• The
consolidated billing provision places with the Skilled Nursing Facility
(SNF) itself the Medicare billing responsibility for virtually all
services furnished to a resident of the SNF during the course of
a covered Part A stay that is paid under the Prospective Payment
System (PPS). The only types of services furnished to SNF residents
that are categorically excluded from consolidated billing are the
ones specified in a short list of statutory exclusions at section 1888(e)(2)(A)(ii)-(iii)
of the Social Security Act (the Act), for which an outside supplier
can still bill Medicare directly and receive a separate payment.
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• Since
ambulance services (other than those furnished in conjunction with
the receipt of Part B dialysis services--see section 1888(e)(2)(A)(iii)(I)
of the Act) do not appear on this statutory excluded list, they
are subject to consolidated billing when furnished to an SNF “resident”
(see below) during the course of a covered Part A SNF stay, and
are included in the PPS payment that Part A makes to the SNF. Excluding
such ambulance services from the PPS and consolidated billing provisions
would require legislation to amend the law.
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• 1998
SNF PPS Interim Final Rule: The preamble to the SNF PPS Interim
Final Rule (63 FR 26298, May 12, 1998) clarifies that under the
consolidated billing provision, an ambulance trip is considered
to be furnished to an SNF “resident” if it occurs during the course
of an SNF stay, but not if it occurs at either the very beginning
or end of the stay. This policy is comparable to the one governing
ambulance services furnished in the inpatient hospital setting,
which has been subject to a similar comprehensive Medicare billing
or “bundling” requirement for almost two decades.
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• As
explained in the preamble, the initial ambulance trip that first
brings a beneficiary to an SNF is not subject to consolidated billing,
since the beneficiary has not yet been admitted to the SNF as a
resident at that point. Similarly, an ambulance trip that conveys
a beneficiary from the SNF at the end of a stay is not subject to
consolidated billing when it occurs in connection with one of the
events specified in regulations at 42 CFR 411.15(p)(3)(i)-(iv) as
ending the beneficiary’s SNF “resident” status:
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A trip for an
inpatient admission to a Medicare-participating hospital or Critical
Access Hospital (CAH) (however, see discussion below regarding an
ambulance trip made for the purpose of transferring a beneficiary
from the discharging SNF to an inpatient admission at another SNF);
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A trip to the
beneficiary’s home to receive services from a Medicare-participating
home health agency under a plan of care;
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A trip to a
Medicare-participating hospital or CAH for the specific purpose
of receiving emergency services or certain other intensive outpatient
services that are not included in the SNF’s comprehensive care plan
(see further explanation below); or
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A formal discharge
(or other departure) from the SNF that is not followed by readmission
to that or another SNF by midnight of that same day.
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• Ambulance
trips to receive excluded outpatient hospital services: As
noted above, the regulations specify the receipt of certain exceptionally
intensive or emergent services furnished during an outpatient visit
to a hospital as one circumstance that ends a beneficiary’s status
as an SNF resident for consolidated billing purposes. Such outpatient
hospital services are themselves excluded from the consolidated
billing requirement, on the basis of their being well beyond the
typical scope of the SNF care plan. (However, the exclusion of a
particular outpatient hospital service is not invoked on this basis
merely because it does not appear in the individual SNF care plan
of the person receiving the service; rather, the exclusion applies
only to those specified categories of services that, by definition,
lie well beyond the scope of SNF care plans generally).
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Currently, only
those categories of outpatient hospital services that are specifically identified
in Program Memorandum No. A-98-37 (November 1998, reissued as PM
No. A-00-01, January 2000) are excluded from consolidated billing
on this basis: cardiac catheterization; Computerized Axial Tomography
(CT) scans; Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRIs); ambulatory surgery
involving the use of an operating room; emergency room services;
radiation therapy; angiography; and, lymphatic and venous procedures.
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Since the receipt
of one of these excluded types of outpatient hospital services is considered
to end a beneficiary’s status as an SNF resident for consolidated
billing purposes, any associated ambulance trips are themselves
excluded from consolidated billing as well; thus, an ambulance trip
furnished in connection with the receipt of such services can still
be billed separately to Part B by the outside supplier.
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By contrast,
when a beneficiary leaves the SNF to receive outpatient hospital
services other than the excluded types of services described above
and then returns to the SNF, he or she retains the status of an
SNF resident with respect to the services furnished during the absence
from the SNF. Accordingly, ambulance services furnished in connection
with such an outpatient visit would remain subject to consolidated
billing, even if the purpose of the trip is to receive a particular
type of service (such as a physician service) that is itself categorically
excluded from the consolidated billing requirement.
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• Transfers
Between Two SNFs: Under the regulations at 42 CFR 411.15(p)(3)(iv),
a beneficiary’s departure from an SNF is not considered to be a
“final” departure for consolidated billing purposes if he or she
is readmitted to that or another SNF by midnight of the same day.
Such a beneficiary continues to be considered a resident of the
SNF from which he or she departed until the occurrence of one of
the events specified as terminating the beneficiary’s “resident” status.
§411.15(p)(3)(i) specifies the admission to a second SNF as an event
that ends a beneficiary’s status as a “resident” of the first SNF.
As discussed previously, consolidated billing applies only to services
that are furnished during the course of a covered Part A stay that
is paid under the PPS. Thus, when a beneficiary travels directly
from SNF 1 and is admitted to SNF 2 by midnight of the same day,
that day is a covered Part A day for the beneficiary, to which consolidated
billing applies. Accordingly, the ambulance trip that conveys the
beneficiary would be bundled back to SNF 1 since, under §411.15(p)(3),
the beneficiary would continue to be considered a resident of SNF
1 (for consolidated billing purposes) up until the actual point
of admission to SNF 2. By contrast, when an individual leaves an
SNF via ambulance and does not return to that or another SNF by
midnight, the day is not a covered Part A day; accordingly, consolidated
billing would not apply.
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• 1999
SNF PPS Final Rule: The preamble to the SNF PPS Final Rule
(64 FR 41672-75, July 30, 1999) clarifies that the scope of coverage
under the Part A SNF benefit includes transportation via ambulance
in situations meeting the general medical necessity requirements
(as set forth in 42 CFR 410.40(d)(1)) that would apply to Part B
coverage under the separate ambulance services benefit if the services
were not covered under Part A; i.e., those situations in which a beneficiary’s
medical condition is such that other means of transportation would
be contraindicated. In those situations that do not contraindicate
the use of other, non-ambulance modes of transportation to obtain
services from offsite sources, the preamble indicates that the facility’s
fundamental obligation is to ensure that each resident receives
those services needed to attain or maintain the resident’s “...highest
practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being” in accordance
with regulations at 42 CFR 483.25. In fulfilling this basic obligation, however,
an SNF may utilize a wide variety of means either to send its residents
to the offsite location of the services or, alternatively, to bring
the services themselves onsite to its residents.
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Moreover, in
contrast to ambulance trips (for which a specific Part B benefit
exists), there is no Part B benefit that provides coverage for non-ambulance
forms of transportation. Further, SNFs historically have only rarely,
if ever, directly undertaken to provide non-ambulance forms of transportation
to their residents as part of a covered Part A stay. While in theory,
the pre-PPS procedures for SNF cost reporting and payment under
Part A could have recognized the costs incurred if SNFs had elected
to undertake this function themselves, SNFs were in fact under no
obligation to do so, and in actual practice, the responsibility
for providing such transportation for SNF residents has generally
been assumed instead by other sources, such as the Medicaid program,
local community service organizations, or the resident’s own family.
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In this context,
the preamble to the final rule explains that it is not our intent
to include within the scope of the current SNF PPS bundle any types
of transportation services for which the Medicare program did not
previously assume financial responsibility under either Part A or
Part B. Accordingly, the final rule clarifies that the scope of
the required service bundle furnished to Part A SNF residents under
the PPS specifically encompasses coverage of transportation via
ambulance under the conditions described above, rather than more
general coverage of other forms of transportation.
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