Posts Tagged: rac approved issues

Aiming High with Medical Necessity Reviews

It’s Worse Than You Think

In previous posts, we’ve reported that two RACs have now posted approval to begin reviews of both medical necessity and DRG Validation, for the exact same 29 DRGs.  We have also previously shown that the RAC lists (as posted earlier this year) are skewed toward high-dollar and high-volume claims, to no one’s surprise.

Nevertheless, we have a “new” list, so let’s take a look at this “List of 29,” let’s call it — the first list of MS-DRGs approved for RAC review of medical necessity. Can we learn anything about what the RACs and CMS are thinking?

The answer is YES, we can.  Click here if you just want to jump down to the conclusion…

How Skewed Is This “List of 29″?

Well… not very, but that’s actually worse for providers! Why is it worse? Read on, and it should be come clear…

The first table below begins with some unfortunate insight, when counting the number of CC or MCCs in the List of 29. If you are not too familiar with the MS-DRG system, we recommend reading a PDF made available by CMS on the system.

Briefly, the Medicare Severity-Diagnosis Related Groups (MS-DRGs) are a system of codes that provide up to three levels of severity for a particular condition or diagnosis. A “Base DRG Group” combines all levels of severity into a single category, allowing us to combine the the individual MS-DRGs for reporting. Individual MS-DRGs within a Base DRG Group are differentiated according to the presence of either a complication (CC) or a major complication (MCC), or neither. Some Base DRG Groups, however, happen to have only two codes assigned to them. At the end of the day, all the MS-DRGs are assigned payment rates, based on their relative use of resources and supplies. Simply put, a condition that is accompanied by a major complication (MCC) is more costly to treat, therefore the provider is paid more for that claim. A condition with a complication (CC) is not paid quite as much, and a condition with neither CC nor MCC is paid the least of the three.

Now consider this table and consider what the numbers reveal:

  • 8 or 28%   – the number of MS-DRGs without a CC or MCC
  • 13 or 45%   – the number of MS-DRGs with an MCC
  • 18 or 62%   – the number of MS-DRGs with either a CC or MCC.

For the sake of this article, let’s just assume that all Base DRG Groups include exactly 3 MS-DRGs: one with an MCC, one with a CC, and one without CC or MCC. If that were true, then any randomly selected list would likely have 33% of each kind of MS-DRG. However, if the list of MS-DRGs was selected with a weighting toward the MS-DRGs with an MCC, then there would be a higher percentage of those in the list, and a lesser percentage of the two others. Basically, any list with one type of MS-DRG appearing more than 33% of the time is evidence that selection of the list favored that type of MS-DRG over the others.

In the above table, MS-DRGs with an MCC appear 45% of the time, and therefore is evidence that the list is skewed toward those MS-DRGs with an MCC. So, as mentioned above, we can once again demonstrate that even this new list is skewed toward the higher paying MS-DRGs, particularly the ones with MCCs. Of course, this still comes as no surprise, since the RACs are paid via contingency fees — the more they find, the more they get paid by CMS.

But I’m not done yet.

The size of the “skew” was disappointing, and something else about those numbers just didn’t sit right with me. The “skew” just wasn’t very big. I was expecting more. And why were there so many lower-paying DRGs in the list? “Whassup with that?” as my teenage daughter would say.

Could it be that the list is not really intended to be very skewed? That’s when the pattern became clear to me, and a reason for that pattern also came to mind…

RAC to CMS: “Hey, it’s all good!”

The RACs have obviously been busy, these past months. They were not sitting idly by, waiting for medical necessity to be released. It appears to me quite obvious that they have been running their little data-mining machines in high gear because it seems that they have dredged up plenty of evidence of improper payments due to what will be defined in denials as “a lack of medical necessity.”

Remember, the only thing that matters to a RAC is the documentation, or the lack there of, to clearly demonstrate medical necessity, not the reality of the patient encounter. And to get approval from CMS to pursue an issue across their region, a RAC must gather enough evidence to make a case that there is a problem with said claims.

I kept staring at the list. A pattern became obvious to me. Perhaps the pattern is obvious to you, too, but I’ve neither seen nor heard anyone else mention what this pattern MEANS for providers, and I do think it is important to recognize, to enable more clear thinking about what the RACs and CMS intend to do.

A Pattern Emerges

The table below shows the pattern: six complete DRG Groups, included in the List of 29. That’s 16 DRGs, more than half of the list. And remember, these are high-volume DRGs…

MS-DRGs Base DRG Group Descriptions
684-683-682 Renal failure
551-552 Medical Back Problems
314-315-316 Other Circulatory System Diagnoses
293-292-291 Heart failure & shock
192-191-190 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
056-057 Degenerative Nervous System Disorders

What this means is that for these specific diagnoses, CMS and the RACs have evidently found enough evidence to warrant RAC reviews for the medical necessity of these treatments for ALL such claims, not simply the higher paying ones.

Does this mean that CMS actually believes that the patients really did not NEED these treatments? Doubtful.

Or, does this mean that CMS is willing to argue with physicians about the medical necessity of treating these conditions or that they have been misdiagnosed?  Perhaps this is true, for a few cases; but I even find this doubtful, although to read some articles out there, one would think that physicians are preparing to wage war on who-knows-best-how-to-care-for-patients with the RACs’ medical directors. While such battles will inevitably occur, it would seem to me that this is not the kind of evidence that the RACs have already found and used to convince the New Issue Review Board at CMS to approve reviews for all the MS-DRGs in these six Base DRG Groups.

Here is what I think it more likely means: the RACs have found enough evidence to support the assertion that providers are recording neither appropriate documentation nor enough documentation in the medical record to warrant reimbursement for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries in their facilities, and that the problem is so ubiquitous that it bears scrutiny across almost the full spectrum of DRGs. Remember, HDI already has approval for DRG Validation for about 80% of all MS-DRGs.

I’m neither an expert on medical necessity nor on auditing medical records, but I do know how to analyze data and find patterns and meaning in those patterns. To me, this latest list simply nails the issue. This is not about medicine. It’s about money.

Nothing New Except Medical Necessity

RAC-LOGO-HDI

HDI Edits Ten Issues to include Reviews of Medical Necessity for 29 DRGs

The Region D RAC, HDI, only took about a week to also garner approval to begin review of medical necessity for 29 DRGs previously approved for DRG Validation, after the Region B RAC, CGI, was approved by CMS to begin medical necessity reviews for the same DRGs, as of August 6, 2010. However, while CGI had to post six (6) new issues to their site, because those DRGs had never appeared on their site before, HDI did not have to post any new issues. Of the existing 746 MSDRGs, HDI had already posted approvals for DRG Validation of over 75% of them, and these 29 did happen to already be among their approved list.

The I’s Have It: CGI and HDI

Now two of the four RACs have approval to review medical necessity, putting 24 states under such review. We do expect that to grow in the next few days, since it took HDI only about a week to catch up to CGI, so we assume Connolly and DCS are not far behind.

Although our previous post provided lists and links to the 29 DRGs, those links and titles were created using the CGI website data. Also, that list was broken into two lists — one for “new” issues, and one for “previous” issues.

Below is a list of the ten “previous” issues that now include some approvals for medical necessity. It was created using the HDI website data, which is slightly different. To see the full detail, as posted by HDI, follow the links:

(Note: to see the details, you will need to login to the eduTrax main siteRegistration is still Free.)

# eduTrax version of the HDI Posted Issue Title Originally
Posted
1 MSDRG 034-036, 215, 222-227, 231-236, 242-249, 258-262, 265, 286-287: DRG Validation-Cardiac Procedures 12/16/09
2 MSDRG 052 thru 086, 088 thru 093 and 097 thru 103: DRG Validation-Nervous System Disorders 12/16/09
3 MSDRG 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168,175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208: DRG Validation-MDC 04 Respiratory 12/16/09
4 MSDRG 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 313, 314, 315, 316: DRG Validation-Cardiovascular Diseases 12/16/09
5 MSDRG 294, 295, 312: DRG Validation-Cardiovascular, Other 01/13/10
6 MSDRG 368 thru 395 and 432 thru 446: DRG Validation-Gastrointestinal Disorders 12/16/09
7 MSDRG 539, 540, 541, 545-558, 564, 565, 566: DRG Validation-Musculoskeletal Disorders 01/13/10
8 MSDRG 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645: DRG Validation-Endocrine, Nutritional & Metabolic Disorders 12/16/09
9 MSDRG 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700: DRG Validation-Kidney & Urinary Tract Disorders 12/16/09
10 MSDRG 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 815, 815, 816: DRG Validation-Blood & Immunological Disorders 12/16/09
 

Most Difficult to Track

It is perhaps insignificant but notable that the first two RACs to be approved for medical necessity review also happen to have the two websites that are the most difficult to monitor for changes. Both sites are constructed in a way that requires interaction, and does not provide a simple method of capturing the data on the page, to compare to a future capture of the same page.

New Service Coming

We have resorted to creating our own software application to specifically follow and compare all the pages on these two sites. Shortly, we will announce and offer a for-fee service to notify our clients and subscribers of any changes posted to any of the RAC New Issues pages, including the details screen, in addition to our eduTrax RAC New Issues Tool Suite®.

Medical Necessity Approved for RAC, New and Old

Newly Approved Medical Necessity Reviews by RACs

CGI Federal, the CMS RAC for Region B posted approvals for review of both Medical Necessity and DRG Validation for some 29 DRGs since last Thursday, August 12, 2010.

Half of the top 20 DRGs nationwide were included. Click here to jump down to the list.

Our subtitle above calls these “Newly Approved,” instead of “New.”  Why did I use that phrase?  Why not just say “new”? Well, because that’s not quite accurate, and it seems that CMS and CGI don’t consider all of them to be “new” issues. Are you surprised that a word like “new” is not well defined?

This little video snippet should help you recall recent public debate about what the word “is” means.

I’ve had “debates” like that, on occasion, and I’ve always wanted to ask the person debating with me, “How many moons are in your night sky?” Of course, some words change definitions over time, or just mean different things to different people. Small words should be easy to define, though, don’t you think?

Anyway, keep this in mind as you read on, because there does not seem to be a consensus in our industry on what the word “new” means.

More about this later…

 

A Valid “New” Concern for Providers

The morning after the “newly approved” medical necessity issues were first posted by CGI, I spoke with the a RAC Team Leader for a hospital system with hospitals in several states. Even though this system has no hospitals in Region B, I know this person as a keen observer of all the RAC activities, and we often talk about the impact of the RACs. “We heard from our state hospital association that Region B would be the first to post some issues for medical necessity, and that it would happen this week,” they told me. “So, this wasn’t really a surprise. But this marks a new phase for the RACs, and we are concerned about what’s on the list.”

50% of Top 20 DRGs Now Approved

A quick analysis of the list proves that provider concerns are quite valid – of the top 20 DRGs for FY2009, 10 made this new list. Therefore, perhaps half of the top 20 DRGs in any facility either are now or soon will be targets of RAC reviews for medical necessity; and remember, they were already likely targets for reviews of physician admission orders, DRG validation, and the coding for principal and secondary diagnoses.

The First “New” DRGs Approved for Medical Necessity

Now, let me explain a small caveat, about the word “new”:  some of the DRGs approved for Medical Necessity are truly “new” issues, as those DRGs have never appeared on the (CGI) list before; while other DRGs were already approved for DRG Validation, but have now been “newly approved” for Medical Necessity review, as well.

So now, here is a list of six (6) issues with nine (9) DRGs never before posted on the CGI website, but now are posted as approved for review of both Medical Necessity and DRG Validation. To see the full detail, as posted by CGI, follow the links:

(Note: to see the details, you will need to login to the eduTrax main siteRegistration is still Free.)

There was also one DRG added for the first time, but only approved for DRG Validation:

Ok, but that’s still only nine of the DRGs. Where are the others posted on the site?

Twenty More DRGs with Medical Necessity “Newly Approved”

The other 20 DRGs now approved for Medical Necessity review were all listed previously for DRG Validation in a total of 12 issues, dating back to December, 2009, among the first complex reviews posted by CGI. These 20 DRGs were not listed as “new” issues, but were simply “called out” as approved for Medical Necessity by renaming those previously approved issues.

The 12 issues with some DRGs newly approved for medical necessity review are as follows:

Confused yet?

Why Not List All Those As “New Issues”?

Why indeed!  NOW, with the lists out of the way, let’s finally discuss why I even bring this up, and why it really will matter to providers — at least the ones who are trying to keep up with what the RACs are doing.

“New” Issues Must Be Posted by the RAC

According to the RAC Statement of Work, before a RAC can begin sending out requests for documentation to conduct complex reviews, or even demand letters for automated reviews already completed, the RAC must first win the approval of any audit issues from CMS, and then they must post all those approved issues on a public web site.

Last August, we all began watching those websites ominously take form and grow by leaps and bounds, in some cases, with the addition of more and more “new,” approved issues. We were curious to see the formats that the RACs were using, as each seemed to have their own private format for posting the issues.

Why Not All Use the Same Format?

Because they don’t have to. The RAC Statement of Work actually says NADA about what the format of these websites should be, and how “approved issues” should be “posted” on the sites. Whence, each RAC has their own interpretation of how to “post” their “new,” dare we say “newly minted,” approved issues.

To be sure, Medical Necessity review was never approved by CMS for a RAC before August 6, (now there’s an ominous date for you) and no issue approved for medical necessity review has being posted on any RAC website before August 11. However… now that such approvals have been garnered, and such posts have been made, at least some of said posts have been done in a manner that could be described as… well… obscure.

I call them obscure because some of these posts wind up as simple “edits” instead of “new” line items.

The method that CGI has chosen for posting approvals of Medical Necessity reviews is either of two methods: 

  1. post it as a new issue if the DRG is not already on the list; or
  2. merely change the name or title of the previously approved issue that lists the DRG, to include Medical Necessity review for one or more of the already approved DRGs in that issue.

So, some 20 of the 29 DRGs wound up “sprinkled” within 12 older issues, and simply had their titles “edited” instead of appearing as “new” line items in the list.

Why does this matter? Because the RACs can now post changes to their list of approved issues, without notice. Of course, they didn’t have to notify any of the providers before, but the lists seemed to do that, after a fashion – a form of notifying providers of what’s being reviewed, what to expect from the RACs.

Since the lists first appeared, many of us were thinking that we could watch the RAC websites and see the “new issues” get posted, from week to week; hoping we could simply sort the list (somehow) by date posted, and we’d know if there was anything “new” on the list or not.

“We all” were wrong. It would seem that “new” doesn’t have the same meaning, as we now see with the way a “new” review approach (medical necessity) is embedded in the original posted issue. Keep in mind that there is no reason to think that the other RACs will not adopt this same approach, also. Instead of posting “new” issues for Medical Necessity, they may simply rewrite the descriptions of their “old” issues, just as CGI has done.

Anyway, more “new”…oops… “edited” issues can be expected, any day. They’ll just be harder to track now, because we’ll have to read every issue, every day, to see what changed.

Oh, and by the way, I only see one moon in my night sky — how about you?

Connolly Adds Nine RAC Approved Issues

RAC-LOGO-CGIThe RAC contracted for the southern and southeastern states, Connolly Healthcare, continues to post new automated issues concerning dose-versus-units-billed, further proving that injections and infusions is a major target for RAC review, and a continuing concern for provider reimbursement, especially for physicians and outpatient settings.

The List

Below are the nine new issues, posted earlier this week. Follow the links to each one, in the eduTrax RAC New Issue Database®, which can be seen with simple free registration at myedutrax.com.

Who’s Getting Stuck?

You’ve billed for it, even been paid for it. But will you get to keep the money? And you can’t take the injection back…

This is like getting an injection with a barbed needle: feels ok going in, but coming back out it hurts like <insert your favorite expletive>.

For both providers and payers, there’s no confusion about one thing: injections and infusions can be tricky to properly bill.

Instruction Available

The eduTrax® site has two excellent courses available for their paid subscribers, and these can also be purchased as downloads or CDs. Short previews are available to give you an idea of their quality and content:

BLUE-PREVIEW-ON-Button Coding Injections and Infusions — reviews the recent changes to injections and infusions codes and offers guidance on correct capture of these services. (3 minute preview)

BLUE-PREVIEW-ON-Button RAC Focus: Injections & Infusions — discusses why, how & where physicians must be involved, and addresses code selection based upon time and service provided. (8 minute preview)

Click here to send us an Email for more information or to place an order.


Still No Medical Necessity Approvals

To date, there are still no issues posted & approved for review of Medical Necessity for any issue.

As usual, we wait…

RAC Reviews for Multiple Issues

Can a RAC review a claim for multiple issues at the same time?

We’ve seen this question from several providers, recently. The short answer is “Yes,” but under certain circumstances, it’s “No”; and so maybe the answer should be “Maybe”?

Timing is everything, in…

Timing, Timing, Timing

In the retail industry (and others), the three most important factors are said to be, “Location, Location, Location.” If that’s true for those industries, then perhaps something similar can be said for our industry, under the new healthcare reform environment.

I submit that at least in dealing with the RACs, the factors might be, “Timing, Timing, Timing.”

Timing is everything, in many things, don’t you agree?

So let me explain what I mean…

How RACs Perform Reviews

RACs have to get issues they want to review approved by CMS before they can do “widespread review” — the term “widespread” evidently refers to multiple records, multiple providers, and/or multiple states. (They can review ANY record on a very limited basis while assembling evidence needed to garner CMS approval for any issue, but that’s another subject…)

Approved Issues Lists

The RACs also have to post a list of approved issues on a public web page, before they can begin conducting records requests, conduct reviews and publish their results — most often in the form of Demand Letters, recouping the payments from the providers.

Once an issue is approved by CMS and posted on the RAC’s website, the RAC uses proprietary software and their own experience to do data mining and analysis of Medicare Part A and Part B claims, which CMS makes available to them. When the RAC identifies claims that they believe show a potential for an improper payment, they can perform one of two types of review: an Automated review, where an error is a certainty just from data analysis; or a Complex review, where an error is considered likely, but cannot be determined without a human review of the medical record for the claim in question.

For an Automated review, the error is certain, by definition, so a Demand Letter is produced and sent to the provider. For a Complex review, an Additional Documentation Request letter (ADR) is send to the provider, and requires the provider to send specific claims records to the RAC for review. The ADR must name the issue being reviewed by the RAC. It must list one issue, and this issue must already be approved by CMS and posted on that RAC’s approved issues web page.

Now, back to the question at hand:  once a RAC recieves a record in house, can they review it for other approved issues at the same time?

The CMS Answer

Here’s how the CMS RAC FAQs answer that exact question: READ CAREFULLY…

Question: Can the Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC ) do a medical necessity review on a claim that they originally reviewed for DRG validation?

Answer: At this time, if the RAC has already requested documentation and issued a review results letter to the provider for a DRG Validation, the RAC will not be allowed to re-review the claim again for medical necessity. However, if both issues are approved (DRG Validation and medical necessity) prior to the request of the additional documentation, the RAC may conduct both reviews simultaneously.

(see Answer ID 10007, posted 4/23/2010)

Let’s analyze this a bit…

So that’s…At Least Two Answers?

First, notice the phrase, “At this time,…” So, CMS might change their policy at a later date. Form your own opinion about the likelihood of that.

Second, while the first sentence mentions the review results letter, which appears to place a stop on multiple issue reviews on a claim (that was the NO answer), the second sentence allows multiple issue reviews on the same claim, as long as both issues were approved for review before the ADR was sent out for that claim (that’s the YES answer).

So, as long as both issues were approved for review before an ADR was sent out, it appears that a single claim can be reviewed for multiple approved issues.

However, if a new issue is approved after a Review Results letter was sent out for a previously approved issue, the RAC is not allowed to re-review that same record for the new issue.

And Maybe a Third Answer?

What the statement does NOT address is this: can the RAC send out a new ADR for the same claims, under the newly approved issue? (That’s what I call the MAYBE answer.)

Well, we would expect that the RAC could submit an ADR for any approved issue, even if the record has already been reviewed for something else… but we’re going to send this question in to CMS and see what their answer is, which we will then post here…

So, stay tuned.

RACs Post New Issues in June

Three of the four RACs posted new issues recently. The Region A RAC, DCS, posted 39 new DRG Validations issues, plus an approved issue to review Evaluation & Management (E&M) codes for New Patient visits, mirroring the same issues already approved for other RACs.
Despite recent reports that issues including review of Medical Necessity have already been approved by CMS in at least one region, none of the RACs have yet to post any such approved issues.
The new issues are listed below, including links to their descriptions on eduTrax®. To see those pages, you will need to login to the eduTrax main site. Registration on the site is still free.

Region A

The RAC for Region A (DCS) posted several new issues, mostly for Automated Review:

1 Blood Transfusions
2 Bronchoscopy Services
3 Duplicate Claims – Part B
4 Global Billing of Radiology or Diagnostic Tests in the Facility Setting
5 Global Surgery – Pre and Post-Operative Visits
6 Global vs. TC/PC Split Reimbursements
7 IV Hydration
8 MSDRGs 177, 189, 193, 291, 438, 441, 444, 592, 602, 682, 689, 691, 693: MS-DRG Validation for Severe Sepsis
9 MSDRGs 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221: MS-DRG Validation for Cardiac Valve Procedures
10 MSDRGs 234, 236: MS-DRG Validation for Coronary Bypass
11 MSDRGs 335, 336, 337, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355: MS-DRG Validation for Lysis of Adhesions
12 MSDRGs 463, 464, 465, 573, 574, 575, 901, 902, 903: MS-DRG Validation for Excisional Debridement
13 National Correct Coding Initiative – Part B
14 Neulasta
15 New Patient Visits
16 Newborn/Pediatric Codes
17 Once In A Lifetime
18 Parenteral Nutrition Additives with Premix Solutions
19 Technical Component of Radiology
20 Untimed Codes
21 Initial/Preparatory Knee Disarticulation Prosthesis
22 Manual Wheelchair Accessories Billed With Power Wheelchair Bases

Region C

Connolly added two DRG Validations and one issue for Automated review:

1 Lymphoma and Nonacute Leukemia with MCC: MS-DRG 840
2 Percutaneous Cardiovascular Procedure with Drug-Eluting Stent without MCC: MS-DRG 247
3 Zoledronic acid, (Zometa) – Dose vs. Units Billed

Region D

HDI added a single issue for Automated review, concerning Discharge Status:

1 Incorrect Patient Status – Acute

Every wonder about what difference a Discharge Status code makes for your reimbursement? Take a look at the Transfer DRG Assistant® at the eduTrax site. The complete tool includes all DRGs, all the Discharge Codes with explanations, and can show you an estimated difference in reimbursement based upon length of stay, the DRG assigned, and the appropriate status code, which is determined by where a patient may (or may not) wind up going after discharge from your facility.

Making Your Own RAC Issues Lists?

Good luck, we know how hard it is to do. To find a complete, sortable listing of all the RACs’ posted issues, visit this page on eduTrax. (Registration required.)

We recommend viewing the list, sorted by Approved Date.

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

When Will Medical Necessity Reviews Begin?

No one knows but the RACs, and so far, they ain’t sayin’.

BUT — If you would like to be notified immediately whenever they do get posted, simply to the click here to subscribe for free to the eduTrax RAC New Issues Alert Service®.

We post new issues, as in this article, and will send out an email notice immediately when medical necessity issues begin posting on the RAC websites.

More Issues and Medical Necessity Expected Any Day

CMS May Have Already Approved Medical Necessity Reviews

During the May 5, 2010 RAC 101 Conference Call, Scott Wakefield, a CMS RAC Project Manager for Region B stated that providers may begin to receive RAC medical necessity reviews “within the next month or so.” According to one observer, he seemed somewhat surprised that no such reviews have been posted by the RACs, as yet, and intimated that such issues had already been approved.

Meanwhile, in the past two weeks, the RAC have all posted new issues, but none with medical necessity reviews approved.

The new issues are listed below, including links to their descriptions in the eduTrax® RAC New Issues pages. To see those pages, you will need to login to the eduTrax main site. Registration on the site is still free.

Region A

While the RAC for Region A (DCS) only posted one new issue, it is not exactly inconsequential:

MS-DRG Validation for HIV — Reviewers will validate claims where diagnosis code 042 Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Disease was billed as secondary.

This is currently the only DRG Validation issue that cannot be specifically tied to a single MSDRG. This issue involves any DRG where HIV appears as a secondary diagnosis.

Region B

CGI Federal added two new issues: one Automated Review and one that includes 3 DRG Validations:

Knee Orthoses — concerns certain additions not being separately payable.

MSDRG 239, 240, 241: DRG Validation for Amputation for Circulatory System Disorders Except Upper Limb and Toe.

This site remains the most difficult to track – it is designed to require human interaction across eight pages of issues.

Region C

Connolly Healthcare posted 19 new issues, including 21 new DRG Validations:

Darbepoetin alfa (non-ESRD) – Dose vs. Units Billed
Bevacizumab – Dose vs. Units Billed
Carboplatin – Dose vs. Units Billed
Docetaxel – Dose vs. Units
Irinotecan – Dose vs. Units Billed
Darbepoetin alfa (ESRD) – Dose vs. Units Billed
MS-DRG 040: Peripheral/Cranial Nerve and Other Nervous System Procedures with MCC
MS-DRG 841: Lymphoma and Nonacute Leukemia with CC
MS-DRG 258: Cardiac Pacemaker Device Replacement with MCC
MS-DRG 653: Major Bladder Procedure with MCC
MS-DRG 659: Kidney and Ureter Procedures for Non-Neoplasm with MCC
MS-DRG 326: Stomach, Esophageal and Duodenal Procedures with MCC
MS-DRG 009: Bone Marrow Transplant: MS-DRG 009
MS-DRG 328: Stomach, Esophageal and Duodenal Procedures without CC/MCC
MS-DRG 623: Skin Grafts and Wound Debridement for Endocrine, Nutritional & Metabolic Disorders w/CC
MS-DRG 802: Other O.R. Procedures of the Blood and Blood-Forming Organs with MCC
MS-DRGs 034, 035, 036, 215, 223, 224, 225, 231, 232, 286: Cardiac Procedures
MS-DRG 541: Osteomyelitis without CC/MCC
DME vs. Inpatient

Region D

Even HDI added a new issue for Automated Review:

Part B Duplicates – Automated Review

Making Your Own Lists?

Good luck, we know how hard it is to do.  To find a complete, sortable listing of all their posted issues, visit this page on eduTrax. (Registration required.) We recommend viewing the list, sorted by Approved Date.

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

When Will Medical Necessity Reviews Begin?

No one knows but the RACs, and so far, they ain’t sayin’.

BUT — If you would like to be notified immediately whenever they do get posted, simply to the click here to subscribe for free to the eduTrax RAC New Issues Alert Service®.

We post new issues, as in this article, and will send out an email notice immediately when medical necessity issues begin posting on the RAC websites.

Connolly Adds 20 More in April

More High Dollar, High Volume DRGs

Connolly Healthcare, the RAC for Region C, posted 20 new DRG Validation Issues to their list of CMS-Approved audit issues, on Friday, April16. The list includes eight (8) MS-DRGs with very high Relative Weights (which equates to high dollar reimbursements and thereby potentially high RAC fees) and six (6) with claim volumes in the top 25% of all DRGs (providing a rather large number of claims to potentially audit).

Four (4) of the newly approved issues are for MSDRGs with Relative Weights of better than 10.0.  Such claims have high dollar reimbursements, averaging over $45,000 per claim, nationwide.

Once again, these approval/postings seems to continue a pattern previously noted. (See our posts from February 9 and March 17.)

Virgina and West Virginia Now Included

The states of Virginia and West Virginia have been absent from the list of states affected or approved for any issues, until some recent changes to the lists, earlier in April. Still, not all the issues have been approved for these two states.

The New Issues

Below are the new posted and approved audit issues for RAC Region C, including Relative Weights and FY09 Discharge Ranks:  (a low rank number relates to a large number of discharges for that DRG, nationwide)

  • MS-DRG 003: ECMO or Tracheotomy with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours or Principal Diagnosis Except Face, Mouth and Neck with Major O.R. (RW 18.27; Rank 122)
  • MS-DRG 001: Heart Transplant or Implant of Heart Assist System with MCC (RW 24.85; Rank 720)
  • MS-DRG 005: Liver Transplant with MCC or Intestinal Transplant (RW 10.14; Rank 713)
  • MS-DRG 332: Rectal Resection with MCC (RW 4.78; Rank 297)
  • MS-DRG 562: Kidney Transplant (RW 1.38; Rank 79)
  • MS-DRG 011: Tracheotomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with MCC (RW 4.73; Rank 476)
  • MS-DRG 012: Tracheotomy for Face, Mouth, and Neck Diagnoses with CC (RW 3.03; Rank 584)
  • MS-DRG 020: Intracranial Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage with MCC (RW 8.44; Rank 696)
  • MS-DRG 021: Intracranial Vascular Procedures with Principal Diagnosis of Hemorrhage with CC (RW 6.21; Rank 696)
  • MS-DRG 927: Extensive Burns or Full Thickness Burns with Mechanical Ventilation 96+ Hours with Skin Graft (RW 13.74; Rank 629)
  • MS-DRG 929: Full Thickness Burn with Skin Graft or Inhalation Injury without CC/MCC (RW 2.01; Rank 728)
  • MS-DRG 023: Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute Complex Central Nervous System Principal Diagnosis with MCC or Chemo Implant (RW 4.94; Rank 469)
  • MS-DRG 024: Craniotomy with Major Device Implant/Acute Complex Central Nervous System Principal Diagnosis without MCC (RW 3.26; Rank 212)
  • MS-DRG 007: Lung Transplant (RW 9.45; Rank 689)
  • MS-DRG 076: Viral Meningitis without CC/MCC (RW 0.83; Rank 510)
  • MS-DRG 461: Bilateral or Multiple Major Joint Procedures of Lower Extremity with MCC (RW 4.56; Rank 187)
  • MS-DRGs 799, 800, 801: Splenectomy w MCC, w CC, w/o CC/MCC (RW 5.11, 2.53, 1.59; Ranks 666, 709, 620)
  • MS-DRG 177: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations with MCC (RW 2.05; Rank 35)
  • MS-DRG 178: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations with CC (RW 1.49; Rank 132)
  • MS-DRG 179: Respiratory Infections & Inflammations without CC/MCC (RW 1.01; Rank 119)

To see the complete original listings (on the RAC websites), visit this page.

Or, to find a more useful listing of all their posted issues, visit  this page on eduTrax.  (Registration required.)

Still No Medical Necessity Reviews

All of the above approved issues still include this caveat:

(At this time, Medical Necessity excluded from review).

As faithful readers know, however, Medical Necessity Reviews could be approved by CMS at any time now, since the CMS RAC Review Phase-In Strategy allows for such audits in calendar 2010.

We will shortly post further analysis, in an overview of the DRG Validations posted to date by all four RACs.

CMS Expands RAC Records Requests Limits

Limits Now Apply to All Institutional Claim Types, Not Just DRG Validations

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) modified its FY2010 Additional Documentation Request (ADR) Limits, expanding the scope of the rule to include all institutional providers, on January 28, 2010. Previously, the rule applied to ADRs for DRG Validation issues only, as posted by CMS on December 1, 2009, and would have only applied to Medicare Part A providers. CMS also indicated that more changes are yet to come, with rules applying to physicians and other types of providers, including DME suppliers.

The December posting indicated that there would be two “caps” made on RAC ADRs, during FY2010. Through March 2010, the cap would remain at 200 ADRs per 45 days for all providers/suppliers. However, from April through September 2010, providers/suppliers who bill in excess of 100,000 claims to Medicare, across all claims processing contractors, would have a cap of 300 ADRs per per 45 days.

These limits would apply per “campus” instead of per NPI (National Provider Identifier). The definition of a campus is CMS’s new method of calculating limits, and is based on providers’ Tax ID Numbers plus the first three numbers of the ZIP code where those provider entities are physically located.

This most recent posting does not change any of the previous limits or definitions, but does expand the rule to apply to all claim types, not just DRG Validations.

Read the new document  HERE , along with a copy of the text from the December document.

Connolly Posts Over 40 New Issues

Connolly Healthcare, Region C RAC, posted over 40 new issues, all for Complex Reviews, most for Inpatient Hospitals, during the final week of December, 2009. Happy New Year! The total number of issues now approved for Connolly’s review is over 75. Most of those issues will review MS-DRG coding and DRG Validation, but those all include the following phrase in their title:

At this time, Medical Necessity excluded from review.

Of course, this could change at any time now, since CMS plans to allow Medical Necessity to be reviewed, beginning in calendar 2010. (See CMS RAC Review Phase-in Strategy)

Non-User Friendly Lists

However, as we discovered in this past quarter, since the RACs began posting new issues, as they are required to do by CMS, we noticed that the WAY in which they post the new issues is not consistent, from RAC to RAC. What’s worse, there seems to be no effort on the part of the RAC to make that information easy to sort, copy, or deal with in any useful form. That is, you can’t sort the list, you can’t make a decent copy of it, you can’t even see all the data you might like to know on each issue.

Changes Made Without Notice

The worst part, however, is the way that the RACs do their postings: willy-nilly. In other words, they just throw the posts up there. There is no notice sent or made about a new post being added and/or changed. When new issues are added, there is also no effort made to group similar issues together. For example, on the Connolly list, some of the DRG Validation issues involve all three of an MS-DRG triplet (a triplet is an MS-DRG “group,” if you will, a set of three MS-DRGs that represent all three severity levels assigned by CMS to that diagnosis — e.g., Pneumonia is assigned a triplet, 193/194/195, representing Pnuemonia with an MCC, with just a CC, or without MCC or CC). This is not huge, but it certainly makes it difficult to work with the list.

Needless Complexity

For example, we know of one hospital in Region C that received a single letter requesting 24 medical records, one for each of 24 different MS-DRGs. The MS-DRGs were simply listed by number, with no descriptions. For a coding department, this is not a huge problem. However, for a RAC Team, it is an issue. Why? Because the letter probably has to travel thru several hands to get to the Coding department, who then have to look up the codes, add the descriptions, and then send the letter back up the path to all concerned parties, so that they know what they’re doing.

How much time did that just add to the time it takes to identify, find, copy and send off those records to the RAC? Providers are already under the gun to get the records back to the RAC, and this makes the process all that much more difficult. And needlessly!

A New Way to See the New Issues

For our own internal use, eduTrax developed it’s own database of the new issues, and we are pleased to now make that database available to providers, for their use.

The RAC News Issues Page provides direct links to the four RAC websites. You need not register or login to see these links. Simply go HERE, and choose one of the RAC links.

The RAC New Issues Menu requires you to register, which is free and takes only a minute to do. (You will have to confirm your email address, as a security measure.) Once you login to the site, select the RAC New Issues Page, and a new menu will appear on your left. (preview here)

eduTrax® RAC New Issues Alert Services

This new service now gives you the following choices:

  • See New Issues by each RAC — but in a list that is sortable and searchable,
  • See New Issues by State — click your state, get a list of the issues approved for that state.

We keep the database updated daily. Currently, we are changing the Issue Title, in our database, so that it is more friendly. For example, we put the MS-DRG number at the front of the title. This makes it easier to search and sort.

To search for an MS-DRG, simply enter the number alone in the Title Search field, then hit Go.

To sort any list by title, simply click on “Issue Title” at the top of the list.

Go HERE to see some instructions on using the sort and search filters.

Soon, we will announce an eMail Alert Service — you get an email from us whenever a RAC posts or changes an issue, and the email will include what got added and/or changed. That way, you stay alerted, and you don’t have to figure out what changed — we do it for you!

More Coming Soon…

So, we recommend you go look at the lists yourself. And watch for the announcement about our new Alerts services.

Also, our next post will include some analysis of the new issues, and what you need to be looking for.

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