WSR 99-14-039

PERMANENT RULES

DEPARTMENT OF

SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES
(Medical Assistance Administration)

[ Filed June 30, 1999, 10:32 a.m. , effective July 1, 1999 ]

Date of Adoption: June 30, 1999.

Purpose: To clarify terms and add previously undefined terms.

Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Amending WAC 388-550-1050 Hospital definitions.

Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.730, 42 U.S.C. 1395x(v), 42 C.F.R. 447.271, .11303 and .2652.

Adopted under notice filed as WSR 99-09-088 on April 21, 1999.

Changes Other than Editing from Proposed to Adopted Version: 1) Definition for "Inflation adjustment" changed from: "...means, for cost inflation, the hospital inflation ((factor determined by Data Resources, Inc., (DRI) and published in the DRI/McGraw Hill Report. See also "hospital market basket index.")) adjustment. This adjustment is the vendor rate increase identified by the legislature as the adjustment to be applied to payment rates used to reimburse vendors, including health care providers, that provide services to the state. If the legislature does not identify an inflation adjustment for the vendor rates for a given period, then there is no inflation adjustment for that period."

To: "...means, for cost inflation, the hospital inflation ((factor determined by Data Resources, Inc., (DRI) and published in the DRI/McGraw Hill Report. See also "hospital market basket index.")) adjustment. This adjustment is determined by using the inflation factor method and guidance indicated by the legislature in the budget notes to the biennium appropriations bill."

2) Definition for "Profitability factor" changed from: "...means a factor used to calculate a hospital's low income disproportionate share (LIDSH) payment. The methods used to determine the profitability factor are:

(1) Determine the net revenue of each LIDSH qualified hospital. The net revenue will be the "net revenue" figure identified on the MAA hospital disproportionate share application submitted by the hospital;..."

To: "...means a factor used to calculate a hospital's low income disproportionate share (LIDSH) payment. The methods used to determine the profitability factor are:

(1) Determine the net revenue of each LIDSH qualified hospital. The net revenue will be the "net revenue" figure identified on the MAA hospital disproportionate share application submitted by the hospital. (Net revenue may be calculated using a three year average net revenue using "net revenue" figures from the most recent three years' MAA hospital disproportionate share applications."

Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

Other Findings Required by Other Provisions of Law as Precondition to Adoption or Effectiveness of Rule: Per RCW 34.05.380(3), the rule must become effective July 1, 1999, because SHB 5968 and the budget notes clarifying the senate budget bill (ESSB 5180) contain hospital definitions and mandate this effective date.Effective Date of Rule: July 1, 1999.

June 30, 1999

Marie Myerchin-Redifer, Manager

Rules and Policies Assistance Unit

2561.2
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 99-06-046, filed 2/26/99, effective 3/29/99)

WAC 388-550-1050
Definitions.

See also chapter 388-500 WAC for other definitions and abbreviations used by ((the department)) MAA. Unless otherwise specified, the terms used in this chapter have the following meaning:

"Accommodation costs" means the expenses incurred by a hospital to provide its patients services for which a separate charge is not customarily made, such as, but not limited to, a regular hospital room, special care hospital room, dietary and nursing services, medical and surgical supplies, medical social services, psychiatric social services, and the use of certain hospital equipment and facilities.

"Acute" means a medical condition of severe intensity with sudden onset.

"Acute care" means care provided by an agency for clients who are not medically stable or have not attained a satisfactory level of rehabilitation.  These clients require frequent monitoring by a health care professional in order to maintain their health status (WAC 248-27-015).

"Acute physical medicine and rehabilitation (Acute PM&R)" means a comprehensive inpatient rehabilitative program coordinated by a multidisciplinary team at an MAA-approved rehabilitation facility.  The program provides twenty-four-hour specialized nursing services and an intense level of therapy for a diagnostic category for which the client shows significant potential functional improvement.

"ADATSA/DASA assessment center" means an agency contracted by the division of alcohol and substance abuse (DASA) to provide chemical dependency assessment for clients and pregnant women in accordance with the alcohol and drug addiction treatment and support act (ADATSA).  Full plans for a continuum of drug and alcohol treatment services for pregnant women are also developed in ADATSA/DASA assessment centers.

"Add-on procedure" means a secondary procedure that is performed in addition to another procedure.

"Administrative day" means a day of a hospital stay in which an acute inpatient level of care is no longer necessary, and ((an appropriate)) noninpatient hospital placement is ((not available)) appropriate.

"Admitting diagnosis" means the diagnosis, coded according to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modifications (ICD-9-CM), indicating the medical condition which precipitated the client's admission to an inpatient hospital facility.

"Advance directive" means a document, such as a living will, executed by a client, that tells the client's health care providers and others the client's decisions regarding his or her medical care, particularly whether the client wishes to accept or refuse extraordinary measures to prolong his or her life.

"Aggregate capital cost" means the total cost or the sum of all capital costs.

"Aggregate cost" means the total cost or the sum of all constituent costs.

"Aggregate operating cost" means the total cost or the sum of all operating costs.

"Alcohol and drug addiction treatment and support act (ADATSA)" means the law and the state-funded program it established which provides medical services for persons who are incapable of gainful employment due to alcoholism or substance addiction.

"Alcoholism and/or alcohol abuse treatment" means the provision of medical social services to an eligible client designed to mitigate or reverse the effects of alcoholism or alcohol abuse and to reduce or eliminate alcoholism or alcohol abuse behaviors and restore normal social, physical, and psychological functioning.  Alcoholism or alcohol abuse treatment is characterized by the provision of a combination of alcohol education sessions, individual therapy, group therapy, and related activities to detoxified alcoholics and their families.

"All-patient grouper (AP-DRG)" means a computer program that determines the diagnosis-related group (DRG) assignments.

"Allowed charges" means the maximum amount for any procedure that the department will recognize.

"Ancillary hospital costs" means the expenses incurred by a hospital to provide additional or supporting services to its patients during their hospital stay.   See "ancillary services."

"Ancillary services" means additional or supporting services, such as, but not limited to, laboratory, radiology, drugs, delivery room, operating room, postoperative recovery rooms, and other special items and services, provided by a hospital to a patient during his or her hospital stay.

"Approved treatment facility" means a treatment facility, either public or private, profit or nonprofit, approved by DSHS.

"Audit" means an assessment, evaluation, examination, or investigation of a health care provider's accounts, books and records, including:

(1) Medical, financial and billing records pertaining to billed services paid by the department through Medicaid or other state programs, by a person not employed or affiliated with the provider, for the purpose of verifying the service was provided as billed and was allowable under program regulations; and

(2) Financial, statistical and medical records, including mathematical computations and special studies conducted supporting Medicare cost reports HCFA Form 2552, submitted to the department for the purpose of establishing program rates of reimbursement to hospital providers.

"Audit claims sample" means a subset of the universe of paid claims from which the sample is drawn, whether based upon judgmental factors or random selection.  The sample may consist of any number of claims in the population up to one hundred percent.  See also "random claims sample" and "stratified random sample."

"Authorization number" means a nine-digit number assigned by MAA that identifies individual requests for approval of services or equipment.  The same authorization number is used throughout the history of the request, whether it is approved, pended, or denied.

"Authorization requirement" means MAA's requirement that a provider present proof of medical necessity to MAA, ((usually before)) prior to providing certain medical services or equipment to a client.  This takes the form of a request for authorization of the service(s) and/or equipment, including a complete, detailed description of the client's diagnosis and/or any disabling conditions, justifying the need for the equipment or the level of service being requested.

"Average hospital rate" means the ((weighted)) average of hospital rates ((in the state of Washington)) for any particular type of rate that MAA uses.

"Bad debt" means an operating expense or loss incurred by a hospital because of uncollectible accounts receivables.

"Beneficiary" means a recipient of Social Security benefits, or a person designated by an insuring organization as eligible to receive benefits.

"Billed charge" - See "usual and customary charge."

"Blended rate" means a mathematically weighted average rate.

"Border area hospital" means a hospital located in an area defined by state law as:

(1) Oregon - Astoria, Hermiston, Hood River, Milton-Freewater, Portland, Rainier, or The Dalles; and

(2) Idaho - Coeur d'Alene, Lewiston, Moscow, Priest River or Sandpoint.

"Bundled services" mean interventions which are incidental to the major procedure and are not separately reimbursable.

"Buy-in premium" means a monthly premium the state pays so a client is enrolled in part A and/or part B Medicare.

"By report" means a method of reimbursement in which MAA determines the amount it will pay for a service that is not included in MAA's published fee schedules by requiring the provider to submit a "report" describing the nature, extent, time, effort and/or equipment necessary to deliver the service.

"Callback" means keeping physician staff on duty beyond their regularly scheduled hours, or having them return to the facility after hours to provide unscheduled services; usually associated with hospital emergency room, surgery, laboratory and radiology services.

"Capital-related costs" mean the component of operating costs related to capital assets, including, but not limited to:

(1) Net adjusted depreciation expenses;

(2) Lease and rentals for the use of depreciable assets;

(3) The costs for betterment and improvements;

(4) The cost of minor equipment;

(5) Insurance expenses on depreciable assets;

(6) Interest expense; and

(7) Capital-related costs of related organizations that provide services to the hospital.

It excludes capital costs due solely to changes in ownership of the provider's capital assets.

"Case mix complexity" means, from the clinical perspective, the condition of the treated patients and the difficulty associated with providing care.  Administratively, it means the resource intensity demands that patients place on an institution.

"Case mix index" means a measure of the costliness of cases treated by a hospital relative to the cost of the average of all Medicaid hospital cases, using diagnosis-related group weights as a measure of relative cost.

"Charity care" means necessary hospital health care rendered to indigent persons, as defined in this section, to the extent that these persons are unable to pay for the care or to pay the deductibles or coinsurance amounts required by a third-party payer, as determined by the department.

"Chemical dependency" means an alcohol or drug addiction; or dependence on alcohol and one or more other psychoactive chemicals.

"Children's hospital" means a hospital primarily serving children.

"Comorbidity" means of, relating to, or caused by a disease other than the principal disease.

"Complication" means a disease or condition occurring subsequent to or concurrent with another condition and aggravating it.

"Comprehensive hospital abstract reporting system (CHARS)" means the department of health's hospital data collection, tracking and reporting system.

"Contract hospital" means a licensed hospital located in a selective contracting area, which is awarded a contract to participate in the department's selective contracting hospital program.

"Contractual adjustment" means the difference between the amount billed at established charges for the services provided and the amount received or due from a third-party payer under a contract agreement.  A contractual adjustment is similar to a trade discount.

"Conversion factor" means a hospital-specific dollar amount that reflects the average cost of treating Medicaid clients in a given hospital.  See "cost-based conversion factor (CBCF)" and "negotiated conversion factor (NCF)."

"Cost proxy" means an average ratio of costs to charges for ancillary charges or per diem for accommodation cost centers used to determine a hospital's cost for the services where the hospital has Medicaid claim charges for the services ((has)), but does not report costs in corresponding centers in its Medicare cost report.

"Cost report" means the HCFA Form 2552, Hospital and Hospital Health Care Complex Cost Report, completed and submitted annually by a provider:

(1) To Medicare intermediaries at the end of a provider's selected fiscal accounting period to establish hospital reimbursable costs for per diem and ancillary services; and

(2) To Medicaid to establish appropriate DRG and RCC reimbursement.

"Costs" mean MAA-approved operating, medical education, and capital-related costs as reported and identified on the HCFA 2552 form.

"Cost-based conversion factor (CBCF)" means a hospital-specific dollar amount that reflects the average cost of treating Medicaid clients in a given hospital.  It is calculated from the hospital's cost report by dividing the hospital's costs for treating Medicaid clients during a base period by the number of Medicaid discharges during that same period and adjusting for the hospital's case mix.  See also "conversion factor" and "negotiated conversion factor."

"County hospital" means a hospital established under the provisions of chapter 36.62 RCW.

"Covered service" means a service that is included in the Medicaid program and is within the scope of the eligible client's medical care program.

"Critical care services" mean services for critically ill or injured patients in a variety of medical emergencies that require the constant attendance of the physician (e.g., cardiac arrest, shock, bleeding, respiratory failure, postoperative complications).  For Medicaid reimbursement purposes, critical care services must be provided in a Medicare qualified critical care area, such as the coronary care unit, intensive care unit, respiratory care unit, or the emergency care facility, to qualify for reimbursement as a special care level of service.

"Current procedural terminology (CPT)" means a systematic listing of descriptive terms and identifying codes for reporting medical services, procedures, and interventions performed by physicians; it is published annually by the American Medical Association (AMA).

"Customary charge payment limit" means the limit placed on aggregate diagnosis-related group (DRG) payments to a hospital during a given year to assure that DRG payments do not exceed the hospital's charges to the general public for the same services.

"Day outlier" means a case that requires MAA to make additional payment to the hospital provider but which does not qualify as a high-cost outlier.  See "day outlier payment" and "day outlier threshold."

"Day outlier payment" means the additional amount paid to a disproportionate share hospital for a client five years old or younger who has a prolonged inpatient stay which exceeds the day outlier threshold but whose charges for care fall short of the high cost outlier threshold.  The amount is determined by multiplying the number of days in excess of the day outlier threshold and the administrative day rate.

"Day outlier threshold" means the average number of days a client stays in the hospital for an applicable DRG before being discharged, plus twenty days.

"Deductible" means the amount a beneficiary is responsible for, before Medicare starts paying; or the initial specific dollar amount for which the applicant or client is responsible.

"Detoxification" means treatment provided to persons who are recovering from the effects of acute or chronic intoxication or withdrawal from alcohol or other drugs.

"Diabetic education program" means a comprehensive, multidisciplinary program of instruction offered by an MAA-approved facility to diabetic clients on dealing with diabetes, including instruction on nutrition, foot care, medication and insulin administration, skin care, glucose monitoring, and recognition of signs/symptoms of diabetes with appropriate treatment of problems or complications.

"Diagnosis code" means a set of alphabetic, numeric, or alpha-numeric characters assigned by the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM), as a shorthand symbol to represent the nature of a disease.

"Diagnosis-related group (DRG)" means a classification system which categorizes hospital patients into clinically coherent and homogenous groups with respect to resource use, i.e., similar treatments and statistically similar lengths of stay for patients with related medical conditions.  Classification of patients is based on the International Classification of Diseases, the presence of a surgical procedure, patient age, presence or absence of significant co-morbidities or complications, and other relevant criteria.

"Direct medical education costs" means the direct costs of providing an approved medical residency program as recognized by Medicare.

"Discharging hospital" means the institution releasing a client from the acute care hospital setting.

"Disproportionate share payment" means additional payment(s) made by the department to a hospital which serves a disproportionate number of Medicaid and other low-income clients and which qualifies for one or more of the disproportionate share hospital programs identified in the state plan.

"Disproportionate share program" means a program that provides additional payments to hospitals which serve a disproportionate number of Medicaid and other low-income clients.

"Dispute conference" means a hospital rate appeal meeting for deliberation during a provider administrative appeal.

(1) At the first level of appeal it is usually a meeting between auditors and the audited provider and/or staff to resolve disputed audit findings, clarify interpretation of regulations and policies, provide additional supporting information and/or documentation.

(2) At the second level of appeal the dispute conference is ((a more formal hearing, held by the office of contracts and asset management which issues a decision articulating the department's final position on the contested issue(s).

(3) See WAC 388-502-0230)) an informal administrative hearing conducted by an MAA administrator for the purpose of resolving contractor/provider rate disagreements with any of the department’s action at the first level of appeal. The dispute conference in this regard is not a formal adjudicative process held in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 RCW.

"Distinct unit" means a Medicare-certified distinct area for rehabilitation services within a general acute care hospital or a department-designated unit in a children's hospital.

"DRG" - See "diagnosis-related group."

"DRG-exempt services" mean services which are paid for through other methodologies than those using cost-based or negotiated conversion factors.

"DRG payment" means the payment made by MAA for a client's inpatient hospital stay; it is calculated by multiplying the hospital-specific conversion factor by the DRG relative weight for the client's medical diagnosis.

"DRG relative weight" means the average cost or charge of a certain DRG divided by the average cost or charge, respectively, for all cases in the entire data base for all DRGs((, expressed in comparison to a designated standard cost)).

"Drug addiction and/or drug abuse treatment" means the provision of medical and rehabilitative social services to an eligible client designed to mitigate or reverse the effects of drug addiction or drug abuse and to reduce or eliminate drug addiction or drug abuse behaviors and restore normal physical and psychological functioning.  Drug addiction or drug abuse treatment is characterized by the provision of a combination of drug and alcohol education sessions, individual therapy, group therapy and related activities to detoxified addicts and their families.

"Elective procedure or surgery" means a nonemergent procedure or surgery that can be scheduled at convenience.

"Emergency room" or "emergency facility" means an organized, distinct hospital-based facility available twenty-four hours a day for the provision of unscheduled episodic services to patients who present for immediate medical attention, and capable of providing emergency services including trauma.

"Emergency services" mean medical services, including maternity services, required by and provided to a patient after the sudden onset of a medical condition manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity (including severe pain) that the absence of immediate medical attention could reasonably be expected to result in placing the patient's health in serious jeopardy; serious impairment to bodily functions; or serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.  Inpatient maternity services are treated as emergency services.

"Equivalency factor" means a conversion factor used, in conjunction with two other factors (cost-based conversion factor and the ratable factor), to determine the level of state-only program payment.

"Exempt hospital" means a hospital that is either not located in a selective contracting area or is exempted by the department and is reimbursed for services to MAA clients through methodologies other than those using cost-based or negotiated conversion factors.

"Experimental treatment" means a course of treatment or procedure that:

(1) Is not generally accepted by the medical profession as effective and proven;

(2) Is not recognized by professional medical organizations as conforming to accepted medical practice;

(3) Has not been approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or other requisite government body;

(4) Is still in clinical trials, or has been judged to need further study;

(5) Is covered by the federal law requiring provider institutional review of patient consent forms, and such review did not occur; or

(6) Is rarely used, novel, or relatively unknown, and lacks authoritative evidence of safety and effectiveness.

"Facility triage fee" means the amount the medical assistance administration will pay a hospital for a medical evaluation or medical screening examination, performed in the hospital's emergency department, of a nonemergent condition of a healthy options client covered under the primary care case management (PCCM) program.  This amount corresponds to the professional care level A or level B service.

"Fee for service" means the general payment method MAA uses to reimburse for medical services provided to clients other than for those services provided through MAA’s per capita healthy options program.

"Fiscal intermediary" means Medicare's designated fiscal intermediary for a region and/or category of service.

"Fixed per diem rate" means a contracted nonnegotiated daily amount, used to determine payment to a hospital for specific services.

(("Formula price" means the hospital's payment rate, which is the product of the hospital-specific conversion factor multiplied by the DRG weight for the given hospitalization.))

"Global surgery days" means the number of preoperative and follow-up days that are included in the reimbursement to the physician for the major surgical procedure.

"Graduate medical education costs" means the direct and indirect costs of providing medical education in teaching hospitals.

"Grouper" - See "all-patient grouper (AP-DRG)."

"HCFA 2552" - See "cost report."

"Health care team" means a team of professionals and/or paraprofessionals involved in the care of a client.

"High-cost outlier" means a case with extraordinarily high costs when compared to other cases in the same DRG, in which the allowed charges prior to July 1, 1999, exceed three times the applicable DRG payment or twenty-eight thousand dollars, whichever is greater. On and after July 1, 1999, to qualify as a high-cost outlier, the allowed charges must exceed three times the applicable DRG payment or thirty-three thousand dollars, whichever is greater.

"Hospice" means a medically-directed, interdisciplinary program of palliative services which is provided under arrangement with a Title XVIII Washington state-licensed and Title XVIII-certified Washington state hospice for terminally ill clients and the clients' families.

"Hospital" means an entity which is licensed as an acute care hospital in accordance with applicable state laws and regulations, and which is certified under Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act.

"Hospital admission" means admission as an inpatient to a hospital, for a stay of twenty-four hours or longer.

"Hospital base period" means, for purposes of establishing a provider rate, a specific period or timespan used as a reference point or basis for comparison.

"Hospital base period costs" mean costs incurred in or associated with a specified base period.

"Hospital cost report" - See "cost report."

"Hospital facility fee" - See "facility triage fee."

"Hospital market basket index" means a measure, expressed as a percentage, of the annual inflationary costs for hospital services, as measured by Data Resources, Inc., (DRI).

"Hospital peer group" means the peer group categories adopted by the former Washington state hospital commission for rate-setting purposes:

(1) Group A - rural hospitals paid under a ratio-of-costs-to-charges (RCC) methodology;

(2) Group B - urban hospitals without medical education programs;

(3) Group C - urban hospitals with medical education programs; and

(4) Group D - specialty hospitals and/or hospitals not easily assignable to the other three peer groups.

"Indigent patient" means a patient who has exhausted any third-party sources, including Medicare and Medicaid, and whose income is equal to or below two hundred percent of the federal poverty standards (adjusted for family size), or is otherwise not sufficient to enable the individual to pay for his or her care, or to pay deductibles or coinsurance amounts required by a third-party payor.

"Indirect medical education costs" means the indirect costs of providing an approved medical residency program as recognized by Medicare.

"Inflation adjustment" means, for cost inflation, the hospital inflation ((factor determined by Data Resources, Inc., (DRI) and published in the DRI/McGraw-Hill Report.  See also "hospital market basket index.")) adjustment. This adjustment is determined by using the inflation factor method and guidance indicated by the legislature in the budget notes to the biennium appropriations bill. For charge inflation, it means the inflation factor determined by comparing average discharge charges for the industry from one year to the next, as found in the comprehensive hospital abstract reporting system (CHARS) standard reports three and four.

"Inpatient hospital" means a hospital authorized by the department of health to provide inpatient services.

"Inpatient services" means all services provided directly or indirectly by the hospital to a patient subsequent to admission and prior to discharge, and includes, but is not limited to, the following services: Bed and board; medical, nursing, surgical, pharmacy and dietary services; maternity services; psychiatric services; all diagnostic and therapeutic services required by the patient; the technical and/or professional components of certain services; use of hospital facilities, medical social services furnished by the hospital, and such drugs, supplies, appliances and equipment as required by the patient; transportation services subsequent to admission and prior to discharge; and services provided by the hospital within twenty-four hours of the patient's admission as an inpatient.

"Interdisciplinary group (IDG)" means the team, including a physician, a registered nurse, a social worker, and a pastoral or other counselor, which is primarily responsible for the provision or supervision of care and services for a Medicaid client.

"Intermediary" - See "fiscal intermediary."

"International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) Edition" means the systematic listing that transforms verbal descriptions of diseases, injuries, conditions and procedures into alpha-numerical designations (coding).

"Intervention" means any medical or dental service provided to a client that modifies the medical or dental outcome for that client.

"Length of stay (LOS)" means the number of days of inpatient hospitalization.  The phrase more commonly means the average length of hospital stay for patients based on diagnosis and age, as determined by the Commission of Professional and Hospital Activities and published in a book entitled Length of Stay by Diagnosis, Western Region.  See also "professional activity study (PAS)."

"Length of stay extension request" means a request from a hospital provider for MAA to approve a client's hospital stay exceeding the average length of stay for the client's diagnosis and age.

"Lifetime hospitalization reserve" means, under the Medicare Part A benefit, the nonrenewable sixty hospital days that a beneficiary is entitled to use during his or her lifetime for hospital stays extending beyond ninety days per benefit period.  See also "reserve days."

"Low-cost outlier" means a case with extraordinarily low costs when compared to other cases in the same DRG, in which the allowed charges for the case prior to July 1, 1999, is less than or equal to ten percent of the applicable DRG payment or four hundred dollars, whichever is greater. On and after July 1, 1999, to qualify as a low-cost outlier, the allowed charges must be less than or equal to ten percent of the applicable DRG payment or four hundred and fifty dollars, whichever is greater.  Reimbursement in such cases is determined by multiplying the case's allowed charges by the hospital's RCC ratio.

"Low income utilization rate" means a formula represented as (A/B)+(C/D) in which:

(1) The numerator A is the hospital's total patient services revenue under the state plan, plus the amount of cash subsidies for patient services received directly from state and local governments in a period;

(2) The denominator B is the hospital's total patient services revenue (including the amount of such cash subsidies) in the same period as the numerator;

(3) The numerator C is the hospital's total inpatient service charge attributable to charity care in a period, less the portion of cash subsidies described in (1) of this definition in the period reasonably attributable to inpatient hospital services.  The amount shall not include contractual allowances and discounts (other than for indigent patients not eligible for medical assistance under the state plan); and

(4) The denominator D is the hospital's total charge for inpatient hospital services in the same period as the numerator.

"Major diagnostic category (MDC)" means one of the twenty-five mutually exclusive groupings of principal diagnosis areas in the DRG system.  The diagnoses in each MDC correspond to a single major organ system or etiology and, in general, are associated with a particular medical specialty.

"Market basket index" - See "hospital market basket index."

"Medicaid cost proxy" means a figure developed to approximate or represent a missing cost figure.

"Medicaid inpatient utilization rate" means a formula represented as X/Y in which:

(1) The numerator X is the hospital's number of inpatient days attributable to patients who (for such days) were eligible for medical assistance under the state plan in a period.

(2) The denominator Y is the hospital's total number of inpatient days in the same period as the numerator's.  Inpatient day includes each day in which an individual (including a newborn) is an inpatient in the hospital, whether or not the individual is in a specialized ward and whether or not the individual remains in the hospital for lack of suitable placement elsewhere.

"Medical assistance program" means Medicaid and medical care services.

"Medical education costs" means the expenses incurred by a hospital to operate and maintain a formally organized graduate medical education program.

"Medical screening evaluation" means the service(s) provided by a physician or other practitioner to determine whether an emergent medical condition exists.  See also "facility triage fee."

"Medical stabilization" means a return to a state of constant and steady function.  It is commonly used to mean the client is adequately supported to prevent further deterioration.

"Medically indigent person" means a person certified by the department of social and health services as eligible for the limited casualty program-medically indigent (LCP-MI) program.  See also "indigent patient."

"Medicare cost report" means the annual cost data reported by a hospital to Medicare on the HCFA form 2552.

"Medicare crossover" means a claim involving a client who is eligible for both Medicare benefits and Medicaid.

"Medicare fee schedule (MFS)" means the official HCFA publication of Medicare policies and relative value units for the resource based relative value scale (RBRVS) reimbursement program.

"Medicare Part A" means that part of the Medicare program that helps pay for inpatient hospital services, which may include, but are not limited to:

(1) A semi-private room;

(2) Meals;

(3) Regular nursing services;

(4) Operating room;

(5) Special care units;

(6) Drugs and medical supplies;

(7) Laboratory services;

(8) X-ray and other imaging services; and

(9) Rehabilitation services.

Medicare hospital insurance also helps pay for post-hospital skilled nursing facility care, some specified home health care, and hospice care for certain terminally ill beneficiaries.

"Medicare part B" means that part of the Medicare program that helps pay for, but is not limited to:

(1) Physician services;

(2) Outpatient hospital services;

(3) Diagnostic tests and imaging services;

(4) Outpatient physical therapy;

(5) Speech pathology services;

(6) Medical equipment and supplies;

(7) Ambulance;

(8) Mental health services; and

(9) Home health services.

"Medicare buy-in premium" - See "buy-in premium."

"Medicare payment principles" means the rules published in the federal register regarding reimbursement for services provided to Medicare clients.

"Mentally incompetent" means a client who has been declared mentally incompetent by a federal, state, or local court of competent jurisdiction for any purpose, unless the client has been declared competent for purposes which include the ability to consent to sterilization.

"Multiple occupancy rate" means the rate customarily charged for a hospital room with two or more patient beds.

"Negotiated conversion factor (NCF)" means a negotiated hospital-specific dollar amount which is used in lieu of the cost-based conversion factor as the multiplier for the applicable DRG weight to determine the DRG payment for a selective contracting program hospital.  See also "conversion factor" and "cost-based conversion factor."

"Nonallowed service or charge" means a service or charge that cannot be billed to the department or client.

"Noncontract hospital" means a licensed hospital located in a selective contracting area (SCA) but which does not have a contract to participate in the selective contracting hospital program.

"Noncovered service or charge" means a service or charge that is not covered by medical assistance, including, but not limited to, such services or charges as a private room, circumcision, and video recording of the procedure.

"Nonemergent hospital admission" means any inpatient hospitalization of a client who does not have an emergent condition, as defined in WAC 388-500-0005, Emergency services.

"Nonparticipating hospital" means a noncontract hospital, as defined in this section.

"Operating costs" means all expenses incurred in providing accommodation and ancillary services, excluding capital and medical education costs.

"Orthotic device" means a fitted surgical apparatus designed to activate or supplement a weakened or atrophied limb or bodily function.

"Out-of-state hospital" means any hospital located outside the state of Washington or outside the designated border areas in Oregon and Idaho.

"Outlier set-aside factor" means the amount by which a hospital's cost-based conversion factor is reduced for payments of high cost outlier cases.

"Outlier set-aside pool" means the total amount of payments for high cost outliers which are funded annually based on payments for high cost outliers during the year.

"Outliers" means cases with extraordinarily high or low costs when compared to other cases in the same DRG.

"Outpatient" means a client who is receiving medical services in other than an inpatient hospital setting.

"Outpatient care" means medical care provided other than inpatient services in a hospital setting.

"Outpatient hospital" means a hospital authorized by the department of health to provide outpatient services.

"Outpatient stay" means a hospital stay of less than or approximating twenty-four hours, except that cases involving the death of a client, delivery or initial care of a newborn, or transfer to another acute care facility are not deemed outpatient stays.

"Pain treatment facility" means an MAA-approved inpatient facility for pain management, in which a multidisciplinary approach is used to teach clients various techniques to live with chronic pain.

"Participating hospital" means a licensed hospital that accepts MAA clients.

"PAS length of stay (LOS)" means the average length of hospital stay for patients based on diagnosis and age, as determined by the Commission of Professional and Hospital Activities and published in a book entitled Length of Stay by Diagnosis, Western Region.  See also "professional activity study (PAS)" and "length of stay."

"Patient consent" means the informed consent of the client and/or the client's guardian to the procedure(s) to be performed upon or the treatment provided to the client, evidenced by the client's or guardian's signature on a consent form.

"Peer group" - See "hospital peer group."

"Peer group cap" means the reimbursement limit set for hospital peer groups B and C, established at the seventieth percentile of all hospitals within the same peer group for aggregate operating, capital, and direct medical education costs.

"Per diem charge" means the daily charge per client that a facility may bill or is allowed to receive as payment for its services.

"Personal comfort items" means items and services which do not contribute meaningfully to the treatment of an illness or injury or the functioning of a malformed body member.

"((Physical medicine and rehabilitation ())PM&R(()))" ((means a comprehensive inpatient rehabilitative program coordinated by a multidisciplinary team at an MAA-approved rehabilitation facility.  The program provides twenty-four-hour specialized nursing services and an intense level of therapy for a diagnostic category for which the client shows significant potential functional improvement.)) -See "Acute PM&R."

"Physician standby" means physician attendance without direct face-to-face patient contact and does not involve provision of care or services.

"Physician's current procedural terminology (CPT)" - See "CPT."

"Plan of treatment" or "plan of care" means the written plan of care for a patient which includes, but is not limited to, the physician's order for treatment and visits by the disciplines involved, the certification period, medications, and rationale indicating need for services.

"Pregnant and postpartum women (PPW)" means eligible female clients who are pregnant or within the first one hundred sixty days following delivery.

"Principal diagnosis" means the medical condition determined after study of the patient's medical records to be the principal cause of the patient's hospital stay.

"Principal procedure" means a procedure performed for definitive treatment rather than diagnostic or exploratory purposes, or because it was necessary due to a complication.

"Private room rate" means the rate customarily charged by a hospital for a one-bed room.

"Professional activity study (PAS)" means the compilation of inpatient hospital data by diagnosis and age, conducted by the Commission of Professional and Hospital Activities, which resulted in the determination of an average length of stay for patients.  The data are published in a book entitled Length of Stay by Diagnosis, Western Region.

"Professional component" means the part of a procedure or service that relies on the physician's professional skill or training, or the part of a reimbursement that recognizes the physician's cognitive skill.

"Profitability factor" means a factor used to calculate a hospital’s low income disproportionate share (LIDSH) payment. The methods used to determine the profitability factor are:

(1) Determine the net revenue of each LIDSH qualified hospital. The net revenue amount will be the "net revenue" figure identified on the MAA hospital disproportionate share application submitted by the hospital. (Net revenue may be calculated using a three year average net revenue using "net revenue" figures from the most recent three years’ MAA hospital disproportionate share applications.);

(2) Add the net revenue figures for all hospitals together to determine one total net revenue figure for all hospitals together to determine one total net revenue figure for all LIDSH qualified hospitals;

(3) Divide the hospital specific net revenue figure by the net revenue total for all hospitals; and

(4) Subtract the resulting amount from 1.00. The outcome is the profitability factor.

"Prognosis" means the probable outcome of a patient's illness, including the likelihood of improvement or deterioration in the severity of the illness, the likelihood for recurrence, and the patient's probable life span as a result of the illness.

"Prolonged service" means direct face-to-face patient services provided by a physician, either in the inpatient or outpatient setting, which involve time beyond what is usual for such services.

"Prospective payment system (PPS)" means a system that sets payment rates for a pre-determined period for defined services, before the services are provided.  The payment rates are based on economic forecasts and the projected cost of services for the pre-determined period.

"Psychiatric hospitals" means designated psychiatric facilities, state psychiatric hospitals, designated distinct part pediatric psychiatric units, and Medicare-certified distinct part psychiatric units in acute care hospitals.

"Public hospital district" means a hospital district established under chapter 70.44 RCW.

"Random claims sample" means a sample in which all of the items are selected randomly, using a random number table or computer program, based on a scientific method of assuring that each item has an equal chance of being included in the sample.  See also "audit claims sample" and "stratified random sample."

"Ratable" means a hospital-specific adjustment factor applied to the cost-based conversion factor (CBCF) to determine state-only program payment rates to hospitals.

"Ratio of costs to charges (RCC)" means the methodology used to pay hospitals for services exempt from the DRG payment method.  It also refers to the factor applied to a hospital's allowed charges for medically necessary services to determine payment to the hospital for these DRG-exempt services.

"Readmission" means the situation in which a client who was admitted as an inpatient and discharged from the hospital is back as an inpatient within seven days as a result of one or more of the following: A new flair of illness, complication(s) from the first admission, a therapeutic admission following a diagnostic admission, a planned readmission following discharge, or a premature hospital discharge.

"Rebasing" means the process of recalculating the hospital cost-based conversion factors using more current data.

"Recalibration" means the process of recalculating DRG relative weights using more current data.

"Regional support network (RSN)" means a county authority or a group of county authorities recognized and certified by the department, that contracts with the department per chapters 38.52, 71.05, 71.24, 71.34, and 74.09 RCW and chapters 275-54, 275-55, and 275-57 WAC.

"Rehabilitation units" means specifically identified rehabilitation hospitals and designated rehabilitation units of general hospitals that meet Medicare criteria for distinct part rehabilitation units.

"Relative weights" - See "DRG relative weights."

"Remote hospitals" means hospitals located outside selective contracting areas (SCAs), or which:

(1) Are more than ten miles from the nearest contract hospital in the SCA; and

(2) Have fewer than seventy five beds; and

(3) Have fewer than five hundred Medicaid admissions in a two-year period.

"Reserve days" means the days beyond the ninetieth day of hospitalization of a Medicare patient for a benefit period or spell of illness.  See also "lifetime hospitalization reserve."

"Retrospective payment system" means a system that sets payment rates for defined services according to historic costs.  The payment rates reflect economic conditions experienced in the past.

"Revenue code" means a nationally-used three-digit coding system for billing inpatient and outpatient hospital services, home health services, and hospice services.

"Room and board" means services provided in a nursing facility, including:

(1) Assistance in the activities of daily living.

(2) Socialization activities.

(3) Administration of medication.

(4) Maintenance of the resident's room.

(5) Supervision and assistance in the use of durable medical equipment and prescribed therapies.

See "accommodation costs" for services included in the hospital room and board category.

"Rural health clinic" means a clinic that is located in a rural area designated as a shortage area, and is not a rehabilitation agency or a facility primarily for the care and treatment of mental diseases.

"Rural hospital" means a rural health care facility capable of providing or assuring availability of health services in a rural area.

"Secondary diagnosis" means a diagnosis other than the principal diagnosis for which an inpatient is admitted to a hospital.

"Selective contracting area (SCA)" means an area in which hospitals participate in competitive bidding for hospital contracts.  The boundaries of an SCA are based on historical patterns of hospital use by Medicaid patients.

"Selective hospital contracting program" or "selective contracting" means a competitive bidding program for hospitals within a specified geographic area to provide inpatient hospital services to medical assistance clients.

"Semi-private room rate" means a rate customarily charged for a hospital room with two to four beds; this charge is generally lower than a private room rate and higher than a ward room.  See also "multiple occupancy rate."

"Short stay" means a hospital stay of less than or approximating twenty-four hours where an inpatient admission was not appropriate.

"Special care unit" means a Medicare-certified hospital unit where intensive care, coronary care, psychiatric intensive care, burn treatment or other specialized care is provided.

"Specialty hospitals" means children's hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, cancer research centers or other hospitals which specialize in treating a particular group of clients or diseases.

"Spenddown" means the amount of excess income MAA has determined that a client has available to meet his or her medical expenses.  The client becomes eligible for Medicaid coverage only after he or she meets the spenddown requirement.

"Stat laboratory charges" means the charges by a laboratory for performing a test or tests immediately.  "Stat." is the abbreviation for the Latin word "statim" meaning immediately.

"State plan" means the plan filed by the department with the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), outlining how the state will administer the hospital program.

"Stratified random sample" means a sample consisting of claims drawn randomly, using statistical formulas, from each stratum of a universe of paid claims stratified according to the dollar value of the claims.  See also "audit claims sample" and "random claims sample."

"Subacute care" means care to a patient which is less intrusive than that given at an acute care hospital.  Skilled nursing, nursing care facilities and other facilities provide subacute care services.

"Surgery" means the medical diagnosis and treatment of injury, deformity or disease by manual and instrumental operations.  For reimbursement purposes, surgical procedures are those designated in CPT as procedure codes 10000 to 69999.

"Swing-bed days" means a bed day on which an inpatient is receiving skilled nursing services in a swing bed at the hospital's census hour.  The hospital bed must be certified by the health care financing administration for both acute care and skilled nursing services.

"Teaching hospital" means, for purposes of the teaching hospital assistance program disproportionate share hospital (THAPDSH), the University of Washington Medical Center and Harborview ((hospital)) Medical Center.

"Technical component" means the part of a procedure or service that relates to the equipment set-up and technician's time, or the part of a reimbursement that recognizes the equipment cost and technician time.

"Tertiary care hospital" means a specialty care hospital providing highly specialized services to clients with more complex medical needs than acute care services.

"Total patient days" means all patient days in a hospital for a given reporting period, excluding days for skilled nursing, nursing care, and observation days.

"Transfer" means to move a client from one acute care facility to another.

"Transferring hospital" means the hospital transferring a client to another acute care facility.

"Trauma care facility" means a facility certified by the department of health as a level I, II ((or)), III, IV or V facility.

"Trauma care service" - See department of health’s WAC 246-976-935.

"UB-92" means the uniform billing document intended for use nationally by hospitals, hospital-based skilled nursing facilities, home health, and hospice agencies in billing third party payers for services provided to clients.

"Unbundled services" means services which are excluded from the DRG payment to a hospital, including but not limited to, physician professional services and certain nursing services.

"Uncompensated care" - See "charity care."

"Uniform cost reporting requirements" means a standard accounting and reporting format as defined by Medicare.

"Uninsured indigent patient" means an individual who receives hospital inpatient and/or outpatient services and who cannot meet the cost of services provided because the individual has no or insufficient health insurance or other resources to cover the cost.

"Usual and customary charge (UCC)" means the charge customarily made to the general public for a procedure or service, or the rate charged other contractors for the service if the general public is not served.

"Vendor rate increase" means an inflation adjustment determined by the legislature, used to periodically increase reimbursement to vendors, including health care providers, that do business with the state.

[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 42 USC 1395 x(v), 42 CFR 447.271, 447.11303, and 447.2652.  99-06-046, § 388-550-1050, filed 2/26/99, effective 3/29/99.  Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.730, 74.04.050, 70.01.010, 74.09.200, [74.09.]500, [74.09.]530 and 43.20B.020.  98-01-124, § 388-550-1050, filed 12/18/97, effective 1/18/98.]

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