The History of the NUBC
The National Uniform Billing
Committee (NUBC) was brought together by the American Hospital
Association (AHA) in 1975 and it includes the participation of all
the major national provider and payer organizations. The NUBC was
formed to develop a single billing form and standard data set that
could be used nationwide by institutional providers and payers for
handling health care claims.
It wasn't until 1982, after many
years of debate and discussion on very technical data and policy
issues, that the NUBC voted to accept the UB-82 and its associated
data manual for implementation as a national uniform bill. Each of
the represented organizations, including Medicare, expressed their
support of the UB-82 data set. This came after several earlier
versions of a uniform bill were developed and implemented with
varying degrees of success.
Before the formation of the NUBC,
the AHA had worked closely with the Healthcare Financial
Management Association and the federal government to develop a
uniform hospital bill. Between 1968 and 1972, thirteen different
form designs were developed and discarded as unsatisfactory. The
fourteenth version was field tested in Georgia in 1973, modified
again, and introduced for a second trial in Wyoming. The Health
Care Financing Administration (HCFA) agreed to participate in a
five state pilot test of this latest version, known as the
UB-16-78. An independent consultant evaluated this pilot project
against the uniform bill used in New York State the UBF-1. Because
of this evaluation and the subsequent deliberations of the NUBC,
the UB-82 emerged as the uniform bill endorsed by the members of
the NUBC. The UB-82 format and data specifications were finalized
at the May 1982 NUBC meeting. The focus then shifted to the state
level for implementation of the UB-82. Consequently, State Uniform
Billing Committees (SUBC's) were created to handle state
implementation and to disseminate state UB-82 manuals, which
reflect the national guidelines and unique state billing
requirements. Virtually all states adopted the use of the UB-82
data set specifications.
Data Specifications
In determining the data to be
included, the NUBC strives to balance the need for the information
against the burden of providing that information. In essence it
applies the administrative simplification principles mentioned in
the recently enacted Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996. Data elements identified as necessary
for claims processing are, in most cases, assigned designated
spaces on the form. The designated spaces are referred to as Form
Locators and each one has a unique number. Other elements that are
occasionally needed are incorporated into general fields that
utilize assigned codes, codes and dates, and codes and amounts.
This built-in flexibility of the data set is intended to promote
the greatest use of the data set and to eliminate the need for
attachments to the billing form. The data specifications manual
seeks to identify the national requirements for preparing
Medicare, Medicaid, OCHAMPUS, BCBS, and commercial insurance
claims.
When the NUBC established the UB-82
data set design and specifications, it also imposed an eight-year
moratorium on changes to the structure of the data set design. In
light of the expiration of the moratorium, the NUBC embarked on a
process to evaluate how well the UB-82 data set performed. After
numerous state surveys, the NUBC sought to implement improvements
to the UB-82 design. Consequently, the UB-92 was created,
incorporating the best of the UB-82 along with other changes that
further improve on the previous data set design. These
improvements further reduce the need for attachments. Today the
UB-92 is the "de facto" institutional claim standard.
Today, more than 98% of hospital claims are submitted
electronically to the Medicare program. Overall, more that 80% of
all institutional claims are submitted electronically.
Role of the NUBC
With the data set operational, one
of the NUBC's major roles is to maintain the integrity of the
UB-92 data set. In addition, the NUBC serves as the forum for
discussions that lead to mutually agreed data elements for the
claim as well as the data elements for other claim related
transactions.
Over the years, the NUBC has
realized that the UB data set has become more than a billing
instrument. It is also used by many others, including public
health and health researchers, as a tool to gauge the delivery of
health care services to patients. Therefore, the data set has
broad policy implications for shaping the future of our health
delivery system. Recently, the NUBC increased it membership to
include the public health sector as well as the electronic
standards development organizations. The final regulations from
the Health Insurance Portability Act of 1996 will include a
prominent role for the NUBC. The role will be that of helping to
define the data content associated with each of the electronic
transactions mentioned in the legislation.
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