To be eligible for DSH payments a hospital must have at least two (2) obstetricians with staff privileges at the hospital who have agreed to provide obstetric services to individuals entitled to such services under the State 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 non-emergency obstetric procedures. However, the obstetric criteria above do not apply to hospitals in which the inpatients are predominantly individuals under eighteen (18) years of age or to hospitals that did not offer non- emergency obstetric services as of December 21, 1987.
The hospital must also have a MaineCare utilization rate of at least one percent (1%). Acute care hospitals must also meet additional requirements as described below.
The hospital must also either a) have a MaineCare inpatient utilization rate at least one (1) standard deviation above the mean MaineCare inpatient utilization rate for hospitals receiving MaineCare payments in the state), or b) have a low-income inpatient utilization rate exceeding twenty-five percent (25%).
For purposes of determining whether a hospital is a disproportionate share hospital in a Payment Year the Department will use data from the hospital's Medicare Interim Cost Report for the same period to apply the standard deviation test. Interim Cost Settlement Reports for the specified payment year must be issued by the Department for all acute care hospitals in order for DSH to be calculated by the Department.
Subject to the CMS IMD Cap described below and to the extent allowed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the DSH adjustment will be one hundred percent (100%) of the actual uncompensated cost, as calculated using Medicare Cost Report and GAAP principles, of:
CMS places a limit on the amount of DSH payment that may be made to IMDs (IMD cap). If the Department determines that aggregate payments to IMDs, as calculated above, would exceed the CMS IMD cap, payments will be made to State-owned facilities first. Remaining IMD DSH payments will be allocated among the DSH eligible hospitals based on their relative share of applicable DSH payments absent the federal or state cap.
CMS places a limit on the amount of DSH payment that may be made to a single hospital. If approved by CMS, if the Department or CMS determine that payments to a hospital would exceed that cap, the overage shall be redistributed as follows:
If any state-owned hospital has not reached its DSH cap it will receive DSH payments to the extent funds are available up to the limit of its hospital- specific cap. Remaining IMD DSH funds will be allocated among the DSH eligible hospitals based on their relative share of applicable DSH payments absent the federal or state cap.The "relative share" is calculated as follows: calculate the fraction, the numerator of which is one hundred percent (100%) of actual uncompensated cost of a non- state owned IMD, the denominator of which is the total of one hundred percent (100%) of actual uncompensated cost for all non-state owned IMDs. That fraction is then multiplied by the remaining available for IMD DSH payments, as described above, to give the relative share for each non-state-owned IMD.
For example:
Hospitals X, Y and Z are all eligible for DSH. MaineCare days for X equals five thousand (5,000); Y equals ten thousand (10,000) and Z equals fifteen thousand (15,000). The resulting total MaineCare days for DSH eligible hospitals would be thirty thousand (30,000) (5,000+10,000+15,000). Hospital X's DSH allocation percentage would be sixteen and seven tenths percent (16.7%) (5,000/30,000). Hospital X would get sixteen thousand seven hundred dollars ($16,700) ($100,000 times 16.7%) in DSH payments related to utilization.
This standard deviation related DSH allocation percentage for each eligible acute care hospital will be multiplied by one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) to determine each hospital's share of the DSH payments.
For example:
Assume the same three hospitals, X, Y and Z, are all eligible for DSH.
Respectively, their utilization rates are six (6), seven (7) and eight (8) percentage points above the mean MUR plus one (1) standard deviation. The resulting total percentage points above the mean for all hospitals would be twenty-one (21) (6+7+8). Hospital X's DSH allocation percentage would be twenty-eight and fifty-seven hundredths (28.57%) (6/21). If fifty percent (50%) of the available DSH pool is one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), then Hospital X would get twenty eight thousand five hundred and seventy dollars ($28,570) ($100,000 times 28.57%) in DSH payments related to distance above one (1) standard deviation above the mean.
After final settlement is complete for all hospitals in a category (i.e., acute care or psychiatric) hospitals within the category are assessed for eligibility for DSH payments. However, state psychiatric hospitals only may be paid estimated DSH prospectively if they are expected to be found eligible.
C.M.R. 10, 144, ch. 101, ch. III, 144-101-III-45, subsec. 144-101-III-45.15