96-29557. Medicare Program; Physician Fee Schedule Update for Calendar Year 1997 and Physician Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase for Federal Fiscal Year 1997  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 227 (Friday, November 22, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 59717-59724]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-29557]
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 227 / Friday, November 22, 1996 / 
    Notices
    
    [[Page 59717]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Health Care Financing Administration
    [BPD-853-FN]
    RIN 0938-AH41
    
    
    Medicare Program; Physician Fee Schedule Update for Calendar Year 
    1997 and Physician Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase for 
    Federal Fiscal Year 1997
    
    AGENCY: Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final notice.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This final notice announces the calendar year 1997 updates to 
    the Medicare physician fee schedule and the Federal fiscal year 1997 
    volume performance standard rates of increase for expenditures for 
    physicians' services under the Medicare Supplementary Medical Insurance 
    (Part B) program as required by sections 1848 (d) and (f), 
    respectively, of the Social Security Act. The fee schedule updates for 
    calendar year 1997 are 1.9 percent for surgical services, 2.5 percent 
    for primary care services, and -0.8 percent for other nonsurgical 
    services. While it does not affect payment for any particular service, 
    there was a 0.6 percent increase in the update for all physicians' 
    services for 1997. The physician volume performance standard rates of 
    increase for Federal fiscal year 1997 are -3.7 percent for surgical 
    services, 4.5 percent for primary care services, -0.5 percent for other 
    nonsurgical services, and a weighted average of -0.3 percent for all 
    physicians' services.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: The provisions in this final notice pertaining to the 
    Medicare volume performance standard rates of increase are effective 
    October 1, 1996, and the provisions pertaining to the Medicare 
    physician fee schedule update are effective January 1, 1997, as 
    provided by the Medicare statute. Ordinarily, 5 U.S.C. section 801 
    requires that agencies submit major rules to Congress 60 days before 
    the rules are scheduled to become effective. However, the 104th 
    Congress adjourned on October 4, 1996, and the 105th Congress is not 
    scheduled to convene until January 7, 1997. The Department has 
    concluded that, in this instance, a further delay in the effective 
    dates in order to satisfy section 801 would not serve the law's intent, 
    since Congress will not be in session during this period, and such 
    delay in the effective dates established by the Medicare statute is 
    unnecessary and contrary to the public interest. The Department finds, 
    on this basis, that there is good cause for establishing these 
    effective dates pursuant to 5 U.S.C. section 808(2).
    
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    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ordering information: See ADDRESSES 
    section.
        Content information: Contact Don Thompson, (410) 786-4586.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background and Summary of Legislation
    
    A. The Physician Fee Schedule Update and Medicare Volume Performance 
    Standard
    
        Section 1848 of the Social Security Act (the Act) requires the 
    Secretary of Health and Human Services to--
         Establish annual updates to payment rates under the 
    Medicare physician fee schedule, and
         Establish volume performance standard rates of increase to 
    help control the rate of growth in expenditures for physicians' 
    services.
        Under section 1848(b)(1) of the Act, payment for physicians' 
    services, except for anesthesia services, equals the product of the 
    relative value units (RVUs) for a service, a geographic adjustment 
    factor, and a conversion factor. Anesthesia services are paid under a 
    different relative value system, and payment is equal to the sum of the 
    base and time units for the service multiplied by a geographically 
    adjusted anesthesia-specific conversion factor. The RVUs and anesthesia 
    base units reflect the relative amount of resources used by physicians 
    to furnish the service, and the geographic adjustment factor measures 
    practice cost differences between areas. The geographically adjusted 
    RVUs are multiplied by a conversion factor to obtain the physician fee 
    schedule payment amounts. As is discussed in section IV.C.1. of the 
    final rule for the 1997 physician fee schedule, ``Medicare Program; 
    Revisions to Payment Policies and Five-Year Review of and Adjustments 
    to the Relative Value Units Under the Physician Fee Schedule for 
    Calendar Year 1997,'' published elsewhere in this Federal Register 
    issue, there is a separate adjustment to the work RVUs in 1997. (This 
    rule is referenced from now on as the 1997 physician fee schedule final 
    rule.) Therefore, for 1997, the work RVUs are adjusted by this separate 
    factor, and all RVUs are adjusted by a geographic practice cost index 
    and multiplied by a conversion factor to obtain the physician fee 
    schedule payment amounts. We plan on eliminating this separate adjuster 
    in 1998 when we implement resource-based practice expense RVUs.
        The 1997 conversion factors are $16.68 for anesthesia services, 
    $40.9603 for surgical services, $35.7671 for primary care services, and 
    $33.8454 for other nonsurgical services.
    
    [[Page 59718]]
    
    1. Physician Fee Schedule Update
        Section 1848(d) of the Act requires the Secretary to provide the 
    Congress with her recommendation of a physician fee schedule update by 
    April 15 of each year. Under section 1848(d)(2)(A) of the Act, the 
    Secretary is required to consider a number of factors, including the 
    following:
         The percentage change in the Medicare economic index 
    (MEI), a measure of the change in the cost of operating a medical 
    practice.
         The growth in actual expenditures for physicians' services 
    in the prior fiscal year.
         The relationship between that growth and the volume 
    performance standard rate of increase.
         Changes in the volume and intensity of services.
         Access to services.
         Other factors that may contribute to changes in the volume 
    and intensity of services or access to services.
        If the Congress does not set the update, section 1848(d)(3) of the 
    Act establishes the process for updating the physician fee schedule. 
    Under section 1848(d)(3), unless otherwise specified by the Congress, 
    the fee schedule update for a category of physicians' services equals 
    the appropriate update index (the MEI) adjusted by the number of 
    percentage points by which expenditure growth exceeded or was less than 
    the volume performance standard rates of increase for the second 
    preceding year for that category of physicians' services. That is, the 
    calendar year 1997 update would equal the 1997 MEI increased or 
    decreased by the difference between the rate of increase in 
    expenditures for fiscal year 1995 and the volume performance standard 
    for that year. However, section 1848(d)(3)(B) of the Act limits the 
    maximum downward adjustment for 1995 and any succeeding year to 5.0 
    percentage points. There is no restriction on upward adjustments to the 
    MEI.
        Section 1848(d)(1)(C) of the Act requires the Secretary to publish 
    in the Federal Register, within the last 15 days of October, the 
    updates for the following calendar year.
        The updates are required by the Medicare statute, and any budget 
    implications associated with them are due to the requirements of the 
    law and not this notice.
    2. Medicare Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase
        Section 1848(f) of the Act requires the Secretary to establish 
    volume performance standard rates of increase for Medicare expenditures 
    for physicians' services. The use of volume performance standard rates 
    of increase is intended to control the rate of increase in expenditures 
    for physicians' services.
        The volume performance standard rates of increase are not limits on 
    expenditures. Payments for services are not withheld if volume 
    performance standard rates of increase are exceeded. Rather, the 
    appropriate fee schedule update, as specified in section 1848(d)(3)(A) 
    of the Act, is adjusted to reflect the success or failure in meeting 
    the volume performance standard rates of increase.
        Section 1848(f) of the Act sets forth the process for establishing 
    the volume performance standard rates of increase by requiring the 
    Secretary to recommend to the Congress the physician volume performance 
    standard rates of increase for the following Federal fiscal year by not 
    later than April 15. The Secretary is required to recommend MVPS rates 
    for surgical, primary care, other nonsurgical, and all physicians' 
    services. In making the recommendations, the Secretary is required to 
    confer with organizations that represent physicians and to consider the 
    following factors:
         Inflation.
         Changes in the number and age composition of Medicare 
    enrollees under Part B (excluding risk health maintenance organization 
    enrollees).
         Changes in technology.
         Evidence of inappropriate utilization of services.
         Evidence of lack of access to necessary physicians' 
    services.
         Other appropriate factors as determined by the Secretary.
        If the Congress does not set the volume performance standard rates 
    of increase, section 1848(f)(2)(A) and (B) of the Act requires the 
    Secretary to set MVPS rates for all physicians' services and each 
    category of physicians' services equal to the product of the following 
    four factors reduced by a performance standard factor, which for fiscal 
    year 1997 is 4.0 percentage points:
         1.0 plus the Secretary's estimate of the weighted-average 
    percentage increase (divided by 100) in fees for all physicians' 
    services or for the category of physicians' services for the portions 
    of calendar year 1996 and calendar year 1997 contained in fiscal year 
    1997.
         1.0 plus the Secretary's estimate of the percentage change 
    (divided by 100) in the average number of Part B enrollees (excluding 
    risk health maintenance organization enrollees) from fiscal year 1996 
    to fiscal year 1997.
         1.0 plus the Secretary's estimate of the average annual 
    percentage growth (divided by 100) in the volume and intensity of all 
    physicians' services or of the category of physicians' services for 
    fiscal year 1991 through fiscal year 1996.
         1.0 plus the Secretary's estimate of the percentage change 
    (divided by 100) in expenditures for all physicians' services or of the 
    category of physicians' services that will result from changes in law 
    or regulations in fiscal year 1997 as compared with expenditures for 
    physicians' services in fiscal year 1996.
        Section 1848(f)(1)(C) of the Act requires the Secretary to publish 
    in the Federal Register within the last 15 days of October of each year 
    the volume performance standard rates of increase for all physicians' 
    services and for each category of physicians' services for the Federal 
    fiscal year that began on October 1 of that year. (The MVPS for all 
    physicians' services has no practical effect on the update. We publish 
    it only because we are required to do so by section 1848(f) of the 
    Act.)
    3. Past Years' Medicare Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase 
    and Physician Fee Schedule Updates
        MVPS rates have been established under section 1848 of the Act 
    since fiscal year 1990. Calendar year 1992 was the first year in which 
    the update was affected by expenditures under the MVPS system. The 
    following tables illustrate the MVPS rates in each fiscal year since 
    their inception, the actual rates of increase, and the corresponding 
    updates in the second subsequent calendar year.
    
    [[Page 59719]]
    
    
    
                                                   Fee Schedule Update                                              
                                                      [In Percent]                                                  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                               Performance  Legislative             
                            Calendar year                             MEI       adjustment   adjustment     Update  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    CY 1992:                                                                                                        
        All services............................................          3.2         -0.9         -0.4          1.9
    CY 1993:                                                                                                        
        Surgical................................................          2.7          0.4  ...........          3.1
        Nonsurgical.............................................          2.7         -1.9  ...........          0.8
        All services \1\........................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          1.4
    CY 1994:                                                                                                        
        Surgical................................................          2.3         11.3         -3.6         10.0
        Primary care............................................          2.3          5.6          0.0          7.9
        Other nonsurgical.......................................          2.3          5.6         -2.6          5.3
        All services \1\........................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          7.0
    CY 1995:                                                                                                        
        Surgical................................................          2.1         12.8         -2.7         12.2
        Primary care............................................          2.1          5.8          0.0          7.9
        Other nonsurgical.......................................          2.1          5.8         -2.7          5.2
        All services \1\........................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          7.7
    CY 1996:                                                                                                        
        Surgical................................................          2.0          1.8  ...........          3.8
        Primary care............................................          2.0         -4.3  ...........         -2.3
        Other nonsurgical.......................................          2.0         -1.6  ...........          0.4
        All services \1\........................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          0.8
    CY 1997:                                                                                                        
        Surgical................................................          2.0         -0.1  ...........          1.9
        Primary care............................................          2.0          0.5  ...........          2.5
        Other nonsurgical.......................................          2.0         -2.8  ...........         -0.8
        All services \1\........................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          0.6
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ The all services update is the weighted average of the category updates and, except for 1992, does not      
      affect payment.                                                                                               
    
    
             Medicare Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase         
                                  (In Percent)                              
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Fiscal Year                 MVPS        Actual     Difference
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    FY 1990:                                                                
        All services.................          9.1         10.0         -0.9
    FY 1991:                                                                
        Surgical.....................          3.3          2.9          0.4
        Nonsurgical..................          8.6         10.5         -1.9
    FY 1992:                                                                
        Surgical.....................          6.5         -4.8         11.3
        Nonsurgical..................         11.2          5.6          5.6
    FY 1993:                                                                
        Surgical.....................          8.4         -4.4         12.8
        Nonsurgical..................         10.8          5.0          5.8
    FY 1994:                                                                
        Surgical.....................          9.1          7.3          1.8
        Primary care.................         10.5         14.8         -4.3
        Other nonsurgical............          9.2         10.8         -1.6
    FY 1995:                                                                
        Surgical.....................          9.2          9.3         -0.1
        Primary care.................         13.8         13.3          0.5
        Other nonsurgical............          4.4          7.2         -2.8
    FY 1996:                                                                
        Surgical.....................         -0.5                          
        Primary care.................          9.3                          
        Other nonsurgical............          0.6                          
    FY 1997:                                                                
        Surgical.....................         -3.7                          
        Primary care.................          4.5                          
        Other nonsurgical............        -0.5                           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Separate MVPS rates for surgical and nonsurgical services were not      
      required until fiscal year 1991. Separate fee schedule updates were   
      not required until calendar year 1993. Beginning with the calendar    
      year 1994 fee schedule update and the fiscal year 1994 MVPS, we       
      established separate updates and MVPS rates of increase for surgical, 
      primary care, and other nonsurgical services.                         
    
    
    [[Page 59720]]
    
    B. Physicians' Services
    
        Section 1848(f)(5)(A) of the Act defines physicians' services for 
    purposes of the volume performance standard rates of increase as 
    including other items or services (such as clinical diagnostic 
    laboratory tests and radiology services), specified by the Secretary, 
    that are commonly performed by a physician or furnished in a 
    physician's office. Section 1861(s) of the Act defines medical and 
    other health services covered under Part B. As provided for in the 
    fiscal year 1990 volume performance standard rates of increase notice 
    in the Federal Register on December 29, 1989 (54 FR 53819), we are 
    including the following medical and other health services in section 
    1861(s) of the Act in the physician volume performance standard rates 
    of increase if bills for the items are processed and paid for by 
    Medicare carriers:
         Physicians' services.
         Services and supplies furnished incident to physicians' 
    services.
         Outpatient physical therapy and speech therapy services, 
    and outpatient occupational therapy services.
         Antigens prepared by or under the direct supervision of a 
    physician.
         Services of physician assistants, certified registered 
    nurse anesthetists, certified nurse midwives, clinical psychologists, 
    clinical social workers, nurse practitioners, and clinical nurse 
    specialists.
         Diagnostic x-ray tests, diagnostic laboratory tests, and 
    other diagnostic tests.
         X-ray, radium, and radioactive isotope therapy.
         Surgical dressings, splints, casts, and other devices used 
    for reduction of fractures and dislocations.
        As stated in our December 8, 1994 final notice (59 FR 63638) 
    announcing the fiscal year 1995 volume performance standard rates of 
    increase, we included outpatient diagnostic laboratory tests paid 
    through intermediaries in the MVPS definition of physicians' services 
    beginning in fiscal year 1996 (59 FR 63640).
    
    C. Definition of Surgical, Primary Care, and Other Nonsurgical Services
    
        As described in the December 2, 1993 notice (58 FR 63858) 
    containing our definitions of surgical, primary care, or other 
    nonsurgical services, we consider a procedure to be surgical if the 
    following conditions are met:
         In the HCFA Part B data system, the service is classified 
    under ``type of service'' as a ``surgery.''
         The service is performed by surgical specialists more than 
    50 percent of the time.
        As also discussed in the December 1993 notice, section 1842(i)(4) 
    of the Act defines primary care services as ``office medical services, 
    emergency department services, home medical services, skilled nursing, 
    intermediate care, and long-term care medical services, or nursing 
    home, boarding home, domiciliary, or custodial care medical services.'' 
    Since this language was the result of an amendment to the Act made by 
    section 4042(b) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA 
    1987) (Pub. L. 100-203), enacted on December 22, 1987, we rely on the 
    conference report accompanying OBRA 1987 (H. R. Rep. No. 100-495, 100th 
    Congress, 1st Session 594-595 (1987)) to determine the HCFA Common 
    Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes to be included in the definition 
    of primary care services. In addition, section 6102(f)(10) of the 
    Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA 1989) (Pub. L. 101-
    239), enacted on December 19, 1989, indicated intermediate and 
    comprehensive office visits for eye examinations and treatments for new 
    patients were to be considered primary care services.
        We classify physicians' services not meeting the surgical or 
    primary care definitions as nonsurgical services.
        For a procedure code that is new in 1997 and does not meet the 
    primary care definition, we do not have any data for determining how 
    often the procedure is performed by surgical specialists and therefore 
    whether the service should be classified as surgical or nonsurgical. We 
    categorized these codes as surgical or nonsurgical based on the 
    judgment of our medical staff. To assist us in making these 
    determinations, we considered the type-of-service classification within 
    the Physicians' Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) and the 
    relationship of services represented by the new codes to surgical 
    services meeting the above-described criteria. We followed a similar 
    process to classify codes that were new in 1996. For the 1997 
    classification of the new 1996 codes, however, we used 6 months of 1996 
    data to determine whether they meet the criteria for being considered 
    surgical services. Based on these data, we did not need to reclassify 
    any codes as surgical or nonsurgical.
        Beginning in 1996, we classified monthly end-stage renal disease 
    services (HCPCS codes 90918 through 90921) as primary care services. 
    For a full discussion of this classification, see the final rule with 
    comment period entitled ``Medicare Program; Revisions to Payment 
    Policies and Adjustments to the Relative Value Units Under the 
    Physician Fee Schedule for Calendar Year 1996'' published in the 
    Federal Register on December 8, 1995 (60 FR 63155 through 63156).
        Also, Addendum B of the 1997 physician fee schedule final rule, 
    published elsewhere in this Federal Register issue, lists the RVUs and 
    related information used in determining Medicare payments for HCPCS 
    codes. For the purposes of the physician fee schedule, we have assigned 
    the following surgical, primary care, or other nonsurgical service 
    update indicators to these codes:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Update indicator                      Interpretation           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    S                                  Surgical services.                   
    P                                  Primary care services.               
    N                                  The physician fee schedule update    
                                        applies, but the code is not defined
                                        as surgical or primary care.        
    O                                  The physician fee schedule update    
                                        does not apply.                     
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The MVPS indicator for a procedure code is identical to the update 
    indicator for codes that have a surgical, primary care, or other 
    nonsurgical service update indicator. However, we consider some codes 
    with an update indicator of ``O'' to be nonsurgical for the purposes of 
    the MVPS, most notably the clinical diagnostic laboratory codes.
    
    II. Provisions of This Final Notice
    
    A. Physician Fee Schedule Update for Calendar Year 1997
    
        Under the requirements of section 1848(d)(3) of the Act, the fee 
    schedule update for calendar year 1997 will be 1.9 percent for surgical 
    services, 2.5 percent for primary care services, and -0.8 percent for 
    other nonsurgical services. The weighted average update across all 
    services for 1997 will be 0.6 percent. We determined this update as 
    follows:
    
    [[Page 59721]]
    
    
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Primary               
                                         Surgical       care     Nonsurgical
                                         services     services     services 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
    (2) (In Percent)                                                        
    1997 MEI.........................          2.0          2.0          2.0
    MVPS Adjustment..................         -0.1          0.5         -2.8
    1997 Update......................          1.9          2.5         -0.8
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As discussed in our December 8, 1995 final rule for the 1996 
    physician fee schedule (60 FR 63172 through 63173), we began applying 
    budget-neutrality adjustments to the conversion factors rather than to 
    the RVUs in 1996. As we discuss in section IX of the 1997 physician fee 
    schedule final rule, published elsewhere in this Federal Register 
    issue, there will be two separate budget neutrality adjustments in 
    1997. The first will be a budget neutrality adjustment applied to the 
    work RVUs when calculating Medicare physicians' fees for 1997. This 
    budget neutrality adjustment, 8.3 percent, will account for fee changes 
    related to the 5-year review of work RVUs. The second budget neutrality 
    adjustment, 1.5 percent, will be applied uniformly to the conversion 
    factors to account for both the fee schedule changes unrelated to the 
    5-year review and the anticipated volume and intensity response to all 
    fee schedule changes unrelated to the conversion factor updates. 
    Because anesthesia services are not paid on the basis of work RVUs, an 
    equivalent -7.5 percent adjustment will be made to the anesthesia 
    conversion factor to account for both these budget neutrality 
    adjustments.
        Applying the updates and conversion factor budget neutrality 
    adjustment to the 1996 conversion factors of $40.7986 for surgical 
    services (other than anesthesia services), $35.4173 for primary care 
    services, and $34.6293 for nonsurgical services yields 1997 conversion 
    factors of $40.9603 for surgical services, $35.7671 for primary care 
    services, and $33.8454 for other nonsurgical services. The 1996 
    anesthesia conversion factor of $15.28, which includes the effect of 
    the 1996 budget neutrality adjustment, will be updated by the surgical 
    update to $16.68 for 1997, after adjusting for the 1997 budget 
    neutrality adjustments.
        The specific calculations to determine the fee schedule updates for 
    physicians' services for calendar year 1997 are explained in section 
    III.A. of this notice.
    
    B. Physician Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase for Fiscal 
    Year 1997
    
        Under the requirements in section 1848(f)(2)(A) and (B) of the Act, 
    we have determined that the volume performance standard rates of 
    increase for physicians' services for fiscal year 1997 are -3.7 percent 
    for surgical services, 4.5 percent for primary care services, -0.5 
    percent for other nonsurgical services, and a weighted average of -0.3 
    percent for all physicians' services.
        This determination is based on the following statutory factors:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      Primary               
            Statutory factors            Surgical       care     Nonsurgical
                                         services     services     services 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
    (2) (In Percent)                                                        
                                                                            
    Fees.............................          2.0          2.0          2.2
    Enrollment.......................         -1.1         -1.1         -1.1
                                                                            
    (2) (In Percent)                                                        
    Volume and Intensity.............          1.6          4.0          4.0
    Legislation......................         -2.1          3.4         -1.5
    Performance Standard Factor......          4.0          4.0          4.0
          Total......................         -3.7          4.5         -0.5
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The specific calculations to determine the volume performance 
    standard rates of increase for physicians' services for fiscal year 
    1997 are explained in section III.B. of this notice.
    
    III. Detail on Calculation of the Calendar Year 1997 Physician Fee 
    Schedule Update and the Fiscal Year 1997 Physician Volume Performance 
    Standard Rates of Increase
    
    A. Physician Fee Schedule Update
    
    1. The Percentage Change in the Medicare Economic Index
        The MEI measures the weighted-average annual price change for 
    various inputs needed to produce physicians' services. The MEI is a 
    fixed-weight input price index, with an adjustment for the change in 
    economy-wide labor productivity. This index, which has 1989 base 
    weights, is comprised of two broad categories: (1) Physician's own 
    time, and (2) physician's practice expense.
        The physician's own time component represents the net income 
    portion of business receipts and primarily reflects the input of the 
    physician's own time into the production of physicians' services in 
    physicians' offices. This category consists of two subcomponents, wages 
    and salaries and fringe benefits. These components are adjusted by the 
    10-year moving average percent change in output per man-hour for the 
    nonfarm business sector to eliminate double counting for productivity 
    growth in physicians' offices and the general economy.
        The physician's practice expense category represents the rate of 
    price growth in nonphysician inputs to the production of services in 
    physicians' offices. This category consists of wages and salaries and 
    fringe benefits for nonphysician staff and other nonlabor inputs. Like 
    physician's own time, the nonphysician staff categories are adjusted 
    for productivity using the 10-year moving average percent change in 
    output per man-hour for the nonfarm business sector. The physician's 
    practice expense component also includes the following categories of 
    nonlabor inputs: office expense, medical materials and supplies, 
    professional liability insurance, medical equipment, professional car, 
    and other expense. The table below presents a listing of the MEI cost 
    categories with associated weights
    
    [[Page 59722]]
    
    and percent changes for price proxies for the 1997 update. The calendar 
    year 1997 MEI is 2.0 percent.
    
     Increase in the Medicare Economic Index Update for Calendar Year 1997 1
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   CY 1997  
                                                        1989       percent  
                                                     weights 2     changes  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Medicare Economic Index Total.................        100.0          2.0
        1. Physician's Own Time \3\ \4\...........         54.2          2.0
            a. Wages and Salaries: Average hourly                           
             earnings private nonfarm, net of                               
             productivity.........................         45.3          2.2
            b. Fringe Benefits: Employment Cost                             
             Index, benefits, private nonfarm, net                          
             of productivity......................          8.8          1.0
        2. Physician's Practice Expense \3\.......         45.8          2.0
            a. Nonphysician Employee Compensation.         16.3          1.9
                1. Wages and Salaries: Employment                           
                 Cost Index, wages and salaries,                            
                 weighted by occupation, net of                             
                 productivity.....................         13.8          2.0
                2. Fringe Benefits: Employment                              
                 Cost Index, fringe benefits,                               
                 white collar, net of productivity          2.5          1.4
            b. Office Expense: Consumer Price                               
             Index for Urban Consumers (CPI-U),                             
             housing..............................         10.3          2.8
            c. Medical Materials and Supplies:                              
             Producer Price Index (PPI), ethical                            
             drugs/PPI, surgical appliances and                             
             supplies/CPI-U, medical equipment and                          
             supplies (equally weighted)..........          5.2          2.2
            d. Professional Liability Insurance:                            
             HCFA professional liability insurance                          
             survey \5\...........................          4.8         -1.1
            e. Medical Equipment: PPI, medical                              
             instruments and equipment............          2.3          1.6
            f. Other Professional Expense.........          6.9          2.8
                1. Professional Car: CPI-U,                                 
                 private transportation...........          1.4          2.3
                2. Other: CPI-U, all items less                             
                 food and energy..................          5.5          2.9
    Addendum:                                                               
        Productivity: 10-year moving average of                             
         output per man-hour, nonfarm business                              
         sector...................................          N/A          0.9
        Physician's Own Time, not productivity                              
         adjusted.................................         54.2          2.9
            Wages and salaries, not productivity                            
             adjusted.............................         45.3          3.1
            Fringe benefits, not productivity                               
             adjusted.............................          8.8          1.9
        Nonphysician Employee Compensation, not                             
         productivity adjusted....................         16.3          2.8
            Wages and salaries, not productivity                            
             adjusted.............................         13.8          2.9
            Fringe benefits, not productivity                               
             adjusted.............................          2.5         2.3 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \1\ The rates of change are for the 12-month period ending June 30,     
      1996, which is the period used for computing the calendar year 1997   
      update. The price proxy values are based upon the latest available    
      Bureau of Labor Statistics data as of September 1996.                 
    \2\ The weights shown for the MEI components are the 1989 base-year     
      weights, which may not sum to subtotals or totals because of rounding.
      The MEI is a fixed-weight, Laspeyres-type input price index whose     
      category weights indicate the distribution of expenditures among the  
      inputs to physicians' services for calendar year 1989. To determine   
      the MEI level for a given year, the price proxy level for each        
      component is multiplied by its 1989 weight. The sum of these products 
      (weights multiplied by the price index levels) over all cost          
      categories yields the composite MEI level for a given year. The annual
      percent change in the MEI levels is an estimate of price change over  
      time for a fixed market basket of inputs to physicians' services.     
    \3\ The Physician's Own Time and Nonphysician Employee Compensation     
      category price measures include an adjustment for productivity. The   
      price measure for each category is divided by the 10-year moving      
      average of output per man-hour in the nonfarm business sector. For    
      example, the wages and salaries component of Physician's Own Time is  
      calculated by dividing the rate of growth in average hourly earnings  
      by the 10-year moving average rate of growth of output per man-hour   
      for the nonfarm business sector. Dividing one plus the decimal form of
      the percent change in the average hourly earnings (1+.031=1.031 by one
      plus the decimal form of the percent change in the 10-year moving     
      average of labor productivity (1+.009=1.009) equals one plus the      
      change in average hourly earnings net of the change in output per     
      manhour (1.031/1.009=1.022). All Physician's Own Time and Nonphysician
      Employee Compensation categories are adjusted in this way. Due to a   
      higher level of precision the computer calculated quotient may differ 
      from the quotient calculated from rounded individual percent changes. 
    \4\ The average hourly earnings proxy, the Employment Cost Index        
      proxies, as well as the CPI-U, housing and CPI-U, private             
      transportation are published in the Current Labor Statistics Section  
      of the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Monthly Labor Review. The remaining
      CPIs and PPIs in the revised index can be obtained from the Bureau of 
      Labor Statistics' CPI Detailed Report or Producer Price Indexes.      
    \5\ Derived from a HCFA survey of several major insurers (the latest    
      available historical percent change data are for calendar year 1995). 
      This is consistent with prior computations of the professional        
      liability insurance component of the MEI.                             
    N/A Productivity is factored into the MEI compensation categories as an 
      adjustment to the price variables; therefore, no explicit weight      
      exists for productivity in the MEI.                                   
    
    2. Medicare Volume Performance Standard Performance Adjustment
        As required by section 1848(d)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, we are 
    increasing the update by 0.5 percentage points for primary care 
    services and decreasing it by 0.1 percentage points for surgical and 
    2.8 percentage points for other nonsurgical services to reflect the 
    percentage increase in expenditures between fiscal year 1994 and fiscal 
    year 1995 relative to the volume performance standard rates of increase 
    for fiscal year 1995.
        Our estimate of the percentage growth in surgical services between 
    fiscal year 1994 and fiscal year 1995 is 9.3 percent. Because the 
    volume performance standard rate of increase for fiscal year 1995 was 
    9.2 percent, the rate of increase in expenditures for surgical services 
    was greater than the volume performance standard rate of increase by 
    0.1 percentage points. For primary care services, the rate of increase 
    in expenditures was 13.3 percent, 0.5 percentage points less than the 
    volume performance standard rate of increase of 13.8 percent. For other 
    nonsurgical services, the rate of increase in expenditures was 7.2 
    percent, 2.8 percentage points greater than the volume performance 
    standard rate of increase of 4.4 percent.
    
    B. Fiscal Year 1997 Physician Volume Performance Standard Rates of 
    Increase
    
        Below we explain how we determined the increases for each of the 
    four factors used in determining the volume performance standard rates 
    of increase for fiscal year 1997.
    
    [[Page 59723]]
    
    Factor 1--Weighted-Average Percentage Increase in Fees for Physicians' 
    Services (Before Applying Legislative Reductions) for Months of 
    Calendar Years 1996 and 1997 Included in Fiscal Year 1997
    
        This factor was calculated as a weighted average of the fee 
    increases that apply to fiscal year 1997; that is, the fee increases 
    that apply to the last 3 months of calendar year 1996 multiplied by 25 
    percent plus the fee increases that apply to the first 9 months of 
    calendar year 1997 multiplied by 75 percent. Beginning with calendar 
    year 1992, physicians' services are updated by a physician fee schedule 
    update factor that is based on the MEI adjusted for several statutory 
    factors. The update factor for a category of physicians' services for 
    calendar year 1997 is adjusted by the number of percentage points that 
    the rate of increase in expenditures in fiscal year 1995 compared to 
    fiscal year 1994 was less than the volume performance standard rate of 
    increase for the category of physicians' services in fiscal year 1995. 
    Laboratory services are updated by increases in the Consumer Price 
    Index for Urban Consumers (CPI-U).
        Table 2 shows the updates that were used to determine the weighted-
    average percentage increase in physicians' fees.
    
      Table 2.--Medicare Economic Index and Consumer Price Index for Urban  
                   Consumers for Calendar Years 1996 and 1997               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              1996     1997 
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    MEI...................................................      2.0      2.0
    CPI-U.................................................      3.2      2.7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Physicians' services make up approximately 90 percent of the total 
    expenditures in the definition of physicians' services used for 
    purposes of the volume performance standard rates of increase; 
    laboratory services represent approximately 10 percent.
        In addition to the annual updates and individual weights of the 
    above services, one other element has an effect on the rate of increase 
    in physician fees. Section 1842(h)(1) of the Act provides for 
    ``participating physicians'' who agree to accept Medicare payment as 
    payment in full and to bill Medicare beneficiaries only for the 20 
    percent coinsurance amount and any unmet portion of the $100 annual 
    deductible amount. Sections 1842(b)(4)(A)(iv) and 1848(a)(3) of the Act 
    provide that nonparticipating physicians are paid 5 percent less for 
    their Medicare services than participating physicians. The 
    nonparticipating physicians are given an opportunity at the end of each 
    calendar year to enroll as participating physicians for the next 
    calendar year. Participation rates have increased each year, and we 
    assume that this trend will continue. The increase in the number of 
    participating physicians and the fact that they are paid at a rate 
    higher than nonparticipating physicians also add to the rate of 
    increase in the weighted-average percentage increase in physician fees.
        After taking into account all the elements described above, we 
    estimate that the weighted-average increase in fees for physicians' 
    services in fiscal year 1997 before applying the legislative changes 
    will be 2.0 percent for surgical services, 2.0 percent for primary care 
    services, 2.2 percent for other nonsurgical services, and a weighted 
    average of 2.1 percent for all physicians' services.
    
    Factor 2--The Percentage Increase in the Average Number of Part B 
    Enrollees from Fiscal Year 1996 to Fiscal Year 1997
    
        We estimate that average Medicare Part B enrollment in fiscal year 
    1997, excluding those enrolled in risk health maintenance organizations 
    (whose Medicare-covered medical care is paid for through the adjusted 
    average per capita cost mechanism and is therefore outside the scope of 
    the MVPS) will be 32.170 million.
        The corresponding figure for 1996 is estimated to be 32.532 million 
    total Part B enrollees not enrolled in risk health maintenance 
    organizations. This represents a 1.1 percent decrease in enrollment 
    from fiscal year 1996 to fiscal year 1997 for surgical services, 
    primary care services, other nonsurgical services, and the average of 
    all physicians' services.
    
    Factor 3--Average Annual Growth in the Volume and Intensity of 
    Physicians' Services for Fiscal Year 1992 Through Fiscal Year 1996
    
        Section 1848(f)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act requires the Secretary to 
    estimate the average annual percentage growth in the volume and 
    intensity of physicians' services or of the category of physicians' 
    services for fiscal year 1992 through fiscal year 1996. This estimate 
    must be based upon information contained in the most recent annual 
    report issued by the Board of Trustees of the Supplementary Medical 
    Insurance Trust Fund (Trustees' Report).
        The data on the percentage increase in the volume and intensity of 
    services in the Trustees' Report are based on historical trends in 
    increases in allowed charges, which are not influenced by the Part B 
    deductible. Increases in expenditures, however, are influenced by the 
    Part B deductible. Section 1832(b) of the Act specifies that the Part B 
    deductible will be $100 for calendar year 1991 and subsequent years. 
    The effect of the deductible remaining fixed at $100 is that the 
    overall annual increases in allowed charges for MVPS physicians' 
    services are lower than the overall annual increases in expenditures. 
    Although we believe it would be consistent with a literal 
    interpretation of section 1848(f)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, it would be 
    inappropriate to base the volume and intensity component on the lower 
    5-year growth in allowed charges and compare the volume performance 
    standards to the higher growth in expenditures, so we instead compare 
    the standards to the growth in allowed charges.
        Consistent with data contained in the Trustees' Report, we 
    estimated Factor 3 using a definition of physicians' services that 
    includes certain supplies and nonphysician services not otherwise 
    included in computing the volume performance standard rates of increase 
    (primarily durable medical equipment and ambulance services). We 
    included data for these services because we were required to base the 
    estimate on data contained in the Trustees' Report, and it was not 
    feasible to recompute the data from the 5-year period to exclude these 
    supplies and nonphysician services. We believe the inclusion of these 
    nonphysician supplies and services in this component has a minimal 
    effect on the estimate because the component measures rates of change. 
    Since durable medical equipment and ambulance services constitute only 
    about 10 percent of the total charges used in the Trustees' Report, the 
    rate of change for these nonphysician services and supplies would have 
    to be significantly different from the rate of change for physicians' 
    services to have any measurable impact on this volume and intensity 
    increase factor. (Factor 3 is the only component of the volume 
    performance standard rate of increase that was estimated using data 
    that included nonphysician services and supplies.) The volume increases 
    for services performed in independent laboratories were included in the 
    calculation of the physician increases, as were the volume increases 
    for clinical laboratory tests performed in hospital outpatient 
    departments.
        As described earlier, the fiscal year 1997 volume performance 
    standards were calculated using category-specific volume and intensity. 
    The 5-year average rate of increase in volume and
    
    [[Page 59724]]
    
    intensity equals 1.6 percent for surgical services, 4.0 percent for 
    primary care services, and 4.0 percent for other nonsurgical services. 
    The weighted-average increase for all physicians' services is 3.4 
    percent.
    
    Factor 4--Percentage Increase in Expenditures for Physicians' Services 
    Resulting From Changes in Law or Regulations in Fiscal Year 1997 
    Compared With Fiscal Year 1996
    
        Legislative changes enacted in OBRA 1993 and changes in the 
    regulations required by this law, as well as implementation of the 
    physician fee schedule (including changes made in the RVUs for 1996 and 
    1997) will have an impact on the volume performance standard rates of 
    increase for fiscal year 1997.
        The net effect of implementing the physician fee schedule after 
    making RVU changes for 1996 and 1997 is to increase payment rates for 
    primary care services and the volume performance standard for those 
    services. Similarly, the net effect of refining the RVUs and 
    implementing the fee schedule reduces payment rates for most surgical 
    services and many nonsurgical services other than primary care, thus, 
    lowering the volume performance standard rates of increase for these 
    services. Implementing the fee schedule will increase the volume 
    performance standard rates of increase for all physicians' services 
    because, although the net effect of increases in fees for certain 
    services and decreases in fees for other services will have a budget 
    neutral effect on fees for all physicians' services, an adjustment is 
    required to ensure that changes in volume and intensity related to the 
    fee changes do not cause an increase in expenditures. The MVPS targets 
    are increased by this volume and intensity adjustment.
        After taking into account these provisions, this factor equals -2.1 
    percent for surgical services, 3.4 percent for primary care services, 
    and -1.5 percent for other nonsurgical services, and a weighted average 
    of -0.7 percent for all physicians' services.
    
    IV. Inapplicability of 30-Day Delay in Effective Date
    
        We usually provide a delay of 30 days in the effective date for 
    final Federal Register documents. In this case, however, the volume 
    performance standard rates of increase are required by law to be 
    published in the last 15 days of October 1996 and are effective on 
    October 1, 1996. Thus, the Congress has clearly indicated its intent 
    that the rates of increase be implemented without the usual 30-day 
    delay in the effective date and has foreclosed any discretion by us in 
    this matter. Therefore, the requirement for a 30-day delay in the 
    effective date does not apply to this notice. With regard to the 
    physician fee schedule, the effective date will be January 1, 1997, 
    which is more than 30 days beyond the publication date of this notice.
    
    V. Collection of Information Requirements
    
        This document does not impose information collection and 
    recordkeeping requirements. Consequently, it need not be reviewed by 
    the Office of Management and Budget under the authority of the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
    
    VI. Regulatory Impact Statement
    
    A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        We generally prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis that is 
    consistent with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 
    through 612) unless the Secretary certifies that a notice will not have 
    a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. For purposes of the RFA, States and individuals are not 
    entities, but we consider all physicians to be small entities.
        We are not preparing a regulatory flexibility analysis since we 
    have determined, and the Secretary certifies, that this notice will not 
    have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
        Also, section 1102(b) of the Act requires the Secretary to prepare 
    a regulatory impact analysis if a notice may have a significant impact 
    on the operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals. 
    This analysis must conform to the provisions of section 604 of the RFA. 
    For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define a small rural 
    hospital as a hospital that is located outside of a Metropolitan 
    Statistical Area and has fewer than 50 beds.
        We are not preparing a rural impact analysis since we have 
    determined, and the Secretary certifies, that this notice will not have 
    a significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of small 
    rural hospitals.
        In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this 
    notice was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
    
    (Sections 1848 (d) and (f) of the Social Security Act)
    
    (42 U.S.C. 1395w-4 (d) and (f))
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.774, 
    Medicare--Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
    
        Dated: November 7, 1996.
    Bruce C. Vladeck,
    Administrator, Health Care Financing Administration.
    
        Dated: November 12, 1996.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 96-29557 Filed 11-15-96; 11:51 am]
    BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/1/1996
Published:
11/22/1996
Department:
Health Care Finance Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Final notice.
Document Number:
96-29557
Dates:
The provisions in this final notice pertaining to the Medicare volume performance standard rates of increase are effective October 1, 1996, and the provisions pertaining to the Medicare physician fee schedule update are effective January 1, 1997, as provided by the Medicare statute. Ordinarily, 5 U.S.C. section 801 requires that agencies submit major rules to Congress 60 days before the rules are scheduled to become effective. However, the 104th Congress adjourned on October 4, 1996, and the ...
Pages:
59717-59724 (8 pages)
Docket Numbers:
BPD-853-FN
RINs:
0938-AH41: Medicare Program: Physician Fee Schedule Update for Calendar Year 1997 and Physician Volume Performance Standard Rates of Increase for Federal Fiscal Year 1997 (BPD-853-FN)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0938-AH41/medicare-program-physician-fee-schedule-update-for-calendar-year-1997-and-physician-volume-performan
PDF File:
96-29557.pdf