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Third Time is a Charm, Maybe?

Published on 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

On November 12th CMS hosted a third, follow-up Special Open Door Forum (ODF) to allow hospitals and practitioners to ask questions regarding the Hospital Inpatient Admission Order and Certification and the 2 Midnight Benchmark for Inpatient Hospital Admissions. While you wait for CMS to post the transcript here is a run down from the Question and Answer (Q&A) portion of the call:

Question(s): More than one caller sought clarification on when care started in the Emergency Department for the 2 Midnight Benchmark. Specific “scenarios” provided by callers:

  • What if a triage nurse does more than simply take vital signs and begins to initiate orders and/or treatment protocols that were designed by Physicians. Is this when care starts?
  • What if a patient begins receiving treatment in an Ambulance prior to reaching the hospital at the direction of an Emergency Department Physician? Is this when care starts?

Answer: Pre-hospital care time does not count towards the 2 Midnight Benchmark. To meet the spirit of the regulation a Provider (MD, NP or PA) would need to initiate the care to start the time. Of note, CMS is currently considering when a triage nurse initiates a treatment protocol designed by a Physician.

Question: Will claims submitted with date of service from October 1, 2013 through March 31, 2014 later be audited by Recovery Auditors?

Answer: These claims are “off the table” for Recovery Auditors to perform “patient status reviews.” CMS went on to remind callers that they can request claims from this time for Coding Validation and Medical Necessity of Surgical Procedure reviews. This caller asked when this would be put in writing. CMS indicated that this was answered in the first question of the most recently released Questions and Answers on the CMS website.

Question: Regarding the Probe and Educate Program, a caller asked what would happen if the records were not reviewed timely and based on those findings the MAC requests additional records for review.

Answer: CMS indicated that the initial sample will be complete in entirety from October 1 – December 31 dates of service claims. After a review is complete the MACs will identify the denial rate and provide education. The Goal with the program is that a follow up sample would be from claims with dates of services after education had been provided to a hospital.

Question: A caller recognized that in recent information made available on the CMS website it was unclear whether or not Critical Access Hospitals would be part of the Probe and Educate Program and asked for clarification.

Answer: CAHs are not included in the Probe and Educate Program but are still subject to the rules.

Question: A caller provided an example of a patient presenting to the Emergency Department at 10:00 pm who was subsequently admitted as outpatient with observation services. The following morning the patient was no better, no sicker and not safe for discharge. At this point would it be appropriate to write the Inpatient order?

Answer: Yes, update to an Inpatient status.

Question: In regards to the medical review process, will MACs and RAs consider that a verbal order for inpatient admission written by a Nurse Practitioner or Resident that is co-signed by the Attending meets the Physician Certification Requirement?

Answer: Yes, as long as the Inpatient admission is conducted pursuant to an Inpatient order.

Question: One caller requested additional guidance regarding how to treat patient transfers to their hospital in regards to the 2 Midnight Rule.

Answer: CMS indicated that they are still working on this guidance and did note that they are excluding transfer cases from the Probe and Educate Review until the further guidance has been issued.

CMS has identified “rare and unusual” (exceptions) circumstances when a patient would not remain in the hospital greater than 2 Midnights but still be appropriate as an Inpatient. Current exceptions include patient death, patient transfer, patient left AMA or a patient who rapidly improves and is stable for discharge. The last call to be accepted during the ODF was an additional suggestion for an exception. When a patient is admitted and is receiving medically necessary inpatient services but the family requests Hospice care prior to the 2nd Midnight and the patient is discharged home with Hospice. CMS requested that this suggestion be sent to them to take a closer look at this.

CMS indicated during the ODF that they will soon be adding additional guidance regarding the patient order and certification to the website. MMP strongly recommends that you read these two downloads and continue to check the Inpatient Hospital Review page on the CMS website frequently for updates.

Link to Inpatient Hospital Review page:  http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring-Programs/Medical-Review/InpatientHospitalReviews.html

Article Author: Beth Cobb, RN, BSN, ACM, CCDS
Beth Cobb, RN, BSN, ACM, CCDS, is the Manager of Clinical Analytics at Medical Management Plus, Inc. Beth has over twenty-five years of experience in healthcare including eleven years in Case Management at a large multi-facility health system. In her current position, Beth is a principle writer for MMP’s Wednesday@One weekly e-newsletter, an active member of our HIPAA Compliance Committee, MMP’s Education Department Program Director and co-developer of MMP’s proprietary Compliance Protection Assessment Tool.

This material was compiled to share information.  MMP, Inc. is not offering legal advice. Every reasonable effort has been taken to ensure the information is accurate and useful.