TITLE 12. HEALTH
                REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The  is claiming an exemption from the Administrative Process Act in accordance with  § 2.2-4006 A 4 a of the Code of Virginia, which excludes regulations that  are necessary to conform to changes in Virginia statutory law where no agency  discretion is involved. The Board of Medical Assistance Services will receive,  consider, and respond to petitions from any interested person at any time with  respect to reconsideration or revision.
         Titles of Regulations: 12VAC30-70. Methods and  Standards for Establishing Payment Rates - Inpatient Hospital Services (amending 12VAC30-70-50, 12VAC30-70-351).
    12VAC30-80. Methods and Standards for Establishing Payment  Rates; other Types of Care (amending 12VAC30-80-180, 12VAC30-80-200).
    12VAC30-90. Methods and Standards for Establishing Payment  Rates for Long-Term Care (amending 12VAC30-90-36, 12VAC30-90-41). 
    Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of  Virginia; 42 USC § 1396 et seq.
    Effective Date: August 14, 2013. 
    Agency Contact: Brian McCormick, Regulatory Supervisor,  Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad Street, Suite 1300,  Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-8856, FAX (804) 786-1680, or email  brian.mccormick@dmas.virginia.gov.
    Summary:
    Item 307 of Chapter 3 of the 2012 Acts of Assembly required  a number of changes in reimbursement methodology affecting many providers. The  amendments implement those changes as follows: (i) 12VAC30-70-50 is amended to  limit the inflation adjustment for long stay inpatient hospitals to 2.6%,  effective for state fiscal year (SFY) 2013, and  to 0.0% for SFY 2014;  (ii) 12VAC30-70-351 is amended per Item 307 LLL to limit the inflation  adjustment for inpatient hospital (including freestanding psychiatric  hospitals) operating rates, disproportionate share hospital rates, and graduate  medical education payments to 2.6%, effective for SFY 2013 and to 0.0% for SFY  2014; (iii) 12VAC30-80-180 and 12VAC30-80-200 are amended to eliminate the  inflation adjustment for home health and outpatient rehabilitation agencies,  effective for SFYs 2013 and 2014; (iv) 12VAC30-90-36 is amended to change the  nursing facility capital rental rate floor from 9.0% to 8.5%, effective for  dates of service on or after July 1, 2012 (effective July 1, 2011, through June  30, 2012, the nursing facility capital rental rate floor was 8.0%, and, absent  any action, the rental rate floor would have been restored to 9.0% effective  July 1, 2012); and (v) 12VAC30-90-41 is amended per Item 307 MMM to increase  operating rates for regular and specialized care nursing facilities by 2.2% in  SFYs 2013 and 2014 and to increase the inflation adjustment ceiling by 3.2%  effective for SFY 2013 and by 2.2% effective for SFY 2014.
    12VAC30-70-50. Hospital reimbursement system.
    The reimbursement system for hospitals includes the following  components: 
    A. Hospitals were grouped by classes according to number of  beds and urban versus rural. (Three groupings for rural - 0 to 100 beds, 101 to  170 beds, and over 170 beds; four groupings for urban - 0 to 100, 101 to 400,  401 to 600, and over 600 beds.) Groupings are similar to those used by the  Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) in determining routine cost  limitations. 
    B. Prospective reimbursement ceilings on allowable operating  costs were established as of July 1, 1982, for each grouping. Hospitals with a  fiscal year end after June 30, 1982, were subject to the new reimbursement  ceilings. 
    1. The calculation of the initial group ceilings as of July 1,  1982, was based on available, allowable cost data for hospitals in calendar  year 1981. Individual hospital operating costs were advanced by a reimbursement  escalator from the hospital's year end to July 1, 1982. After this advancement,  the operating costs were standardized using SMSA wage indices, and a median was  determined for each group. These medians were readjusted by the wage index to  set an actual cost ceiling for each SMSA. Therefore, each hospital grouping has  a series of ceilings representing one of each SMSA area. The wage index is  based on those used by HCFA in computing its Market Basket Index for routine  cost limitations. 
    2. Effective July 1, 1986, and until June 30, 1988, providers  subject to the prospective payment system of reimbursement had their  prospective operating cost rate and prospective operating cost ceiling computed  using a new methodology. This method uses an allowance for inflation based on  the percent of change in the quarterly average of the Medical Care Index of the  Chase Econometrics - Standard Forecast determined in the quarter in which the  provider's new fiscal year began. 
    3. The prospective operating cost rate is based on the  provider's allowable cost from the most recent filed cost report, plus the  inflation percentage add-on. 
    4. The prospective operating cost ceiling is determined by  using the base that was in effect for the provider's fiscal year that began  between July 1, 1985, and June 1, 1986. The allowance for inflation percent of  change for the quarter in which the provider's new fiscal year began is added  to this base to determine the new operating cost ceiling. This new ceiling was  effective for all providers on July 1, 1986. For subsequent cost reporting  periods beginning on or after July 1, 1986, the last prospective operating rate  ceiling determined under this new methodology will become the base for computing  the next prospective year ceiling. 
    5. Effective on and after July 1, 1988, and until June 30,  1989, for providers subject to the prospective payment system, the allowance  for inflation shall be based on the percent of change in the moving average of  the Data Resources, Incorporated Health Care Cost HCFA-Type Hospital Market  Basket determined in the quarter in which the provider's new fiscal year  begins. Such providers shall have their prospective operating cost rate and  prospective operating cost ceiling established in accordance with the  methodology which became effective July 1, 1986. Rates and ceilings in effect  July 1, 1988, for all such hospitals shall be adjusted to reflect this change. 
    6. Effective on or after July 1, 1989, for providers subject  to the prospective payment system, the allowance for inflation shall be based  on the percent of change in the moving average of the Health Care Cost  HCFA-Type Hospital Market Basket, adjusted for Virginia, as developed by Data  Resources, Incorporated, determined in the quarter in which the provider's new  fiscal year begins. Such providers shall have their prospective operating cost  rate and prospective operating cost ceiling established in accordance with the  methodology which became effective July 1, 1986. Rates and ceilings in effect  July 1, 1989, for all such hospitals shall be adjusted to reflect this change. 
    7. Effective on and after July 1, 1992, for providers subject  to the prospective payment system, the allowance for inflation, as described  above, which became effective on July 1, 1989, shall be converted to an  escalation factor by adding two percentage points, (200 basis points) to the  then current allowance for inflation. The escalation factor shall be applied in  accordance with the inpatient hospital reimbursement methodology in effect on  June 30, 1992. On July 1, 1992, the conversion to the new escalation factor  shall be accomplished by a transition methodology which, for non-June 30 year  end hospitals, applies the escalation factor to escalate their payment rates  for the months between July 1, 1992, and their next fiscal year ending on or  before May 31, 1993. 
    Effective July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2012, the escalation  factor shall be zero. In addition, ceilings shall remain at the same level as  the ceilings for long stay hospitals with fiscal year's end of June 30, 2010.
    Effective July 1, 2009, the escalation factor shall be equal  to the allowance for inflation.
    Effective July 1, 2012, through June 30, 2013, the  escalation factor for inpatient hospitals, including long stay hospitals, shall  be 2.6%.
    Effective July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2014, the escalation  factor for inpatient hospitals, including long stay hospitals, shall be 0.0%.
    8. The new method will still require comparison of the  prospective operating cost rate to the prospective operating ceiling. The  provider is allowed the lower of the two amounts subject to the lower of cost  or charges principles. 
    C. Subsequent to June 30, 1992, the group ceilings shall not  be recalculated on allowable costs, but shall be updated by the escalator  factor. 
    D. Prospective rates for each hospital shall be based upon  the hospital's allowable costs plus the escalator factor, or the appropriate  ceilings, or charges; whichever is lower. Except to eliminate costs that are  found to be unallowable, no retrospective adjustment shall be made to  prospective rates. 
    Capital and education costs approved pursuant to PRM-15 (§  400), shall be considered as pass throughs and not part of the calculation.  Capital cost is reimbursed the percentage of allowable cost specified in  12VAC30-70-271.
    E. An incentive plan should be established whereby a hospital  will be paid on a sliding scale, percentage for percentage, up to 10.5% of the  difference between allowable operating costs and the appropriate per diem group  ceiling when the operating costs are below the ceilings. The incentive should  be calculated based on the annual cost report. Effective for dates of service  July 1, 2010, through September 30, 2010, the incentive plan shall be  eliminated.
    F. Disproportionate share hospitals defined. 
    The following criteria shall be met before a hospital is  determined to be eligible for a disproportionate share payment adjustment. 
    1. Criteria. 
    a. A Medicaid inpatient utilization rate in excess of 10.5%  for hospitals receiving Medicaid payments in the Commonwealth, or a low-income  patient utilization rate exceeding 25% (as defined in the Omnibus Budget  Reconciliation Act of 1987 and as amended by the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage  Act of 1988); and 
    b. At least two obstetricians with staff privileges at the  hospital who have agreed to provide obstetric services to individuals entitled  to such services under a State Medicaid plan. In the case of a hospital located  in a rural area (that is, an area outside of a Metropolitan Statistical Area,  as defined by the Executive Office of Management and Budget), the term  "obstetrician" includes any physician with staff privileges at the  hospital to perform nonemergency obstetric procedures. 
    c. Subdivision 1 b of this subsection does not apply to a  hospital: 
    (1) At which the inpatients are predominantly individuals  under 18 years of age; or 
    (2) Which does not offer nonemergency obstetric services as of  December 21, 1987. 
    2. Payment adjustment. 
    a. Hospitals which have a disproportionately higher level of  Medicaid patients shall be allowed a disproportionate share payment adjustment  based on the type of hospital and on the individual hospital's Medicaid  utilization. There shall be two types of hospitals: (i) Type One, consisting of  state-owned teaching hospitals, and (ii) Type Two, consisting of all other hospitals.  The Medicaid utilization shall be determined by dividing the number of  utilization Medicaid inpatient days by the total number of inpatient days. Each  hospital with a Medicaid utilization of over 10.5% shall receive a  disproportionate share payment adjustment. 
    b. For Type One hospitals, the disproportionate share payment  adjustment shall be equal to the product of (i) the hospital's Medicaid  utilization in excess of 10.5% times 11, times (ii) the lower of the  prospective operating cost rate or ceiling. For Type Two hospitals, the  disproportionate share payment adjustment shall be equal to the product of (i)  the hospital's Medicaid utilization in excess of 10.5% times (ii) the lower of  the prospective operating cost rate or ceiling. 
    c. No payments made under subdivision 1 or 2 of this  subsection shall exceed any applicable limitations upon such payments  established by federal law or regulations. 
    G. Outlier adjustments. 
    1. DMAS shall pay to all enrolled hospitals an outlier  adjustment in payment amounts for medically necessary inpatient hospital  services provided on or after July 1, 1991, involving exceptionally high costs  for individuals under one year of age. 
    2. DMAS shall pay to disproportionate share hospitals (as  defined in subsection F of this section) an outlier adjustment in payment  amounts for medically necessary inpatient hospital services provided on or  after July 1, 1991, involving exceptionally high costs for individuals under  six years of age. 
    3. The outlier adjustment calculation. 
    a. Each eligible hospital which desires to be considered for  the adjustment shall submit a log which contains the information necessary to  compute the mean of its Medicaid per diem operating cost of treating  individuals identified in subdivision 1 or 2 of this subsection. This log shall  contain all Medicaid claims for such individuals, including, but not limited  to: (i) the patient's name and Medicaid identification number; (ii) dates of  service; (iii) the remittance date paid; (iv) the number of covered days; and  (v) total charges for the length of stay. Each hospital shall then calculate  the per diem operating cost (which excludes capital and education) of treating  such patients by multiplying the charge for each patient by the Medicaid  operating cost-to-charge ratio determined from its annual cost report. 
    b. Each eligible hospital shall calculate the mean of its  Medicaid per diem operating cost of treating individuals identified in  subdivision 1 or 2 of this subsection. 
    c. Each eligible hospital shall calculate its threshold for  payment of the adjustment, at a level equal to two and one-half standard  deviations above the mean or means calculated in subdivision 3 a (ii) of this  subsection. 
    d. DMAS shall pay as an outlier adjustment to each eligible  hospital all per diem operating costs which exceed the applicable threshold or  thresholds for that hospital. 
    4. Pursuant to 12VAC30-50-100, there is no limit on length of  time for medically necessary stays for individuals under six years of age. This  section provides that consistent with 42 CFR 441.57, payment of medical  assistance services shall be made on behalf of individuals under 21 years of  age, who are Medicaid eligible, for medically necessary stays in acute care  facilities in excess of 21 days per admission when such services are rendered  for the purpose of diagnosis and treatment of health conditions identified  through a physical examination. Medical documentation justifying admission and  the continued length of stay must be attached to or written on the invoice for  review by medical staff to determine medical necessity. Medically unjustified  days in such admissions will be denied. 
    12VAC30-70-351. Updating rates for inflation. 
    A. Each July, the Virginia moving average values as compiled  and published by Global Insight (or its successor), under contract with the  department shall be used to update the base year standardized operating costs  per case, as determined in 12VAC30-70-361, and the base year standardized  operating costs per day, as determined in 12VAC30-70-371, to the midpoint of  the upcoming state fiscal year. The most current table available prior to the  effective date of the new rates shall be used to inflate base year amounts to  the upcoming rate year. Thus, corrections made by Global Insight (or its  successor), in the moving averages that were used to update rates for previous  state fiscal years shall be automatically incorporated into the moving averages  that are being used to update rates for the upcoming state fiscal year. 
    B. The inflation adjustment for hospital operating rates,  disproportionate share hospitals (DSH) payments, and graduate medical education  payments shall be zero percent for fiscal year (FY) 2010. The elimination of  the inflation adjustments shall not be applicable to re-basing in FY 2011.
    C. In FY 2011, hospital operating rates shall be rebased;  however the 2008 base year costs shall only be increased 2.58% for inflation.  For FY 2011 there shall be no inflation adjustment for graduate medical  education (GME) or freestanding psychiatric facility rates. The inflation  adjustment shall be eliminated for hospital operating rates, GME payments, and  freestanding psychiatric facility rates for FY 2012. The inflation  adjustment shall be 2.6% for inpatient hospitals, including hospital operating  rates, GME payments, DSH payments, and freestanding psychiatric facility rates  for FY 2013, and 0.0% for the same facilities for FY 2014.
    12VAC30-80-180. Establishment of rate per visit. 
    A. Effective for dates of services on and after July 1, 1991,  the Department of Medical Assistance Services (DMAS) shall reimburse home  health agencies (HHAs) at a flat rate per visit for each type of service  rendered by HHAs (i.e., nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy,  speech-language pathology services, and home health aide services.) In  addition, supplies left in the home and extraordinary transportation costs will  be paid at specific rates. 
    B. Effective for dates of services on and after July 1, 1993,  DMAS shall establish a flat rate for each level of service for HHAs by peer  group. There shall be three peer groups: (i) the Department of Health's HHAs,  (ii) non-Department of Health HHAs whose operating office is located in the  Virginia portion of the Washington DC-MD-VA metropolitan statistical area, and  (iii) non-Department of Health HHAs whose operating office is located in the  rest of Virginia. The use of the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA)  designation of urban metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) shall be  incorporated in determining the appropriate peer group for these  classifications. 
    The Department of Health's agencies are being placed in a  separate peer group due to their unique cost characteristics (only one  consolidated cost report is filed for all Department of Health agencies). 
    C. Rates shall be calculated as follows: 
    1. Each home health agency shall be placed in its appropriate  peer group. 
    2. Department of Health HHAs' Medicaid cost per visit  (exclusive of medical supplies costs) shall be obtained from its 1989  cost-settled Medicaid cost report. Non-Department of Health HHAs' Medicaid cost  per visit (exclusive of medical supplies costs) shall be obtained from the 1989  cost-settled Medicaid Cost Reports filed by freestanding HHAs. Costs shall be  inflated to a common point in time (June 30, 1991) by using the percent of  change in the moving average factor of the Data Resources Inc., (DRI), National  Forecast Tables for the Home Health Agency Market Basket (as published  quarterly). 
    3. To determine the flat rate per visit effective July 1,  1993, the following methodology shall be utilized: 
    a. The peer group HHA's per visit rates shall be ranked and  weighted by the number of Medicaid visits per discipline to determine a median  rate per visit for each peer group at July 1, 1991. 
    b. The HHA's peer group median rate per visit for each peer  group at July 1, 1991, shall be the interim peer group rate for calculating the  update through January 1, 1992. The interim peer group rate shall be updated by  100% of historical inflation from July 1, 1991, through December 31, 1992, and  shall become the final interim peer group rate which shall be updated by 50% of  the forecasted inflation to the end of December 31, 1993, to establish the  final peer group rates. The lower of the final peer group rates or the Medicare  upper limit at January 1, 1993, will be effective for payments from July 1,  1993, through December 1993. 
    c. Separate rates shall be provided for the initial  assessment, follow-up, and comprehensive visits for skilled nursing and for the  initial assessment and follow-up visits for physical therapy, occupational  therapy, and speech therapy. The comprehensive rate shall be 200% of the  follow-up rate, and the initial assessment rates shall be $15 higher than the  follow-up rates. The lower of the peer group median or Medicare upper limits  shall be adjusted as appropriate to assure budget neutrality when the higher  rates for the comprehensive and initial assessment visits are calculated. 
    4. The fee schedule shall be adjusted annually beginning July  1, 2010, based on the percent of change in the moving average of the National  Forecast Tables for the Home Health Agency Market Basket published by Global  Insight (or its successor) for the second quarter of the calendar year in which  the fiscal year begins. The report shall be the latest published report prior  to the fiscal year. The method to calculate the annual update shall be: 
    a. All subsequent year peer group rates shall be calculated  utilizing the previous final peer group rate established on July 1. 
    b. The annual July 1 update shall be compared to the Medicare  upper limit per visit in effect on each January 1, and the HHA's shall receive  the lower of the annual update or the Medicare upper limit per visit as the  final peer group rate. 
    D. Effective July 1, 2009, the previous inflation increase  effective January 1, 2009, shall be reduced by 50%.
    E. Effective July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2012, June  30, 2014, there shall be no inflation adjustment for home health agencies.
    12VAC30-80-200. Prospective reimbursement for rehabilitation  agencies or comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facilities.
    A. Rehabilitation agencies or comprehensive outpatient  rehabilitation facilities.
    1. Effective for dates of service on and after July 1, 2009,  rehabilitation agencies or comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facilities,  excluding those operated by community services boards or state agencies, shall  be reimbursed a prospective rate equal to the lesser of the agency's fee  schedule amount or billed charges per procedure. The agency shall develop a  statewide fee schedule based on CPT codes to reimburse providers what the  agency estimates they would have been paid in FY 2010 minus $371,800. 
    2. Effective for dates of service on and after October 1,  2009, rehabilitation agencies or comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation  facilities, excluding those operated by state agencies shall be reimbursed a  prospective rate equal to the lesser of the agency's fee schedule amount or  billed charges per procedure. The agency shall develop a statewide fee schedule  based on CPT codes to reimburse providers what the agency estimates they would  have been paid in FY 2010 minus $371,800. 
    B. Reimbursement for rehabilitation agencies subject to the  new fee schedule methodology.
    1. Payments for the fiscal year ending or in progress on June  30, 2009, shall be settled for private rehabilitation agencies based on the  previous prospective rate methodology and the ceilings in effect for that  fiscal year as of June 30, 2009.
    2. Payments for the fiscal year ending or in progress on  September 30, 2009, shall be settled for community services boards based on the  previous prospective rate methodology and the ceilings in effect for that  fiscal year as of September 30, 2009. 
    C. Beginning with state fiscal years beginning on or after  July 1, 2010, rates shall be adjusted annually for inflation using the  Virginia-specific nursing home input price index contracted for by the agency.  The agency shall use the percent moving average for the quarter ending at the  midpoint of the rate year from the most recently available index prior to the  beginning of the rate year.
    D. Reimbursement for physical therapy, occupational therapy,  and speech-language therapy services shall not be provided for any sums that  the rehabilitation provider collects, or is entitled to collect, from the  nursing facility or any other available source, and provided further, that this  subsection shall in no way diminish any obligation of the nursing facility to  DMAS to provide its residents such services, as set forth in any applicable  provider agreement.
    E. Effective July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2014,  there will be no inflation adjustment for outpatient rehabilitation facilities through  June 30, 2012.
    12VAC30-90-36. Nursing Facility Capital Payment Methodology  facility capital payment methodology. 
    A. Applicability. The capital payment methodology described  in this article shall be applicable to freestanding nursing facilities but not  to hospital-based facilities. Hospital-based facilities shall continue to be  reimbursed under the methodology contained in Article 2 (12VAC30-90-30 et seq.)  of this subpart. For purposes of this provision, a hospital-based nursing  facility shall be one for which a combined cost report is submitted on behalf  of both the hospital and the nursing facility. 
    B. Definitions. The following words and terms when used in  this article shall have the following meaning unless the context clearly  indicates otherwise: 
    "Capital costs" means costs that include the cost  elements of depreciation, interest, financing costs, rent and lease costs for  property, building and equipment, property insurance and property taxes. 
    "Date of acquisition" means the date legal title  passed to the buyer. If a legal titling date is not determinable for a nursing  facility building, date of acquisition shall be considered to be the date a  certificate of occupancy was issued by the appropriate licensing or building  inspection agency of the locality where the nursing facility is located. 
    "Facility average age" means for a facility the  weighted average of the ages of all capitalized assets of the facility, with  the weights equal to the expenditures for those assets. The calculation of  average age shall take into account land improvements, building and fixed  equipment, and major movable equipment. The basis for the calculation of  average age shall be the schedule of assets submitted annually to the  department in accordance with the provisions of this section. 
    "Facility imputed gross square feet" means a number  that is determined by multiplying the facility's number of nursing facility  licensed beds licensed by the Virginia Department of Health by the imputed number  of gross square feet per bed. The imputed number of gross square feet per bed  shall be 461 for facilities of 90 or fewer beds, and 438 for facilities of more  than 90 beds. The number of licensed nursing facility beds shall be the number  on the last day of the provider's most recent fiscal year end for which a cost  report has been filed. 
    "Factor for land and soft costs" means a factor  equaling 1.429 that adjusts the construction cost amount to recognize land and  capitalized costs associated with construction of a facility that are not part  of the R.S. Means construction cost amount. 
    "Fixed capital replacement value" means an amount  equal to the R.S. Means 75th percentile nursing home construction cost per  square foot, times the applicable R.S. Means historical cost index factor,  times the factor for land and soft costs, times the applicable R.S. Means  "Location Factor," times facility imputed gross square feet. 
    "FRV depreciation rate" means a depreciation rate  equal to 2.86% per year. 
    "Hospital-based facility" means one for which a  single combined Medicare cost report is filed that includes the costs of both  the hospital and the nursing home. 
    "Movable capital replacement value" means a value  equal to $3,475 per bed in SFY 2001, and shall be increased each July 1 by the  same R.S. Means historical cost index factor that is used to calculate the  fixed capital replacement value. Each year's updated movable capital  replacement value shall be used in the calculation of each provider's rate for  the provider year beginning on or after the date the new value becomes  effective. 
    "R.S. Means 75th percentile nursing construction cost  per square foot" means the 75th percentile value published in the 59th  Annual Edition of the R.S. Means Building Construction Cost Data, 2001. In the  2000 edition of the R.S. Means publication this value is $110, which is  reported as a January 2000 value. 
    "R.S. Means historical cost index factor" means the  ratio of the two most recent R.S. Means Historical Cost Indexes published in  the 59th Annual Edition of the R.S. Means Building Construction Cost Data,  2001. In the 2000 edition of this R.S. Means publication these two values are  117.6 (for 1999) and 115.1 (for 1998). The ratio of these values, and therefore  the factor to be used, would be 1.022. This factor would be used to adjust the  January 2000 value for the one year of change from January 2000 to January  2001, the mid-point of the prospective rate year (SFY 2001). The resulting cost  value that would be used in SFY 2001 is $112.42. The indexes used in this  calculation do not match the time period for which a factor is needed. They  relate to 1998 and 1999, while 2000 and 2001 would be ideal. However, R.S.  Means does not publish index forecasts, so the most recent available indexes shall  be used. 
    "R.S. Means Location Factors" means those published  in the 22nd Annual Edition of the R.S. Means Square Foot Costs, 2001. The 2000  location factors are shown in the following Table 1. They will be updated  annually and distributed to providers based upon the most recent available  data. 
           |      TABLE 1.     R.S. MEANS COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION COST LOCATION FACTORS (2000).      |    
       |      Zip Code      |          Principal City      |          Location Factor      |    
       |      220-221      |          Fairfax      |          0.90      |    
       |      222      |          Arlington      |          0.90      |    
       |      223      |          Alexandria      |          0.91      |    
       |      224-225      |          Fredericksburg      |          0.85      |    
       |      226      |          Winchester      |          0.80      |    
       |      227      |          Culpeper      |          0.80      |    
       |      228      |          Harrisonburg      |          0.77      |    
       |      229      |          Charlottesville      |          0.82      |    
       |      230-232      |          Richmond      |          0.85      |    
       |      233-235      |          Norfolk      |          0.82      |    
       |      236      |          Newport News      |          0.82      |    
       |      237      |          Portsmouth      |          0.81      |    
       |      238      |          Petersburg      |          0.84      |    
       |      239      |          Farmville      |          0.74      |    
       |      240-241      |          Roanoke      |          0.77      |    
       |      242      |          Bristol      |          0.75      |    
       |      243      |          Pulaski      |          0.70      |    
       |      244      |          Staunton      |          0.76      |    
       |      245      |          Lynchburg      |          0.77      |    
       |      246      |          Grundy      |          0.70      |    
  
    "Rental rate" means for a prospective year a rate  equal to two percentage points plus the yield on U.S. Treasury Bonds with  maturity over 10 years, averaged over the most recent three calendar years for  which data are available, as published by the Federal Reserve (Federal Reserve  Statistical Release H.15 Selected Interest Rates  (www.Federalreserve.gov/releases/)). The rate will be published and distributed  to providers annually. Changes in the rental rate shall be effective for the  providers' fiscal year beginning on or after July 1. Rental rates may not fall  below 9.0% or exceed 11% and will be updated annually on or about July 1 each  year. Effective July 1, 2010, through September 30, 2010, the floor for the  nursing facility rental rates may not fall below 8.75%. Effective October 1,  2010, through June 30, 2011, the floor for the nursing facility rental rates  may not fall below 9.0%. Effective July 1, 2011, through June 30, 2012, the  floor for the nursing facility rental rates may not fall below 8.0%. Effective  July 1, 2012, through June 30, 2014, the floor for the nursing facility rental  rates may not fall below 8.5%. The rate will be published and distributed  to providers annually. Changes in the rental rate shall be effective for the  providers' fiscal year beginning on or after July 1. 
    "Required occupancy percentage" means an occupancy  percentage of 90%. 
    "SFY" means State Fiscal Year (July 1 through June  30). 
    1. Fair Rental Value (FRV) Payment for Capital. Effective for  dates of service on or after July 1, 2001, DMAS shall pay nursing facility  capital related costs under a FRV methodology. The payment made under this  methodology shall be the only payment for capital related costs, and no  separate payment shall be made for depreciation or interest expense, lease  costs, property taxes, insurance, or any other capital related cost, including  home office capital costs. This payment is considered to cover costs related to  land, buildings and fixed equipment, major movable equipment, and any other  capital related item. This shall be the case regardless of whether the property  is owned or leased by the operator. The department shall review the operation  and performance of the FRV methodology every two years. 
    2. FRV Rate Year. The FRV payment rate shall be a per diem  rate determined each year for each facility using the most recent available  data from settled cost reports, or from other verified sources as specified  herein. The per diem rate shall be determined prospectively and shall apply for  the entire fiscal year. Each provider shall receive a new capital per diem rate  each year effective at the start of the provider's fiscal year, except that the  capital per diem rate shall be revised for the rental rate changes effective  July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2012. Data elements that are provider specific  shall be revised at that time and shall rely on the settled cost report and  schedule of assets of the previous year. Data elements that are not provider  specific, including those published by R.S. Means and the rental rate, shall be  determined annually on or about July 1, and shall apply to provider fiscal  years beginning on or after July 1. That is, each July 1 DMAS shall determine  the R.S. Means values and the rental rate, and these shall apply to all  provider fiscal years beginning on or after July 1. 
    12VAC30-90-41. Nursing facility reimbursement formula.
    A. Effective on and after July 1, 2002, all NFs subject to  the prospective payment system shall be reimbursed under "The Resource  Utilization Group-III (RUG-III) System as defined in Appendix IV  (12VAC30-90-305 through 12VAC30-90-307)." RUG-III is a resident  classification system that groups NF residents according to resource  utilization. Case-mix indices (CMIs) are assigned to RUG-III groups and are  used to adjust the NF's per diem rates to reflect the intensity of services  required by a NF's resident mix. See 12VAC30-90-305 through 12VAC30-90-307 for  details on the Resource Utilization Groups.
    1. Any NF receiving Medicaid payments on or after October 1,  1990, shall satisfy all the requirements of § 1919(b) through (d) of the  Social Security Act as they relate to provision of services, residents' rights  and administration and other matters.
    2. Direct and indirect group ceilings and rates.
    a. In accordance with 12VAC30-90-20 C, direct patient care  operating cost peer groups shall be established for the Virginia portion of the  Washington DC-MD-VA MSA, the Richmond-Petersburg MSA and the rest of the state.  Direct patient care operating costs shall be as defined in 12VAC30-90-271.
    b. Indirect patient care operating cost peer groups shall be  established for the Virginia portion of the Washington DC-MD-VA MSA, for the  rest of the state for facilities with less than 61 licensed beds, and for the  rest of the state for facilities with more than 60 licensed beds.
    3. Each facility's average case-mix index shall be calculated  based upon data reported by that nursing facility to the Centers for Medicare  and Medicaid Services (CMS) (formerly HCFA) Minimum Data Set (MDS) System. See  12VAC30-90-306 for the case-mix index calculations.
    4. The normalized facility average Medicaid CMI shall be used  to calculate the direct patient care operating cost prospective ceilings and  direct patient care operating cost prospective rates for each semiannual period  of a NFs subsequent fiscal year. See 12VAC30-90-306 D 2 for the calculation of  the normalized facility average Medicaid CMI.
    a. A NFs direct patient care operating cost prospective  ceiling shall be the product of the NFs peer group direct patient care ceiling  and the NFs normalized facility average Medicaid CMI. A NFs direct patient care  operating cost prospective ceiling will be calculated semiannually.
    b. A CMI rate adjustment for each semiannual period of a  nursing facility's prospective fiscal year shall be applied by multiplying the  nursing facility's normalized facility average Medicaid CMI applicable to each  prospective semiannual period by the nursing facility's case-mix neutralized  direct patient care operating cost base rate for the preceding cost reporting  period (see 12VAC30-90-307).
    c. See 12VAC30-90-307 for the applicability of case-mix  indices.
    5. Direct and indirect ceiling calculations.
    a. Effective for services on and after July 1, 2006, the  direct patient care operating ceiling shall be set at 117% of the respective  peer group day-weighted median of the facilities' case-mix neutralized direct  care operating costs per day. The calculation of the medians shall be based on  cost reports from freestanding nursing homes for provider fiscal years ending  in the most recent base year. The medians used to set the peer group direct  patient care operating ceilings shall be revised and case-mix neutralized every  two years using the most recent reliable calendar year cost settled cost  reports for freestanding nursing facilities that have been completed as of  September 1.
    b. The indirect patient care operating ceiling shall be set at  107% of the respective peer group day-weighted median of the facility's  specific indirect operating cost per day. The calculation of the peer group  medians shall be based on cost reports from freestanding nursing homes for  provider fiscal years ending in the most recent base year. The medians used to  set the peer group indirect operating ceilings shall be revised every two years  using the most recent reliable calendar year cost settled cost reports for  freestanding nursing facilities that have been completed as of September 1.
    6. Reimbursement for use of specialized treatment beds.  Effective for services on and after July 1, 2005, nursing facilities shall be  reimbursed an additional $10 per day for those recipients who require a  specialized treatment bed due to their having at least one Stage IV pressure  ulcer. Recipients must meet criteria as outlined in 12VAC30-60-350, and the  additional reimbursement must be preauthorized as provided in 12VAC30-60-40.  Nursing facilities shall not be eligible to receive this reimbursement for  individuals whose services are reimbursed under the specialized care  methodology. Beginning July 1, 2005, this additional reimbursement shall be  subject to adjustment for inflation in accordance with 12VAC30-90-41 B, except  that the adjustment shall be made at the beginning of each state fiscal year,  using the inflation factor that applies to provider years beginning at that  time. This additional payment shall not be subject to direct or indirect  ceilings and shall not be adjusted at year-end settlement.
    B. Adjustment of ceilings and costs for inflation. Effective  for provider fiscal years starting on and after July 1, 2002, ceilings and  rates shall be adjusted for inflation each year using the moving average of the  percentage change of the Virginia-Specific Nursing Home Input Price Index,  updated quarterly, published by Standard & Poor's DRI. For state fiscal  year 2003, peer group ceilings and rates for indirect costs will not be  adjusted for inflation.
    1. For provider years beginning in each calendar year, the  percentage used shall be the moving average for the second quarter of the year,  taken from the table published for the fourth quarter of the previous year. For  example, in setting prospective rates for all provider years beginning in  January through December 2002, ceilings and costs would be inflated using the  moving average for the second quarter of 2002, taken from the table published  for the fourth quarter of 2001.
    2. Provider specific costs shall be adjusted for inflation  each year from the cost reporting period to the prospective rate period using  the moving average as specified in subdivision 1 of this subsection. If the  cost reporting period or the prospective rate period is less than 12 months  long, a fraction of the moving average shall be used that is equal to the  fraction of a year from the midpoint of the cost reporting period to the  midpoint of the prospective rate period.
    3. Ceilings shall be adjusted from the common point  established in the most recent rebasing calculation. Base period costs shall be  adjusted to this common point using moving averages from the DRI tables  corresponding to the provider fiscal period, as specified in subdivision 1 of  this subsection. Ceilings shall then be adjusted from the common point to the  prospective rate period using the moving average(s) for each applicable second  quarter, taken from the DRI table published for the fourth quarter of the year  immediately preceding the calendar year in which the prospective rate years  begin. Rebased ceilings shall be effective on July 1 of each rebasing year, so  in their first application they shall be adjusted to the midpoint of the  provider fiscal year then in progress or then beginning. Subsequently, they  shall be adjusted each year from the common point established in rebasing to  the midpoint of the appropriate provider fiscal year. For example, suppose the  base year is made up of cost reports from years ending in calendar year 2000,  the rebasing year is SFY2003, and the rebasing calculation establishes ceilings  that are inflated to the common point of July 1, 2002. Providers with years in  progress on July 1, 2002, would receive a ceiling effective July 1, 2002, that  would be adjusted to the midpoint of the provider year then in progress. In  some cases this would mean the ceiling would be reduced from the July 1, 2002,  ceiling level. The following table shows the application of these provisions  for different provider fiscal periods.
         VA.R. Doc. No. R13-3289; Filed June 19, 2013, 11:53 a.m.