Psychiatry Coding & Reimbursement Alert

CMS Update:

Be Informed of Medicare's Open Enrollment For CY 2017

Participating providers get higher reimbursement for services.

As you gear up to step into the New Year, you should remember to take the all important decision regarding Medicare participation for the year 2017. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requires all physicians, practitioners, and suppliers to make their Medicare participation decision by December 31, 2016.

Heads up: According to CMS, an overwhelming majority of physicians, practitioners, and suppliers have chosen to participate in Medicare. During calendar year (CY) 2016, 97.2 percent of all physicians and practitioners are billing under Medicare participation agreements.

CMS has taken up the task of open enrollment that will allow non-participating providers and suppliers to help become a participating provider for Medicare. All the Medicare administrative contractors (MACs) are informing eligible physicians, practitioners, and suppliers through postcards about the open enrollment as well as instructions to get the 2017 MPFS pricing.

Know the Benefits of Participation

“Physicians who are ‘participating’ (PAR) agree to accept Medicare’s allowed charge as payment in full for all of their Medicare patients,” says Kent Moore, senior strategist for physician payment at the American Academy of Family Physicians. “Physicians may elect to be a non-PAR physician, which permits them to make assignment decisions on a case-by-case basis and to bill patients for more than the Medicare allowance (up to the limiting charge) for unassigned claims.”

“While PAR physicians must accept assignment on all Medicare claims, Medicare participation agreements do not require physician practices to accept every Medicare patient who seeks treatment from them,” Moore says. “Also, Medicare provides a number of incentives for physicians to be ‘participating’ physicians, including:

  • The Medicare payment amount for PAR physicians is 5% higher than the rate for non-PAR physicians.
  • Directories of PAR physicians are provided to senior citizen groups and individuals who request them.
  • MACs provide toll-free claims processing lines to PAR physicians and process their claims more quickly.”

Learn What Action Should be Taken

If your psychiatrist or other practitioners are already participating or are non-participating providers, and presently want to continue the same status for the calendar year 2017, then they need not do anything during the open enrollment period till December 31, 2016. This will ensure your clinician’s participating or non-participating status will continue as it was during the calendar year 2016.

On the other hand, if your psychiatrist or other practitioners want to change their status from participating to non-participating or from non-participating to participating, then you will need to take specific action during the open enrollment period following which your clinician’s status will change effective January 1, 2017.

Participating to Non-participating status: If your psychiatrist or other practitioners are already participating with Medicare and want to stop their participation you will need to send a written notice to every MAC that you submit claims to. This letter should be on your provider’s letterhead that has information about all credentials (Provider Transaction Access Number [PTAN], National Provider Identifier [NPI], Tax Identification Number/Employer Identification Number/Social Security Number [TIN/EIN/SSN]).

The written notice should include content that expresses your wish to terminate your participation in the Medicare participating physician program and to change your status to nonparticipating effective Jan. 1, 2017. This letter with the request to change status to nonparticipating should be duly signed by your clinician or an appropriate delegated official for the NPI.

“Those considering a change in status from PAR to non-PAR should first determine that they are not bound by any contractual arrangements with hospitals, health plans or other entities that require them to be PAR physicians,” Moore says.

Non-participating to Participating status: “You can refer to the type of form to be filled by finding the information on the CMS website,” says Suzan (Berman) Hauptman, MPM, CPC, CEMC, CEDC, senior principal of ACE Med, a medical auditing, coding and education organization in Pittsburgh, Pa. “Itwill depend on the type of provider (supplier, physician, facility).”

If your psychiatrist or other practitioners are currently non-participating with Medicare and want to participate in 2017, they will need to submit separate copies of the CMS-460 mail form to each MAC that they will be submitting claims to.

The mail form should carry the date on which it has been completed and other details such as legal name, legal business name, address, and all credentials (PTAN, NPI, and TIN/EIN/SSN). The mail form should be duly signed by your clinician or an appropriate delegated official for the NPI.

By completing the mail form, your clinician’s status will change from non-participating to participating effective Jan.1, 2017 and you will need to accept assignment for all covered services that you provide to Medicare patients in CY2017.

“Once made, the decision regarding Medicare participation status is generally binding for the entire year except where the physician’s practice situation has changed significantly, such as relocation to a different geographic area or a different group practice,” Moore notes.

Resources: For more information on the topic, check the link at http://www.aafp.org/practice-management/regulatory/medicare.html.