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A party dissatisfied with an initial Part B determination may appeal the decision in writing. There are several appeal levels and each level must be processed before proceeding to the next level.

On this page: Appeals Process | Forms | Mailing Addresses | Articles

Appeals Process

After receiving the initial determination, there are five levels in the appeals process. Each level has procedural steps the appellant must take before appealing to the next level. If the appellant meets the procedural steps at a specific level, the appellant is then afforded the right to appeal any determination or decision to the next level in the process. The appellant may exercise the right to appeal any determination or decision to the next higher level, until appeal rights are exhausted.

Although there are five distinct levels in the Medicare Part B appeals process, the redetermination, the first level, is the only level performed by the Medicare Part B contractor. If an appellant is dissatisfied with this first level of appeal, a request must be sent to the Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC) by the appellant. If the appellant is dissatisfied with this second level, the appellant can request a hearing from the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing , level 3. To do so, a request must be made in writing to the Office of Medicare Hearings and Appeals (OMHA). If the decision is still dissatisfactory, the appellant may request a review within the Departmental Appeals Board. If an appellant has exhausted these first four levels, the appellant may appeal to the Federal courts, provided the appellant satisfies the requirements for obtaining judicial redetermination.

In the chart below is the administrative appeals process. Each level of appeal must be exhausted before moving to the next level.

CHART 1 - The Medicare Part B Fee-for-Service Appeals Process:

Appeal Level Time Limit For Filing Request Monetary Threshold To Be Met
1. Redetermination (Submit request to the Part B contractor) 120 days from date of receipt of the notice of the initial determination (allow an additional 5 days for mail delivery) None
2. Reconsideration (Submit request to the QIC) 180 days from date of receipt of the redetermination (allow an additional 5 days for mail delivery) None
3. Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Hearing 60 days from the date of receipt of the reconsideration At least $120 remains in controversy
4. Departmental Appeals Board (DAB) Review 60 days from the date of receipt of the ALJ hearing decision None
5. Federal Court Review 60 days from date of receipt of DAB decision or declination of review by DAB At least $1,180 remains in controversy

 

Forms

1st level of appeal - Redetermination Form: http://www.cms.hhs.gov/cmsforms/downloads/cms20027.pdf

2nd level of appeal - Reconsideration Form: http://www.cms.hhs.gov/cmsforms/downloads/cms20033.pdf

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Mailing Addresses - New England

Redetermination

Medicare Appeals
P.O. Box 1000
Hingham, MA 02044-1000

 

Overpayment Redetermination (use this address if you are appealing an overpayment)

Medicare Appeals
P.O. Box 9200
Hingham, MA 02044

 

Reconsideration

First Coast Service Options, Inc.
QIC Part B North Reconsiderations
P.O. Box 45208
Jacksonville, FL 32232-5208

 

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Articles

NHIC, Corp.'s (NHIC) strategy has been developed to achieve the goal of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) program to assure that the Medicare program makes payments only for covered, correctly coded services and to reduce payment error rate. Moreover, our strategy is to use education, proactively and retroactively, as the primary corrective action whenever possible.

These articles are intended to assist providers with the above purposes in mind.

Appeals/Redetermination Articles

 

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08/14/2008

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