Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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#47
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- A Medicare Advantage (MA) plan receives a monthly amount ($1,000?) per patient regardless of any treatment - The monthly amount is intended to be more than enough to cover costs which allows the MA plan to off additional services - The provider sees patients and bills the MA plan for services provided - If the services provided indicate the patient is sicker than average then the MA plan can bill Medicare extra for that patient - The additional money paid by Medicare is passed through MA to the provider - TVH may interact only with the MA plan - TVH requests reimbursement through coding - If the coding is within a "normal" range of services, the MA plan reimburses TVH from the monthly amount it receives for that patient - If the coding is above normal (sicker patient) then MA requests additional funding from Medicare - The additional funding is passed to the TVH If it is later found that the "above-normal" coding was inaccurate then Medicare may choose to demand reimbursement. Since the coding was done by TVH and the additional funds were given to TVH it is logical that Medicare would approach TVH for any reimbursement. Since TVH doesn't have $360M just sitting around to be used for reimbursement, it anticipates a serious problem and has filed for bankruptcy protection. The above is certainly missing some details and nuances but it seems to be consistent with the description of the flow of funds with Advantage plans and what has been reported in various articles.
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Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works. Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so. Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough |
#48
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MA pays X dollars for patient John. Every month. No more, no less. And then John is found to have a brain tumor that is treatable with chemo, targeted radiation, months of physical and speech therapy, home health aids, and two months in rehab. Who's gonna pay for all that? Or will John simply die because he can't afford it? Answer: Something ELSE is going to happen, besides MA simply paying out X dollars for patient John. What is that something else? I don't know. But I'm confident it's something else. |
#49
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I am still confused. I thought Medicare Advantage worked the following way:
For every patient enrolled in UHC, Medicare pays a certain amount to UHC. This is based on your RAF rating (Risk Adjustment Factor). RAF is based on your overall health. The average score is 1.00 and assuming that the average payment is $1000, UHC would get $1000 a month for each patient with an RAF rating of 1. If a person has a score of .8, UHC would get $800 a month and if a person had an RAF score of 1.5, UHC would get $1500 a month. I thought that if UHC provides less care than the amount that Medicare pays each month that UHC keeps that as profit. And if UHC provides more care than the amount that Medicare pays each month, UHC has to make up the difference. This is from the bankruptcy filing. TVH receives a monthly payment per member (“PMPM”) for each MA beneficiary that it treats. The PMPM amount that CMS pays MA plans depend on a number of risk adjustments factors (“RAF Scores”) that are meant to reflect the illness level of patients. Generally speaking, MA plans receive higher PMPM payments for patients who have higher RAF Scores and are anticipated to have higher medical expenses than patients with lower RAF Scores. Hierarchical Condition Categories (“HCC”) codes are a significant input in the calculation of RAF Scores. Through its contracts with MA plans, TVH generally receives larger payments for beneficiaries with higher RAF Scores. In approximately August 2024, TVH became aware of a potential issue with respect to its HCC guidance. At that time, TVH learned that it may have submitted HCC diagnosis codes that were not clinically supported or otherwise did not meet Medicare coding and payment guidance. For example, TVH engaged in a retrospective review program (in which patients’ medical histories were reviewed to identify instances in which TVH believed additional codes were supportable and could be added) that may not have been consistent with Medicare coding and payment guidance. I think it means (but I am not sure) that if TVH assigned you a higher RAF rating, that TVH would get more per procedure so that TVH would have an incentive to assign people higher RAF scores. Do they get more procedure or do they usually have more procedures because they are in worse health? I am not sure how this works with UHC. It seems that UHC would get more money each month also since their payment is based on RAF scores. If that is the case, does UHC owe Medicare a lot of money? Is there someone that can explain this? A lawyer, a coder, a doctor? Has anyone obtained their RAF score? I contacted UHC and they told me to contact TVH. |
#50
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That is why UHC's profits fell 19% last year. |
#51
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TVH was awesome for years because it was relatively exclusive, and didn't need thousands of employees to care for tens of thousands of patients. That's all changed. It's become an enormous machine that has been pieced together with duct tape and zip-ties, and the only people who know how it's run, are getting ready to retire. |
#52
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Is Not What Is Happening. I don't know how people can explain this to make it any more clear than has already been explained. The "issue" with this incident of overpayment has to do with billing codes. Not RAF or PMPMs or guaranteed minimum monthly payments to the Health Center. It is specifically a billing code error. Start there, and work your way back. |
#53
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#54
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This is from the Villages Health bankruptcy filing. They are claiming that. TVH receives a monthly payment per member (“PMPM”) for each MA beneficiary that it treats. The PMPM amount that Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) pays MA plans depend on a number of risk adjustments factors (“RAF Scores”) that are meant to reflect the illness level of patients. Generally speaking, MA plans receive higher PMPM payments for patients who have higher RAF Scores and are anticipated to have higher medical expenses than patients with lower RAF Scores. Hierarchical Condition Categories (“HCC”) codes are a significant input in the calculation of RAF Scores. Through its contracts with MA plans, TVH generally receives larger payments for beneficiaries with higher RAF Scores. They are ones talking about PMPMs and RAF scores. In fact, I never heard of either term before yesterday. Are you saying that the Villages Health lawyers are mistaken? That it wasn't about PMPMs or RAF scores? Last edited by Rainger99; Yesterday at 10:56 AM. |
#55
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#56
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Do you know for a fact that the buyer will assume the loss? If they have a loss then they don't have a profit.
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#58
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possible, but in this case, buying the loss means buying the customers/physical assets. . . and the loss comes with the Medicare liability. . . if they buy the business without the Medicare liability, there is no loss, just customers and assets, assets which get revalued, and customers who start all over with billing codes and medical encounters.
usually in the purchase to use the loss, is an operating loss carry forward after a transaction has been completed. . . which I am not certain that will apply in this case, as its a continuing operating liability. . . but i am not a tax lawyer, and don't even want to play one on TV |
#60
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There have been a number of posts concerning the manner in which TVHS is paid by United Health and the other insurers for Mecicare Part C. Several of the posts are inaccurate or speculative. To get the facts (or at least TVHS's version of them), click here and read paragraph 27: https://cases.stretto.com/public/x45...0000000204.pdf
To understand that paragraph, one must realize that TVHS is not paid by the Part C insurers for each service TVHS renders, which is the traditional Medicare Part C method. Instead, TVHS gets a monthly, per capita payment. Warning: even after reading paragraph 27, you will not understand the calculation of the $361million claim of the US Government. That cannot be discerned on the basis of any of the filings in the bankruptcy case-- so far. Last edited by ScottFenstermaker; Yesterday at 01:20 PM. |
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