U S Department of Health and Human Services www.hhs.gov
  CMS Home > Medicare > Acute Inpatient PPS > New Medical Services and New Technologies
Acute Inpatient PPS

New Medical Services and New Technologies

APPLICATION INFORMATION FOR FY 2010

The deadline for FY 2010 IPPS New Technology Applications is November 17, 2008. Applicants may obtain an application by clicking on the "Full Application" link in the "Downloads" section of this webpage.

The following information is available in the Downloads section at the bottom of this page.

  • Table 10 – Lists the mean + the lesser of 75 percent of the standardized amount or 75 percent of 1 standard deviation by Diagnosis Related Group
  • Federal Fiscal Year 2010 Application Guidelines for Payments for New Medical Services and New Technologies Under the Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System – Full Application
  • Federal Fiscal Year 2010 Application Guidelines for Payments for New Medical Services and New Technologies Under the Acute Care Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment System – Tracking Form
  • The deadline for new technology applications for FY 2010 is November 17, 2008. The deadline for complete databases to be submitted to CMS is December 31, 2008.

TRACKING FORMS SUBMITTED BY APPLICANTS FOR FY 2010 WILL BE POSTED BELOW IN THE DOWNLOADS SECTION AS WE RECEIVE THEM.

ANNUAL TOWNHALL MEETING

The IPPS New Technology Town Hall Meeting for FY 2010 applications will be announced at a future date in a Federal Register Notice and on this webpage. 

BACKGROUND

Sections 1886(d)(5)(K) and (L) of the Act establish a process of identifying and ensuring adequate payment for new medical services and technologies under the IPPS. Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(ii)(I) of the Act specifies that the process must apply to a new medical service or technology if, "based on the estimated costs incurred with respect to discharges involving such service or technology, the DRG prospective payment rate otherwise applicable to such discharges under this subsection is inadequate." Section 1886(d)(5)(K)(vi) of the Act specifies that a medical service or technology will be considered "new" if it meets criteria established by the Secretary after notice and opportunity for public comment.

Section 412.87(b)(3) provides that, to receive special payment treatment, new technologies meeting this clinical definition must be demonstrated to be inadequately paid otherwise under the DRG system. For applicants for new technology add-on payments for FY 2005 and forward, we established the criteria that will be applied to assess whether technologies would be inadequately paid under the DRGs the lesser of 75 percent of the standardized amount increased to reflect the difference between costs and charges (based on the national case weighted cost-to-charge ratio) or 75 percent of 1 standard deviation (based on the logarithmic values of the charges and transformed back to charges) beyond the geometric mean standardized charge for all cases in the DRGs to which the new technology is assigned (or the case weighted average of all relevant DRGs, if the new technology occurs in many different DRGs).

In order to qualify for the new technology add-on payments, a specific technology must be "new" under the requirements of §412.87(b)(2) of our regulations. The statutory provision contemplated the special payment treatment for new technologies until such time as data are available to reflect the cost of the technology in the DRG weights through recalibration (no less than 2 years and no more than 3 years).

Section 412.87(b)(1) of our existing regulations provides that a new technology will be an appropriate candidate for an additional payment when it represents an advance in medical technology that substantially improves, relative to technologies previously available, the diagnosis or treatment of Medicare beneficiaries (see the September 7, 200l final rule (66 FR 46902)). Applicants for FY 2010 must submit a formal request, including a full description of the clinical applications of the technology and the results of any clinical evaluations demonstrating that the new technology represents a substantial clinical improvement, along with data to demonstrate the technology meets the high cost threshold.

The new technology add-on payment policy provides additional payments for cases with high costs involving eligible new technologies while preserving some of the incentives under the average-based payment system. The payment mechanism is based on the cost to hospitals for the new technology. Under §412.88, Medicare pays a marginal cost factor of 50 percent for the costs of the new technology in excess of the full DRG payment. If the actual costs of a new technology case exceed the DRG payment by more than the estimated costs of the new technology, Medicare payment is limited to the DRG payment plus 50 percent of the estimated costs of the new technology.

For a more complete reading on Add-On Payments for New Services and Technologies, please view the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) final rule published on August 18, 2008. The final rule and all other regulations and notices are located in the left navigational area of this page.

 

Downloads

FY 2010 Full Application [PDF, 75KB]

FY 2010 Tracking Form [PDF 67KB]

Table 10 for FY 2009 Applications [PDF 889KB]
Related Links Inside CMS

There are no Related Links Inside CMS
Related Links Outside CMSExternal Linking Policy

There are no Related Links Outside CMS

 

Page Last Modified: 08/29/2008 7:56:44 AM
Help with File Formats and Plug-Ins

Submit Feedback




www3