PROPOSED RULES
SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES
(Health and Recovery Services Administration)
Original Notice.
Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 09-04-072.
Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: The department is amending WAC 388-550-4670 CPE payment program -- "Hold harmless" provision, 388-550-4900 Disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments -- General provisions, and 388-550-5150 Payment method -- General assistance-unemployable disproportionate share hospital (GAUDSH).
Hearing Location(s): Blake Office Park East, Rose Room, 4500 10th Avenue S.E., Lacey, WA 98503 (one block north of the intersection of Pacific Avenue S.E. and Alhadeff Lane. A map or directions are available at http://www.dshs.wa.gov/msa/rpau/docket.html or by calling (360) 664-6094), on April 27, 2010, at 10:00 a.m.
Date of Intended Adoption: Not sooner than April 28, 2010.
Submit Written Comments to: DSHS Rules Coordinator, P.O. Box 45850, Olympia, WA 98504-5850, delivery 4500 10th Avenue S.E., Lacey, WA 98503, e-mail DSHSRPAURulesCoordinator@dshs.wa.gov, fax (360) 664-6185, by
5 p.m. on April 27, 2010.
Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Jennisha Johnson, DSHS rules consultant, by April 6, 2010, TTY (360) 664-6178 or (360) 664-6094 or by e-mail at johnsjl4@dshs.wa.gov.
Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: The department of social and health services (the department) is proposing amendments that pertain to the disproportionate share hospital (DSH) program and the certified public expenditure (CPE) payment program hold harmless payments in order to meet the legislature's targeted budget expenditure levels. The rules will replace the emergency rule that is currently in effect under WSR 10-06-032 filed on February 23, 2010.
Reasons Supporting Proposal: The amendments are required to fully meet the legislatively mandated appropriation reduction under sections 201 and 209 of the final legislative operating budget for fiscal years 2010 and 2011 with respect to the determination of payment rates for inpatient and outpatient hospital services.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.057, 74.08.090, 74.09.500.
Statute Being Implemented: RCW 74.04.050, 74.04.057, 74.08.090, 74.09.500; sections 201 and 209 of 2009-2011 budget bill.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Name of Proponent: Department of social and health services, governmental.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Kathy Sayre, P.O. Box 45505, Olympia, WA 98504-5504, (360) 725-1342; Implementation and Enforcement: Sandy Stith, P.O. Box 45500, Olympia, WA 98504-5500, (360) 725-1949.
No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW. These rules do not impact small businesses.
A cost-benefit analysis is required under RCW 34.05.328. A preliminary cost-benefit analysis may be obtained by contacting Sandy Stith, Health and Recovery Services Administration, P.O. Box 45500, Olympia, WA 98504-45500, phone (360) 725-1949, fax (360) 753-9152, e-mail sandy.stith@dshs.wa.gov.
March 17, 2010
Katherine I. Vasquez
Rules Coordinator
4103.5(1) The department:
(a) Uses historical cost and payment data trended forward to calculate prospective hold harmless grant payment amounts for the current state fiscal year (SFY); and
(b) Reconciles these hold harmless grant payment amounts
when the actual claims data ((is)) are available for the
current fiscal year.
(2) For ((each state fiscal year)) SFYs 2006 through
2009, the department calculates what the hospital would have
been paid under the methodologies otherwise in effect for the
((state fiscal year ())SFY(())) as the sum of:
(a) The total payments for inpatient claims for patients admitted during the fiscal year, calculated by repricing the claims using:
(i) For SFYs 2006 and 2007, the inpatient payment method in effect during SFY 2005; or
(ii) For SFYs 2008 and ((beyond)) 2009, the payment
method that would otherwise be in effect during the CPE
payment program year if the CPE payment program had not been
enacted.
(b) The total net disproportionate share hospital and state grant payments paid for SFY 2005.
(3) For SFY 2010 and beyond, the department calculates what the hospital would have been paid under the methodologies otherwise in effect for the SFY as the sum of:
(a) The total of the inpatient claim payment amounts that would have been paid during the SFY had the hospital not been in the CPE payment program;
(b) One-half of the indigent assistance disproportionate share hospital payment amounts paid to and retained by each hospital during SFY 2005; and
(c) All of the other disproportionate share hospital payment amounts paid to and retained by each hospital during SFY 2005 to the extent the same disproportionate share hospital programs exist in the 2009-2011 biennium.
(4) For each SFY, the department determines total state and federal payments made under the program, including:
(a) Inpatient claim payments;
(b) Disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments; and
(c) Supplemental upper payment limit payments ((made for
SFY 2006 and 2007)), as applicable.
(((4) The amount determined in subsection (3) of this
section is subtracted from the amount calculated in subsection
(2) of this section to determine the gross state grant amount
necessary to hold the hospital harmless. If the resulting
number is positive, the hospital is entitled to a grant in
that amount, subject to legislative directives and
appropriations.
(a))) (5) A hospital may receive a hold harmless grant, subject to legislative directives and appropriations, when the following calculation results in a positive number:
(a) For SFY 2006 through SFY 2009, the amount derived in subsection (4) of this section is subtracted from the amount derived in subsection (2) of this section; or
(b) For SFY 2010 and beyond, the amount derived in subsection (4) of this section is subtracted from the amount derived in subsection (3) of this section.
(6) The department calculates interim hold harmless and final hold harmless grant amounts as follows:
(a) An interim hold harmless grant amount is calculated approximately ten months after the end of the SFY to include the paid claims for the same SFY admissions. Claims are subject to utilization review prior to the interim hold harmless calculation. Prospective grant payments made under subsection (1) of this section are deducted from the calculated interim hold harmless grant amount to determine the net grant payment amount due to or due from the hospital.
(b) The ((department calculates the)) final hold harmless
grant amount is calculated at such time as the final allowable
federal portions of program payments are determined. The
procedure is the same as the interim grant calculation but it
includes all additional claims that have been paid or adjusted
since the interim hold harmless calculation. Claims are
subject to utilization review and audit prior to the final
calculation of the hold harmless amount. Interim grant
payments determined under (a) of this subsection are deducted
from this final calculation to determine the net final hold
harmless amount due to or due from the hospital.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090 and 74.09.500. 08-20-032, § 388-550-4670, filed 9/22/08, effective 10/23/08; 07-14-090, § 388-550-4670, filed 6/29/07, effective 8/1/07. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.500, and 2005 c 518 § 209(9). 06-11-100, § 388-550-4670, filed 5/17/06, effective 6/17/06.]
(2) No hospital has a legal entitlement to any DSH payment. A hospital may receive DSH payments only if:
(a) It satisfies the requirements of 42 USC 1396r-4;
(b) It satisfies all the requirements of department rules and policies; and
(c) The legislature appropriates sufficient funds.
(3) For purposes of eligibility for DSH payments, the following definitions apply:
(a) "Base year" means ((the hospital fiscal year or)) the
twelve-month medicare cost report year that ended during the
calendar year immediately preceding the year in which the
state fiscal year (SFY) for which the DSH application is being
made begins.
(b) "Case mix index (CMI)" means the average of diagnosis
related group (DRG) weights for all of an individual
hospital's DRG-paid medicaid claims during the ((state fiscal
year (SFY))) SFY two years prior to the SFY for which the DSH
application is being made.
(c) "Charity care" means necessary hospital care rendered to persons unable to pay for the hospital services or unable to pay the deductibles or coinsurance amounts required by a third-party payer. The charity care amount is determined in accordance with the hospital's published charity care policy.
(d) (("Disproportionate share hospital (DSH) cap" means
the maximum amount per state fiscal year that the state can
distribute in DSH payments to hospitals (statewide DSH cap),
or the maximum amount of DSH payments a hospital may receive
during a state fiscal year (hospital-specific DSH cap).
(e))) "DSH reporting data file (DRDF)" means the
information submitted by hospitals to the department which the
department uses to verify medicaid ((patient)) client
eligibility and ((patient)) applicable inpatient days.
(((f))) (e) "Hospital-specific DSH cap" means the maximum
amount of DSH payments a hospital may receive from the
department during a ((state fiscal year)) SFY. ((For a
critical access hospital (CAH), the DSH cap is based strictly
on the net cost to the hospital of providing services to
uninsured patients)) If a hospital does not qualify for DSH,
the department will not calculate the hospital-specific DSH
cap and the hospital will not receive DSH payments.
(((g))) (f) "Inpatient medicaid days" means inpatient
days attributed to clients eligible for Title XIX medicaid
programs. Excluded from this count are inpatient days
attributed to clients eligible for state administered
programs, medicare Part A, Title XXI, the refugee program and
the take charge program.
(g) "Low income utilization rate (LIUR)" ((means)) the
sum of ((these)) two percentages: (((1)))
(i) The ratio of payments received by the hospital for
patient services provided to clients under medicaid (including
managed care) ((and state-administered programs)), plus cash
subsidies received by the hospital from state and local
governments for patient services, divided by total payments
received by the hospital from all patient categories; plus
(((2)))
(ii) The ratio of inpatient charity care charges
(((excluding contractual allowances))) less inpatient cash
subsidies received by the hospital from state and local
governments, less contractual allowances and discounts,
divided by total ((billed)) charges for inpatient services. ((The department uses LIUR as one criterion to determine a
hospital's eligibility for the low income disproportionate
share hospital (LIDSH) program. To qualify for LIDSH, a
hospital's LIUR must be greater than twenty-five percent.))
(h) "Medicaid inpatient utilization rate (MIPUR)" ((means
the number of inpatient days of service provided by a hospital
to medicaid clients during its hospital fiscal year or
medicare cost report year, divided by the number of inpatient
days of service provided by that hospital to all patients
during the same period)) is calculated as a fraction
(expressed as a percentage), the numerator of which is the
hospital's number of inpatient days attributable to clients
who (for such days) were eligible for medical assistance
during the base year (regardless of whether such clients
received medical assistance on a fee-for-service basis or
through a managed care entity), and the denominator of which
is the total number of the hospital's inpatient days in that
period. "Inpatient days" include each day in which a person
(including a newborn) is an inpatient in the hospital, whether
or not the person is in a specialized ward and whether or not
the person remains in the hospital for lack of suitable
placement elsewhere.
(i) "Medicare cost report year" means the twelve-month period included in the annual cost report a medicare-certified hospital or institutional provider is required by law to submit to its fiscal intermediary.
(j) "Nonrural hospital" means a hospital that ((is not a
peer group E hospital or a small rural hospital and)):
(i) Is not participating in the "full cost" public hospital certified public expenditure (CPE) payment program as described in WAC 388-550-4650;
(ii) Is not designated as an "institution for mental diseases (IMD)" as defined in WAC 388-550-2600 (2)(d);
(iii) Is not a small rural hospital as defined in (n) of this subsection; and
(iv) Is located ((inside)) in the state of Washington or
in a designated bordering city. For DSH purposes, the
department considers as nonrural any hospital located in a
designated bordering city.
(k) "Obstetric services" means routine, nonemergency obstetric services and the delivery of babies.
(l) "Service year" means the one year period used to measure the costs and associated charges for hospital services. The service year may refer to a hospital's fiscal year or medicare cost report year, or to a state fiscal year.
(m) "Statewide disproportionate share hospital (DSH) cap" is the maximum amount per SFY that the state can distribute in DSH payments to all qualifying hospitals during a SFY.
(((m))) (n) "Small rural hospital" means a hospital that:
(i) Is not ((a peer group E hospital,)) participating in
the "full cost" public hospital certified public expenditure
(CPE) payment program as described in WAC 388-550-4650;
(ii) Is not designated as an "institution for mental diseases (IMD)" as defined in WAC 388-550-2600 (2)(d);
(iii) Has fewer than seventy-five acute ((licensed))
beds((,));
(iv) Is located ((inside)) in the state of
Washington((,)); and
(v) Is located in a city or town with a nonstudent
population of no more than seventeen thousand ((one)) eight
hundred ((fifteen)) six in calendar year ((2006)) 2008, as
determined by ((the Washington State office of financial
management estimate. The nonstudent population ceiling
increases cumulatively by two percent each succeeding state
fiscal year)) population data reported by the Washington state
office of financial management population of cities, towns and
counties used for the allocation of state revenues. This
nonstudent population is used for SFY 2010, which begins July
1, 2009. For each subsequent SFY, the nonstudent population
is increased by two percent.
(((n))) (o) "Uninsured patient" ((means an individual who
does not have health insurance that would apply to the
hospital service the individual sought and received. An
individual who did have health insurance that applied to the
hospital service the individual sought and received, is
considered an insured individual for DSH program purposes,
even if the insurer did not pay the full charges for the
services. When determining the cost of a hospital service
provided to an uninsured patient, the department uses as a
guide whether the service would have been covered under
medicaid)) is a person without creditable coverage as defined
in 45 C.F.R. 146.113. (An "insured patient," for DSH program
purposes, is a person with creditable coverage, even if the
insurer did not pay the full charges for the service.) To
determine whether a service provided to an uninsured patient
may be included for DSH application and calculation purposes,
the department considers only services that would have been
covered and paid through the department's fee-for-service
process.
(4) To be considered for a DSH payment for each SFY, a
hospital ((located in the state of Washington or in a
designated bordering city)) must ((submit to the department a
completed and final DSH application by the due date. The due
date will be posted on the department's web site)) meet the
criteria in this section:
(a) DSH application requirement.
(i) Only a hospital located in the state of Washington or in a designated bordering city is eligible to apply for and receive DSH payments. An institution for mental disease (IMD) owned and operated by the state of Washington is exempt from the DSH application requirement.
(ii) A hospital that meets DSH program criteria is eligible for DSH payments in any SFY only if the department receives the hospital's DSH application by the deadline posted on the department's website.
(b) DSH application review and correction period.
(i) This subsection applies only to DSH applications that meet the requirements under (a) of this subsection.
(ii) The department reviews and may verify any information provided by the hospital on a DSH application. However, each hospital has the responsibility for ensuring its DSH application is complete and accurate.
(iii) If the department finds that a hospital's application is incomplete or contains incorrect information, the department will notify the hospital. The hospital must resubmit a new, corrected application. The department must receive the new DSH application from the hospital by the deadline for corrected DSH applications posted on the department's website.
(iv) If a hospital finds that its application is incomplete or contains incorrect information, it may choose to submit changes and/or corrections to the DSH application. The department must receive the corrected, complete, and signed DSH application from the hospital by the deadline for corrected DSH applications posted on the department's website.
(c) Official DSH application.
(i) The department considers as official the last signed DSH application submitted by the hospital as of the deadline for corrected DSH applications. A hospital cannot change its official DSH application. Only those hospitals with an official DSH application are eligible for DSH payments.
(ii) If the department finds that a hospital's official DSH application is incomplete or contains inaccurate information that affects the hospital's LIDSH payment(s), the hospital does not qualify for, will not receive, and cannot retain, LIDSH payment(s). Refer to WAC 388-550-5000.
(5) A hospital is a disproportionate share hospital for a
specific SFY if the hospital ((submits a completed DSH
application for that specific year, if it)) satisfies the
((utilization rate)) medicaid inpatient utilization rate
(MIPUR) requirement (discussed in (a) of this subsection), and
the obstetric services requirement (discussed in (b) of this
subsection).
(a) The hospital must have a ((medicaid inpatient
utilization rate ())MIPUR(())) greater than one percent; and
(b) Unless one of the exceptions described in (i)(A) or (B) of this subsection applies, the hospital must have at least two obstetricians who have staff privileges at the hospital and who have agreed to provide obstetric services to eligible individuals.
(i) The obstetric services requirement does not apply to a hospital that:
(A) Provides inpatient services predominantly to individuals younger than age eighteen; or
(B) Did not offer nonemergency obstetric services to the general public as of December 22, 1987, when section 1923 of the Social Security Act was enacted.
(ii) For hospitals located in rural areas, "obstetrician" means any physician with staff privileges at the hospital to perform nonemergency obstetric procedures.
(6) ((To determine a hospital's eligibility for any DSH
program, the department uses the criteria in this section and
the information obtained from the DSH application submitted by
the hospital, subject to the following:
(a) Charity care. If the hospital's DSH application and audited financial statements for the relevant fiscal year do not agree on the amount for charity care, the department uses the lower amount listed. For purposes of calculating a hospital's LIUR, the department allows a hospital to claim charity care amounts related to inpatient services only. A hospital must submit a copy of its charity care policy for the relevant fiscal year as part of the hospital's DSH application.
(b) Total inpatient hospital days. If the hospital's DSH application and its medicare cost report do not agree on the number of total inpatient hospital days, the department uses the higher number listed to determine the hospital's MIPUR. Labor and delivery days count towards total inpatient hospital days. Nursing facility and swing bed days do not count towards total inpatient hospital days)) To determine a hospital's MIPUR, the department uses inpatient days as follows:
(a) The total inpatient days on the official DSH application if this number is greater than the total inpatient hospital days on the medicare cost report; and
(b) The MMIS medicaid days as determined by the DSH reporting data file (DRDF) process if the Washington state medicaid days on the official DSH application do not match the eligible days on the final DRDF. If the hospital did not submit a DRDF, the department uses paid medicaid days from MMIS.
(7) The department administers the following DSH programs (depending on legislative budget appropriations):
(a) Low income disproportionate share hospital (LIDSH);
(b) Institution for mental diseases disproportionate share hospital (IMDDSH):
(c) General assistance-unemployable disproportionate share hospital (GAUDSH);
(d) Small rural disproportionate share hospital (SRDSH);
(e) Small rural indigent assistance disproportionate share hospital (SRIADSH);
(f) Nonrural indigent assistance disproportionate share hospital (NRIADSH);
(g) Public hospital disproportionate share hospital (PHDSH); and
(h) Psychiatric indigent inpatient disproportionate share hospital (PIIDSH).
(8) Except for IMDDSH, the department allows a hospital
to receive any one or all of the DSH payment ((adjustments))
it qualifies for, up to the individual hospital's DSH cap (see
subsection (10) of this section) and provided that total DSH
payments do not exceed the statewide DSH cap. See WAC 388-550-5130 regarding IMDDSH. To be eligible for payment
under multiple DSH programs, a hospital must meet:
(a) The basic requirements in subsection (5) of this section; and
(b) The eligibility requirements for the particular DSH payment, as discussed in the applicable DSH program WAC.
(9) For each SFY, the department calculates DSH payments
((due an)) for each DSH program for eligible hospitals using
data from ((the)) each hospital's base year. The department
does not use base year data for GAUDSH and PIIDSH payments,
which are calculated based on specific claims data.
(10) The department's total DSH payments to a hospital
for any given SFY cannot exceed the ((individual hospital's
annual DSH limit (also known as the)) hospital-specific DSH
cap(())) for that SFY. Except for critical access hospitals
(CAHs), the department determines a hospital's DSH cap as
follows. The department:
(a) ((The cost to the hospital of providing services to
medicaid clients, including clients served under medicaid
managed care organization (MCO) plans)) Uses the overall ratio
of costs-to-charges (RCC) to determine costs for:
(i) Medicaid services, including medicaid services provided under managed care organization (MCO) plans; and
(ii) Uninsured charges; then
(b) ((Less the amount paid by the state under the non-DSH
payment provision of the medicaid state plan)) Subtracts all
payments related to the costs derived in (a) of this
subsection; then
(c) ((Plus the cost to the hospital of providing services
to uninsured patients;
(d) Less any cash payments made by or on behalf of uninsured patients; and
(e) Plus)) Makes any adjustments required and/or authorized by federal statute or regulation.
(11) A CAH's DSH cap is based strictly on the cost to the
hospital of providing services to ((uninsured patients. In
calculating a CAH's DSH cap, the department deducts payments
received by the hospital from and on behalf of the uninsured
patients from the hospital's costs of services for the
uninsured patients)) medicaid clients served under MCO plans,
and uninsured patients. To determine a CAH's DSH cap amount,
the department:
(a) Uses the overall RCC to determine costs for:
(i) Medicaid services provided under MCO plans; and
(ii) Uninsured charges; then
(b) Subtracts the total payments made by, or on behalf of, the medicaid clients serviced under MCO plans, and uninsured patients.
(12) In any given federal fiscal year, the total of the department's DSH payments cannot exceed the statewide DSH cap as published in the federal register.
(13) If the department's DSH payments for any given federal fiscal year exceed the statewide DSH cap, the department will adjust DSH payments to each hospital to account for the amount overpaid. The department makes adjustments in the following program order:
(a) PHDSH;
(b) SRIADSH;
(c) SRDSH;
(d) NRIADSH;
(e) GAUDSH;
(f) PIIDSH;
(g) IMDDSH; and
(h) LIDSH.
(14) If the statewide DSH cap is exceeded, the department will recoup DSH payments made under the various DSH programs, in the order of precedence described in subsection (13) of this section, starting with PHDSH, until the amount exceeding the statewide DSH cap is reduced to zero. See specific program WACs for description of how amounts to be recouped are determined.
(15) The total amount the department may distribute
annually under a particular DSH program is capped by
legislative appropriation, except for PHDSH, GAUDSH, and
PIIDSH, which are not fixed ((pools)) amounts. Any changes in
payment amount to a hospital in a particular DSH ((pool))
program means a redistribution of payments within that DSH
((pool)) program. When necessary, the department will recoup
from hospitals to make additional payments to other hospitals
within that DSH ((pool)) program.
(16) If funds in a specific DSH program need to be redistributed because of legislative, administrative, or other state action, only those hospitals eligible for that DSH program will be involved in the redistribution.
(a) If an individual hospital has been overpaid by a
specified amount, the department will recoup that overpayment
amount from the hospital and redistribute it among the other
eligible hospitals in the DSH ((pool)) program. The
additional DSH payment to be given to each of the other
hospitals from the recouped amount is proportional to each
hospital's share of the particular DSH ((pool)) program.
(b) If an individual hospital has been underpaid by a
specified amount, the department will pay that hospital the
additional amount owed by recouping from the other hospitals
in the DSH ((pool)) program. The amount to be recouped from
each of the other hospitals is proportional to each hospital's
share of the particular DSH ((pool)) program.
(17) All information ((submitted by a hospital)) related
to ((its)) a hospital's DSH application is subject to audit by
the department or its designee. ((The department may audit
any, none, or all DSH applications for a given state fiscal
year.)) The department determines the extent and timing of
the audits. For example, the department or its designee may
choose to do a desk review ((upon receipt)) of an individual
hospital's DSH application and/or supporting documentation, or
audit all hospitals that qualified for a particular DSH
program after payments have been distributed under that
program.
(18) If a hospital's submission of incorrect information or failure to submit correct information results in DSH overpayment to that hospital, the department will recoup the overpayment amount, in accordance with the provisions of RCW 74.09.220 and 43.20B.695.
(19) DSH calculations use fiscal year data, and DSH
payments are distributed based on funding for a specific
((state fiscal year)) SFY. Therefore, unless otherwise
specified, changes and clarifications to DSH program rules
apply for the full ((state fiscal year)) SFY in which the
rules are adopted.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.500. 07-14-090, § 388-550-4900, filed 6/29/07, effective 8/1/07; 06-08-046, § 388-550-4900, filed 3/30/06, effective 4/30/06. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.04.050, 74.08.090. 05-12-132, § 388-550-4900, filed 6/1/05, effective 7/1/05. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.04.050, and 2003 1st sp.s. c 25. 04-12-044, § 388-550-4900, filed 5/28/04, effective 7/1/04. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.500, 74.09.035(1), and 43.88.290. 03-13-055, § 388-550-4900, filed 6/12/03, effective 7/13/03. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.730 and 42 U.S.C. 1396r-4. 99-14-040, § 388-550-4900, filed 6/30/99, effective 7/1/99. 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, § 388-550-4900, filed 12/18/97, effective 1/18/98.]
(a) Meets the criteria in WAC 388-550-4900;
(b) Is an in-state or designated bordering city hospital;
(c) Provides services to clients eligible under the medical care services program; and
(d) Has a medicaid inpatient utilization rate (MIPUR) of one percent or more.
(2) The department determines the GAUDSH payment for each eligible hospital in accordance with:
(a) WAC 388-550-4800 for inpatient hospital claims submitted for general assistance unemployable (GAU) clients; and
(b) WAC 388-550-7000 through 388-550-7600 and other sections in chapter 388-550 WAC that pertain to outpatient hospital claims submitted for GAU clients.
(3) The department makes GAUDSH payments to a hospital on a claim-specific basis.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.500. 07-14-090, § 388-550-5150, filed 6/29/07, effective 8/1/07; 06-08-046, § 388-550-5150, filed 3/30/06, effective 4/30/06. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.500, 74.09.035(1), and 43.88.290. 03-13-055, § 388-550-5150, filed 6/12/03, effective 7/13/03. Statutory Authority: RCW 74.08.090, 74.09.730, chapter 74.46 RCW and 42 U.S.C. 1396r-4. 99-14-025, § 388-550-5150, filed 6/28/99, effective 7/1/99. 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, § 388-550-5150, filed 12/18/97, effective 1/18/98.]