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Standards for Electronic Transactions and Code
Sets
I. Background
A. Electronic Data Interchange
Electronic data interchange (EDI) is the electronic transfer of
information, such as electronic media health claims, in a standard
format between trading partners. EDI allows entities within the
health care system to exchange medical, billing, and other information
and to process transactions in a manner which is fast and cost effective.
With EDI there is a substantial reduction in handling and processing
time compared to paper, and the risk of lost paper documents is
eliminated. EDI can eliminate the inefficiencies of handling paper
documents, which will significantly reduce administrative burden,
lower operating costs, and improve overall data quality.
The health care industry recognizes the benefits of EDI and many
entities in that industry have developed proprietary EDI formats.
Currently, there are about 400 formats for electronic health claims
being used in the United States. The lack of standardization makes
it difficult and expensive to develop and maintain software. Moreover,
the lack of standardization minimizes the ability of health care
providers and health plans to achieve efficiency and savings.
B. Statutory Background
The Congress included provisions to address the need for standards
for electronic transactions and other administrative simplification
issues in the Health Insurance Portability AND ACCOUNTABILITY ACT OF 1996 (HIPAA), Public Law 104-191, which was enacted on August
21, 1996. Through subtitle F of title II of that law, the Congress
added to title XI of the Social Security Act a new part C, entitled
Administrative Simplification. (Public Law 104-191 affects
several titles in the United States Code. Hereafter, we refer to
the Social Security Act as the Act; we refer to the other laws cited
in this document by their names.) The purpose of this part is to
improve the Medicare program under title XVIII of the Social Security
Act and the Medicaid program under title XIX of the Act, and the
efficiency and effectiveness of the health care system, by encouraging
the development of a health information system through the establishment
of standards and requirements to enable the electronic exchange
of certain health information.
Part C of title XI consists of sections 1171 through 1179 of the
Act. These sections define various terms and impose several requirements
on HHS, health plans, health care clearinghouses, and certain health
care providers.
The first section, section 1171 of the Act, establishes definitions
for purposes of part C of title XI for the following terms: code
set, health care clearinghouse, health care provider, health information,
health plan, individually identifiable health information, standard,
and standard setting organization (SSO).
Section 1172 of the Act makes any standard adopted under part C
applicable to (1) all health plans, (2) all health care clearinghouses,
and (3) any health care provider who transmits any health information
in electronic form in connection with transactions referred to in
section 1173(a)(1) of the Act.
This section also contains requirements concerning standard setting.
- The Secretary may adopt a standard developed, adopted, or modified
by a standard setting organization (that is, an organization accredited
by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)) that has
consulted with the National Uniform Billing Committee (NUBC),
the National Uniform Claim Committee (NUCC), the Workgroup for
Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI), and the American Dental Association
(ADA).
- The Secretary may also adopt a standard other than one established
by a standard setting organization, if the different standard
will reduce costs for health care providers and health plans,
the different standard is promulgated through negotiated rulemaking
procedures, and the Secretary consults with each of the above-named
groups.
- If no standard has been adopted by any standard setting organization,
the Secretary is to rely on the recommendations of the National
Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS) and consult with
the above-named groups before adopting a standard.
- In complying with the requirements of part C of title XI, the
Secretary must rely on the recommendations of the NCVHS, consult
with appropriate State and Federal agencies and private organizations,
and publish the recommendations of the NCVHS regarding the adoption
of a standard under this part in the Federal Register.
Paragraph (a) of section 1173 of the Act requires that the Secretary
adopt standards for financial and administrative transactions, and
data elements for those transactions, to enable health information
to be exchanged electronically. Standards are required for the following
transactions: health care claims or equivalent encounter information,
health claims attachments, health plan enrollments and disenrollments,
health plan eligibility, health care payment and remittance advice,
health plan premium payments, first report of injury, health care
claim status, and referral certification and authorization. Section
1173(a)(1)(B) authorizes the Secretary to adopt standards for any
other financial and administrative transactions as she determines
appropriate.
Paragraph (b) of section 1173 of the Act requires the Secretary
to adopt standards for unique health identifiers for each individual,
employer, health plan, and health care provider. It also requires
that the adopted standards specify for what purposes unique health
identifiers may be used.
Paragraphs (c) through (f) of section 1173 of the Act require the
Secretary to adopt standards for code sets for each data element
for each health care transaction listed above, security standards
to protect health care information, standards for electronic signatures
(established together with the Secretary of Commerce), and standards
for the transmission of data elements needed for the coordination
of benefits and sequential processing of claims. Compliance with
electronic signature standards will be deemed to satisfy both State
and Federal statutory requirements for written signatures with respect
to the transactions listed in paragraph (a) of section 1173 of the
Act.
In section 1174 of the Act, the Secretary is required to adopt
standards for all of the above transactions, except claims attachments,
within 18 months after enactment. The standards for claims attachments
must be adopted within 30 months after enactment. Modifications
to any established standard may be made after the first year, but
not more frequently than once every 12 months. The Secretary may,
however, modify an initial standard at any time during the first
year of adoption, if she determines that the modification is necessary
to permit compliance with the standard. The Secretary must also
ensure that procedures exist for the routine maintenance, testing,
enhancement, and expansion of code sets and that there are crosswalks
from prior versions. Any modification to a code set must be implemented
in a manner that minimizes the disruption and the cost of compliance.
Section 1175 of the Act prohibits health plans from refusing to
conduct a transaction as a standard transaction. It also prohibits
health plans from delaying the processing of, or adversely affecting
or attempting to adversely affect, a person submitting a standard
transaction or the transaction itself on the grounds that the transaction
is in standard format. It establishes a timetable for compliance:
each person to whom a standard or implementation specification applies
is required to comply with the standard no later than 24 months
(or 36 months for small health plans) following its adoption. With
respect to modifications to standards or implementation specifications
made after initial adoption, compliance must be accomplished by
a date designated by the Secretary. This date may not be earlier
than 180 days after the modification is adopted by the Secretary.
Section 1176 of the Act establishes civil monetary penalties for
violation of the provisions in part C of title XI of the Act, subject
to several limitations. Penalties may not be more than $100 per
person per violation of a provision, and not more than $25,000 per
person per violation of an identical requirement or prohibition
for a calendar year. With certain exceptions, the procedural provisions
in section 1128A of the Act, Civil Monetary Penalties,
are applicable to imposition of these penalties.
Section 1177 of the Act established penalties for any person that
knowingly misuses a unique health identifier, or obtains or discloses
individually identifiable health information in violation of this
part. The penalties include: (1) A fine of not more than $50,000
and/or imprisonment of not more than 1 year; (2) if the offense
is under false pretenses, a fine of not more than $100,000
and/or imprisonment of not more than 5 years; and (3) if the offense
is with intent to sell, transfer, or use individually identifiable
health information for commercial advantage, personal gain, or malicious
harm, a fine of not more than $250,000 and/or imprisonment of not
more than 10 years. We note that these penalties do not affect any
other penalties that may be imposed by other federal programs.
Under section 1178 of the Act, the provisions of part C of title
XI of the Act, as well as any standards or implementation specifications
adopted under them, generally supersede contrary provisions of State
law. However, the Secretary may make exceptions to this general
rule if she determines that the provision of State law is necessary
to prevent fraud and abuse, ensure appropriate State regulation
of insurance and health plans, or for State reporting on health
care delivery or costs, among other things. In addition, contrary
State laws relating to the privacy of individually identifiable
health information are not preempted if more stringent than the
related federal requirements. Finally, contrary State laws relating
to certain activities with respect to public health and regulation
of health plans are not preempted by the standards adopted under
Part C or section 264 of Public Law 104-191.
Finally, section 1179 of the Act makes the above provisions inapplicable
to financial institutions or anyone acting on behalf of a financial
institution when authorizing, processing, clearing, settling,
billing, transferring, reconciling, or collecting payments for a
financial institution.
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