Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2004/07/28/04-16932/tricare-individual-case-management-program-program-for-persons-with-disabilities-extended-benefits
Timestamp: 2016-05-31 12:06:26
Document Index: 501529904

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', 'art 484', 'art 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', '§ 199', 'art 199', 'art 199']

Federal Register | TRICARE; Individual Case Management Program; Program for Persons With Disabilities; Extended Benefits for Disabled Family Members of Active Duty Service Members; Custodial Care
Dates: Termination of the Individual Case Management Program (Sec. 199.4(i)) became effective December 28, 2001. The remainder of this rule is effective July 1, 2004.
Effective Date: 12/28/2001
69 FR 44942
-44952 (11 pages)
Document Number: 04-16932
Shorter URL: https://federalregister.gov/a/04-16932 Related Topics
The Department is publishing this final rule to implement requirements enacted by Congress in section 701(g) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 (NDAA-02), which terminates the Individual Case Management Program. The Department withdraws its proposed rule published at 66 FR 39699 on August 1, 2001, regarding the Individual Case Management Program. This rule also implements section 701(b) of the NDAA-02 which provides additional benefits for certain eligible active duty dependents by amending the TRICARE regulations governing the Program for Persons with Disabilities. The Program for Persons with Disabilities is now called the Extended Care Health Option. Other administrative amendments are included to clarify specific policies that relate to the Extended Care Health Option, custodial care, and to update related definitions.
TRICARE: Individual Case Management: Program for Persons With Disabilities: Extended Benefits for Disabled Family Members of Active Duty Service Members: Custodial Care 4 actions from August 6th, 2003 to September 2004
68 FR 46526
Termination of the Individual Case Management Program (§ 199.4(i)) became effective December 28, 2001. The remainder of this rule is effective July 1, 2004.
Michael Kottyan, Medical Benefits and Reimbursement Systems, TRICARE Management Activity, telephone (303) 676-3520. Questions regarding payment of specific claims should be addressed to the appropriate TRICARE contractor.
The Individual Case Management Program (ICMP). Under the provisions of section 704(3) of the NDAA-93 [102], 10 U.S.C. 1079(a)(17) was enacted which allowed the DoD to establish the ICMP, also known as the Individual Case Management Program for Persons with Extraordinary Conditions (ICMP-PEC). This allowed a reasonable deviation from the restrictive statutory coverage of health services for patients who had exceptionally serious, long-range, costly and incapacitating conditions. The ICMP was officially implemented in March 1999 as a waiver program that provided coverage for care and services that were normally restricted from coverage under the Basic Program. Specifically, when a beneficiary was determined to meet the TRICARE definition of custodial care, coverage under the Basic Program was limited to one hour of skilled nursing care per day, twelve physician visits per year related to the custodial condition, durable medical equipment and prescription medications. The Department recognized that the exclusion of coverage when a family member is deemed to be a custodial care patient is both a financial and emotional burden. Consequently, the Department used the ICMP/ICMP-PEC authority to cover medically necessary care and to enable TRICARE case managers to maximize available resources for these beneficiaries.
Repeal of the ICMP. Section 701(g) of the NDAA-02 repealed 10 U.S.C. 1079(a)(17), the statutory authority for the ICMP. However, section 701(d) allows the Department to continue to provide payment for home health care or custodial care services not otherwise authorized under the Basic Program as if the ICMP were still in effect. Payment may occur when a determination is made that discontinuation of payment would result in the provision of services inadequate to meet the needs of the eligible beneficiary and would be unjust to the beneficiary. Eligible beneficiaries are defined in section 701(d)(3) as covered beneficiaries who were regarded as custodial care patients under the ICMP/ICMP-PEC and received medically necessary skilled services for which the Secretary provided payment before December 28, 2001.
The statutory definition of custodial care under section 701(c) began on December 28, 2001, the effective date of the NDAA-02. Public notice of the substitution of the new statutory definition of the former custodial care definition in 32 CFR 199.2 was published in the Federal Register at 67 FR 40597 on June 13, 2002.
Program for Persons with Disabilities (PFPWD). This program is now renamed the Extended Health Care Option (ECHO). The PFPWD was established by Congress in 1966 and was originally called the Program for the Handicapped (PFTH). The name was changed to PFPWD in 1997 to reflect the national shift away from the label of handicapped and in an effort to be more sensitive to our beneficiaries with special needs. The program was established to provide financial assistance for active duty family members who are moderately or severely mentally retarded or have a serious physical disability. The purpose of the program was to help defray the cost of services not available either through the Basic Program or through other public agencies as a result of state residency requirements. Section 701(b) of the NDAA-02 strikes 10 U.S.C. 1079(d), (e), and (f), which were the statutory authority for the PFPWD, and re-authorizes the program with new sub-sections (d), (e), and (f). These new sub-sections add an extraordinary physical or psychological condition as a qualifying condition and limits the requirement to use public facilities to the extent that they are available and adequate to certain benefits under sub-section (e). They also include discretion to increase the monthly Government cost-share for allowable services from a maximum of $1,000 per month and expand the benefit to allow for coverage of ECHO home health care and services beyond the Basic program. Section 701(e) also includes the discretion to allow coverage for custodial care and respite care.
II. The Extended Care Health Option (ECHO) Back to Top
(c) An extraordinary physical or psychological condition, as defined in 32 CFR 199.2.
ECHO Benefits. ECHO benefits established herein include diagnostic procedures to establish a qualifying condition, inpatient, outpatient, and comprehensive home health care supplies and services, training, habilitative or rehabilitative services, special education, assistive technology devices, institutional care within a State when a residential environment is required, transportation under certain circumstances, certain other services such as assistive services of a qualified interpreter or translator for deaf or blind beneficiaries in conjunction with receipt of other allowed ECHO benefits, equipment adaptation and maintenance, and respite care, and ECHO home health care.
ECHO Respite Care. Under 10 U.S.C. 1079(e)(6), the Department may provide respite care under the ECHO program. Respite care is defined in 32 CFR 199.2 as short term care for a patient in order to provide rest and change for those who have been caring for the patient at home, usually the patient's family. DoD recognizes that caring for a special needs beneficiary poses special challenges, especially for active duty families. This rule establishes an ECHO benefit to provide a maximum of 16 hours per month of respite care. The respite care benefit is available for ECHO beneficiaries in any month during which the beneficiary receives ECHO benefits other than respite care under the ECHO Home Health Care benefit. Respite care services will be provided by a TRICARE-authorized home health agency and will provide health care services for the covered beneficiary, and not baby-sitting or child-care services for other members of the family. The benefit is not cumulative, that is, any respite care hours not used in one-month will not be carried over or banked for a subsequent month(s). The Government's cost-share incurred for the ECHO respite care services accrue to the ECHO maximum monthly benefit of $2,500.
Government Cost-share Liability for ECHO. The Government's monthly cost-share of all benefits provided to a beneficiary in a particular month under the PFPWD was statutorily limited to $1,000 by 10 U.S.C. 1079(e)(2). The Government's monthly cost-share of any benefits provided under ECHO is now statutorily limited to $2,500 by section 701(b) of the NDAA-02 (10 U.S.C. 1079(f)(2)(A)) for benefits related to training, rehabilitation, special education, assistive technology devices, and institutional care in private, non-profit, public, and state institutions and facilities, and if appropriate, transportation to and from such institutions and facilities. Because the NDAA-02 provided no statutory limitation concerning the amount of the Government's monthly cost-share for all other benefits under ECHO, the Department has discretion to determine the maximum monthly Government cost-share. Therefore, this rule increases the monthly Government cost-share from $1,000 to $2,500 for all benefits under ECHO, except for the new ECHO Home Health Care (EHHC) benefit as established herein. The primary reason for this increase is that the maximum government cost-share has not been adjusted since 1980. We will continue to review this issue to insure that the government's cost-share reasonably meets the needs of beneficiaries.
(b) Be homebound, as defined in § 199.2 and as modified in this rule; and
(c) Require medically necessary skilled services that exceed the maximum level of coverage provided under the Basic Program's home health care benefit, or
(d) Require frequent interventions, other than skilled medical services, by the primary caregiver(s) (as “primary caregiver” is defined in § 199.2) such that EHHC services are necessary to allow primary caregiver(s) the opportunity to rest; and
(e) Be case managed (as “case management” is defined in § 199.2), including a periodic assessment of needs, and receive services as outlined in a written plan of care; and
(f) Receive home health care services from a TRICARE-authorized home health agency as described in § 199.6(b)(4)(xv).
EHHC Benefit. Covered TRICARE-authorized home health agency services are the same as, and provided under the same conditions as, those services provided under the TRICARE Basic Program under § 199.4(e)(21), with the exception that the EHHC benefit is not limited to part-time or intermittent home health care. Therefore, this rule sets out that TRICARE beneficiaries who are eligible for the ECHO and require home health care services beyond the coverage limits under the Basic Program will receive all home health care services under EHHC and no portion will be provided under the Basic Program.
Government Cost-share Liability for EHHC. TRICARE-authorized home health agencies who provide services under the Basic Program are reimbursed under § 199.14(h) using the same methods and rates as used under the Medicare home health agency prospective payment system under section 1895 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1385fff) and 42 CFR part 484, subpart E, except for children under age ten and except as otherwise necessary to recognize distinct characteristics of TRICARE beneficiaries and as described in instructions issued by the Director, TRICARE Management Activity. However, the Medicare home health agency prospective payment system is designed to reimburse providers who provide part-time or intermittent services; it is not designed to reimburse providers for services that exceed those limits. Therefore, this rule set outs that the Department will reimburse home health agencies the allowable charges or negotiated rates. The maximum annual fiscal year cap for EHHC services is what the highest locally wage-adjusted maximum Medicare Resource Utilization Grouping (RUG-III) category cost to the Department would be if such services were provided in a TRICARE-authorized skilled nursing facility. (See
Federal Register 67 FR 40597, June 13, 2002, concerning the TRICARE Sub-Acute Care Program; Uniform Skilled Nursing Facility Benefit; Home Health Care Benefit; Adopting Medicare Payment Methods for Skilled Nursing Facilities and Home Health Care Providers). Because the highest RUG-III category is used to determine the EHHC fiscal year cap, the Department will not attempt to determine what RUG-III category would apply to the beneficiary if such beneficiary were in fact admitted for care into a TRICARE-authorized skilled nursing facility. The fiscal year cap will be recalculated each year following publication of the “Medicare Program; Prospective Payment System and Consolidated Billing for Skilled Nursing Facilities—Update; Notice”, or similar, by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the Federal Register.
Beneficiary Cost-share Liability for ECHO, including EHHC. Under 10 U.S.C. 1079(f), members are required to share in the cost of any benefits provided to their dependents under ECHO. ECHO benefits are not subject to a deductible amount. Regardless of the number of ECHO eligible family members, the sponsor's monthly cost-share for allowed ECHO benefits is based upon the rank of the uniformed service member. Under 10 U.S.C. 1079(f)(1)(A), members with a rank of E-1 are required to pay the first $25 incurred per month, and members with a rank of O-10 are required to pay the first $250 incurred per month. This rules sets out the cost-share for members with ranks in-between such that the majority will pay less than $100 per month, with the most senior enlisted member paying less than $50 per month.
Sponsor rank-based cost-sharing (refer to Table 1, 32 CFR 199.5) applies to benefits covered by the ECHO and these cost-shares do not apply toward the Basic Program's catastrophic cap under 10 U.S.C. 1079(b)(5). Also, the waiver of cost-shares for active duty family members enrolled in TRICARE Prime does not apply to ECHO as the statutory basis for the ECHO program and its cost-shares is separate and distinct from the Basic Program, including TRICARE Prime.
Registration. Sec 701(b) of the NDAA-02 (10 U.S.C. 1079(d)(1)) requires registration to receive ECHO benefits. Sponsors of potentially qualifying beneficiaries will seek to register their family member(s) for ECHO benefits through the applicable Managed Care Support Contractor (MCSC). The MCSC will determine eligibility and update the Defense Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS) to reflect the beneficiary's ECHO eligibility. No ECHO benefits may be authorized unless the beneficiary is registered in DEERS as ECHO-eligible.
EFMP Enrollment. Each of the Military Services has its own Exceptional Family Member Program (EFMP). Although the EFMPs can interface with the Military Health System, they are actually military personnel programs. The purpose of those programs is to require military personnel offices to evaluate the ability of a military and civilian community to provide appropriate medical and/or educational services to service members' dependents who have special medical or educational needs before the Service re-assigns the member to a new location. Although each Service requires its members who have family members with special needs to enroll in the EFMP, some members do not comply with this requirement. The result is that some members arrive at assignment locations that are unable to accommodate the special medical and/or educational needs of their dependent(s). Dependents of members required to be enrolled in EFMP are similar if not identical to those who qualify for the ECHO program. The Services do not routinely provide EFMP enrollments to TRICARE, therefore, to provide a greater degree of coordination of services for TRICARE beneficiaries, this rules sets out that members will be required to provide evidence they are enrolled in their Services' Exceptional Family Member Program when registering for ECHO benefits. This requirement will enhance the probability that personnel are assigned to locations where there are sufficient qualified individual or institutional providers to provide the ECHO benefit to their dependents.
Use of Public Facilities. For ECHO benefits related to training, rehabilitation, special education, assistive technology devices, and institutional care in private, non-profit, public, and state institutions and facilities, and if appropriate, transportation to and from such institutions and facilitates, the statute expressly requires use of public facilities to be the extent such facilities are available and adequate as determined under this regulation.
We provided a 60-day public comment period following publication of the Proposed Rule in the Federal Register at 68 FR 46526 on August 6, 2003. Two individuals provided several comments, summarized below.
Comment: The first commentor questioned the Department's decision regarding where the ECHO, in particular ECHO Home Health Care and respite care, will be available.
Response: The ECHO will generally be available wherever there are TRICARE beneficiaries eligible for the ECHO and appropriate TRICARE-authorized providers.
The focus of the ECHO Home Health Care benefit is to provide ECHO beneficiaries with the same benefit structure as provided by the Basic Program's Home Health Agency Prospective Payment System (HHA-PPS) but without its limitation that the services be provided on a “part-time or intermittent” basis. In order to assure the quality of care for TRICARE beneficiaries, the HHA-PPS provides that only Medicare-authorized Home Health Agencies are eligible for designation as TRICARE-authorized providers. Likewise, the Department also elected to utilize those same home health agencies to provide the ECHO respite care. Consequently, ECHO respite care and the ECHO Home Health Care benefits are limited to locations where there are Medicare-authorized home health agencies. Currently that is limited to the 50 United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Guam.
Comment: That commentor also remarked about the cost of transportation to receive ECHO-authorized benefits.
Comment: The second commentor requested the Department provide the ECHO respite care benefit to multiple TRICARE beneficiaries within group settings, such as a day care center, and prorate the allowable cost among those receiving the respite care.
Response: The Department has identified several issues regarding the comment. First, other than when allowed by specific exceptions to its policies, TRICARE professional outpatient benefits are provided one-on-one, that is, one patient with one provider per episode of care. Consequently, there is no general provision for “group” type episodes-of-care or settings. Second, the regulatory language at 32 CFR 199.2 defines respite care as “ * * * short-term care for a patient in order to provide rest and change for those who have been caring for the patient at home, usually the patient's family.” Although there is no statutory restriction on where respite care services are provided, it is the Department's decision that such care be provided in the beneficiary's primary residence.
IV. Summary of Regulatory Modifications Back to Top
Executive Order 12866 requires that a comprehensive regulatory impact analysis be performed on any economically significant regulatory action, defined as one that would result in an annual effect of $100 million or more on the national economy or which would have other substantial impacts. The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that each Federal agency prepare, and make available for public comment, a regulatory flexibility analysis when the agency issues a regulation which would have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities. This rule is not an economically significant regulatory action and will not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities for purposes of the RFA. This rule, although not economically significant under Executive Order 12866, is a significant rule under Executive order 12866 and has been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Department of Defense amends 32 CFR part 199 as follows:
2.Section 199.2 is amended in paragraph (b) by removing the definitions of “Program for Persons with Disabilities (PFPWD)” and “Extraordinary condition”, by revising paragraph (v) of the definition of “Double coverage plan”, by revising the definitions of “Durable equipment”, “Homebound”, and “Primary caregiver”, and by adding the definitions of “Duplicate equipment”, “Extended Care Health Option (ECHO)”, and “Extraordinary physical or psychological condition” in alphabetical order to read as follows: § . 199.2 Definitions.
Double coverage plan.* * *
Duplicate equipment. An item of durable equipment or durable medical equipment, as defined in this section that serves the same purpose that is served by an item of durable equipment or durable medical equipment previously cost-shared by TRICARE. For example, various models of stationary oxygen concentrators with no essential functional differences are considered duplicate equipment, whereas stationary and portable oxygen concentrators are not considered duplicates of each other because the latter is intended to provide the user with mobility not afforded by the former. Also, a manual wheelchair and an electric wheelchair, both of which otherwise meet the definition of durable equipment or durable medical equipment, would not be considered duplicates of each other if each is found to provide an appropriate level of mobility. For the purpose of this part, durable equipment or durable medical equipment that are essential to provide a fail-safe in-home life support system or that replaces in like kind an item of equipment that is not serviceable due to normal wear, accidental damage, a change in the beneficiary's condition, or has been declared adulterated by the U.S. FDA, or is being or has been recalled by the manufacturer, is not considered duplicate equipment.
Durable equipment. A device or apparatus which does not qualify as durable medical equipment and which is essential to the efficient arrest or reduction of functional loss resulting from, or the disabling effects of a qualifying condition as provided in § 199.5.
Extended Care Health Option (ECHO). The TRICARE program of supplemental benefits for qualifying active duty family members as described in § 199.5.
Homebound A beneficiary's condition is such that there exists a normal inability to leave home and, consequently, leaving home would require considerable and taxing effort. Any absence of an individual from the home attributable to the need to receive health care treatment, including regular absences for the purpose of participating in therapeutic, psychosocial, or medical treatment or in an adult day-care program certified by a state, or accredited to furnish adult day-care services in the state shall not disqualify an individual from being considered to be confined to his home. Any other absence of an individual from the home shall not disqualify an individual if the absence is infrequent or of relatively short duration. For the purposes of the preceding sentence, any absence for purpose of attending a religious service shall be deemed to be an absence of infrequent or short duration. Also, absences from the home for non-medical purposes, such as an occasional trip to the barber, a walk around the block or a drive, would not necessarily negate the beneficiary's homebound status if the absences are undertaken on an infrequent basis and are of relatively short duration. In addition to the above, absences, whether regular or infrequent, from the beneficiary's primary residence for the purpose of attending an educational program in a public or private school that is licensed and/or certified by a state, shall not negate the beneficiary's homebound status.
Primary caregiver. An individual who renders to a beneficiary services to support the activities of daily living (as defined in § 199.2) and specific services essential to the safe management of the beneficiary's condition.
§ 199.3 [Amended]
3.Section 199.3 is amended by revising the term “Program for Persons with Disabilities” or the acronym “PFPWD” to read “Extended Care Health Option” or the acronym “ECHO,” respectively, in paragraphs (b)(2)(iii)(A)(1), (c)(2)(i)(C), (c)(2)(ii)(B), (c)(2)(iii)(B), (c)(3)(i)(C), (c)(3)(ii)(B), (c)(4)(i)(B), (c)(4)(ii)(B), (c)(4)(iii)(B), (c)(5)(i)(C), (c)(5)(ii)(B), (c)(5)(iii)(B), (c)(5)(iv)(C)(2), (c)(6)(ii), (c)(7)(i)(C), (c)(7)(ii)(B), (c)(8)(ii), (c)(9)(i)(B), (c)(9)(ii)(B), and (c)(10)(ii) wherever they appear. 4.Section 199.4 is amended by removing and reserving paragraph (e)(20); adding paragraph (g)(59); revising paragraph (g)(73); and removing paragraph (i) Case management program in its entirety; to read as follows: § 199.4 Basic program benefits.
(g) * **
(59) Duplicate equipment. As defined in § 199.2, duplicate equipment is excluded.
(73) Economic interest in connection with mental health admissions. Inpatient mental health services (including both acute care and RTC services) are excluded for care received when a patient is referred to a provider of such services by a physician (or other health care professional with authority to admit) who has an economic interest in the facility to which the patient is referred, unless a waiver is granted. Requests for waiver shall be considered under the same procedure and based on the same criteria as used for obtaining preadmission authorization (or continued stay authorization for emergency admissions), with the only additional requirement being that the economic interest be disclosed as part of the request. The same reconsideration and appeals procedure that apply to day limit waivers shall also apply to decisions regarding requested waivers of the economic interest exclusion. However, a provider may appeal a reconsidered determination that an economic relationship constitutes an economic interest within the scope of the exclusion to the same extent that a provider may appeal determination under § 199.15(i)(3). This exclusion does not apply to services under the Extended Care Health Option (ECHO) in § 199.5 or provided as partial hospital care. If a situation arises where a decision is made to exclude CHAMPUS payment solely on the basis of the provider's economic interest, the normal CHAMPUS appeals process will be available.
5.Section 199.5 is revised to read as follows: § 199.5 TRICARE Extended Care Health Option (ECHO).
(ii) An abused dependent as described in § 199.3(b)(2)(iii); or
(i) Mental retardation. A diagnosis of moderate or severe mental retardation made in accordance with the criteria of the current edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders” published by the American Psychiatric Association.
(ii) Serious physical disability. A serious physical disability as defined in § 199.2.
(iii) Extraordinary physical or psychological condition. An extraordinary physical or psychological condition as defined in § 199.2.
(4) Continuity of eligibility. A TRICARE beneficiary who has an outstanding Program for Persons with Disabilities (PFPWD) benefit authorization on the date of implementation of the ECHO program shall continue receiving such services for the duration of that authorization period provided the beneficiary remains eligible for the PFPWD. Upon termination of an existing PFPWD authorization, or if the beneficiary seeks benefits under this section before such termination, the beneficiary shall establish eligibility for the ECHO in accordance with this section.
(2) Medical, habilitative, rehabilitative services and supplies, durable equipment and durable medical equipment that are related to the qualifying condition. Benefits may be provided in the beneficiary's home or other environment as appropriate.
(7) Respite care. ECHO beneficiaries are eligible for 16 hours of respite care per month in any month during which the qualified beneficiary otherwise receives an ECHO benefit(s). Respite care is defined in § 199.2. Respite care services will be provided by a TRICARE-authorized home health agency and will be designed to provide health care services for the covered beneficiary, and not baby-sitting or child-care services for other members of the family. The benefit will not be cumulative, that is, any respite care hours not used in one month will not be carried over or banked for use on another occasion.
(iii) The Government's cost-share incurred for these services accrue to the maximum monthly benefit of $2,500.
(8) Other services—(i) Assistive services. Services of qualified personal assistants, such as an interpreter or translator for ECHO beneficiaries who are deaf or mute and readers for ECHO beneficiaries who are blind, when such services are necessary in order for the ECHO beneficiary to receive authorized ECHO benefits.
(iii) Equipment maintenance. Reasonable repairs and maintenance of beneficiary owned or rented durable equipment or durable medical equipment provided by this section shall be allowed while a beneficiary is registered in the ECHO.
(d) ECHO Exclusions. (1) Basic Program. Benefits allowed under the TRICARE Basic Program will not be provided through the ECHO.
(7) Equipment. Purchase or rental of durable equipment and durable medical equipment, which are otherwise allowed by this section, are excluded when:
(i) The beneficiary is a patient in an institution or facility that ordinarily provides the same type of equipment to its patients at no additional charge in the usual course of providing services; or
(iv) The item is duplicate equipment as defined in § 199.2.
(10) Public facility or Federal government. Services or items paid for, or eligible for payment, directly or indirectly by a public facility, as defined in § 199.2, or by the Federal government, other than the Department of Defense, are excluded for training, rehabilitation, special education, assistive technology devices, institutional care in private nonprofit, public, and state institutions and facilities, and if appropriate, transportation to and from such institutions and facilities, except when such services or items are eligible for payment under a state plan for medical assistance under Title XIX of the Social Security Act (Medicaid). Rehabilitation and assistive technology services or supplies may be available under the TRICARE Basic Program.
(12) Unproven status. Drugs, devices, medical treatments, diagnostic, and therapeutic procedures for which the safety and efficacy have not been established in accordance with § 199.4 are excluded. (13) Immediate family or household. Services or items provided or prescribed by a member of the beneficiary's immediate family, or a person living in the beneficiary's or sponsor's household, are excluded.
(16) Drugs and medicines. Drugs and medicines that do not meet the requirements of § 199.4 or § 199.21 are excluded.
(18) Custodial care. Custodial care, as defined in § 199.2, is not a stand-alone benefit. Services generally rendered as custodial care may be provided only as specifically set out in this section.
(19) Domiciliary care. Domiciliary care, as defined in § 199.2, is excluded.
(20) Respite care. Respite care for the purpose of covering primary caregiver (as defined in § 199.2) absences due to deployment, employment, seeking of employment or to pursue education is excluded. Authorized respite care covers only the ECHO beneficiary, not siblings or others who may reside in or be visiting in the beneficiary's residence.
(1) Home health care. Covered ECHO home health care services are the same as, and provided under the same conditions as those services described in § 199.4(e)(21)(i), except that they are not limited to part-time or intermittent services. Custodial care services, as defined in § 199.2, may be provided to the extent such services are provided in conjunction with authorized ECHO home health care services, including the EHHC respite care benefit specified herein. Beneficiaries who are authorized EHHC will receive all home health care services under EHHC and no portion will be provided under the Basic Program. TRICARE-authorized home health agencies are not required to use the Outcome and Assessment Information Set (OASIS) to assess beneficiaries who are authorized EHHC.
(iii) Require medically necessary skilled services that exceed the level of coverage provided under the Basic Program's home health care benefit; or
(vi) Receive all home health care services from a TRICARE-authorized home health agency, as described in §199.6(b)(4)(xv), in the beneficiary's primary residence.
(5) EHHC exclusions. (i) General. ECHO Home Health Care services and supplies are excluded from those who are being provided continuing coverage of home health care as participants of the former Individual Care Management Program for Persons with Extraordinary Conditions (ICMP-PEC) or previous case management demonstrations.
(f) Cost-share liability. (1) No deductible. ECHO benefits are not subject to a deductible amount.
Table 1.—Monthly Cost-Share by Member's Pay Grade Back to Top
E-7 and O-1
E-8 and O-2
E-9, W-1, W-2 and O-3
W-3, W-4 and O-4
W-5 and O-5
(3) Government cost-share liability. (i) ECHO. The total Government share of the cost of all ECHO benefits, except ECHO home health care and EHHC respite care, provided in a given month to a beneficiary may not exceed $2,500 after application of the allowable payment methodology.
(ii) ECHO home health care. (A) The maximum annual Government cost-share for ECHO home health care, including EHHC respite care may not exceed the local wage-adjusted highest Medicare Resource Utilization Group (RUG-III) category cost for care in a TRICARE-authorized skilled nursing facility.
(g) Benefit payment. (1) Transportation. The allowable amount for transportation of an ECHO beneficiary is limited to the actual cost of the standard published fare plus any standard surcharge made to accommodate any person with a similar disability or to the actual cost of specialized medical transportation when non-specialized transport cannot accommodate the beneficiary's qualifying condition related needs, or when specialized transport is more economical than non-specialized transport. When transport is by private vehicle, the allowable amount is limited to the Federal government employee mileage reimbursement rate in effect on the date the transportation is provided.
(2) Equipment. (i) The TRICARE allowable amount for durable equipment and durable medical equipment shall be calculated in the same manner as durable medical equipment allowable through § 199.4.
(A) Maximum period. The maximum number of consecutive months during which the allowable cost may be prorated is the lesser of:
(2) An item of durable equipment or durable medical equipment shall not be authorized when such authorization would allow cost-sharing of duplicate equipment, as defined in § 199.2, for the same beneficiary.
(3) For-profit institutional care provider. Institutional care provided by a for-profit entity may be allowed only when the care for a specific ECHO beneficiary:
(4) ECHO home health care and EHHC respite care. (i) TRICARE-authorized home health agencies must provide and bill for all authorized home health care services through established TRICARE claims' mechanisms. No special billing arrangements will be authorized in conjunction with coverage that may be provided by Medicaid or other federal, state, community or private programs.
(h) Other Requirements. (1) Applicable part. All provisions of this part, except the provisions of § 199.4 unless otherwise provided by this section or as directed by the Director, TRICARE Management Activity or designee, apply to the ECHO.
(iii) Valid period. An authorization for ECHO benefits shall be valid until such time as the Director, TRICARE Management Activity or designee determines that the authorized services are no longer appropriate or required or the beneficiary is no longer eligible under paragragh(b) of this section.
(v) Public facility use. (A) An ECHO beneficiary residing within a state must demonstrate that a public facility is not available and adequate to meet the needs of their qualifying condition. Such requirement shall apply to beneficiaries who request authorization for training, rehabilitation, special education, assistive technology, and institutional care in private nonprofit, public, and state institutions and facilities, and if appropriate, transportation to and from such institutions and facilities. The maximum Government cost-share for services that require demonstration of pubic facility non-availability or inadequacy is limited to $2,500 per month per beneficiary. State-administered plans for medical assistance under Title XIX of the Social Security Act (Medicaid) are not considered available and adequate facilities for the purpose of this section.
(4) Repair or maintenance of beneficiary owned durable equipment and durable medical equipment is exempt from the public facility use certification requirements.
(j) Implementation transition. Pending administrative actions necessary for the effective implementation of this section on or after July 1, 2004, this section, as it existed prior to July 1, 2004, shall remain in effect. The dates on or after July 1, 2004, on which this section will be implemented in particular regions of the United States and elsewhere will be established by Federal Register notice(s) during 2004.
6.Section 199.6 is amended by revising the section heading and paragraphs (e)(1)(ii), (e)(2) and (e)(3) to read as follows: § 199.6 TRICARE—authorized providers.
(1) General.* * *
(2) ECHO provider categories. (i) ECHO inpatient care provider. A provider of residential institutional care, which is otherwise an ECHO benefit, shall be:
(B) An individual, corporation, foundation, or public entity that predominantly renders services of a type uniquely allowable as an ECHO benefit and not otherwise allowable as a benefit of § 199.4, that meets all applicable licensing or other regulatory requirements of the state, county, municipality, or other political jurisdiction in which the ECHO service is rendered, or in the absence of such licensing or regulatory requirements, as determined by the Director, TRICARE Management Activity or designee.
(3) ECHO provider exclusion or suspension. A provider of ECHO services or items may be excluded or suspended for a pattern of discrimination on the basis of disability. Such exclusion or suspension shall be accomplished according to the provisions of § 199.9.
7.Section 199.7 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2)(xii) to read as follows: § 199.7 Claims submission, review, and payment.
(2) Claim required. No benefit may be extended under the Basic Program or Extended Care Health Option (ECHO) Program without submission of an appropriate, complete and properly executed claim form.
(xii) Other authorized providers. For items from other authorized providers (such as medical supplies), an explanation as to the medical need must be attached to the appropriate claim form. For purchases of durable equipment and durable medical equipment under the ECHO, it is necessary also to attach a copy of the preauthorization.
8.Section 199.8 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(4) and (d)(5) to read as follows: § 199.8 Double coverage.
9.Section 199.20 is amended by revising paragraph (p)(2)(i) to read as follows: § 199.20 Continued Health Care Benefits Program (CHCBP).
(i) The Extended Care Health Option (ECHO) under § 199.5.
10.Appendix A to part 199 is amended by adding the term “ECHO” and removing the term “PFPWD” to read as follows: Appendix A to Part 199—Acronyms Back to Top
[FR Doc. 04-16932 Filed 7-27-04; 8:45 am]