Urology Coding Alert

Discover if You Can Capitalize on 1-Year NPI Extension

CMS admits defeat, promises progress on NPI-sharing  Good news: You'll have an extra year to get up to snuff with your national provider identifier (NPI) compliance. 
 
Bad news: The extension may not be a great as it sounds, and you may not be able to, or want to, take advantage of it.

Better safe than sorry: Even though CMS has said it will give you an extra year's wriggle room on NPIs, other payers can start requiring them in May 2007. Providers Aren't At Fault  With less than two months left before crunch time, CMS decided to give you until May 23, 2008, to become NPI-only with all of your transactions. If you're not quite ready by May 23, 2007, you can implement a "contingency plan" to maintain your cash flow, CMS said in a release.

Why the change: CMS tried to make it sound as if providers weren't ready for the original deadline. But CMS was also behind on its obligations, said the Medical Group Management Association. CMS failed to issue a policy that would "facilitate the communication of NPIs," said MGMA president and CEO William Jessee in a release.

Without any CMS policy, providers didn't know how to obtain the NPIs of doctors who referred patients to them. The MGMA has posted a sample letter to request a
referring doctor's NPI on its site at www.mgma.com, but CMS has been promising a "Data Dissemination Notice" on NPI-sharing for years now.

The lack of this CMS policy has "hindered industry efforts to meet the original compliance date," MGMA said.

To come: CMS promises it will soon make data available to help you develop "crosswalks" between old provider numbers and NPIs. Contingency Plans Are Key  CMS hasn't actually suspended the original May 2007 compliance date. Rather, the agency says it will have a relaxed enforcement regime until May 2008. CMS will focus on "obtaining voluntary compliance" and will only enforce the NPI requirement in response to complaints.
 
If CMS receives a complaint before May 2008 that you haven't implemented NPIs yet, CMS will notify you in writing. Then you have a chance to show that you're in compliance, document your "good faith efforts" to comply, or submit a corrective action plan. CMS will look at NPI compliance on a case-by-case basis.

CMS will judge your "contingency plan" based on whether you've increased external testing with "trading partners," and whether your providers have actually obtained NPIs.

CMS will determine "on a case-by-case basis whether reasonable cause for the noncompliance exists and, if so, the extent to which the time for curing the noncompliance should be extended," the agency says in its contingency plan guidance.
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