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Under section 4106 of the Affordable Care Act, the list of United States Preventive Services

States may only claim the one percentage point FMAP increase on services that adhere to the USPSTF grade A and B recommendations on age, gender, periodicity and other criteria as indicated in the summary of recommendations. For instances where the USPSTF grade A and B recommendations have expanded age, gender or periodicity levels due to clinical considerations, practitioners should document in the patient's medical record the necessity for exceeding the grade A and B recommendations, and states may claim the one percentage point FMAP increase. When billing for these services, payers may want to use modifier 33 to identify services that meet the criteria for the USPSTF grade A and B recommendations. Pursuant to page 2 of State Medical Director (SMD) letter #13-002, states should have a financial monitoring procedure in place to ensure proper claiming for federal match.

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Date
FAQ ID
91541
FAQ Question
Under section 4106 of the Affordable Care Act, the list of United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) preventive services describes services as being available for persons based on their sex and age range. For example: Abdominal aortic aneurysm screening (men): The USPSTF recommends one-time screening for abdominal aortic aneurysm by ultrasonography in men ages 65 to 75 years who have ever smoked. Are states required to follow the USPSTF grade A and B recommendations on age, gender and smoking status in order to claim the one percentage point federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP) increase for a particular service?Since some recommendations have start and stop ages, are states required to perform age edits on each service for each individual?