[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: 42CFR411.33]



[Page 389-390]

 

                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH

 

                    CHAPTER IV--CENTERS FOR MEDICARE

                          & MEDICAID SERVICES,

                        DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND

                             HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 411_EXCLUSIONS FROM MEDICARE AND LIMITATIONS ON MEDICARE PAYMENT

--Table of Contents

 

   Subpart B_Insurance Coverage That Limits Medicare Payment: General 

                               Provisions

 

Sec. 411.33  Amount of Medicare secondary payment.



    (a) Services for which CMS pays on a Medicare fee schedule or 

reasonable charge basis. The Medicare secondary payment is the lowest of 

the following:

    (1) The actual charge by the supplier (or the amount the supplier is 

obligated to accept as payment in full if that is less than the charges) 

minus the amount paid by the third party payer.

    (2) The amount that Medicare would pay if the services were not 

covered by a third party payer.

    (3) The higher of the Medicare fee schedule, Medicare reasonable 

charge, or other amount which would be payable under Medicare (without 

regard to any applicable Medicare deductible or coinsurance amounts) or 

the third party payer's allowable charge (without regard to any 

deductible or co-insurance imposed by the policy or plan) minus the 

amount actually paid by the third party payer.

    (b) Example: An individual received treatment from a physician for 

which the physician charged $175. The third party payer allowed $150 of 

the charge and paid 80 percent of this amount or $120. The Medicare fee 

schedule for this treatment is $125. The individual's Part B deductible 

had been met. As secondary payer, Medicare pays the lowest of the 

following amounts:

    (1) Excess of actual charge minus the third party payment: $175-

120=$55.

    (2) Amount Medicare would pay if the services were not covered by a 

third party payer: .80x$125=$100.

    (3) Third party payer's allowable charge without regard to its 

coinsurance (since that amount is higher than the Medicare fee schedule 

in this case) minus amount paid by the third party payer: $150-120=$30.



The Medicare payment is $30.

    (c)-(d) [Reserved]

    (e) Services reimbursed on a basis other than fee schedule, 

reasonable charge, or monthly capitation rate. The Medicare secondary 

payment is the lowest of the following:

    (1) The gross amount payable by Medicare (that is, the amount 

payable without considering the effect of the Medicare deductible and 

coinsurance or the payment by the third party payer), minus the 

applicable Medicare deductible and coinsurance amounts.

    (2) The gross amount payable by Medicare, minus the amount paid by 

the third party payer.

    (3) The provider's charges (or the amount the provider is obligated 

to accept as payment in full, if that is less than the charges), minus 

the amount payable by the third party payer.

    (4) The provider's charges (or the amount the provider is obligated 

to accept as payment in full if that is less than the charges), minus 

the applicable Medicare deductible and coinsurance amounts.

    (f) Examples: (1) A hospital furnished 7 days of inpatient hospital 

care in 1987 to a Medicare beneficiary. The provider's charges for 

Medicare-covered services totaled $2,800. The third party payer paid 

$2,360. No part of the Medicare inpatient hospital deductible of $520 

had been met. If the gross amount payable by Medicare in this case is 

$2,700, then as secondary payer, Medicare pays the lowest of the 

following amounts:

    (i) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the Medicare 

inpatient hospital deductible: $2,700-$520=$2,180.

    (ii) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the third party 

payment: $2,700-$2,360=$340.



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    (iii) The provider's charges minus the third party payment: $2,800-

$2,360=$440.

    (iv) The provider's charges minus the Medicare deductible: $2,800-

$520=$2,280. Medicare's secondary payment is $340 and the combined 

payment made by the third party payer and Medicare on behalf of the 

beneficiary is $2,700. The $520 deductible was satisfied by the third 

party payment so that the beneficiary incurred no out-of-pocket 

expenses.

    (2) A hospital furnished 1 day of inpatient hospital care in 1987 to 

a Medicare beneficiary. The provider's charges for Medicare-covered 

services totalled $750. The third party payer paid $450. No part of the 

Medicare inpatient hospital deductible had been met previously. The 

third party payment is credited toward that deductible. If the gross 

amount payable by Medicare in this case is $850, then as secondary 

payer, Medicare pays the lowest of the following amounts:

    (i) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the Medicare 

deductible: $850-$520=$330.

    (ii) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the third party 

payment: $850-$450=$400.

    (iii) The provider's charges minus the third party payment: $750-

$450=$300.

    (iv) The provider's charges minus the Medicare deductible: $750-

$520=$230. Medicare's secondary payment is $230, and the combined 

payment made by the third party payer and Medicare on behalf of the 

beneficiary is $680. The hospital may bill the beneficiary $70 (the $520 

deductible minus the $450 third party payment). This fully discharges 

the beneficiary's deductible obligation.

    (3) An ESRD beneficiary received 8 dialysis treatments for which a 

facility charged $160 per treatment for a total of $1,280. No part of 

the beneficiary's $75 Part B deductible had been met. The third party 

payer paid $1,024 for Medicare-covered services. The composite rate per 

dialysis treatment at this facility is $131 or $1,048 for 8 treatments. 

As secondary payer, Medicare pays the lowest of the following:

    (i) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the applicable 

Medicare deductible and coinsurance: $1,048-$75-$194.60=$778.40. (The 

coinsurance is calculated as follows: $1,048 composite rate-$75 

deductible=$973x.20=$194.60).

    (ii) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the third party 

payment: $1,048-$1,024=$24.

    (iii) The provider's charges minus the third party payment: $1,280-

$1,024=$256.

    (iv) The provider's charge minus the Medicare deductible and 

coinsurance: $1,280-$75-$194.60=1010.40. Medicare pays $24. The 

beneficiary's Medicare deductible and coinsurance were met by the third 

party payment.

    (4) A hospital furnished 5 days of inpatient care in 1987 to a 

Medicare beneficiary. The provider's charges for Medicare-covered 

services were $4,000 and the gross amount payable was $3,500. The 

provider agreed to accept $3,000 from the third party as payment in 

full. The third party payer paid $2,900 due to a deductible requirement 

under the third party plan. Medicare considers the amount the provider 

is obligated to accept as full payment ($3,000) to be the provider 

charges. The Medicare secondary payment is the lowest of the following:

    (i) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the Medicare 

inpatient deductible: $3,500-$520=$2,980.

    (ii) The gross amount payable by Medicare minus the third party 

payment: $3,500-$2,900=$600.

    (iii) The provider's charge minus the third party payment: $3,000-

$2,900=$100.

    (iv) The provider's charges minus the Medicare inpatient deductible: 

$3,000-$520=$2,480. The Medicare secondary payment is $100. When 

Medicare is the secondary payer, the combined payment made by the third 

party payer and Medicare on behalf of the beneficiary is $3,000. The 

beneficiary has no liability for Medicare-covered services since the 

third party payment satisfied the $520 deductible.



[54 FR 41734, Oct. 11, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 1820, Jan. 19, 1990; 60 

FR 45362, Aug. 31, 1995]



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