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State: Ntl. Anders: CMS Rolls Out Updates to User Guide: [2020-10-23] |
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Earlier this month, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid released an updated MMSEA Section 111 Medicare Secondary Payer Mandatory Reporting User Guide (Version 6.0). Here are the key updates with analysis and practical implications. ![]() Dan Anders Additional definition of total payment obligation to claimant (TPOC) Section 6.4 of Volume 3 (Policy Guidance) of the user guide defines TPOC this way:
The update added an explanation of the TPOC amount computation to this definition:
CMS’ definition seems to have been largely pulled from the Workers’ Compensation Medicare Set-Aside (WCMSA) Reference Guide’s definition of total settlement. Its purpose in the Reference Guide is to determine whether a settlement meets CMS MSA review thresholds. While we assume CMS’ intent is to help reporting entities better determine the TPOC amount, adding this computation definition raises some concerns:
We see using the amounts forgiven term as a way for CMS to provide settling parties the ability to obtain an MSA approval when the comp case is settling and all or most of the settlement funds are coming from a third-party liability settlement. However, in the mandatory reporting context, amounts forgiven is a specific dollar amount that must reported and, thus, becomes relevant to Medicare conditional payment recovery. Were the comp carrier to report amounts forgiven in the TPOC amount, CMS and its recovery contractor would assume that the injured worker has received these funds as part of the WC settlement, which is not the case. These funds are not a payment to the claimant. The injured worker presumably receives payment from the third-party liability settlement and, if he or she was a Medicare beneficiary at the time of that settlement, this will be reported to Medicare. Requiring the WC carrier to report amounts forgiven in settlement, and then having the liability carrier report the liability settlement, is duplicative and unnecessary to protect Medicare’s interests. We hope CMS reconsiders the use of this terminology in its TPOC computation or clarifies what it means by "amounts forgiven." Indemnity-only settlements are not reportable Following its Aug. 13, 2020, webinar on Section 111 reporting, where CMS officials reiterated that indemnity-only settlements are not reportable as TPOC, CMS has now added the following to Section 6.5.1 of the guide, which also incorporates “property damage only” claims:
This raises the question of whether a prior indemnity-only settlement amount is combined with a later settlement releasing medicals and reported as TPOC. As mentioned earlier, CMS’ TPOC computation definition was taken from the WCMSA Reference Guide and applied to the TPOC computation. In doing so, CMS excluded the phrase “prior settlements of the same claim” from the TPOC definition. Based on this exclusion, which is consistent with other guidance in the user guide, we accept that a prior indemnity-only settlement is not reported as TPOC, even when a later settlement releases medicals. Dan Anders is chief compliance officer at Tower MSA Partners LLC. This entry is republished with permission from the Tower MSP Compliance Blog. |