Thursday, December 8, 2011

Proposed Delay of Stage 2 of Meaningful Use


Proposed Meaningful Use Timeline Changes Encourage Adoption of EHRs


In response to significant input from multiple stakeholders, expert testimony, and countless hours of review, analysis and deliberation, HHS announced its intention to delay the start of Stage 2 meaningful use for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs for a period of one year for those first attesting to meaningful use in 2011. CMS intends to propose such a delay in the Stage 2 meaningful use Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), which is scheduled to be published in February 2012.


Why Did We Make this Decision?

Input from the vendor community and the provider community makes clear that the current schedule for compliance with Stage 2 meaningful use objectives in 2013 poses a challenge for those who are attesting to meaningful use in 2011.

The current timetable would require EHR vendors to design, develop, and release new functionality, and for providers to upgrade, implement, and begin using the new functionality as early as October 2012.

 
What are the Benefits to the Proposed Delay? 

We believe that a proposed delay will be beneficial for several reasons:


  • We hope that this will give vendors added time to develop certified EHR technologies for Stage 2, as well as give providers additional time to implement new software and meet the new requirements of Stage 2.



  • We also intend to propose maintaining the current expectation for those first attesting to meaningful use in 2012, so that all providers attesting to meaningful use in 2011 or 2012 will begin Stage 2 in 2014.



  • We believe this provides an added incentive for providers to attest to meaningful use in 2011 and rewards early participants.


Under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, providers who attest early receive greater incentives. And now those providers who first attest in 2011 are eligible for three payment years for meeting the Stage 1 criteria, while those first attesting in 2012 can only have two payment years under Stage 1 criteria.


Are Medicaid Program Participants Affected?

Because Medicaid providers can receive an incentive payment for adopting, implementing, or upgrading to certified EHR technology in their first year of Medicaid EHR Incentive Program participation, Medicaid providers will still be able to attest to Stage 1 meaningful use for the next two years (first for a 90-day period, then for a 365-day period). 

Therefore, most Medicaid providers do not attest to Stage 2 requirements until 2014 at the earliest.
Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs. 

Friday, December 2, 2011

CMS has a New Data and Reports Web Page for the EHR Incentive Programs


New Web Page Provides Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs Payment and Registration Data


CMS has created a new web page where you can find Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program payment and registration data. The page includes up-to-date information about the programs through October 2011. The new web page will be your resource for updates regarding the programs' registration, payment, and state Medicaid launches.


Overview of Content on the Data and Reports Page

The web page includes the following information:


  • A Map that Illustrates a State Breakdown of Payments to Medicare and Medicaid Providers

  • A Map that Illustrates a State Breakdown of Registration by Medicaid and Medicare Providers

  • A Map that Illustrates a State Breakdown of Registration by Medicare Providers

  • A Map that Illustrates a State Breakdown of Registration by Medicaid Providers

  • Individual State Report of Registrants and Payments

  • Updates on State Launches of Medicaid EHR Program

  • List of Recipients of Medicare EHR Incentive Program Payments


You can use the maps to see how your state compares to others in registration and paymenttotals for the EHR Incentive Programs. 

 

October Highlights 

Below are some highlights about the EHR Incentive Programs from data through October 2011 that are now featured on the new page:




  • Over 135,000 Medicare and Medicaid providers have registered for the programs

  • Over $525 million in Medicare payments have been provided to eligible professionals and eligible hospitals

  • Over $710 million in Medicaid payment have been provided to eligible professionals and eligible hospitals


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs. 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

New Interactive Guide for EPs in the Medicare EHR Incentive Program


Take a Look at CMS’ New Medicare EHR Incentive Program Guide for Eligible Professionals (EPs)


CMS has created a new comprehensive tool, An Introduction to the Medicare EHR Incentive Program for Eligible Professionals, to help guide EPs through all of the phases of the Medicare EHR Incentive Program—from eligibility and registration to attestation and payment. Chapters provide information on:


  • EHR Incentive Program basics

  • How to participate (determining eligibility and registration)

  • Meaningful use and choosing measures

  • Attestation

  • Helpful resources on the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs


The guide is interactive. Users can click on sections of the Table of Contents to learn more about specific areas of the program. Interactive tabs are also included at the bottom of each page where users can jump from chapter to chapter. Additionally, each section provides readers with user-friendly screen shots, charts, and links to the CMS website.

Note: If a user prefers a hard copy document, the guide can also be printed. Links are written out and hyperlinked throughout the guide.

The guide can be found on the Educational Materials section of the EHR website, along with several other helpful tools and resources for participants in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs.


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs. 

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Important Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs Deadlines and Resources for Hospitals


Reminder of Upcoming Deadlines and Helpful Resources for Eligible Hospitals and CAHs Participating in the EHR Incentive Programs


CMS wants to remind eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals (CAHs) of key registration and attestation dates for the EHR Incentive Programs, and provide resources to help them successfully register and start their path to payment for 2011.


Important Registration Details for Medicare and Medicaid




  • Medicare: November 30, 2011, is the last day for Medicare eligible hospitals and CAHs to register and attest to receive an incentive payment for Federal fiscal year 2011.

  • Medicaid: Each state has its own attestation deadlines. Please check with your State Medicaid agency to find out the last day you can attest.




Registration Resources
CMS has a number of resources to help providers successfully register for the EHR Incentive Programs, including:






Attestation Resources
CMS has an Eligible Hospital and CAH Attestation User Guide, which provides step-by-step instructions for login and completing attestation. CMS also has a Meaningful Use Attestation Calculator, which allows providers to see if they are able to meet all of the necessary meaningful use measures to successfully attest and qualify for an incentive payment.

Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?
Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.




Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Update to State Medicaid Launches Message


Updated Link for Montana Medicaid EHR Incentive Program Website


We apologize that our previous listserv message titled, "Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, and North Dakota Launched Their Medicaid EHR Programs This Month" contained an incorrect link to the Montana Medicaid EHR Incentive Program website. The corrected link has been included in the message below.





Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota Launched Their Medicaid EHR Programs This Month

On November 7th, the Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program launched in Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota. This means that eligible professionals (EPs) and eligible hospitals in these six states will be able to complete their incentive program registration. More information about the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program can be found on the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program Basics page of the CMS EHR website.

If you are a resident of Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, and are eligible to participate in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, visit your State Medicaid Agency website for more information on your state's participation in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. Click on a State below to access its website.


As of November 7th, 39 states have launched Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and through October, 23 states have issued incentive payments to Medicaid EPs and eligible hospitals who have adopted, implemented, or upgraded certified EHR technology. CMS looks forward to announcing the launches of additional states' programs in the coming months.

For a complete list of states that have already begun participation in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, see the Medicaid State Information page on the CMS EHR website.


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Six New State Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs Launched in November


Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota Launched Their Medicaid EHR Programs This Month


On November 7th, the Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program launched in Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota. This means that eligible professionals (EPs) and eligible hospitals in these six states will be able to complete their incentive program registration. More information about the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program can be found on the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program Basics page of the CMS EHR website.

If you are a resident of Arkansas, Delaware, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, and are eligible to participate in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, visit your State Medicaid Agency website for more information on your state's participation in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program. Click on a State below to access its website.


As of November 7th, 39 states have launched Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and through October, 23 states have issued incentive payments to Medicaid EPs and eligible hospitals who have adopted, implemented, or upgraded certified EHR technology. CMS looks forward to announcing the launches of additional states' programs in the coming months.

For a complete list of states that have already begun participation in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program, see the Medicaid State Information page on the CMS EHR website.


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Alert: An Important EHR Incentive Program Deadline is Approaching


November 30 is the Last Day for Eligible Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) to Register and Attest for an Incentive Payment for FY 2011


Eligible hospitals and CAHs have 60 days after the end of the fiscal year to submit their attestation for the Medicare Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program. The last day that eligible hospitals and CAHs can register and attest for fiscal year (FY) 2011 is November 30, 2011. For eligible hospitals and CAHs, this means that they must successfully register and then attest to demonstrating meaningful use by this date in order to receive an incentive payment for FY 2011.

Note, in order to attest, you must have begun your 90-day reporting period on or before July 3, 2011. Registration will be open after November 30th for eligible hospitals and CAHs who wish to register for a 2012 payment.


CMS encourages eligible hospitals and CAHs not to miss the deadline to attest for an incentive payment for FY 2011.


Registration Resources

To help eligible hospitals and CAHs with registration, CMS has created a Registration User Guide for Eligible Hospitals and CAHs. Additionally, eligible hospitals and CAHs can view the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs Webinar for Eligible Hospitals and CAHs, which walks hospitals through the registration process.


Attestation Resources

CMS has a number of tools available to help eligible hospitals and CAHs prepare for attestation. They can use the CMS Eligible Hospital and CAH Attestation Worksheet to record their meaningful use measures and then use as a reference when attesting for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program in CMS' web-based Registration and Attestation System. The Meaningful Use Attestation Calculator and Attestation User Guide for Eligible Hospitals and CAHscan also help with the attestation process.


Looking Ahead

Take a look at all of the other EHR Incentive Program important dates that are coming up by going to our CMS Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs Milestone Timeline, or reviewing the “Important Dates” section of the EHR Incentive Programs’ Overview page.


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

ICD-10 Is No Laughing Matter, Duck Bites Aside


November 1, 2011 — Physicians have gotten a few laughs from the new and voluminous set of diagnostic codes known as ICD-10, which distinguishes between being struck by a duck (W6162XA) and being bitten by a duck (W6161XA).

A new study by the healthcare research firm KLAS, however, suggests that physicians and other providers need to take ICD-10, more seriously. Only 9% of providers are more than halfway through the needed preparations to switch from the ICD-9 code set to the new one by the federal deadline of October 1, 2013. The rest, said study author Graham Triggs, are still in the early stage of doing their homework.

The consequences of not submitting claims to Medicare and other third-party payers with the new diagnostic codes when the deadline arrives are dire, said Triggs, a senior research manager at KLAS.

"If claims aren't compliant with ICD-10, they won't get paid," Triggs told Medscape Medical News. "It could put providers out of business."

More than 95% of providers surveyed by KLAS were hospitals and health systems, said Triggs. "My guess is that physicians in independent practices are even less prepared."

Older Codes Said to Be Outdated, Lacking in Specificity

ICD-10 stands for the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, which was developed by the World Health Organization. Like ICD-9, ICD-10 breaks down into 2 subsets: CM codes for diagnoses and PCS codes for procedures.

Physicians currently use Current Procedure Terminology (CPT) codes and those in the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) to document their services in office and outpatient settings. They will not switch from these codes to ICD-10 procedure codes, which are confined to inpatient treatment.

However, all physicians will need to make the leap from the ICD-9 diagnostic codes they use now to those of ICD-10. The new diagnostic codes are 3-7 characters in length, whereas their ICD-9 counterparts contain 5 at most. Then there is the difference in the sheer volume of codes — 68,000 for ICD-10 compared with 14,000 for ICD-9.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) decreed the switch to ICD-10 in 2009 as part of implementing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The rationale is that ICD-9, now 30 years old, contains outdated and obsolete terms, captures limited data about a patient's condition, and fails to describe current medical practice. Plus, its structure limits the number of new codes that can be coined.

With ICD-10, physicians will be able to document what ails a patient with far more specificity. ICD-9, for example, has a code for a malignant neoplasm of an arm, but ICD-10 offers 3 options: upper right arm, upper left arm, or unspecified arm.

Finally, a Code for Walking Into a Lamppost

Such multiple choices help explain why the new code set is almost 5 times larger than the old one. However, some may wonder whether the authors of ICD-10 got carried away in covering every base.

ICD-9, for example, recognizes that patients may seek treatment because they were bitten, and gives clinicians a few choices, such as dog, rat, snake, arthropod, unspecified animal, or human. ICD-10, in contrast, is a veritable zoo of bite codes — horse, cow, cat, pig, shark, dolphin, sea lion, alligator, macaw, parrot, and duck, to name just a few new kinds of jaws. And for each kind of bite, physicians can pick a code for an initial encounter, subsequent encounter, or sequela.

ICD-10 also describes the world of bumps and bruises in excruciating detail, with codes for walking into a wall versus a lamppost versus a piece of furniture. Ever been crushed between a sailboat and another kind of water craft? There's a code for that, too — V9114XA.

Some accident codes, however, defy the imagination, such as the famous V9107XA: burn due to water-skis on fire, initial encounter.

Develop a Master Plan and a Budget

Physicians may never need to look up the diagnostic code for a macaw bite, but they nevertheless must prepare to leave behind ICD-9 for ICD-10. There still is enough time to do so, according to Graham Triggs at KLAS.

Vendors of practice management and electronic health record (EHR) systems will perform much of the heavy lifting in the changeover because they need to incorporate the new codes in their software. Physicians should check in with their vendors and make sure they are on track with updating their programs to comply with ICD-10 along with the new Version 5010 HIPAA standards for electronic healthcare transactions, which take effect next year. Medical practices, of course, will need to buy the latest version of their practice management and EHR software and test it before going live with ICD-10 on October 1, 2013.

Even with software vendors doing their part on the tech end, physicians still have to invest sufficient time and money in training themselves and their staff — especially professional coders — on how to use the new diagnostic codes. Sources of that schooling range from software vendors to practice-management consultants to a network of ICD-10 trainers approved by the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA).

All this preparation requires a master plan and somebody in charge of executing it. It also requires a budget. Besides spending money on software upgrades and training, practices should set aside some cash in the event that coding snags delay the payment of insurance claims. The Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) estimated in 2008 that a 3-physician practice would shell out a grand total of $84,000 to implement the new code set.

Physicians seeking further guidance on entering the ICD-10 era can find plenty of it on the Web sites of the MGMAAHIMAAmerican Medical Association, their specialty medical society, or CMS.

Friday, October 28, 2011

We've Posted New FAQs to the EHR Website!


Take a Look at the New Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs FAQs    


We want to keep you updated with the latest information about the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs. These new FAQs include information about clinical quality measures (CQMs), meaningful use, attestation, and other Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs topics.


  1. Does a provider have to record all clinical data in their certified EHR technology in order to accurately report complete CQM data for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs? Read the answer.

  2. Do providers have to contribute a minimum dollar amount toward their certified EHR technology for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs? Read the answer.

  3. Where can I find a list of public health agencies and immunization registries to submit my data as required by the public health objectives for the EHR Incentive Programs? Read the answer.

  4. Can two separate practices with two different TINs purchase a single certified EHR system and share it in order to participate in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs? Read the answer.

  5. For the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, how should an eligible professional (EP), eligible hospital, or critical access hospital (CAH) that sees patients in multiple practice locations equipped with certified EHR technology calculate numerators and denominators for the meaningful use objectives and measures? Read the answer.

  6. For the EHR Incentive Programs, how should an eligible hospital or CAH with multiple certified EHR systems report their CQMs? Read the answer.

  7. Does the person who completes the registration for the EHR Incentive Programs need to be the same person who completes the attestation? Read the answer.

  8. For the meaningful use objective “Capability to submit electronic syndromic surveillance data to public health agencies,” what is the definition of "syndromic surveillance"? Read the answer.


Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs? Make sure to visit the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Big Medicare Pay Cut Would Shut Physician Doors to Patients


October 27, 2011 — In yet another warning to lawmakers, a new survey of group practices shows that 51% will reduce the number of available appointment slots for new Medicare patients if Congress does not avert a 29.5% Medicare pay cut set for January 1.

Another 30.9% of group practices would stop seeing new Medicare patients altogether, according to the survey conducted by the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA). And 34.8% would reduce access to existing Medicare patients.

The MGMA says it intends to impress these findings on the Congressional Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, the "super committee" tasked with recommending $1.5 trillion in savings that Congress must enact by December 23. Organized medicine is strenuously lobbying the super committee to repeal the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula for physician reimbursement, which is triggering the scheduled reduction in 2012.

Physicians have faced SGR-mandated pay cuts each year since 2002. Except for a 4.8% reduction that went through in 2002, Congress has always postponed them, but postponement has caused them to accumulate to the point of catastrophe. Last year Congress voted no fewer than 5 times to stave off a reduction topping 20%.

Life on the edge of the SGR cliff has taken its toll on physicians. Sixty-five percent of respondents to the MGMA survey, released Monday, reported that they have delayed buying new clinical equipment and facilities because of the uncertainty over Medicare reimbursement. Roughly half said they have had to reduce charity care, the size of their administrative staff, and staff salaries and benefits.

"Our data reflects a dire Medicare environment for physician practices," said Susan Turney, MD, president and chief executive officer of the MGMA, in a press release. "The 5 short-term congressional patches last year substantially diminished practices' faith in Congress and the stability of the Medicare program. This time, practices are not waiting to implement tough business decisions. The SGR is a runaway train that threatens the future of Medicare."

A repeal of the SGR would not necessarily end the Medicare reimbursement crisis. Earlier this month, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPac) recommended a "doc fix" for the SGR problem that would freeze reimbursement rates for primary care physicians for 10 years while cutting rates for specialists by 5.9% for 3 straight years, followed by zero growth over the next 7 years. Organized medicine has warned that these draconian measures, if approved by Congress, also would drive physicians out of Medicare and make it harder for seniors to get the care they need.

Find CMS at the AOA OMED Conference in Orlando, FL from Oct. 30 - Nov. 1


CMS will be Presenting in the Exhibit Theater next to our Booth #322 To Help You Learn about the EHR Incentive Programs   




Are you attending the American Osteopathic Association's Osteopathic Medical Conference and Exhibition beginning this Sunday, October 30th? CMS will be at Booth #322, next to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) exhibit. CMS and ONC are partnering to present information on the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs and other HIT initiatives.

 




Representatives from CMS will be on-site to discuss your questions and listen to your EHR and HIT program experiences. You can even sign up for a chance to share your EHR story by participating in a recorded discussion with CMS on Monday, October 31st.

 




There will be computers and CMS staff available on-site to help guide providers through the EHR program registration and attestation processes. Educational information and resources will be available at our booth to help you successfully participate in the EHR Incentive Programs.

 


CMS will also be holding two learning sessions on the EHR Incentive Programs at the Exhibit Hall Theater near the CMS booth:


  • Sunday, October 30 at 2:45 p.m. - CMS: EHR Medicaid Presentation  by John Allison

  • Monday, October 31 at 2:45 p.m. - CMS: EHR Medicare and ICD-10 Presentation  by Michael Pierson and Ethan Moore



Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?

Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs  website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs. 



Saturday, October 22, 2011

Sign up for CMS' CQM Webinar For Small-Practice Providers



CMS is Holding a Second Webinar on the CQMs and the EHR Incentive Programs for Small-Practice Providers


Overview


What:Webinar- The CMS EHR Incentive Programs: Small-Practice Providers and Clinical Quality Measures (CQMs)

When: October 25 from 1:00 – 2:30 p.m. EDT Why: To help small-practice providers successfully report CQMs How: Register online  
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is holding a second webinar on CQMs and their importance in attesting to meaningful use for the EHR Incentive Programs. CMS hopes to help small-practice and rural providers become more knowledgeable in the topics below:


  • An overview of the CQMs

  • How to report CQMs during attestation

  • Why CQMs are included in the EHR Incentive Programs

  • Answers to many FAQs on the CQMs and the EHR Incentive Programs




Although, small-practice providers are the intended audience of this webinar, anyone is welcome to join.

 




The webinar presentation, a document with over 300 questions and answersfrom the webinar held on August 30, and an informational CQM fact sheet will be provided to participants before the webinar as downloadable handouts.

 


Additionally, registrants will be given an opportunity to submit questions through the registration site before the webinar that will be answered by CMS subject matter experts and posted to the CMS EHR website a few weeks after the webinar has been completed.


Registration

Individuals can register online for the webinar. After successfully registering, they will be sent a confirmation message with a link to the webinar site. Space is limited, so interested participants should register now to secure their place. 

Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs? 

Make sure to visit the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Medicare Mailing eRx Pay-Cut Letters to Physicians


October 18, 2011 — Physicians participating in Medicare should read their mail carefully over the next few weeks. There could be a letter warning them about a possible 1% pay cut next year because of their failure to meet the program’s e-prescribing requirements, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced today.

Anyone who opens such a letter may have enough time to beat a November 1 deadline to apply for a hardship exemption from the penalty, dubbed a "payment adjustment" by CMS.

Companies who process and pay Medicare claims on behalf of CMS began mailing out the letters Monday, said Michael Rapp, MD, JD, director of the Quality Measurement and Health Assessment Group in the CMS Office of Clinical Standards and Quality, during a conference call with providers today. The agency had intended to inform physicians about the e-prescribing penalty through a so-called Payment Adjustment Feedback Report that they could access at the CMS Web site, but the reports will not be ready to post until late November or early December. So CMS resorted to snail mail to get the word out, said Dr. Rapp.

The mailing should be completed by October 25, just days before the November 1 deadline to apply for an exemption from the penalty.

In addition, in the coming weeks Medicare help-desk personnel will telephone physicians who unsuccessfully attempted to comply with the eRx requirements to give them a head’s up about the penalty.

CMS will inform physicians only about the possibility of a penalty because the warning is based on a preliminary as opposed to a final analysis of claims data, said Molly MacHarris, a policy analyst in Dr. Rapp’s department at CMS, during the conference call.

Penalties Increase Over Time

In 2009, Medicare began paying bonuses to physicians and other clinicians who qualified as "successful" e-prescribers — that is, they reported electronically transmitting a certain number of prescriptions from their computer to a pharmacy computer. In 2011 and 2012, the bonus equals 1% of a clinician’s fee-for-service (FFS) charges. It drops to 0.5% in 2013, the last year of the incentive program.

Meanwhile, physicians who have not satisfied the complicated rules for e-prescribing this year face a 1% reduction in their FFS charges in 2012. The penalty increases to 1.5% in 2013 and 2% in 2014.

Not every physician is subject to the eRx penalty next year. Someone who was not licensed as of June 30, 2011, for example, need not do anything. Physicians who are subject to the penalty can apply for 1 of 6 exemptions, which cover situations such as practicing in a rural area that lacks high-speed Internet access. They can submit their exemption application at a CMS Web site called the Quality Reporting Communication Support Page. Medical groups participating in Medicare's Physician Quality Reporting System under the Group Practice Reporting Option must apply for a hardship exemption in writing. Either way, the deadline is November 1.

More information on the e-prescribing incentive program, and how to obtain an exemption, is available on the CMS Web site.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

UPDATED: Are you Aware of the Registration Deadlines for the EHR Incentive Programs?


Updated Message on Important Information on Registration for the EHR Incentive Programs




This message is an updated version of the registration listserv message that was sent by CMS on October 4. This version of the message provides updated language to help providers understand the difference in registration and attestation dates for the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs.

 




CMS wants to remind eligible professionals (EPs), eligible hospitals, and critical access hospitals (CAHs) of the key registration and attestation dates for the EHR Incentive Programs, and provide information to help them successfully register and start their path to payment for 2011.

 


Important Registration Details for Medicare and Medicaid


  • Medicare - November 30, 2011, is the last day for Medicare eligible hospitals and CAHs to register and attest to receive an incentive payment for Federal fiscal year 2011.

  • Medicare - February 29, 2012, is the last day for Medicare EPs to register and attest to receive an incentive payment for calendar year 2011.

  • Medicaid - Each state may have different attestation deadlines. Please check with your State Medicaid agency to find out the last day you can attest.


When Should Providers Register?

CMS encourages providers to register for the Medicare and/or Medicaid EHR Incentive Program(s) as soon as possible to avoid payment delays. Please note that not all states have launched a Medicaid EHR Incentive Program yet. EPs will not be able to complete their registration for the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program until their state's program has launched and that state's site has opened. Eligible professionals should check their state's status.


Note: Providers can register before they have a certified EHR and can also register if they do not have an enrollment record in PECOS.
Registration Resources CMS has a number of resources to help providers successfully register for the EHR Incentive Programs:


  • Step-by-step registration guides, available on CMS' Registration page.

  • A number of FAQs  about registration on the EHR Incentive Programs website.

  • Webinars on YouTube to help guide providers through the registration .process– one for EPs, and one for hospitals. 

    Want more information about the EHR Incentive Programs?


Make sure to visit the EHR Incentive Programs website for the latest news and updates on the EHR Incentive Programs.



Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Meaningful Use: Attesting to the Data


What Does Attestation for the EHR Incentive Programs Entail?




Over 114,000 eligible professionals and hospitals have registered for the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs. As more hospitals move towards meeting meaningful use and attesting, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) wants to make sure everyone understands what attestation entails.

 




In order to attest, successfully demonstrate meaningful use, and receive an incentive payment under the Medicare EHR Incentive Program, eligible hospitals must indicate that they agree with several attestation statements.

 


Eligible hospitals must agree that the information submitted:


  • is accurate to the knowledge and belief of the hospital or the person submitting on behalf of the hospital.

  • is accurate and complete for numerators, denominators, exclusions, and measures applicable to the hospital.

  • includes information on all patients to whom the measure applies.

  • for clinical quality measures (CQMs), was generated as output from an identified certified EHR technology.




By agreeing to the above statements, the hospital is attesting to providing all of the information necessary from certified EHR technology, uncertified EHR technology, and/or paper-based records in order to render complete and accurate information for all meaningful use core and menu set measures except CQMs.

 


Attesting to CQM Data's Validity



CMS considers information to be accurate and complete for CQMs to the extent that it is identical to the output that was generated from certified EHR technology. In other words, the hospital is only attesting that what was put in the attestation module is identical to the output generated by its certified EHR technology. Therefore, the numerator, denominator, and exclusion information for CQMs must be reported directly from information generated by certified EHR technology.

 




CMS, through meaningful use, does not require any data validation. Eligible hospitals are not required to provide any additional information beyond what is generated from certified EHR technology in order to satisfy the requirement for submitting CQM information, even if the reported values include zeros. If a hospital has concerns about the accuracy of its output, the hospital can still attest but should work with its vendor and/or the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology to improve the accuracy of the individual product and/or the level of accuracy guaranteed by certification.

 




CMS recommends that hospitals print out or save an electronic copy of the CQM report used at attestation from their certified EHR. The eligible hospital should retain this copy for its records so that the hospital can show its numbers in the event of an audit. Upon audit, this documentation will be used to validate that the hospital accurately attested and submitted CQMs.

 


For more information about the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, please visit the CMS EHR website, and see the Frequently Asked Questions page for answers on various topic areas of the programs.