16 Va. Admin. Code § 30-16-50 - Electronic medical billing, reimbursement, and documentation
A. Applicability.
1. This section outlines the exclusive
process for the initial exchange of electronic medical bill and related payment
processing data for professional, institutional or hospital, pharmacy, and
dental services provided to injured workers in accordance with §
65.2-603 of the Code of
Virginia.
2. Unless exempted from
this process in accordance with subdivision B 2 of this section, payers or
their agents shall:
a. Accept electronic
medical bills submitted in accordance with the adopted standards;
b. Transmit acknowledgments and remittance
advice in compliance with the adopted standards in response to electronically
submitted medical bills; and
c.
Support methods to receive electronic documentation required for the
adjudication of a bill, as described in
16VAC30-16-80.
3. Unless exempted from this
process in accordance with subdivision B 1 of this section, a health care
provider shall:
a. Implement a software
system capable of exchanging medical bill data in accordance with the adopted
standards or contract with a clearinghouse to exchange its medical bill
data;
b. Submit medical bills as
provided in
16VAC30-16-30 A 1
to any payers that have established connectivity to the health care provider's
system or clearinghouse;
c. Submit
required documentation in accordance with subsection E of this section;
and
d. Receive and process any
acceptance or rejection acknowledgment from the payer.
4. Payers shall be able to exchange
electronic data by July 1, 2019, unless exempted from the process in accordance
with subdivision B 2 of this section.
5. Health care providers or their agents
shall be able to exchange electronic data by July 1, 2019, unless exempted from
the process in accordance with subdivision B 1 of this section.
B. Exemptions.
1. A health care provider is exempt from the
requirement to submit medical bills electronically to a payer if:
a. The health care provider employs 15 or
fewer full-time employees; or
b.
The health care provider submitted fewer than 250 medical bills for workers'
compensation treatment, services, or products in the previous calendar
year.
2. A payer is
exempt from the requirements to receive and pay medical bills electronically if
the payer processed fewer than 250 medical bills for workers' compensation
treatment, services, or products in the previous calendar year.
C. Complete electronic medical
bill. To be considered a complete electronic medical bill, the bill or
supporting transmissions shall:
1. Be
submitted in the correct billing format;
2. Be transmitted in compliance with the
format requirements described in
16VAC30-16-30;
3. Include in legible text all supporting
documentation for the bill, including medical reports and records, evaluation
reports, narrative reports, assessment reports, progress reports, progress
notes, clinical notes, hospital records, and diagnostic test results that are
expressly required by law or can reasonably be expected by the payer or its
agent under the laws of Virginia;
4. Identify the following:
a. Injured employee;
b. Employer;
c. Insurance carrier, third-party
administrator, managed care organization, or payer agent;
d. Health care provider;
e. Medical service or product; and
f. Any other requirements as presented in the
Companion Guide; and
5.
Use current and valid codes and values as defined in the applicable formats
referenced in this chapter and the Companion Guide.
D. Acknowledgment.
1. An Interchange Acknowledgment (ASC X12
TA1) notifies the sender of the receipt of, and certain structural defects
associated with, an incoming transaction.
2. An Implementation Acknowledgment (ASC X12
999) transaction is an electronic notification to the sender of the file that
it has been received and has been:
a.
Accepted as a complete and structurally correct file; or
b. Rejected with a valid rejection error
code.
3. A Health Care
Claim Acknowledgment (ASC X12 277CA) is an electronic acknowledgment to the
sender of an electronic transaction that the transaction has been received and
has been:
a. Accepted as a complete, correct
submission; or
b. Rejected with a
valid rejection error code.
4. A payer shall acknowledge receipt of an
electronic medical bill by returning an Implementation Acknowledgment (ASC X12
999) within one business day of receipt of the electronic submission.
a. Notification of a rejected bill is
transmitted using the appropriate acknowledgment when an electronic medical
bill does not meet the definition of a complete electronic medical bill as
described in subsection C of this section or does not meet the edits defined in
the applicable implementation guide.
b. A health care provider or its agent shall
not submit a duplicate electronic medical bill earlier than 60 calendar days
from the date originally submitted if a payer has acknowledged acceptance of
the original complete electronic medical bill. A health care provider or its
agent may submit a corrected medical bill electronically to the payer after
receiving notification of a rejection. The corrected medical bill is submitted
as a new, original bill.
5. A payer shall acknowledge receipt of an
electronic medical bill by returning a Health Care Claim Acknowledgment (ASC
X12 277CA) transaction (detail acknowledgment) within two business days of
receipt of the electronic submission.
a.
Notification of a rejected bill is transmitted in an ASC X12N 277CA response or
acknowledgment when an electronic medical bill does not meet the definition of
a complete electronic medical bill or does not meet the edits defined in the
applicable implementation guide.
b.
A health care provider or its agent shall not submit a duplicate electronic
medical bill earlier than 60 calendar days from the date originally submitted
if a payer has acknowledged acceptance of the original complete electronic
medical bill. A health care provider or its agent may submit a corrected
medical bill electronically to the payer after receiving notification of a
rejection. The corrected medical bill is submitted as a new, original
bill.
6. Acceptance of a
complete medical bill is not an admission of liability by the payer. A payer
may subsequently reject an accepted electronic medical bill if the employer or
other responsible party named on the medical bill is not legally liable for its
payment.
a. The rejection is transmitted by
means of a Health Care Claim Payment/Advice ASC X12 835 transaction.
b. The subsequent rejection of a previously
accepted electronic medical bill shall occur no later than 45 calendar days
from the date of receipt of the complete electronic medical bill.
c. The transaction to reject the previously
accepted complete medical bill shall clearly indicate that the reason for
rejection is that the payer is not legally liable for its payment.
7. Acceptance of a complete or
incomplete medical bill does not satisfy the written notice of injury
requirement from an employee or payer as required by §§
65.2-600 and
65.2-900 of the Code of
Virginia.
[
8.
Transmission of an Implementation Acknowledgment under subdivision D 2 of this
section and acceptance of a complete, structurally correct file serves as proof
of the received date for an electronic medical bill in subsection C of this
section.
E. Electronic
documentation.
1. Electronic documentation,
including medical reports and records submitted electronically that support an
electronic medical bill, may be required by the payer before payment may be
remitted to the health care provider in accordance with this chapter.
2. Complete electronic documentation shall be
submitted by secure fax, secure encrypted electronic mail, or in a secure
electronic format as described in
16VAC30-16-30.
3. The electronic transmittal, by secure fax,
secure encrypted electronic mail, or any other secure electronic format, shall
prominently contain the following details on its cover sheet or first page of
the transmittal:
a. The name of the injured
employee;
b. Identification of the
worker's employer, the employer's insurance carrier, or the third-party
administrator or its agent handling the workers' compensation claim;
c. Identification of the health care provider
billing for services to the injured worker, and where applicable, its
agent;
d. Dates of
service;
e. The workers'
compensation claim number assigned by the payer if established by the payer;
and
f. The unique attachment
indicator number.
F. Electronic remittance advice and
electronic funds transfer.
1. An electronic
remittance advice (ERA) is an explanation of benefits (EOB) or explanation of
review (EOR), submitted electronically, regarding payment or denial of a
medical bill, recoupment request, or receipt of a refund.
2. The ERA shall contain the appropriate
Claim Adjustment Group Codes, Claim Adjustment Reason Codes, and associated
Remittance Advice Remark Codes as specified in the Code Value Usage in Health
Care Claim Payments and Subsequent Claims Technical Report Type 2 (TR2)
Workers' Compensation Code Usage Section and for pharmacy charges, the National
Council for Prescription Drugs Program (NCPDP) Reject/Payment Codes, denoting
the reason for payment, adjustment, or denial. Instructions for the use of the
ERA and code sets are found in section 7.5 of the Companion Guide.
3. The ERA shall be sent before five business
days of:
a. The expected date of receipt by
the health care provider of payment from the payer, or
b. The date the bill was rejected by the
payer.
4. All payments
for services that have been billed electronically in accordance with this
chapter are required to be paid via electronic funds transfer unless an
alternate method is agreed upon by the payer and health care
provider.
G.
Requirements for health care providers exempted from electronic billing. Health
care providers exempted from electronic medical billing pursuant to subdivision
B 1 of this section shall submit paper medical bills for payment in the
following formats as applicable:
1. On the
current standard forms used by CMS, which are available online at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/CMS-Forms/CMS-Forms/index.html.
2. On the current NCPDP Workers'
Compensation/Property and Casualty Universal Claim Form (WC/PC UCF), which are
available online at
http://www.ncpdp.org/Products/Universal-Claim-Forms.
3. On the current American Dental Association
Claim Form, which is available online at
https://www.ada.org/en/publications/cdt/ada-dental-claim-form.
All information submitted on required paper billing forms under this subsection shall be legible and accurately completed.
H. Resubmissions. A
health care provider or its agent shall not submit a duplicate paper medical
bill earlier than 30 businessdays from the date originally submitted unless the
payer has rejected the medical bill as incomplete in accordance with
16VAC30-16-60. A health care
provider or its agent may submit a corrected paper medical bill to the payer
after receiving notification of the rejection of an incomplete medical bill.
The corrected medical bill is submitted as a new, original bill.
I. Connectivity. Unless the payer or its
agent is exempted from the electronic medical billing process in accordance
with subdivision B 2 of this section, it should attempt to establish
connectivity through a trading partner agreement with any clearinghouse that
requests the exchange of data in accordance with
16VAC30-16-30.
J. Fees. No party to the electronic
transactions shall charge excessive fees of any other party in the transaction.
A payer or clearinghouse that requests another payer or clearinghouse to
receive, process, or transmit a standard transaction shall not charge fees or
costs in excess of the fees or costs for normal telecommunications that the
requesting entity incurs when it directly transmits or receives a standard
transaction.
K. A health care
provider agent may charge reasonable fees related to data translation, data
mapping, and similar data functions when the health care provider is not
capable of submitting a standard transaction. In addition, a health care
provider agent may charge a reasonable fee related to:
1. Transaction management of standard
transactions, such as editing, validation, transaction tracking, management
reports, portal services, and connectivity; and
2. Other value added services, such as
electronic file transfers related to medical documentation.
L. A payer or its agent shall not
reject a standard electronic transaction on the basis that it contains data
elements not needed or used by the payer or its agent or that the electronic
transaction includes data elements that exceed those required for a complete
bill as enumerated in subsection C of this section.
M. A health care provider that has not
implemented a software system capable of sending standard transactions is
required to use a secure online direct data entry system offered by a payer if
the payer does not charge a transaction fee. A health care provider using an
online direct data entry system offered by a payer or other entity shall use
the appropriate data content and data condition requirements of the standard
transactions.
Notes
Statutory Authority: § 65.2-605.1 of the Code of Virginia.
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