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Participating vs.
Non-Participating
PARTICIPATING
(PAR)
Participating in the Medicare
program simply means that you agree to accept assignment for all
services furnished to Medicare patients. By accepting assignment you
agree to accept the amount approved by Medicare as total payment for
covered services. The deductible and coinsurance are applied to
covered services and the beneficiary is responsible for these amounts.
If both Medicare and Medicaid cover a beneficiary, the Medicaid
program assumes responsibility for these amounts.
When you enroll as a new provider,
or re-enroll due to a tax ID number change you come in as a
non-participating provider. If you do not wish to become a
participating provider at the time of enrollment, you have 90 days
from the date of your Provider Identification Number (PIN)
Notification to change your participation status. If a
PAR agreement is received within 90 days of
enrollment the PAR effective date will be the post mark date on the
envelope.
If you decide to enroll as a
Medicare participating provider after the 90-day grace period, you
must wait and complete a form during open enrollment. You are
obligated to remain a participant until the following annual
enrollment period.
Advantages of Participating
- Your Medicare fee schedule amount is 5 percent
higher than that of a non-participating provider.
- Collecting from patients is much easier because Medicare pays 80 percent of the Medicare allowed amount leaving only 20 percent of the Medicare allowed amount plus any deductibles, (if applicable) as patient responsibility.
- Medicare will automatically forward Medigap claims
to the proper insurer for payment when you send in your completed
claim form. This "one stop" billing eliminates the need for you to
submit a separate bill to the supplementary insurer or beneficiary
after receiving Medicare's payment.
- Participation also improves your relationship with
the beneficiary because it helps reduce the beneficiary’s
out-of-pocket expenses.
NON-PARTICIPATING (NON-PAR)
If you choose not to become a
participating provider in the Medicare program, you may choose either
to accept or not accept assignment on Medicare claims on a
claim-by-claim basis. If you choose not to accept assignment, you may
not charge the beneficiary more than the Medicare limiting charge for
unassigned claims for Medicare services.
The limiting charge applies to
non-participating providers in the Medicare Part B program when they
do not accept assignment. The limiting charge is 115 percent of the
physician fee schedule amount. The beneficiary is not responsible for
billed amounts in excess of the limiting charge for a covered service.
Effective Jan. 1, 1994, the limiting charge applies to all services
and supplies billed under the Physician Fee Schedule (including drugs
and biologicals) regardless of the provider rendering the services.
If You Choose Not to Participate
If you choose not to participate in
the Medicare program and do not accept assignment on your claims, the
maximum amount you may charge is 115 percent of the approved fee
schedule amount for non-participating providers. This amounts to only
9.25 percent more than the fee schedule amount for participating
providers (115% x 95%). So in the following example, a
non-participating provider would only receive $9.25 more than the
participating provider would. Here is an example of how this works:
|
Non Participating |
Participating |
|
Fee Schedule Amount = $95.00 |
Fee Schedule Amount = $100 |
|
Limiting Charge Calculation |
|
115% x $95 = $109.25 |
None |
|
Most Each Can Collect |
|
$109.25 |
$100 |
All unassigned claims from
non-participating providers are monitored for compliance with the
limiting charge provision and providers and beneficiaries are advised
of any excess charges. Non-participating
providers may accept assignment on a claim-by-claim basis, but these
claims are approved at 95 percent of the participating physician fee
schedule for the same service.
BREAKEVEN POINT FOR
NON-PARTICIPATING PROVIDERS
Because the maximum limiting charge
is actually only 9.25 percent more than participating providers can
collect, unless you collect the limiting charge balance on almost all
patients, it may be more profitable for you to become a participating
provider.
It has been determined that a
non-participating provider who accepts assignment on 64.9 percent of
his or her Medicare claims must collect 100 percent of the limiting
charge amount for nonassigned claims to earn the same amount that a
participating doctor would earn.
Even if you did not take assignment
on any Medicare claims, you would need to collect 91.5% of your
charges for the nonassigned claims to break even with a participating
provider who filed the exact same claims and charges.
If you choose to be a
non-participating provider and accept assignment on more than 64.9
percent of Medicare claims, you will make less than if you were
participating because of the Medicare limiting charge and 5 percent
non-PAR reduction.
The table below illustrates this
point. These figures, however, do not include office collection
expenses or bad debts. Both actually lower the breakeven percentage.
Medicare Breakdown Analysis for
Non-Participating Providers
|
Percent of Medicare claims
assigned
(Payment = 95% of PAR amount): |
Percent of nonassigned claims
which must be collected to break even: |
|
0% |
91.5% |
|
20% |
92.7% |
|
40% |
94.6% |
|
50% |
96.1% |
|
60% |
98.4% |
|
64.9% |
100% |
|
70% |
102.2% |
|
80% |
109.8% |
Practitioner Mandatory Assignment
Under current Medicare law, if you
are one of the following:
- Physician’s assistant
- Nurse practitioner
- Certified registered nurse anesthetist
- Clinical nurse specialist
- Nurse midwife
- Clinical social worker
- Clinical psychologist
You are required to accept
assignment for all services that you render to Medicare beneficiaries.
Because you must accept assignment, you automatically receive the
advantages of participation. Therefore, it is not necessary for you to
complete a participating agreement when enrolling in the Medicare
program.
Penalties for Violating Assignment
Agreement
If you accept assignment, you agree
to accept Medicare’s reasonable charge as the full charge for the
service. You violate the assignment agreement if you collect or
attempt to collect from the beneficiary or other person any amount
other than coinsurance, non-covered charges or unmet deductible.
If you violate your assignment
agreement, you could face one of the following penalties:
- Any person who accepts assignment and who
""knowingly, willfully, and repeatedly" violates the assignment
agreement shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and subject to a fine of
not more than $2,000 or imprisonment of not more than six months or
both.
- CMS may exclude the provider from program
participation and from any State health care programs.
- The statute provides for civil monetary penalties
(CMPs) of up to $2,000 per item or service claimed against any
person who violates the assignment agreement.
- Remember that once you file a claim assigned,
Medicare will treat that claim as assigned even if the assignment
was billed in error.
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