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Medicare Managed Care: Greater Oversight Needed to Protect Beneficiary Rights

HEHS-99-68 Published: Apr 12, 1999. Publicly Released: Apr 13, 1999.
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Highlights

Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed Medicare's managed care beneficiary appeals process, focusing on: (1) the appeals process available to beneficiaries when managed care plans deny care or payment for services; (2) beneficiaries' use of the appeals process and the extent to which they are informed of their appeal rights; and (3) the Health Care Financing Administration's (HCFA) oversight of this process.

Recommendations

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
Health Care Financing Administration To help ensure that the appeals process provides adequate protection to Medicare beneficiaries, the Administrator, HCFA, should provide more explicit denial notice instructions to plans. Denial notices should explain the coverage criteria and state the specific reason or reasons why the beneficiary did not meet the criteria.
Closed – Implemented
CMS will require plans to use standardized denial notices beginning January 1, 2002.
Health Care Financing Administration To help ensure that the appeals process provides adequate protection to Medicare beneficiaries, the Administrator, HCFA, should set specific timeliness standards for certain types of denial notices, such as discontinued skilled nursing facility care services, to allow beneficiaries reasonable time to obtain an expedited appeal decision.
Closed – Implemented
CMS published a final rule on April 4, 2003 establishing timeliness requirements for denial notices.
Health Care Financing Administration To help ensure that the appeals process provides adequate protection to Medicare beneficiaries, the Administrator, HCFA, should develop criteria for plans to use in determining when initial decisions and appeals should be expedited.
Closed – Implemented
Criteria and timeframes for determining how and when an appeal should be expedited by an HMO are contained in regulations. During 2001, CMS began releasing chapters of a new Medicare managed care manual intended to inform HMOs about program requirements. Chapter 13 of the manual has been released and explains organization grievances and appeals.
Health Care Financing Administration To improve HCFA's monitoring of the appeals process, the Administrator, HCFA, should require each plan to collect sufficient information from its provider groups so that HCFA staff can, during the course of a normal biennial performance review, determine whether the plan and its provider groups satisfactorily implemented the required appeals process.
Closed – Implemented
CMS changed the Medicare+Choice (M+C) Monitoring Guide in November 1999, to include program requirements pertaining to delegation (42 CFR 422.502(i)(4)). These regulations (1) make M+COs accountable for any function delegated to an outside entity, (2) require entities performing delegated functions to sign a written agreement which specifies the activities and reporting responsibilities, (3) require M+COs to evaluate an entity's ability to perform the delegated activities prior to delegation, and (4) requires M+COs to monitor entities performing delegated functions. During monitoring visits to M+COs, CMS randomly samples and reviews case files pertaining to organization determinations, reconsiderations for expedited and standard cases, and appeals. These samples may include cases in which a delegated provider group was responsible for informing beneficiaries of their appeal rights. If CMS suspects that a particular entity performing delegated functions is having problems with appeals-related items, agency staff will generally examine a distinct random sample of cases from that entity to assess its performance.
Health Care Financing Administration To improve HCFA's monitoring of the appeals process, the Administrator, HCFA, should require agency staff conducting performance reviews to sample a number of denied cases that were not appealed to determine whether beneficiaries were informed of their appeal rights.
Closed – Implemented
CMS reviews random samples to determine if Medicare+Choice Offices (M+CO) correctly provided appeals rights to beneficiaries when requests were denied. CMS updated the M+C Monitoring Guide in November 1999, to include a worksheet with a column to record whether the correct appeals language was provided to a beneficiary when a claim was denied. In addition, CMS reviews a random sample of M+CO grievances that could indicate if an M+CO is not providing correct appeal rights to beneficiaries.
Health Care Financing Administration To improve HCFA's monitoring of the appeals process, the Administrator, HFCA, should use the data HCFA collects during plan performance reviews to assess the relative performance of plans, and develop strategies for better plan monitoring and program management.
Closed – Not Implemented
CMS hired PriceWaterhouseCoopers to develop a strategy to identify and monitor Medicare+Choice Offices (M+CO) that may need to improve their performance in areas related to the appeals process. PriceWaterhouseCoopers will develop a formula that uses CAHPS and independent review entity data to identify M+COs to monitor a tool (electronic and manual) to implement the monitoring strategy, and a short survey to followup with a few (no more than nine) beneficiaries enrolled in each identified M+CO. As of September, 2002, PriceWaterhouseCoopers has not issued its final report to CMS. In Spring 2008,CMS indicated that M+C is no longer a program. As a result we are closing this recommendation as not implemented.
Health Care Financing Administration To ensure that appeals data are available to HCFA and Medicare beneficiaries, the Administrator, HCFA, should develop requirements for the type and format of appeals data plans must collect and make available.
Closed – Implemented
HCFA has issued an OPL that would implement this recommendation on January 27, 2000.

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Appeals processBeneficiariesClaims settlementHealth care programsHealth care servicesHealth maintenance organizationsHealth services administrationManaged health careMedical expense claimsMedicareSkilled nursing facilities