The
following definitions are a mixture of TRICARE Regulatory definitions
listed in
32 CFR 199.2 and
199.17,operational definitions used by TRICARE
personnel and contractors in the daily administration of the TRICARE
Program, and terminology found in the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996. Regulatory definitions may
not be changed or elaborated upon without a regulatory change. Further
explanations/elaborations of TRICARE Regulatory definitions may
be found in the TRICARE Operations Manual (TOM), TRICARE Policy
Manual (TPM), TRICARE Reimbursement Manual (TRM), and TRICARE Systems
Manual (TSM) where appropriate. For a complete listing of TRICARE
Regulatory Definitions refer to
32 CFR 199.2 and
199.17. Included are acronyms for some of the
words being defined. An acronym is a word for1med from the first
(or first few) letters of a series of words.
Absent
Treatment (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Services
performed by Christian Science practitioners for a person when the
person is not physically present. Technically, “Absent Treatment”
is an obsolete term. The current Christian Science terminology is
“treatment through prayer and spiritual means,” which is employed
by an authorized Christian Science practitioner either with the
beneficiary being present or absent. However, to be considered for coverage
under TRICARE, the beneficiary must be present physically when a
Christian Science service is rendered, regardless of the terminology
used.
Abuse (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Any practice
that is inconsistent with accepted sound fiscal, business, or professional
practice which results in a TRICARE claim, unnecessary cost, or
TRICARE payment for services or supplies that are:
1. Not within the
concepts of medically necessary and appropriate care, as defined
in the Regulation (32 CFR 199), or
2. That fail to
meet professionally recognized standards for Health Care Providers
(HCPs).
The term
“abuse” includes deception or misrepresentation by a provider, or
any person or entity acting on behalf of a provider in relation
to a TRICARE claim.
Note: Unless
a specific action is deemed gross and flagrant, a pattern of inappropriate
practice will normally be required to find that abuse has occurred.
Any practice or action that constitutes fraud, as defined by the
Regulation (32 CFR 199), would also be abuse.
Access,
Health CareThe ability to receive necessary health
care services of high quality within specific time frames, at locations
and from the providers that satisfy patient health care needs. This
is frequently associated with the contractor’s provision of network
adequacy. Access to care standards are established in
32 CFR 199.17 and 45 CFR 156.230. See the
definition of “Access Standards” in this appendix.
Access,
Information1. The availability and the permission to
consult records, archives, or manuscripts.
2. The ability
and opportunity to obtain sensitive, classified, or administratively
controlled information or records readily.
Access Standards (Defined
in 32 CFR 199.17)Preferred
Provider Networks (PPNs) will have attributes of size composition,
mix of providers and geographical distribution so that the networks,
coupled with the Military Treatment Facility (MTF) capabilities,
can adequately address the health care needs of the enrollees. Before
offering enrollment in Prime to a beneficiary group, the MTF Commander/eMSM
Manager (or other authorized person) will assure that the capabilities
of the MTF plus PPN will meet the following access standards with
respect to the needs of the expected number of enrollees from the
beneficiary group being offered enrollment:
1. Under normal
circumstances, enrollee travel time may not exceed 30 minutes from
home to primary care delivery site unless a longer time is necessary
because of the absence of providers (including providers not part
of the network) in the area.
2. The wait
time for an appointment for a well-patient visit or a specialty
care referral shall not exceed four weeks; for a routine visit,
the wait time for an appointment shall not exceed one week; and
for an urgent care visit the wait time for an appointment shall
generally not exceed 24 hours.
3. Emergency
services shall be available and accessible to handle emergencies
(and urgent care visits if not available from other primary care
providers within the service area 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
4. The network
shall include a sufficient number and mix of board certified specialists
to meet reasonably the anticipated needs of enrollees. Travel time
for specialty care shall not exceed one hour under normal circumstances,
unless a longer time is necessary because of the absence of providers (including
providers not part of the network) in the area. This requirement
does not apply under the Specialized Treatment Services Program.
5. Office
waiting times in nonemergency circumstances shall not exceed 30
minutes, except when emergency care is being provided to patients,
and the normal schedule is disrupted.
Action
PlanA contractor’s plan for achieving a goal
through the use of specific resources based on a time-oriented schedule
of activities.
Active
Duty (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Full-time
duty in the Uniformed Services of the United States (U.S.). It includes
duty on the active list, full-time training duty, annual training
duty, and attendance while in the active Military Service, at a school
designated as a Service school by law or by the Secretary of the
Military Department concerned.
Active
Duty Member (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
person on active duty in a Uniformed Service under a call or order
that does not specify a period of 30 days or less.
Activities
of Daily Living (ADL) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Care
that consists of providing food (including special diets), clothing
and shelter; personal hygiene services; observation and general
monitoring; bowel training or management (unless abnormalities in bowel
function are of a severity to result in a need for medical or surgical
intervention in the absence of skilled services); safety precautions;
general preventive procedures (such as turning to prevent bedsores);
passive exercise; companionship; recreation; transportation; and
other such elements of personal care that can reasonably be performed
by an untrained adult with minimal instruction or supervision. ADL
may also be referred to as “essentials of daily living”.
Adequate Medical Documentation,
Mental Health Records (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Adequate
medical documentation provides the means for measuring the type,
frequency, and duration of active treatments mechanisms employed
and progress under the treatment plan. Under TRICARE, it is required
that adequate and sufficient clinical records be kept be the provider
to substantiate that specific care was actually and appropriately
furnished, was medically or psychologically necessary (as defined
in
32 CFR 199.2),
and to identify the individual(s) who provided the care. Each service
provided or billed must be documented in the records. In determining
whether medical records are adequate, the records will be reviewed
under the general acceptable standards (e.g., standard of an accrediting organization
approved by the Director, and the provider’s state or local licensing
requirements) and other requirements specified in 32CFR 199. The
psychiatric and psychological evaluations, physicians orders, the
treatment plan, integrated progress notes (and physician progress
notes if separate from the integrated progress notes), and the discharge
summary are the more critical elements of the mental health record.
However, nursing and staff notes, no matter how complete, are not
a substitute for the documentation of services by the individual
professional provider who furnished treatment to the beneficiary.
In general, the documentation requirement of a professional provider
are not less in the outpatient setting than the inpatient setting.
Furthermore, even though a hospital that provides psychiatric care
may be accredited under The Joint Commission (TJC) manual for hospitals
rather than TJC behavioral health standards, the critical elements
of the mental health record listed above are required for TRICARE
claims.
Adjunctive
Dental Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Dental
care that is medically necessary in the treatment of an otherwise
covered medical (not dental) condition, is an integral part of the
treatment of such medical condition, and is essential to the control of
the primary medical condition; or, is required in preparation for
or as the result of dental trauma which may be or is caused by medically
necessary treatment of an injury or disease (iatrogenic).
AdjustmentA
correction to the information in the TRICARE Encounter Data (TED)
records and/or Beneficiary History Files (Hard Copy Files and Automated
Beneficiary History and Deductible Files) related to a claim previously
Processed To Completion (PTC). Adjustments include any recoupments,
additional payment(s), all cancellations (total or partial), and
corrections to statistical data, whether or not the changes result
in changes to the financial data.
Adjustment,
Identification Of ReceiptAn adjustment
may be generated by a telephonic, written or personal inquiry, appeal
decision, or as the result of a contractor’s internal review. The
adjustment is identified when the contractor’s staff determines
the issue requires an additional payment, cancellation, or a change
to the Beneficiary History and Deductible Files (see definition)
or when notice is received from DHA that an adjustment is required.
In the case of recoupments, the adjustment is “identified” for reporting
purposes, with receipt of the payment by the contractor.
Administrative
EfficienciesAdherence to the TRICARE program and benefits,
electronic claims processing, responsiveness to patient questions
and care coordination, timeliness of consult reporting back to referring
providers.
Administrative
Fee, PharmacyThe offered price that represents all administrative
charges relative to prescription, prior authorization and medical
necessity determination transaction processing.
All-Inclusive
Per Diem Rate (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
TRICARE-determined rate that encompasses the daily charge for inpatient
care and, unless specifically excepted, all other treatment determined
necessary and rendered as part of the treatment plan established
for a patient and accepted by TRICARE.
Allowable
Charge (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
TRICARE-determined level of payment to institutions, physicians,
and other categories of individual professional providers based
on one of the approved reimbursement methods set forth in the
32 CFR 199.14.
Allowable
Charge ComplaintA request for review of a contractor determination
of the allowable charge for covered services and supplies furnished
under TRICARE. An allowable charge complaint does not fall within
the meaning of an “appeal”, in the technical sense, but does require
a careful review or reconsideration by the contractor of how the
claim was processed to ensure accuracy of the payment made.
Allowable
Charge ReductionThe difference between the reimbursement
determination made by a contractor and the amount billed by the
provider of care (prior to determination of applicable cost-shares
and deductibles). This is also referred to in the industry as the
contractual allowance.
Allowable
Cost (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
TRICARE-determined level of payment to hospitals or other institutions,
based on one of the approved reimbursement methods set forth in
32 CFR 199.14. The allowable charge may also
be referred to as the TRICARE-determined reasonable or allowable
cost.
Amount In Dispute (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The amount
of money, determined under 32 CFR 199, that TRICARE will pay for
medical services and supplies involved in an adverse determination
being appealed if the appeal were resolved in favor of the appealing
party. See
32 CFR 199.10 for
additional information concerning the determination of “amount in
dispute” under the Regulation.
AppealA
formal written request by a beneficiary, a participating provider,
a provider denied authorized provider status under TRICARE, or a
representative, to resolve a disputed question of fact. See
32 CFR 199.10 and
Chapter 12.
Appropriate
Medical Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Services
that are:
1. Performed
in connection with the diagnosis or treatment of disease or injury,
pregnancy, mental disorder, or well-baby care which are in keeping
with the generally accepted norms for medical practice in the U.S.;
2. Rendered by
an authorized individual professional provider who is qualified
to perform such medical services by reason of his or her training
and education and is licensed or certified either by the state where
the service is rendered or appropriate national organization, or
who otherwise meets TRICARE standards; and
3. Furnished economically.
For the purposes of TRICARE, “economically” means that the services
are furnished in the least expensive level of care or medical environment
adequate to provide the required medical care regardless of whether
or not that level of care is covered by TRICARE.
Authorization
For CareThe authorization determination addresses
whether a particular service may be covered by TRICARE, including
whether it appears necessary and appropriate in the context of the
patient’s diagnosis and circumstances.
Authorized
Provider (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
hospital or institutional provider, physician, or other individual
professional provider, or other provider of services or supplies
specifically authorized to provide benefits under TRICARE in
32 CFR 199.6.
Note: Providers
not specifically listed in
32 CFR 199.6 or
defined in
32 CFR 199.2 are
not considered authorized providers unless they have been included
in a TRICARE demonstration program.
Authorized
Supplies, PharmacyNon-drug items (usually used in conjunction
with the administration of a drug) approved by the DoD Pharmacy
and Therapeutic (P&T) [Committee] for inclusion in the formulary,
and appearing on the formulary web site at
http://www.tricare.mil/CoveredServices/Pharmacy/Drugs/OTCDrugsSupplies.aspx.
Automated
Data Processing (ADP)A system for
recording and processing data on magnetic media, ADP cards, or any
other method for mechanical/electronic processing and manipulation
or storage of data.
Automated Data Processing (ADP)
Backup SystemA separate, off-site ADP system with
similar operating capabilities which will be activated/used in case of
a major system failure, damage, or destruction. This includes back-up
data sets, software and hardware requirements, and trained personnel.
Balance
Billing (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
provider seeking any payment, other than any payment relating to
applicable deductible and cost-sharing amounts, from a beneficiary
for TRICARE covered services for any amount in excess of the applicable
TRICARE allowable cost or charge.
Basic
Program (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
primary medical benefits authorized under Chapter 55 of Title 10,
United States Code (USC), and set forth in
32 CFR 199.4.
Benchmark,
Drug PriceThe Average Wholesale Price (AWP) has long
been the drug price benchmark for establishing reimbursement payment
terms between payers, Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), and pharmacies. AWP
as a benchmark has been going away. AWP is by no means the only
price type available. Listed here, with brief descriptions, are
others that are available and may be used by the industry for reimbursement
purposes as AWP is being phased out:
• Actual
Acquisition Cost (AAC) - Final price paid by the pharmacy after
subtraction of all discounts;
• Average
Manufacturer Price (AMP) - Manufacturer reported price for Medicaid
drug rebate program;
• Average
Sales Price (ASP) - Center for Medicare and Medicaid Service (CMS)
calculated price for Medicate Part B drugs;
• Estimated
Acquisition Cost (EAC) - Estimated cost of the product or the pharmacies’
usual and customary charge;
• Federal
Upper Limit (FUL) - CMS calculation for the upper amount to be paid
in aggregate for multi-source products;
• Maximum
Allowable Cost (MAC) - Defined by each payer for multi-source drugs;
• Manufacturer
List Price (MLP) - Price listed by the drug company;
• Wholesale
Acquisition Cost (WAC) - List price for a drug sold by a manufacturer
to wholesaler, not including discounts.
BeneficiaryA
beneficiary is an individual eligible for benefits. The beneficiary,
Sponsor, or representative of the beneficiary, including the parent
of a beneficiary under 18 years of age, the beneficiary’s attorney,
legal guardian or representative specifically designated by the
beneficiary may on his or her behalf regarding the benefit at issue.
An individual who is subject to the conflict of interest provisions
of
32 CFR 199.10(a)(2)(i)(B), may not act as
the beneficiary’s representative under this section.
Beneficiary
Counseling and Assistance Coordinators (BCACs)Formerly
referred to as Health Benefit Advisors (HBAs), BCACs are individuals
located at Uniformed Services medical facilities or on occasion
at other locations and assigned the responsibility for providing
TRICARE information, information concerning availability of care
from the Uniformed Services Direct Care (DC) or Purchased Care Systems,
and generally assisting beneficiaries or sponsors. The term also
includes “Health Benefits Counselor.”
Beneficiary
History FileA system of records consisting of any record
or subsystem of records, whether hard copy, microform or automated,
which reflects diagnosis, treatment, medical condition, family history
records, correspondence, memorandum, or any other personal information
with respect to any individual, including all such records/reports
acquired or utilized by the contractor in delivery of health care services,
in the development and processing of claims, or in performing any
other functions under a TRICARE contract.
1. Hard Copy Claim
Files.
2. Automated History Files. The electronically
maintained record of a beneficiary’s medical care and related administrative
data, including such data on charges, payments, deductible status,
services received, diagnoses, adjustments, etc.
Note: The
term “TRICARE Contractor Claims Records” is used by the National
Archives and Records Administration (NARA) “Medical/Dental Claims
History files (formerly “Beneficiary History and Deductibles Files”)
includes but is not limited to “TRICARE Contractor claims Records.”
Beneficiary
Liability (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
legal obligation of a beneficiary, his or her estate, or responsible
family member to pay for the costs of medical care or treatment
received. Specifically, for the purposes of services and supplies
covered by TRICARE, beneficiary liability includes any annual deductible
amount, cost-sharing amounts, or, when a provider does not submit
a claim on a participating basis on behalf of the beneficiary, amounts
above the TRICARE-determined allowable charge. Beneficiary liability
also includes any expenses for medical or related services and supplies
not covered by TRICARE.
BenefitServices,
supplies, payment amounts, cost-shares and copayments authorized
by Public Law (PL) 89-614, 32 CFR 199, and outlined in the TPM and
the TRM.
Best
PracticesA best practice is a method or technique
that has consistently shown results superior to those achieved with
other means, and that is used as a benchmark. In addition, a “best”
practice can evolve to become better as improvements are discovered.
Best
Value Health CareThe delivery of high quality clinical and
other related services in the most economical manner for the Military
Health System (MHS) that optimizes the DC system while delivering
the highest level of customer service.
BreachA
breach, as defined in Department of Defense Directive (DoDD) 5400.11
(2014), is a loss of control, compromise, unauthorized disclosure,
unauthorized acquisition, unauthorized access, or any similar term
referring to situations where persons other than authorized users
and for an other than authorized purpose have access or potential
access to Personally Identifiable Information (PII)/Protected Health
Information (PHI), whether in paper or electronic form. Breaches
are classified as either possible or confirmed (see the definition
of “Possible Breach” and “Confirmed Breach” in this appendix) and
as either cyber or non-cyber (i.e., involving either electronic
PII/PHI or paper/oral PII/PHI).
Business
Associate1. A person or organization that performs
a function or activity on behalf of a covered entity, but is not
part of a covered entity’s workforce. A business associate may also
be a covered entity in it’s own right.
2. For a full definition,
refer to the 45 CFR 160.103, Definitions of HIPAA of 1996.
Business
DayFor claims processing purposes, one business
day is defined as the business day following the day of transmission
at the close of business at the location of the receiving entity.
A business workday is Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays.
Capability Of A ProviderThe
scope of services the provider is both capable of performing and
willing to perform under a TRICARE contract. For example, a neurologist
under TRICARE contract to perform sleep studies may not be considered
to have capability to perform as a general neurology specialist.
Capacity
Of A ProviderThe amount of time or number of services
a provider is able to perform in conjunction with a TRICARE contract.
For example, a Primary Care Physician (PCP), whose practice is full
has no available capacity for services.
Capped RateThe
maximum per diem or all-inclusive rate that TRICARE will allow for
care.
Care
CoordinationA comprehensive method of client assessment
designed to identify client vulnerability, needs identification,
and client goals which results in the development plan of action
to produce an outcome that is desirable for the client. The goal
is to provide client advocacy, a system for coordinating client services,
and providing a systematic approach for evaluation of the effectiveness
of the client’s Life Plan.
Case
Management (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
collaborative process which assesses, plans, implements, coordinates,
monitors and evaluates the options and services required to meet
an individual’s health needs, including mental health and Substance
Use Disorder (SUD) needs, using communication and available resources
to promote quality, cost-effective outcomes.
Catastrophic
CapThe National Defense Authorization Act
(NDAA) for Fiscal Years (FYs) 1988 and 1989 (Public Law 100-180)
amended Title 10, USC, and established catastrophic loss protection
for TRICARE beneficiary families on a Government fiscal year basis.
The law placed fiscal year limits or catastrophic caps on beneficiary
liabilities for deductibles and cost-shares under the TRICARE Basic
Program. Specific guidance may be found in the TRM,
Chapter 2, Section 2. NDAA for FY 2017 amended
Title 10, USC to change calculations to a calendar year basis, beginning
January 1, 2018. The last quarter of calendar year 2017 was applied
to the FY 2017 calculations to bridge the gap.
Catchment
AreasGeographic areas determined by the Assistant
Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs) (ASD(HA)) that are defined
by a set of five digit zip codes, usually within an approximate
40 mile radius of military inpatient treatment facility.
Centers
of ExcellenceSee definition for Defense Centers of Excellence
(CoE).
Certification
and Accreditation (C&A) ProcessA process that
ensures the trust requirement is met for Information Systems (IS)/networks.
Certification is the determination of the appropriate level of protection
required for IS/networks. Certification also includes a comprehensive
evaluation of the technical and non-technical security features
and countermeasures required for each IS/network. Accreditation
is the formal approval by the Government to operate the contractor’s
IS/networks in a particular security mode using a prescribed set
of safeguards at an acceptable level of risk. In addition, accreditation
allows IS/networks to operate within the given operational environment
with stated interconnections; and with appropriate level-of-protection
for the specified period. The C&A requirements apply to all
DoD IS/networks and contractor IS/networks that access, manage,
store, or manipulate electronic IS data. Specific guidance may be found
in the TSM,
Chapter 1.
Certification
For CareThe determination that the provider’s request
for services (level of care, procedure, etc.) is consistent with
pre-established health care criteria. Pre-certification is the process
performing a certification for care prior to rendering the care.
Note: This
is NOT synonymous with authorization for care.
Certified
ProviderA hospital or institutional provider, physician,
or other individual professional provider of services or supplies
verified by DHA, or a designated contractor, to meet the provider
standards outlined in
32 CFR 199.6,
and have been approved to provide services to TRICARE beneficiaries
and receive Government payment for services rendered to TRICARE
beneficiaries.
CHAMPUS
Maximum Allowable Charge (CMAC)A CMAC is a
nationally determined allowable charge level that is adjusted by
locality indices and is equal to or greater than the Medicare Fee
Scheduled amount.
Civilian
Health and Medical Program of the Department of Veterans Affairs (CHAMPVA)A
program of medical care for spouses and dependent children of disabled
or deceased disabled veterans who meet the eligibility requirements
of the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA)/Veterans Health Administration
(VHA).
Change
OrderA written directive from the DHA Procuring
Contracting Officer (PCO) to the contractor directing modifications,
within the general scope of the contract, as authorized by the “changes
clause” at FAR 52.243-1, Changes--Fixed Price.
Christian
Science Nurse (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
individual who has been accredited as a Christian Science Nurse
by the Department of Care of the First Church of Christ, Scientist,
Boston, Massachusetts, and listed (or eligible to be listed) in
the Christian Science Journal at the time the service is provided.
The duties of Christian Science nurses are spiritual and are nonmedical
and nontechnical nursing care performed under the direction of an accredited
Christian Science practitioner. There are two levels of Christian
Science nurse accreditation:
1. Graduate
Christian Science Nurse. This accreditation is granted by
the Department of Care of the First Church of Christ, Scientist,
Boston, Massachusetts, after completion of a three year course of instruction
and study.
2. Practical Christian Science Nurse. This
accreditation is granted by the Department of Care of the First
Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts, after completion
of a one year course of instruction and study.
Christian
Science Practitioner (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
individual who has been accredited as a Christian Science Practitioner
for the First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts,
and listed (or eligible to be listed) in the Christian Science Journal
at the time the service is provided. An individual who attains this
accreditation has demonstrated results of his or her healing through
faith and prayer rather than by medical treatment. Instruction is
executed by an accredited Christian Science teacher and is continuous.
Christian
Science Sanatorium (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
sanatorium either operated by the First Church of Christ, Scientist,
or listed and certified by the First Church of Christ, Scientist,
Boston, Massachusetts.
ClaimAny request
for reimbursement for health care services rendered, received from
a beneficiary, a beneficiary’s representative, or a network or non-network
provider, by a contractor on any TRICARE-approved claim form or
approved electronic medium.
Note: If two
or more forms for the same beneficiary are submitted together, they
shall constitute one claim unless they qualify for separate processing
under the claims splitting rules. (It is recognized that services
may be provided in situations in which no claims, as defined here,
are generated. This does not relieve the contractor from collecting
the data necessary to fulfill the requirements of the TED record
for all care provided under the contract.)
Note: Any
request for reimbursement of a dispensed pharmaceutical agent or
diabetic supply item. For electronic media claims, one prescription
equals one claim. For paper claims, reimbursement for multiple prescriptions
may be requested on a single paper claim.
Claim
FileThe collected records submitted with or
developed in the course of processing a single claim. It includes
the approved TRICARE claim form and may include attached bills,
medical records, records of telephone development, copies of correspondence
sent and received in connection with the claim, the EOB, and records
of adjustments to the claim. It may also include the records of
appeals and appeal actions. The claim file may be in microcopy,
hard copy, or in a combination of media.
Claim
FormA fixed arrangement of captioned spaces
designed for entering and extracting prescribed information, including
ADP system forms.
Claims
Cycle TimeThat period of time, recorded in calendar
days, from the receipt of a claim into the possession/custody of
the contractor to the completion of all processing steps (see the
definition of “Processed to Completion (or Final Disposition)” in
this appendix, and the TSM,
Chapter 2, Section 2.4, “Date TED Record Processed
to Completion”).
Claims
Payment DataThe record of information contained on
or derived from the processing of a claim or encounter.
Clinical
Quality OutcomesThe American College of Medical Quality
in their 2010 revision of their recommended Core Curriculum for
Medical Quality Management describes clinical outcomes as part of
the definition of quality measures. These are:
1. Structural Measures
- health care setting, appropriate equipment and supplies, education, certification
and experience of clinicians;
2. Process Measures
- actions taken and how well these were performed to achieve a given
outcome, use of evidence-based clinical guidelines;
3. Outcome Measures
- capture of changes in health status following the provision of
a set of healthcare processes and including the cost of delivering
the processes -- hospitalizations, physician office visits, or care
provided in post-acute care setting, patient satisfaction.
Clinical
Support Agreement (CSA)An arrangement
requested by the military, between an MTF/eMSM and the TRICARE contractor
for the contractor to provide needed clinical personnel at an MTF/eMSM.
The arrangement must be formalized by modification to the TRICARE
contract prior to implementation of the provisions of the arrangement.
Code
Set (HIPAA/Privacy Definition)Any set of codes
used to encode data elements, such as tables of terms, medical concepts,
medical diagnostic codes, or medical procedure codes. This includes
both the codes and their descriptions, as outlined in HIPAA of 1996.
Code
Set Maintaining Organization (HIPAA/Privacy Definition)An
organization that creates and maintains the code sets adopted by
the Secretary of Home Health Services (HHS) for use in the transactions
for which standards are adopted as outlined in HIPAA of 1996.
Combined
Daily Charge (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
billing procedure by an inpatient facility that uses an inclusive
flat rate covering all professional and ancillary charges without
any itemization.
Concurrent
Review/Continued Stay ReviewEvaluation of
a patient’s continued need for treatment, the appropriateness of
current and proposed treatment, as well as the setting in which
the treatment is being rendered or proposed. Concurrent review applies
to all levels of care (including outpatient care).
Confidentiality
RequirementsThe procedures and controls that assure
the privacy of personal medical information in compliance with the
Freedom of Information Act, the Comprehensive Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism Prevention and Rehabilitation Act, the Privacy Act, and
HIPAA of 1996.
Confirmed
BreachAn incident in which it is known that unauthorized
access could occur. For example, if a laptop containing PII/PHI
is lost and the contractor knows that the PII/PHI is unencrypted,
then the contractor should classify and report the incident as a
confirmed breach, because unauthorized access could occur due to
the lack of encryption (the contractor knows this even without knowing
whether or not unauthorized access to the PII/PHI has actually occurred).
If the laptop is subsequently recovered and forensic investigation
reveals that files containing PII/PHI were never accessed, then
the possibility of unauthorized access can be ruled out, and the
contractor should re-classify the incident as a non-breach incident.
Conflict
Of Interest (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Includes
any situation where an active duty member (including a reserve member
while on active duty) or civilian employee of the U.S. Government,
through an official federal position, has the apparent or actual
opportunity to exert, directly or indirectly, any influence on the
referral of TRICARE beneficiaries to himself or herself or others
with some potential for personal gain or appearance of impropriety. Individuals
under contract to a Uniformed Service may be involved in a conflict
of interest situation through the contract position.
Consultation
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
deliberation with a specialist physician, dentist, or qualified
mental health provider requested by the attending TRICARE authorized
provider primarily responsible for the medical care of the patient,
with respect to the diagnosis or treatment in any particular case.
A consulting physician or dentist or qualified mental health provider
may perform a limited examination of a given system or one requiring a
complete diagnostic history and examination. To qualify as a consultation,
a written report to the attending TRICARE authorized provider of
the findings of the consultant is required.
Note: Staff
consultations required by rules and regulations of the medical staff
of a hospital or institutional provider do not qualify as consultations.
Consultation
Appointment (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2) An
appointment for evaluation of medical symptoms resulting in a plan
for management which may include elements of further evaluation,
treatment and follow-up evaluation. Such an appointment does not
include surgical intervention or other invasive diagnostic or therapeutic
procedures beyond the level of very simply office procedures, or
basic laboratory work but rather provides the beneficiary with an
authoritative option.
Consulting
Physician or Dentist (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
physician or dentist, other than the attending physician, who performs
a consultation.
Continued
Health Care Benefit Program (CHCBP)A TRICARE benefit
program that provides temporary continued health care for certain
former beneficiaries of the MHS. Coverage under the CHCBP is purchased
on a premium basis.
Continuity
of CareFollow on of health care services from
a specific individual professional provider as part of a specific procedure
or service that was performed within the previous six months in
order to not disrupt therapy or repeat services.
Continuum
of CareAll patient care services provided from
“pre-conception to grave” across all types of settings. Requires integrating
processes to maintain ongoing communication and documentation flow
between the DC system and network.
Contract
Performance Evaluation (CPE)A review by
DHA, of a contractor’s level of compliance with the terms and conditions
of the contract. Usually, an operational audit performed by DHA
staff that focuses on timeliness, accuracy, and responsiveness of
the contractor in performing all aspects of the work required by
the contract.
Contract
PhysicianA physician who has made contractual arrangements
with a contractor to provide care or services to TRICARE beneficiaries.
A contract physician is a network provider who participates on all
TRICARE claims.
Contracting
Officer’s Representative (COR)A Government
representative, appointed in writing by the Contracting Officer
(CO), who represents the CO in the administration of technical matters
involving contract requirements.
ContractorAn
organization with which DHA has entered into a contract for delivery
of and/or processing of payment for health care services, and the
performance of related support activities, such as, pharmacy services,
quality monitoring and/or customer service.
Control
Of ClaimsThe ability to identify individually, locate,
and count all claims in the custody of the contractor by location,
including those that may be being developed by physical return of
a copy of the claim, and age including total age in-house and age
in a specific location.
Controlled
SubstancesThose medications which are included in
one of the schedules of the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 and
as amended.
Controlled
Unclassified Information (CUI)Information
that is not classified in accordance with national security directives,
but that otherwise requires safeguarding or dissemination controls
pursuant to and consistent with applicable law, regulations, and
Government-wide policies.
Coordination
Of Benefits (COB) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
coordination, on a primary or secondary payer basis of the payment
of benefits between two or more health care coverages to avoid duplication
of benefit payments.
Cost-Share
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
amount of money for which the beneficiary (or sponsor) is responsible
in connection with otherwise covered inpatient and outpatient services
(other than the annual deductible or disallowed amounts) as set
forth in
32 CFR 199.4(f) and
32 CFR 199.5(b). Cost-sharing may also be
referred to as “copayment.”
Correctional
Institution (HIPAA Definition)Any penal or
correctional facility, jail, reformatory, detention center, work
farm, halfway house, or residential community program center operated
by, or under contract to, the U.S., a State, a territory, a political
subdivision of a State or territory, or an Indian tribe, for the
confinement or rehabilitation of persons charged with or convicted
of a criminal offense or other persons held in lawful custody. Other persons
held in lawful custody includes juvenile offenders adjudicated delinquent,
aliens detained awaiting deportation, persons committed to mental
institutions through the criminal justice system, witnesses, or
others awaiting charges or trial as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Note: For
the purposes of TRICARE, the term “correctional institution” includes
military confinement facilities, but does not include internment
facilities for enemy prisoners of war, retained personnel, civilian
detainees and other detainees provided under the provisions of DoDD
2310.1 (reference (b)).
Covered
Entity (HIPAA Definition)Any business
entity that must comply with HIPAA regulations, which includes,
health plans, health care clearinghouses, and HCPs. For the purposes
of HIPAA, HCPs include hospitals, physicians, and other caregivers.
See 45CFR Section 160.103 of HIPAA regulation for additional information.
Note: In
the case of a health plan administered by the DoD, the covered entity
is the DoD Component (or subcomponent) that functions as the administrator
of the health plan.
Covered
Functions (HIPAA Definition)Those functions
of a covered entity, the performance of which, makes the entity
a health plan or HCP as outlined in HIPAA of 1996.
CredentialingThe
process by which providers are allowed to participate in the network.
This includes a review of the provider’s training, educational degrees,
licensure, practice history, etc.
Credentials PackageInformation
required for all clinical personnel supplied by the contractor who
will be working in an MTF/eMSM. Similar information may be required
for non-clinical personnel. Complete information shall contain the
following:
1. All documents, required per regulation/directive/instruction/policy
which are needed to verify that the individual is certified/authorized/qualified
to provide the proposed services at the involved facility. This
shall include licensure from the jurisdiction in which the individual
will be practicing and a National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB)
query as specified by the facility.
2. A completed
a Criminal History Background Check (CHBC), for all personnel required
by law to have a CHBC prior to awarding of privileges or the delivery
of services with the following considerations:
• If a CHBC has been initiated, but not completed,
the MTF Commander/eMSM Manager has the authority to allow awarding
of privileges and initiation of services if delivered under clinical
supervision.
• The mechanism
for accomplishing the CHBC may vary between MTFs/eMSMs and should be
determined during phase-in/transition and be agreed to by the MTF
Commander/eMSM Manager.
• Regardless of the mechanism for
initiating and completing a CHBC, the cost shall be borne by the
contractor.
3. Medicare Provider ID number/National Provider
Identifier (NPI) number.
4. Evidence of
compliance (or scheduled compliance) with the MTF/eMSM specific
requirements including all local Employee Health Program (EHP),
Federal Occupational Safety Act and Health Act (OSHA), and Bloodborne
Pathogens Program (BBP) requirements.
Custodial
Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
treatment or services, regardless of who recommends such treatment
or services or where such treatment or services are provided, that:
1. Can be rendered
safely and reasonably by a person who is not medically skilled;
or
2. Is/are designed mainly to help the patient
with the ADLs.
Cybersecurity
IncidentA cybersecurity incident is a violation
or imminent threat of violation of computer security policies, acceptable
use policies, or standard security practices, with respect to electronic
PII/PHI. A cybersecurity incident may or may not involve a breach
of PII/PHI. For example, a malware infection would be a possible
breach if it could cause unauthorized access to PII/PHI. However,
if the malware only affects data integrity or availability (not
confidentiality), then a non-breach cybersecurity incident has occurred.
Cycle
TimeThe elapsed time, as expressed in calendar
days including any part of the first and last days counted as two
days, from the date a claim, piece of correspondence, grievance,
or appeal case was received by a contractor through the date (PTC).
See the definition of claims cycle time, in this appendix, for added detail.
DataAny
information collected, derived, or created as a result of operations
as a TRICARE contractor. All data is the property of the Government
regardless of where it is maintained/stored.
Data
AggregationThe combining of PHI by a business associate
with the PHI received by the business associate in its capacity
as a business associate of another covered entity, to permit data
analyses that relate to the health care operations of the respective
covered entities as outlined in HIPAA of 1996.
Data
Condition (HIPAA Definition)The circumstances
under which a covered entity must use a particular data element
or segment as defined by HIPAA of 1996.
Data
Content (HIPAA Definition)All the data
elements and code sets inherent to a transaction, and not related
to the format of the transaction. Data elements that are related
to the format are not data content as defined by HIPAA of 1996.
Data
Element (HIPAA Definition)The smallest
named unit of information in a transaction defined by HIPAA of 1996.
Data
RepositoryA single point of electronic storage, established
and maintained by the contractor that enables the Government to
electronically access all data maintained by the contractor relative
to a TRICARE contract. This includes all claims/encounter data,
provider data, authorization, enrollment, and derived data collected
in relation to a TRICARE contract.
Data
Set (HIPAA Definition)A semantically
meaningful unit of information exchanged between two parties to
a transaction as defined by HIPAA of 1996.
Date
Of Determination (Appeals)The date of
completion appearing on the reconsideration determination, formal
review determination, or hearing final decision.
Days
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Calendar
days.
Days
Supply (Pharmacy)The length of time a dispensed quantity
of drug should last, based on directions for use with a limit as the
First Data Bank recommended maximum daily dose (unless specifically
altered by DoD).
Deductible
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Payment
by the beneficiary of the first $50 of the CHAMPUS determined allowable
costs or charges for covered outpatient services or supplies provided
in any one fiscal year; aggregate payment by two or more beneficiaries
who submit claims for the first $100. Effective January 1, 2018,
deductibles are determined on a calendar year basis. Deductible
amounts are outlined in the TRM,
Chapter 2.
Deductible
CertificateA statement issued to the beneficiary (or
sponsor) by a TRICARE contractor certifying to the deductible amounts
satisfied by a beneficiary for any applicable program year.
Defense
Centers of Excellence (COEs)CoEs focus on
an associated group of clinical conditions and create value by achieving
improvement in outcomes through clinical, educational, and research
activities.
• CoEs develop pathways of care covering
the clinical spectrum from prevention through reintegration or transition.
• Products of
pathway of care development include:
• Guidance regarding
structured documentation (electronic health record);
• Clinical practice
guidelines;
• Process and
outcome measures;
• Educational
materials;
• Innovation and
identification of research priorities; and,
• Strategies for
improving access to care.
Defense
Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An automated
system maintained by the DoD for the purposes of:
1. Enrolling members,
former members and their dependents; and
2. Verifying members’,
former members’, and their dependents’ eligibility for health care
benefits in the direct facilities and for TRICARE.
De-Identified
DataHealth information that has been rendered
not individually identifiable by removal of specific identifiers,
such as, individual or relatives or household members, names, addresses,
employers, name or addressee, or geographic subdivisions smaller
than a State, and all elements of dates (except year) for dates
directly related to an individual, telephone numbers, Social Security
Numbers (SSNs), etc., as outlined in HIPAA of 1996.
DemonstrationA
study or test project for the purpose of trying alternative methods
of payment for health and medical services, cost-sharing by eligible
beneficiaries, methods of encouraging efficient and economical delivery
of care, innovative approaches to delivery and financing services
and prepayment for services provided to a defined population. Following
completion and evaluation of the test project, it may or may not
become part of the program.
Descriptor
(HIPAA Definition)The text defining a code as defined in
HIPAA of 1996.
Designated
Record SetA group of records maintained by or for
a covered entity that is:
1. The medical records and billing records
about individuals maintained by or for a covered HCP;
2. The enrollment,
payment, claims adjudication, and case or medical management record
systems maintained by or for a health plan; or
3. Used, in whole
or in part, by or for the covered entity to make decisions about
individuals.
For purposes
of this definition, the term record means any item, collection,
or grouping of information that includes PHI and is maintained,
collected, used, or disseminated by or for a covered entity as described
in HIPAA of 1996.
Designated
Standard Maintenance Organization (DSMO)An organization
designated by the Secretary of HHS under HIPAA of 1996 §162.910(a).
Diagnosis
Related Groups (DRGs) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
method of dividing hospital patients into clinically coherent groups
based on their consumption of resources. Patients are assigned to
the groups based on their principal diagnosis (the reason for admission,
determined after study), secondary diagnoses, procedures performed,
and the patient’s age, sex, and discharge status. See the TRM for
more specific information on DRGs.
Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)A
classification system of codes for mental illness developed by the
American Psychiatric Association (APA).
Direct
Data Entry (HIPAA Definition)The direct entry
of data (for example, using dumb terminals or web browsers) that
is immediately transmitted into a health plan’s computer, as defined
in HIPAA of 1996.
Direct
Treatment Relationship (HIPAA Definition)A treatment
relationship between an individual and a HCP that is not an indirect
treatment relationship as defined under HIPAA of 1996. See the definition
of “Indirect Treatment Relationship” in this appendix.
DirectorThe
Director of the DHA; Director, TRIICARE Management Activity (TMA);
or Director, Office of CHAMPUS (OCHAMPUS). Any reference to the
Director, Office of CHAMPUS, or OCHAMPUS, or TMA shall mean the
Director, DHA. Any reference to Director shall also include any
person designated by the Director to carry out a particular authority.
In addition, any authority of the Director may be exercised by the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs (ASD(HA)).
Director,
TRICARE Regional Offices (TROs)An individual
responsible for:
1. Overseeing and ensuring there is an integrated
health care delivery system for TRICARE beneficiaries in the region;
and
2. Oversight of the management/monitoring
of the daily administration of the TRICARE contract/contractor(s)
in the region; and
3. Managing the daily activities of the TRO.
Disaster
Response DutyFor purposes of TPM,
Chapter 10, Section 10.1 only, the term “disaster
response duty” means duty performed by a member of the National
Guard in State status pursuant to an emergency declaration by the
Governor of the State (to include the four United States Territories,
or with respect to the District of Columbia, the mayor of the District
of Columbia) in response to a disaster or in preparation for an imminent
disaster.
Discharge
PlanningThe development of an individualized discharge
health care plan for the patient prior to leaving an institution
to follow at home, with the aim of improving patient outcomes, reducing
the chance of unplanned readmission to an institution, and containing
costs.
Disclosure
(HIPAA Definition)The release, transfer, provision of access
to, or divulging in any other manner of information outside the entity
holding the information as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Distant
SiteThe “distant site” is where the physician
or practitioner providing the professional service is located at the
time the services are provided via an interactive telecommunications
system.
DoD
InformationInformation that is provided by the DoD
to a non-DoD entity, or that is collected, developed, received, transmitted,
used, or stored by a non-DoD entity in support of an official DoD
activity, where that information has not been cleared for public
release.
Domiciliary Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Care provided
to a patient in an institution or home-like environment because:
1. Providing support
for the ADLs in the home is not available or is unsuitable; or
2. Members
of the patient’s family are unwilling to provide the care.
Note: The
terms “domiciliary” and “custodial care” represent separate concepts
and are not interchangeable. Custodial care and domiciliary care
are not covered under the TRICARE programs or the Extended Care
Health Option (ECHO).
Donor
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
individual who supplies living tissue or material to be used in
another body, such as a person who furnishes a kidney for renal
transplant.
Double
Coverage (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)When
a TRICARE beneficiary also is enrolled in another insurance, medical
service, or health plan that duplicates all or part of a beneficiary’s
TRICARE benefits.
Double
Coverage Plan (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
specific insurance, medical service, or health plan under which
a TRICARE beneficiary has entitlement to medical benefits that duplicate
TRICARE benefits in whole or in part. Double coverage plans do not
include:
1. Medicaid.
2. Coverage specifically
designed to supplement TRICARE benefits.
3. Entitlement
to receive care from the Uniformed Services medical care facilities;
or
4. Entitlement to receive care from DVA/VHA
medical care facilities; or
5. Entitlement
to receive care from Indian Health Services medical care facilities;
or
6. Services and items provided under Part
C (Infants and Toddlers with Disabilities) of the Individuals With
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
Dual
Compensation (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Federal
law (5 USC 5536) prohibits active duty members or civilian employees
of the U.S. Government from receiving additional compensation from
the Government above their normal pay and allowances. This prohibition
applies to TRICARE cost-sharing of medical care provided by active
duty members or civilian Government employees to TRICARE beneficiaries.
Edit
Error (TEDs Only)Errors found on TEDs (initial submissions,
resubmissions, and adjustments/cancellation submissions) which result
in non-acceptance of the records by DHA. These require correction
of the error by the contractor and resubmission of the corrected
TED to DHA for acceptance.
Electronic
Media (HIPAA Definition)A mode of transferring/storing
information that includes:
1. Electronic storage material on which data
may be recorded electronically, including for example devices in
computers (hard drives) and any removable/transportable digital
memory medium, such as magnetic tape or disk, or digital memory
card.
2. Transmission media used to exchange information
already in electronic storage media. Transmission media includes,
for example, the Internet (the Extranet leased lines, dial-up lines,
private networks, and the physical movement of removable and transportable
electronic storage media. Certain transmissions, including paper,
via facsimile, and of voice, via telephone, are not considered to be
transmissions via electronic media if the information being exchanged
did not exist in electronic form immediately before the transmission.
Employment
Records (Defined in DoD 5400.11-R, DoD Privacy Program)Any
item collection or grouping of information, whatever the storage
media (paper, electronic, etc,) about an individual that is maintained
by an entity subject to the DoD Privacy Program Regulation including
but not limited to an individual’s education, financial transactions,
medical history, criminal or employment history, and that contains
his or her name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying
particular assigned to the individual, such as a finger or voice
print or a photograph. For more specific information refer to the
DoD Privacy Program Regulation.
Enhanced
Multi-Service Markets (eMSM)Concept which
integrates health care among the Uniformed Services by providing
increased authority including funding allocation, policy, and better
maximization of staff skill sets. The concept is employed in geographic
areas where at least two medical hospitals or clinics from different
Uniformed Services have overlapping service areas. They are considered
enhanced because of several factors, including overall size, medical
mission, and graduate medical education capacity and because they
allow for the movement of workload and workforce between or among
the medical treatment facilities.
Enrollment
FeesThe amount required to be paid by some
MHS beneficiaries eligible to enroll in and receive the benefits of
TRICARE Prime, TRICARE Select or other special TRICARE programs.
Enrollment
PlanA process established by the contractor
to inform beneficiaries of the availability of the TRICARE Prime program,
facilitate enrollment in the program, and maintain enrollment records.
The plan must include actions for TRICARE Select and must be approved
by the Government. The contractor process must be approved by the
Government.
Enrollment
RecordsOfficial documentation of a beneficiary’s
registration (enrollment) for TRICARE Prime and maintained on the
DEERS.
Enrollment
TransferA transfer of TRICARE enrollment from one
location or contractor to another:
1. Out-Of-Contract Enrollment Transfer. An
enrollment transfer between contractors, to include the Continental
United States (CONUS) to CONUS, CONUS to Outside of the Continental
United States (OCONUS), and OCONUS to CONUS. The term “contractors”
also includes Designated Providers (DPs) under the Uniformed Services
Family Health Plan (USFHP).
2. Within-Contract
Enrollment Transfer. An enrollment transfer within a TRICARE
region, which involves a change of address and possibly a change
of Primary Care Managers (PCMs), but not a change of contractors.
Entity
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
entity includes a corporation, trust, partnership, sole proprietorship
or other kind of business enterprise that is or may be eligible
to receive reimbursement either directly or indirectly from TRICARE.
Episodes
of Care (EOC)Referrals are normally processed as “Episodes
of Care.” An EOC is defined as “A treatment period that begins with
the initial assessment, follow up interventions and reassessments
necessary to provide reasonable medical services related to a specific
condition.” The episode includes associated lab, radiology, Durable
Medical Equipment (DME), and ancillary therapies (Physical Therapy
(PT), Occupational Therapy (OT), Speech Therapy (ST)), all of which
are subject to the Right of First Refusal (ROFR) process. An episode
of care generally involves evaluation and/or treatment of one disease
or condition and may allow for specialist to specialist (secondary)
referrals. Episodes are generally categorized as ”evaluate (only)”
or “evaluate and treat.”
ExclusionServices
and/or supplies not reimbursable under TRICARE. This includes otherwise
covered services and supplies provided to a TRICARE eligible beneficiary
by a non-authorized provider/entity or a provider placed on “suspension”
by a contractor.
Explanation
Of Benefits (EOB)An electronic or paper document prepared
by insurance carriers, health care organizations, and TRICARE contractors
to inform beneficiaries of the actions taken with respect to a claim
for health care coverage.
Explanation
Of Benefits (EOB) PharmacyAn
electronic or paper document which provides a consolidated listing
of prescriptions filled for the beneficiary over a specific period
of time. The period of time is dependent on printed request (quarterly)
or online (user defined).
Explanation
Of Payment (EOP) PharmacyA
document provided to either the beneficiary after paper claims are
processed or network pharmacies for each payment cycle. This document
describes the action taken for each claim processed to a final determination
(paid or denied). EOPs are not generated for beneficiaries processing
claims electronically at the point of sale.
Extraordinary
Physical Or Psychological ConditionA complex physical
or psychological clinical condition of such severity which results
in the dependents of a Service member being homebound. See TPM,
Chapter 9 for additional information.
Federal
Records Center (FRCs)Locations established
and maintained by the General Services Administration (GSA) at areas throughout
the U.S. for the storage, processing, and servicing of non-current
records for Government agencies.
Files
AdministrationThe application of records management techniques
to filing practices to maintain records easily and to retrieve them
rapidly, to ensure their completeness, and to facilitate the disposition
of noncurrent records.
Fiscal
Year (FY)The Federal Government’s 12 month accounting
period which currently runs from October 1 through September 30
of the following year.
Format
(HIPAA Definition)Those data elements that provide or control
the enveloping or hierarchical structure, or assist in identifying
data content of, a transaction, as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Former
MemberAn individual who is eligible for, or entitled
to, retired pay, at age 60, for non-regular service in accordance
with Chapter 1223, Title 10, USC but has been discharged and maintains
no military affiliation. These former members, at age 60, and their
eligible dependents are entitled to medical care, commissary, exchange,
and MWR privileges. Under age 60, they and their eligible dependents
are entitled to commissary, exchange, and MWR privileges only.
FormularyA listing
of pharmaceuticals and other authorized supplies to be dispensed
with appropriate prescriber’s order from a particular POS. The formulary
for any TRICARE contract will be managed by the DoD Pharmacy and
Therapeutics (P&T) Committee with clinical guidance from the
DoD Pharmacoeconomic Center (PEC). Applicable formulary information
may be viewed on the TRICARE web site at:
http://www.health.mil/formulary.
Freedom Of ChoiceThe
right to obtain medical care from any TRICARE-authorized source
available, including TRICARE Prime, the DC and/or the MTF/eMSM systems,
or obtain care from a provider not affiliated with the contractor
and seek reimbursement under the terms and conditions of the TRICARE
Standard (TRICARE Select starting January 1, 2018) Program (see
definition).
Note: Beneficiaries
who voluntarily enroll in TRICARE Prime must be informed of any
restrictions on freedom of choice that may be applicable to enrollees
as a result of enrollment. Except for any limitations on freedom
of choice that are fully disclosed to the beneficiaries at the time
of enrollment, freedom of choice provisions applicable to the TRICARE
Standard (TRICARE Select starting January 1, 2018) Program shall
be applicable to TRICARE Prime.
Freedom
Of Information Act (FOIA)A law enacted
in 1967 as an amendment to the “Public Information” section of the
Administrative Procedures Act, establishing provisions making information
available to the public. DHA and TRICARE contractors are subject
to these provisions.
Freestanding
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Not
“institution-affiliated” or “institution-based.”
Full
Mobilization (DoD Definition)Expansion of
the Active Armed Forces resulting from action by Congress and the
President to mobilize all Reserve Component (RC) units and individuals
in the existing approved force structure, as well as retired military
personnel, and the resources needed for their support to meet the
requirements of a war or other national emergency involving an external
threat to the national security. Reserve personnel can be placed
on active duty for the duration of the emergency plus six months.
Gag
ClauseA provision that is included in a professional
provider’s agreement or contract with a managed care organization;
such as a Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) network or a Health
Maintenance Organization (HMO) network, or third-party payer that
directly or indirectly prevents limits the ability of the HCP from
being open with his/her patients about the terms of the patient’s
coverage and therapeutic treatment options, including, the risks,
benefits and consequences of treatment or non-treatment, or the
opportunity for the individual to refuse treatment and to express
preferences about future treatment options.
Good
Faith Payments (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Those
payments made to civilian sources of medical care who provided medical
care to persons purporting to be eligible beneficiaries but who
are determined later to be ineligible for TRICARE benefits. (The
ineligible person usually possesses an erroneous or illegal identification
card.) To be considered for good faith payments, the civilian source
of care must have exercised reasonable precautions in identifying
a person claiming to be an eligible beneficiary.
GrievanceA
written complaint on a non-appealable issue which deals primarily
with a perceived failure of a network provider, the Health Care
Finder (HCF), or contractor or subcontractor, to furnish the level
or quality of care expected by a beneficiary.
Grievance
ProcessA contractor developed and managed system
for resolving beneficiary grievances.
Group
A and BWith respect to beneficiary cost-sharing,
deductibles and catastrophic cap, the NDAA 2017 divided beneficiaries
enrolled in TRICARE Prime or TRICARE Select into two groups:
• Group A (or grandfathered) beneficiaries:
consists of sponsors and their family members who first became affiliated
with a Uniformed Service through enlistment or appointment before
January 1, 2018.
• Group B (or
non-grandfathered) beneficiaries: consists of sponsors and their
family members who first became affiliated with a Uniformed Service
through enlistment or appointment on or after January 1, 2018.
Effective
January 1, 2018, enrollees in the TRICARE Reserve Select (TRS),
TRICARE Retired Reserve (TRR), TRICARE Young Adult (TYA), or the
CHCBP have Group B cost-shares, deductibles, and catastrophic caps,
regardless of when the sponsor first became affiliated with a Uniformed
Service through enlistment or appointment.
Group
Health Plan (GHP)An employee welfare benefit plan (as defined
in section 3(1) of the Employee Retirement Income and Security Act
of 1974 (ERISA), 29 USC 1002(1)), including insured and self-insured
plans, to the extent that the plan provides medical care (as defined
in section 2791(a)(2) of the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act),
42 USC 300gg-91(a)(2)), including items and services paid for as
medical care, to employees or their dependents directly or through
insurance, reimbursement, or otherwise, that:
1. Has 50 or more
participants (as defined in section 3(7) of ERISA, 29 USC 1002(7));
or
2. Is administered by an entity other than
the employer that established and maintains the plan.
Health
CareThe prevention, treatment and management
of illness and the preservation of mental and physical well being
by qualified medical professionals. This includes but is not limited
to, preventive, diagnostic, therapeutic, rehabilitative, maintenance,
or palliative care, and counseling, service, assessment, or procedure
with respect to the physical or mental condition, or functional
status, of an individual or that affects the structure or function
of the body; and the sale or dispensing of a drug, device, equipment,
or other item in accordance with a prescription. As described in
HIPAA of 1996.
Health
Care Clearinghouse (HIPAA Definition)A public or
private entity, including a billing service, repricing company,
community health management information system or community health
information system, and “value-added” networks and switches, that
does either of the following functions.
1. Processes or
facilitates the processing of health information received from another
entity in a nonstandard format or containing nonstandard data content
into standard data elements or a standard transaction.
2. Receives a standard
transaction from another entity and processes or facilitates the
processing of health information into nonstandard format or nonstandard
data content for the receiving entity. As defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Health
Care Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS)Set of health
care procedure codes based on the American Medical Association’s
(AMA’s) Current Procedural Terminology (CPT).
Health
Care Finder (HCF)A person who manages and performs the duties
necessary to operate an HCF system.
Health
Care Finder (HCF) SystemA system or
mechanism, established by the contractor in each Prime Service Area
(PSA) in the region, to facilitate referrals and other customer
service functions to assist beneficiaries in accessing health care to
the DC system and/or civilian providers.
Health
Care Provider (HCP) (HIPAA Definition)A provider of
medical or health services, institutional or individual professional
provider, and any other person or organization who furnishes, bills,
or is paid for health care in the normal course of business as defined
in HIPAA of 1996.
Health
Information (HIPAA Definition)Any information,
including genetic information, whether oral or recorded, in any
form or medium that:
1. Is created or received by a HCP, health
plan, public health authority, employer, life insurer, school or university,
or health care clearinghouse; and
2. Relates to the
past, present, or future physical or mental health or condition
of an individual; the provision of health care to an individual;
or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health
care to an individual.
As defined in
HIPAA of 1996.
Health
Insurance Issuer (HIPAA Definition)An insurance
company, insurance service, or insurance organization (including
an HMO) that is licensed to engage in the business of insurance
in a State and is subject to State Law that regulates insurance. Such
term does not include a group health plan.
Health
Maintenance Organization (HMO) (HIPAA Definition)A
federally qualified HMO, an organization recognized as an HMO under
State law, or a similar organization regulated for solvency under
State law in the same manner and to the same extent as such an HMO
as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Health
Oversight Agency (HIPAA Definition)An agency or
authority of the U.S., a State, a territory, a political subdivision
of a State or territory, or an Indian tribe, or a person or entity
acting under a grant of authority from or contract with such public agency,
including the employees or agents of such public agency or its contractors
or persons or entities to whom it has granted authority, that is
authorized by law to oversee the health care system (whether public
or private) or Government programs in which health information is
necessary to determine eligibility or compliance, or to enforce
civil rights laws for which health information is relevant as defined
in HIPAA of 1996.
Note: The term “health
oversight agency” includes any DoD Component authorized under applicable
DoD Regulation to oversee the MHS, including with respect to matters
of quality of care, risk management, program integrity, financial
management, standards of conduct, or the effectiveness of the MHS
in carrying out its mission.
Health
Plan (HIPAA Definition)An individual
or group plan that provides or pays the cost of medical care. For
a more detailed definition refer to HIPAA of 1996.
HIPAA
BreachAn incident that satisfies the definition
of a breach in 45 CFR 164.402 (HIPAA Breach Rule).
Homebound (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A beneficiary’s
condition is such that there exists a normal inability to leave
home, and consequently, leaving home would require considerable
and taxing effort. Any absence of an individual from the home attributable
to the need to receive health care treatment including regular absences
for the purpose of participating in rehabilitative, therapeutic,
psychosocial, or medical treatment in an adult daycare program that
is licensed or certified by a state, or accredited to furnish adult
daycare services in the state shall not disqualify an individual
from being considered to be confined to home. Any other absence
of an individual from the home shall not disqualify an individual
if the absence is infrequent or of relatively short duration. For
the purposes of the preceding sentence, any absence for the purpose
of attending a religious service shall be deemed to be an absence
of infrequent or short duration. Also, absences from the home for
non-medical purposes, such as an occasional trip to the barber,
a walk around the block or a drive, would not necessarily negate
the beneficiary’s homebound status if the absences are undertaken
on an infrequent basis and are of relatively short duration. An
exception is made to the above homebound definitional criteria for
beneficiaries under the age of 18 and those receiving maternity
care. The only homebound criteria for these special beneficiary
categories is written certification from a physician attesting to
the fact that leaving home would place the beneficiary at medical
risk. In addition to the above absences, whether regular or infrequent,
from the beneficiary’s primary home for the purpose of attending
an educational program in a public or private school that is licensed
and/or certified by a state, shall not negate the beneficiary’s
homebound status. See also TPM,
Chapter 9 for
additional information.
Hospital DayAn
overnight stay at a hospital. Normally if the patient is discharged
in less than 24 hours it would not be considered an inpatient stay;
however, if the patient was admitted and assigned to a bed and the intent
of the hospital was to keep the patient overnight, regardless of
the actual Length-Of-Stay (LOS), the stay will be considered an
inpatient stay and, therefore, a hospital day. For hospital stays
exceeding 24 hours, the day of admission is considered a hospital
day; the day of discharge is not.
Immediate
Family (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
spouse, natural parent, child and sibling, adopted child and adoptive
parent, stepparent, stepchild, grandparent, grandchild, stepbrother
and stepsister, father-in-law, mother-in-law of the beneficiary,
or provider, as appropriate. For purposes of this definition only,
to determine who may render services to a beneficiary, the step-relationship
continues to exist even if the marriage upon which the relationship
is based terminates through divorce or death of one of the parents.
Independent
Laboratory (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
freestanding laboratory approved for participation under Medicare
and certified by the CMS.
Indirect
Treatment Relationship (HIPAA Definition)A relationship
between an individual and a HCP in which:
1. The HCP delivers
health care to the individual based on the orders of another HCP;
and
2. The HCP typically provides services or
products, or reports the diagnosis or results associated with the
health care, directly to another HCP, who provides the services
or products or reports to the individual.
As
defined in HIPAA of 1996.
IndividualThe
person who is the subject of PHI as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Individual Consideration (IC)
ProcedureA service/treatment not routinely
provided, is unusual, variable, or new and, as such, will require additional
information from the provider of care, including an adequate definition
or description of the nature, extent and need for the unusual service/treatment
including the time, effort, and necessary equipment required. Any
complexities related to the service should also be identified.
Individually
Identifiable Health Information (IIHI) (HIPAA Definition)Information
that is a subset of health information, including demographic information
collected from an individual, and:
1. Is created or received by a HCP, health
plan, employer, or health care clearinghouse; and
2. Relates to the
past, present, or future physical or mental health or condition
of an individual; the provision of health care to an individual;
or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health
care to an individual; and
3. That identifies
the individual; or
4. With respect to which there is a reasonable
basis to believe the information can be used to identify the individual.
As
defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Initial
Determination (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
formal written decision on a TRICARE claim, a request for benefit
authorization, a request by a provider for approval as an authorized
TRICARE provider, or a decision disqualifying or excluding a provider
as an authorized provider under TRICARE. Rejection of a claim or
a request for benefit or provider authorization for failure to comply
with administrative requirements, including failure to submit reasonably
requested information, is not an initial determination. Responses
to general or specific inquiries regarding TRICARE benefits are
not initial determinations.
Initial
PaymentThe first payment on a continuing claim,
such as a long-term institutional claim.
Inpatient (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A patient
who has been admitted to a hospital or other authorized institution
for bed occupancy for purposes of receiving necessary medical care,
with the reasonable expectation that the patient will remain in
the institution at least 24 hours, and with the registration and
assignment of an inpatient number or designation. Institutional
care in connection with in and out (ambulatory) surgery is not included
within the meaning of inpatient whether or not an inpatient number
or designation is made by the hospital or other institution. If
the patient has been received at the hospital, but death occurs before
the actual admission occurs, an inpatient admission exists as if
the patient had lived and had been formally admitted.
Inpatient
CareServices/treatment provided to a person
who has been admitted to a hospital or other authorized institution.
Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility (IRF)A facility classified
by CMS as an IRF and meets the applicable requirements established
by
32 CFR 199.6(b)(4)(xx) (which includes the
requirement to be a Medicare participating provider).
InquiryRequests
for information or assistance made by or on behalf of a beneficiary,
provider, the public, or the Government. Written inquiries may be
made in any format (letter, memorandum, note attached to a claim,
etc.). Allowable charge complaints, grievances, and appeals are
excluded from this definition.
Institution-Affiliated
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Related
to a TRICARE authorized institutional provider through a shared
governing body but operating under a separate and distinct license
or accreditation.
Institution-Based
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Related
to a TRICARE authorized institutional provider through a shared
governing body and operating under a common license and shared accreditation.
Institutional
ProviderA HCP who meets the applicable requirements
established by
32 CFR 199.6.
Intensive
Outpatient Program (IOP)A treatment
setting capable of providing an organized day or evening program
that includes assessment, treatment, case management, and rehabilitation
for individuals not requiring 24-hour care for mental health disorders,
to include SUDs, as appropriate for the individual patient. The
program structure is regularly scheduled, individualized, and shares
monitoring and support with the patient’s family and support system.
Interactive
Telecommunications SystemInteractive
telecommunications systems are defined as multimedia communications
modalities that include, at a minimum, secure audio and video equipment
permitting two-way, real-time services or consultations. This includes
smartphones, tablet computers, and personal computers equipped with the
necessary camera and software to enable two-way, encrypted real-time
audio and video interaction; as well as dedicated video conferencing
and telemedicine systems.
Internal Control Number (ICN)The
unique number assigned to a claim by the contractor to distinguish
the claim during processing, payment, and filing procedures. It
is the number affixed to the face of each claim received and will,
at a minimum, include the Julian date of receipt and a five digit
sequence number assigned by the contractor. Each TED must have a
unique ICN. For records generated from claims, it will be the ICN
of the claim from which it was generated. For a TED which is not
generated from claims, it will be a unique number assigned by the
contractor which will include the Julian date of the record’s creation
and a five digit sequence number.
International
Classification of Diseases, 9th Edition, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM)A
technical reference, ICD-9-CM. Volumes 1 and 2 are a required reference
and coding system for diagnoses and Volume 3 is required as a coding
system for procedures in processing TRICARE claims for medical care
with dates of service for outpatient services or dates of discharge
for inpatient services before the mandated date, as directed by
HHS, for ICD-10 implementation.
International
Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition, Clinical Modification
(ICD-10-CM)A technical reference, ICD-10-CM. It is
a required reference and coding system for diagnoses in processing
TRICARE claims for medical care with dates of service for outpatient
services or dates of discharge for inpatient services on or after
the mandated date, as directed by HHS, for ICD-10 implementation.
International
Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition, Procedure Coding System
(ICD-10-PCS)A technical reference, ICD-10-PCS. It is
a required reference and coding system for procedures in processing
TRICARE claims for medical care with dates of discharge for inpatient
services on or after the mandated date, as directed by HHS, for
ICD-10 implementation.
Intervention,
PharmacyA change in therapy resulting from the
prospective drug utilization review process and contact with the
prescriber and/or the beneficiary because of allergy, clinically
significant interactions, duplicative therapy, or other reasons.
Intervention Report, PharmacyA
formal account of prescriptions not dispensed or changes in therapy
as a result of contact with prescriber's and/or beneficiaries because
of allergies, clinically significant interactions, duplicative therapy,
or other reasons. The formal account shall also contain the resultant
change in cost due to the intervention, if possible.
Investigational
DrugsNew medicines or other substances which
have a physiological effect when ingested or otherwise introduced
into the body, that have not been approved for general use by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) but is under investigation and
clinical trial regarding its safety and efficacy first by clinical
investigators and then by practicing physician using subjects who
have given informed consent to participate.
Laboratory
And Pathological Services (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Laboratory and
pathological examinations (including machine diagnostic tests that
produce hard-copy results) when necessary to, and rendered in connection
with medical, obstetrical, or surgical diagnosis or treatment of
an illness or injury, or in connection with well-baby care.
Law
Enforcement Official (HIPAA Definition)An officer or
employee of any agency or authority of the U.S., a State, a territory,
a political subdivision of a State or territory, or an Indian tribe,
who is empowered by law to:
1. Investigate or conduct an official inquiry
into a potential violation of law; or
2. Prosecute or
otherwise conduct a criminal, civil, or administrative proceeding
arising from an alleged violation of law.
For
further details, refer to HIPAA of 1996.
Legacy
IdentifierA number used to identify unique providers.
These number include the six-digit Medicare ID number, Unique Physician
Identification Number (UPIN), 10-digit Ambulatory Surgery Center
(ASC) number, Supplier Clearinghouse (NSC) number, Online Survey
Certification and Reporting (OSCAR) number, and DME supplier number.
A legacy identification number is other than the unique NPI required
by HIPAA of 1996 to be issued to each physician, supplier and other
provider of health care and the Federal Tax Identification Number
(TIN). A Federal TIN is not considered a legacy identifier for health
care purposes as it’s primary purpose is to support IRS 1099 reporting.
Limited
Data Set (HIPAA Definition)A semantically
meaningful unit of information exchanged between two parties to
a transaction that excludes direct identifiers of the individual
or of relatives, employers, or household members of the individual
which is considered to be PHI as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Long-Term
Care Hospital (LTCH)A hospital that
is classified by the CMS as an LTCH and meets the applicable requirements
established by
32 CFR 199.6(b)(4)(v) (which includes the
requirement to be a Medicare participating provider).
Machine-Readable
Records/ArchivesThe records and archives whose informational
content is usually in code and has been recorded on media, such
as magnetic disks, drums, tapes, punched paper cards, or punched
paper tapes, accompanied by finding aids known as software documentation.
The coded information is retrievable only by machine.
Maintain
Or Maintenance (HIPAA Definition)Activities necessary
to support the use of a standard adopted by the Secretary of HHS,
including technical corrections to an implementation specification,
and enhancements, or expansion of a code set. This term excludes
the activities related to the adoption of a new standard or implementation specification,
or modification to an adopted standard or implementation specification.
Major
Diagnostic Category (MDC)A group of similar
DRGs, such as all those effecting a given organ system of the body
formed by dividing all possible principal diagnoses from (ICD-9-CM)
into 25 mutually exclusive diagnosis areas. MDC codes, like DRG
codes, are primarily a claims and administrative data element unique
to the U.S. medical care reimbursement system. DRG codes are also
mapped, or grouped, into the MDC codes.
Managed
Care Support Contractor (MCSC)Civilian contractor,
under contract with the DoD, to work with, help support and augment
health care services available at the MTFs/eMSMs resulting in the
establishment of an integrated system of health care delivery that
influences utilization of services, cost of services while measuring
performance. The contractor is required to assist military personnel
in the combining of the resources of the military’s direct medical
care system, the TRICARE program and the contractor’s managed care
provider network and other services outlined in the contract to
ensure a system that delivers value by giving TRICARE eligible beneficiaries
access to quality, cost-effective health care.
Marketing
(HIPAA Definition)Communication about a product or service
to encourage recipients of the communication to purchase or use
the product or service as defined in HIPAA of 1996. See also DoD
6025.18R, DoD Health Information Privacy Regulation, for a list
of specific exclusions to this definition.
Maximum
Allowable Prevailing ChargeThe TRICARE
state prevailing charges adjusted by the Medicare Economic Index
(MEI) according to the methodology as set forth in
Chapter 16.
Maximum
Defined Data Set (HIPAA Definition)All required
data elements for a particular standard based on a specific implementation
specification.
Medicaid
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Those
medical benefits authorized under Title XIX of the Social Security
Act provided to welfare recipients and the medically indigent through
programs as administered by the various states.
Medical
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
generally used term which pertains to the diagnosis and treatment
of illness, injury, pregnancy, and mental disorders by trained and
licensed or certified health professionals. For purposes of TRICARE, the
term “medical” should be understood to include “medical, psychological,
surgical, and obstetrical,” unless it is specifically stated that
a more restrictive meaning is intended.
Medical/Dental
Claims History FileRefer to Beneficiary
History File definition.
Medical
Emergency (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
sudden and unexpected onset of a medical condition or the acute
exacerbation of a chronic condition that is threatening to life,
limb, or sight, and requires immediate medical treatment or which manifests
painful, symptomatology requiring immediate palliative efforts to
alleviate suffering. Medical emergencies include heart attacks,
cardiovascular accidents poisoning, convulsions, kidney stones,
and such other acute medical conditions as may be determined to
be medical emergencies by the TRICARE Director, or a designee. In
the case of a pregnancy, a medical emergency must involve a sudden
and unexpected medical complication that puts the mother, the baby,
or both, at risk. Pain would not, however, qualify a maternity case
as an emergency, nor would incipient birth after the 34th week of gestation,
unless an otherwise qualifying medical condition is present. Examples
of medical emergencies related to pregnancy or delivery are hemorrhage,
ruptured membrane with prolapsed cord, placenta previa, abruption
placenta, presence of shock or unconsciousness, suspected heart attack
or stroke, or trauma (such as injuries received in an automobile
accident.
Medical
Necessity DeterminationA review to
determine if the recommended health care services are reasonable
for the diagnosis and treatment of illness, injury, pregnancy, mental
disorders and adequate for well-baby care.
Medical
Supplies And Dressings (Consumables) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Necessary medical
or surgical supplies (exclusive of DME) that do not withstand prolonged,
repeated use and that are needed for the proper medical management
of a condition for which benefits are otherwise authorized under
TRICARE, on either an inpatient or outpatient basis. Examples include disposable
syringes for a diabetic, colostomy sets, irrigation sets, and ace
bandages.
Medical
ManagementContemporary practices in areas such as
Utilization Management (UM), Case Management (CM), care coordination,
chronic care/Disease Management (DM), and the various additional
terms and models for managing the clinical and social needs of eligible
beneficiaries to achieve the short and long term cost-effectiveness
of the MHS while achieving the highest level of satisfaction among
MHS beneficiaries.
Medically
or Psychologically Necessary (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The frequency,
extent and types of medical services or supplies, which represent
appropriate medical care and that are generally accepted by qualified
professionals to be reasonable and adequate for the diagnosis and
treatment of illness, injury, pregnancy, and mental disorders or
that are reasonable and adequate for well-baby care.
Medicare
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
medical benefits authorized under Title XVIII of the Social Security
Act provided to persons 65 or older, certain disabled persons, or
persons with chronic renal disease, through a national program administered
by the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Health Care
Financing Administration (HCFA), Medicare Bureau.
Medicare
Economic Index (MEI)An index used
by Medicare to update physician fee levels in relation to annual
changes in the general economy for inflation, productivity, and
changes in specific health sector practice expenses factors including
malpractice, personnel costs, rent, and other expenses.
Medication
Assisted Treatment (MAT)MAT for diagnosed
SUD is a holistic modality for recovery and treatment that employs
evidence-based therapy, including psychosocial treatments and psychopharmacology,
and FDA-approved medications as indicated for the management of
withdrawal symptoms and maintenance.
Medication
Error (FDA Definition)Any preventable
event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or
patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health
care professional, patient, or consumer. Such events may be related
to professional practice, health care products, procedures, and
systems, including prescribing, order communication, product labeling
packaging, and nomenclature, compounding, dispensing, distribution,
administration, education, monitoring and use as defined by the
FDA.
Mental
Disorder, To Include SUD
For
purposes of the payment of TRICARE benefits, a mental disorder is
a nervous or mental condition that involves a clinically significant
behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that is associated with
a painful symptom, such as distress, and that impairs a patient’s
ability to function in one or more major life activities. An SUD
is a mental condition that involves a maladaptive pattern of substance
use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress; impaired
control over substance use; social impairment; and risky use of
a substance(s). Additionally, the mental disorder must be one of
those conditions listed in the current edition of the DSM. “Conditions
Not Attributable to a Mental Disorder,” or V codes,
or ICD-10-CM Z codes, are not considered diagnosable
mental disorders.
MemberAn
individual who is affiliated with a Service, either an active duty
member, reserve member, active duty retired member, or retired reserve
member. Members in a retired status are not former members. Also
referred to as the sponsor.
Mental
Health Therapeutic Absence (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A therapeutically
planned absence from the inpatient setting. The patient is not discharged
from the facility and may be away for periods of several hours to
several days. The purpose of the therapeutic absence is to give
the patient an opportunity to test his or her ability to function
outside the inpatient setting before the actual discharge.
Military Health System (MHS)
BeneficiaryAny individual who is eligible to receive
treatment in an MTF/eMSM. Eligibility is determined by the Uniformed
Services and is reported on DEERS.
Note: The
categories of MHS beneficiaries shall be broadly interpreted unless
otherwise specifically restricted. (For example: Authorized parents
and parents-in-law are not eligible for TRICARE Program, but may
receive treatment in an MTF/eMSM (on a space available basis) and
may access the Nurse Advise Line (NAC)).
Military
Treatment Facility (MTF)A Uniformed
Services hospital or clinic.
Military
Treatment Facility (MTF)/Enhanced Multi-Service Market (eMSM) OptimizationFilling
every appointment and bed available within the MTF or in the eMSM
based on the capacity and capabilities of the MTF/eMSM and the MTF’s/eMSM’s
readiness/training requirements, as defined by the MTF Commander/eMSM
Manager before referral to outside civilian providers.
Military
Treatment Facility (MTF)/Enhanced Multi-Service Market (eMSM)-Referred
CareMedical care or services/supplies required
by a patient that are not available at the MTF or in the eMSM area
and therefore must be provided by an outside civilian provider.
Such care requires an MTF/eMSM referral for the civilian medical
care.
Mobilization
Plan - TRICAREA detailed proposal designed to ensure
the Government’s ability to continue to meet the health care needs
of the TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries in the event of a military
mobilization that precludes the use of all or parts of the military
DC system for provision of care to TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries.
Monthly Pro-RatingA
calculation process for determining the amount of the enrollment
fee to be credited to a new enrollment period. For example, if a
beneficiary pays their annual enrollment fee, in total, on January
1, (the first day of their enrollment period) and a change in status
occurs on February 15. The beneficiary will receive credit for 10
months of the enrollment fee. The beneficiary will lose that portion
of the enrollment fee that would have covered the period from February
15 through February 28.
Most-Favored
Rate (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
lowest usual charge to any individual or third-party payer in effect
on the date of the admission of a TRICARE beneficiary.
National
Appropriate Charge LevelThe charge level
established from a 1991 national appropriate charge file developed
from July 1986 - June 1987 claims data, by applying appropriate
MEI updates through 1990, and prevailing charge cuts, freeze or
MEI updates for 1991 as discussed in the September 6, 1991, Final
Rule.
National
Conversion Factor (NCF)A mathematical
representation of what is currently being paid for similar services
nationally. The factor is based on the national allowable charges
actually in use.
National Disaster Medical System
(NDMS)A Federally coordinated framework
that augments the nation’s medical response capability. The primary
purpose of the NDMS is to supplement an integrated national medical
response for assisting state and local authorities in dealing with
medical impacts of major peacetime disasters and to provide support
to the military and the DVA/VHA medical systems in caring for casualties
evacuated back to the U.S. from overseas armed conventional conflict.
The NDMS framework involves private sector hospitals located throughout
the U.S. that will provide care for victims of any incident that
exceeds the medical care capability of any affected state, region,
or federal medical care system. For more detailed information see
NDMS at the DHHS web site.
National
Prevailing Charge LevelA rate that
does not exceed the amount equivalent to the eightieth (80th) percentile
of billed charges made for similar services during a 12 month base
period.
National
Provider Identifier (NPI) (HIPAA Definition)A 10-digit number
assigned to all HCPs mandated by HIPAA of 1996. These numbers are
to be used for all financial and administrative transactions. The
10-digit number, containing checksum, prevents technical errors
during data transmission. The number doesn’t have built-in correlation
with any other identifier associated with the provider.
Negotiated
(Discounted) RateAn amount that represents the reimbursable
amount that a provider agrees to accept for covered services.
NetworkThe
providers or facilities (owned, leased, or arranged) the TRICARE
contractor has contracted with to provide health care services to
TRICARE eligible beneficiaries at a pre-negotiated rate as the total charge
for services provided by the provider and to file claims for beneficiaries.
The agreements for health care delivery made between the MTF and
the eMSM and the TRICARE contractor are also included in this definition.
Network
CareHealth care services and supplies provided
by providers and facilities (owned, leased, arranged) the TRICARE
contractor has contracted with to provide necessary treatment to
TRICARE eligible beneficiaries.
Network
InadequacyInsufficient TRICARE contractor contracted
providers to meet the access standards required by the TRICARE contract.
Network
ProviderAn individual or institutional provider
that has contracted with a TRICARE contractor to provide care to TRICARE
eligible beneficiaries, usually at a discounted rate.
Note: All
network providers MUST be participating providers.
Non-Appealable IssueDenial
of benefits based on a fact or condition outside the scope of responsibility
of DHA and the TRICARE contractor.
Note: For
example, the establishment of eligibility is a Uniformed Service
responsibility and if the service has not established that eligibility,
neither DHA nor a TRICARE contractor may review the action. Similarly,
late claim filing, late appeal filing, amount of allowable charge
(the contractor must verify it was properly applied and calculated),
and services or supplies specifically excluded by law or regulation,
such as routine dental care, clothing, routine vision care, etc.,
are matters subject to legislative action or regulatory rule making
not appealable under TRICARE. TRICARE contractors shall not make
a determination that an issue is not appealable except as specified
in
Chapter 13 and
32 CFR 199.10.
Non-Claim
Health Care DataInformation captured by the TRICARE contractor
to complete the required TED record for care rendered to TRICARE
beneficiaries in those contractor owned, operated and/or subcontracted
facilities where there is no claim submitted by the provider of
care.
Non-Compliant, PharmacyAction
which results in a medication being returned to stock for various
reasons such as the medication was not picked by the patient within
the given 10 day grace period, pharmacy/physician cancelled the prescription,
etc.
Note: A subsequent reversal is automatically
sent to Pharmacy Data Transaction Service (PDTS) which will result
in the removal of the prescription fill from the patient profile.
A reversed or adjusted TED record is also submitted to DHA resulting
in a financial credit to the Government.
Non-Current
RecordsDocuments that are no longer required in
the conduct of current business and therefore can be retrieved by
an archival repository or destroyed.
Non-Department
Mental health Care ProviderFor the purposes
of establishing a mental health care provider readiness designation
as mandated by the National Defense and Authorization Act (NDAA)
for Fiscal Year (FY) 2016 Section 717, a non-Department mental health
care provider is a health care provider who specializes in mental
health, is not a health care provider of the DoD at a facility of
the Department, and provides health care to members of the Armed
Forces. It includes psychiatrists, psychologists, psychiatric nurses,
social workers, mental health counselors, marriage and family therapists,
and other mental health care providers designated by the Secretary
of Defense.
Non-DoD
Information System (IS)An IS that is
not owned, controlled, or operated by the DoD, and is not used or
operated by a contractor or other non-DoD entity exclusively on
behalf of the DoD.
Non-DoD
TRICARE BeneficiariesA special category
of individuals sponsored by non-DoD Uniformed Services (the Commissioned
Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS), the U.S. Coast
Guard, and the Commissioned Corps of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA)) who are eligible for TRICARE.
Non-Network
CareServices and supplies received from a civilian
provider authorized to provide health care but has no contractual
relationship with the TRICARE contractor.
Non-Network
ProviderAn individual or institutional provider
that not has contracted with a TRICARE contractor to provide care
to TRICARE eligible beneficiaries at a discounted rate.
Non-Participating
Provider (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
hospital or other authorized institutional provider, a physician
or other authorized individual professional provider, or other authorized
provider that furnished medical services or supplies to a TRICARE
beneficiary, but who did not agree on the TRICARE claim form to
participate or to accept the TRICARE-determined allowable cost or
charge as the total charge for the services. A nonparticipating provider
looks to the beneficiary or sponsor for payment of his or her charge,
not TRICARE. In such cases, TRICARE pays the beneficiary or sponsor,
not the provider.
Non-Prime
TRICARE BeneficiariesIndividuals,
eligible for the TRICARE Program, who are not enrolled in the TRICARE
Prime program.
North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) MemberA military member
of an armed force of a foreign NATO nation who is on active duty
and who, in connection with official duties, is stationed in or
passing through the U.S. For a list of member nations, see
https://www.nato.int/cps/ie/natohq/topics_52044.htm.
Office-Based
Opioid Treatment (OBOT)
TRICARE
authorized providers acting within the scope of their licensure
or certification to prescribe outpatient supplies of the medication
to assist in withdrawal management (detoxification) and/or maintenance
of opioid use disorder, as regulated by 42 CFR Part 8, addressing
OBOT.
Open
Enrollment PeriodThe yearly period when non-active duty
beneficiaries can enroll in or change their TRICARE enrolled plan
coverage for the following calendar program year. The open enrollment
period for TRICARE begins on the Monday of the second full week
in November to the Monday of the second full week in December of
each calendar year. See TPM,
Chapter 10, Section 2.1.
Opioid
Treatment Program (OTP)OTPs are service
settings for opioid treatment, either freestanding or hospital-based,
that adhere to the DHHS’ regulations at 42 CFR Part 8 and use medications
indicated and approved by DHA. OTPs provide a comprehensive, individually
tailored program of medication therapy integrated with psychosocial and
medical treatment and support services that address factors affecting
each patient, as certified by the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment
(CSAT) of the DHHS’ Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA). Treatment in OTPs can include management of withdrawal symptoms
(detoxification) from opioids and medically supervised withdrawal
from maintenance medications. Patients receiving care for substance
use and co-occurring disorders care can be referred to, or otherwise
concurrently enrolled in, OTP.
Organized
Health Care Arrangement (HIPAA Definition)1. A clinically
integrated care setting in which individuals typically receive health
care from more than one HCP;
2. An organized
system of health care in which more than one covered entity participates,
and in which the participating covered entities hold themselves
out to the public as participating in a joint arrangement and participate
in joint activities such as utilization review, quality assessment
and improvement activities, or payment activities.
3. A group health
plan and a health insurance issuer or HMO with respect to such group
health plan, but only with respect to PHI created or received by
such health insurance issuer or HMO that relates to individuals
who are or who have been participants or beneficiaries in such group
health plan;
4. A
group health plan and one or more other group health plans each
of which are maintained by the same plan sponsor; or
5. The group health
plans described in paragraph
4 of this definition
and health insurance issuers or HMOs with respect to such group
health plans, but only with respect to PHI created or received by
such health insurance issuers or HMOs that relates to individuals
who are or have been participants or beneficiaries in any of such
group health plans.
For full details
refer to HIPAA of 1996.
Originating
SiteThe originating site is where the beneficiary
is located at the time the services are provided via an interactive
telecommunications system. The originating site must be either (a)
where an otherwise authorized TRICARE provider normally offers professional
medical or psychological services, such as the office of a TRICARE
authorized individual professional provider (e.g., physician’s office),
(b) a TRICARE authorized institutional provider, or (c) a patient’s
home or other secure location as outlined in this policy.
Other
Health Insurance (OHI)Alternate or
additional health plan coverage other than TRICARE. This does not
include Medicare or supplemental insurance plans.
Other
Special Institutional Providers (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Certain specialized
medical treatment facilities, either inpatient or outpatient, other
than those specifically defined, that provide courses of treatment
prescribed by a doctor of medicine or osteopathy; when the patient
is under the supervision of a doctor of medicine or osteopathy during the
entire course of the inpatient admission or the outpatient treatment;
when the type and level of care and services rendered by the institution
are otherwise authorized in 32 CFR 199; when the facility meets
all licensing or other certification requirements that are extant
in the jurisdiction in which the facility is located geographically;
which is accredited by an accrediting organization approved by the Director,
DHA if an appropriate accreditation program for the given type of
facility is available; and which is not a nursing home, intermediate
facility, halfway house, home for the aged, or other institution
of similar purpose.
Out-Of-Area
CareTreatment received by TRICARE eligible
beneficiaries while traveling outside their TRICARE region.
Out-Of-Network
CareSee definition for Non-network Care.
Out-Of-Region
BeneficiariesIndividuals who resides in one TRICARE
region but receives care within another TRICARE region.
Over-The-Counter (OTC) MedicationsDrugs
that by law can be sold to a consumer without a prescription from
a health care professional.
Note: OTC drugs/items
covered by the TRICARE Pharmacy (TPharm) benefit (see
https://www.tricare.mil/CoveredServices/Pharmacy/Drugs/OTCDrugsSupplies.aspx for
covered items) will be reimbursed by the TPharm contractor when
purchased with or without a prescription, as long as the purchase
was from a retail pharmacy. Covered OTC’s purchased without a prescription
from a medical supply house or venue other than a retail pharmacy
will be processed for reimbursement by the TRICARE regional contractor.
Partial
HospitalizationA treatment setting capable of providing
an interdisciplinary program of medically monitored therapeutic
services, to include management of withdrawal symptoms, as medically
indicated. Services may include day, evening, night, and weekend
treatment programs which employ an integrated, comprehensive, and
complementary schedule of recognized treatment approaches. Partial hospitalization
is a time-limited, ambulatory, active treatment program that offers
therapeutically intensive, coordinated, and structured clinical
services within a stable therapeutic environment. Partial hospitalization
is an appropriate setting for crisis stabilization, treatment of
partially stabilized mental disorders, to include substance disorders,
and a transition from an inpatient program when medically necessary.
Participating
Provider (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
TRICARE authorized provider that is required, or has agreed by entering
into a TRICARE participation agreement or by an act of indicating
“accept assignment” on the TRICARE claim form to accept the TRICARE-allowable
amount as the maximum total charge for a service or item rendered
to a TRICARE beneficiary, whether the amount is paid for fully by
TRICARE or requires cost-sharing by the TRICARE beneficiary.
Note: This
is another term for a non-network provider previously defined in
this section.
Partnership
for Peace (PfP)The PfP Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA)
is a multilateral agreement between NATO member states and countries
participating in the PfP program. It deals with the status of foreign
forces while present on the territory of another state. See
https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/topics_50349.htm for
a more detailed definition and
https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/51288.htm for
a list of current countries.
Patient
HarmA fraudulent or abusive practice directly
causing a patient who is undergoing treatment for a disease, injury,
or medical (or dental) condition to suffer actual physical injury
or acceleration of an underlying condition. The determination that
patient harm has occurred must be based on the opinion of a qualified
medical or dental provider or pharmacist in the case of pharmacy
claims. Refer to
Chapter 13 for additional information.
Patient
Profile, PharmacyA complete record for each beneficiary
receiving prescriptions under the TRICARE program including: name,
address, telephone number, date of birth, gender, patient identification
number (sponsor’s SSN and DEERS dependent suffix), DEERS Identifier,
service sponsorship, status category, chronic medical conditions
(diagnosis code), allergies and adverse drug experiences, past medication
history, prescriptions dispensed, non-receipt of prescriptions,
status on interventions and prescription problems resolved, prior
authorizations approved or denied, and any other information supplied
by the beneficiary in the patient data form or updates.
Pending
Claim, Correspondence, Or AppealThe claim/correspondence/appeal
case has been received but has not been processed to final disposition.
Performance
StandardGovernment approved and developed criteria
measuring specific aspects of a contractor’s execution of a TRICARE
contract.
Pharmacoeconomic
Center (PEC)An activity under the DoD Pharmacy Operations
Division (POD) with the mission to improve the clinical, economic,
and humanistic outcomes of drug therapy in support of the readiness
and managed care missions of the MHS. The PEC is comprised of pharmacists,
physicians, and pharmacy technicians from each of the three services,
as well as civilian pharmacists and support personnel who monitor drug
usage, and cost trends, and performs analysis to support DoD formulary
management and national pharmaceutical contracts, and clinical practice
guidelines.
Pharmacy
and Therapeutics (P&T) CommitteeA DoD chartered
committee with representatives from MTF/eMSM providers and MTF/eMSM pharmacists.
The P&T Committee’s primary role is establishing and maintaining
the DoD Uniform Formulary for the purchased care system and the
DC system (MTFs/eMSMs).
Pharmacy
Data Transaction Service (PDTS)A bi-directional
data transaction service that provides a pharmaceutical data warehouse
and electronically transmits encrypted prescription data using the
National Council of Prescription Drug Program (NCPDP) standards
to the pharmacy contractor. The PDTS provides the capability to
perform Prospective Drug Utilization Review (ProDUR) and houses
prior authorization/medical necessity history by integrating pharmacy
data from all three points of service (DC, mail order, and retail
pharmacies) with increased clinical screening and medication-related
outcomes.
Pharmacy
Operations Center (POC)The DoD organization
responsible for Tier I and Tier II (systems and software) support
of the PDTS project. The POC:
1. Resolves ProDUR POS conflicts between MTFs/eMSM
and the TPharm contractor;
2. Monitors quantity
limits (which are cumulative between all three POSs);
3. Issues NCPDP
provider numbers for DC pharmacies; and
4. Maintains “lock
out” and “include” databases for closed class and mandatory use
requirements contracts.
Point
Of Service (POS) OptionAllows TRICARE
Prime enrollees and TRICARE Prime Remote for Active Duty Family
Members (TPRADFMs) enrollees to receive non-emergent health care
services from any TRICARE authorized civilian provider, in or out
of the network without requesting a referral from a PCM. Using this
benefit results in the beneficiary incurring more out of pocket
expenses. For further details, refer to the TRM,
Chapter 2, Section 3.
Possible BreachAn
incident where the possibility of unauthorized access is suspected
(or should be suspected) and has not been ruled out. For example,
if a laptop containing PII/PHI is lost, and the contractor does
not initially know whether or not the PII/PHI was encrypted, then
the incident must initially be classified as a possible breach,
because it is impossible to rule out the possibility of unauthorized
access to the PII/PHI. In contrast, that possibility can be ruled
out immediately, and a possible breach has not occurred, when misdirected
postal mail is returned unopened in its original packaging. However,
if the intended recipient informs the contractor that an expected
package has not been received, then a possible breach exists until
and unless the unopened package is returned to the contractor. In
determining whether unauthorized access should be suspected, the
contractor shall consider at least the following factors:
• How the event
was discovered;
• Did the information
stay within the covered entity’s control;
• Was the information
actually accessed/viewed; and
• Ability to ensure
containment (e.g., recovered, destroyed, or deleted).
Preauthorization
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
decision issued in writing or electronically by the Director, Defense
Health Agency (DHA), or a designee, that TRICARE benefits may be
payable for certain services that a beneficiary has not yet received.
The term prior authorization is substituted for preauthorization
and has the same meaning.
A more comprehensive
review process for certain services to determine that requested
treatment may be covered as medically necessary, delivered at the
appropriate setting, and is a TRICARE benefit before services are
rendered to the beneficiary. Preauthorizations are required for
certain services per the TOM,
Chapter 7, Section 2,
A preauthorization request may be submitted by the beneficiary or
provider and is not required prior to a Primary Care Manager (PCM)
(physician) issuing a beneficiary a referral for specialty services
from a network provider.
Preferred
Provider Organization (PPO)A type of health
plan that has contracts with a network of doctors, hospitals and
other health care professionals to provide services to plan beneficiaries
at a reduced rate.
PrescriberA
physician or other individual professional provider of services
specifically authorized to write a prescription for medications
or supplies in accordance with all applicable federal and state
laws.
PrescriptionA
legal order from an authorized prescriber to dispense pharmaceuticals
or other authorized supplies.
Prevailing ChargeA
rate submitted by certain non-institutional providers which fall
within the range of rates that are most frequently used in a state
for a particular health care procedure or service. The top of the
range establishes the maximum amount TRICARE will authorize for
payments of a given health care procedure or service, except where
unusual circumstances or medical complications warrant an additional
charge. The calculation methodology and use is determined according
to the reimbursement instructions outlined in the TRM.
Preventive
Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Diagnostic
and other medical procedures not related directly to a specific
illness, injury, or definitive set of symptoms, or obstetrical care,
but rather performed as periodic health screening, health assessment, or
health maintenance.
Primary
CareThe initial medical care given by a HCP
to a patient especially, as part of regular ambulatory care, and sometimes
followed by referral to other medical providers.
Primary
Caregiver (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
individual who renders to a beneficiary services to support the
ADL as defined in
32 CFR 199.2 and specific
services essential to the safe management of the beneficiary’s condition.
Primary
Care Manager (PCM)A HCP a patient sees first for their health
care needs responsible for providing and coordinating the patient’s
care, maintaining the patient’s health record and when necessary
refers the patient for specialty care.
Primary
Payer (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
plan or program whose medical benefits are payable first in a double
coverage situation.
Prime
ContractorThe main individual or organization that
has a contract with the owner of the contract and has full responsibility
for its completion/execution and may employ (and manage) one or
more subcontractors to carry out specific parts of the contract.
Prime
EnrolleeAn Individual who has signed up to receive
health care under the TRICARE Prime option.
Prime Service Area (PSA)PSAs
are areas in which the contractor offers enrollment in TRICARE Prime
in compliance with the travel time access standard. PSAs encompass
the entire area of all the ZIP codes lying within or intersected
by the 40 mile radius around enrolling MTFs/eMSMs (both hospitals
and clinics) and Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) sites. Zip
codes enclosed entirely within a PSA’s boundary shall also be included.
For BRAC sites, the 40 mile radius shall be determined based on
the physical address of the former MTF location. If the former MTF
address is no longer valid, the 40 mile radius shall be determined
from the geographic center of the BRAC site zip code as of the date
of contract award.
Prior
Authorization, Medical CareSee definition
for Preauthorization.
Prior Authorization, PharmacyPre-approval
required for the filling of certain drugs ordered by a HCP.
Note: Criteria,
developed by the DoD P&T Committee, will be provided by the
to the contractor for use in the filling of certain drugs. However,
the contractor will be responsible for developing pre-approval criteria
for quantity limit override, etc.
Priority
CorrespondenceOfficial communications, received by mail,
faxes, e-mail, cables, telexes and other media of record, received
by the contractor from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of
Defense (Health Affairs) (OASD(HA)), DHA, and any elected or appointed,
federal, state, local, foreign, and tribal officials and Members
of Congress and Governors, or any other correspondence designated
for priority status by the contractor’s management.
Privacy
Act, 5 USC 552a (Records Maintained on Individuals)Federal
Law which established a Code of Fair Information Practice that governs
the collection, maintenance, use and dissemination of personally
identifiable information about individuals that is maintained in
systems of records by federal agencies. The law prohibits the disclosure
of a System Of Records (SOR) without the written consent of the
individual. Additionally, the law provides the individual with a
means by which to seek access for amendment of their records, and
set forth various agencies record keeping requirements.
Privacy
Act, 5 USC 552a System of Records (SOR)A group of records
containing PHI and PII maintained by or on behalf of the DoD where
PHI and PII in the records is specifically retrieved by personal
identifiers.
Processed
To Completion (PTC)A date/time
frame when specific portions of claims processing work has been
completed, resolved or received a final disposition. Under the TRICARE
MCSCs there are specific dates/time frames for:
1. Claims. Claims
are considered PTC, for workload reporting and payment record coding
purposes, when all claims received in the current and prior months
have been processed to the point where the following actions have
resulted:
• All services
and supplies on the claim have been adjudicated, payment has been determined
on the basis of covered services/supplies and allowable charges
applied to deductible and/or denied, and
• Payment, deductible
application or denial action has been posted to ADP history.
2. Correspondence. Correspondence
is considered PTC, when the final reply is mailed to the individual(s)
submitting the written inquiry or when the inquiry is fully answered
by telephone.
3. Telephonic Inquiry. A telephonic
inquiry is considered PTC or resolved, when the final reply is provided
by either telephone or letter. A final telephone reply means that
the caller’s inquiry has been fully responded to, there are no unanswered
issues remaining, and no additional call-backs are necessary. If
the contractor must take a subsequent action to correct a problem
or address an issue raised during the telephone call, the telephone
inquiry is considered resolved when the contractor identifies the
need for the subsequent action, and so notifies the inquirer. For
example, if a claim requires adjustment as a result of a telephone
inquiry, the call is resolved when the contractor initiates the
claim adjustment and the inquirer is so notified (i.e., it is not
necessary to keep the call open until the actual processing of the
claim adjustment occurs).
4. Appeals. Final
disposition of an appeal case occurs when the previous decision
by the contractor is either reaffirmed, reversed, or partially reversed
and the decision is mailed.
Procuring
Contracting Officer (PCO)A Federal employee
with specific contracting authorization having ultimate authority
and responsibility for the Governments’ side for the contract execution
regardless of whatever additional support team may be outlined in
the contract. The Government employee is responsible for overseeing the
contract from start to finish, including the drawing up the procurement
package, Request for Proposal (RFP) and contract award, as well
as administration during the contracts life cycle.
Profiled
AmountAn amount that is the lower of the prevailing
charge or the maximum allowable prevailing charge.
Program
Integrity SystemA software system for detecting overutilization
or fraud and abuse.
Program
YearThe appropriate year (e.g.,calendar year,
fiscal year, rolling 12-month period, etc.) specified in the administration
of TRICARE programs for application of unique requirements or limitations
(e.g., enrollment fees, deductibles, catastrophic lose protection,
etc.) on covered health care services obtained or provided during
the designated time period.
Prospective
Drug Utilization Review (ProDUR)A process used
to identify any potential medication problems that may occur, based
on a patient’s current prescription, applicable patient profile
information, and medication history, prior to the point of dispensing.
ProDUR is used to detect over-utilization, under-utilization, therapeutic
duplication, drug-disease complications, drug interactions, incorrect
dosages and duration of therapy.
Prospective
ReviewPrior assessment of a request for treatment
before the treatment is rendered to determine if the treatment is
appropriate for the patient. Another term for preauthorization.
Protected
Health Information (PHI) (HIPAA Definition)1. IIHI that is:
a. Transmitted
by electronic media;
b. Maintained in electronic media; or
c. Transmitted
or maintained in any other form or medium.
Note: Sometimes
referred to as Electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI).
2. PHI excludes
IIHI in:
a. Education
records covered by the Family Educational Right and Privacy Act,
as amended, 20 USC 1232g;
b. Records described
at 20 USC 1232g(a)(4)(B)(iv); and
c. Employment records
held by a covered entity in its role as an employer.
d. Regarding a
person who has been deceased for more than 50 years.
Note: As
defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Provider
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
hospital or other institutional provider, a physician or other individual
professional provider, or other provider of services or supplies
in accordance with
32 CFR 199.6.
Provider
Exclusion And Suspension (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
terms “exclusion” and “suspension”, when referring to a provider
under TRICARE, both mean the denial of status as an authorized provider,
resulting in items, services, or supplies furnished by the provider
not being reimbursed, directly or indirectly, under TRICARE. The
terms may be used interchangeably to refer to a provider who has
been denied status as an authorized TRICARE provider based on:
1. A criminal conviction
or civil judgment involving fraud;
2. An administrative
finding of fraud or abuse under TRICARE;
3. An administrative
finding that the provider has been excluded or suspended by another
agency of the Federal Government, a state, or a local licensing
authority;
4. An administrative finding that the provider
has knowingly participated in a conflict of interest situation;
or
5. An administrative finding that it is in
the best interests of TRICARE or TRICARE beneficiaries to exclude
or suspend the provider.
Provider
NetworkA group of HCPs with which a managed care
contractor has made contractual or other arrangements with to provide
health care at a discounted rate.
Provider
Termination (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)When
a provider’s status as an authorized TRICARE provider is ended,
other than through exclusion or suspension, based on a finding that
the provider does not meet the qualifications, as set forth in
32 CFR 199.6 to be an authorized TRICARE provider.
Psychotherapy
Notes (HIPAA Definition)Notes recorded
(in any medium) by a HCP who is a mental health professional documenting
or analyzing the contents of conversation during a private counseling
session or a group, joint, or family counseling session and that
are separated from the rest of the individual’s medical record. Psychotherapy
notes excludes medication prescription and monitoring, counseling
session start and stop times, the modalities and frequencies of
treatment furnished, results of clinical tests, and any summary
of the following items: diagnosis, functional status, the treatment
plan, symptoms, prognosis, and progress to date, as defined in HIPAA
of 1996.
Public
Health Authority (HIPAA Definition)An agency or
authority of the U.S., a state, a territory, a political subdivision
of a state or territory, or an Indian tribe, that is responsible
for public health matters as part of its official mandate as well
as a person or entity acting under a grant of authority from or
under a contract with a public health agency, as defined in HIPAA
of 1996.
Note: The term “public health authority” includes
any DoD Component authorized under applicable DoD regulation to
carry out public health activities, including medical surveillance
activities under DoD Directive 6490.2.
Qualified
Mental Health Provider
Psychiatrists
or other physicians, clinical psychologists, Certified Psychiatric
Nurse Specialists (CPNSs), Certified Clinical Social Workers (CCSWs),
certified marriage and family therapists, TRICARE Certified Mental
Health Counselors (TCMHCs), pastoral counselors under a physician’s
supervision, and supervised mental health counselors under a physician’s
supervision.
Qualifying
Life Event (QLE)A change in a beneficiary’s situation,
like getting married, having a baby, or losing health coverage,
that allows a beneficiary to enroll in or change their TRICARE health
plan coverage outside of the annual open enrollment period. See
TPM,
Chapter 10, Section 2.1, for a list of authorized
QLEs.
Quality
Assurance (QA), PharmacyA process for
developing controls to prevent mistakes in the dispensing of drugs.
QA is the responsibility of both the pharmacy and the contractor.
Quality
Assurance ProgramA system-wide process established and maintained
by the contractor to monitor and evaluate the quality of patient
health care and clinical performance.
Quality
Control, PharmacyProcesses and procedures employed to ensure
that pharmaceuticals are dispensed accurately and timely. These
should be employees by both the contractor and the pharmacy.
Quality
ImprovementAn approach to quality management that
builds upon traditional quality assurance methods by emphasizing:
1. The organization
and systems (rather than individuals);
2. The need for
objective data with which to analyze and improve processes; and
3. The ideal that
systems and performance can always improve even when high standards
appear to have been met.
Receipt
Of Claim, Correspondence Or AppealDelivery of
a claim, correspondence, or appeal into the custody of the contractor
by the post office or other party.
ReconsiderationAn
appeal to a contractor of an initial determination issued by the
contractor.
RecordsAll
books, papers, maps, photographs, machine readable materials, or
other documentary materials, regardless of physical form or characteristics,
made or received by an agency of the U.S. Government under Federal
law or in connection with the transaction of public business or
appropriate for presentation by that agency or its legitimate successor
as evidence of the organization, functions, policies, decisions,
procedures, operations, or other activities of the Government.
Also
any item, collection, or grouping of information about a beneficiary
which is maintained, collected, used or disseminated, by TRICARE
or a TRICARE contractor, including, but not limited to his or her
education, financial transactions, medical history, and criminal
or employment history, and which contains the beneficiary’s name
or identifying number, symbol or other personal identifiers.
Records
ManagementThe area of general administrative management
concerned with achieving economy and efficiency in the creation,
use and maintenance, and disposition of records. Included in the
fulfilling of archival requirements and ensuring effective documentation.
Referral
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
act or an instance of referring a TRICARE beneficiary to another
authorized provider to obtain necessary medical treatment. Generally,
when a referral is required to qualify health care as a covered benefit,
only a TRICARE-authorized physician may make such a referral unless
32 CFR 199 specifically allows another category of TRICARE-authorized
provider to make a referral as allowed within the scope of the provider’s
license. In addition to referrals which may be required for certain
health care to be a covered TRICARE benefit, the TRICARE Prime program
under
32 CFR 199.17 generally
requires Prime enrollees to obtain a referral for care through a
PCM or other authorized care coordinator to avoid paying higher
deductible and cost-sharing for otherwise covered TRICARE benefits.
A
referral is a request from one physician to another to assume responsibility
for management of one or more of a patient’s specified problems.
A consult is a request from one physician to another for an advisory
opinion. Referrals and/or consults written by MTF/eMSM or Civilian
TRICARE providers are sent to the Contractor for authorization or
preauthorization (if needed per TOM,
Chapter 7, Section 2).
A PCM (physician) does not require a preauthorization/authorization
from the Contractor to generate a referral or consult to/from a
network provider.
Referral
ManagementProcess by which all referrals written
by the MTF/eMSM authorized providers and network and non-network
providers are tracked for care coordination, patient safety, and
accountability. The referral management process ends when the referring
provider is provided the clear and legible report, informed the
patient did not use/activate their referral, or if the referral
was denied by the contractor.
RegionA
geographic area determined by the Government for civilian contracting
of medical care and other services for TRICARE-eligible beneficiaries.
Regional Review Authority
(RRA)An entity responsible for performing
Peer Review Organization (PRO) functions. Under TRICARE the contractor
shall be responsible for performing the duties of the RRA.
ReliantsRefers
to a subset of TRICARE eligible beneficiaries who are dependent
on TRICARE and not the DC system or OHI for the coverage/reimbursement
of vaccines under the well-child and preventive benefits. This includes,
but is not limited to: All TRICARE Active Duty Family Members (ADFMs)
not enrolled to a DC PCM who are reliant on TRICARE as their primary
form of insurance, and retirees and their family members who do
not have OHI and are not dependent on the DC system but are dependent
on TRICARE as their primary form of insurance.
Representative
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Any
person who has been appointed by a party to the initial determination
as counsel or advisor and who is otherwise eligible to serve as
the counsel or advisor of the party to the initial determination, particularly
in connection with a hearing.
Required
By Law (HIPAA Definition)A mandate contained
in law that compels a covered entity to make a use or disclosure
of PHI and that is enforceable in a court of law. Required by law
includes, but is not limited to, court orders and court-ordered
warrants; subpoenas or summons issued by a court, grand jury, a
governmental or tribal inspector general, or an administrative body
authorized to require the production of information; a civil or
an authorized investigative demand; Medicare conditions of participation
with respect to HCPs participating in the program; and statutes
or regulations that require the production of information, including
statutes or regulations that require such information if payment
is sought under a Government program providing public benefits as
defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Note: For TRICARE
required by law also includes any mandate contained in a DoD Regulation
that mandates a covered entity (or other person functioning under
the authority of a covered entity) to make a use or disclosure and
is enforceable in a court of law. The attribute of being enforceable
in a court of law means that in a court or court-martial proceeding,
a person required by the mandate to comply would be held to have
a legal duty to comply or, in the case of noncompliance, to have
had a legal duty to have complied. Required by law also includes
any DoD regulation requiring the production of information necessary
to establish eligibility for reimbursement or coverage under TRICARE.
Research
(HIPAA Definition)A systematic investigation, including research,
development, testing, and evaluation, designed to develop or contribute
to generalizable knowledge as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
ResidenceFor
purposes of TRICARE, “residence” is the dwelling place of the beneficiary
for day-to-day living. A temporary living place during periods of
temporary duty or during a period of confinement, such as a Residential
Treatment Center (RTC), does not constitute a residence. In the
case of minor children, the residence of the custodial parent(s)
or the legal guardian shall be deemed the residence of the child.
In the case of incompetent adult beneficiaries, the residence of
the legal guardian shall be deemed the residence of such beneficiary.
Under split enrollment, when a dependent resides away from home while
attending school, their residence shall be where they are domiciled.
Residential
Treatment Center (RTC)A facility or
distinct part of a facility which meets the criteria in
32 CFR 199.6(b)(4)(vii).
Residual
ClaimA claim for health care services rendered
during the health care delivery period of one contract, but processed
under a different (incoming) contract.
Resource
Sharing Agreement (External) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A type of external
Partnership Agreement established in the context of the TRICARE
Program by agreement of the MTF Commander and an authorized TRICARE
contractor. External resource sharing agreements may incorporate
TRICARE features in lieu of standard TRICARE features that would
apply to stand external Partnership Agreements.
Respite Care (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Short-term
care for a patient in order to provide rest and change for primary
caregivers who have been caring for the patient at home, usually
the patient’s family.
Note: Although this
is usually the patient’s family, it may be a relative or friend
who assists the member with their ADL. Respite care consists of
providing skilled and non-skilled services to a beneficiary such
that in the absence of the primary caregiver, management of the
beneficiary’s qualifying condition and safety are provided. Respite
care services are provided exclusively to the Service member beneficiary.
1. Qualifying
Condition For Receipt Of Respite Benefits. For the purposes
of receiving respite benefits, a qualifying condition is defined
as a serious injury or illness resulting in, or based on the clinical
assessment of the member’s provider or case management team that
will result in a physical disability, or an extraordinary physical
or psychological condition.
2. Limitations
On Respite Benefits:
• The
services performed by the primary caregiver are those that can be
performed safely and effectively by the average non-medical person
without direct supervision of a HCP after the primary caregiver
has been trained by appropriate medical personnel.
• Respite
care services are limited to a maximum of eight hours per calendar
day, five days per calendar week.
ResubmissionsA
group of TED records submitted to DHA to correct those TED claims
and adjustments which generated edit errors when originally processed
by DHA. These groups of records will be identified by the batch
number and resubmission in the TED Header Record.
Retention
PeriodThe length of time for particular documents/records
(normally a series) are to be kept.
Retiree
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
member or former member of a Uniformed Service who is entitled to
retired, retainer, or equivalent pay based on duty in a Uniformed
Service.
Retired
CategoryRetirees and their family members who are
beneficiaries covered by 10 USC 1086(c), other than Medicare-eligible
beneficiaries as described in 10 USC 1086(d).
Retrospective
Drug Utilization ReviewA process of
appraising and reconsidering the usage of drugs to determine the
effectiveness of drug treatment after a medication is dispensed.
The process includes evaluation for therapeutic appropriateness,
over-utilization and under-utilization, therapeutic duplication,
drug-disease contraindications, drug interactions, incorrect dosage
and /or duration of therapy.
Retrospective
ReviewA post-treatment assessment of care already
delivered. The assessment evaluates the appropriateness of care
and conformance to pre-established criteria for utilization. The
purpose for this type of assessment may be to validate utilization
decisions made and/or to validate payment made for care provided
(by examining the actual record of treatment).
Returned
ClaimA bill of health care services the contractor
returns to the sender because there is missing information that
is needed for processing, and the missing information cannot be
obtained from in-house sources.
ReversedStatus
of claim once a reversal transaction is transmitted for the removal
of the PAID claim from a patient’s profile.
Routine
CorrespondenceAll communications received by mail, faxes
cables, telexes, and other media or record, is not designated as
Priority Mail.
Routine
UseWith respect to the disclosure of a record
from a Privacy Act System of Records (SOR) 5 USC, 552a, the use
of a record for a purpose that is compatible for which it was information
collected. See also Defense Privacy and Civil Liberties Office’s
(DPCLO’s) published list of blanket routine uses for sharing PII.
Same
Day ReferralThe act or instance of referring a TRICARE
beneficiary to another authorized provider to obtain necessary medical
treatment within 24 hours of a request for care. This includes immediate
(STAT), 24 hours (As Soon As Possible (ASAP)), and Today referral
priority requests from the Composite Health Care System (CHCS).
Sanction
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)For
the purposes of
32 CFR 199.9,
“sanction” means a provider exclusion, suspension, or termination.
Secondary
Payer (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
plan or program whose medical benefits are payable in double coverage
situations only after the primary payer has adjudicated the claim.
Secretary
Of Health And Human Services (HHS)The head of
the U.S. DHHS concerned with health matters.
Segment
(HIPAA Definition)A group of related data elements in a transaction
as defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Seventy-Two
Hour ReferralThe act or instance of referring a TRICARE
beneficiary to another authorized provider to obtain necessary medical
treatment within 72 hours of a request for care.
Skilled
Nursing Facility (SNF) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)An
institution (or a distinct part of an institution) that meets the
criteria as set forth in
32 CFR 199.6.
Skilled
Nursing Service (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Skilled
nursing services includes application of professional nursing services
and skills by and Registered Nurse (RN), Licensed Practical Nurse
(LPN), or Licensed Vocational Nurse (LVN) that are required to be
performed under the general supervision/direction of a TRICARE authorized
physician to ensure the safety of the patient and achieve the medically
desired result in accordance with accepted standards of practice.
Note: Skilled
nursing services are other than those services that provide primarily
support for the Activities of Daily Living (ADL) or that could be
performed by an untrained adult with minimum instruction or supervision.
Special
ChecksChecks issued outside the normal processing
workflow for the purpose of expediting payment of a claim for benefits.
Special
InquiriesRequests for information under the Freedom
of Information Act, Privacy Act, and the news media. Also includes
requests received for surveys, audits, and requests by Government
agencies including DoD agencies, entities other than DHA and Congressional
Committees.
Specialty
CareSpecialized medical services provided by
a physician specialist.
Specified
Authorization Staff (SAS)/Defense Health Agency-Great Lakes (DHA-GL)
(formerly Military Medical Support Office (MMSO))A
Joint Services Organization responsible for reviewing specialty
and inpatient care requests and claims for impact on fitness-for-duty.
SAS/DHA-GL is also responsible for approving certain medical services
not covered under TRICARE that are necessary to maintain fitness
for duty and/or retention on active duty. The SASs for Army, Navy,
Marine Corps, and Air Force Service members are assigned to the DHA-GL.
For more information, see
Chapter 17 for
additional information.
Split-BillingThe
division of a medical claim for service provided into two or more
parts. Claims may be split to divide work between clients, payers
or for reimbursement to different service providers for performing a
shared service. Such claims may or may not require Coordination
of Benefits. (COB)
Split
EnrollmentA TRICARE Prime option which allows an
entire family to enroll in TRICARE Prime even if part of the family
is living in another TRICARE region.
SponsorAn
active duty member, retiree, or deceased active duty member or retiree,
of a Uniformed Service upon whose status his or her family members’
eligibility for TRICARE is based. See also
32 CFR 199.2 for a more complete definition.
Spouse
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
lawful husband or wife, who meets the criteria in
32 CFR 199.3, regardless of whether or not dependent
upon the active duty member or retiree.
StakeholdersAny
party who has a direct interest in the success of a business concern.
For TRICARE purposes, stakeholders include the DoD, the Director,
TROs, MTF Commanders/eMSM Managers, DHA, the MHS, and all employees
thereof, contractors, elected officials, and MHS beneficiaries.
Standard
Transaction (HIPAA Definition)A transaction
that complies with the applicable standard adopted by HIPAA.
Start
Of ServiceThe date a contractor officially begins
delivery of health care services, processing claims, and/or delivery
of other services in a production environment, as specified in the
contract requirements.
State
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)For
the purposes of the 32 CFR 199, any of the several states, the District
of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, and each territory and possession
of the U.S.
State
(HIPAA Definition)1. For a health plan established or regulated
by Federal law, State has the meaning set forth in the applicable
section of the USC for such health plan.
2. Each of the
several states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
Student
Status (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
dependent of a member or former member of a Uniformed Service who
has not passed his or her 23rd birthday, and is enrolled in a full-time
course of study in an institution of higher learning.
SubcontractorAn
individual or in many cases a business that signs a contract to
perform part or all of the obligations of another’s contract. This
includes but is not limited to enrolled program health benefits
business entities at whatever level of the contract organization
they exist. It does not include institutional or non-institutional
providers of health care. This definition does not exclude business
entities that are not specifically addressed herein but whose legal
status within the contract organization establishes them as subcontractors
because that term may be otherwise defined in the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR).
Note: In determining
whether a business entity is a network first tier subcontractor,
consideration is given as to whether or not the entity providing
the designated services acts as a broker of care; i.e., the entity
itself obtains the medical coverage needed by in turn contracting
with institutional and non-institutional providers. Implicit in
the determination is size of the offered network; i.e., does this
entity provide a large number of contracted providers for a large
geographical area?
Subcontractor
(HIPAA Definition)A person to whom a business associate delegates
a function, activity, or service other than in the capacity of a
member of the workforce of such business associate.
SubcontractsThe
contractual assignment of elements of requirements to another organization
or person for purposes of TRICARE. Unless otherwise specified in
the contract, the term also includes purchase orders, with changes
and/or modifications thereto.
Substance
Use Disorder Rehabilitation Facility (SUDRF)A facility or
a distinct part of a facility that meets the criteria in
32 CFR 199.6(b)(4)(xiv).
Summary
Health Information (HIPAA Definition)Information
that may be IIHI, and:
1. That summarizes the claims history, claims
expenses, or type of claims experienced by individuals for whom
a plan sponsor has provided health benefits under a group health
plan; and
2. From which the information has been deleted,
except that the geographic information may be aggregated to the
level of a five digit zip code.
As defined in
HIPAA of 1996.
Supplemental
CareMedical care received by Service members
of the Uniformed Services and other designated patients pursuant
to an MTF/eMSM referral (MTF/eMSM Referred Care). Supplemental Health
Care also includes specific episodes of Service member non-referred
civilian care, both emergent and authorized non-emergent care (non-MTF/eMSM
Referred Care).
Supplemental
FundsFunds used to pay for supplemental care.
Supplemental Insurance Plan
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
health insurance policy or other health benefit plan offered by
a private entity to a TRICARE beneficiary, that primarily is designed,
advertised, marketed, or otherwise held out as providing payment
for expenses incurred for services and items that are not reimbursed
under TRICARE due to program limitations or beneficiary liabilities
imposed by law. TRICARE recognizes two types of supplemental plans,
general indemnity plans and those offered through a direct service
HMO.
1. An
indemnity supplemental insurance plan must meet all the following
criteria:
a. It
provides insurance coverage, regulated by the state insurance agencies,
which is only available only to beneficiaries of TRICARE.
b. It is premium
based and all premiums relate only to the TRICARE supplemental coverage.
c. Its benefits
for all covered TRICARE beneficiaries are predominately limited
to non-covered services, to the deductible and cost-shared portions
of the pre-determined allowable charges and/or to amounts exceeding
the allowable charges for covered services.
d. It provides
insurance reimbursement by making payment directly to the TRICARE
beneficiary or to the participating provider.
e. It does not
operate in a manner which results in lower deductibles or cost-shares
than those imposed by law, or that waives the legally imposed deductibles
and cost-shares.
2. A supplemental
insurance plan offered by a HMO must meet all of the following criteria:
a. The HMO must
be authorized and must operate under relevant provisions of state
law.
b. The HMO supplemental plan must be premium
based and all premiums must relate only to TRICARE supplemental
coverage.
c. The HMO’s benefits, above those which are
directly reimbursed by TRICARE, must be limited predominantly to
services not covered by TRICARE and TRICARE deductible and cost-share
amounts.
d. The HMO must provide services directly
to TRICARE beneficiaries through its affiliated providers, who in
turn, are reimbursed by TRICARE.
e. The HMO’s
premium structure must be designed so that no overall reduction
to the amount of the beneficiary deductibles or cost-shares will
result.
Suspension
Of Claims Processing (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
temporary suspension of processing (to protect the Government’s
interests) of claims for care furnished by a specific provider (whether
the claims are submitted by the provider or beneficiary) or claims
submitted by or on behalf of a specific TRICARE beneficiary pending
action by the Director, DHA, or a designee, in a case of suspected
fraud or abuse. The action may include administrative remedies provided
for in
32 CFR 199.9 or
any other DoD issuance (e.g., DoD issuances implementing the Program Fraud
Civil Remedies Act), case development or investigation by DHA, or
referral to the DoD-Inspector General (IG) or the Department of
Justice (DOJ) for action within their cognizant jurisdictions.
TelepresenterA
telepresenter is an individual at the originating site (when the
originating site is other than the patient’s home) who has the necessary
skills, training, and/or clinical background (e.g., Licensed Practical
Nurse (LPN), Registered Nurse (RN), trained medical technician,
etc.) to operate the telemedicine technology and facilitate examinations
under the direction of the provider at the distant site. For example,
a nurse may use a device connected to a telemedicine system, such
as a digital stethoscope or otoscope, in order to provide diagnostically
relevant imagery, sound, or other data/information about the patient
to the distant provider in real time.
TerminationThe
removal of a provider as an authorized TRICARE provider based on
a finding that the provider does not meet the qualifications established
by
32 CFR 199.6 to
be an authorized TRICARE provider. This includes those categories
of providers who have signed specific participation agreements.
Third-Party
Billing Agent (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Any
entity that acts on behalf of a provider to prepare, submit, and
monitor claims, excluding those entities that act solely as a collection
agency.
Third-Party
Liability (TPL) ClaimsReimbursements
to the Government that arise when medical care is provided to an
entitled beneficiary for treatment or injury or illness caused under
circumstances creating tort liability legally requiring a third
person to pay damages for that care. The Government pursues repayment
for the care provided to the beneficiary under the provisions and
authority of the Federal Medical Care Recovery Act (FMCRA) (42 USC
paragraphs 2651-2653).
Third-Party
Liability (TPL) RecoveryThe recovery
by the Government of expenses incurred for medical care provided
to an entitled beneficiary in the treatment of injuries or illness
caused by a third-party who is liable in tort for damages to the
beneficiary. Such recoveries can be made from the liable third-party
directly or from a liability insurance policy (e.g., automobile
liability policy or homeowners insurance) covering the liable third-party.
TPL recoveries are made under the authority of the FMCRA (42 USC
paragraph 2651 et sec). Other potential sources of recovery in favor
of the Government in TPL situations include, but are not limited
to, no fault or uninsured motorist insurance, medical payments provisions
of insurance policies, and workers compensation plans. Recoveries
from such other sources are made under the authority of 10 USC paragraphs
10790, 1086(g), and 1095b.)
Third-Party Payer (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Third-party
means an entity that provides an insurance, medical service, or
health plan by contract or agreement, including an automobile liability
insurance or no fault insurance carrier and a workers compensation
program or plan, and any other plan or program (e.g., homeowners
insurance) that is designed to provide compensation or coverage
for expenses incurred by a beneficiary for medical services or supplies.
For the purposes of the definition of “third-party payer,” an insurance
medical service or health plan includes a preferred provider organization,
an insurance plan described as Medicare supplemental insurance,
and a personal injury protection plan or medical payments benefit plan
for personal injuries resulting from the operation of a motor vehicle.
Note: TRICARE
is secondary payer to all third-party payers. Under limited circumstances
in
32 CFR 199.8,
TRICARE payment may be authorized to be paid in advance of adjudication
of the claim by certain third-party payers. TRICARE advance payment
will not be made when a third-party provider is determined to be
a primary medical insurer under
32 CFR 199.8.
Timely
FilingThe submitting of TRICARE claims within
the prescribed time limits as set forth in
32 CFR 199.7 and the requirements of the TRICARE
contract.
Toll-Free
TelephonesHaving or using a direct line or number
for a call that is not charged to the caller. Under the TRICARE contract
all telephone calls are considered toll-free for the purposes of
measuring the standards contained in
Chapter 1, Section 3, paragraph 3.4.
Trading
Partner Agreement (HIPAA Definition)An agreement
related to the exchange of information in electronic transactions,
whether the agreement is distinct or part of a larger agreement,
between each party to the agreement. (For example, a trading partner
agreement may specify, among other things, the duties and responsibilities of
each party to the agreement in conducting a standard transaction.)
As defined in HIPAA of 1996.
Transaction
(HIPAA Definition)The transmission of information between
two parties to carry out financial or administrative activities related
to health care. It includes the following types of information transmissions:
1. Health care
claims or equivalent encounter information.
2. Health care
payment and remittance advice.
3. Coordination
of benefits.
4. Health care claims status.
5. Enrollment and
disenrollment in a health plan.
6. Eligibility
for a health plan.
7. Health plan premium payments.
8. Referral certification
and authorization.
9. First report of injury.
10. Health claims
attachments.
11. Other transactions that may be prescribed
by regulation.
Transfer
ClaimsA bill received by a contractor for services
received and billed from another contractor’s jurisdiction. See
Chapter 8 for processing requirements related
to these types of claims.
Note: Claims for Service
members which are sent to the appropriate Uniformed Service are
not considered to be “transfer claims.”
TransitionThe
process of changing contractors or contract in a Government designated
service area. Transition begins with the Notice of Award to the
incoming contractor and is formally completed with the close out
procedures of the outgoing contractor, several months after the
start work date.
Transitional
Patients Or CasesBeneficiaries for whom active care is in
progress on the date of a contractor’s start work date.
Note: If
the care being provided is for covered services, the contractor
is financially responsible for the portion of care delivered on
or after the contractor’s start work date.
Treatment
(HIPAA Definition)The provision, coordination, or management
of health care and related services by one or more HCPs, including
the coordination or management of health care by a HCP with a third-party;
consultation between HCPs relating to a patient; or the referral
of a patient for health care from one HCP to another.
Treatment
EncounterThe smallest meaningful unit of health
care utilization: One provider rendering one service to one beneficiary.
Treatment Plan (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A detailed
description of the medical care being rendered or expected to be
rendered a TRICARE beneficiary seeking approval for inpatient and
other benefits for which preauthorization is required as set forth
in
32 CFR 199.4(b). Medical care described in
the plan must meet the requirements of medical and psychological
necessity. A treatment plan must include, at a minimum, a diagnosis
(either the current edition of the ICD-CM, or the current edition
of the DSM); detailed reports of prior treatment, medical history,
family history, social history, and physical examination; diagnostic
test results; consultant’s reports (if any); proposed treatment
by type (such as surgical, medical, and psychiatric); a description
of who is or will be providing treatment (by discipline or specialty);
anticipated frequency, medications, and specific goals of treatment;
type of inpatient facility required and why (including length of
time the related inpatient stay will be required); and prognosis.
If the treatment plan involves the transfer of a TRICARE beneficiary
from a hospital or another inpatient facility, medical records related
to that inpatient stay also are required as a part of the treatment
plan documentation.
TriageThe
process of determining the priority of patients treatment based
on the severity of their condition.
Note: For
the TRICARE Program this function is performed by the contractor’s
24 hour telephone Nurse Advice Line (NAL).
TRICAREThe
DoD’s managed health care program for Service members and their
families, retirees and their families, survivors, and other TRICARE-eligible
beneficiaries. TRICARE is a blend of the military’s DC system of
hospitals and clinics and civilian providers. Through December 31,
2017, TRICARE offers three options: TRICARE Standard Plan, TRICARE
Extra Plan, and TRICARE Prime Plan (see definitions in this section
and in
32 CFR 199.17).
Beginning January 1, 2018, TRICARE offers three options: TRICARE
Prime, TRICARE Select, and TRICARE For Life (TFL) (see definitions
in this appendix and in
32 CFR 199.2).
TRICARE
Beneficiary
An
individual determined by the Uniformed Services to be eligible for
TRICARE benefits, as set forth in
32 CFR 199.3.
TRICARE
ContractorAn organization with which DHA has entered
into a binding agreement for:
1. The delivery of and/or processing of payment
for health care services through contracted providers;
2. The processing
of claims for health care services received from non-network providers;
and
3. The performance of related support activities.
TRICARE
Encounter Data (TED)A data set of
information required for all care received/delivered under the contract
and provided by the contractor in a Government-specified format
and submitted to DHA via a telecommunication network. The information
in the data set can be described in the following broad categories:
1. Beneficiary
identification.
2. Provider identification.
3. Health information:
• Place and type
of service
• Diagnosis and
treatment-related data
• Units of service
(admissions, days, visits, etc.)
4. Related financial
information.
TRICARE
Encounter Data (TED) Record Transmittal SummaryA
single record which identifies the submitting contractor and summarizes,
for transmittal purposes, the number of records and the financial
information contained within the associated “batch” of TED records.
TRICARE
Extra (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
preferred-provider option of the TRICARE program made available
prior to January 1, 2018, under which TRICARE Standard beneficiaries
may obtain discounts on cost-sharing as a result of using TRICARE
network providers.
TRICARE
For Life (TFL) (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2) The
Medicare wraparound coverage option of the TRICARE program made
available to an eligible beneficiary by reason of 10 USC 1086(d).
TRICARE
Operations Manual (TOM) (6010.59-M)A DHA authored
book which provides instructions and requirements for claims processing
and health care delivery under TRICARE.
TRICARE
Pharmacy (TPharm) Benefits ProgramA plan to provide
outpatient prescription drugs through military pharmacies, TRICARE
Pharmacy Home Delivery, and TRICARE retail network and non-network
pharmacies.
TRICARE
Policy Manual (TPM) (6010.60-M)A DHA authored
book which provides the description of TRICARE Program benefits,
adjudication guidance, policy interpretations, and decisions for
use in determining benefits under the TRICARE Program.
TRICARE PlusA
primary care program offered at some military hospitals and clinics
for beneficiaries not enrolled in TRICARE Prime. Beneficiaries are
enrolled with a Primary Care Coordinator (PCC) at an MTF/eMSM. MTFs/eMSMs
may limit enrollment based on capability and capacity. There is
no enrollment fee.
Note: These MTF/eMSM
enrollees are to receive primary care appointments within the TRICARE Prime
access standards. TRICARE Plus “enrollment” will be annotated in
DEERS and the MTF’s/eMSM’s Electronic Medical Records. When a TRICARE
Plus enrollee receives care from civilian providers, TRICARE Standard/Extra
rules will apply (through December 31, 2017). For services payable
by Medicare, Medicare rules will apply, with TRICARE as second payer
for TRICARE covered services and supplies. Specialty care in the
MTF/eMSM will be on referrals from the primary care provider or
on a self-referral basis. TRICARE Plus enrollees are not guaranteed
specialty care appointments within the TRICARE Prime access standards.
TRICARE
Prime (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
managed care option of the TRICARE program established under
32 CFR 199.17.
TRICARE
Prime Remote (TPR) ProgramA managed care
option under TRICARE designed to provide health care services to
Service members and command sponsored family members assigned to
remote locations in the U.S.
TRICARE
Prime Remote (TPR) Work UnitA uniformed
services group whose members have to be designated by the Military
Services to be eligible to enroll in the TPR Program.
TRICARE
Program (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
program established under the
32 CFR 199.17.
TRICARE
Quality Management Contract (TQMC)A national-level
contractor responsible to the DoD and DHA that performs second level reconsiderations
for payment denials and focused retrospective quality of care reviews.
TRICARE
Retired ReserveThe program established under 10 USC 1076e
and
32 CFR 199.25.
TRICARE
Regional Office (TRO)The management
organization responsible for overseeing an integrated Tri-Services
health care delivery system within one of the designated TRICARE
regions.
TRICARE
Regulation (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)This
regulation prescribes guidelines and policies for the administration
of the TRICARE Program for the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
Coast Guard, Commissioned Corps of the USPHS, and the Commissioned
Corps of the NOAA. It includes the guidelines and policies for the
administration of the TRICARE Program.
TRICARE
Reimbursement Manual (TRM) (6010.61-M)A DHA authored
book which provides and outlines payment methodologies under the
TRICARE Program.
TRICARE
RepresentativeA highly qualified individual knowledgeable
about TRICARE responsible for providing information and assistance
to providers, whether network or non-network, to Beneficiary Counseling
and Assistance Coordinators (BCACs) in their service area and to
Congressional offices.
TRICARE
SelectThe self-managed, preferred provider network
option under the TRICARE program established by 10 USC 1075 and
32 CFR 199.17 to replace TRICARE Extra and
Standard after December 31, 2017.
TRICARE
StandardThe TRICARE program made available prior
to January 1, 2018, under which the basic program of health care
benefits generally referred to as CHAMPUS was made available to
eligible beneficiaries under 32 CFR 199.
TRICARE
Systems Manual (TSM) (7950.3-M)A DHA authored
book which provides ADP instructions and requirements for contractors
who use the TEDs system for reporting data to DHA.
Unbundled
(Or Fragmented) BillingA form of procedure
code manipulation which involves a provider separately billing the
component parts of a procedure instead of billing only the single
procedure code which represents the entire comprehensive procedure.
Uniform FormularyA
list of brand name and generic drugs and supplies available for
dispensing.
Note: PL 106-65,
NDAA for FY 2000, Section 701, mandated that the DoD develop a uniform formulary
to be applied across all POSs within the TRICARE system. Pharmaceuticals
and other supplies authorized for dispensing will be in accordance
with TRICARE policy and the Uniform Formulary. Recommendations for
the design, structure and composition of the Uniform Formulary are
developed by the DoD P&T Committee, with comments by the Uniform
Formulary Beneficiary Advisory Panel, and provided to the Executive
Director, DHA for approval and implementation.
Uniform
HMO Benefit (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
health care benefit established by
32 CFR 199.18.
Uniformed
Services (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)The
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Commissioned Corps
of the USPHS, and the Commissioned Corps of the NOAA.
Uniformed
Services Clinic (USC)An MHS clinic
that delivers primary health care to Service members.
Uniformed
Services Family Health Plan (USFHP)A DoD health
plan option that offers TRICARE Prime to individuals who reside
in the geographic service area of a USFHP DP who are eligible to
receive care in medical MTFs/eMSMs (except Service members). This
includes those individuals over age 65 who, except for their eligibility
for Medicare benefits, would have been eligible for TRICARE benefits.
DPs under the USFHP were previously known as “Uniformed Services
Family Treatment Facilities” (USTFs) and are former USPHS hospitals.
The service areas of the USFHP DPs are listed at
http://usfhp.net on
the world wide web and in the Catchment Area Directory.
United
States (U.S.)Territory made up of the 50 federated states,
American Samoa, the District of Columbia, Johnston Island, Guam,
Wake, Midway Islands, Northern Marianas and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
United
States Public Health Service (USPHS)An agency within
the DHHS which has a Commissioned Corps which are classified as
members of the “Uniformed Services.”
Unprocessable
TRICARE Encounter Data (TED)TED records
transmitted by the contractor to DHA and received in such condition
that the basic record identifier information is not readable on
the TRICARE data system, i.e., header incorrect, electronic records
garbled, etc.
Unproven
Drugs, Devices, And Medical Treatments Or ProceduresDrugs,
devices, medical treatments or procedures are considered unproven
if:
1. FDA
approval is required and has not been given;
2. If the device
is a FDA Category A Investigational Device Exemption (IDE);
3. If there is
no reliable evidence which documents that the treatment or procedure
has been the subject of well-controlled studies of clinically meaningful
endpoints which have determined its maximum tolerated dose, its
toxicity, its safety, and its efficacy as compared with the standard
means of treatment or diagnosis;
4. If the reliable
evidence shows that the consensus among experts regarding the treatment
or procedure is that further studies or clinical trials are necessary
to determine its maximum tolerated dose, its safety, or its effectiveness
as compared with the standard means of treatment or diagnosis.
For
further clarification see
32 CFR 199.4.
Urgent
CareMedically necessary treatment that is required
for a sudden illness or injury that is not life threatening, but
does require immediate professional attention to avoid further complications
resulting from non-treatment. Treatment is usually performed outside
an Emergency Room (ER) setting.
Urgent
Care Center (UCC)
A
TRICARE authorized UCC is a qualified corporate services provider
under
32 CFR 199.6(f) with a location distinct from
a hospital Emergency Room (ER), an office, or a clinic; and whose
purpose is to diagnose and treat illness or injury for unscheduled,
ambulatory patients seeking immediate medical attention.
Use
(HIPAA Definition)IIHI which involves sharing, employment,
application, utilization, examination, or analysis of such information
within an entity that maintains such information.”
Utilization
CriteriaSpecific guidelines that must be met in
order to ensure that medically necessary and appropriate treatment
is being provided. Criteria to use for screening.
Utilization
ManagementA set of techniques used to manage health
care costs by influencing patient care decision-making through case-by-case
assessment of the appropriateness and medical necessity of care
either prior to, during, or after provision of care. Utilization
management also includes the systematic evaluation of individual
and group utilization patterns to determine the effectiveness of
the employed utilization management techniques and to develop modifications
to the utilization management system designed to address aberrances
identified through the evaluation.
Utilization
ReviewA process for monitoring the use, delivery,
quality, medical necessity, and cost-effectiveness of health care
services especially those provided by medical community.
Validated
Date and DiagnosisThe date a DoD physician (military or civil
service) validates the diagnosis of a service-related condition and
validates that the condition can be resolved within 180 days.
Veteran
(Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
person who served in the active military, naval, or air service,
and who was discharged or released therefrom under conditions other
than dishonorable.
Note: Unless the veteran
is eligible for “retired pay,” “retirement pay,” or “retainer pay,”
which refers to payments of a continuing nature and are payable
at fixed intervals from the Government for military service neither
the veteran nor his or her family members are eligible for benefits
under TRICARE.
Widow
Or Widower (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)A
person who was a spouse at the time of death of the active duty
member or retiree and who has not remarried.
WorkdayAny
day on which full-time business can be conducted. See the definition
of “Business Day” in this appendix.
Worker's
Compensation Benefits (Defined in 32 CFR 199.2)Medical
benefits available under any worker’s compensation law (including
the Federal Employees Compensation Act), occupational disease law,
employers liability law, or any other legislation of similar purpose,
or under the maritime doctrine of maintenance, wages, and cure.
Workforce
(HIPAA Definition)Employees, volunteers, trainees, and other
persons whose conduct, in the performance of work for a covered
entity is under the direct control of such entity, whether or not
they are paid by the covered entity or business associate as defined
in HIPAA of 1996.