Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 140.31 - Emergency Services Audits
a)
All emergency services for which charges are made to the Department and are
provided to a recipient who does not require admission as an inpatient are
subject to audit.
b) An emergency
services audit shall be limited to a review of records related to services
rendered within three years of the date the hospital is notified that the audit
will be initiated. The Department shall notify the hospital of an audit at
least four calendar weeks before the audit occurs, unless the hospital and the
Department agree to schedule the audit at an earlier date. The hospital's
business and professional records for at least 12 previous calendar months
shall be maintained and available for inspection by authorized Department
personnel on the premises of the hospital. Department personnel shall make
requests in writing to inspect records more than 12 months old at least two
business days in advance of the date they must be produced. These records
required to be maintained shall be kept in accordance with accepted business
and accounting practice and shall be legible. Such records must be retained for
a period of not less than three years from the date of service or as provided
by applicable State law, whichever period is longer, except that if an audit is
initiated within the required retention period the records must be retained
until the audit is completed and every exception resolved by settlement or by
the Director's final decision.
c)
All records required to be maintained shall be available for inspection by
authorized Department personnel during normal business hours. Department
personnel shall make all attempts to examine such records without interfering
with the professional activities of the hospital. The hospital shall make
legible copies of those records requested by the Department upon completion of
its inspection, and tender said copied records to the Department within two
weeks after such request is made unless this time is extended by mutual
consent. Additionally, if the hospital locates records that were unavailable
during the audit, that data shall be submitted to the Department within 30 days
after completion of the audit conducted on the hospital's premises, and that
data shall be utilized in generating the audit findings. The determination that
an emergency medical condition exists shall be based solely upon the review of
the legible information contained in those medical records supplied by the
hospital during the audit.
d)
Authorized Department personnel shall meet with the chief executive officer of
the hospital, or a person designated by the chief executive officer, upon
arrival at the hospital to conduct the audit and at the conclusion of the
audit. The purpose of the pre-audit meeting shall be to inform the hospital of
the scope of the audit. The purpose of the post-audit meeting shall be to
provide an opportunity for the auditors to discuss their preliminary findings
with the chief executive officer, or a person designated by the chief executive
officer. More detailed audit findings shall be provided in writing to the
hospital within 120 days after the date on which the audit conducted on the
hospital premises was completed.
e)
The final determination of whether an emergency room visit was for the
alleviation of severe pain or for the immediate diagnosis and/or treatment of
conditions or injuries which might result in disability or death if there is
not immediate treatment shall be based upon the symptoms and condition of the
recipient at the time the recipient is initially examined by the hospital's
emergency department physician and not upon the final determination of the
recipient's actual medical condition (see Sections
140.3
and
140.5
of this Part).
f) When the purpose
of the audit is to determine the appropriateness of the emergency services
provided, any final determination that would result in a denial of or reduction
in payment to the hospital shall be based on the opinion of a physician
licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches who is board certified in
emergency medicine or by the appropriate health care professionals under the
supervision of the physician.
g)
The Department or its designated review agent in cases where the Department
seeks to recover an extrapolated amount, shall use statistically valid sampling
techniques when conducting audits as provided by Section
140.30
of this Part.
h) This Section shall
not apply to any audits initiated prior to July 1, 1992.
Notes
Added at 16 Ill. Reg. 19879, effective December 7, 1992
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