Over the past year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has been enhancing its web-based Medicare Secondary Recovery Portal, which has improved its usefulness in identifying and resolving Medicare conditional payments.
CMS’ latest improvement, effective Jan. 5, is the addition of a self-reporting function providing for reporting a Medicare secondary payer case through the portal versus via phone or written correspondence to the BCRC. CMS has also updated its multi-factor authentication process, which ensures only authorized users can view information in the portal.
Self-reporting functionality added to MSPRP
The new functionality allows for self-reporting by a Medicare beneficiary, representative, insurer or an insurer representative in a liability, no-fault insurance or a workers’ compensation claim to CMS (known as an MSP lead). Important: MSPRP self-reporting does not replace Section 111 reporting.
Accordingly, if ongoing responsibility for medicals (ORM) has been reported through the Section 111 reporting process, then MSPRP self-reporting cannot be used. Similarly, if a total payment obligation to the claimant (TPOC) — typically a settlement — has been reported through the Section 111 process, then MSPRP self-reporting cannot be utilized.
Practically speaking, self-reporting would most often be used for the initiation of a conditional payment search stemming from a liability claim or a denied workers’ compensation claim. Prior to the introduction of self-reporting, reporting these types of claims to the BCRC required a phone call or written correspondence to the BCRC (self-reporting will remain available via phone and written correspondence).
The information to be submitted through the portal to self-report a claim is that which has been required to self-report a claim by phone or written correspondence, namely:
Upon submitting the report through the portal, if ORM or TPOC has already been reported, the user will be advised that the self-reporting cannot be completed. If the claim has not been previously reported with ORM or TPOC, then the following will occur:
Multi-factor authentication verification process updated
MFA is a security process that verifies the user’s identity by requiring multiple credentials rather than solely asking for a username and password. Effective Jan. 5, CMS replaced the current MFA process via EIDM/Symantec with one provided by OKTA. The change will require users to utilize the new authentication method to view “unmasked” information in the MSPRP.
Practical implications
As the self-reporting functionality is limited to cases where ORM or TPOC have not been reported, its use, while a welcome improvement, will not impact much of the work Tower completes on accepted workers’ compensation claims where ORM has been reported.
Tower commends CMS for these continuing enhancements to the MSPRP and looks forward to additional functionalities to be added in 2019, including a function to directly pay Medicare through the portal.
CMS’s Dec. 18, 2018, slide presentation, which details the above enhancements, may be found here.
The updated MSPRP User Guide, Version 4.4, which includes these enhancements, may be found here.
Daniel Anders is chief compliance officer for Tower MSA Partners. This column was reprinted with permission from Tower’s MSP Compliance Blog.
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