Resources

The Official Web Site for the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Records (EHR) Incentive Programs
The
Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs will provide incentive
payments to eligible professionals, eligible hospitals and critical
access hospitals (CAHs) as they adopt, implement, upgrade or demonstrate
meaningful use of certified EHR technology.
Registration for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program is now open. Participate early to get the maximum incentive payments!
Check on the links below for up-to-date, detailed information about the Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 authorizes the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to provide
reimbursement incentives for eligible professionals and hospitals who
are successful in becoming “meaningful users” of certified electronic
health record (EHR) technology. These incentive payments begin in 2011
and gradually decrease. Starting in 2015, providers are expected to
have adopted and be actively utilizing a certified EHR in compliance
with the “meaningful use” definition or they will be subject to
financial penalties under Medicare.
The focus on meaningful use is a recognition that better health care
does not come solely from the adoption of technology itself but through
the exchange and use of health information to best inform clinical
decisions at the point of care.
Over the next several months, CMS will be working closely with the
Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT and other parts of HHS
to develop regulations that will govern the initial year of the
incentives programs, including a definition of meaningful use for
2011. The proposed rule, with a 60-day period for public comment, is
targeted for publication in late 2009.
Both the HIT Policy Committee and the HIT Standards Committee
are providing recommendations to the National Coordinator for Health
Information that will help CMS develop the initial criteria for
meaningful use and assist in planning for any criteria expansion for
the future incentive programs. More than 800 public comments were
received on the HIT Policy Committee’s initial recommendations.
In addition, helpful input was provided at the April 28-29, 2009,
hearing of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics and at
21 listening sessions that CMS conducted in June.
Meaningful Use documents from ONC, CMS, NCVHS, and the HIT Standards and Policy Committees
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June 16, 2009
| Details for: MEDICARE AND MEDICAID HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: TITLE IV OF THE AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT link |
|
| For Immediate Release: |
Tuesday, June 16, 2009 |
| Contact: |
CMS Office of Public Affairs 202-690-61 |
MEDICARE AND MEDICAID HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: TITLE IV OF THE AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT
Background
On Feb. 17, 2009, President Obama signed the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act), a critical measure to
stimulate the economy. Among other provisions, the new law provides
major opportunities for the Department of Health and Human Services
(DHHS), its partner agencies, and the States to improve the nation’s
health care through health information technology (HIT) by promoting
the meaningful use of electronic health records (EHR) via incentives.
For a copy of the full bill, go to: http://www.hhs.gov/recovery/overview/index.html
The HIT provisions of the Recovery Act are found primarily in Title
XIII, Division A, Health Information Technology, and in Title IV of
Division B, Medicare and Medicaid Health Information Technology. These
titles together are cited as the Health Information Technology for
Economic and Clinical Health Act or the HITECH Act. This fact sheet
focuses on the provisions of Title IV only.
Funding
Under Title IV, funding is available to certain eligible
professionals (EPs) and hospitals, as described below. Funds will be
distributed through Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments to EPs,
physicians, and hospitals who are “meaningful EHR users.” In addition,
with regard to the Medicaid program, federal matching funds are also
available to States to support their administrative costs associated
with these provisions.
Criteria for Qualifying for an Incentive
The qualification criteria for incentives (i.e., meeting specified
HIT standards, policies, implementation specifications, timeframes, and
certification requirements) are still in development, and will be
defined through regulation and additional guidance materials. However,
CMS generally expects that under Medicare, “meaningful EHR users” would
demonstrate each of the following: meaningful use of a certified EHR,
the electronic exchange of health information to improve the quality of
health care, and reporting on clinical quality and other measures using
certified EHR technology. Medicaid programs will determine their own
requirements in line with the Medicaid-related provisions of the
Recovery Act. Funds will be distributed through Medicare and Medicaid
incentive payments to EPs and hospitals who are “meaningful EHR
users.” CMS intends to publish a proposed rule in late 2009 to propose
a definition of meaningful use of certified Electronic Health Records
(EHR) technology and establish criteria for the incentives programs.
CMS is working extensively with the Office of the National Coordinator
for Health Information Technology (ONC) to identify the proposed
criteria.
Medicare Payment Incentives for Eligible Professionals
- The Recovery Act establishes financial incentives beginning in
January 2011 for eligible professionals (EPs) who are meaningful EHR
users. Beginning in 2015, payment adjustments will be imposed on EPs
who are not meaningful EHR users.
- Hospital-based physicians who substantially furnish their services in a hospital setting are not eligible.
- The incentive payment is equal to 75 percent of Medicare allowable
charges for covered services furnished by the EP in a year, subject to
a maximum payment in the first, second, third, fourth, and fifth years
of $15,000; $12,000; $8,000; $4000; and $2,000, respectively. For
early adopters whose first payment year is 2011 or 2012, the maximum
payment is $18,000 in the first year.
- There will be no payments for meaningful EHR use after 2016.
- There would be no payments to EPs who first become meaningful EHR users in 2015 or thereafter.
- For EPs who predominantly furnish services in a health professional
shortage area (HPSA), incentive payments would be increased by 10
percent.
- The Medicare fee schedule amount for professional services provided
by an EP who was not a meaningful EHR user for the year would be
reduced by 1 percent in 2015, by 2 percent in 2016, by 3 percent for
2017 and by between 3 to 5 percent in subsequent years.
- For 2018 and thereafter, if the Secretary finds that the proportion
of EPs who are meaningful EHR users is less than 75 percent, then the
reductions will be increased by 1 percentage point each year, but by
not more than 5 percent overall.
Medicare Payment Incentives for Hospitals
- Incentive payments are provided, beginning with October 2010, for
eligible subsection (d) hospitals and critical access hospitals (CAHs)
that are meaningful EHR users. Reduced payment updates beginning in FY
2015 will apply to eligible hospitals that are not meaningful EHR users.
- An eligible hospital that is a meaningful EHR user could receive up
to four years of financial incentives payments, beginning with fiscal
year 2011. There will be no payments to hospitals that become
meaningful EHR users after 2015.
- Incentive Payments for Hospitals
- The incentive payment for each eligible hospital would be
calculated based on the product of (1) an initial amount, (2) the
Medicare share, and (3) a transition factor.
(a)The initial amount is the sum of a $2 million base year amount
plus a dollar amount based on the number of discharges for each
eligible hospital.
(b)The Medicare share is a fraction based on estimated Medicare
fee-for-service and managed care inpatient bed days divided by
estimated total inpatient bed-days and modified by charges for charity
care.
(c)The transition factor phases down the incentive payments over the
four-year period. The factor equals 1 for the first payment year, ¾
for the second payment year, ½ for the third payment year, and ¼ for
the fourth payment year, and zero thereafter.
The Secretary has discretion to use other data if the required data to calculate the incentive payment formula does not exist.
- The transition factor is modified for those eligible hospitals that
first become meaningful EHR users beginning in 2014. Such hospitals
would receive payments as if they became meaningful EHR users beginning
in 2013 (i.e., if a hospital were to begin EHR meaningful use in 2014,
the transition factor used for the year would be ¾ instead of 1, ½ for
the second year, ¼ for the third year, and zero thereafter ).
- o For CAHs that are meaningful EHR users, reasonable costs for
the purchase of certified EHR technology would be computed by expensing
such costs in a single payment year, rather than depreciating them over
time. In addition, incentive payments for CAHs would be based on the
Medicare share formula used for subsection (d) hospitals, plus 20
percentage points (not to exceed a total of 100 percent). CAHs would
receive a prompt interim payment for the Medicare share of such costs
(subject to reconciliation). Payments would not be made with respect to
a cost reporting period beginning during a payment year after 2015, and
in no case would a CAH receive payment with respect to more than 4
consecutive payment years.
- Market Basket Adjustments for Hospitals that are not Meaningful Users
- Eligible subsection (d) hospitals that are not meaningful users for
a fiscal year would receive a net reduction of ¼, ½, and ¾ of the
market basket update that would apply in 2015, 2016, 2017 and
thereafter, respectively.
- The Secretary of HHS may, on a case-by-case basis, exempt a
hospital if requiring the hospital to be a meaningful EHR user would
result in a significant hardship.
- Eligible CAHs that are not meaningful EHR users for a fiscal year
and otherwise would be paid at 101 percent of reasonable costs are
subject to the following payment adjustments: in FY2015, reimbursement
for inpatient services at 100.66 percent of reasonable costs; in
FY2016, reimbursement for inpatient services at 100.33 percent of
reasonable costs; and in FY2017 and each subsequent year, 100 percent
of reasonable costs.
.
Medicaid Payment Incentives
The Recovery Act establishes 100 percent Federal Financial
Participation (FFP) for States to provide incentive payments to
eligible Medicaid providers to purchase, implement, and operate
(including support services and training for staff) certified EHR
technology. It also establishes 90 percent FFP for State
administrative expenses related to carrying out this provision.
Incentive Payments to Providers
- Certain classes of Medicaid professionals and hospitals are
eligible for incentive payments to encourage the adoption and use of
certified EHR technology. Eligible professionals include physicians,
dentists, certified nurse-midwives, nurse practitioners, and physician
assistants who are practicing in Federally Qualified Health Centers
(FQHCs) or Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) led by a physician assistant.
- Eligible professionals must meet minimum Medicaid patient volume
percentages, and must waive rights to duplicative Medicare EHR
incentive payments. Eligible professionals may receive up to 85
percent of the net average allowable costs for certified EHR
technology, including support and training (determined on the basis of
studies that the Secretary will undertake), up to a maximum level, and
incentive payments are available for no more than a 6-year period.
- Acute care hospitals with at least 10 percent Medicaid patient
volume would also be eligible for payments, as would children's
hospitals of any patient volume. Entities that promote the adoption of
certified EHR technology, as designated by the State, are also eligible
to receive incentive payments through arrangements with eligible
professionals under certain conditions.
Medicaid Incentive Program Qualifications
To be eligible for incentive payments not associated with the
initial adoption/implementation/upgrade of EHR technology, the provider
must demonstrate meaningful use of the EHR technology through a means
approved by the State and acceptable to the Secretary. In determining
what is “meaningful use,” a State must ensure that populations with
unique needs, such as children, are addressed. A State may also
require providers to report clinical quality measures as part of the
meaningful use demonstration. In addition, to the extent specified by
the Secretary, the EHR technology must be compatible with State or
Federal administrative management systems.
EPs may not receive an incentive under both Medicare and Medicaid in
a given year. CMS and the States will develop means to prevent such
duplicate payments. CMS expects that the prevention of duplicative
payments will be addressed more fully through notice and comment
rulemaking.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Question: When will the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) publish regulations to define certified Electronic
Health Records and “meaningful use?”
Answer: CMS intends to publish a proposed rule in late 2009
to define meaningful use of certified Electronic Health Records (EHR)
technology and establish criteria for the incentives programs. We are
working extensively with the Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology(ONC) to identify the proposed criteria.
Question: What is CMS’ overall time frame for actions and activities related to the incentive program?
Answer: Although further details will be developed, CMS can provide the following timeline based on the current implementation plan:
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Date
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Milestone
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2009
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- Coordinate with ONC to develop policies such as the definition of meaningful use
- Develop proposed rules to allow public input to the incentive program policies
- Plan systems and other requirements needed to support the incentives programs
- Plan national outreach program
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2010
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- Conduct outreach to eligible professionals and providers and to State Medicaid Agencies
- Develop systems to support the payment of incentives
- Develop final rules to establish policies needed to pay incentives
- Develop systems to monitor and evaluate incentive payments
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No sooner than October 2010
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Start to pay hospital incentives for Medicare and monitor payments
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No sooner than January 2011
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- Start to pay eligible professionals for Medicare and monitor payments
- Begin and monitor Medicaid incentive payments to eligible professionals and hospitals
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2011 - 2016
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Continue paying hospital incentives for Medicare and monitor payments
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2011 – 2016
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Continue paying eligible professionals incentives for Medicare and monitor payments
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2011 - 2021
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Continue paying Medicaid incentives to eligible professionals and hospitals and monitor payments
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2015 and thereafter
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Initiate payment reductions to Medicare hospitals and eligible professionals that fail to adopt EHRs
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Question: When will the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) begin to pay incentives to eligible professionals and
hospitals for using certified Electronic Health Records ( EHRs)?
Answer: By statute, the earliest dates that CMS will be able
to pay an incentive under Medicare is October 1, 2010, for hospitals
and January 1, 2011, for eligible professionals.
The statute does not define a date for the Medicaid incentives
program. Given the range of regulatory and planning activities that
must precede States being able to make provider incentive payments, as
well as the importance of coordinating Medicaid and Medicare payments
to prevent duplication, CMS does not expect that States will be able to
make such payments until 2011.
Work is underway to define the meaningful EHR user criteria, as well
as the requirements for applying for and receiving the EHR payment
incentives, CMS expects to issue a proposed rule in late 2009.
Question: If an eligible professional uses a certified
Electronic Health Record (EHR) in a meaningful way in accordance with
the adopted regulations, and meets the requirements established by CMS,
could that professional receive both the Medicare EHR payment incentive
as well as the Medicaid EHR payment incentive?
Answer: No, an eligible professional may only receive an EHR
payment under either Medicare or Medicaid. CMS expects to more fully
address the issue of duplicative payments under Medicare and Medicaid
through rulemaking.
Question: If I already have an Electronic Health Record
(EHR) that has been certified by the Certification Commission for
Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT), will I have to buy a new
system if the government mandates that only EHRs that meet a higher
certification level are considered certified EHRs?
Answer: Decisions about EHR standards, implementation
specifications and certification criteria have not been made yet, and
are under development. Policies will be proposed in the regulation to
be published in late 2009.
Question: What is the maximum incentive an eligible professional can earn for using an Electronic Health Record under Medicaid?
Answer: The statute does not define fixed amounts for the
incentive payments, only ceilings that cannot be exceeded. CMS expects
that the actual payment amounts will be more fully addressed through
notice and comment rulemaking.
Question: What is the maximum Electronic Health Record(EHR) incentive an eligible professional can earn under Medicare?
Answer: Eligible professionals(EPs), who adopt Electronic
Health Records as early as 2011 or 2012 may be eligible for up to
$44,000 in Medicare incentive payments spread out over five years
(increased by 10 percent for EPs who predominantly furnish services in
a health professional shortage area).
Question: What if my Electronic Health Record (EHR) system
costs much more than the incentive the government will pay? May I
request additional funds?
Answer: The Recovery Act does not provide for incentive
payments under Medicare or Medicaid beyond the limits established by
the legislation, regardless of the cost of the EHR system chosen by
eligible professionals or hospitals. With regard to Medicaid, the
purpose of the 100 percent FFP provider incentive payments to certain
eligible Medicaid providers is to encourage the adoption and meaningful
use of certified EHR technology. While the incentive payments are
expected to be used for certified EHR technology and support services,
including maintenance and training necessary for the adoption and
operation of such technology, the incentive payments are not direct
reimbursement for such activities, but rather are intended to serve as
an incentive for eligible professionals and hospitals to adopt and
meaningfully use certified EHR technology
Question: What is the earliest date the payment adjustments
will start to be imposed for eligible professionals and hospitals that
are not meaningful Electronic Health Record (EHR) users under the
HITECH provisions of the Recovery Act?
Answer: The HITECH provisions of the Recovery Act establish
2015 as the first year that payment adjustments will start to be
imposed on Medicare eligible professionals and hospitals that are not
meaningful EHR users. There are no payment adjustments associated with
the Medicaid provisions under Section 4201.
Question: How will eligible providers and hospitals apply
for incentives if they are using certified Electronic Health Records
(EHRs) in accordance with the standards established by Health and Human
Services (HHS) under the HITECH portion of the Recovery Act?
Answer: The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
will publish a rule establishing the criteria which eligible
professionals and hospitals must meet in order to qualify for the EHR
incentive payments, including defining meaningful EHR users. The rule
will also explain how to apply for those incentives.
Question: How will the public know who has received incentive payments under the Recovery Act?
Answer: CMS will post the names of those receiving Medicare
incentives online. The list will include the elements identified in
the Recovery Act: name, business addresses, and business phone number
of all Medicare eligible professionals and hospitals who received
incentive payments under the Recovery Act. There is no such
requirement for CMS to publish the names of those receiving Medicaid
incentive payments under Section 4201 though States may opt do so.
Question: What will be done to help prepare providers to
take advantage of the incentive payments for the meaningful use of an
Electronic Health Record (EHR)?
Answer: A set of supportive programs will be announced after
CMS publishes a proposed rule in late 2009, that is, regarding a
definition of meaningful use of certified EHR technology and criteria
for the incentives programs. These programs are intended to educate
and support providers, enable health information exchange, and build
the workforce that will be needed for success. Information about these
supportive efforts will be communicated to eligible providers through
many channels.
For additional information, visit http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Recovery/
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