DHS 120.13 History
History: Cr.
Register, December, 2000, No. 540, eff. 1-1-01;
CR 01-051: am. (2) (d) 1. and (7) (a) 1.,
Register September 2001 No. 549 eff. 10-1-01;
CR 03-033: am. (2) (a)
Register December 2003 No. 576, eff. 1-1-04.
DHS 120.14
DHS 120.14 Data to be submitted by physician class of provider. DHS 120.14(1)(a)(a)
Data to be collected. Physicians shall submit all of the following data elements:
DHS 120.14(1)(a)8.
8. The first date of illness, if patient has had same or similar illness.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)1.1. Non–exempt physicians shall submit claims information to the department in an electronic format using secure methods specified in a data submission manual provided by the department. Physicians who submit data through a qualified vendor shall require their vendor to comply with the requirements specified in this paragraph. In addition, qualified vendors shall sign a trading partner agreement.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)2.
2. Each physician shall submit his or her data to the department within 30 calendar days following the close of the reporting period. The department shall provide instructions on submission in a data submission manual.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)3.
3. The department may grant an extension of the deadline specified under
subd. 2. only when the physician adequately justifies to the department the physician's need for additional time. In this subdivision, “adequate justification" means a delay due to a strike, fire, natural disaster or catastrophic computer failure. A physician desiring an extension shall submit a request for an extension in writing to the department at least 10 calendar days prior to the date that the data are due. The department may grant an extension for up to 30 calendar days.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)4.a.a. To ensure confidentiality of the data is maintained, physicians using qualified vendors to submit data shall provide to the department an original trading partner agreement that has been signed and notarized by the qualified vendor and the physician.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)4.b.
b. A physician or his or her delegated representative shall be accountable for his or her qualified vendor's failure to submit and edit data in the format required by the department.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)5.
5. A health care provider that is not a hospital or ambulatory surgery center shall, before submitting information required by the department under this chapter, convert any names of an insured's payer or other insured's payer to a payer category code as specified by the department in its data submission manual.
DHS 120.14(1)(b)6.
6. A health care provider or qualified vendor may not submit information that uses any of the following as a patient account number:
DHS 120.14(1)(b)6.a.
a. The patient's social security number or any substantial portion of the patient's social security number.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)1.1. The department shall check the accuracy and completeness of all submitted data.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)2.
2. The department may not retain or release any of the following data elements if the department receives the elements:
DHS 120.14(1)(c)2.g.
g. The patient's account number, after use only as verification of data by the department.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)4.a.a. If the department determines data submitted by a physician or qualified vendor to be questionable, the department may return the questionable data in a data summary to the physician or the physician's qualified vendor with information for revision and resubmission.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)4.b.
b. The physician or the physician's qualified vendor shall correct data errors identified by the department as requiring correction via the department's, physician's or qualified vendor's data editing system and shall return corrected data to the department within 15 calendar days after the physician or the physician's qualified vendor received the data summary.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)4m.
4m. If the data submitted by a physician or qualified vendor passes the department's editing processes, the department shall send a data profile to the physician or their qualified vendor indicating what has been sent and an affirmation statement. The physician or their qualified vendor shall review the profile and verify the accuracy of the profile's data.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)5.
5. The physician or his or her delegated representative shall review the final data profile for accuracy and completeness and shall supply the department within 30 calendar days from the day the data is due to the bureau of health information with the following:
DHS 120.14 Note
Note: The bureau of health information was renamed the the bureau of health information and policy.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)5.b.
b. A signed affirmation statement. A physician or the physician's delegated representative submitting affirmation statements to the department electronically shall use a digital signature approved by the department and returned by the physician or the physician's delegated representative during the timeframes for data submission specified by the department. A physician's or the physician's delegated representative's signature on the electronic data affirmation statement represents the physician's or the physician's delegated representative's acknowledgment that the data is accurate and the data submitter may no longer submit revised data.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)6.
6. If the department discovers data errors after the department's release of the data or if a physician notifies the department of data errors after the department's release of the data, the department shall note the data errors as caveats to the completed datasets.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)7.
7. The department shall include a comment file with each of the physician databases. Physicians desiring to comment on data they submit shall submit their comments in a standard electronic word processing format. Comments shall be limited to a maximum of 1000 words. All comments shall be submitted with the electronic data affirmation statement no later than the 15th calendar day following the physician's receipt of the data profile.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)8.
8. The department may randomly or for cause audit physician-submitted data to verify the reliability and validity of the data.
DHS 120.14(1)(c)9.
9. The department may grant an extension for up to 15 calendar days beyond the 15 calendar days specified in
subd. 4. b. if the physician adequately justifies to the department the physician's need for additional time. In this subdivision, “adequate justification" means a delay due to a strike, fire, natural disaster or catastrophic computer failure.
DHS 120.14(1)(d)
(d)
Data adjustment methods. The department may use any of the following factors for adjusting the physician office data: age; gender; physician specialty; patient zip code; patient diagnosis; procedure; payer category, as appropriate; and other factors, as appropriate. The number and selection of factors the department uses to adjust the data shall depend on the topic under study. The department shall publish in all public reports of the outpatient data the factors used in risk adjustment or the questions and analysis criteria posed to a vendor utilizing proprietary software for a risk adjustment tool. The department shall seek the expertise of technical advisory panels that include physician members, in the regular review of risk adjustment methods and tools. The department shall report at least annually to the board on health care information on the evaluation of risk adjustment tools and the state-of-the-art.
DHS 120.14(1)(e)1.1. Physicians practicing anytime during calendar year 1998 and submitting claims electronically to any payer shall continue to submit their practice data to the department electronically.
DHS 120.14(1)(e)2.
2. Physicians beginning practice in Wisconsin after calendar year 1998 who have the capacity to submit claims data electronically as evidenced by electronic submission to payers shall submit data to the department electronically.
DHS 120.14(1)(e)3.a.a. The department may grant up to four 6-month exceptions to the requirements in
subd. 1. or
2. to physician practices that request an exception to the submission requirements and submit an affidavit as evidence of lost capacity to submit data electronically.