Home Health & Hospice Week

Industry Note:

CMS Holds Off On Imposing Therapy Caps — For Now

If you furnish outpatient therapy in the home under Part B, Medicare is giving you a bit of leeway on therapy caps that expired Jan. 1. But the same doesn't go for rural add-on payment bonuses that expired in the New Year also.

"Several Medicare legislative provisions affecting providers and beneficiaries recently expired, including exceptions to the outpatient therapy caps, the Medicare physician work geographic adjustment floor, add-on payments for ambulance services and home health rural services, payments for low volume hospitals, and payments for Medicare dependent hospitals," the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services notes on its website. "CMS is implementing these payment policies as required under current law."

However: "CMS is taking steps to limit the impact on Medicare beneficiaries by holding claims affected by the therapy caps exceptions process expiration for a short period of time beginning on January 1, 2018," the agency says. "Only therapy claims containing the KX modifier are being held; claims submitted with the KX modifier indicate that the cap has been met but the service meets the exception criteria for payment consideration.

Currently if claims are submitted without the KX modifier and the beneficiary has exceeded the cap the claim will be denied."

The agency continues, "CMS is not holding any other claims except those affected by the therapy caps." In other words, HHA payment rates minus the rural add-on will go forward.

Timeframe: "If legislation regarding the therapy caps is not enacted in this short period of time, then CMS will release and process the therapy claims accordingly," it says.

Meanwhile, the American Occupational Therapy Association says it is "working harder than ever to have legislation passed that would completely repeal the therapy cap. With the turn of the calendar year, the therapy cap of $2,010 went into effect, and now more than a million beneficiaries are at risk of losing access to outpatient Medicare Part B therapy services."

While waiting for Congress to act on the therapy cap issue, providers of Part B therapy should issue Advance Beneficiary Notices to patients who may exceed the cap, AOTAadvises in a release. "The ABN is issued in situations where Medicare payment is expected to be denied. Because Congress didn't extend the exceptions process permitting the attachment of a KX modifier or the manual medical review process, patients must be notified that their therapy services may be limited."

Reminder: The therapy cap applies to Part B outpatient therapy, including services provided in the home. It does not apply to therapy furnished under the home care benefit.

Other Articles in this issue of

Home Health & Hospice Week

View All