97-19829. Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniform Services (CHAMPUS); Defense and Veterans Head Injury Program (DVHIP) Demonstration Project  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 145 (Tuesday, July 29, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 40506-40507]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-19829]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    
    Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniform Services 
    (CHAMPUS); Defense and Veterans Head Injury Program (DVHIP) 
    Demonstration Project
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Defense (DoD).
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
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    SUMMARY: This notice is to advise parties of a demonstration project 
    where the DoD will participate in the Defense and Veterans Head Injury 
    Program (DVHIP) Protocol II Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) 
    Rehabilitation: A Controlled, Randomized Multicenter Study of Two 
    Interdisciplinary Programs with Adjuvant Pharmacotheraphy. Under the 
    demonstration, DoD will participate in a controlled trail of cognitive 
    therapy for TBI at four participating Department of Veterans Affairs 
    medical facilities. Participation in these clinical trails will provide 
    access to cognitive rehabilitation for TRICARE/CHAMPUS beneficiaries 
    when their conditions meet the study protocol edibility criteria. DoD 
    financing of these procedures will assist in meeting clinical trail 
    goals and arrival at conclusions regarding the safety and efficacy of 
    cognitive rehabilitation in the treatment of TBI. This demonstration 
    project is under the authority of Title 10, United States Code 
    (U.S.C.), Chapter 55, Section 1092.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: August 1, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Mr. Tariq Shahid, Health Care Program Development Branch, Office of 
    Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniform Services (OCHAMPUS), 
    Aurora, CO, 80045-6900, telephone (303) 361-1401 or Ms. Ann Fazzini, 
    Health Care Policy Analyst, Program Development Branch, OCHAMPUS, 
    Aurora, CO 80045-6900, telephone (303) 361-1403.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    
    A. Background
    
        TBI is the principal cause of death and disability for young 
    Americans, at an estimated cost of over $39 billion per year. Important 
    advances have been made in prevention and acute care, yet the costs of 
    TBI rehabilitation have been growing exponentially. This is in spite of 
    the fact that few, if any, TBI rehabilitation modalities have been 
    subjected to the degree of scientific scrunity for efficacy and cost 
    efficiency that is usually applied to other medical treatments. The 
    escalating economic burden that TBI places on individual families, as 
    well as on society, is unlikely to be controlled until this issue is 
    resolved.
        The Conference Report on the Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal 
    Year 1992 (House Report 102-328) supported the Department of Defense 
    (DoD) to start an initiative for DoD victims of head injuries. The 
    DVHIP was established in February 1992, and funded in part direct 
    appropriations to DoD (Health Affairs) from Congress. The DVHIP 
    represents a unique collaboration among the DoD, Department of Veterans 
    Affairs (DVA), and the Brain Injury Association. DVHIP objectives 
    ensure that all DVA eligible TBI patients receive TBI-specific 
    evaluation and follow-up, while at the same time collecting 
    standardized patient outcome data that will allow the DVHIP to compare 
    the relative efficacy and cost of various TBI treatment and 
    rehabilitations strategies, and to help define optimal care for victims 
    of TBI.
        There are four DVA facilities participating in the DVHIP study. 
    These are located in Palo Alto, California; Minneapolis, Minnesota; 
    Richmond, Virginia; and, Tampa, Florida. The DVHIP can currently 
    provide services at its DVA facilities only for those patients who are 
    eligible for care within the DVA system. At present this excludes a 
    significant number of TRICARE/CHAMPUS patients from participation in 
    the DVHIP.
        Cognitive rehabilitation is a generic term lacking a standard 
    definition. The term is used to describe varied systems of 
    multidisciplinary services intended to remedy related cognitive, daily 
    living and psychosocial ability impairments which are secondary to 
    organic brain damage.
        The current state of the medical literature does not allow for a 
    TRICARE/CHAMPUS benefit for cognitive rehabilitation in the treatment 
    of TBI patients. The DVHIP is conducting a randomized, prospective 
    trail that would hasten the answers to the current questions of the 
    contribution(s), if any, of cognitive rehabilitation. The study will 
    address the efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation versus traditional 
    rehabilitation of beneficiaries with TBI (moderate to severe closed 
    head injury) in prospective randomized clinical trials of 364 patients. 
    In addition, patients randomized into either the cognitive or the 
    traditional rehabilitation program will be further randomized to 
    receive pharmacotherapy or placebo. The pharmacotherapy will consist of 
    methylphenidate if the patient is determined to be non-depressed and 
    apathetic, and sertraline for all others.
        Because CHAMPUS relies upon outcome-based medical literature in the 
    formulation of its coverage policy regarding cognitive rehabilitation, 
    the DoD should assist with research protocols that will directly 
    contribute to the body of science regarding cognitive rehabilitation. 
    DoD financing of these procedures will assist in meeting clinical trial 
    goals and arrival at conclusions regarding the safety and efficacy of 
    cognitive rehabilitation in the treatment of TBI.
    
    B. TRICARE/CHAMPUS Experience
    
        TRICARE/CHAMPUS cost shares TBI rehabilitative services such as 
    speech therapy, physical therapy and occupational therapy. However, 
    cognitive rehabilitation therapy, which is frequently provided as a 
    component of TBI care, is considered investigational under TRICARE/
    CHAMPUS.
        TRICARE/CHAMPUS, by regulation, does not approve payment for 
    experimental or investigational procedures. Any change in the 
    experimental status of cognitive rehabilitation in the treatment of TBI 
    logically awaits the findings from well controlled studies of 
    clinically meaningful endpoints such as the DVHIP Demonstration 
    Project.
        Among TRICARE/CHAMPUS beneficiaries of all ages (5.4 million) 
    approximately 5,000 have head injuries each year with 1,300-1,400 
    requiring hospitalization.
        Overall CHAMPUS billed charges for 1,360 TBI admissions in Fiscal 
    Year (FY) 1992 were approximately $31.1 million (or $1,908 per day), 
    and the total allowed amount (i.e., the government payments and 
    beneficiary cost shares) was almost $21.4 million (or $1,309 per day). 
    This included acute and rehabilitation hospitalizations and skilled 
    nursing home costs.
        CHAMPUS billed charges for 78 admissions in FY 1992 for services in 
    rehabilitation hospitals were approximately $5.8 million (or $1,343 per 
    day), and the total allowed amount was $5.46 million (or $1,247 per 
    day). This represented about 4,378 rehabilitation hospital bed days.
        CHAMPUS billed charges for 31 admissions in FY 1992 for services in 
    skilled nursing homes were approximately $2.2 million (or $930 per 
    day), and the total allowed amount was approximately $2.15 million (or 
    $902 per day). This represented about 2387 skilled nursing home bed 
    days.
        Together, the total CHAMPUS cost for services in rehabilitation 
    hospitals and in skilled nursing homes for beneficiaries with TBI in FY 
    1992 was
    
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    approximately $7.6 million for 109 admission requiring 6,765 bed days. 
    The average length of stay was 62 days with an average per diem of 
    $1,125 in FY 1992. Based on increases in the Consumer Price Index 
    (Urban) for medical care, the average per diem for 1996 under CHAMPUS 
    is estimated to be $1,320. This contrasts with a current estimated 
    average cost of about $600 per day in participating VAMCs.
    
    C. Caseload, Costs
    
        The design of the rehabilitation protocol is limited to patients 
    between the ages of 17-55 years. CHAMPUS population projections for 
    fiscal year (FY) 1996 included approximately 2.1 million beneficiaries 
    between 17 and 55 years of age.
        This Demonstration Project is conservatively projected to provide 
    inpatient rehabilitation services for approximately 100 TRICARE/CHAMPUS 
    patients with TBI each year.
        The Demonstration Project involves the costs for the inpatient bed 
    days required for the initial evaluation, rehabilitation and subsequent 
    re-evaluations at the participating DVA facilities. The beneficiary 
    cost-shares applicable under TRICARE/CHAMPUS shall apply under the 
    Demonstration Project.
        On average, each TRICARE/CHAMPUS beneficiary participating in the 
    clinical trials would require about three bed days for evaluation for 
    the protocol, sixty bed days for the rehabilitation services, and five 
    bed days each for the post-discharge evaluation and three follow-on re-
    evaluations. Over the entire Demonstration Project each participant 
    would require about eighty-three bed days.
        The current annual CHAMPUS costs for 100 admissions in 
    rehabilitation hospitals and skilled nursing facilities for the 
    beneficiaries with TBI are estimated to be $8.18 million. This 
    contrasts with the estimated cost of $4.38 million for 100 admissions 
    during the first year of the demonstration. This represents a projected 
    cost avoidance of approximately $3.8 million to DoD during the first 
    year of the demonstration while providing access to rehabilitation 
    services for the beneficiaries.
    
    D. Operation of the Demonstration
    
        The Demonstration is projected to last for three years. The 
    Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs) will designate a 
    Project Officer in the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of 
    Defense (DASD) for Clinical Services. The DASD (Clinical Services) 
    provides oversight for the DVHIP operations.
        Office of CHAMPUS will provide for demonstration claim processing 
    via specific contractual arrangement with a claims processor. The 
    contractor would not be involved in clinical issues but will direct 
    patients to the nearest participating DVA facility for evaluation.
    
        Dated: July 21, 1997.
    L.M. Bynum,
    Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer, Department of Defense.
    [FR Doc. 97-19829 Filed 7-28-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 5000-04-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/1/1997
Published:
07/29/1997
Department:
Defense Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
97-19829
Dates:
August 1, 1997.
Pages:
40506-40507 (2 pages)
PDF File:
97-19829.pdf