News: CMS issues guidance on applying the 2-midnight rule to TKA

CDI Strategies - Volume 13, Issue 8

CMS recently reissued Special Edition MLN Matters 19002 to address lingering provider questions surrounding the application of the 2-midnight rule to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) claims, according to Revenue Cycle Insider. TKA’s removal from the inpatient-only list has caused consternation among providers since the decision was made in the 2018 outpatient prospective payment system final rule.

CMS does not intend removal of TKA from the inpatient-only list to dictate that all TKAs must be performed on an outpatient basis, according to the MLN Matters article. The agency has no default determination and recognizes that the decision to admit a patient as an inpatient is a complex medical decision based on the individual patient’s unique clinical circumstances and the physician’s expectation of how long hospital care is excepted to be necessary, Revenue Cycle Insider reported.

CMS contracts with Beneficiary and Family-Centered Care Quality Improvement Organizations (BFCC-QIO) to review a sample of short-stay inpatient claims for compliance with the 2-midnight rule. Although TKAs are now subject to BFCC-QIO review, contractors do not target condition, or disease-specific, claims for review, according to CMS.

For short-stay TKA claims that are selected for BFCC-QIO review, the reviewers will look for documentation that shows the admitting physician’s reasonable expectation that the beneficiary requires medically necessary hospital services that will span two midnights or longer, or the admitting physician’s judgment that inpatient hospital care was medically necessary despite not meeting the 2-midnight benchmark. The latter case-by-case determination should be based on complex medical factors including the:

  • Patient’s history, comorbidities, and current medical needs
  • Severity of signs or symptoms
  • Risk adverse events

The article goes on to describe three example cases and the rationale for why they would or would not be appropriate for inpatient admission. The article also includes five FAQs and a list of additional resources.

Editor’s note: This article originally appeared in Revenue Cycle Insider. To read the full article from MLN Matters, click here. To read about earlier concerns over TKA’s removal from the inpatient-only list, click here.

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