[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 42, Volume 2]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 42CFR405.504]



[Page 113-116]

 

                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH

 

                    CHAPTER IV--CENTERS FOR MEDICARE

                          & MEDICAID SERVICES,

                        DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND

                             HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 405_FEDERAL HEALTH INSURANCE FOR THE AGED AND DISABLED--Table of 

Contents

 

          Subpart E_Criteria for Determining Reasonable Charges

 

Sec. 405.504  Determining prevailing charges.



    (a) Ranges of charges. (1) In the case of physicians' services 

furnished beginning January 1, 1987, the prevailing charges for a 

nonparticipating physician as defined in this paragraph will be no 

higher than the same level that was set for services furnished during 

the previous calendar year for a physician who was a participating 

physician during that year. A nonparticipating physician is a physician 

who has not entered into an agreement with the Medicare program to 

accept payment on an assignment-related basis (in accordance with Sec. 

424.55 of this chapter)



[[Page 114]]



for all items and services furnished to individuals enrolled under Part 

B of Medicare during a given calendar year.

    (2) No charge for Part B medical or other health services may be 

considered to be reasonable if it exceeds the higher of:

    (i) The prevailing charge for similar services in the same locality 

in effect on December 31, 1970, provided such prevailing charge had been 

found acceptable by CMS; or

    (ii) The prevailing charge that, on the basis of statistical data 

and methodology acceptable to CMS, would cover:

    (A) 75 percent of the customary charges made for similar services in 

the same locality during the 12-month period of July 1 through June 30 

preceding the fee screen year (January 1 through December 31) in which 

the service was furnished; or

    (B) In the case of services furnished more than 12 months before the 

beginning of the fee screen year (January 1 through December 31) in 

which the claim or request for payment is submitted, 75 percent of the 

customary charges made for similar services in the same locality during 

the 12 month period of July 1 through June 30 preceding the fee screen 

year that ends immediately preceding the fee screen year in which the 

claim or request for payment is submitted.

    (3)(i) In the case of physicians' services, furnished before January 

1, 1992, each prevailing charge in each locality may not exceed the 

prevailing charge determined for the FY ending June 30, 1973 (without 

reference to the adjustments made in accordance with the economic 

stabilization program then in effect), except on the basis of 

appropriate economic index data that demonstrate the higher prevailing 

charge level is justified by:

    (A) Changes in general earnings levels of workers that are 

attributable to factors other than increases in their productivity; and

    (B) changes in expenses of the kind incurred by physicians in office 

practice. The office-expense component and the earnings component of 

such index shall be given the relative weights shown in data on self-

employed physicians' gross incomes.



    Example. The available data indicate the office-expense and earnings 

components of the index should be given relative weights of 40 percent 

and 60 percent, respectively, and it is calculated that the aggregate 

increase in expenses of practice for a particular July through June 

period was 112 percent over the expenses of practice for calendar year 

1971 and the increase in earnings (less increases in workers' 

productivity was 110 percent over the earnings for calendar year 1971. 

The allowable increase in any prevailing charge that could be recognized 

during the next fee screen year would be 110.8 percent 

((.40x112)+(.60)x110)=110.8) above the prevailing charge recognized for 

fiscal year 1973.



    (ii)(A) If the increase in the prevailing charge in a locality for a 

particular physician service resulting from an aggregate increase in 

customary charges for that service does not exceed the index determined 

under paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section, the increase is permitted and 

any portion of the allowable increase not used is carried forward and is 

a basis for justifying increases in that prevailing charge in the 

future. However, if the increase in the prevailing charge exceeds the 

allowable increase, the increase will be reduced to the allowable 

amount. Further increases will be justified only to the degree that they 

do not exceed further rises in the economic index. The prevailing charge 

for physicians' services furnished during the 15-month period beginning 

July 1, 1984 may not exceed the prevailing charge for physicians' 

services in effect for the 12-month period beginning July 1, 1983. The 

increase in prevailing charges for physicians' services for subsequent 

fee screen years similarly may not reflect the rise in the economic 

index that would have otherwise been provided for the period beginning 

July 1, 1984, and must be treated as having fully provided for the rise 

in the economic index which would have been otherwise taken into 

account.

    (B) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and 

(ii)(A) of this section, the prevailing charge in the case of a 

physician service in a particular locality determined pursuant to 

paragraphs (a)(2) and (3)(i) of this section for the fiscal year 

beginning July 1, 1975, and for any subsequent fee



[[Page 115]]



screen years, if lower than the prevailing charge for the fiscal year 

ending June 30, 1975, by reason of the application of economic index 

data, must be raised to such prevailing charge which was in effect for 

the fiscal year ending June 30, 1975. (If the amount paid on any claim 

processed by a carrier after the original reasonable charge update for 

the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1975, and prior to the adjustments 

required by the preceding sentence, was at least $1 less than the amount 

due pursuant to the preceding sentence, the difference between the 

amount previously paid and the amount due shall be paid within 6 months 

after December 31, 1975; however, no payment shall be made on any claim 

where the difference between the amount previously and the amount due 

shall be paid within 6 months after December 31, 1975; however, no 

payment shall be made on any claim where the difference between the 

amount previously paid and the amount due is less than $1.)

    (iii) If, for any reason, a prevailing charge for a service in a 

locality has no precise counterpart in the carrier's charge data for 

calendar year 1971 (the data on which the prevailing charge calculations 

for fiscal year 1973 were based), the limit on the prevailing charge 

will be estimated, on the basis of data and methodology acceptable to 

CMS, to seek to produce the effect intended by the economic index 

criterion. The allowance or reduction of an increase in a prevailing 

charge for any individual medical item or service may affect the 

allowance or reduction of an increase in the prevailing charges for 

other items or services if, for example, the limit on the prevailing 

charge is estimated, or if the prevailing charges for more than one item 

or service are established through the use of a relative value schedule 

and dollar conversion factors.

    (b) Variation in range of prevailing charges. The range of 

prevailing charges in a locality may be different for physicians or 

other persons who engage in a specialty practice or service than for 

others. Existing differentials in the level of charges between different 

kinds of practice or service could, in some localities, lead to the 

development of more than one range of prevailing charges for application 

by the carrier in its determinations of reasonable charges. Carrier 

decisions in this respect should be responsive to the existing patterns 

of charges by physicians and other persons who render covered services, 

and should establish differentials in the levels of charges between 

different kinds of practice or service only where in accord with such 

patterns.

    (c) Re-evaluation and adjustment of prevailing charges. 

Determinations of prevailing charges by the carrier are to be re-

evaluated and adjusted from time to time on the basis of factual 

information about the charges made by physicians and other persons to 

the public in general. This information should be obtained from all 

possible sources including a carrier's experience with its own programs 

as well as with the supplementary medical insurance program.

    (d) Computation and issuance of the MEI after CY 1992--(1) For 

update years after CY 1992, the MEI is a physician input price index, in 

which the annual percent changes for the direct-labor price components 

are adjusted by an annual percent change in a 10-year moving average 

index of labor productivity in the nonfarm business sector.

    (2) The MEI is constructed, using as a base year, CY 1989 weights 

and annual percent changes in the economic price proxies as shown on the 

following chart:



   Medicare Economic Index Expenditure Categories, Weights, and Price

                                 Proxies

------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                  1989 weights

        Expense category             \1\,\2\         Price proxy \3\

                                    (percent)

------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Total......................           100.0

1. Physician's Own Time (net               54.2

 income, general earnings).

    a. Wages and Salaries......            45.3  Average hourly

                                                  earnings, total

                                                  private non-farm.\4\

    b. Fringe Benefits.........             8.8  Employment Cost Index,

                                                  fringe benefits,

                                                  private non-farm.\4\



[[Page 116]]





2. Physician Practice Expense..            45.8

    a. Non-physician Employee              16.3

     Compensation.

        (1) Wages and Salaries.            13.8  Employment Cost Index,

                                                  wages and salaries

                                                  weighted for

                                                  occupational mix of

                                                  non-physician

                                                  employees.\4\

        (2) Fringe Benefits....             2.5  Employment Cost Index,

                                                  fringe benefits, white

                                                  collar.\4\

    b. Office Expense..........            10.3  CPI-U, housing.

    c. Medical Materials and                5.2  PPI, ethical drugs;

     Supplies.                                    PPI, surgical

                                                  appliances and

                                                  supplies; and CPI-U

                                                  medical equipment and

                                                  supplies (equally

                                                  weighted).

    d. Professional Liability               4.8  CMS survey of change in

     Insurance.                                   average liability

                                                  premiums for $100,000/

                                                  $300,000 liability

                                                  coverage among 9 major

                                                  insurers.

    e. Medical Equipment.......             2.3  PPI, medical

                                                  instruments and

                                                  equipment.

    f. Other Professional                   6.9

     Expense.

        (1) Professional Car...             1.4  CPI-U, private

                                                  transportation.

        (2) Other..............             5.5  CPI-U, all items less

                                                  food and energy.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

\1\ Sources: Martin L. Gonzalez, ed.: Physician Marketplace Statistics,

  Fall, 1990. Center for Health Policy Research, Chicago, American

  Medical Association, 1990; Mark Holoweiko, ``Practice Expenses Take

  the Leap of the Decade,'' Medical Economics, November 12, 1990; and

  CMS, OACT special study.

\2\ Due to rounding, weights may not sum to 100.0%

\3\ All price proxies are for annual percent changes for the 12 months

  ending June 30th.

\4\ Annual percent change values for Physicians' Own Time and Non-

  physician Employee Compensation are net of the change in the 10-year

  moving average of output per man-hour to exclude changes in non-farm

  business sector labor productivity.



    (3) If there is no methodological change, CMS publishes a notice in 

the Federal Register to announce the annual increase in the MEI before 

the beginning of the update year to which it applies. If there are 

changes in the base year weights or price proxies, or if there are any 

other MEI methodological changes, they are published in the Federal 

Register with an opportunity for public comment.



[32 FR 12600, Aug. 31, 1967, as amended at 40 FR 25447, June 16, 1975; 

42 FR 18275, Apr. 6, 1977. Redesignated at 42 FR 52826, Sept. 30, 1977, 

as amended at 43 FR 4430, Feb. 2, 1978; 47 FR 63274, Dec. 31, 1982; 51 

FR 34978, Oct. 1, 1986; 53 FR 6648, Mar. 2, 1988; 57 FR 55912, Nov. 25, 

1992]