|
|
 |

Disability Compensation | Services reduce claims backlogs and seek outreach to new eligible disabled retirees
CRSC Processing Turning Corner
On Aug. 26, MOAA and The Military Coalition hosted
representatives from Army, Navy, and Air Force Combat-Related
Special Compensation (CRSC) review boards and the Defense Finance
Accounting Service (DFAS) to discuss progress and challenges on CRSC
claims processing. We came away gratified by these groups’ sincere
efforts to overcome start-up obstacles, reduce the claims backlogs,
and increase responsiveness to the needs of disabled retirees.
Air Force and Navy officials reported that they had reduced their
backlogs of unprocessed claims to less than 200 each. The Army,
which with almost 30,000 CRSC applications had more than the other
services combined, still had a backlog of more than 8,000 claims to
be processed.
However, Army officials reported that they had achieved a
breakthrough agreement with the VA that should dramatically expedite
the Army’s receipt of archived information from the VA—the most
time-consuming part of the process for older retirees. The Army
expects this will have a substantial impact in reducing the backlog
in the coming months.
The service and finance representatives engaged in a productive
discussion of remaining problem areas, along with the reasons for
the problems and how they might be resolved. These included
individual unemployability payments for 100-percent disabled
retirees, DFAS computer reprogramming challenges, and implementation
alternatives for the annual “open season” choice between CRSC and
concurrent receipt for retirees eligible for both.
The services also shared some important tips for a successful
application:
- Documentation is key—applicants need to show, via official
documentation, how a disability was incurred. Important documents
include DD Form 214, complete VA ratings decisions, and pertinent
medical records.
- Linkage of the disability to a discrete combat- or
operations-related incident is extremely important—e.g., medical
reports or citations showing a gunshot wound was sustained during
combat operations or combat training or that a fighter pilot’s back
injury can be traced to a specific in-flight ejection.
- Repetitive exposure claims (hearing loss, degenerative
conditions, etcetera) are harder to approve. The applicant must show
a clear pattern of the disability’s onset during active service, or
at the very least during the exit physical or initial VA medical
exam.
- Guard and Reserve retirees must be eligible to receive retired
pay (i.e., be at least age 60) to be eligible for CRSC payments.
Since the purpose of CRSC, in effect, is to restore lost retired pay
value that has been offset by VA disability compensation, there’s no
value to restore if there’s no lost retired pay.
- Don’t hesitate to reapply if your application is not approved
and you later obtain additional documentation.
The service representatives stressed that they review each case
on an individual basis and seek to approve applications whenever
they can justify a preponderance of evidence in favor of the award.
But they only can make those determinations based on specific
documentation; they can’t just accept the applicant’s assertion.
Service officials expected an additional surge of CRSC applications
this year, after eligibility was expanded to include Guard and
Reserve members with 20 qualifying years of service (as opposed to
7,200 retirement points) and to cover combat- or operations-related
disability ratings below 50 percent. They indicated surprise—and
disappointment—that there has been no such surge, because that means
thousands of eligible disabled retirees aren’t getting earned CRSC
payments.
They asked for MOAA’s help in conducting an outreach program to
locate potential eligibles and urge them to apply. This would be a
great community service project for MOAA chapters and others who are
making personal visits to local nursing homes, putting notices in
local media, or just spreading the word to friends, neighbors, and
relatives.
While some issues remain to be hammered out, all attendees were
impressed by the obvious sincerity of the service and finance
efforts to do the right thing by disabled retirees. They share our
frustrations at initial hurdles but believe the program is now a
fair and increasingly efficient one.
CRSC application forms are available online at:
www.dior.whs.mil/forms/dd2860t.pdf.
Legislation | MOAA discusses issues with all interested legislators, parties.
Parties Seek Association Inputs
At the invitation of Rep. Melissa Hart (R-Pa.), military and
veterans’ organizations attended a meeting of the Republican
National Committee (RNC) Platform Coordinating Committee to address
their issues of concern. MOAA and nine other military and veterans’
organizations attended the meeting.
MOAA noted that ending the Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) age-62
benefit reduction remains our top issue and urged support for the
House SBP provision in the FY 2005 Defense Authorization Bill (H.R.
4200). The House plan would eliminate the age-62 SBP annuity
reduction in 31/2 years and offer a fair open-season option for new
enrollees. MOAA also urged support for the Senate provision on
concurrent receipt that would restore full retired pay effective
January 2005 for disabled retirees with 100-percent VA ratings.
Additionally, we asked that the platform support a force structure
that better meets today’s operations-tempo of increased deployments
for active duty members and recalled Guard and Reserve forces.
Further, benefits and compensation for reserve component members
must be upgraded to reflect the dramatically increased demands being
imposed upon them and their families. More specifically, Guard and
Reserve forces need reliable year-round medical coverage as proposed
in the Senate version of the FY 2005 Defense Authorization Act. We
also pressed for increased TRICARE Standard reimbursement rates and
other TRICARE improvements.
Other issues raised by one or more of the association
representatives included:
- the need to restore full military pay comparability, especially
for senior enlisted ranks;
- a stronger push to establish mandatory funding for VA health care;
- concerns about the use of extended deployments and stop-loss as “a
back door draft” covering only those who already have completed
their voluntary periods of service;
- providing a separate platform plank for veterans’ and military
personnel issues, distinct from broader national security concerns;
and
- sensitivity to the needs of disabled veterans, particularly the
catastrophically disabled.
Earlier, MOAA, along with a group of associations covering roughly
the same issues, had participated in a conference call meeting with
the House Democratic leadership. That meeting was aimed at making
sure the minority leadership fully understood the significant issues
of concern to military and veterans’ associations.
Our reports of such meetings sometimes generate member input voicing
suspicions that this means we’re siding with whatever party hosted
the most recent meeting. On the contrary, MOAA conducts itself in a
strictly nonpartisan manner.
We are invited to leadership meetings of each party and sometimes
solicit meetings. We want to meet with both, and we provide our
legislative priorities to any legislators—House or Senate,
Republican or Democrat—who are willing to listen. And we support
bills offered by members of either party that are consistent with MOAA’s legislative objectives.
Members who note that articles in a “Washington Scene” column seem
to focus on legislators of one party or the other shouldn’t worry
that that reflects a partisan bias on MOAA’s part. It’s merely a
coincidence in the process of reporting the news that happened that
particular month. If you go back a few issues, you’ll find articles
that focus on the efforts of members of the other party.
Retired Pay | September court date raises visibility of former-spouse law.
USFSPA Lawsuit Hearing Set
In April 2004, an organization called USFSPA (Uniformed Services
Former Spouse Protection Act) Litigation Support Group (ULSG) filed
a lawsuit on behalf of 58 servicemembers and retirees against the
secretary of defense, alleging that the USFSPA (which allows state
courts to divide military retired pay in divorce settlements) isn’t
applied fairly and denies servicemembers constitutional equal
protection and due process rights.
Among other things, the ULSG suit argues that the former-spouse law
violates constitutional protections, because the law was applied
retroactively to members who entered the service before the
enactment of the law in 1982—and these servicemembers never
envisioned their retired pay being divided with their former
spouses. The law sprang from a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in
1981 (McCarty v. McCarty) that military retired pay could not be
divided as marital property unless Congress passed a law expressly
allowing this. The following year, Congress enacted the USFSPA.
The ULSG lawsuit also alleges that the law doesn’t provide equal
protection, because state courts have applied it in different ways—in some cases, awarding excessive disbursements of retired pay,
improperly including disability compensation, or requiring payments
before the member actually retires.
In July, government lawyers filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit,
arguing that a legal doctrine derived from two Supreme Court cases—called the Rooker-Feldman doctrine—prevents a federal court from
exercising its jurisdiction over a claim that, if successful, would
nullify a final state court judgment. The government lawyers also
rejected the ULSG claims of due process and equal protection
violations, urging dismissal on the ground that the ULSG has no
standing to present individuals’ claims because it doesn’t state who
the members of ULSG are or how the ULSG has been harmed by the
purported unconstitutionality of the USFSPA.
ULSG subsequently offered the court a 49-page rebuttal to the
government’s motion. At press time, a hearing on the government’s
motion to dismiss the case was scheduled for Sept. 10 in the federal
court in Alexandria, Va.
MOAA has pushed for years to reform USFSPA, with little success so
far. Legislators have been reluctant to take this issue on because
emotions run high among advocates for both retirees and former
spouses, and each side can cite its own examples of egregious
behavior. Congress’ reluctance to take sides on further legislation
has stymied progress to date, but we still think the legislative
route offers the best chance of future success. We think the
historic gender-oriented views of the former-spouse issue are
evolving as more and more female retirees have become subject to
USFSPA.
While most experts think historical court precedents give the
lawsuit slim chances of success, MOAA thinks it will at least give
the former-spouse issue much-needed visibility.
To read more about USFSPA, the particulars of the ULSG lawsuit, and
the positions of the parties to the suit, visit MOAA’s Web Base,
www.MOAA.org/legislative/USFSPA.
Guard/Reserve | Coalition raises
utilization equity, readiness issues.
House Staff Hears TMC Concerns
MOAA’s July 30 “Legislative Update” highlighted The Military
Coalition’s (TMC’s) concerns about certain proposals in the House-
and Senate-passed versions of the FY 2005 Defense Authorization Act
governing utilization of Guard and Reserve members. (See
www.themilitarycoalition.org/library/04letters/26jul04hunter.pdf.)
MOAA is grateful that the House Armed Services Committee staff set
up a late-August meeting to give members of TMC’s Guard and Reserve
Committee an opportunity to discuss those concerns in more detail.
TMC representatives reiterated their understanding of the need for
additional flexibility in some areas. But they stressed that the
proposed changes appear to go far beyond the current need and urged
the committee to at least hold hearings on longer-term utilization,
retention, and readiness impacts before writing such sweeping
changes into law.
Specifically, TMC is concerned that some of the proposed changes
would:
- make Guard and Reserve units divert essential training time and
resources to operational and other requirements;
- change the rules to make guardmembers perform federal missions
under provisions of law that normally govern state duties, which
would deny them veteran status and cut their compensation; and
- continue to ignore worrisome, fundamental questions about how much
of the active duty mission can be shifted to reserve component
forces without significant retention and readiness consequences.
TMC recognizes the importance of increased reliance on the Guard and
Reserve in the current operational environment but does not think
this immediate requirement justifies continued failure to address
fundamental utilization and readiness implications for the longer
term.
Coalition representatives made the case that the final Defense
Authorization Bill should:
- establish clear “fencing” of resources for essential training
(drill) time, separate from those for operational or other
requirements;
- provide consistent compensation and veteran status rules for all
federal missions performed by guardmembers;
- prescribe reasonable boundaries on DoD’s increased substitution of
Guard and Reserve forces for active duty forces pending a broader
review of the issue; and
- establish an independent commission to examine the broader issues
concerning roles, missions, and utilization of the Guard and Reserve
forces, including the extent to which changes need to be made in
personnel, compensation, and other programs to recognize the
increased demands being placed on the reserve components.
Health Care | Other insurance
pharmacy copayments can be claimed.
TRICARE
Reimburses OHI
On June 1, Express Scripts Inc. (ESI) took over the TRICARE Retail
Pharmacy program. Since that time, some of our members have
experienced problems with reimbursement of copayments for other
health insurance (OHI). If you are a TRICARE beneficiary who has OHI,
you are eligible to have TRICARE reimburse those pharmacy copayments.
You can do this by filing a paper TRICARE claim (DD Form 2642).
Along with the form, you must enclose further documentation—providing a copy of the pharmacy receipt on the pharmacy’s
letterhead or a billing form showing the:
- name of the drug;
- strength (100 mg, 500 mg, etcetera);
- quantity (number of pills or doses);
- cost paid by your OHI;
- amount you paid;
- prescription number and date of fill;
- prescriber’s name or DEA number;
- pharmacy’s name;
- pharmacist’s signature only if the claim is not printed on an
“acceptable format” (pharmacy stamp, letterhead, etcetera). If it
looks like it was printed on a home computer (plain paper), then a
signature is required; and
- beneficiary’s name imprinted on the receipt.
(The days supply (e.g., 30, 90 days) is not explicitly required.
However, if days supplied can’t be determined based on the
information provided, calling the pharmacy, etcetera, the claim will
be rejected.)
If you use a TRICARE network pharmacy, you will be reimbursed the
full copayment in most situations. If you use a non-TRICARE network
pharmacy, you must first meet the annual TRICARE deductibles. After
that, in most circumstances, DoD will refund the copayment amount.
Forms should be sent to:
ESI
P.O. Box 66518
St. Louis, MO 63166-6518
For more information contact:
TRICARE Retail Pharmacy (TRRx): (866) 363-8779 or
http://member.express-scripts.com/dodcustom/home.do.
TRICARE Mail-Order Pharmacy (TMOP): (866) DoD-tmop (363-8667) or
www.tricare.osd.mil/pharmacy/tmop.cfm.
Health Care | Contract changeover has ups and downs.
TRICARE Transition Moves Forward
The TRICARE transition to new TRICARE Next Generation (TNEX)
contracts will be completed Nov. 1, when Humana Military Healthcare
Services takes over Region 6 (Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and
Texas). That change is the last step in consolidating the TRICARE
administration into three regions: North (Health Net Federal
Services), South (Humana Military Healthcare Services), and West (TriWest
Healthcare Alliance Corporation). While the transition has been on
schedule, implementation has had its ups and downs for
beneficiaries.
The contracts are intended to improve the administration of TRICARE
by:
- streamlining TRICARE claims processing to conform to Medicare
requirements;
- facilitating electronic claims processing for under-65 Medicare
users;
- allowing retired TRICARE Prime users to pay enrollment fees by
allotment; and
- instituting a monthly payment option for Prime enrollment fees.
However, the initial transition periods have not run smoothly in all
areas. Beneficiaries have encountered customer service and care
delivery obstacles—some of which the contractors still are working
on.
Customer Service: With each changeover, beneficiaries have called on
the new customer service centers for help on a range of issues such
as enrollment questions, picking a new primary care manager (PCM),
finding a specialist, and understanding the referral and
authorization process. At first, the call volume overwhelmed the
centers. TriWest received more than 17,000 calls a day in some
centers, and hold times averaged well over two minutes. Health Net
and Humana had up to 25,000 calls a day with similar hold-time
experiences.
Calls to customer service centers at TriWest and Health Net have
since dropped to less than 7,000 a day, with hold times within the
30-second TRICARE standard. Humana’s calls remain above 20,000 on
Mondays but taper off to 15,000 later in the week. Beneficiaries
should try to avoid calling during periods of peak volume (Mondays
or right after holidays).
Provider Networks: Most beneficiaries have seen little or no change
in where and how they get their care. However, the transition has
been problematic at some locations where provider networks had to be
rebuilt or expanded.
In the West, Yuma, Ariz.; San Diego and Monterey, Calif.; and
Portland, Ore., experienced significant provider network disruption.
TriWest also had to reassign more than 35,000 Prime beneficiaries to
a new PCM. This has been understandably upsetting for beneficiaries
who had long relationships with their previous primary doctors.
TriWest has worked hard to bring more providers into the networks in
Arizona, California, and Idaho, and now TriWest has more network
providers in Monterey and Yuma than under the previous contract.
In the North region, fewer than 400 beneficiaries had to find a new
PCM. Health Net was able to “buy” the networks of civilian providers
that had been built by previous TRICARE contractors, so virtually
all doctors previously contracted to provide TRICARE services in the
North region will continue to do so.
In the South, Humana already has begun servicing Region 3
(Southeast) and Region 4 (Gulf South) and has retained most of their
provider networks, so most Prime enrollees can remain with their
previous PCMs.
Referrals and Authorizations: Because of delays in the rollout of TRICARE’s new automated Enterprise Wide Referral and Authorization
System, the contractors unexpectedly have had to manually process
all referrals and authorizations. Predictably, referrals backed up
quickly and caused headaches for providers, patients, and
contractors.
TriWest, Health Net, and Humana have hired 250 additional people to
handle this increased workload. All regions cleared their backlogs
within a few weeks, but not without considerable consternation for
providers and beneficiaries. At press time, the manual process
seemed to be working fairly well. Urgent referrals were being
handled within one day and most routine referrals within three days.
The government also has established a “tiger team” to address the
automation issues needed to streamline benefit delivery to TRICARE
beneficiaries. MOAA will track the progress of this effort and
report developments as they occur.
Hopefully, the two remaining contract transitions, Regions 7 and 8
(Central Region) and Region 6 (Southwest), will go more smoothly as
the contractors apply their recent experiences to these new
challenges. TriWest already serves the Central Region—meaning that
current provider networks will continue in place.
Humana, which will take over Region 6 from Health Net Nov. 1, will
use its preexisting commercial provider networks as the primary
source of civilian providers. The contractor reports that its
provider networks will provide access to a TRICARE provider for 99
percent of beneficiaries.
MOAA will continue to monitor the transitions and make
recommendations as needed to meet beneficiaries’ needs.
|