Amended 10/16/2024
If a claim is impacted by the cooling-off period, providers can batch all other services impacted that occurred during that time period together once cooling-off concludes. Additional batching rules remain unchanged and must still be followed.
On August 3, 2023, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas issued an opinion and order in Texas Medical Association, et al. v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, et al., Case No. 6:23-cv-59-JDK (TMA IV). This order vacated, among other provisions, the batching provisions established under the Requirements Related to Surprise Billing; Part II (October 2021 interim final rules) codified at 26 CFR 54.9816-8T(c)(3)(i)(C), 29 CFR 2590.716-8(c)(3)(i)(C), and 45 CFR 149.510(c)(3)(i)(C), which required that items and services batched in one independent dispute resolution (IDR) dispute be billed under the same service code or a comparable code under a different procedural code system.
On September 26, 2023, the Departments of Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services (collectively the “Departments”) published the Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) Process Administrative Fee and Certified IDR Entity Fee Ranges proposed rule, which stated that since the TMA IV opinion and order vacated 26 CFR 54.9816-8T(c)(3)(i)(C), 29 CFR 2590.716-8(c)(3)(i)(C), and 45 CFR 149.510(c)(3)(i)(C), which established standards for determining when multiple items or services relate to “the treatment of a similar condition” for the purpose of batched disputes, the certified IDR entities may no longer rely on the regulatory guidance provided to assist certified IDR entities when reviewing batched disputes. Certified IDR entities must now rely upon only statutory language when determining whether multiple items or services are related to the treatment of a similar condition and are therefore appropriate to batch.
On October 27, 2023, the Departments released the No Surprises Act Independent Dispute Resolution Process Proposed Rule Fact Sheet. The fact sheet explains a number of the proposals contained in the Departments’ October 27, 2023 Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) Operations proposed rule (published on November 3, 2023), including new batching provisions addressing when qualified IDR items and services relate to treatment of a similar condition as well as encourage efficiency and minimize cost. Specifically, the Departments proposed to allow the following qualified IDR items and services to be batched:
The Departments also proposed to limit batched determinations to 25 qualified IDR items and services (or “line items”) in a single dispute to ensure certified IDR entities can make timely eligibility and payment determinations.
Until the Departments adopt a final rule governing batching, certified IDREs must determine which items and services are considered “related to the treatment of a similar condition.” FHAS’s batching rules align closely with those proposed by the Departments on October 27, 2023.
FHAS has implemented the following criteria for batching claims:
Unlimited Line Items: For all batching, FHAS will allow an unlimited number of line items meeting the batching criteria.
IDRE Fee. The FHAS IDRE fee as previously published is based upon line-item tiers. The parties are advised to properly calculate the fee in order to issue the correct payment amount to FHAS, which is required for FHAS to arbitrate a case.
Below are FHAS’s interpretations of the statutory language regarding items or services that are related to the treatment of a similar condition and are therefore appropriate to batch. Note that items and/or services must meet only one – not all three – of the following:
1. Single Patient Encounter Batching
Along with three aforementioned criteria, batched items and/or services must be performed within the same patient encounter. A patient encounter is defined by CMS as “the set of services provided to treat a clinical condition or procedure.” Therefore, any item or service that meets the criteria listed above, as well as being within the same set of services provided to treat a clinical condition or procedure would be eligible for batching.
2. Identical Service Codes
Along with three aforementioned criteria, batched items and/or services must have identical service codes. Identical service codes relate to items and services billed under the same service code or a comparable code under a different procedural code system.
3. Category I CPT code section
Along with three aforementioned criteria, batched items and services must be billed under service codes belonging to the same Category I CPT code section, as specified in guidance by the Departments, for radiology, pathology & labs, and anesthesiology. The Category I CPT code sections for batching are included in Table 2 below.