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These
guidelines are for use in applying the established Criteria for
Designation of Medically Underserved Areas (MUAs) and Populations
(MUPs), based on the Index of Medical Underservice (IMU), published
in the Federal Register on October 15, 1976, and in submitting
requests for exceptional MUP designations based on the provisions
of Public Law 99-280, enacted in 1986.
The
three methods for designation of MUAs or MUPs are as follows:
I.
MUA Designation
This
involves application of the Index of Medical Underservice (IMU)
to data on a service area to obtain a score for the area. The IMU
scale is from 0 to 100, where 0 represents completely underserved
and 100 represents best served or least underserved. Under the established
criteria, each service area found to have an IMU of 62.0 or less
qualifies for designation as an MUA.
The
IMU involves four variables - ratio of primary medical care physicians
per 1,000 population, infant mortality rate, percentage of the population
with incomes below the poverty level, and percentage of the population
age 65 or over. The value of each of these variables for the service
area is converted to a weighted value, according to established
criteria. The four values are summed to obtain the area's IMU score.
The
MUA designation process therefore requires the following information:
(1)
Definition of the service area being requested for designation.
These may be defined in terms of:
(a)
a whole county (in non-metropolitan areas);
(b)
groups of contiguous counties, minor civil divisions (MCDs), or
census county divisions (CCDs) in non-metropolitan areas, with
population centers within 30 minutes travel time of each other;
(c)
in metropolitan areas, a group of census tracts (C.T.s) which
represent a neighborhood due to homogeneous socioeconomic and
demographic characteristics.
In
addition, for non-single-county service areas, the rationale for
the selection of a particular service area definition, in terms
of market patterns or composition of population, should be presented.
Designation requests should also include a map showing the boundaries
of the service area involved and the location of resources within
this area.
(2)
The latest available data on:
(a)
the resident civilian, non-institutional population of the service
area (aggregated from individual county, MCD/CCD or C.T. population
data)
(b)
the percent of the service area's population with incomes below
the poverty level
(c)
the percent of the service area's population age 65 and over
(d)
the infant mortality rate (IMR) for the service area, or for the
county or subcounty area which includes it. The latest five-year
average should be used to ensure statistical significance. Subcounty
IMRs should be used only if they involve at least 4000 births
over a five-year period. (If the service area includes portions
of two or more counties, and only county-level infant mortality
data is available, the different county rates should be weighted
according to the fraction of the service area's population residing
in each.)
(e)
the current number of full-time-equivalent (FTE) primary care
physicians providing patient care in the service area, and their
locations of practice. Patient care includes seeing patients in
the office, on hospital rounds and in other settings, and activities
such as laboratory tests and X-rays and consulting with other
physicians. To develop a comprehensive list of primary care physicians
in an area, an applicant should check State and local physician
licensure lists, State and local medical society directories,
local hospital admitting physician listings, Medicaid and Medicare
provider lists, and the local yellow pages.
(3)
The computed ratio of FTE primary care physicians per thousand population
for the service area (from items 2a and 2e above).
(4) The IMU
for the service area is then computed from the above data using
the attached conversion Tables V1-V4, which translate the values
of each of the four indicators (2b, 2c, 2d, and 3) into a score.
The IMU is the sum of the four scores. (Tables V1-V4 are reprinted
from earlier Federal Register publications.)
II.
MUP Designation, using IMU
This
involves application of the Index of Medical Underservice (IMU)
to data on an underserved population group within an area of residence
to obtain a score for the population group. Population groups requested
for MUP designation should be those with economic barriers (low-income
or Medicaid-eligible populations), or cultural and/or linguistic
access barriers to primary medical care services.
This
MUP process involves assembling the same data elements and carrying
out the same computational steps as stated for MUAs in section I
above. The population is now the population of the requested group
within the area rather than the total resident civilian population
of the area. The number of FTE primary care physicians would include
only those serving the requested population group. Again, the sample
survey on page 8 may be used as a guide for this data collection.
The ratio of the FTE primary care physicians serving the
population group per 1,000 persons in the group is used in determining
weighted value V4. The weighted value for poverty (V1) is to be
based on the percent of population with incomes at or below 100
percent of the poverty level in the area of residence for the population
group. The weighted values for percent of population age 65 and
over (V2) and the infant mortality rate (V3) would be those for
the requested segment of the population in the area of residence,
if available and statistically significant; otherwise, these variables
for the total resident civilian population in the area should be
used. If the total of weighted values V1 - V4 is 62.0 or less, the
population group qualifies for designation as an IMU-based MUP.
Tables
V1 - V4 for Determining Weighted Values
TABLE
V1
PERCENTAGE
OF POPULATION BELOW POVERTY LEVEL
In
the left column find the range which includes the percentage of
population below the poverty level for the area being examined.
The corresponding weighted value found opposite in the right column,
should be used in the formula for determining the IMU.
| Percent
Below Poverty |
Weighted
Value V1 |
TABLE V2
PERCENTAGE
OF POPULATION AGE 65 AND OVER
In
the left column find the range which includes the percentage of
population age 65 and over for the area being examined. The corresponding
weighted value, found opposite in the right column, should be
used in the formula for determining the IMU.
| Percent
Age 65 and Over |
Weighted
Value V2 |
| 20.2 |
| 20.1 |
| 19.9 |
| 19.8 |
| 19.6 |
| 19.4 |
| 19.1 |
| 18.9 |
| 18.7 |
| 17.8 |
| 16.1 |
| 14.4 |
| 12.8 |
| 11.1 |
| 9.8 |
| 8.9 |
| 8.0 |
| 7.0 |
| 6.1 |
| 5.1 |
| 4.0 |
| 2.8 |
| 1.7 |
| 0.6 |
| 0 |
TABLE V3
INFANT
MORTALITY RATE
In
the left column find the range which includes the infant mortality
rate for the area being examined or the area in which it lies.
The corresponding weighted value, found opposite in the right.
TABLE
V4
RATIO
OF PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS PER 1,000 POPULATION
In
the left column find the range which includes the ratio of primary
care physicians per 1,000 population for the area being examined.
The corresponding weighted value found opposite in the right column,
should be used in the formula for determining the IMU.
III.
Exceptional MUP designations
Under
the provisions of Public law 99-280, enacted in 1986, a population
group which does not meet the established criteria of an IMU less
than 62.0 can nevertheless be considered for designation if "unusual
local conditions which are a barrier to access to or the availability
of personal health services" exist and are documented, and
if such a designation is recommended by the chief executive officer
and local officials of the State where the requested population
resides.
Requests
for designation under these exceptional procedures should describe
in detail the unusual local conditions/access barriers/availability
indicators which led to the recommendation for exceptional designation
and include any supporting data.
Such
requests must also include a written recommendation for designation
from the Governor or other chief executive officer of the State
(or State-equivalent) and local health official.
Federal
Programs Using MUA/MUP Designations Include:
Recipients
of Community Health Center (CHC) grant funds are legislatively
required to serve areas or populations designated by the Secretary
of Health and Human Services as medically underserved. Grants
for the planning, development, or operation of community health
centers under section 330 of the Public Health Service Act are
available only to centers which serve designated MUAs or MUPs.
Systems
of care which meet the definition of a community health center
contained in Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act, but
are not funded under that section, and are serving a designated
MUA or MUP, are eligible for certification as a Federally Qualified
Health Center (FQHC) and thus for cost-based reimbursement of
services to Medicaid-eligibles.
Clinics
serving rural areas designated as MUAs are eligible for certification
as Rural Health Clinics by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services under the authority of the Rural Health Clinics Services
Act (Public Law 95-210, as amended).
PHS
Grant Programs administered by HRSA's Bureau of Health Professions
- gives funding preference to Title VII and VIII training programs
in MUA/Ps.
Revised
June, 1995
BPHC/Division of Shortage Designation
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Sample
Survey for Determining Primary Medical Care FTE
The
following may be used as a guide for MUA and MUP
requests. This information should be collected for
each primary care physician at a practice location.
Not all questions may apply to a specific designation
request.
Physician's
name:
Specialty:
Percent of Practice:
Sub-specialty:
Percent of Practice:
Location
of Practice - City:
Zip
How many hours a
week is the physician engaged in patient care activities
at this location?
Additional
Office Location - City:
Zip
How many hours a
week is the physician engaged in patient care activities
at this location?
Does
the physician have hospital admitting privileges,
and if so, does the physician follow up with admitted
patients
at the hospital?
Yes
No
If
a physician works less than a total of 40 hours
a week in patient care, please provide a brief explanation,
i.e. semi-retired, administration, teaching, other
Does
the physician serve Medicaid patients? Yes
No
If yes, what percent
of his/her practice?
Does
the physician offer a sliding fee scale based on
income or ability to pay? Yes
No
If yes, what
percent of his/her practice?
Does
the physician or others on staff offer language
interpretation?
Yes
No
If yes, what languages?
Does
the physician see migrant farmworkers as patients?
Yes
No
If yes, what
percent of his/her practice?
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For
shortage designation inquiries, please call 1-888-275-4772. Press
option 1, then option 2 or contact the Shortage Designation
Branch:
sdb@hrsa.gov
301-594-0816
301-443-4370 fax
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 8C-26
Rockville, MD 20857
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