebates from drug manufacturers.

   Finally, the Department obtained approval from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to impose provider assessments on MCOs, long-term care facilities and intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded. Through these assessments, the Department realized $350 million in additional revenue to support the MA Program.

   Even with the success of these initiatives, the Department was compelled to examine other aspects of the MA Program to achieve the needed savings. In conducting this review, the Department evaluated proposals that other State Medicaid programs have considered or implemented. These proposals include imposition of provider assessments, changes in recipient eligibility criteria, decreased benefits and reduced provider fees. From among the options that it had not yet pursued, the Department rejected changes in eligibility as inconsistent with its goal of maintaining comprehensive benefit packages for as many individuals as possible. The Department also rejected the wholesale elimination of even some benefits as inconsistent with the same goal as well as counterproductive, since elimination of MA benefits would likely result in increased expenditures for more costly services and the shifting of costs to other programs within the Department and other Commonwealth agencies, such as child welfare and juvenile justice, mental health and mental retardation, the Department of Education or the Department of Aging. Finally, the Department rejected across-the-board provider fee reductions because reductions could cause some providers to discontinue participation in the MA program, which could potentially result in reduced access to needed services.

   The Department also solicited and considered cost-containment recommendations submitted by the Medical Assistance Advisory Committee (MAAC) and its subcommittees as well as other advocacy organizations. Of the many suggested proposals, the Department had already implemented several and agreed to pursue others. None of the recommendations would, however, realize the necessary savings in the current fiscal year.

   After reviewing the various options available to it, the Department concluded that the changes that would best achieve the goal of containing costs while continuing to make services available to the greatest number of MA recipients were to impose only a few service-specific limits, subject to exceptions in specified circumstances; modify copayments for brand name and generic drugs in the FFS delivery system; and permit its contracted MCOs to impose copayments up to those imposed by the Department in the FFS delivery system. The MCOs that provide services in the Department's voluntary and mandatory managed care programs have the option of imposing the same or lesser physical health service-specific limits. If the MCOs establish service limits, they must also establish an exceptions process. These limited changes to the MA Program will enable the Department to preserve the vital benefits to the greatest number of MA recipients in a fiscally responsible and cost-effective manner.

   The Department informed providers and affected recipients of the benefit package and copayment changes, as well as the criteria and process for requesting exceptions to the limits, by individual notice mailed to each recipient household and each provider enrolled in the MA Program. Providers will receive additional information regarding the exception process by means of MA Bulletins and updates to provider handbooks. The Department will also issue paper vouchers to adult MA recipients, to be given to the provider during a visit that is subject to the 18-visit limit, as is the current procedure for adult GA recipients. MCOs that choose to exercise the option of imposing the same or fewer service-specific limits for some services or copayments for certain services will issue individual notice to their members, advising them of the specific benefit package changes and copayments, at least 30 days before the changes become effective. The MCOs will also notify their network providers of the changes they intend to implement.

Service-Specific Limits

   The service-specific limits are designed to meet the medical needs of the vast majority of MA recipients. To protect its most vulnerable MA population, the Department imposed the service-specific limits only on adult MA and adult GA recipients, 21 years of age or older, excluding pregnant women. MA and GA recipients under 21 years of age are not affected by this final-omitted rulemaking and remain eligible for all medically necessary services. Likewise, pregnant recipients are not affected by this final-omitted rulemaking and remain eligible for all medically necessary services covered under the categorically needy and medically needy categories of MA and the categorically needy and medically needy only categories of GA.

   The Department developed the service-specific limits mindful of the Federal requirement that the amount, duration and scope of each MA service must be sufficient to reasonably achieve its purpose. See 42 CFR 440.230(b) (relating to sufficiency of amount, duration, and scope). Specifically, the limits on inpatient medical rehabilitation and acute care hospital admissions are such that the majority of recipients will not be affected. For example, of the approximately 760 adult MA and GA recipients in the MA FFS delivery system who were admitted to an inpatient medical rehabilitation hospital during SFY 2002-2003, 84.3% had only one admission. Similarly, of the approximately 3,774 adult GA recipients in the FFS delivery system who were admitted to an inpatient acute care hospital during SFY 2002-2003, 76.5% had only one admission.

   The 18-visit limit on office and clinic visits, which has been in place for GA recipients since 1993 (see 22 Pa.B. 5995 (December 12, 1992)), will likewise not affect the majority of recipients. In the first instance, the limit applies only to specified procedures: evaluation and management and consultations by physicians, podiatrists, optometrists and certified registered nurse practitioners; general ophthalmologic services by ophthalmologists and optometrists; examination and manipulation services by chiropractors; and outpatient hospital clinic, independent medical clinic, rural health clinic and Federally qualified health center visits. Of the estimated 66,259 adult MA recipients who used practitioner and clinic visits in the MA FFS delivery system during SFY 2002-2003, 91.6% used 18 or fewer visits. Of the approximately 9,141 adult GA recipients who are currently subject to this limit and needed these services in the FFS delivery system during SFY 2002-2003, only 172 used more than 18 visits during the fiscal year; 98.1% used 18 or fewer visits.

   In addition to the service-specific limits established by the Department in this final-omitted rulemaking, sections 2 and 3 of Act 42 imposed limits on inpatient and outpatient psychiatric services in the FFS delivery system, which the Department is also codifying through this final-omitted rulemaking. As with the service limits established by the Department, those enacted in Act 42 are also designed to meet the needs of the most recipients and to maintain the amount, duration and scope of the services to reasonably achieve their purpose.

   For example, of the approximately 16,823 adult MA and GA recipients in the MA FFS delivery system who were admitted to a private inpatient psychiatric hospital or psychiatric unit during FY 2002-2003, 93.2% had stays of 30 or fewer days. Similarly, the vast majority of adult MA and GA recipients in the FFS delivery system had fewer than 5 hours of psychotherapy in an outpatient psychiatric clinic in a 30-day period: of the approximately 80,557 adult MA and GA recipients in the MA FFS delivery system who received psychotherapy during FY 2002-2003, 92.4% received 5 or fewer hours. Finally, of the estimated 4,967 adult MA and GA recipients in the FFS delivery system who received psychiatric partial hospitalization services during SFY 2002-2003, 91.3% received 540 or fewer hours.

   The impact of the service-specific limits will be further ameliorated by the exceptions to the limits authorized by Act 42. Specifically, sections 443.3(b) and 454(c) of the code, as added by Act 42, authorize the Department to grant exceptions to allow payment for services beyond the established limits and specify the criteria that the Department will use to review exception requests. The Department has codified the exceptions process for both adult MA and adult GA recipients in § 1101.31(f) (relating to scope) to enable it to grant an exception when it determines that: the recipient has a serious chronic systemic illness or other serious health condition and denying the exception will jeopardize the recipient's life or result in the serious deterioration of the recipient's health; granting the exception is a cost-effective alternative for the MA Program; or granting the exception is necessary to comply with Federal law. The Department will apply the exceptions criteria in substantially the same way that it has applied the existing exceptions criteria for adult GA recipients.

   To facilitate review of requests for exceptions to the service-specific limits, the Department will automate approval of several types of exception requests. For example, a request for an exception to the 18-visit service limit to visit a recipient's primary care practitioner (PCP) will be automatically approved. A request for an exception to the 18-visit service limit to visit a specialist on referral from a PCP will likewise be automatically approved. A request for an exception to the acute inpatient limit for adult GA recipients when the admission required care in an intensive care unit will also be automatically approved.

Copayments

   The Department evaluated a broad range of potential copayment changes for recipients, which included both new copayments for services that do not currently have a copayment and increases to existing copayments. Rather than having to impose some of the more significant proposals under consideration, the Department is able to limit the copayment changes in the FFS delivery system to a nominal revision to copayments for brand name and generic drugs for MA and GA recipients 18 years of age and older. In addition, the Department is permitting MA MCOs to apply nominal copayments to recipients for the same services and up to the same amounts that are imposed in the FFS delivery system. MA and GA recipients who are under 18 years of age, pregnant or residents in an institution remain exempt from these copayment changes. The Department is making no other changes to recipient copayments.

   The copayment for brand name drugs is increased from $1 for MA recipients and from $2 for GA recipients to $3 per prescription or refill for both MA and GA recipients. The copayment for generic drugs is reduced for GA recipients from $2 to $1 per prescription or refill and remains at $1 per prescription or refill for MA recipients. This nominal copayment revision supports the Department's general goal of encouraging the use of cost-effective generic drugs whenever appropriate while imposing limited additional liability on recipients.

DME

   Act 42 amended section 443.6(b) of the code to raise the payment limit for DME and surgical supplies from $100 to $600 unless prior authorized by the Department and to permit rental of DME for 6 months rather than 3 months before PA is required. The original limits were enacted in 1978 and have not been amended since then. Act 42 amended the limits to account for increases in the cost of DME and medical supplies since 1978. Act 42 also authorizes the Department to continue to require PA for purchase of DME that costs less than $600 and rental of DME for fewer than 6 months.

Technical Amendments

   The Department promulgated regulations published at 22 Pa.B. 5995 to establish a GA Basic Health Care package and to limit dental services for all recipients 21 years of age and older, to be effective on January 1, 1993. The GA Basic Health Care package established certain benefit limits, including a combined maximum of 18 practitioner and clinic visits per fiscal year; 3 prescriptions (including refills) per month in specific drug classes; 30 days of inpatient medical rehabilitation hospital per fiscal year; 30 days of inpatient drug and alcohol care per fiscal year; 30 home health visits per fiscal year; emergency room care for emergency use only, and ambulance services for emergency transport only. The regulations also established criteria and procedures for requesting an exception to some of the limits.

   After the regulations were promulgated but before the effective date, the regulations were enjoined on December 31, 1992, by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in Felix v. Casey, No. 92-CV-7376 (E. D. Pa.). Under the terms of a court-approved Stipulation of Settlement, the GA Basic Health Care package was modified to increase the prescription limit per month to six and to expand drug coverage to all classes of legend drugs included in the Department's Drug Reference File. Dental benefits were restored with certain limitations for all categories of recipients but limited to inpatient, short procedure unit and ambulatory surgical center settings for the medically needy categories of recipients. See 23 Pa.B. 4583 (September 25, 1993). These policies have been in place since July 1, 1993, and this final-omitted rulemaking amends §§ 1101.31(b) and (e) and 1149.21--1149.24.

   Section 1101.31(e) is also amended to conform to a Notice of Rule Change published at 26 Pa.B. 2132 (May 4, 1996), which removed family planning clinic visits from the 18-visit limit on practitioner and clinic services in the GA Basic Health Care package.

   Section 1101.31(d) is amended to eliminate the cross-reference to the categorically needy scope of benefits in § 1101.31(b) and restate the State Blind Pension (SBP) scope of benefits, § 1101.31(d). Because the changes to benefit limits and copayments that apply to the adult MA and GA populations do not apply to SBP recipients, the SBP benefit package must now be described separately. These amendments are purely technical in nature and do not alter the current scope of benefits for SBP recipients.

   Finally, this final-omitted rulemaking adds § 1101.63(c) (relating to payment in full) to codify the $150 deductible per fiscal year that applies to adult GA recipients for ambulatory surgical center services and inpatient or outpatient hospital services, excluding laboratory and X-ray services, as currently specified in section 448 of the code.

Requirements

   A.  Benefit limits, exceptions, copayments, and conditions for payment. The final-omitted rulemaking amends the current scope of benefits for categorically and medically needy adult MA recipients and chronically and medically needy only adult GA recipients, codifies the exception criteria and process required under Act 42, amends copayment requirements and codifies conditions of payment for DME as follows:

   1.  Practitioners' visits and clinic visits. Section 1101.31(b)(2) is amended to provide that the Department will pay for up to a combined total of 18 office or home visits per SFY by practitioners and clinics for adult MA recipients.

   2.  Inpatient medical rehabilitation hospital admissions. Section 1101.31(b)(1) and (e)(1)(iv)(B) is amended to provide that the Department will pay for one admission to an inpatient rehabilitation hospital per SFY for both adult MA and adult GA recipients.

   3.  Inpatient acute care hospital admissions. Section 1101.31(e)(1)(iv)(A) is amended to provide that the Department will pay for one admission to an inpatient acute care hospital per SFY for adult GA recipients.

   4.  Private inpatient psychiatric hospital care. Sections 1101.31(b)(7) and (e)(1)(xii), 1151.2, 1151.21(b), 1151.22(b) and 1151.43(a) and (c) are amended to codify that the Department will pay for up to 30 days of inpatient care in a private psychiatric hospital or psychiatric unit per SFY, for both adult MA and adult GA recipients.

   5.  Outpatient psychiatric clinic services. Sections 1101.31(b)(11)(iii) and (e)(1)(xiii)(C) and 1153.53(a)(4) and (b) (relating to limitations on payment) are amended to codify that the Department will pay for psychotherapy provided by outpatient psychiatric clinics, up to 5 hours or 10 1/2 hour sessions every 30-consecutive-day period for both adult MA and adult GA recipients.

   6.  Psychiatric partial hospitalization services. Sections 1101.31(b)(3)(ii) and (e)(1)(viii)(B) and 1153.53(a)(1) and (b) are amended to codify that the Department will pay for psychiatric partial hospitalization, up to 540 hours per SFY, for both adult MA and adult GA recipients.

   7.  Exceptions. Section 1101.31(f) is added to codify the exceptions criteria enacted in Act 42 and to set forth the process for requesting an exception to a service-specific limit. Because the Department's application of the exceptions criteria will not be substantively different from application of the exceptions criteria currently in effect under § 1101.31 for GA recipients, these amendments also delete § 1101.31(e)(4)--(6) and consolidate the current GA exceptions process and the new exceptions process in § 1101.31(f), which applies to both adult MA and adult GA recipients.

   8.  Copayments. Section 1101.63(b)(2)(viii) and (ix) is amended to delete the exclusion of copayments by health maintenance organizations, to permit MCOs to apply nominal recipient copayments in the mandatory and voluntary managed care programs and to delete reference to health insuring organizations, which is an obsolete term. Section 1101.63(b)(5)(i) is amended to modify the copayment required of MA and GA recipients 18 years of age and older for brand name drugs to $3 per prescription and $3 per refill. Section 1101.63(b)(6)(i) is amended to modify the copayment required of MA and GA recipients 18 years of age and older for generic drugs to $1 per prescription and $1 per refill.

   9.  Payment conditions for DME. Section 1123.60(e) and (f) is amended to codify the payment conditions for DME specified in section 443.6(b) of the code, as amended by Act 42, to raise the payment limit for DME and surgical supplies to a maximum of $600 unless prior authorized by the Department and the rental of DME to 6 months before PA is required.

   B.  Additional technical amendments. Additional technical amendments in this final-omitted rulemaking are as follows:

   1.  Scope of benefits for SBP recipients. Section 1101.31(d) is amended to set forth the scope of benefits for SBP recipients and eliminate the cross-reference to the categorically needy scope of benefits in § 1101.31(b). This is purely a technical amendment. The scope of benefits for these recipients remains unchanged.

   2.  Scope of benefits for GA chronically needy recipients. Section 1101.31(e)(1) is amended to set forth the scope of benefits for GA chronically needy recipients; eliminate the cross-reference to the categorically needy scope of benefits in § 1101.31(b); codify the existing benefit limits on prescription drugs and dental services; and delete family planning clinic services from the 18-visit limit.

   3.  Scope of benefits for MA medically needy and GA medically needy only recipients. Section 1101.31(c) and (e)(2) is amended to conform to Chapter 1143 (relating to podiatrists' services) to specify that podiatrists' services are included within the scope of benefits for these recipients.

   4.  GA MA Deductible. Section 1101.63(c) is added to codify the $150 deductible per fiscal year that applies to adult GA recipients for specified services, as required by section 448 of the code.

   5.  Other technical amendments. The Department is making various minor technical amendments throughout Chapters 1101, 1123, 1149, 1151 and 1153 to define and update terminology, as well as establish and update cross-references between Chapter 1101 and related service-specific chapters for the sole purpose of enhancing the clarity and readability of the regulations.

Affected Individuals and Organizations

   Hospitals, including acute care and medical rehabilitation hospitals, private inpatient psychiatric hospitals and units of general hospitals, practitioners, outpatient psychiatric clinics and pharmacies that provide services to adult MA and GA recipients will be affected by the final-omitted rulemaking.

   Adult MA and GA recipients except pregnant women who receive services in the FFS delivery system will be affected by the final-omitted rulemaking, which imposes limits on various inpatient and outpatient behavioral and physical health services and increases the copayment for brand name drugs while reducing or maintaining the copayment for generic drugs. Adult MA and GA recipients except pregnant women who receive services in the managed care delivery system could be affected by the final-omitted rulemaking because the MCOs are authorized to impose the physical health service limits and all copayments that are currently imposed in the FFS delivery system.

Accomplishments and Benefits

   This final-omitted rulemaking makes limited changes to the MA Program that will enable the Department to preserve the vital benefits to the greatest number of MA recipients in a fiscally responsible and cost-effective manner. The service-specific limits are designed to meet the medical needs of the vast majority of MA recipients. The nominal copayment revisions support the Department's general goal of encouraging the use of cost-effective generic drugs whenever appropriate while imposing limited additional liability on recipients. By implementing these changes, the Department was able to avoid either the elimination of services or the termination of MA recipients from MA coverage.

Fiscal Impact

   The revised benefit packages for adult MA and GA recipients will result in reduced payments for inpatient rehabilitation hospital admissions, inpatient acute care hospital admissions, private inpatient psychiatric hospital admissions, outpatient psychiatric clinic and psychiatric partial hospitalization services and practitioner and clinic visits. The Commonwealth expects to realize $104.727 million ($ 72.888 million in State funds) in savings in FY 2005-2006. The changes in copayments for brand name and generic drugs will result in savings of $ 6.517 million ($ 2.920 million in State funds) in FY 2005-2006.

Paperwork Requirements

   There will be no new paperwork requirements as a result of the final-omitted rulemaking. Providers, practitioners and recipients will use the existing Program Exception process authorized in § 1150.63 (relating to waivers) to request exceptions to the service-specific limits.

Public Process

   The Department discussed various proposed service-specific limits and copayment changes at meetings of the MAAC, as well as the Consumer and Fee-for-Service Delivery System Subcommittees of the MAAC, on an ongoing basis since February 24, 2005. Both issues were discussed at the MAAC meetings on February 24, 2005, March 24, 2005, April 28, 2005, and May 26, 2005; at the Consumer Subcommittee meetings on February 23, 2005, March 23, 2005, April 27, 2005, May 25, 2005, and June 22, 2005; and at the Fee-for-Service Delivery System Subcommittee meetings on February 14, 2005, and April 13, 2005. The Department distributed charts describing the various scope of benefit and copayment changes being considered, solicited input and alternative cost-containment strategies and responded to questions.

   After Act 42 was enacted, the Department presented the final service-specific limits and copayment revisions at the MAAC meeting on July 28, 2005. The Department also presented a draft of the recipient notice, advising of the benefit package and copayment changes, to the Consumer Subcommittee of the MAAC for review and comment and revised the notice in response to comments received.

Regulatory Review Act

   Under section 454 of the code, this final-omitted rulemaking is not subject to review under the Regulatory Review Act.

Findings

   The Department finds that:

   (1)  Notice of proposed rulemaking is omitted in accordance with section 204(1)(iv) of the CDL and 1 Pa. Code § 7.4(1)(iv) because the regulation relates to Commonwealth grants and benefits.

   (2)  Adoption of this regulation in the manner provided by this order is necessary and appropriate for the administration and enforcement of the code.

Order

   The Department, acting under the code, orders that:

   (a)  The regulations of the Department, 55 Pa. Code Chapters 1101, 1123, 1149, 1151 and 1153, are amended by amending §§ 1101.21, 1101.31, 1101.63, 1123.21, 1123.24, 1123.60, 1149.2, 1149.21, 1149.22, 1149.23, 1149.24, 1151.2, 1151.21, 1151.22, 1151.24, 1151.43, 1153.53 to read as set forth in Annex A.

   (b)  The Secretary of the Department shall submit this order and Annex A to the Office of General Counsel for approval as to legality and form as required by law.

   (c)  The Secretary of the Department shall certify and deposit this order and Annex A with the Legislative Reference Bureau as required by law.

   (d)  This order shall take effect on August 29, 2005.

ESTELLE B. RICHMAN,   
Secretary

   Fiscal Note: 14-500. No fiscal impact; (8) recommends adoption. Implementation of this rulemaking will generate savings to the General Fund beginning in Fiscal Year 2005-2006 of $75.8 million.

Annex A

TITLE 55. PUBLIC WELFARE

PART III. MEDICAL ASSISTANCE MANUAL

CHAPTER 1101. GENERAL PROVISIONS

DEFINITIONS

§ 1101.21. Definitions.

   The following words and terms, when used in this part, have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

   Adult--An MA recipient 21 years of age or older.

   CRNP--Certified registered nurse practitioner.

   Categorically needy--Aged, blind or disabled individuals or families and children who are otherwise eligible for Medicaid and who meet the financial eligibility requirements for TANF, SSI or an optional State supplement.

   Complete medical history--A chronological medical record which includes, but is not limited to, major complaints, present medical history, past medical history, family history and social history.

   County Assistance Offices or CAOs--The local offices of the Department that administer the MA Program on the local level. They determine recipient eligibility and perform other necessary MA functions such as prior authorization and client referral to a source of medical services.

   Covered service--A benefit to which a MA recipient is entitled under the MA Program of the Commonwealth.

   Department--The Department of Public Welfare of the Commonwealth or a subagency thereof.

   Emergency situation--A condition in which immediate medical care is necessary to prevent the death or serious impairment of health of the individual.

   Enroll--The act of becoming eligible to participate in the MA Program by completing the provider enrollment form, entering into or renewing as required a written provider agreement and meeting other participation requirements specified in this chapter and the appropriate separate chapters relating to each provider type.

   EPSDT--Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program.

   FQHC--Federally qualified health center.

   Factor--An individual or an organization, such as a service bureau, that advances money to a provider for accounts receivable that the provider has assigned, sold or transferred to the individual or organization for an added fee or a deduction of a portion of the accounts receivable.

   GA--General Assistance--MA funded solely by State funds as authorized under Article IV of the Public Welfare Code (62 P. S. §§ 401--488).

   General public--Payors other than Medicaid. The term includes other health insurance plans.

   HHS--The United States Department of Health and Human Services or its successor agency, which is given responsibility for implementation of Title XIX of the Social Security Act.

   MA--Medical Assistance.

   Medicaid--Medical Assistance provided under a State Plan approved by HHS under Title XIX of the Social Security Act.

   Medical facility--A licensed or approved hospital, skilled nursing facility, intermediate care facility, intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded, public clinic, shared health facility, rural health clinic, psychiatric clinic, pharmacy, laboratory, drug and alcohol clinic, partial hospitalization facility or family planning clinic.

   Medically necessary--A service, item, procedure or level of care that is:

   (i)  Compensable under the MA Program.

   (ii)  Necessary to the proper treatment or management of an illness, injury or disability.

   (iii)  Prescribed, provided or ordered by an appropriate licensed practitioner in accordance with accepted standards of practice.

   Medically needy--A term used to refer to aged, blind or disabled individuals or families and children who are otherwise eligible for Medicaid and whose income and resources are above the limits prescribed for the categorically needy but are within limits set under the Medicaid State Plan.

   Noncompensable item--A service or supply a provider furnishes for which there is no provision for payment under this part.

   Parent/caretaker--The person responsible for the care and control of an unemancipated minor child. This includes mother or father, grandmother or grandfather, stepmother or stepfather or another relative related by blood or marriage.

   Postpartum period--The period beginning on the last day of the pregnancy and extending through the end of the month in which the 60-day period following termination of the pregnancy ends.

   Practitioner--A medical doctor, doctor of osteopathy, dentist, optometrist, podiatrist, chiropractor or other medical professional licensed by the Commonwealth or by another state who is authorized to participate in the MA Program as a provider.

   Prepayment review--Determination of the medical necessity of a service or item before payment is made to the provider. Prepayment review is performed after the service or item is provided and involves an examination of an invoice and related material, when appropriate. Prepayment review is not prior authorization.

   Prior authorization--A procedure specifically required or authorized by this title wherein the delivery of an MA item or service is either conditioned upon or delayed by a prior determination by the Department or its agents or employees that an eligible MA recipient is eligible for a particular item or service or that there is medical necessity for a particular item or service or that a particular item or service is suitable to a particular recipient.

   Professional Standards Review Organization or PSRO--An organization which HHS has charged with the responsibility for operating professional review systems to determine whether hospital services are medically necessary, provided appropriately, carried out on a timely basis and meet professional standards.

   Program--The MA program of the Commonwealth.

   Provider--An individual or medical facility which signs an agreement with the Department to participate in the MA program, including, but not limited to: licensed practitioners, pharmacies, hospitals, nursing homes, clinics, home health agencies and medical purveyors.

   Public clinic--A health clinic operated by a Federal, State or local governmental agency.

   Purveyor--A person other than a practitioner who, directly or indirectly, engages in the business of supplying to patients medical supplies, equipment or services for which reimbursement under the MA program is received, including, but not limited to: clinical laboratory services or supplies, X-ray laboratory services or supplies, inhalation therapy services or equipment, ambulance services, sick room supplies, physical therapy services or equipment, and orthopedic or surgical appliances or supplies.

   Recipient--A person or family that is eligible for MA benefits.

   School child--A child attending a kindergarten, elementary, grade or high school, either public or private.

   Shared health facility--An entity other than a licensed or approved hospital facility, skilled nursing facility, intermediate care facility, intermediate care facility for the mentally retarded, rural health clinic, public clinic or Health Maintenance Organization in which:

   (i)  Medical services, either alone or together with support services, are provided at a single location.

   (ii)  Services are provided by three or more practitioners, two or more of whom are practicing within different professions.

   (iii)  Practitioners share any of the following: common waiting areas, examining rooms, equipment, supporting staff or records.

   (iv)  At least one practitioner receives payment on a fee for service basis.

   (v)  A provider receiving more than $30,000 in payment from the MA Program during the 12-month period prior to the date of the initial or renewal application of the shared health facility for registration in the MA Program.

   State Blind Pension recipient--An individual 21 years of age or older who by virtue of meeting the requirements of Article V of the Public Welfare Code (62 P. S. §§ 501--515) is eligible for pension payments and payments made on his behalf for medical or other health care, with the exception of inpatient hospital care and post-hospital care in the home provided by a hospital. Payment for medical and health care is made solely from Commonwealth funds since these individuals do not meet the criteria for Federal funding of their medical care under Medicaid.

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