23 Miss. Code. R. 203-1.6 - Locum Tenens/Reciprocal Billing Arrangements
A. Locum
Tenens: For purposes of this rule a "locum tenens" arrangement is defined when
the regular physician retains a substitute physician to take over the practice
during an absence. A regular physician is the physician that is normally
scheduled to see a patient. The regular physician usually pays the substitute
physician a fixed amount per diem, with the substitute physician being an
independent contractor rather than an employee.
B. Reimbursement shall be made to the
patient's regular physician for covered services of a locum tenens physician
who is not an employee of the regular physician and whose services for patients
of the regular physician are not restricted to the regular physician's offices
when all the following criteria are met:
1.
The regular physician is unavailable to provide the services,
2. The regular physician pays the locum
tenens for the services on a per diem or similar fee-for-time basis,
3. The Medicaid beneficiary has arranged or
sought to receive services from the regular physician,
4. The substitute physician does not provide
the services to the Medicaid beneficiary over a continuous period of longer
than sixty (60) days,
5. The locum
tenens physician is an enrolled Mississippi Medicaid provider with a valid
Mississippi Medicaid provider number,
6. The regular physician identifies the
services as substitute physician services,
7. The claim is billed with the National
Provider Identifier (NPI) of the regular physician,
8. The regular physician keeps on file a
record of each service provided by the substitute physician, and
9. The regular physician ensures that the
locum tenens physician is properly licensed to practice medicine in the state
of Mississippi; or, if the regular physician practices in another state, the
state in which the regular physician is licensed to practice.
C. Reciprocal Billing Arrangement:
Medicaid defines reciprocal billing arrangement when a regular physician or
group has a substitute physician provide covered services to a Medicaid
beneficiary on an occasional reciprocal basis. A physician can have reciprocal
arrangements with more than one physician. The arrangements need not be in
writing.
1. Medicaid covers reciprocal billing
arrangements when the regular physician arranges to be provided by a substitute
physician on an occasional reciprocal basis if all the following criteria are
met:
a) The regular physician is unavailable
to provide the services,
b) A
reciprocal billing arrangement is typically an agreement among physicians that
one will cover the other's practice when the regular physician is absent.
Physicians can have reciprocal arrangements with more than one
physician,
c) The Medicaid
beneficiary has arranged or sought services from the regular physician,
d) The substitute physician does
not provide the services to a Medicaid beneficiary over a continuous period of
longer than sixty (60) days,
e)
The substitute physician is an enrolled Mississippi Medicaid provider with a
valid Mississippi Medicaid provider number,
f) The regular physician identifies the
services as substitute physician on the appropriate claim form,
g) The regular physician keeps on file a
record of each service provided by the substitute physician, associated with
the substitute physician's National Provider Identifier (NPI), and
h) The regular physician ensures that the
substitute physician is properly licensed to practice medicine in the state of
Mississippi; or, if the regular physician practices in another state, the state
in which the regular physician is licensed to practice.
2. Medicaid does not cover reciprocal
services for substitution arrangements among physicians in the same medical
group except when a group member provides services on behalf of another group
member who is the designated attending physician for a hospice
patient.
D. Covered
Visit Service - Medicaid covers the submission of claims for a medical group
under reciprocal billing arrangements for the covered visit services of a
substitute physician who is not a member of the group. Medicaid defines a
continuous period of covered visit services that begins with the first day on
which the substitute physician provides covered visit services to patients of
the regular physician, and it ends with the last day on which the substitute
physician provides these services to these patients before the regular
physician returns to work. This period continues without interruption on days
on which no covered visit services are provided to patients on behalf of the
regular physician or are furnished by some other substitute physician on behalf
of the regular physician. A new period of covered visit services can begin
after the regular physician has returned to work.
Notes
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