Transcription of Data Services for Commissioners
1 1 data Services for Commissioners - Commissioner Assignment Method Flow Chart 2015 /16: Accompanying Guidance and Reference Tables 2 3 data Services for Commissioners Commissioner Assignment Method Flow Chart 2015 /16: Accompanying Guidance and Reference Tables Version number: 11 First published: 7 December 2015 Prepared by: DSfC Programme data Development Team Classification: OFFICIAL The National Health Service Commissioning Board was established on 1 October 2012 as an executive non-departmental public body. Since 1 April 2013, the National Health Service Commissioning Board has used the name NHS England for operational purposes. 4 Contents Contents .. 4 1 Document Purpose .. 5 2 Aligned Flow Chart Version and Status.
2 5 3 Document Audience .. 5 4 Commissioner Assignment Method Objective .. 5 5 CDS Scope .. 6 6 When to Assign Commissioner Code .. 6 7 Determining Usual Place of Residence .. 8 8 Flow Chart Methodology .. 9 9 Flowchart Key .. 10 10 Definitions of Assigned Commissioners .. 10 11 Flow Chart Annotations .. 20 12 Appendix A - NHS England Direct Commissioning Framework Responsibilities matrix 2015 /16 .. 51 13 Appendix B Specialised and Highly-Specialised Service Line Codes .. 55 14 Appendix C - Specialised Services Cross Border Flows within the UK .. 69 15 Appendix D Mapping Table to Identify Secondary Dental Activity .. 76 16 Appendix E Identification of Correct Commissioning Organisation for Infertility Care .. 82 17 Appendix F Mapping Table of Detention Centre Addresses and Regional Geography Commissioners Responsible for Paying for Treatment for Referrals from that Detention Centre.
3 84 18 Appendix G Glossary .. 102 19 Appendix H Pseudo Postcodes for EU Member States and Other States with Similar Arrangements (starred) .. 103 20 Appendix I CAM Flow Chart .. 104 5 1 Document Purpose This document provides further clarification and supporting information for the Commissioner Assignment Method flow chart. 2 Aligned Flow Chart Version and Status This guidance relates to the version of the flow chart that is designed around the commissioning business rules for the 2015 /16 financial year (flow chart file name [Commissioner Assignment Method ] and Appendix I). 3 Document Audience This document is designed to support those organisations (hereafter referred to as providers ) who derive and provide commissioner code data within commissioning datasets.
4 These organisations may be healthcare providers ( acute or mental health trusts, independent sector hospitals) or commissioning support organisation ( the HSCIC and its data Services for Commissioners , Regional Offices (DSCROs)). 4 Commissioner Assignment Method Objective The Commissioner Assignment Method, builds upon, complements and clarifies the August 2013 Who Pays? Determining Responsibility for Payment to Providers guidance published by NHS England in August 20131. The Commissioner Assignment Method flow chart is designed to assist English secondary care providers of healthcare to allocate the correct commissioner code within specified commissioning datasets (CDS) for the healthcare activities they provide. The commissioner code is recorded within the CDS field ORGANISATION CODE (CODE OF COMMISSIONER) within the Service Agreement Details data group2.
5 The commissioner code describes which commissioning organisation has payment responsibility, differentiating activity paid for by NHS England (including subdivisions thereof), Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) Commissioners and other Commissioners as appropriate. It embodies the explicit commissioning hierarchy for CCG and NHS England commissioned Services as described in the Gateway Reference Letter to NHS England Area Teams Secondary Dental Care (Gateway Reference No. 00781), dated 20 November 20133. SecondarydentalcareAFHJ11 November2013 (commissioning hierarchy gateway letter).pdf 1 2 (code_of_commissioner) 3 *D2SG-- 6 This shows the order of precedence for the different NHS England commissioned Services , where more than one apply for a particular patient ( member of the armed forces receiving specialised care).
6 5 CDS Scope The following CDS types are within the scope of the Commissioner Assignment Method flow chart: CDS Name 010 Accident & Emergency Attendances 020 Outpatient Appointments 120 Admitted Patient Care Finished Birth Episodes 130 Admitted Patient Care Finished General Episodes 140 Admitted Patient Care Finished Delivery Episodes 150 Admitted Patient Care Other Birth Events 160 Admitted Patient Care Other Delivery Events 180 Admitted Patient Care Unfinished Birth Episodes 190 Admitted Patient Care Unfinished General Episodes 200 Admitted Patient Care Unfinished Delivery Episodes 6 When to Assign Commissioner Code The Commissioner Assignment Method should be applied, based on CDS data content, at the following dates for the described CDS types.
7 CDS Type Date 010 (Accident & Emergency Attendances) Arrival Date At Accident and Emergency Department 020 (Outpatients) Appointment Date 120 (Admitted Patient Care Finished Birth Episodes) DISCHARGE DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 130 (Admitted Patient Care Finished General Episodes) DISCHARGE DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 140 (Admitted Patient Care Finished DISCHARGE DATE (HOSPITAL 7 CDS Type Date Delivery Episodes PROVIDER SPELL) 150 (Admitted Patient Care Other Birth Events) DISCHARGE DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 160 (Admitted Patient Care Other Delivery Events) DISCHARGE DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 180 (Admitted Patient Care Unfinished Birth Episodes) START DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 190 (Admitted Patient Care Unfinished General Episodes) START DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 200 (Admitted Patient Care Unfinished Delivery Episodes START DATE (HOSPITAL PROVIDER SPELL) 8 7 Determining Usual Place of Residence This paper assumes the same rules for deciding usual place of residence of a patient, as described in Annex B in the August 2013 Who Pays?))
8 Determining Responsibility for Payment to Providers guidance. The guidance therein is also maintained for determining the residency status of asylum seekers, patients residing in approved premises, bail accommodation, patients who move during treatment, people taken ill abroad, students and boarding school pupils and persons detained under the Mental Health Act (1983). Providers should also ensure for any patients with a No Fixed Abode postcode (ZZ99 3VZ) or Address Not Known postcode (ZZ99 3WZ), or England UK - not specified (Z99 3CZ) that they identify a usual place of residence based upon the address of the main site of the provider delivering the care and use this address when determining commissioning payment responsibilities.
9 Providers should not, however, transmit the postcode of the main site of the provider delivering the care, in the CDS itself for any patients who have no fixed abode as the ZZ99 3VZ postcode value may need to be used to differentiate this population group within health outcomes and equalities analyses. Providers should endeavour to record the full address and postcode for patients from the UK home countries (Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland). Providers should only use the pseudo postcodes for these countries (ZZ99 3GZ Wales; ZZ99 1WZ Scotland; ZZ99 2WZ Northern Ireland) if it is impossible to determine the full address and postcode for a patient. Where a patient s usual place of residence is overseas providers should record the full address and use the relevant pseudo postcode to indicate the country of usual residence.
10 The pseudo post code list is maintained by the Office of National Statistics (ONS) as part of the ONS NHS Postcode Directory and can be found at the following HSCIC website: Serving members of the armed forces will be registered with a Defence Medical Services (DMS) primary care practice. These are located within the UK or overseas. Registration details are held on the Ministry of Defence s (MoD) health information system DMICP (Defence Medical Information Capability Programme). DMICP is integrated to the Patient Demographic Service on the Spine and the Spine s demographic data for armed forces personnel are civilianised by this integration. This is for security reasons as it prevents serving members of the armed forces being easily identifiable whilst in hospital.