[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 42, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 42CFR412.62]

[Page 392-394]
 
                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH
 
                             HUMAN SERVICES
 
PART 412--PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL SERVICES--Table of Contents
 
Subpart D--Basic Methodology for Determining Prospective Payment Federal 
                   Rates for Inpatient Operating Costs
 
Sec. 412.62  Federal rates for inpatient operating costs for fiscal year 1984.

    (a) General rule. CMS determines national adjusted DRG prospective 
payment rates for operating costs, for each inpatient hospital discharge 
in fiscal year 1984 involving inpatient hospital services of a hospital 
in the United States subject to the prospective payment system under 
subpart B of this part, and determines regional adjusted DRG prospective 
payment rates for inpatient operating costs for such discharges in each 
region, for which payment may be made under Medicare Part A. Such rates 
are determined for hospitals located in urban or rural areas within the 
United States and within each such region, respectively, as described in 
paragraphs (b) through (k) of this section.
    (b) Determining allowable individual hospital inpatient operating 
costs. CMS determines the Medicare allowable operating costs per 
discharge of inpatient hospital services for each hospital in the data 
base for the most recent cost reporting period for which data are 
available.
    (c) Updating for fiscal year 1984. CMS updates each amount 
determined under paragraph (b) of this section for fiscal year 1984 by--
    (1) Updating for fiscal year 1983 by the estimated average rate of 
change of hospital costs industry-wide between the cost reporting period 
used under paragraph (b) of this section and fiscal year 1983; and
    (2) Projecting for fiscal year 1984 by the applicable percentage 
increase in the hospital market basket for fiscal year 1984.
    (d) Standardizing amounts. CMS standardizes the amount updated under 
paragraph (c) of this section for each hospital by--
    (1) Adjusting for area variations in case mix among hospitals;
    (2) Excluding an estimate of indirect medical education costs;
    (3) Adjusting for area variations in hospital wage levels; and
    (4) Adjusting for the effects of a higher cost of living for 
hospitals located in Alaska and Hawaii.
    (e) Computing urban and rural averages. CMS computes an average of 
the standardized amounts determined under paragraph (d) of this section 
for urban and rural hospitals in the United States and for urban and 
rural hospitals in each region.
    (f) Geographic classifications. (1) For purposes of paragraph (e) of 
this section, the following definitions apply:
    (i) The term region means one of the nine census divisions, 
comprising the fifty States and the District of Columbia, established by 
the Bureau of the Census for statistical and reporting purposes.
    (ii) The term urban area means--
    (A) A Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or New England County 
Metropolitan Area (NECMA), as defined by the Executive Office of 
Management and Budget; or
    (B) The following New England counties, which are deemed to be parts 
of urban areas under section 601(g) of the Social Security Amendments of 
1983 (Pub. L. 98-21, 42 U.S.C. 1395ww (note)): Litchfield County, 
Connecticut; York County, Maine; Sagadahoc County, Maine; Merrimack 
County, New Hampshire; and Newport County, Rhode Island.
    (iii) The term rural area means any area outside an urban area.
    (iv) The phrase hospital reclassified as rural means a hospital 
located in a county that was part of an MSA or NECMA, as defined by the 
Executive Office of Management and Budget, but is not part of an MSA or 
NECMA as a result of an Executive Office of Management and Budget 
redesignation occurring after April 20, 1983.
    (2) For hospitals within an MSA or NECMA that crosses census 
division boundaries, the following provisions apply:

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    (i) The MSA or NECMA is deemed to belong to the census division in 
which most of the hospitals within the MSA or NECMA are located.
    (ii) If a hospital would receive a lower Federal rate because most 
of the hospitals are located in a census division with a lower Federal 
rate than the rate applicable to the census division in which the 
hospital is located, the payment rate will not be reduced for the 
hospital's cost reporting period beginning before October 1, 1984.
    (iii) If an equal number of hospitals within the MSA or NECMA are 
located in each census division, such hospitals are deemed to be in the 
census division with the higher Federal rate.
    (g) Adjusting the average standardized amounts. CMS adjusts each of 
the average standardized amounts determined under paragraphs (c), (d), 
and (e) of this section by factors representing CMS's estimates of the 
following:
    (1) The amount of payment that would have been made under Medicare 
Part B for nonphysician services to hospital inpatients during the first 
cost reporting period subject to prospective payment were it not for the 
fact that such services must be furnished either directly by hospitals 
or under arrangements in order for any Medicare payment to be made after 
September 30, 1983 (the effective date of Sec. 405.310(m) of this 
chapter).
    (2) The amount of FICA taxes that would be incurred during the first 
cost reporting period subject to the prospective payment system, by 
hospitals that had not incurred such taxes for any or all of their 
employees during the base period described in paragraph (c) of this 
section.
    (h) Reducing for value of outlier payments. CMS reduces each of the 
adjusted average standardized amounts determined under paragraphs (c) 
through (g) of this section by a proportion equal to the proportion 
(estimated by CMS) of the total amount of payments based on DRG 
prospective payment rates that are additional payments for outlier cases 
under subpart F of this part.
    (i) Maintaining budget neutrality. (1) CMS adjusts each of the 
reduced standardized amounts determined under paragraphs (c) through (h) 
of this section as required for fiscal year 1984 so that the estimated 
amount of aggregate payments made, excluding the hospital-specific 
portion (that is, the total of the Federal portion of transition 
payments, plus any adjustments and special treatment of certain classes 
of hospitals for Federal fiscal year 1984) is not greater or less than 
25 percent of the payment amounts that would have been payable for the 
inpatient operating costs for those same hospitals for fiscal year 1984 
under the Social Security Act as in effect on April 19, 1983.
    (2) The aggregate payments considered under this paragraph exclude 
payments for per case review by a utilization and quality control 
quality improvement organization, as allowed under section 1866(a)(1)(F) 
of the Act.
    (j) Computing Federal rates for inpatient operating costs for urban 
and rural hospitals in the United States and in each region. For each 
discharge classified within a DRG, CMS establishes a national 
prospective payment rate for inpatient operating costs and a regional 
prospective payment rate for inpatient operating costs for each region, 
as follows:
    (1) For hospitals located in an urban area in the United States or 
in that region respectively, the rate equals the product of--
    (i) The adjusted average standardized amount (computed under 
paragraphs (c) through (i) of this section) for hospitals located in an 
urban area in the United States or in that region; and
    (ii) The weighting factor determined under Sec. 412.60(b) for that 
DRG.
    (2) For hospitals located in a rural area in the United States or in 
that region respectively, the rate equals the product of--
    (i) The adjusted average standardized amount (computed under 
paragraphs (c) through (i) of this section) for hospitals located in a 
rural area in the United States or that region; and
    (ii) The weighting factor determined under Sec. 412.60(b) for that 
DRG.
    (k) Adjusting for different area wage levels. CMS adjusts the 
proportion (as estimated by CMS from time to time) of Federal rates 
computed under paragraph (j) of this section that are attributable to 
wages and labor-related

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costs, for area differences in hospital wage levels by a factor 
(established by CMS) reflecting the relative hospital wage level in the 
geographic area (that is, urban or rural area as determined under the 
provisions of paragraph (f) of this section) of the hospital compared to 
the national average hospital wage level.

[50 FR 12741, Mar. 29, 1985, as amended at 51 FR 34793, Sept. 30, 1986; 
53 FR 38527, Sept. 30, 1988; 57 FR 39821, Sept. 1, 1992; 58 FR 46337, 
Sept. 1, 1993]