Title: Two-Midnight Rule Process
1Two-Midnight Rule Process
- Pam Applegate, MA, RHIT
- Senior Program Director
2Two-Midnight Rule
- October 2013 Two-Midnight Rule is implemented
- Adopted for inpatient admissions occurring on or
after October 1, 2013 (fiscal year 2014) - FY 2014 Hospital IPPS Final Rule CMS-1599-F
established two distinct, but related, medical
review policies - 2-Midnight presumption claims with LOS gt2
midnights after formal admission order are
presumed to be appropriate for Part A payment and
are not the focus of medical review efforts - 2-Midnight benchmark provides guidance to
Medicare review contractors to identify inpatient
admissions generally appropriate for Part A
payment under CMS-1599-F, as revised by
CMS-1633-F
3Two-Midnight Rule
- October 2015 Responsibility for reviews of lt2
midnight inpatient stays transitioned from MACs
to QIOs - MAC reviews were prospective (pre-pay)
- QIO reviews are retrospective (post-pay)
- Inpatient claims have three dates
- From Date (Date patient started receiving
services) - Admission Date (Date inpatient order is written)
- Thru Date (Discharge Date)
- A claim is subject to review under lt 2 midnight
inpatient stay if the date of admission to the
date of discharge is less than 2 days (0-1 day
length of stay)
4Two-Midnight Cycles
- There are two 6-month review cycles per year
- October March
- April September
- Hospitals will be sampled no more than once in a
6-month cycle
5Two-Midnight Universes
- Paid claims with 0-1 day LOS are supplied to the
QIO monthly - October 2015 universes contained claims from May
2015 - November 2015 universes contained claims from
June 2015 - December 2015 universes contained claims from
October 2015 - January 2016 universes contained claims from
November 2015 - February 2016 universes contained claims from
December 2015 - March 2016 universes contained claims from
January 2016 - Future universes will most likely continue to
follow a two-month lag period
6Two-Midnight Sampling
- Monthly sample is chosen
- 0-day stays are prioritized, as directed by CMS
- Large hospitals 25 claim sample
- Average hospitals 10 claim sample
- Sampled claims may be pulled from multiple
universes to reach desired number of claims for
the hospital so one sample may contain
discharges from multiple months - If a hospital has less than the required number
of claims for sampling within a 6-month cycle, it
will not be sampled
72M Medical Record Requests
- Monthly samples are imported into the
CMS-supplied Case Review Information System
(CRIS) and medical record requests are generated - Medical Record contact information for these
requests is stored in the government system and
updated as hospitals request - The government system only allows for one Medical
Record contact and one QIO Liaison cannot be
unique for different claim types - One envelope is mailed via USPS and contains
instructions for submitting the medical records
along with a cover sheet for each record
requested - Note that the cover sheet lists the From and Thru
Dates - Medical records are due 30 days from the request
82M Submission Instructions
92M Example Cover Sheet
10Record Request Follow-Up
- Around day 15 of an outstanding medical record
request, Livanta calls the provider to ensure
that the request was received and is in process - We can then fax the request and cover sheets to
the provider, if needed - Around day 30 Livanta will send a Technical
Denial Warning letter to the provider with cover
sheets of outstanding records - Around day 45 if the records have still not been
received, a technical denial letter is sent to
the beneficiary, provider, and MAC
11Reopening Technical Denials
- If Livanta receives the medical record for which
a technical denial has been issued, the case will
be reopened, provided the final determination for
the sample has not yet been mailed - If the technical denial is reopened, the
beneficiary, the provider, and the MAC are
notified that the record will be reviewed
122M Review Process
- Medical records are first screened by our
Registered Nurse Review Coordinators who check
for the following - Admission Order requirements are met
- Two-Midnight Benchmark is met
- InterQual or MCG may be used to support medical
necessity for approval of the admission - No inpatient order billing error
- Independent licensed practicing physician
reviewers who are board-certified with hospital
privileges make the final determination on any
case not clearly meeting the requirements of the
Two-Midnight Rule
13Two-Midnight Rule Benchmark
- Two-Midnight Benchmark
- Provides guidance to Medicare review contractors
for identifying when an inpatient admission is
generally appropriate for payment under Part A - Patient admitted for an Inpatient-Only procedure
- Medical record supports the admitting physicians
determination that the patient requires inpatient
care despite the lack of a two-midnight
expectation case-by-case exception - Complex medical factors such as history,
comorbidities, severity of signs and symptoms,
current medical needs, risk of an adverse event
all can support need for inpatient hospital care - Physician expects medically necessary acute
hospital services will be needed for 2 or more
midnights as supported by documentation in the
record
14 Two-Midnight Rule Benchmark
- Two-Midnight Benchmark
- Unforeseen Circumstances death, transfer to
another hospital, discharge against medical
advice (AMA), clinical improvement, election of
hospice care - Based upon physicians expectation of the
required duration of medically necessary acute
hospital services at the time the inpatient order
is written - Reasonableness of the inpatient admission based
on the information known to the physician at the
time the inpatient order is written may be
inferred from medical documentation (care plan,
orders, notes, etc.)
15 Two-Midnight Rule Benchmark
- 2M Rule Benchmark and Outpatient Time
- The record must first support the determination
that the patient required acute hospital services
to qualify for Part A payment - If the patient required acute hospital services,
Livanta will consider the pre-admission time such
as services provided under observation, treatment
in the ED, and/or procedures in the operating
room or other treatment area of the hospital - For patients transferred to another hospital, the
time care began at the initial hospital will be
taken into account
162M Review Timelines/Delays
- Delay in initial sampling first medical records
not requested until mid to late November 2015 - Three monthly samples requested within 3 weeks
initially overwhelmed our Mailroom and delayed
getting records ready for review - Reviews began in earnest in mid-December 2015
- QIO has obligation to complete medical review of
a record within 30 days of medical record receipt - We are not yet hitting this target due to the
confluence of multiple samples and Mailroom delays
17Stratification
- After determinations are made for a hospitals
entire sample, the Initial Review Results Letter
is sent to the QIO Liaison, with a determination
for each sampled claim and stratification results - Minor concern hospitals have lt10.01 errors
- May submit additional information within 20 days
- No 11 education required
- Moderate concern hospitals have gt10 but
lt20.01 errors - May submit additional information within 20 days
- May request 11 educational session within 20
days - May submit additional information after 11
session within 10 days - Major concern hospitals have gt20 errors
- May submit additional information within 20 days
- Must attend 11 educational session (required)
- May submit additional information after 11
session within 10 days
18Initial Review Results Letter
19Initial Review Results Letter
20Initial Review Results Letter
21Education Process
- Livantas 2M Nurse Educator will reach out to the
QIO Liaison at the time of scheduling the
education session - To ensure receipt of the letter
- To entertain any questions about the process, and
- To establish of line of communication
- The QIO has 90 days from the completion of a
hospitals sample to supply provider education
22Provider Education
- Livanta conducted the first provider education
sessions in early February 2016 - Livanta Medical Directors present the review
findings on the preliminarily denied claims on a
case-by-case basis - Hospital participation and feedback is expected
and welcomed - The hospital has 10 days to respond with
additional information after the 11 education
session
23Final Determination Letters
24Final Determination Letters
25Admission Denial Letters
- After the Final Determination letter has been
mailed to the provider, an Admission Denial
letter is mailed for each denied claim to the
beneficiary, the hospital, and the MAC
26RAC Referrals
- BFCC-QIOs shall rate and stratify providers for
education and corrective action based upon the
results of the completed claim reviews - BFCC-QIOs will refer to the Recovery Audit
Contractor providers that consistently
demonstrate a high denial rate - Failing to adhere to the Two Midnight rule
- Failing to improve performance after BFCC-QIO
educational intervention has been rendered - Referral to the RAC must be upon CMS direction
27RAC Referral Process
- Although the exact process for RAC referral is
still being refined, it will involve the QIO
discussing potential referrals with CMS and
noting any extenuating circumstances - It is important to note that the timing of the
education session and subsequent samples and
reviews for a provider may necessitate several
cycles of reviews before RAC referral is supported
28Questions?
29Case Review Examples
- Lamerial Danaiels, RN
- Redetermination Manager, Area 5
30Denial Example
- Case 1 Syncope
- This 75-year-old female was brought in by
ambulance due to a syncopal episode. She had a
history of vertigo, hypertension, and thyroid
disease. The patient was admitted to observation
status. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because at the time of inpatient
admission the patients condition had improved,
and there was no anticipation of an additional
midnight stay. Our physician reviewer concluded
that there were no acute findings at the time of
the emergency department evaluation and the
patient went home the next day. There was no
indication that the patient would need to stay 2
midnights.
31Denial Example
- Case 2 Mental Status Changes
- This 77-year-old male presented to the emergency
department due to mental status changes. He had a
history of stroke, transient ischemic attacks
(TIAs), dementia, and a recent right neck mass
biopsy. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the patient had no evidence of a
stroke or TIA present on admission and he was
admitted for a work-up to rule out a TIA. This
diagnostic testing could have been provided at an
observation level of care. Our physician reviewer
concluded that the patients evaluation in the
emergency department was unremarkable, and he was
discharged the following day after his mental
status was cleared.
32Denial Example
- Case 3 Elective Procedure
- This 82-year-old female was admitted electively
for an anorectal examination under anesthesia and
a rigid proctosigmoidoscopy. The patient had a
history of diabetes and was recently diagnosed
with a rectal mass found to be positive for
adenocarcinoma. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the patient was admitted
following an outpatient procedure with no
documentation of complications or unstable
comorbid conditions. The patient was discharged
in less than 24 hours as expected. The procedure
was not on the CMS inpatient only list.
33Denial Rationale Examples
- This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the treatment of pain control,
IV hydration, monitoring of lab results, and a
gastroenterology consultation did not require an
inpatient admission and could have been done in
observation status. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the patient was admitted to
inpatient status following an outpatient surgical
procedure with no documentation of complications
or unstable comorbid conditions. The patient was
discharged within 24 hours as expected. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the patients condition was
improved prior to admission, and there was no
indication that a 2 midnight stay was
anticipated. The patients ongoing inpatient care
for diagnostic testing and oral medications could
have been provided at an outpatient level of
care. - This admission did not meet the Two-Midnight Rule
criteria because the patients care for mild CHF
exacerbation without significant acute symptoms
did not require an inpatient level of care. The
patients care could have been provided at an
observation level of care.
34Good Documentation Example
- A 72-year-old female patient presented on May 04,
2015 to have an implantable cardioverter
defibrillator for severe ischemic cardiomyopathy. - The patients history included myocardial
infarction, coronary artery disease, chronic
systolic heart failure, hypercholesterolemia,
multi-vessel coronary artery disease, status post
diagonal vessel PCI in March as distal LAD
balloon angioplasty pleural effusion, and chronic
kidney disease, stage 3. - Her vital signs were Temperature 98.3, blood
pressure 121/84, heart rate 80, oxygen saturation
97 on 2 liters of oxygen. - The patients laboratory results were white
blood cells 9.8, hemoglobin 9, hematocrit 23,
platelet count 172, sodium 133, potassium 4.4,
blood urea nitrogen 127, and creatinine 2.32. - The original order for the patient was
observation status however, the patient developed
acute chronic systolic heart failure, anemia, and
acute kidney injury post procedure and on May 6,
2015 at 0951, the patient was admitted to
inpatient. - The patient was discharged on May 7, 2015.
- This claim meets the guidelines for the
Two-Midnight Rule.
35Documentation Supporting Admission
Condition Observation Inpatient
Atrial Fibrillation Rapid response to treatment Recurrent bouts or associated with another event, such as MI or PE
Chest Pain Negative Workup Positive troponins or EKG changes
COPD Exacerbation Responds to treatment Does not respond to treatment or is associated with pneumonia
VTE or Small PE Uncomplicated and responds to treatment PE with hemodynamic compromise or not eligible for Thrombin inhibitors
GI Bleed Chronic with normal BP and Hct Acute requiring transfusion and intervention
Abdominal Pain Negative Workup Acute findings (rebound tenderness, free fluid, or signs of inflammatory or obstructive process on CT
Acute neurological condition or Altered Mental Status Negative Workup Head and/or carotid imaging, TEE, active therapy
Electrolyte Disturbance Early response Persistent abnormalities
36Key Points for Education
- Part A reimbursement is based on the continued
need for acute hospital services for a second
midnight - Document what happens between the first and
second midnight to warrant continued acute
hospital services - Documentation of reassessment at 18-30 hours
after initial decision (observation or inpatient)
helps us understand decision-making process - Patient status changes require documentation of
the thought process for the change to support the
decision
37Livanta 2M Contacts
- Website Livanta.com or BFCCQIOarea5.com
- Area 5 Helpline 1-866-603-0970
- Area 1 Redetermination Manager Lamerial Daniels
ldaniels_at_livanta.com - UR/2M/Senior Program Director Pam Applegate
papplegate_at_livanta.com - Please feel free to contact us regarding status
of your reviews and/or hospital contact updates
38Questions?