[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: 42CFR422.157]



[Page 1008-1010]

 

                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH

 

                    CHAPTER IV--CENTERS FOR MEDICARE

                          & MEDICAID SERVICES,

                        DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND

                             HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 422_MEDICARE ADVANTAGE PROGRAM--Table of Contents

 

                      Subpart D_Quality Improvement

 

Sec. 422.157  Accreditation organizations.



    (a) Conditions for approval. CMS may approve an accreditation 

organization with respect to a given standard under this part if it 

meets the following conditions:

    (1) In accrediting MA organizations, it applies and enforces 

standards that are at least as stringent as Medicare requirements with 

respect to the standard or standards in question.

    (2) It complies with the application and reapplication procedures 

set forth in Sec. 422.158.

    (3) It ensures that:

    (i) Any individual associated with it, who is also associated with 

an entity it accredits, does not influence the accreditation decision 

concerning that entity.

    (ii) The majority of the membership of its governing body is not 

comprised of managed care organizations or their representatives.

    (iii) Its governing body has a broad and balanced representation of 

interests and acts without bias.

    (b) Notice and comment--(1) Proposed notice. CMS publishes a notice 

in the Federal Register whenever it is considering granting an 

accreditation organization's application for approval. The notice--

    (i) Announces CMS's receipt of the accreditation organization's 

application for approval;

    (ii) Describes the criteria CMS will use in evaluating the 

application; and

    (iii) Provides at least a 30-day comment period.

    (2) Final notice. (i) After reviewing public comments, CMS publishes 

a final Federal Register notice indicating whether it has granted the 

accreditation organization's request for approval.

    (ii) If CMS grants the request, the final notice specifies the 

effective date and the term of the approval, which may not exceed 6 

years.

    (c) Ongoing responsibilities of an approved accreditation 

organization. An accreditation organization approved by CMS must 

undertake the following activities on an ongoing basis:

    (1) Provide to CMS in written form and on a monthly basis all of the 

following:

    (i) Copies of all accreditation surveys, together with any survey-

related information that CMS may require (including corrective action 

plans and summaries of unmet CMS requirements).

    (ii) Notice of all accreditation decisions.

    (iii) Notice of all complaints related to deemed MA organizations.



[[Page 1009]]



    (iv) Information about any MA organization against which the 

accrediting organization has taken remedial or adverse action, including 

revocation, withdrawal or revision of the MA organization's 

accreditation. (The accreditation organization must provide this 

information within 30 days of taking the remedial or adverse action.)

    (v) Notice of any proposed changes in its accreditation standards or 

requirements or survey process. If the organization implements the 

changes before or without CMS approval, CMS may withdraw its approval of 

the accreditation organization.

    (2) Within 30 days of a change in CMS requirements, submit to CMS--

    (i) An acknowledgment of CMS's notification of the change;

    (ii) A revised cross-walk reflecting the new requirements; and

    (iii) An explanation of how the accreditation organization plans to 

alter its standards to conform to CMS's new requirements, within the 

time-frames specified in the notification of change it receives from 

CMS.

    (3) Permit its surveyors to serve as witnesses if CMS takes an 

adverse action based on accreditation findings.

    (4) Within 3 days of identifying, in an accredited MA organization, 

a deficiency that poses immediate jeopardy to the organization's 

enrollees or to the general public, give CMS written notice of the 

deficiency.

    (5) Within 10 days of CMS's notice of withdrawal of approval, give 

written notice of the withdrawal to all accredited MA organizations.

    (6) Provide, on an annual basis, summary data specified by CMS that 

relate to the past year's accreditation activities and trends.

    (d) Continuing Federal oversight of approved accreditation 

organizations. This paragraph establishes specific criteria and 

procedures for continuing oversight and for withdrawing approval of an 

accreditation organization.

    (1) Equivalency review. CMS compares the accreditation 

organization's standards and its application and enforcement of those 

standards to the comparable CMS requirements and processes when--

    (i) CMS imposes new requirements or changes its survey process;

    (ii) An accreditation organization proposes to adopt new standards 

or changes in its survey process; or

    (iii) The term of an accreditation organization's approval expires.

    (2) Validation review. CMS or its agent may conduct a survey of an 

accredited organization, examine the results of the accreditation 

organization's own survey, or attend the accreditation organization's 

survey, in order to validate the organization's accreditation process. 

At the conclusion of the review, CMS identifies any accreditation 

programs for which validation survey results--

    (i) Indicate a 20 percent rate of disparity between certification by 

the accreditation organization and certification by CMS or its agent on 

standards that do not constitute immediate jeopardy to patient health 

and safety if unmet;

    (ii) Indicate any disparity between certification by the 

accreditation organization and certification by CMS or its agent on 

standards that constitute immediate jeopardy to patient health and 

safety if unmet; or

    (iii) Indicate that, irrespective of the rate of disparity, there 

are widespread or systematic problems in an organization's accreditation 

process such that accreditation no longer provides assurance that the 

Medicare requirements are met or exceeded.

    (3) Onsite observation. CMS may conduct an onsite inspection of the 

accreditation organization's operations and offices to verify the 

organization's representations and assess the organization's compliance 

with its own policies and procedures. The onsite inspection may include, 

but is not limited to, reviewing documents, auditing meetings concerning 

the accreditation process, evaluating survey results or the 

accreditation status decision making process, and interviewing the 

organization's staff.

    (4) Notice of intent to withdraw approval. If an equivalency review, 

validation review, onsite observation, or CMS's daily experience with 

the accreditation organization suggests that the accreditation 

organization is not



[[Page 1010]]



meeting the requirements of this subpart, CMS gives the organization 

written notice of its intent to withdraw approval.

    (5) Withdrawal of approval. CMS may withdraw its approval of an 

accreditation organization at any time if CMS determines that--

    (i) Deeming based on accreditation no longer guarantees that the MA 

organization meets the MA requirements, and failure to meet those 

requirements could jeopardize the health or safety of Medicare enrollees 

and constitute a significant hazard to the public health; or

    (ii) The accreditation organization has failed to meet its 

obligations under this section or under Sec. 422.156 or Sec. 422.158.

    (6) Reconsideration of withdrawal of approval. An accreditation 

organization dissatisfied with a determination to withdraw CMS approval 

may request a reconsideration of that determination in accordance with 

subpart D of part 488 of this chapter.



[63 FR 35082, June 26, 1998, as amended at 65 FR 40323, June 29, 2000; 

65 FR 59749, Oct. 6, 2000]