Senate Finance Committee Hearing
Introduction
I would like to thank Committee Chairman
Since 1989
Throughout our partnership with CMS we served as the Part A East QIC (since 2005), the Part A West (from 2008 to 2015), the Part B South QIC (from 2005 to 2014), the Part C QIC (since 1989), the Part D QIC (since 2006) and the Administrative QIC (since 2004).
Our QIC work is the hallmark of our largest market segment - Independent Benefit Appeals and Independent Medical Review. We are the largest provider of these services in
The Qualified Independent Contractor Program
Pursuant to 1869(a)(1) of the Social Security Act a qualified independent contractor (QIC) is defined as "an entity or organization that is independent of any organization under contract with the Secretary that makes initial determinations". The organizations encompassed within the meaning of section 1869(a)(1) include, but are not limited to, Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Zone Program Integrity Contractors (ZPICs), Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs), and/or Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs).
The primary goals of the QIC program include:
. Timely adjudication of reconsiderations and expedited reconsiderations of initial determinations using established protocols
. Case management and documentation into the Medicare Appeals System (MAS) (including document imaging)
. Collection and transmission of information regarding the receipt and disposition of reconsiderations and expedited reconsiderations via the MAS
. Integrated document imaging to produce a complete second level electronic case file
. Participation and coordination with other entities in the
CMS awards task orders to perform QIC work under an Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract for QIC work based on established jurisdictions and/or claim type as follows:
. Two QIC jurisdiction-based task orders (East and West) for Part A appeals
. Two QIC jurisdiction-based task orders (North and South) for Part B appeals,
. One QIC jurisdiction-based task order for DME appeals
. One QIC task order for Part C appeals
. One QIC task order for Part D appeals
In addition to these seven task orders, CMS awards one task order to perform administrative and data analysis tasks for Parts A, B, and DME of the QIC program, otherwise referred to as the Administrative QIC (AdQIC) task order.
At a very high level the process of an appeal is illustrated below.
There is a five-level appeals process n1 that affords providers, suppliers, beneficiaries, and other parties an opportunity to dispute initial payment decisions on
Appeal Level Medicare Fee-For-Service (FFS) Claim Appeals Medicare Part C Appeals Medicare Part D Appeals
Level One Redetermination by a Medicare Administrative Contractor: Reconsideration by Health Plan Redetermination by Part D Plan sponsor
An independent review of an initial determination of a
Appeal Level Medicare Fee-For-Service (FFS) Claim Appeals Medicare Part C Appeals Medicare Part D Appeals
Level Two Reconsideration by a QIC: Reconsideration by an Independent Review Entity (IRE) n2: Reconsideration by an IRE n3:
An independent, on-the-record, review of an initial determination, including the redetermination and all issues related to payment of the claim. An independent review of a health plan's adverse reconsideration or an independent review when the health plan fails to meet the adjudicatory timeframes for an organization determination or reconsideration request. An independent review of a sponsor's adverse redetermination or an independent review when the plan fails to meet the adjudicatory timeframes of an initial coverage determination or redetermination request.
Level Three Hearings before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) within the
Under FFS provisions, if a party is dissatisfied with a QIC's reconsideration or if the adjudication period for the QIC to complete the reconsiderations has elapsed, a party may request an ALJ hearing. Under Part C provisions, if any party to the reconsideration (except the Health Plan) is dissatisfied with the IRE's reconsideration determination, the party may request an ALJ hearing. Under Part D provisions, if the enrollee or enrollee's representative is dissatisfied with IRE's reconsideration, the enrollee may request an ALJ hearing.
The amount in controversy (AIC) to appeal at the ALJ level for 2015 is
Level Four Review by the
An on-the-record review of an ALJ's decision.
Level Five Judicial review in
A review of the decision by
Part A Qualified Independent Contractors (QIC)
Medicare Part A covers some of the costs of providing medically necessary inpatient hospital care, skilled nursing facility care following a hospital stay, home health care, and hospice care. Individuals entitled to
Part A also provides CMS support in ALJ hearings through party and non-party participation in a select number of hearings and through adhoc reporting.
Volume Challenges
MAXIMUS faced several issues that are directly related to the rapid, unprecedented volume that inundated us with appeals in spring and summer of 2013. As detailed in Error! Reference source not found., we were faced with drastic increases in the appeal volumes that were not anticipated in the initial contract. These increases were so dramatic that they effectively constituted requirements far beyond any foreseeable expectation of performance under this contract. To provide some context, in
In order to respond to the increasingly high volumes of appeals, we established an approach to increase our staff and our contracted physician medical reviewer panel and by adding subcontractors. We built and implemented Expert Gateway (EG) to allow remote users to connect to our Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) server. The driving force behind using the VDI solution was data security. The VDI is a secure environment that is controlled by MAXIMUS. Users cannot save data locally or copy, paste, or print data. All data is processed, saved, and archived on our VDI server.
In addition to adding staff and improving technology to address the increased volume we evolved our work processes. Such process changes included developing specialized teams to address specific case types allowing them to become Subject Matter Experts in their case types. This approach allowed us to be more agile with our responsiveness to volume fluctuations as we are able to rapidly increase the number of available clinicians. Using increased staff, new technology and improved processes,
Part B South Qualified Independent Contractors (QIC)
Medicare Part B covers some of the costs of receiving medically necessary services from physicians and other health care providers. Part B also covers some of the costs of medically necessary outpatient care, durable medical equipment, transportation, home health care, and some preventive services.
Part B also provides CMS support in ALJ hearings through party and non-party participation in a select number of hearings and through adhoc reporting.
Part C Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC)
MAXIMUS has been the sole Part C contractor since 1989 (the contract was originally held by a firm which MAXIMUS acquired). We address expedited pre-service cases (72-hour turnaround), standard pre-service cases (30-day turnaround) and standard retrospective claim payment cases (60-day turnaround) from various types of
We review appeals for denials related to all services covered by Medicare Parts A and B: inpatient hospital, skilled nursing facility, hospice, and home health care and services; services from doctors and other health care providers, outpatient care, durable medical equipment; and some preventive services. In addition, most plans also include extra ("supplemental") benefits and services such as routine dental care, eyewear, or fitness programs. In addition to medical necessity issues, we also review cost-sharing, "lock-in," and health plan dismissals. Most appeals are submitted by
Part D Qualified Independent Contractors (QIC)
The Part D QIC provides independent reconsideration of denials affecting
The Administrative QIC (ADQIC)
MAXIMUS, through our wholly owned subsidiary Q2Administrators, has been the AdQIC since 2004. Under the AdQIC task, we provide administrative processes associated with Fee-for-Service (FFS) QICs. We develop, deliver, and update standard work protocols and training curriculums; produce Joint Operating Agreement (JOA) templates between the QICs and outside contractors; analyze data to identify appeals trends and spot improvement opportunities; analyze ALJ decisions for possible Departmental Appeals Board (DAB) review; manage document imaging; retain and store case files; and prepare draft CMS reports to
Five Year QIC Volumes
QIC Part A East
Year Received Dismissed Escalated Favorable Misrouted Partially Favorable Unfavorable % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 2,758 3,965 150 2,316 55,099 10.2% 9.8%
2011 3,641 6,942 162 3,069 58,813 14.5% 13.8%
2012 4,624 620 23,572 108 2,900 183,247 12.6% 12.3%
2013 8,190 990 43,965 357 6,999 306,687 14.2% 13.9%
2014 2,985 13 36,999 278 3,524 187,570 17.8% 17.5%
QIC Part A West
Year Received Dismissed Escalated Favorable Misrouted Partially Favorable Unfavorable % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 1,251 1,763 243 1,671 15,082 18.5% 17.2%
2011 1,401 3,298 115 908 24,610 14.6% 13.9%
2012 2,224 525 16,258 75 1,134 79,532 17.9% 17.5%
2013 4,328 584 37,377 177 846 149,923 20.3% 19.8%
2014 1,657 12 26,595 206 2,318 85,074 25.4% 25.0%
QIC Part B South
Year Received Dismissed Favorable Misrouted Partially Favorable Unfavorable % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 14,227 37,912 436 22,617 68,455 46.9% 42.1%
2011 12,185 34,679 414 27,032 68,986 47.2% 43.1%
2012 29,801 55,397 492 32,291 101,589 46.3% 39.9%
2013 20,016 45,670 548 31,779 81,658 48.7% 43.1%
2014 14,356 38,268 397 28,162 76,978 46.3% 42.0%
QIC Part C
Year Received Dismiss Appeal Overturn MCO Denial Partly Overturn MCO Denial Uphold MCO Denial Withdraw Appeal % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 27,623 5,996 962 25,737 2,218 21.3% 11.1%
2011 36,117 4,677 675 24,671 2,458 17.8% 7.8%
2012 73,848 4,829 730 27,725 2,592 16.7% 5.1%
2013 82,936 3,956 338 28,029 4,084 13.3% 3.6%
2014 10,605 3,412 306 30,048 2,411 11.0% 7.9%
QIC Part D - Drug
Year Received Dismiss Appeal Fully Reverse Plan Partially Reverse Plan Remand to Plan Uphold Plan Withdraw Appeal % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 6,438 5,654 219 1 6,572 75 47.2% 31.0%
2011 5,036 3,372 200 7 5,107 30 41.2% 26.0%
2012 5,836 2,105 119 8 6,018 46 27.0% 15.7%
2013 5,127 4,091 210 144 14,108 36 23.4% 18.1%
2014 5,923 3,731 291 60 12,666 21 24.1% 17.7%
QIC Part D - LEP
Year Received Dismiss Fully Reverse Partially Reverse Uphold Withdraw % Overturned % Overturned-All
2010 8,137 17,152 1,713 7,931 320 70.4% 53.5%
2011 9,158 15,134 1,813 9,638 53 63.7% 47.3%
2012 7,025 17,469 2,190 10,521 51 65.1% 52.8%
2013 7,926 17,228 2,142 11,186 55 63.4% 50.3%
2014 9,368 20,688 2,565 13,558 49 63.2% 50.3%
* % Overturned excludes Dismissed, Withdrawn, Escalated, Misrouted, Remanded Dispositions in the denominator
** % Overturned-All includes all Dispositions in the denominator
Quality Assurance in our QIC Work
Our
In addition to our internal QA processes each of our QIC programs is evaluated annually by CMS's outside independent Evaluation and Oversight contractor, Optimal Solutions.
Based upon our most recently reported audit by Optimal Solutions on our Part A East project, CMS rated MAXIMUS very good for quality of product. Under this audit CMS conducted a review of the quality of the QIC activities and overall compliance with the Statement of Work (SOW) requirements under this contract including review of more than 70 appeal case files. Through this quality review, CMS found that 95% (57 of the 60) of the standard and expedited reconsiderations reviewed were accurate, and 90% (70 of the 78) of the total cases reviewed met all of the remaining contractual requirements for overall timeliness of activities, quality of decision letters and/or case file organization in accordance with the SOW. Similarly for our Part A West project CMS rated us very good for quality of product finding 98.0% (59/60) of the standard and expedited reconsiderations reviewed were accurate and 92.0% (59/64) of the total cases reviewed met all of the remaining contractual requirements for overall timeliness of activities, quality of decision letters and/or case file organization in accordance with the SOW.
For our Part B South project CMS rated MAXIMUS very good for quality of product. CMS found that 97% (58 out of 60) of the reconsiderations reviewed were accurate and 90% (63 out of 70) of the total cases reviewed met all of the remaining contractual requirements for quality decision letters and/or case file organization in accordance with the SOW.
For our Part C project CMS found MAXIMUS exceptional for quality of product indicating. agreement with 98% of the reviewed decisions. For the AdQIC project CMS rated MAXIMUS exceptional for quality of product finding 98% (112/114) of the cases sampled without error. The results or our most recent Part D audit have yet to be released.
Efficiencies and Enhancements
CMS continually works diligently with all stakeholders in the audit and appeals process to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the programs. Examples of recent CMS enhancements to the program include:
. Support of electronic records. Medicare Administrative Contractors are permitted to send case file records via secure electronic delivery system which ensures faster, cheaper and more efficient transfer of information. CMS is providing organization support to MFS creation of portal to receive appeal requests/information from appellants and Level 1 entities.
. MACs use of the Medicare Appeal System (MAS). This permits first level reviewers to utilize MAS to record pertinent case file information and allow QIC access to case file used by MAC.
. Adjusting Appointment of Representation (AOR) requirements for treating providers in Part C appeals permitting greater access to appeal process for enrollees.
In addition to the above we believe the following efficiencies and enhancements could assist overall program performance and satisfaction.
. Institute auto-escalation of Part D appeals. In Medicare Managed Care (Part C), beneficiary appeals are automatically escalated to the QIC after a Level 1 denial. However, with the exception of when a Part D plan misses its processing time frame, the beneficiary, or the prescriber on behalf of the beneficiary, is required complete an appeal request for Level 2 (IRE) Part D appeals. We believe this is a significant barrier for beneficiaries and is one of the likely reasons for the lower volume of Part D appeals. Allowing auto-escalation of Part D appeals to the IRE when the plan issues a redetermination denial would eliminate the burden on beneficiaries and their prescribers to take affirmative action, under tight deadlines, to continue the appeals process.
. Initiate coordination with Part D plans, enrollees and past employers to assist in addressing Part D Late Enrollment Penalties (LEPs). A reason for the high volume of LEP appeals is that at the time of joining a Part D plan, it is not 100% established whether a new member to the plan has had prior creditable coverage. This often leads to an LEP being assessed. Through the appropriate facilitation of communication between the new member, the entity proving prior coverage, if any, and the Part D plan, we believe an accurate creditable coverage determination can be made immediately upon enrollment, resulting in many fewer LEP appeals.
. Administratively establish a RAC/Audit Contractor only QIC in conjunction with administrative RAC (AdRAC) responsibilities. Along with processing RAC/Audit Contractor appeals the RAC QIC would provide support services to providers as well as a system to allow providers information on case status and other case related information including a customer services center and portal to provide stakeholders access to case status and other case processing information. Similar to the specialized teams we created to address the increase in volume we believe a RAC/Audit Contractor only QIC would ensure the most consistency for the program as well as a centralized resource to assist with program oversight and provider education.
. Create a RAC/Audit Contractor only ALJ unit while providing ALJs appropriate subject matter support such as nurses, physicians, certified coding specialists to assist ALJs in making determinations. We believe this will assist in ensuring consistent decisions and provide resources to significantly reduce existing backlog in a timely manner.
. In lieu of providing ALJ SME support, allow QICs to participate in a greater percentage of hearings. QIC hearing participation generally results in a significantly lower overturn rate at the ALJ level and provides appropriate subject matter expertise at the hearing.
. Have ALJ cases wherein a provider appellant submits new evidence remanded to the QIC for re-review. This will ensure the complete record is reviewed and will assist in reducing ALJ volumes.
. Change Audit Contractor pricing to a per case review as opposed to contingency pricing.
. Enhance the Scope of Work of the AdQIC making it responsible for the consistent and uniform application of all
n1 42 CFR Subpart I, [Sec.] 405
n2 The Part C IRE work is currently competed as a task order under the QIC Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract.
n3 The Part C IRE work is currently competed as a task order under the QIC Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract.
n4 The AIC requirement for all ALJ hearings and
Read this original document at: http://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/MAXFedSenateFinanceAppealsTest.pdf
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