Supporting Statement – Part A
Triennial Network Adequacy Review for Medicare Advantage Organizations
and 1876 Cost Plans
(CMS-10636, OMB 0938-1346)
Our April 12, 2023 (88 FR 22120) final rule (CMS-4201-F1, RIN 0938–AU96) amended § 422.116(b)(1) by adding two new provider specialty types to the list at § 422.116(b)(1) requiring these new specialty types to be subject to network adequacy evaluation. The new specialty types are clinical psychology and clinical social work. We also amended § 422.116(d)(5) by including these specialties as telehealth specialty types eligible for the 10% point credit towards the percentage of beneficiaries residing in published time and distance standards.
Although the changes carry no additional hourly burden, we have adjusted our cost estimates to reflect current BLS wage estimates. Additional changes consist of the following:
The Medicare Advantage and Section 1876 Cost Plan Network Adequacy Guidance (attached) has been revised.
The Exception Request Template (attached) adds the new additional specialty types to the Specialty drop-down under Part I: Exception Information.
The HPMS Web Based Application (attached) has been revised by adding clinical psychology and clinical social work to the list of specialties on the Submit Network page.
Subsequent to the publication of the final rule, we are adding an Excel spreadsheet as a non-substantive change. The spreadsheet has no impact on our currently approved burden estimates.
See section 15 of this Supporting Statement for a more in-depth discussion of the changes.
This collection of information request is authorized under Section 1852(d)(1) of the Social Security Act which permits an MA organization to select the providers from which an enrollee may receive covered benefits, provided that the MA organization makes such benefits available and accessible in the service area with promptness and in a manner which assures continuity in the provision of benefits as defined in §§422.112(a)(1)(i) and 422.114(a)(3)(ii) (under Part 422, Subpart C – benefits and beneficiary protections) and §§417.414(b) and 417.416(a) and (e) (under Part 417, Subpart J – Qualifying Conditions for Medicare Contracts).
Regulations under §§ 417.414, 417.416, 422.112(a)(1)(i), and 422.114(a)(3)(ii) require that all Medicare Advantage organizations (MAOs) offering coordinated care plans, network-based private fee-for-service (PFFS) plans, and as well as section 1876 cost organizations, maintain a network of appropriate providers that is sufficient to provide adequate access to covered services to meet the needs of the population served. To enforce this requirement, CMS regulations at § 422.116 outline network adequacy criteria which set forth the minimum number of providers and maximum travel time and distance from enrollees to providers, for required provider specialty types in each county in the United States and its territories.
Organizations must be in compliance with the current CMS network adequacy criteria guidance, which is updated and published annually on CMS’s website. This collection of information is essential to appropriate and timely compliance monitoring by CMS, in order to ensure that all active contracts offering network-based plans maintain an adequate network.
CMS verifies that organizations are compliant with the CMS network adequacy criteria by performing a contract-level network review, which occurs when CMS requests an organization upload provider and facility Health Service Delivery (HSD) tables for a given contract to the Health Plan Management System (HPMS). CMS reviews networks on a three-year cycle, unless there is an event that triggers an intermediate full network review, thus resetting the organization’s triennial review. The triennial review cycle will help ensure a consistent process for network oversight and monitoring.
Please note the following:
Initial applications will require a full network review and demonstrate that they meet network adequacy standards at § 422.116 as part of an MA application.
Service area expansion (SAE) applications will require a partial network review of only new counties and will need to demonstrate that they meet network adequacy standards at § 422.116 as part of an MA application. CMS will review the organization’s full network during the contract’s triennial review.
Both initial and SAE applicants can utilize Letters of Intent (LOIs) to meet network adequacy standards only during the application process.
Organizations due for their triennial review will submit HSD tables to CMS in June.
When selecting contracts for the triennial review period, CMS will pull from the list of active contracts, based primarily on when the contract’s last full network review occurred in HPMS.
CMS may perform an entire network review after specific triggering events, such as certain provider/facility contract terminations, change of ownership transactions, network access complaints, organization-disclosed network deficiencies, and applicants who utilize LOIs to meet network adequacy standards during the application process once the contract is operational. However, some of the triggering events may warrant only a partial network review. For example, CMS may review a select set of specialty types or counties, instead of reviewing the entire network with all specialty types and counties.
The information will be collected by CMS through HPMS. CMS measures access to covered services through the establishment of quantitative standards for a predefined list of provider and facility specialty types. These quantitative standards are collectively referred to as the network adequacy criteria. Network adequacy is assessed at the county level and CMS requires that organizations contract with a sufficient number of providers and facilities to ensure that at least 90 percent of enrollees within a county can access care within specific travel time and distance maximums for Large Metro and Metro county types and that at least 85 percent of enrollees within a county can access care within specific travel time and distance maximums for Micro, Rural and CEAC (Counties with Extreme Access Considerations) county types.
Health Service Delivery Table Submission
Organizations will be required to demonstrate network adequacy through the submission of HSD tables in the Network Management Module (NMM), which is an automated tool located on the HPMS website. The NMM allows organizations to upload two HSD tables per contract—a provider HSD table and a facility HSD table. On their HSD tables, organizations must list the providers and facilities for CMS’s required specialty types. Key data fields on the HSD tables include: SSA State/County Code, Name of Provider/Facility, National Provider Identifier (NPI) Number, Specialty Code, the use of a LOI and Address.
Organization’s offering telehealth benefits for any of the specialty types finalized in 422.116(d)(5), will be required to select the applicable specialty on the NMM submission page in order to receive the credit towards network adequacy standards.
Applicants submitting HSD tables must attest Yes (Y) for every provider or facility row in the column labeled “Letter of Intent Signed by Both Parties? (Y)” when the applicant uses Letters of Intent (LOIs) in lieu of fully executed provider contracts, at the time of application and for the duration of the application review. The LOI must be signed by both the MA organization and the provider with which the MA organization intends to negotiate. Organizations will only be required to enter LOI attestations on the HSD tables during the second round of HSD submissions.
Regional Preferred Provider Organizations submitting provider or facility HSD tables, will be required to indicate if the provider has an alternative to written agreements. RPPOs must indicate Yes (Y) for every row in the column labeled ‘RPPO-Specific Exception to Written Agreements.’ This serves as the RPPO’s official request to CMS for the RPPO-specific exception per 42 C.F.R. 422.112(a)(1)(ii). All other organization types may leave the column blank.
Automated Criteria Check Process
Using an embedded mapping software, the NMM reviews the HSD tables against default network adequacy criteria for each required provider and facility type in each county for a given contract. CMS provides these default values publicly in the current HSD Reference File, located on CMS's website. These criteria are updated and refined annually to account for various year-to-year changes, such as the most recent number of Medicare beneficiaries per county and updates to county type designations to reflect the most recent population density per county and the county specialties eligible for a CON credit.
After the organization uploads its HSD tables, the NMM will generate an Automated Criteria Check (ACC) report indicating the organization’s results of the network review. The ACC report lists passes and fails for the network adequacy criteria, which shows CMS where the organization’s current provider network has met and/or not met the minimum provider/bed number and maximum time and/or distance standards for each provider/facility type in each county in the organization’s service area. CMS uses the organization’s ACC results to make a network adequacy determination.
Exception Request Reviews
CMS acknowledges that the continuously evolving patterns of care in certain service areas may necessitate exceptions to the network adequacy criteria. Organizations that do not pass the network adequacy criteria for a particular provider or facility type in a given service area may request an exception. If the contracted provider network is consistent with the current pattern of care and provides enrollee access to covered services that is equal to or better than the prevailing original Medicare pattern of care, then an exception may be granted. For detailed information on exception requests, please refer to the Medicare Advantage and Section 1876 Cost Plan Network Adequacy Guidance.
There is no guarantee that a previously approved exception request is still necessary, given the continuously evolving patterns of care and the dynamic nature of the health care market landscape. CMS expects that organizations continuously monitor their networks and that they address network deficiencies when they arise. If the organization believes an exception to the current CMS network adequacy criteria is warranted in a given service area, they are to alert their CMS account managers and submit exception requests at that time. Organizations may submit new exception requests to CMS for consideration following the HSD table upload, and must resubmit all previously approved exception requests using the current template.
In addition to submitting previously approved exception requests, organizations must also resubmit all previously approved Partial County Justifications using the current Partial County Justification template. For detailed information on partial counties, please refer to the Medicare Advantage and Section 1876 Cost Plan Network Adequacy Guidance for additional instructions.
Once CMS staff reviews the ACC reports and any exception requests and/or partial county justifications, CMS then makes its final determination on whether the organization is operating in compliance with current CMS network adequacy criteria. If the organization passes its network review for a given contract, then CMS will take no further action. If the organization fails its network review for a given contract, then CMS will take appropriate compliance actions. CMS has developed a compliance methodology for network adequacy reviews that will ensure a consistent approach across all organizations.
This collection of information involves the use of automated/electronic information technology through the NMM, a currently functioning module in HPMS. Organizations will download the provider and facility HSD tables from the NMM, complete the tables for each contract, and upload the tables back into the NMM. Both the data entry and the HSD table submission into the NMM are electronic. In addition, some organizations will electronically submit any new and/or previously approved exception requests for each contract. Although the exception request template also requires download from the NMM, many organizations will already have the forms on file and will only need to resubmit them electronically to the NMM.
Organizations identified for the triennial review will have at least 60 days to prepare their HSD tables and test their networks prior to the CMS-specified deadline. CMS provides organizations the opportunity to upload their active service area networks in the Network Management Module during this time for an informal review and technical assistance, also referred to as “Consultation”. This review is voluntary, and plans are not required to submit Exception Requests during this period. Plans will have the option to submit Exception Requests for feedback from CMS.
Plans
will be notified by their Account Manager and HPMS with instructions
for submission of HSD tables in the NMM during this Triennial review
period.
CMS will then assess the contract’s network adequacy and determine whether any network deficiencies exist. If CMS finds network deficiencies, then CMS will take appropriate compliance actions, and the organization will be required to come into compliance.
Network submission gates in HPMS will remain open for at least 10 days of this period.
In compliance with the Government Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA), CMS notes that this collection of information is currently available for completion electronically only, and no signature is required from the respondent(s). Although CMS does not have the capability of accepting electronic signatures, this could be made available to respondents in the future, if necessary to satisfy GPEA requirements.
Organization’s networks change continuously as they engage in ongoing contract negotiations with their providers. The day-to-day business decisions that an organization makes inherently affect their relationships with their contracted providers, and provider terminations occur, which may or may not be initiated by the organization. Due to the dynamic nature of MAO networks, we require plans to submit networks that capture their current networks.
Although there is similar information in the organization’s ACC reports from prior network reviews performed by CMS during any of the triggering events, the information cannot be used or modified for the purposes of triennial network review because the information captures an organization’s adequacy at a specific point in time. For all contracts, CMS has network adequacy information that was submitted at the time of an initial or SAE application, which may have occurred more than three years ago, deeming this information out of date. CMS will not be collecting duplicate information (i.e., information that is less than three years old) through this collection of information.
This collection of information will have a minimal impact on small businesses since applicants must possess an insurance license and be able to accept substantial financial risk. Generally, state statutory licensure requirements effectively preclude small businesses from being licensed to bear risk needed to serve Medicare enrollees.
If this collection of information is not conducted or is conducted less frequently than every three years (i.e., only during triggering events), then there will be consequences to CMS’s program and policy activities. In addition, there is the potential for beneficiary harm related to undetected network deficiencies that could be prevented by this required reporting. Organizations may be operating out of compliance with program requirements, as their networks may not be adequate.
This collection of information presents no technical or legal obstacles to reducing burden.
There are no special circumstances that would cause this collection of information to be conducted in a manner:
Requiring respondents to report information to the agency more often than quarterly;
Requiring respondents to prepare a written response to a collection of information in fewer than 30 days after receipt of it;
Requiring respondents to submit more than an original and two copies of any document;
Requiring respondents to retain records, other than health, medical, government contract, grant- in-aid, or tax records for more than three years;
In connection with a statistical survey that is not designed to produce valid and reliable results that can be generalized to the universe of study;
Requiring the use of a statistical data classification that has not been reviewed and approved by OMB;
That includes a pledge of confidentiality that is not supported by authority established in statue or regulation that is not supported by disclosure and data security policies that are consistent with the pledge, or which unnecessarily impedes sharing of data with other agencies for compatible confidential use; or
Requiring respondents to submit proprietary trade secret or other confidential information unless the agency can demonstrate that it has instituted procedures to protect die information's confidentiality to the extent permitted by law.
8. Federal Register Notice/Outside Consultations
Federal Register Notice
Serving as the 60-day notice, our proposed rule (CMS-4201-P, RIN 0938-AU96) published in the Federal Register on December 27, 2022 (87 FR 79452). While the rule received public comments, none of them were applicable to our proposed collection of information requirements and burden estimates.
Our final rule (CMS-4201-F1, RIN 0938–AU96) published in the Federal Register on April 12, 2023 (88 FR 22120). Based on internal review, we are not finalizing our proposed addition of the Prescribers of Medication for Opioid Use Disorder specialty type.
As part of the initial burden estimate determination in 2017, CMS consulted with a sample of nine potential respondents to estimate the hour burden on organizations for a contract-level network submission. Nine CMS account managers were contacted and asked to pose the following question to one of the organizations they oversee:
CMS
Central Office consulted with a sample of MAOs to determine the
average hour burden on an organization for an entire network
submission for a single contract. The sample survey included general
questions around form completion time, including:
“We
would like to find out the approximate total number of hours it
takes an organization to both complete and submit to CMS: (1)
provider and facility HSD tables for one contract, and (2) new and
previously approved exception requests for one contract. We are also
interested in how the size or type of contract impacts the length of
time it takes for the entire network submission process for a single
contract.”
CMS also consulted with a different
sample of eight potential respondents to estimate the hour burden on
health plans for a Partial County Justification. These eight
respondents were organizations who submitted a Partial County
Justification in the past. Eight CMS account managers were contacted
and asked to pose the following question to the specified
organizations they oversee:
“CMS Central Office is consulting with a sample of MAOs to determine the average hour burden on an organization for filling out a partial county justification document. We identified [MAO Name] [Contract #] as an MAO that has applied for a partial county in the past two years. We would like to find out the approximate number of hours it takes them to complete a single partial county justification.”
The responses that CMS received for these two questions varied, depending on the size of organization and the contract. Some respondents were outliers in that they estimated either very few hours or very many hours, which skewed the data and the mean. Therefore, CMS aggregated the results and used the median number of hours for each information collection instrument. The following table describes the results, broken down by median number of hours for HSD tables, Exception Requests, and Partial County Justifications. Also included is the approximate number of hours CMS estimates it takes an organization to use the HPMS web-based application (i.e., the NMM) to submit these materials for one contract.
# of Hours for Provider HSD Table |
# of Hours for Facility HSD Table |
# of Hours for Exception Requests |
# of Hours for Partial County Justifications |
# of Hours for HPMS/NMM Submission |
15 |
15 |
8 |
37 |
1 |
9. Payments/Gifts to Respondents
There are no respondent payments or gifts associated with this collection of information.
Consistent with federal government and CMS policies, CMS will protect the confidentiality of the requested proprietary information. Specifically, only information within submitted HSD tables and Exception Requests (or attachments thereto) that constitutes a trade secret, privileged, or confidential information, (as such terms are interpreted under the Freedom of Information Act and applicable case law), and is clearly labeled as such by the organization, and which includes an explanation of how it meets one of the expectations specified in 45 CFR part 5, will be protected from release by CMS under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4). Information not labeled as trade secret, privileged, or confidential or not including an explanation of why it meets one or more of the FOIA exceptions in part 5 will not be withheld from release under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4).
There are no sensitive questions associated with this collection. Specifically, the collection does not solicit questions of a sensitive nature, such as sexual behavior and attitudes, religious beliefs, and other matters that are commonly considered private.
To derive average costs, we used data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May 2021 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for all salary estimates (http://www.bls.gov/oes/2021/may/oes_nat.htm).
The following table presents BLS’ mean hourly wage, our estimated cost of fringe benefits and other indirect costs (calculated at 100 percent of salary), and our adjusted hourly wage. As indicated, we are adjusting our employee hourly wage estimates by a factor of 100 percent. This is necessarily a rough adjustment, both because fringe benefits and other indirect costs vary significantly from employer to employer, and because methods of estimating these costs vary widely from study to study. Nonetheless, we believe that doubling the hourly wage to estimate total cost is a reasonably accurate estimation method.
We selected the position of Compliance Officer because this position is a key contact identified by organizations. CMS typically interacts with the Compliance Officer in matters related to network adequacy.
Occupation Title |
Occupation Code |
Mean Hourly Wage ($/hr) |
Fringe Benefits and Other Indirect Costs ($/hr) |
Adjusted Hourly Wage ($/hr) |
Compliance Officer |
13-1041 |
36.45 |
36.45 |
72.90 |
CMS used HPMS data from the NMM as well as data from HPMS’s Contract Summary Report, to estimate the number of contracts that have not received an entire network review in the previous years. Between June 2018 and June 2019, CMS performed entire network reviews on 438 of the active contracts at that time.
The frequency of response for this information collection would be one time per year, however, the number of contracts submitting each year will vary.
The following table describes the types of network-based health plans that are required to meet current CMS network adequacy criteria, showing the current estimated number of contracts, by health plan type and total. The table then breaks down how many contracts of each type and how many total contracts are expected to be subject to this information collection in year one.
|
Local Coordinated Care Plan |
Regional Coordinated Care Plan |
1876 Cost Plan |
Network- based PFFS Plan |
Total # of Contracts |
Average Active Contracts Reviewed** |
214 |
1 |
8 |
3 |
226 |
Average New Contracts Reviewed |
276 |
varies |
varies |
varies |
276 |
* Please note, CMS is setting out this burden to apprise the public and OMB as to what we are currently projecting. We will seek OMB approval of subsequent years’ burden when ready.
**
CMS took the average number of contracts reviewed per year in one
triennial cycle to estimate the number of active contracts
reviewed.
*** The
number of new contracts includes the average number of applicants in
a three-year period. The number excludes Employer Group Waiver
Plans (EGWP) and Special Needs Plan (SNP) expansions.
Based on the small sample studies (see Outside Consultations under section 8, above), CMS estimates that it will take organizations a range of hours to complete an entire network submission for one contract. There will be approximately 226 respondents (existing contracts) for the initial information collection year and 276 respondents submitting networks as initial applicants. However, the annual number of responses for two of the collection instruments (i.e., Exception Request Template and Partial County Justification Template) are different because not all respondents submit these instruments during a given submission window, and not all respondents submit just one of each of these instruments. The following table depicts the estimated time and cost for each information collection instrument.
Information Collection Instrument |
Total # of Responses |
Time Per Response (hr) |
Total Time (hr) |
Labor Rate ($/hr) |
Total Cost ($) |
Provider HSD Table |
502*** |
16 |
8,032 |
72.90 |
585,533 |
Facility HSD Table |
502*** |
16 |
8,032 |
72.90 |
585,533 |
Exception Request Template |
1,215* |
8 |
9,720 |
72.90 |
708,588 |
Partial County Justification Template |
32** |
37 |
1,184 |
72.90 |
86,314 |
HPMS Web-Based Application: NMM |
502 |
1 |
502 |
72.90 |
36,596 |
TOTAL |
2,753 |
varies |
27,470 |
72.90 |
2,002,563 |
* 1,215 exception requests were submitted during the CY2020 formal review. 1,732 exception requests were submitted during the CY2019 formal review. 726 exception requests were submitted during the 2018 formal review. We took the average of exceptions submitted during one triennial cycle to estimate the number of exceptions completed.
** 32 Partial County Justifications were submitted during the CY 2018-2019 application cycle, with an average of 16 justifications submitted per cycle. Therefore, we are using this estimate for the annual number of responses for the Partial County Justification Template.
*** Changes to the current Provider and Facility HSD tables only impact Regional Preferred Provider Organizations
12.3 Information Collection Instruments and Instruction/Guidance Documents
Information Collection Instruments
The
Exception Request Template is a form that an organization may
complete and submit to CMS to request an exception to the current
CMS network adequacy criteria for a particular county/specialty
type. For example, if an organization does not meet the minimum
number and maximum time/distance criteria for a specific specialty
type in a given county, then the organization may submit an
Exception Request for CMS to review. An organization may submit
multiple Exception Requests, depending on how many deficiencies are
found in its network, and CMS has discretion to approve or deny
Exception Requests. Organizations must resubmit all previously
approved Exception Requests using the current Exception Request
template.
The Facility HSD Table is a form that captures specific information required by CMS on the facilities in the organization’s current contracted network. All active contracts are required to complete this form and upload the information into HPMS, whenever CMS performs a network review. The Applicant Facility HSD Table includes a column specific to new contracts that intend to use a Letter of Intent (LOI), active contracts are not permitted to use LOIs during network reviews outside of the application.
All new applicants are required to complete this form and upload the information into HPMS, as part of the application.
HPMS
Web Based Application: NMM (Revised)
Organizations submit HSD tables in the Network Management Module (NMM), which is an automated tool located on the HPMS website. The NMM allows organizations to upload two HSD tables per contract—a provider HSD table and a facility HSD table. On their HSD tables, organizations must list the providers and facilities they are currently contracted with for CMS’s required specialty types. Key data fields on the HSD tables include: SSA State/County Code, Name of Provider/Facility, National Provider Identifier (NPI) Number, Specialty Code and Address.
LOI Group to NPI Matrix Template (New)
Independent from the CMS-4201-F1 final rule, we propose to add this spreadsheet as a non-substantive change. The MAO would submit this Excel file with data fields for: a Medical Group Practice Name, NPI Number and LOI File name related to LOIs (that apply to more than one provider) listed on their HSD table.
The new spreadsheet is intended to avoid the submission of duplicate LOIs and files that may cause system latency issues in HPMS.
There is no change to the information that is being collected. We are collecting the information in a different format. Since the data fields are unchanged and we are simply changing to an Excel format, the spreadsheet has no impact on our currently approved burden estimates.
The
Partial County Justification Template is a form that an organization
may complete and submit to CMS if it is requesting a service area
that includes one or more partial counties, as opposed to serving a
full county. Only a small percentage of organizations submit Partial
County Justifications because, per the county integrity rule (42 CFR
422.2), it is CMS’s expectation that a service area consists
of a full county or counties. However, CMS may approve a partial
county if the organization presents valid evidence on its Partial
County Justification that the partial county is necessary,
nondiscriminatory, and in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
Organizations must resubmit all previously approved Partial County
Justifications using the current Partial County Justification
Template.
In addition to the information collection instruments listed above, respondents will have access to documents containing instructions and guidance related to the CMS network review process.
The Medicare Advantage and Section 1876 Cost Plan Network Adequacy Guidance provides clarification for MAOs submitting HSD tables as part of a network review. The document provides additional information related to network adequacy reviews and how they are conducted in accordance with the standards set at § 422.116.
We do not anticipate additional capital costs for organizations. CMS requirements do not necessitate the acquisition of new systems or the development of new technology to complete HSD tables.
All organizations already possess the capabilities to comply with this collection of information. System requirements for submitting HSD tables are minimal, and organizations must already be able to interface with HPMS to obtain a contract and to submit annual bids, for example. Organizations already have the following access to HPMS: (1) Internet or Medicare Data Communications Network (MDCN) connectivity, (2) use of Microsoft Internet Explorer web browser (version 5.1 or higher) with 128-bits encryption, and (3) a CMS-issued user ID and password with access rights to HPMS for each user within the organization who will require such access. CMS anticipates that all organizations currently meet these system requirements and will not incur additional capital costs.
To derive average costs, we used data from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s 2022 Salary Table for the Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia locality ( https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2022/DCB.pdf).
We selected the positions of Central Office Health Insurance Specialist/Regional Office Account Manager because the primary review of networks is the responsibility of both Central and Regional Office staff, which are usually at the GS-13 level with these occupation titles.
The following table presents OPM’s hourly wage, our estimated cost of fringe benefits and other indirect costs (calculated at 100 percent of salary), and our adjusted hourly wage. As indicated, we are adjusting our employee hourly wage estimates by a factor of 100 percent. This is necessarily a rough adjustment, both because fringe benefits and other indirect costs vary significantly from employer to employer, and because methods of estimating these costs vary widely from study to study. Nonetheless, we believe that doubling the hourly wage to estimate total cost is a reasonably accurate estimation method.
Occupation Title |
Grade/Step |
Hourly Wage |
Fringe Benefits and Other Indirect Costs |
Adjusted Hourly Wage |
Central Office Health Insurance Specialist/Region al Office Account Manager |
13/5 |
$58.01/hr |
$58.01/hr |
$116.02/hr |
With this adjusted hourly wage and the adjusted projected hours estimated from the 2017 approved iteration, the table below presents the annualized cost to the federal government for this information collection.
CMS Staff |
Projected Hours/Hourly Rate /# of Contracts |
Projected Costs |
Central Office Health Insurance Specialist/Regional Office Account Manager |
20 hours x $116.02/hr. x 502 Contracts |
$1,164,840.80 |
We estimate the projected hours for network review to include downloading HSD tables, ensuring contracts are in compliance with network adequacy standards, conducting outreach and delivering results to contracts.
15.
Program and Burden Changes
Our April 12, 2023
(88 FR 22120) final rule (CMS-4201-F1, RIN 0938–AU96) amended
§ 422.116(b)(1) by adding two new provider specialty types to
the list at § 422.116(b)(1) requiring these new specialty types
to be subject to network adequacy evaluation. The new specialty
types are clinical psychology and clinical social work. We also
amended § 422.116(d)(5) by including these specialties as
telehealth specialty types eligible for the 10%-point credit towards
the percentage of beneficiaries residing in published time and
distance standards.
As MA organizations are already conducting ongoing work related to network adequacy reviews that happen during the initial or service area application, or every three years for the triennial review, organizations should already have these specialty provider types within network. Therefore, we determined that there is no additional burden related to contracting with the new provider types.
The final rule requires that the specialty types be added to the provider Health Services Delivery (HSD) tables during any network adequacy evaluation requested by CMS. The time to conduct tasks related to adding additional specialty types on the HSD tables is negligible. While the changes carry no additional burden, we have adjusted our cost estimates by $5,494 (from $1,997,069 to $2,002,563) to reflect BLS’ May 2021 wage estimates (an increase of $0.20/hr from $72.70/hr to $72.90/hr).
Changes to references have been added to the Medicare Advantage and Section 1876 Cost Plan Network Adequacy Guidance. This includes the finalized changes to add clinical psychology and clinical social work to the list of the specialty types that receive the 10-percentage point telehealth credit. See the attached redline version of the guidance for details.
The HPMS Web Based Application has been revised by adding clinical psychology and clinical social work to the list of specialties on the Submit Network page. Organization’s offering telehealth benefits for any of the specialty types will be required to select the applicable specialty on the NMM submission page in order to receive the credit towards network adequacy standards. See the attached redline version of the guidance for details.
The Exception Request Template adds clinical psychology and clinical social work to the list of specialty types at the specialty drop-down field under Part I: Exception Information. See the attached redline version of the guidance for details.
Subsequent to the publication of the final rule, we are adding an Excel spreadsheet (LOI Group to NPI Matrix Template) as a non-substantive change. The MAO would submit this Excel file with data fields for: a Medical Group Practice Name, NPI Number and LOI File name related to LOIs (that apply to more than one provider) listed on their HSD table.
The new spreadsheet is intended to avoid the submission of duplicate LOIs and files that are too large for the system to handle. There is no change to the information that is being collected. Rather, we are collecting it in a different format from the submission of LOIs which have proved to be too large for the web application (HPMS) to handle.
16. Publication/Tabulation Dates
This collection of information will not publish results.
The expiration date and the PRA disclosure statement are displayed on the Provider HSD Table, the Facility HSD Table, the Applicant Provider HSD Table, the Applicant Facility HSD Table, the Exception Request Template, and the Partial County Justification Template.
There are no exceptions to the certification statement identified in Item 19, “Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions,” of OMB Form 83-I.
There will be no statistical method employed in this collection of information.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
File Title | Supporting Statement A |
Author | Amber Casserly |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2023-09-26 |