048-1 Wyo. Code R. §§ 1-3 - Definitions
(a) Except as otherwise specified, the
terminology used in this Chapter is the standard terminology and has the
standard meaning used in healthcare, Medicaid, and Medicare.
(b) For the purpose of these rules and
regulations, the following definitions shall apply:
(i) "Abuse." A pattern of practice by a
provider or a client that results in healthcare utilization which is
inconsistent with sound fiscal, business, or medical practices, and results in
unnecessary costs to Medicaid, or in payment for services that are not
medically necessary or that fail to meet professionally recognized standards
for healthcare. Abuse is characterized by, but not limited to, any one of the
following:
(A) The repeated submission of
claims by a provider from which documentation of required material information
is missing, incorrect or not provided for review when requested. Examples
include, but are not limited to: incorrect or missing procedure or diagnosis
codes, missing or invalid signatures, invalid prescription documentation,
incorrect mathematical entries, incorrect third party liability information, or
the incorrect use of procedure code modifiers;
(B) The repeated submission of claims by a
provider presenting procedure codes which overstate the level or amount of
services provided (i.e., upcoding);
(C) The repeated submission of claims by a
provider for services which are not reimbursable under Medicaid, or the
repeated submission of duplicate claims;
(D) Failure by a provider to develop and
maintain legible medical records which document the nature, extent and evidence
of the medical necessity of services provided;
(E) Failure of a provider to use generally
accepted accounting principles or other accounting methods which relate entries
on the medical record to entries on the claim;
(F) Excessive or inappropriate patterns of
referral;
(G) The repeated
submission of claims by a provider for services which were not medically
necessary;
(H) The repeated
submission of claims by a provider for services which exceed that requested or
agreed to by the client or the client's responsible relative or
guardian;
(I) The submission of
claims for services not medically necessary under the generally accepted
practice of provider's of such services;
(J) Overprescribing or misprescribing
products or services;
(K) The
repeated submission of claims by a provider without complying with the
provisions of these rules;
(L) A
client permitting the use of the client's Medicaid identification by any
unauthorized individual for the purpose of obtaining services;
(M) A client obtaining services which are not
medically necessary for the purpose of resale or for the use of a
non-client;
(N) A client obtaining
duplicate services from more than one (1) provider for the same medical
condition, other than confirmation of a diagnosis, evaluation or assessment;
or
(O) Misuse, which with respect
to a client means the request for or utilization of services that are
inappropriate and with respect to a provider means the furnishing of services
that are inappropriate, or the submission of claims that do not accurately
reflect the services provided.
(ii) "Acquired Brain Injury (ABI)." Any of
the following:
(A) Any combination of focal
and diffuse central nervous system dysfunction, both immediate and/or delayed,
at the brain stem level and above;
(B) Acquired through the interaction of any
external forces and the body, oxygen deprivation, infection, toxicity, surgery,
and vascular disorders not associated with aging;
(C) Occurred by an injury to the brain since
birth;
(D) Caused by an external
physical force or by a metabolic disorder(s);
(E) Includes traumatic brain injuries, such
as open or closed head injuries, and non-traumatic brain injuries, such as
those caused by strokes, tumors, infectious disease, hypoxic injuries,
metabolic disorders, and toxic products taken into the body through inhalation
or ingestion;
(F) Does not include
brain injuries that are congenital or brain injuries induced by birth trauma;
and
(G) Are not developmental or
degenerative.
(iii)
"Acquired Brain Injury Home and Community Based Waiver." The "Acquired Brain
Injury Home and Community Based Waiver" submitted to and approved by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services pursuant to Section 1915(c) of the
Social Security Act.
(iv) "Active
treatment." Active treatment as set forth in
42 C.F.R. §
441.154.
(v) "Acute." Having a short and relatively
severe course.
(vi) "Acute
stabilization." The process of bringing to stability an acute medical,
psychiatric or psychological condition.
(vii) "Administrative transportation."
Transportation by means other than an ambulance to obtain covered
services.
(viii) "Admission." The
act that allows an individual to officially enter into a facility or program to
receive covered services, which does not include an individual that is
transferred from one unit of a hospital to another unit in the hospital or to a
separate part of a hospital unit.
(ix) "Admission certification." The
determination by the Department that all or part of a client's inpatient
hospitalization meets or met the medical necessity criteria and that Medicaid
funds may be used to pay the attending physician, hospital, and other
provider's of inpatient hospital services for providing medically necessary
services, subject to the Department's normal procedures and standards and
subject to withdrawal of admission certification pursuant to Chapter 8. An
admission certification may specify the number of days for which Medicaid
payment for inpatient hospital services is approved.
(x) "Admitting diagnosis." The admitting
practitioner's tentative or provisional diagnosis of the client's condition
which provides the basis for examination and treatment when the practitioner
requests admission certification.
(xi) "Adult." An individual who has reached
the age of majority as provided by W.S. §
14-1-101. Emancipated minors may consent to
services to the same extent as an adult as provided by W.S. §
14-1-101.
(xii) "Adult Developmental Disabilities Home
and Community Based Waiver." The "Adult Developmental Disabilities Home and
Community Based Waiver" submitted to and approved by the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services pursuant to Section 1915(c) of the Social Security
Act.
(xiii) "Advanced Practitioner
of Nursing (APN)." A professional registered nurse who is licensed in a
specialty area of advanced nursing practice by the Wyoming Board of Nursing or
a similar agency in another state.
(xiv) "Adverse action." For an applicant,
client, participant, or other person receiving covered services, an adverse
action is a termination, reduction, or denial of services or eligibility,
including a reduction in the level of care of a nursing facility resident. For
a provider, an adverse action is the termination, suspension or other sanction
of a provider (other than in those situations set forth below), the denial or
withdrawal of admission certification, the determination of a per diem rate
pursuant to Chapter 7, or the denial or reduction of a Medicaid payment to a
provider (other than those set forth below).
(A) The following terminations, suspensions
or other sanctions of a provider are not adverse actions:
(I) A termination, suspension, or other
sanction based on the provider's loss of or failure to provide to Medicaid
documentation of required licensure or certifications.
(II) A termination, suspension, or other
sanction based on a provider's exclusion by OIG or termination by
Medicare;
(III) A termination,
suspension, or other sanction based on a finding of fraud, abuse, or other
prohibited activities by a judicial or administrative process where the
provider was afforded notice and the right to a hearing.
(B) The following reductions, denials, or
recoveries of overpayments are not adverse actions:
(I) A reduction, denial, or recovery
described in Section 12(c)(d) and (e) of Chapter 16 of these Rules;
(II) A reduction, denial, or recovery due
solely by a change in Federal or State law; or
(III) An appeal of a rate setting
methodology.
(xv) "Advocate." A person, chosen by the
client or legal guardian, who supports and represents the rights and interests
of the client in order to ensure the client's full legal rights and access to
services. The advocate can be a friend, a relative, or any other interested
person. An advocate has no legal authority to make decisions on behalf of a
client.
(xvi) "Aged." A person
sixty-five (65) years of age or older.
(xvii) "Alien." A person residing in, and who
is not a citizen of, the United States of America.
(xviii) "Allowable cost." Medicare allowable
costs as determined by
42 U.S.C. §
1395 f, except as otherwise specified by the
Medicaid Rules.
(xix) "Ancillary
services." Those services listed as ancillary services on a hospital's most
recently available cost report.
(xx) "Ancillary services charges." Charges
for furnishing ancillary services to a client reported on a claim.
(xxi) "Annuity." A contract or agreement by
which a beneficiary receives fixed, non-variable payments on an investment for
a lifetime or a specified number of years. A commercial (non-employment
related) annuity set up on or after February 8, 2006, is considered an
available asset unless it meets the following criteria:
(A) The annuity is irrevocable and
nonassignable;
(B) The annuity is
actuarially sound, and pays out principal and interest in equal monthly
installments (no balloon payments) to the individual in sufficient amounts that
the principal is paid out within the actuarial life expectancy of the
individual as published by the Office of the Chief Actuary of the United States
Social Security Administration;
(C)
The average number of years of expected life remaining for the individual must
equal or exceed the stated life of the annuity.
(D) The Department is named as the residual
beneficiary of the funds remaining in the annuity, not to exceed any Medicaid
funds expended on the individual during his/her lifetime, unless there is a
community spouse and/or a minor or disabled child, in which case the Department
must be named as the secondary beneficiary; and
(E) The annuity is issued by an insurance
company licensed and approved to do business in the state of Wyoming.
(xxii) "Applicant." Any person
applying for benefits under programs provided pursuant to W.S. §
42-1-101.
(xxiii) "Application." An applicant's request
for a Medicaid funded program in a form specified by the Department.
(xxiv) "Application date." The date the
signed application is received and date stamped by Wyoming Department of
Health, Department of Family Services or an outstation facility.
(xxv) "Appropriate." Medical treatment or
service that is medically necessary, suitable to a client's well-being based on
current practices, and documented in the client's medical record.
(xxvi) "Appropriate bed." A certified bed in
a nursing facility that is:
(A) Available;
and
(B) In a room where the other
bed, if any, is occupied by a member of the same sex or the spouse of the
client.
(xxvii)
"Appropriate placement." The placement of an individual in a treatment setting
when the individual's needs meet the minimum standards for admission to that
treatment setting and the individual's needs for treatment do not exceed the
level of services which the treatment setting is capable of
providing.
(xxviii) "Assets" as
defined by W.S. §
42-2-401(a)(1), et
seq.
(xxix) "Assignment of
rights to benefits." As defined by
42 C.F.R.
§§
433.145 to 433.148. The transfer
from an applicant or client to the Department of the applicant's or client's
rights, or the rights of another, to medical support or payments for services
from any third party payer.
(xxx)
"Attending physician." The physician primarily responsible for a client's
treatment in a hospital.
(xxxi)
"Attorney General." The Attorney General of the State of Wyoming, its agent,
designee or successor.
(xxxii)
"Base rate." A rate in effect on a date chosen by the Department.
(xxxiii) "Billed charges." The charges billed
by a provider to the Department for furnishing covered services to
clients.
(xxxiv) "Capital costs."
Capital related costs as defined in
42 C.F.R. §
413.130, including, but not limited to, costs
incurred by a facility for construction, depreciation, interest, rent and
leases.
(xxxv) "Case management."
Services that assist clients in gaining access to needed medical, waiver, or
Wyoming Medicaid state plan services, as well as social, educational, and other
services, regardless of the funding source.
(xxxvi) "Case manager." A registered nurse,
healthcare professional or individual designated by the Department to provide
case management.
(xxxvii) "Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)." The Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services of the United States Department of Health and Human Services,
its agent, designee, or successor.
(xxxviii) "Certified." Certified by the
Department or survey agency as in compliance with applicable statutes and
rules.
(xxxix) "Certified mail,
return receipt requested." Certified mail, return receipt requested as provided
by the United States Postal Service, or delivery via a commercial delivery
service which provides tracking of the communication and written documentation
of its delivery. "Certified mail, return receipt requested" does not include
communication by facsimile transmission, telephone, or e-mail.
(xl) "Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist
(CRNA)." A professional registered nurse who is licensed in a specialty area of
advanced nursing practice by the Wyoming Board of Nursing or a similar agency
in another state.
(xli) "Change of
ownership." A change in a provider's or facility's ownership, control,
operation, management contract, or leasehold interest.
(xlii) "Child." Any person who does not meet
the definition of adult.
(xliii)
"Children's Developmental Disabilities Home and Community Based Waiver." The
waiver submitted to and approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services pursuant to Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act.
(xliv) "Children's hospital." An inpatient
hospital which is:
(A) Designated by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services as a children's specialty
hospital;
(B) Exempt from the
Medicare prospective payment system (PPS); and
(C) Is a participating provider.
(xlv) "Claim." A request by a
provider for Medicaid payment for covered services provided to a
client.
(xlvi) "Classification in
Mental Retardation." The most recent Classification in Mental Retardation of
the American Association on Mental Deficiency.
(xlvii) "Client." A person who has been
determined eligible for Medicaid.
(xlviii) "Client or applicant information."
Any medical records, financial records, or other records, in whatever form,
which contain any of the following information about an applicant or client:
(A) Names and addresses;
(B) Services provided;
(C) Social and economic conditions or
circumstances;
(D) Evaluations by
DFS of personal information;
(E)
Medical data, including, but not limited to, diagnoses and history of disease
or disability;
(F) Information
received for the purpose of verifying income eligibility and the amount of
Medicaid payments;
(G) Information
received in connection with the identification of third party payers, including
information contained in the Medicaid Management Information System
(MMIS);
(H) Claims, claims
histories, and Medicaid payments made to provider's, including any information
regarding the amount of payments made on behalf of a client;
(I) Any other information generated or
maintained by the Department or in the possession of or subject to the control
of any agent or contractor of the Department.
(xlix) "Commission for the Accreditation of
Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF)." The Commission for the Accreditation of
Rehabilitation Facilities, its agent, designee, or successor.
(l) "Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation
Facility (CORF)." CORF as described in
42 C.F.R. §
400.200.
(li) "Consultation." An opinion or advice
rendered by one physician to another physician as part of the evaluation or
treatment of a client.
(lii)
"Consumer Price Index (CPI)." The consumer price index for all Urban Consumers
(CPI-U) (United States city average), as determined by the United States
Department of Labor and Statistics.
(liii) "Contestant." The person who requests
a hearing.
(liv) "Contested case."
A proceeding under these rules involving an adverse action.
(lv) "Continued stay review." A report that
contains information about a client performed at specified intervals during a
client's stay at a facility. A continued stay review shall contain the
information and be in the form specified by the Department.
(lvi) "Copayment." A Department-established
fee charged to a client by a provider.
(lvii) "Cost report." A cost report prepared
and submitted in conformance with Medicaid requirements. "Cost report" includes
any supplemental request by the Department for additional information relating
to the facility's costs.
(lviii)
"Cost reporting period." The fiscal period used by a facility to report its
costs to Medicare.
(lix) "Cost that
must be incurred." A cost that must be incurred by an efficiently and
economically operated facility.
(lx) "Covered services." Services which are
Medicaid reimbursable
pursuant to the rules of the Department.
(lxi) "Credit balance." Medicaid funds
received by a provider that are owed to the Department for any
reason.
(lxii) "Current market
value." The amount for which property can be expected to sell on the open
market in the community at the time of the estimate or at the time of transfer
or sale, also known as fair market value (FMV).
(lxiii) "Current Procedural Terminology
(CPT®)." The most recent edition of the Current Procedural Terminology
published by the American Medical Association.
(lxiv) "Dementia." An individual has dementia
if the individual:
(A) Has a primary
diagnosis of dementia, as defined in the DSM, including Alzheimer's disease;
or
(B) Has a non-primary diagnosis
of dementia, unless the individual's primary diagnosis is a major mental
illness.
(lxv) "Denial
of payment for new admissions." The denial of Medicaid payments for all clients
admitted to a facility after a specified date. Payments that are denied shall
not be retroactively paid to a facility.
(lxvi) "Dentist." A person licensed to
practice dentistry by the Wyoming Board of Dental Examiners or a similar agency
in another state.
(lxvii)
"Department." See Wyoming Department of Health.
(lxviii) "Department of Family Services
(DFS)." The Wyoming Department of Family Services (DFS), its agent, designee or
successor.
(lxix) "Department of
Family Services Registry." Pursuant to W.S. §
35-20-115
et seq., the
Central Registry of the Department of Family Services that includes
substantiated reports of abuse, neglect, exploitation, or abandonment of
vulnerable adults and children.
(lxx) "Desk review." A review by the
Department or a vendor contracted by the Department of a provider's financial
records, cost reports, and/or other supporting documentation to determine if
documentation and/or cost reports are in compliance with Medicaid program
requirements.
(lxxi) "Developmental
Disabilities Division (DDD)." The Developmental Disabilities Division of the
Department, its agent, designee, or successor.
(lxxii) "Developmental disability." As
defined in federal law (
42
U.S.C. §
15002(8)) , a
severe, chronic disability of an individual that:
(A) Is attributable to a mental or physical
impairment or combination of mental and physical impairments;
(B) Is manifested before the individual
attains age twenty-two (22);
(C)
Is likely to continue indefinitely; and
(D) Results in substantial functional
limitations in three (3) or more of the following areas of major life activity:
(I) Self-care;
(II) Receptive and expressive
language;
(III) Learning;
(IV) Mobility;
(V) Self-direction;
(VI) Capacity for independent
living;
(VII) Economic
self-sufficiency; and
(E) Reflects the individual's need for a
combination and sequence of special, interdisciplinary, or generic services,
individualized supports, or other forms of assistance that are of lifelong or
extended duration and are individually planned and coordinated.
(lxxiii) "Diagnosis codes." Codes
contained in the latest version of the International Classification of
Diseases, Clinical Modification (ICD-CM).
(lxxiv) "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
the American Psychiatric Association (DSM)." The most recent edition of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric
Association.
(lxxv) "Dietician." A
person who is registered as a dietician by the Commission on Dietetic
Registration.
(lxxvi) "Dietician
services." Services furnished by a registered dietician, including:
(A) Menu planning;
(B) Consultation with and training of
caregivers; and
(C) Education of
participants.
(lxxvii)
"Direct supervision." Supervision in which the responsible practitioner is
physically present in the building where the services are being
provided.
(lxxviii) "Director." The
Director of the Department of Health, the Director's agent, designee, or
successor.
(lxxix) "Discharge." The
act by which an individual who has been a patient in a facility or a client in
a program ceases to be a patient and the facility or program ceases to be
legally responsible for providing care for such individuals. "Discharge" does
not include:
(A) A nursing home resident's
temporary absence from the facility for treatment in a hospital, home visits or
a trial community stay, provided such temporary absence is no longer than
thirty (30) consecutive days;
(B)
An LTC-HCBS client's temporary absence from the client's home for periods that
do not exceed thirty (30) consecutive days;
(C) An individual that is transferred from
one unit of a hospital to another unit in the hospital, an individual that is
transferred to a distinct part of a hospital unit, or an individual that is
transferred to another hospital; or
(D) An individual's temporary
absence.
(lxxx)
"Discharge planning." To make arrangements during a client's inpatient stay for
the client to receive appropriate services upon discharge.
(lxxxi) "Dispensing fee." The amount of
Medicaid reimbursement allowed by the Department as payment for the service of
dispensing any prescribed drug or product.
(lxxxii) "Disposable medical supplies."
Supplies prescribed by a practitioner which have a medical purpose, are
specifically related to the active treatment or therapy of the client for a
medical illness or physical condition, and which are consumable and/or
expendable and non-durable. Supplies must meet the definition of medically
necessary and shall be prescribed by an appropriate licensed
practitioner.
(lxxxiii)
"Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH)." A hospital located in Wyoming that is
entitled to a DSH disproportionate share payment pursuant to Chapter 32 of the
Wyoming Medicaid Rules.
(lxxxiv)
"Disproportionate share payments." Medicaid payments made by the Wyoming
Department of Health to a disproportionate share hospital, including payments
for inpatient and outpatient hospital services and Qualified Rate Adjustment
payments.
(lxxxv) "Division of
Criminal Investigation (DCI)." The Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation
within the Office of the Attorney General created at W.S. §
9-1-611, its agent, designee or
successor.
(lxxxvi) "Division of
Preventive Health and Safety." The Division of Preventive Health and Safety of
the Department, its agent, designee or successor.
(lxxxvii) "Drug."
(A) Substances recognized as drugs in
official United States Pharmacopoeia, official Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the
United States, or official National Formulary, or any supplement to any of
them;
(B) Substances intended for
use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in
a person;
(C) Substances (other
than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of a person's body;
or
(D) Substances intended for use
as a component of any article specified in (A) through (C) Substances (other
than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of a person's body;
or
(E) "Drug" includes
over-the-counter (OTC) drugs.
(lxxxviii) "Drug used as a restraint." Any
drug that:
(A) Is administered to manage a
participant's behavior in a way that reduces the safety risk to the participant
or others;
(B) Has the temporary
effect of restricting the participant's freedom of movement; and
(C) Is not a standard treatment for the
participant's medical or psychiatric condition.
(lxxxix) "Durable Medical Equipment (DME)."
Equipment prescribed by a practitioner that has a medical purpose, is not
considered to be experimental or investigational, is designed to withstand
repeated use in the home, and primary purpose is not to enhance the personal
comfort of the client or provide convenience for the client or caregiver.
Equipment must be medically necessary and shall be prescribed by an appropriate
licensed practitioner.
(xc) "Early
and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT) services." Services
for clients under the age of twenty-one (21) through the HEALTH CHECK program
pursuant to Chapter 6 of the Wyoming Medicaid Rules.
(xci) "Eligible." Entitled to receive
Medicaid.
(xcii) "Emergency." The
sudden onset of a medical condition manifesting itself by acute symptoms of
sufficient severity (including severe pain) that the absence of immediate
medical attention could reasonably be expected to result in:
(A) Placing the patient's health in serious
jeopardy;
(B) Serious impairment to
bodily functions; or
(C) Serious
dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
(xciii) "Emergency detention." A person
detained or involuntarily hospitalized pursuant to W.S. §
25-10-109, et seq.
(xciv) "Enrolled." A provider that has signed
a provider agreement and has been certified as a provider with the
Department.
(xcv) "Expanded
services." Medically necessary healthcare, including diagnostic services and
treatment, which are reimbursable pursuant to
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d, and which are not otherwise
reimbursable under the Wyoming Medicaid State Plan.
(xcvi) "Extended Wyoming Medicaid state plan
services." Services made available to a participant whose needs for that
service exceed the Wyoming Medicaid state plan service limitations established
for the general Medicaid population. Extended services include:
(A) Occupational therapy services;
(B) Physical therapy services;
(C) Speech, hearing, and language services;
and
(D) Any other services covered
by Medicaid.
(xcvii)
"Extraordinary care clients." Clients who require skilled nursing facility and
swing bed extraordinary care for those conditions which have received prior
authorization from the Department because they have a Minimum Data Set (MDS)
Activities of Daily Living Sum score of ten (10) or more, and require special
care or clinically complex care as recognized under the Medicare RUG-III
classification system.
(xcviii)
"Facility rate." A facility's Medicaid allowable payment.
(xcix) "Federal fiscal year." The period
beginning October 1st of each year and ending the following September
30th.
(c) "Federal Medicaid funds."
Federal funds paid by HHS to the State pursuant to
42 U.S.C. §
1396 b and subsequently paid to a
provider.
(ci) "Federal Medicaid
Assistance Percentage (FMAP)." Federal medical assistance percentage as defined
in
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d(b).
(cii) "Federally Qualified Health Center
(FQHC)." Federally qualified health center (FQHC) as defined in
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d(1)(2)(B).
(ciii) "Field audit." An onsite examination,
verification and review conducted by employees, agents, or representatives of
the Department or HHS of a provider's records and any supporting or related
documentation.
(civ) "Financial
records." All records, in whatever form, used or maintained by a provider in
the conduct of its business affairs and which are necessary to substantiate or
understand claims or a provider's cost reports submitted to the
Department.
(cv) "Fiscal agent."
The Department's agent responsible for processing claims and supporting
operational functions.
(cvi)
"Foster care." The term used by DFS when a child is in the State's custody as a
foster child.
(cvii) "Fraud." An
intentional deception or misrepresentation made by an individual with the
knowledge that the deception or misrepresentation may result in overpayments.
"Fraud" includes any actions or inactions that constitute fraud under federal
or state law.
(cviii) "Functionally
necessary." A waiver service that is:
(A)
Required due to the diagnosis or condition of the participant;
(B) One or both of the following:
(I) Recognized as a prevailing standard or
current practice among the provider's peer group, or
(II) Intended to make a reasonable
accommodation for functional limitations of a participant, to increase a
participant's independence;
(C) Provided in the most efficient manner
and/or setting consistent with appropriate care required by the participant's
condition; and
(D) Not utilized
experimentally or investigationally and is generally accepted by the medical
community.
(cix)
"Funding." The combination of federal and state funds available to pay for
covered services. Funding does not include any other funds available to the
Department that are not designated for covered services.
(cx) "Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP)." Accounting concepts, standards and procedures established
by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
(cxi) "Generally Accepted Auditing Standards
(GAAS)." Auditing standards, practices, and procedures established by the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
(cxii) "Good cause." A specified reason based
on accepted standards that supports an individual's action and thereby
eliminates the penalty, which normally is imposed for failure to cooperate with
child support or third party liability requirements as defined by
42
C.F.R. §
433.147(c)(1).
(cxiii) "Guardian." A person lawfully
appointed as a guardian to act on the behalf of the client, participant, or
applicant.
(cxiv) "Health and Human
Services (HHS)." The United States Department of Health and Human Services, its
agent, designee, or successor.
(cxv) "Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS)." Codes as contained in the latest version of the HCPCS
Book.
(cxvi) "Home and Community
Based Waiver Services (HCBS)." Services provided under a waiver from CMS that
are not otherwise available under the Wyoming Medicaid state plan. Such
services enable the elderly, disabled, and chronically mentally ill persons,
who would otherwise be placed in an institution, to live in the community.
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act specifies the services that may be
included as HCBS waiver services.
(cxvii) "Home." A home is any property in
which an individual (and spouse, if any) has an ownership interest and serves
as the individual's principal place of residence. This property includes the
shelter in which an individual resides, the land on which the shelter is
located and related outbuildings as defined by
20 C.F.R. §
416.1212.
(cxviii) "Hospice." An optional benefit under
the Medicaid program for individuals who are terminally ill and elect to
receive hospice care.
(cxix)
"Hospital." An institution that:
(A) Is
approved to participate as a "hospital" under Medicare;
(B) Is maintained primarily for the treatment
and care of patients with disorders other than mental diseases or tuberculosis;
(C) Is enrolled in the Medicaid
program;
(D) Meets the
requirements of 42 C.F.R. § 482.66; and
(E) Is licensed to operate as a "hospital" by
the State of Wyoming or, if the institution is out-of-state, licensed by the
state in which the institution is located.
(cxx) "Immediate jeopardy."
(A) A situation in which the provider's
noncompliance with one (1) or more requirements of participation in Medicaid
has caused or is likely to cause serious injury, harm, impairment, or death to
a client or a substantial and immediate threat to the health or safety of
clients; or
(B) As defined in
42
C.F.R. §
488.301.
(cxxi) "Inpatient." An inpatient as defined
by
42
C.F.R. §
440.2(a).
(cxxii) "Inpatient hospital service."
Inpatient hospital service as defined in
42
C.F.R. §
440.10.
(cxxiii) "Inpatient psychiatric services for
individuals under age twenty-one (21)." Inpatient psychiatric services for
individuals under age twenty-one (21) as defined in 42 C.F.R. § 441.
(cxxiv) "Institution for Mental
Diseases (IMD)." An institution for mental diseases as defined by
42 C.F.R. §
435.1010.
(cxxv) "Institution for Mental Diseases (IMD)
services." Services that meet the standards of 42 C.F.R., Ch. IV, Subch. C,
Part 441.
(cxxvi) "Intellectual
disability." Significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning with
concurrent deficits in adaptive behavior manifested during the developmental
period.
(cxxvii) "Intellectually
disabled." A person with an intellectual disability.
(cxxviii) "Interdisciplinary team."
(A) A team that meets the requirements of
42 C.F.R. §
441.156; or
(B) A group consisting of representatives of
the person, the person's family or legally authorized representative, or the
professions, disciplines or service areas that are relevant to identifying the
client's needs, as described in the comprehensive functional assessments and
program design.
(cxxix)
"Interim payments." Payments to a new facility during the time between the
effective date of the new facility's or newly certified facility's provider
agreement and the determination of a per diem rate.
(cxxx) "Intermediate Care Facility for People
with Intellectual Disability (ICF/ID)." Intermediate Care Facility for People
with Intellectual Disability (ICF/ID) means an intermediate care facility for
the mentally retarded or intermediate care facility for people with mental
retardation (ICFMR or ICF/MR) as those phrases are used in
42 U.S.C.
1396 d(d) or other applicable federal
statutes, rules and regulations.
(cxxxi) "International Classification of
Disease-Clinical Modification (ICD-CM)." The most recent version of the
International Classification of Diseases.
(cxxxii) "Irrevocable trust." A trust which
may not be revoked after its creation.
(cxxxiii) "Inventory for Client and Agency
Planning (ICAP)." An instrument used by the Developmental Disabilities Division
to help determine eligibility and to determine the needs of the participant,
available from Riverside Publishing, its successor, or designee.
(cxxxiv) "JCAHO." The Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
(cxxxv) "Laboratory services." Professional
or technical laboratory services.
(cxxxvi) "Legally authorized representative."
A minor child's parent or legal guardian, an individual's legal guardian, an
attorney who presents written authorization that he or she represents an
individual or entity, or any other person who is authorized in writing to act
on behalf of an individual or entity. Any legally authorized representative,
other than a parent or licensed attorney acting on behalf of a participant,
must attach to the first document submitted to the Department a copy of a
written authorization to act on behalf of the individual with respect to the
matter in question. Formal authorizations must be legally enforceable and may
include, but shall not be limited to, powers of attorney, court appointments or
health care directives.
(cxxxvii)
"LT101." A form, or its successor, used by Developmental Disabilities Division
to document an individual's functional capacity and medical necessity for long
term care services.
(cxxxviii)
"LT-ABI-105." A document, or its successor, completed by the selected case
manager and used by Developmental Disabilities Division to verify that the
participant or applicant meets the ICF/ID level of care.
(cxxxix) "LT-MR-104." A document, or its
successor, completed by the selected case manager and used by Developmental
Disabilities Division to verify that the participant or applicant meets the
ICF/ID level of care.
(cxl) "Local
agency." The county offices of Department of Family Services, its agent,
designee, or successor.
(cxli)
"Lock-in." Restricting a client's participation in Medicaid to receiving
covered services from a provider or provider's designated by the client and
approved by the Department.
(cxlii)
"Mechanical restraint." Any device attached or adjacent to a participant's body
that he or she cannot easily move or remove that restricts freedom of movement
or normal access to the body.
(cxliii) "Medicaid allowable costs." Medicaid
program costs as determined from Medicare cost reports that have been submitted
to the Medicare Fiscal Intermediary. Allowable costs are calculated using
Medicare payment principles. Medicaid allowable costs and calculations of
payments shall not be adjusted because of changes that result from a Medicare
appeal or reopening.
(cxliv)
"Medicaid allowable payment." The maximum Medicaid reimbursement as determined
pursuant to the rules of the Department.
(cxlv) "Medicaid fee schedule." The Medicaid
fee schedule as established pursuant to Chapter 3.
(cxlvi) "Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU)."
The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit of the Wyoming Attorney General's Office, its
agent, designee, or successor.
(cxlvii) "Medicaid funds." The combination of
federal Medicaid funds and state Medicaid funds that is available to the
Department to make payments to provider's. The federal portion shall be known
as the FMAP. The state portion shall be known as the State Medicaid
percentage.
(cxlviii) "Medicaid."
Medical assistance and services provided pursuant to Title XIX of the Social
Security Act and/or the Wyoming Medical Assistance and Services Act of 1967, as
amended. "Medicaid" includes any successor or replacement program enacted by
Congress or the Wyoming Legislature.
(cxlix) "Medicaid Management Information
System (MMIS)." The Medicaid Management Information System as certified by CMS
and implemented by the Department.
(cl) "Medicaid payments." The payments made
by the Department for covered services.
(cli) "Medical necessity" or "medically
necessary." A determination that a health service is required to diagnose,
treat, cure or prevent an illness, injury or disease which has been diagnosed
or is reasonably suspected to relieve pain or to improve and preserve health
and be essential to life. The service must be:
(A) Consistent with the diagnosis and
treatment of the client's condition;
(B) In accordance with the standards of good
medical practice among the provider's peer group;
(C) Required to meet the medical needs of the
client and undertaken for reasons other than the convenience of the client and
the provider; and
(D) Performed in
the most cost effective and appropriate setting required by the client's
condition.
(clii)
"Medical necessity for long-term care services." The determination made using
the LT101 assessment form or other tool designated by the Department, which
documents the need of the applicant or client for long-term care services from
a skilled nursing facility, swing bed facility or a Home and Community Based
Waiver Services program.
(cliii)
"Medical records." All records, in whatever form, in the possession of or
subject to the control of a provider which describe the client's diagnosis,
treatment or condition.
(cliv)
"Medical supplies." Disposable, semi-disposable or expendable medical supplies.
"Medical supplies" does not include durable medical equipment, oxygen or oxygen
supplies.
(clv) "Medicare." The
health insurance program for the aged and disabled under Title XVIII of the
Social Security Act.
(clvi)
"Medicare crossover claim." A claim for services provided to a client who is
eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, paid by Medicare.
(clvii) "Medicare Economic Index (MEI)."
Medicare economic index for primary care services, (MEI) as defined in
42 U.S.C. §
1396 a(bb)(3)(A).
(clviii) "Mental disorder." A condition
defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric
Association (DSM), excluding a sole diagnosis of mental retardation or a
specific developmental disorder.
(clix) "Mental health center." A facility
located in Wyoming which is certified by the Mental Health and Substance Abuse
Services Division as a "mental health center."
(clx) "Mental Health and Substance Abuse
Services Division." The Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Division of
the Department, its agent, designee, or successor.
(clxi) "Minimum Data Set (MDS)." A core set
of standardized screening and assessment elements by which a resident's
physical, mental, psychosocial and behavioral status is identified. This
assessment forms the basis for a comprehensive assessment wherein the
resident's strengths and weaknesses can be evaluated, and a plan of care
developed to meet his individual needs.
(clxii) "Monitor." To track a client's
utilization of covered services by any or all of the following methods:
(A) Review of claims;
(B) Review of Inpatient Census Reports
(ICRs);
(C) Review of medical
records;
(D) Consultation with
provider's;
(E) Consultation with
the client or the client's authorized representative; or
(F) Any other reasonable method.
(clxiii) "Most recently available
cost report." A facility's most recent Medicare cost report which has been
submitted to Medicare in accordance with Medicare standards and
procedures.
(clxiv) "Neglect."
Neglect as defined by
42
C.F.R. §
488.301, W.S. §
35-20-102, et seq., and W.S. §
14-3-202, et seq.
(clxv) "Negotiated rate." The rate agreed
upon by the Department and a provider for services furnished to a
client.
(clxvi) "New admission."
The admission of a client who has never been in a facility or, if previously
admitted, had been discharged or had voluntarily left the facility.
(clxvii) "Nonallowable cost." Costs which are
not reasonably related to covered services.
(clxviii) "Nurse midwife." An "advanced
practice registered nurse" as defined by W.S. §
33-21-120(a)(i), et
seq., or licensed as a nurse practitioner by the Wyoming State Board
of Nursing or a similar agency in another state and who is certified as a nurse
midwife by the American College of Nurse-midwives.
(clxix) "Nurse practitioner." An "advanced
practice registered nurse" as defined by W.S. §
33-21-120(a)(i), et
seq., or licensed as a nurse practitioner by the Wyoming State Board
of Nursing or a similar agency in another state.
(clxx) "Nursing facility." A nursing facility
as defined by
42 U.S.C. §
1396 r(a).
(clxxi) "Nursing facility services." Nursing
facility services as defined by
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d(f).
(clxxii) "Occupational therapist." A person
licensed as an occupational therapist by the Wyoming State Board of
Occupational Therapy or a similar agency in another state.
(clxxiii) "Occupational therapy services."
Occupational therapy services, including both individual therapy and group
therapy, that are:
(A) Prescribed by a
physician;
(B) Provided by or under
the scope of practice of an occupational therapist; and
(C) Necessary to keep a participant in his or
her home or out of an institution.
(clxxiv) "The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1993 (OBRA '93)." The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993,
Pub. L. No.
103-66 .
(clxxv) "Orthotics." Medical appliances or
devices, other than routine foot appliances, used to strengthen weak or
defective parts of the body, to aid mobility or to serve other medical
purposes.
(clxxvi) "Outpatient." An
outpatient as defined by
42
C.F.R. §
440.2(a).
(clxxvii) "Outpatient hospital services."
Outpatient hospital services as defined in
42
C.F.R. §
440.20(a).
(clxxviii) "Over the counter (OTC) drugs."
Drugs which are legally available without a prescription.
(clxxix) "Overpayments." Medicaid funds
received by a provider or client to which the provider or client is not
entitled for any reason including payments which exceed the Medicaid allowable
payment. Overpayments include but are not limited to:
(A) Payments made as a result of system
errors;
(B) Payments for services
furnished to a non-client;
(C)
Payments for non-covered services furnished to a client;
(D) Payments for services which are not
documented and/or supported by records and/or financial records;
(E) Payments for services for which admission
certification has been denied or withdrawn;
(F) Payments which exceed a provider's usual
and customary charge, unless otherwise permitted by the Department's
rules;
(G) Payments resulting from
fraud; or
(H) Payments resulting
from abuse.
(clxxx)
"Participant." An individual who has been determined eligible for covered
services on a Waiver.
(clxxxi)
"Participant objectives." A set of meaningful and measurable goals for the
participant and the methods used to train the participant on the
goals.
(clxxxii) "Patient." An
individual receiving healthcare services.
(clxxxiii) "Per diem rate." The total, daily
allowable rate for covered services.
(clxxxiv) "Person with a related condition."
An individual who has a severe, chronic disability, as specified in 42 C.F.R.
§ 435.101, which provides that the disability:
(A) is attributable to:
(I) Cerebral palsy or epilepsy; or
(II) Any other condition other than mental
illness found to be closely related to mental retardation because this
condition results in impairment of general intellectual functioning or adaptive
behavior similar to that of persons with mental retardation, and requires
treatment or services similar to those required for these persons;
and
(B) Is manifested
before the person reaches age twenty-two (22); and
(C) Is likely to continue indefinitely; and
(D) Results in substantial
functional limitations in three (3) or more of the following areas of major
life activity;
(I) Self-care;
(II) Understanding the use of
language;
(III) Learning;
(IV) Mobility;
(V) Self-direction; or
(VI) Capacity for independent
living.
(clxxxv) "Personal care services." Services
to assist a participant with the activities of daily living, including eating,
bathing, dressing, personal hygiene, and household activities.
(clxxxvi) "Personal restraint." The
application of physical force or physical presence without the use of any
device for the purposes of restraining the free movement of the body of the
participant. The term personal restraint does not include briefly holding,
without undue force, a participant in order to calm or comfort him or her, or
holding a participant's hand to safely escort him or her from one area to
another.
(clxxxvii) "Pharmacy." An
entity licensed to operate a pharmacy by the Wyoming State Board of Pharmacy or
a similar board or agency in another state.
(clxxxviii) "Physical therapist." A person
licensed to practice as a physical therapist by the Wyoming State Board of
Physical Therapy or a similar agency in another state.
(clxxxix) "Physical therapy services."
Maintenance or restorative physical therapy services (including either
individual therapy or group therapy) that are:
(A) Prescribed by a physician;
(B) Provided by or under the scope of
practice of a licensed physical therapist; and
(C) Necessary to keep a participant in his or
her home or out of an institution.
(cxc) "Physician." A person licensed to
practice medicine or osteopathy
by the Wyoming State Board of Medical Examiners or a comparable agency in another state.
(cxci) "Plan of care." A written plan of care
developed by qualified individuals approved by the Department.
(cxcii) "Power of Attorney." A written legal
document created pursuant to W.S. §§
3-5-101, et seq.,
34-1-103
et seq.,
35-22-402, et seq., or other
similar law of another State, granting someone authority to act as agent or
attorney-in-fact for the grantor.
(cxciii) "Practitioner." A health
professional licensed by an agency or board of the State of Wyoming or a
similar agency in another state who is acting within the scope of his or her
licensure. "Practitioner" includes physicians and mid-level
practitioners.
(cxciv) "Prepayment
or post payment review." The prepayment or post payment review of a provider's
or client's claims by the Department to determine whether such claims reflect
generally accepted practices.
(cxcv) "Prescription." A written, faxed,
electronic or oral order, as required by the Board of Pharmacy, from a
practitioner that a certain drug, medical supply, device or service is
medically necessary.
(cxcvi)
"Prosecution, Recovery, Investigation, Collection and Enforcement" (PRICE). The
Prosecution, Recovery, Investigation, Collection and Enforcement Unit of DFS,
its agent, designee or successor.
(cxcvii) "Principal diagnosis." Principal
diagnosis as defined by
42 C.F.R. §
412.60(c)(1).
(cxcviii) "Prior authorization." A written,
faxed or electronic approval from the Department that permits payment or
coverage of a service that is covered if such authorization is obtained. Prior
authorization must be requested and received pursuant to Chapter 3. Services
requiring a prior authorization may also be referred to as "prior authorized"
in these rules.
(cxcix) "Private
pay rate." The published semi-private routine daily rates a nursing facility
charges to non-recipients, other than Medicare clients, after all discounts,
allowances and subsidies are subtracted for the same or similar services in
effect on the first day of each rate year. "Private pay rate" does not include
the cost of Medicare Part A and/or Part B premiums or deductibles, or the cost
of any other insurance premiums or deductibles.
(cc) "Procedure codes." Codes contained in
the latest version of the CPT Book.
(cci) "Prosecution, Recovery, Investigation,
Collection and Enforcement (PRICE)". The Prosecution, Recovery, Investigation,
Collection and Enforcement Unit of DFS, its agent, designee or
successor.
(ccii) "Prospective
Payment System (PPS) Inflation factor." The CMS Prospective Payment System
Hospital Market Basket index for the period in question, as published by DRI
Data Resources, Inc., in Healthcare Costs, which is published quarterly by the
DRI/McGraw division of McGraw-Hill, Inc.
(cciii) "Provider." Any individual or entity
that has a current provider agreement, is licensed and/or certified to provide
services, and is enrolled with the Department.
(cciv) "Provider agreement." A written
contract between a provider and the Department in which the provider agrees to
comply with the provisions of the agreement as a condition of receiving
Medicaid payment for services provided to clients.
(ccv) "Psychiatric Residential Treatment
Facility (PRTF)." Any non-hospital facility with a provider agreement with a
State Medicaid Agency to provide the inpatient services benefit to
Medicaid-eligible individuals under the age of twenty-one (21).
(ccvi) "Psychologist." A person licensed to
practice psychology by the Wyoming State Board of Psychology or a comparable
agency in another state.
(ccvii)
"Public health nurse." A registered nurse who is either under contract to the
County to perform public health nursing functions or is an employee of the
Department that is assigned public health nursing functions.
(ccviii) "Qualified intellectual disabilities
professional." A person who ensures the client receives those services and
interventions identified in the individual program plan. Qualified intellectual
disabilities professionals must have at least one (1) year of experience
working directly with persons with intellectual or other developmental
disabilities and be one of the following: a doctor of medicine, a doctor of
osteopathy, a registered nurse, or an individual who holds at least a
bachelor's degree in a professional category designated as a human services
professional (including, but not limited to: sociology, special education,
rehabilitation counseling, and psychology).
(ccix) "Qualified mental health
professional." A mental health practitioner whose qualifications meet standards
set by the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Division.
(ccx) "Qualified Rate Adjustment (QRA)
Payment." Annual lump sum supplemental payment equal to a portion of the
difference between a qualifying hospital's Medicaid allowable costs for the
payment period and its pre-QRA Medicaid payments for the same period, minus
amounts payable by other third parties and beneficiaries. The Department will
determine annual QRA payments prior to determining disproportionate share
hospital payments.
(ccxi)
"Readmission." The act by which an individual is admitted to a provider from
which the individual had been discharged on or before the thirty-first
(31st) day after the previous discharge for
treatment of any diagnosis, excluding newborn admissions which occur within
twenty-eight (28) days after the newborn's initial discharge.
(ccxii) "Re-evaluation of medical necessity."
The completion of an LT101 done in conjunction with the six (6) month renewal
of the LTC HCBS plan of care or the twelve (12) month Assisted Living Facility
Waiver renewal plan of care.
(ccxiii) "Registered nurse." A person
licensed to practice nursing by the Wyoming Board of Nursing or a similar
agency in another state.
(ccxiv)
"Reopen." A request by a hospital, pursuant to the procedures and standards
established by Medicare, to re-examine or review the correctness of a cost
settlement determination or decision made by or on behalf of
Medicare.
(ccxv) "Representative
payee." A person or organization appointed by the Social Security
Administration to manage Social Security, Veterans' Administration, Railroad
Retirement, Welfare Assistance, or other state or federal benefits or
entitlement program payments on behalf of an individual who cannot manage or
direct the management of his/her own money.
(ccxvi) "Reserved bed." A licensed bed in a
facility reserved for a client who is temporarily absent.
(ccxvii) "Residence." The place a client uses
as his or her primary dwelling place and intends to continue to use
indefinitely for that purpose.
(ccxviii) "Respite care." Services provided:
(A) On a short-term basis pursuant to the
individual plan of care;
(B) To a
participant who is unable, unassisted, to care for himself or herself; and
(C) Because the participant's
primary caregiver is absent or in need of relief from furnishing such
services.
(ccxix)
"Restraint." A ''personal restraint,'' ''mechanical restraint,'' or ''drug used
as a restraint," as those terms are defined in this Chapter.
(ccxx) "Revenue codes." Revenue codes as
contained in the latest version of the UB Editor.
(ccxxi) "Rural Health Clinic (RHC)." Rural
health clinic (RHC) as defined in
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d(l)(1).
(ccxxii) "Seclusion." The involuntary
confinement of a participant or client alone in a room or an area from which
the participant is physically prevented from leaving.
(ccxxiii) "Service care plan." A written plan
prepared for a Waiver applicant by the LT101 assessor or their designee that
describes the type and frequency of provider of services for all funding
sources that will meet or move the applicant toward meeting the needs
identified in the LT101 assessment.
(ccxxiv) "Service limitations." Limits on the
quantity of covered services which are reimbursed by Medicaid as set forth in
the rules of the Department.
(ccxxv) "Services." Programs authorized by
W.S. §
42-4-103 and offered pursuant to these
rules.
(ccxxvi) "Settled cost
report." A facility's cost report:
(A) Which
has been submitted to Medicare in accordance with Medicare standards and
procedures;
(B) Which has been cost
settled by the Medicare intermediary using Medicare principles of cost
reimbursement;
(C) For which a
notice of program reimbursement has been issued; and
(D) For which a notice of Medicaid program
reimbursement has been issued.
(E)
A cost report is settled notwithstanding a request to reopen.
(ccxxvii) "Skilled nursing
service." Professional nursing services provided which are included within the
definition of "practice of professional nursing" as set forth in the Wyoming
Nurse Practice Act.
(ccxxviii)
"Social Security Administration (SSA)." A division of the United States
Department of Health and Human Services, its agent, designee, or successor that
administers federal Social Security programs.
(ccxxix) "Social Security Number (SSN)."
Nine-digit number issued to U.S. Citizens, permanent residents and temporary
working residents, by the Social Security Administration.
(ccxxx) "Social worker." A person licensed as
a licensed clinical social worker by the Wyoming Board of Mental Health
Professionals or a similar agency in another state.
(ccxxxi) "Specialized services." Specialized
services as defined in
42 C.F.R. §
483.120.
(ccxxxii) "Specialty services." Services
identified by the Department and approved by CMS.
(ccxxxiii) "Speech, hearing and language
services." The following services, if furnished either as individual therapy or
group therapy, provided by a speech pathologist or audiologist or under the
scope of practice of a speech pathologist or audiologist, and prescribed by a
physician:
(A) Speech pathology and audiology
services, including articulation, pragmatic language training, and devices used
by the participant;
(B) Assessment
of participant's use of visual cues;
(C) Assessment of the need for and use of
amplification;
(D) Assessment of a
person's need for alternative speech output devices; or
(E) Speech, hearing and language services may
be provided as individual therapy and group therapy.
(ccxxxiv) "Speech pathologist." A person
licensed to practice speech pathology by the Wyoming Board of Speech Pathology
and Audiology or a similar agency in another state.
(ccxxxv) "State fiscal year." The twelve-(12)
month period beginning each July 1st and ending the following June
30th.
(ccxxxvi) "State Medicaid
funds." The dollar amount of the state general funds appropriated by the
Wyoming Legislature for the Medicaid program which constitutes the State
Medicaid percentage.
(ccxxxvii)
"State Medicaid percentage." The state percentage as determined pursuant to
42 U.S.C. §
1396 d(b).
(ccxxxviii) "State monitor." An individual
who is an employee or contractor of the provider's certifying division of the
Department and that is appointed by the Director to do any one or more of the
following:
(A) Assure that participants
receiving services from the provider are receiving appropriate levels of
services and are free from abuse, neglect, and exploitation;
(B) Oversee the abatement of the areas of
non-compliance by the provider;
(C) Oversee development and implementation of
the provider's quality improvement plan; or
(D) Report to the Department on whether the
provider is operating in compliance with the Medicaid Rules, properly
implementing a quality improvement plan or both.
(ccxxxix) "State survey agency." The Office
of Healthcare Licensing and Surveys of the Department, its agent, designee or
successor.
(ccxl) "Supervision."
The ready availability of the supervisor for consultation and direction of the
individual providing services. Contact with the supervisor by
telecommunications is sufficient to show ready availability if such contact is
sufficient to provide quality care.
(ccxli) "Supervisor." An individual licensed
to provide services who take professional responsibility for such services,
even when provided by another individual or individuals.
(ccxlii) "Supplemental Security Income
(SSI)." The program enacted as Title XVI of the Social Security Act.
(ccxliii) "Survey." Any survey as defined in
42
C.F.R. §
488.301.
(ccxliv) "Swing bed." A bed in a hospital
which is certified for either inpatient hospital service or nursing facility
services.
(ccxlv) "Swing bed
services." Nursing facility services provided to a client in a hospital bed
which is certified for either inpatient hospital services or nursing facility
services.
(ccxlvi) "Technical
denial." A determination by the Department to deny payment or recoup payments
previously made because of a provider's failure to comply with the timeliness
or other procedural requirements of any of the Wyoming Medicaid Rules. A
technical denial is a final agency action, not an adverse action. Technical
denial includes, but is not limited to, the denial of payment or recoupment of
payments because of a provider's:
(A) Failure
to timely and properly obtain admission certification;
(B) Failure to timely and properly obtain
prior authorization;
(C)
Furnishing covered services to a non-client;
(D) Furnishing non-covered services to a
client; or
(E) Furnishing covered
services in excess of the service limitations.
(ccxlvii) "Temporary absence" or "temporarily
absent." When a client is out of a facility for hospitalization, therapeutic
home visits, or for any other reason, and is expected to return to the
facility.
(ccxlviii) "Third Party
Liability (TPL)." The right of the Department to recover, on behalf of a
client, from a third party payer the costs of Medicaid services furnished to
the client.
(ccxlix) "Third Party
Payer." A person, entity, agency, insurer, or government program that may be
liable to pay, or that pays pursuant to a client's right of recovery arising
from an illness, injury, or disability for which Medicaid funds were paid or
are obligated to be paid on behalf of the client. Third party payer includes,
but is not limited to:
(A)
Medicare;
(B) Insurance companies;
(C) Workers' compensation;
(D) Persons or entities or others
alleged to be legally liable for injury to a client for which Medicaid provides
services to the client;
(E) A
spouse or parent who is obligated by law or court order to pay all or part of
such costs; or
(F) A client's
estate.
(ccl) "Time
out." The restriction of a participant for a reasonable period of time to a
designated area from which the participant is not physically prevented from
leaving, for the purpose of providing the participant an opportunity to regain
self-control.
(ccli) "Treatment
plan." A written description of expected services outcome developed approved
and signed by a clinical professional. The treatment plan must:
(A) Contain a description of the methods and
activities and their frequency that will be employed by specific persons to
implement the treatment; and
(B)
Specify the changes in the client's symptoms and behavior that are expected
during the course of the treatment plan.
(cclii) "Usual and customary." The provider's
charge to the general public for the same or similar services.
(ccliii) "Utilization review." A review of
the cost effectiveness of the utilization of covered services. The review shall
be undertaken in accordance with the standards and procedures specified by the
Department and disseminated to provider's by manuals and bulletins.
(ccliv) "Waiting list." A list of applicants
who are eligible for but are not receiving covered services because of limits
imposed by funding or program scope.
(cclv) "Waiver." An exception of Medicaid
standards granted by CMS to the Wyoming Medicaid Program pursuant to Section
1915(c) or 1115 of the Social Security Act.
(cclvi) "Working days." 8:00 a.m. through
5:00 p.m., Mountain Time, Monday through Friday, exclusive of State
holidays.
(cclvii) "Wyoming
Department of Health (WDH or the Department)." The Wyoming Department of
Health, its agent, designee or successor.
(cclviii) "Wyoming Life Resource Center." The
Wyoming Life Resource Center as established pursuant to W.S. §
25-5-101, et seq.
(cclix) "Wyoming Medical Service Area
(WMSA)." The geographic area surrounding the client's residence within Wyoming
commonly used by other persons in the same area to obtain similar services,
including the following cities or towns outside Wyoming: Craig, Colorado; Idaho
Falls, Montpelier and Pocatello, Idaho; Billings and Bozeman, Montana; Kimball
and Scottsbluff, Nebraska; Belle Fourche, Custer, Deadwood, Rapid City and
Spearfish, South Dakota; and Ogden and Salt Lake City, Utah.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.