Friday, January 28, 2022

THIRD PARTY LIABILITY REQUIREMENTS IN THE MEDICAID PROGRAM

MEDICAID'S THIRD PARTY LIABILITY REQUIREMENTS TPL Syrtis Solutions COB DRA OHI

The Social Security Act, signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1934, stipulates in the statute § 1902( a)( 25) of the law "... that the State or local agency administering such plan will take all reasonable measures to ascertain the legal liability of third parties ... to pay for care and services" delivered to Medicaid recipients. Essentially, it means that Medicaid becomes the payer of last resort, a term also known as third party liability, or the coordination of benefits. In other words, Medicaid pays last, and if a Medicaid member holds other coverage, such as insurance from an employer, that insurer pays first, and then Medicaid pays any remaining costs.

As much as 10 percent of the Medicaid members across the nation hold additional insurance besides Medicaid, which is considered TPL. Types of TPL include employee insurance, Workers' Compensation, Medicare, COBRA insurance from past employment, casualty insurance, dental insurance, eye insurance, and insurance to cover pharmaceutical costs.

The Deficit Reduction Act passed by Congress in 2005 stipulates in Section 6035 that states are directed to pass laws that force health insurance companies to give the state health insurance premium data involving people who are eligible for Medicaid assistance. Specifics of the DRA include:

  • Health insurance companies must hand enrollment information over to Medicaid, or its agent, so member benefits can be coordinated.
  • This information is to be used to identify supplementary health insurance coverage so that improper payments are not made and payments made in error are recovered.
  • Payments are required to be made as long as the claim is submitted within three years after the medical service was provided.
  • Claims cannot be denied as long as the state started action on the claim within six years after the state submitted the claim.

Specifications must be made that health insurance consists of other entities that are by statute, agreement, or contract, legally responsible for paying a claim of a healthcare service; pharmacy benefit managers; managed care organizations; group health plans; and self-insured plans.


IDENTIFYING THIRD PARTY LIABILITY IN MEDICAID


Determining primary health insurance coverage of Medicaid beneficiaries can be achieved by a state through one of three different approaches and still allow the state to comply with TPL criteria, under federal law. The problem is that if only one approach is implemented by the state, savings and recovery are not at their greatest possible amount. The highest level of savings consists of processing at all three of the following points in the process by the state. Here are those processes:

Applicants enrolling in the program are asked about other insurance coverage.


The issue is that some enrollees assume they will be disqualified from Medicaid, so this information is withheld. And, since adding Medicaid coverage might also imply an employment change in which employer insurance coverage is lost, this disclosure might be immaterial soon after the applicant's enrollment.


The state looks for TPL coverage in order to avoid extra cost.


Medicaid eligibility names are cross-referenced with names enrolled in state and national health insurance companies in order to detect primary insurers before the submission of Medicaid claims. But, this practice becomes impossible unless state rules require the timely delivery of insurance data when a state also requires the prompt payment of insurance claims. Additionally, a number of medical services, like those dealing with a pregnancy, must be paid at the time that they are claimed, according to federal law. That means that pregnancy claims have to be paid immediately before recovery can be made from responsible insurers.


Improper payments are recovered.


The third part of a comprehensive TPL plan involves Medicaid's payment, which occurs one of two ways. Medicaid can offset the service provider during the next payment issued for the amount that was overpaid. This is called "provider disallowances." Or, Medicaid receives the overpayment from the correct insurance carrier. This is called commercial insurance direct billings. Strong state policies are required for this third step in a TPL plan to function, since without it, the state can receive denials from insurance companies. The bottom line is that when payment errors are cost avoided, time is not wasted in pay and chase activities.


WHAT AN EFFECTIVE TPL PLAN NEEDS TO INCLUDE


So, in order to gain an efficient TPL plan, immediate and effective discovery of additional coverage is needed at Medicaid enrollment. Also, cost avoidance discovery must take on immediacy when claims are made and past errors need to be resolved quickly. What works best is when the federal directives and state laws mesh to form a truly thorough DRA policy that realizes other health insurance coverage with quick recovery of each claim.

ProTPL offers a solution that provides this critical information in real-time, at the point of sale.

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

MEDICAID 2021 - A YEAR IN REVIEW

 

MEDICAID 2021 A YEAR IN REVIEW SYRTIS SOLUTIONS


Syrtis Solutions distributes a year-end Medicaid review to help you stay informed. The yearly roundup concentrates on developments, analysis, and legislation that pertains to Medicaid program integrity, cost avoidance, coordination of benefits, third party liability, improper payments, fraud, waste, and abuse. Below is a list of last year's important Medicaid developments.


Read here. 

Monday, January 3, 2022

MEDICAID NEWS IN DECEMBER

Medicaid News December 2021 Syrtis Solutions


Syrtis Solutions publishes a monthly Medicaid news roundup to help you stay up-to-date. The monthly recap focuses on developments, analysis, and legislation that relates to Medicaid integrity, cost avoidance, coordination of benefits, third party liability, improper payments, fraud, waste, and abuse. Here is a list of last month's important Medicaid news.

Click here to read.