MCBS Facility Brochure

Facility Brochure.pdf

Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS) (CMS-P-0015A)

MCBS Facility Brochure

OMB: 0938-0568

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Percentage of Medicare Facility Residents
with a “Do Not Resuscitate” Order, 2013
 edicare beneficiaries in facilities are almost
M
just as likely to have a “Do Not Resuscitate”
order as they are to not have one.

¬¬

Don't Know
1%

•	Participating in the MCBS will not impose

additional disclosure record keeping burdens on your
facility. Disclosures under 45 CFR § are explicitly
exempt from the HIPAA disclosure accounting
provisions. See 45 CFR § 164.528 (a) (1) (i)

•	The information you provide will be kept private

to the extent permitted by law, as prescribed by the
Privacy Act of 1974. The information you give will
only be used for research and statistical purposes.

MCBS

Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey

•	The data you provide could be carefully verified by

No
51%

Yes
48%

What do you need to know about your
rights and privacy?
•	Participation is voluntary. Your facility’s

relationship with programs administered by CMS
will not be affected in any way by whether or not
you choose to participate.

•	Your cooperation with the MCBS will not

violate the HIPAA privacy regulations. Under
the privacy standards, your facility does not
need an individual’s authorization to disclose
their protected health information to a health
plan, such as the Medicare program, when the
information is being disclosed for health care
operations activities of the entity that receives
the information, if both your facility and the
Medicare program has or had a relationship
with the individual whose protected health
information is being requested and the protected
information pertains to such relationship. See 45
CFR § 164.506(c) (4).

computer matching to administrative records under
Public Law 100-503 [The Computer Matching and
Privacy Protection Act].

Any other questions?
Please feel free to contact MCBS staff at NORC at
the University of Chicago at any time.
Call toll-free at: 1-877-389-3429
Email at: [email protected]
Visit us at: mcbs.norc.org

This survey is authorized by section 1875 (42 USC
139511) of the Social Security Act and is conducted by
NORC at the University of Chicago for the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
OMB No. 0938-0568 | Expires 8/31/2022

A resident in your facility has been selected to
take part in an important study called the
Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS).
Your resident is one of 16,000 people
scientifically selected at random to represent the
Medicare experiences of other Medicare
beneficiaries all over the United States. Every
year, approximately 1,000 facility administrators
are interviewed on behalf of their residents,
providing invaluable data about how Medicare
affects beneficiaries who require long-term care.

What is the Medicare Current Beneficiary
Survey?

provide will be kept private to the extent permitted
by law, as prescribed by the Privacy Act of 1974.

The MCBS is a study to learn more about people
who use Medicare, in order for the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and
researchers to learn more about Medicare
beneficiaries and their health care experiences.
The MCBS has been conducted since 1991
because the information we collect about health
and health care costs is so valuable. CMS, part of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, sponsors this survey in order to gain
valuable information about how Medicare affects
the people it serves.

Your participation is voluntary, and your
relationship with programs administered by CMS
will not be affected in any way by whether or not
you participate.

What does this mean for my facility?
Although most interviews for the MCBS occur in
the community, we also collect data on individuals
who reside in long-term care facilities. Over the
course of the study, approximately 7% of the
MCBS sample resides in facilities at any given
time. By conducting both community and facility
interviews, the MCBS can collect data from
beneficiaries regardless of their location and
thereby maintain a continuous record of their
health care costs and usage.
The interview focuses on the utilization and costs
of the health care being received by your resident,
along with a small section describing the
characteristics of your facility. Much of the
information is abstracted directly from the
resident’s chart and will only require a limited
amount of your staff’s time.
We collect data three times per year, so if the
selected beneficiary remains in your facility over
an extended period of time, we may contact you
for subsequent interviews. For interviews in
facilities, a specific facility questionnaire is
administered to caregivers and facility accounting
staff who are the most knowledgeable about the
individual. No residents of your facility will be
contacted directly. All of the information you

Why should my facility participate?
The information you provide on behalf of your
facility and residents cannot be replaced by any
other data source in the country. This study is the
only source of in-depth health care cost and use,
which are used to accomplish the following:

•	To help us understand how Medicare affects

people’s daily life, and what problems they might
be experiencing with it.

•	To help increase Medicare coverage and

efficiency for beneficiaries, both now and in the
future.

What do we know about Medicare
because of the participation of facilities
like yours?
Percentage of Medicare Beneficiaries
Receiving a Flu Shot, by Residency Status,
2013
 edicare beneficiaries residing in a facility
M
are more likely to get a flu shot than Medicare
beneficiaries residing in the community.

¬¬

100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%

89%
71%

29%
11%
Community

•	To provide legislators and policy makers with

more information to create effective laws and
regulations for people enrolled in Medicare. In
fact, the Part D prescription drug benefit was
created in part based on findings from the MCBS.

•	To improve the quality of care Medicare
beneficiaries receive.

•	To create reports using this data to describe key
factors about how people use Medicare.

The results of the MCBS are used to monitor and
make decisions about the Medicare program. In
order to form a complete picture of the Medicare
population and guide effective policy decisions, it
is critically important to collect data about all
Medicare beneficiaries, including individuals in
facilities. Long-term care facilities are especially
important to the study because long-term care
issues are at the forefront of the health policy
agenda.

Facility
Yes

No

Percentage of Medicare Beneficiaries with
Coronary Heart Disease, by Residency
Status, 2013
 edicare beneficiaries residing in a facility
M
setting have a higher rate of coronary heart
disease than Medicare beneficiaries residing in
a community setting.

¬¬

90%

Facility

10%

96%

Community

3%
0%

20%

40%
No

60%
Yes

80%

100%


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