DAR File No. 31507
This filing was published in the 06/15/2008, issue, Vol. 2008, No. 12, of the Utah State Bulletin.
Health, Health Care Financing, Coverage and Reimbursement Policy
R414-71
Medical Supplies - Parenteral, Enteral, and IV Therapy
NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE
DAR File No.: 31507
Filed: 05/30/2008, 03:11
Received by: NL
RULE ANALYSIS
Purpose of the rule or reason for the change:
The purpose of this change is to repeal Rule R414-71 because the services it provides are already implemented in Rule R414-70.
Summary of the rule or change:
This rule is repealed in its entirety.
State statutory or constitutional authorization for this rule:
Sections 26-1-5 and 26-18-3
Anticipated cost or savings to:
the state budget:
There is no impact to the state budget because the services that this rule provides are ongoing and implemented in Rule R414-70.
local governments:
There is no budget impact because local governments do not fund or provide the services described in the rule.
small businesses and persons other than businesses:
There is no impact to other persons and small businesses because the services that this rule provides are ongoing and implemented in Rule R414-70.
Compliance costs for affected persons:
There are no compliance costs because the services that this rule provides are ongoing and implemented in Rule R414-70.
Comments by the department head on the fiscal impact the rule may have on businesses:
Rule R414-70 now covers this category of service making this rule unnecessary. No fiscal impact. A. Richard Melton, Acting Executive Director
The full text of this rule may be inspected, during regular business hours, at the Division of Administrative Rules, or at:
HealthHealth Care Financing, Coverage and Reimbursement Policy
CANNON HEALTH BLDG
288 N 1460 W
SALT LAKE CITY UT 84116-3231
Direct questions regarding this rule to:
Craig Devashrayee at the above address, by phone at 801-538-6641, by FAX at 801-538-6099, or by Internet E-mail at cdevashrayee@utah.gov
Interested persons may present their views on this rule by submitting written comments to the address above no later than 5:00 p.m. on:
07/15/2008
This rule may become effective on:
07/22/2008
Authorized by:
Richard Melton, Deputy Director
RULE TEXT
R414. Health, Health Care Financing, Coverage and Reimbursement Policy.
[R414-71.
Medical Supplies -- Parenteral, Enteral, and IV Therapy.
R414-71-1.
Introduction and Authority.
(1) Eligible Medicaid recipients with chronic
physical illnesses, trauma, or terminal disease, who are able to live at home
or in a long term care facility but who cannot be sustained with oral feeding,
and, therefore rely on total parenteral nutrition (TPN) or enteral nutrition
(EN) to sustain life, are covered under this program.
(2) Limited coverage is provided for total oral
nutrition and supplemental oral or tube nutrition using medical foods. Food and nutrition are not covered as
medical assistance under section 1905 (a) of the Social Security Act except as
listed in Subsection R414-71-4(5).
(3) The IV therapy program provides medications,
solutions, blood factors, chemicals, or nutrients by injection or infusion for
eligible Medicaid recipients who reside at home or in a nursing facility.
(4) The provision of services and supplies is
under the authority of 42 CFR 440.70 and 42 CFR 441.15, Oct. 2005 ed.
R414-71-2.
Definitions.
(1) Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) means total
nutrition administered by intravenous, subcutaneous or mucosal infusion.
(2) Enteral Nutrition (EN) means by nasogastric,
jejunostomy or gastrostomy tube into the stomach or intestines to supply
nutrition when a non-functioning gastrointestinal tract is present due to pathology
or structure.
(3) Nutrients means those products with specific
formulas used to supply the total nutritional intake of the recipient by
gastrostomy, jejunostomy or nasogastric tube.
(4) Nutritional Supplement means medical foods
that are used occasionally to supplement a regular but possibly inadequate
diet.
(5) Cassettes mean prepackaged containers or
envelopes of semi-disposable needles and tubing which provide a pathway for the
TPN or IV medication to pass from container to vein.
(6) WIC is the federal nutritional program for
women, infants and children.
(7) Medical food as defined in 21 U.S.C.
360ee(b)(3), means a food which is formulated to be consumed or administered
enterally under the supervision of a physician and which is intended for the
specific dietary management of a disease or condition for which distinctive
nutritional requirements, based on recognized scientific principles are
established by medical evaluation. To
be considered a medical food, a product must be:
(a) created for oral or tube feeding;
(b) labeled for dietary managment of a medical
disorder, disease, or condition;
(c) labeled for use under medical supervision;
and
(d) primarily obtained through hospitals,
clinics and other medical and long term care facilities.
R414-71-3.
Client Eligibility Requirements.
TPN,
EN and IV services are provided to categorically and medically needy eligible
individuals.
R414-71-4.
Program Access Requirements.
(1) TPN and total EN is available to individuals
with a:
(a) missing digestive organ;
(b) long term or permanently non-functioning
gastrointestinal tract; or
(c) short term non-functioning gastrointestinal
tract which may occur following a surgical procedure.
(2) IV therapy requires a physician's order or
prescription and prior authorization.
(3) TPN, EN or other related nutritional
products require a physician's order or prescription which must specify the
kilo calories necessary per day.
Parenteral infusion is identified and reimbursed per daily kilocalorie
requirements.
(4) Total oral nutrition and supplemental oral
or by tube nutrition is available for Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis
and Treatment (EPSDT) eligible children if it is an integral part of another
EPDST service or has a curative or healing effect on the recipient beyond that
which would be provided by ordinary food.
All total oral nutrition or supplemental nutrition must be a medical
food for reimbursement by Medicaid.
R414-71-5.
Service Coverage.
(1) TPN and EN systems, related supplies,
equipment, and nutrients are covered as prosthetic devices if they replace
normal nutritional function of the esophagus, stomach or bowel.
(2) TPN or EN therapy is a covered benefit for
clients residing at home or in a long term care facility.
(3) The following services are allowed for
clients residing at home or in a long term care facility:
(a) parenteral solutions;
(b) a monthly parenteral nutrition
administration kit which includes all catheters, pump filters, tubing,
connectors, and syringes relating to the parenteral infusions;
(c) IV medications, blood factors, and
solutions;
(d) heparin flush and heparin;
(e) enteral solutions for total enteral therapy
through a tube; and
(f) enteral administration kits.
(4) Nutritional supplements are covered for
infants and children ages 0 through 5 who live at home and are in the WIC
program, for quantities beyond what WIC allows if:
(a) the target weight of a child cannot be
attained with expected oral feedings;
(b) the oral feedings are present but due to
weakness, illness, or disease the child's nutritional level is difficult to
maintain; or
(c) the child is concurrently using a ventilator
or oxygen, or has a tracheostomy.
(5)
IV Therapy and treatment which may
include injections or infusions are a covered service. IV therapy may include:
(a) pain medication therapy;
(b) antibiotics and antimicrobials;
(c) fluids such as glucose and fluid
replacement;
(d) electrolytes;
(e) blood products;
(f) IV supply kit for recipients residing at
home;
(g) extension tubing set for peripheral or
midline catheter; or
(h) solutions used to cleanse or irrigate the
catheter for which a national drug code (NDC) code exists.
(6) Administration supplies, syringes, bags,
pumps, tubes, and administration kits for providing TPN, EN and IV therapies
are covered with reasonable limitations as to amounts and length of
administration as medically indicated and according to current standard medical
practices.
(7) Total nutrition without a feeding tube and
supplemental nutrition with a feeding tube are covered for children 0 through
20 years of age if the requirements of subsections (a) through (c) are met. Nutritional supplements are covered for
children 5 through 20 years of age if the requirements of subsections (a)
through (c) are met.
(a) The prescribed nutritional product is a
medical food.
(b) Current disease or dysfunction of the
digestive tract, including dysphagia, causes nutritional deficiency with
insufficient nutrients to maintain body weight by impaired delivery of
nutrients to the small bowel or due to impaired digestion and absorption by the
small bowel, or both.
(c) The client's physician provides
documentation to the Department:
(i) that the client has been unable to reach or
maintain weight in the 10th percentile for the client's age and sex by taking
food orally for the two months prior to the request;
(ii) that the client's specific diagnosis and
current condition require medical food supplementation; and
(iii) by peer review medical literature that the
prescribed medical food will improve body weight, the clinical outcome, and
limit disease progression for the client's specific diagnosis and current
condition when compared to nonmedical food.
(8) Oral supplemental nutrition is covered for
adults and children to treat inborn errors of metabolism subject to all
criteria listed in Subsection R414-71-5(7).
(9) To reauthorize ongoing care the following is
waived:
(a) The need to document the recipient's weight
under the 10th percentile;
(b) If the client's medical diagnosis has not
materially changed, the need to resubmit peer review medical literature if it
has been previously submitted.
R414-71-6.
Limitations.
The
specific limitations for TPN, EN, or IV therapy are as follows:
(1) Cassettes shall be supplied with the
parenteral administration kits and not as separate items.
(2) Enteral nutrients, IV diluents, injectable
medications, and solutions are available as allowed in the pharmacy program
with the limitations stipulated therein.
(3) A monthly supply and administration kit
containing all supplies except the catheter is a Medicaid benefit only for
recipients residing at home. Bags can
not be reimbursed separately if a kit is supplied.
(4) Equipment such as IV poles, disposable
swabs, antiseptic solutions and dressings for the catheter are not reimbursable
by Medicaid for nursing home patients, but are provided by the nursing home
under a per diem rate.
(5) To begin an infusion, an intravenous
catheter may be placed by a home health agency nurse who has been trained for
IV catheter placement, a physician, or a physician's assistant whose training
and protocols allow for this service.
(6) Breast milk from breast milk banks and
infant formulas such as Similac, Enfamil, or other foods generally used as
breast milk substitutes are not medical foods, and are not covered by Medicaid
unless formulated for use through a feeding tube.
(7) Kits, bags and pumps are not covered
benefits with nutritional supplements unless administered by a tube.
(8) Total and supplemental nutrition are not
available for persons with an organic nutritional need resulting from
psychological problems or a failure to thrive.
(9) General nutrition is included in the per
diem rate paid by Medicaid under a contract with a long term care facility and
is not separately reimbursable for its patients.
(10) Nutritional supplements are not covered for
adults residing at home or in a long term care facility. Total nutrition for children ages 0 through
5 is covered under the WIC program as stated in Subsection R414-71-5(4).
(11) A pharmacy provider may be reimbursed for
TPN or EN supplies, nutrients and medications.
There is no additional reimbursement to the pharmacist for preparing the
medication, such as filling syringes, mixing solutions, or adding drugs to an
infusion solution. Pharmacists bill
Medicaid using National Drug Codes.
Heparin for flushing the infusion catheter is billed through the
pharmacy point of sale system using the NDC for heparin.
R414-71-7.
Reimbursement.
(1) HCPCs coding is used for reimbursement. Reimbursement fees are established by
discounting historical charges, by discounting Medicare fees for HCPCs codes
for the geographic region, and by professional judgment to encourage efficient,
effective and economical services.
Adjustments to the fee schedule are made in accordance with
appropriations and to produce efficient and effective services to be in
accordance with the provisions of 4.19-B of the State Plan.
(2) The Department pays the lower of the amount
billed and the rate on the schedule. A
provider shall not charge the Department a fee that exceeds the provider's
usual and customary charges for the provider's private-pay patients.
(3) Providers must accept the Medicare
assignment for clients eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid benefits. All third party payors, including Medicare,
must be billed prior to billing Medicaid.
KEY:
Medicaid
Date of Enactment or Last Substantive
Amendment: March 31, 2008
Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted
Law: 26-18-3; 26-1-5]
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
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For questions regarding the content or application of this rule, please contact Craig Devashrayee at the above address, by phone at 801-538-6641, by FAX at 801-538-6099, or by Internet E-mail at cdevashrayee@utah.gov
For questions about the rulemaking process, please contact the Division of Administrative Rules (801-538-3764). Please Note: The Division of Administrative Rules is NOT able to answer questions about the content or application of these administrative rules.
Last modified: 06/12/2008 2:17 PM