PRB Reporting and Auditing FAQ
Download all Provider Relief Fund FAQs (PDF - 376 KB)
Calculating Eligible Expenses and Lost Revenue
Yes. However, it is important to note that due to the overlapping periods of availability, each time a Reporting Entity changes the method used to calculate lost revenues, the system will recalculate total lost revenues for the entire period of availability. It is important to note that due to the overlapping periods of availability, if a Reporting Entity changes the method used to calculate lost revenues, the system will recalculate total lost revenues for the entire period of availability, which may impact the previously reported unreimbursed lost revenues. The system will also require that the Reporting Entity submit a written justification to support and explain the change in lost revenues methodology. Please refer to the Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements (PDF - 137 KB) for information on the three available methodologies for calculating lost revenues.
(Added 1/27/2022)
Yes. Reporting Entities that previously reported will be able to choose a different methodology for calculating lost revenues during Reporting Period 2 and any subsequent reporting periods. However, if the Reporting Entity decides to use a different methodology, they must then use the new methodology to calculate lost revenues for the entire period of availability. The Reporting Entity will be required to submit a justification for the change. If a Reporting Entity chooses a different methodology, lost revenues by quarter will not pre-populate from the previous reporting period. It is important to note that due to the overlapping periods of availability, if a Reporting Entity changes the method used to calculate lost revenues, the system will recalculate total lost revenues for the entire period of availability, which may impact the previously reported unreimbursed lost revenues. Please refer to the Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements (PDF - 137 KB) for information on the three available methodologies for calculating lost revenues.
(Added 1/27/2022)
The PRF Reporting Portal was designed so that each subsequent report will build from the previous completed and submitted report. The Reporting Portal will calculate remaining unused lost revenues that can be reimbursed by PRF payments received during future payment periods.
If a Reporting Entity had more lost revenues for the overlapping period of availability than the Entity was able to demonstrate in a previous reporting period, then the Reporting Entity will be able to reimburse the unused lost revenues with payments issued in subsequent periods. It is important to note that due to the overlapping periods of availability, if a Reporting Entity changes the method used to calculate lost revenues from one reporting period to another, the system will recalculate total lost revenues for the entire period of availability, which may impact the previously reported unreimbursed lost revenues.
(Added 1/27/2022)
Yes. The Reporting Portal is designed to track changes in the calculation of lost revenues. This includes any changes in the baseline used for comparison, and changes to the inputs for each quarter. The system will also calculate and track unreimbursed lost revenues that may fluctuate as a result of the methodology change. If as a result of the change to the method, a Reporting Entity was previously reimbursed for more lost revenues than they had for the period of availability, they may be required to return more funds than they received during the applicable “Payment Received Period.”
(Added 1/27/2022)
When a Reporting Entity chooses a different lost revenues methodology from one reporting period to the next, the system requires confirmation of the change by the Reporting Entity. If the lost revenues methodology changes, data submitted in the prior reporting period is not pre-populated into the current report (as it would be if the same methodology was used from one reporting period to the next). After a change in methodology is saved in the current report, the portal user will not be able to retrieve data entered in the previously submitted report. Lost revenues data for the current reporting period must cover the entire period of availability.
The reporting portal tracks changes in the calculation of lost revenues from one reporting period to the next. The changes tracked include any changes in the baseline used for comparison, that is, changes to 2019 actuals for a provider that elected to use option 1, changes in the budgeted numbers for providers who elected to use option 2, and any inputs used for providers who elected to use option 3. The system will also calculate and track unreimbursed lost revenues that may fluctuate as a result of the methodology change.
Please refer to the Reporting Portal Resources section of the Reporting Resources page for additional information.
(Added 1/27/2022)
No. Per the payment Terms and Conditions (PDF - 95 KB), the Nursing Home Infection Control Distribution (including any Quality Incentive Program payments) may not be used to reimburse lost revenues.
(Added 1/27/2022)
PRF recipients have the flexibility to identify how to use their multiple payments toward expenses and lost revenues, but must abide by the Terms and Conditions associated with each of the payments and follow the requirements for determining allowable expenses and lost revenues. The Nursing Home Infection Control Distribution, which includes the Quality Incentive Program payments, may only be used to reimburse infection control expenses. This type of Targeted Distribution payment may not reimburse lost revenues.
PRF payments may be used as described in the relevant payment Terms and Conditions for expenses and lost revenues, as appropriate, dating back to January 1, 2020. Because of the overlapping periods of availability, providers have the flexibility to identify which payments they will use to reimburse allowable expenses and lost revenues incurred during the period of availability. Duplication of reimbursement for expenses and lost revenues is not permitted.
(Added 1/27/2022)
No. Documentation to support Nursing Home Infection Control Distribution expenses is not required to be uploaded to the PRF Reporting Portal at the time of reporting. However, Reporting Entities are required to maintain supporting documentation, per the Terms and Conditions, that demonstrates that any allowable expenses were incurred during the period of availability. Supporting documentation must be made available upon the request of the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
(Added 1/27/2022)
Reimbursements received from the Uninsured Program and CAF should be included as “other” in the “Total Revenues/Net Charges from Patient Care Related Sources” section of the reporting portal. Reimbursements from these programs should not be included as “HHS CARES Act Testing” or “other assistance” under the “Other Assistance Received” section of the reporting portal.
(Added 9/13/2021)
The Provider Relief Fund payment recipient has discretion in allocating the payments to support its subsidiaries’ health care-related expenses or lost revenues attributable to coronavirus, so long as the payment is used to prevent, prepare for, or respond to coronavirus and those expenses or lost revenues are not reimbursed from other sources or other sources were not obligated to reimburse.
Option iii, from the Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements, provides Reporting Entities flexibility in the reconciliation of lost revenues. Lost revenues may then be applied as the reporting entity sees fit. Reporting Entities should work with their accounting firms to determine an appropriate way to allocate expenses and lost revenues. The Reporting Entity is responsible for ensuring that adequate documentation is maintained. Provider Relief Fund payments may be applied to expenses and lost revenues attributable to coronavirus according to the Period of Availability of funding. However, expenses and lost revenues may not be duplicated: payments may not be applied to the same expenses and lost revenues that were reported on in prior reporting periods.
(Added 9/13/2021)
No. Grants awarded to Health Center Program-funded health centers and look-alikes are used to support specific operating costs of the FQHC, as approved by HRSA through the annual budgeting process, and are not considered to be patient services revenue. Therefore, such grants should not be factored into the lost revenues calculation.
(Added 8/30/2021)
For Option i, lost revenues are calculated for each quarter during the Period of Availability, as a standalone calculation, with 2019 quarters serving as a baseline. For each calendar year of reporting, the applicable quarters where lost revenues are demonstrated are totaled to determine an annual lost revenues amount. The annual lost revenues are then added together. There is no offset.
(Updated 8/30/2021)
For Option ii, lost revenues are calculated for each quarter during the period of availability, as a standalone calculation, with budgeted quarters serving as a baseline. For each calendar year of reporting, the applicable quarters where lost revenues are demonstrated are totaled to determine an annual lost revenues amount. The annual lost revenues for the years included in the period of availability are then added together. There is no offset. Reporting Entities may use budgeted revenues if the budget(s) and associated documents covering the Period of Availability were established and approved prior to March 27, 2020.
(Added 8/30/2021)
Patient care-related revenue should be reported net of adjustments for all third party payers, charity care adjustments, bad debt, and any other discounts or adjustments, as applicable when reporting patient care-related revenue sources. For example, if a provider’s gross patient revenue was $5,000, and the contractual adjustment from the third-party payer or charity care adjustments was $3,000, the provider should report on the PRF report $2,000 in patient care-related revenue.
(Updated 8/30/2021)
There was not a maximum or minimum that can be allocated. Reporting Entities will see the reporting system asks for unreimbursed expenses attributable to coronavirus first in the overall use of funds calculation; it is possible for a Reporting Entity to enter “0”. Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payment amounts not fully expended on unreimbursed health care-related expenses attributable to coronavirus during the period of availability are then applied to lost revenues. Lost revenues or expenses must only have been incurred during the Period of Availability correlating to the Payment Received Period as described in the Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements.
For Option i (Comparison of Actual Lost Revenues), lost revenues are calculated for each quarter during the Period of Availability, as a standalone calculation, with 2019 quarters serving as a baseline. For Option ii (Comparison of Budgeted to Actual Lost Revenues), Reporting Entities may use budgeted revenue if the budget(s) and associated documents covering the Period of Availability were established and approved prior to March 27, 2020. For each calendar year of reporting, the applicable quarters where lost revenues are demonstrated are totaled to determine an annual lost revenues amount. There is no offset. Option iii provides maximum flexibility to providers by allowing providers to calculate lost revenues using an alternate reasonable methodology.
(Updated 10/27/2022)
Actual revenue from quarters in 2019 will serve as the baseline period of comparison for the Period of Availability for Option i. Budgeted revenue from the quarters reported in 2020 or 2021 will serve as the baseline period of comparison for Option ii. For Option ii, Reporting Entities may use budgeted revenues if the budget(s) and associated documents covering the Period of Availability were established and approved prior to March 27, 2020.
(Updated 8/30/2021)
Yes. When reporting use of Provider Relief Fund payments toward lost revenues attributable to coronavirus, Reporting Entities may use budgeted revenues if the budget(s) and associated documents covering calendar year 2020 were established and approved prior to March 27, 2020. To be considered an approved budget, the budget must have been ratified, certified, or adopted by the Reporting Entity’s financial executive, executive officer or other responsible representative as of that date, and the Reporting Entity will be required to attest that the budget was established and approved prior to March 27, 2020. Documents related to the budget, including the approval, must be maintained in accordance with the Terms and Conditions.
(Updated 7/1/2021)
The Other Assistance Received reported to HRSA will not be used in the calculation of expenses or lost revenues. Reporting Entities are expected to make a determination of their expenses applied to Provider Relief Fund payments after considering “Other Assistance Received” and taking into account that Provider Relief Fund payments may not be used for expenses or lost revenues that other sources have reimbursed or that other sources are obligated to reimburse.
(Added 7/1/2021)
The net unreimbursed expenses attributable to coronavirus reported to HRSA will not be used in the calculation of expenses or lost revenues. Reporting Entities are expected to determine their net unreimbursed expenses attributable to coronavirus after taking into consideration the application of Other Assistance Received and all Provider Relief fund payments. HRSA expects that Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payments would be applied to unreimbursed expenses attributable to coronavirus that are not obligated to be reimbursed by other sources before Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payments are used for lost revenues. Reporting Entities will see the reporting system asks for unreimbursed expenses attributable to coronavirus first in the overall use of funds calculation; it is possible for a Reporting Entity to enter “0”.
(Updated 10/27/2022)
Patient care revenue should not be reported as part of “Other Assistance Received” as it is a source of revenue, not a source of other assistance as defined by Provider Relief Fund and ARP Rural reporting requirements. The “Other Assistance Received” reported to HRSA will not be used in the calculation of expenses applied to Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payments or lost revenues.
(Updated 10/27/2022)
Yes. Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payments may be applied to expenses and lost revenues according to the period of availability of funding. However, expenses and lost revenues may not be duplicated. Specifically, payments received may not be applied to the same expenses and lost revenues that Provider Relief Fund or ARP Rural payments received in prior payment periods already reimbursed. The Payment Received Periods described in the Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements determine the period of availability of funding and when reports are due. The opportunity to apply Provider Relief Fund payments (excluding the Nursing Home Infection Control Distribution) and ARP Rural payments for lost revenues will be available up to June 30, 2023, the end of the quarter in which the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency ends.
(Updated 5/5/2023)
All Reporting Entities that opt to report lost revenues using Option i (Comparison of Actual Revenue) or Option ii (Comparison of Budgeted Revenue to Actual Revenue) must enter their patient care revenue for each quarter within the entire period of availability. Reporting Entities using Option iii must enter their lost revenues, calculated by any reasonable method, for each quarter during the period of availability.
(Added 7/1/2021)
Yes, lost revenues were calculated for each quarter during the period of availability, as a standalone calculation. Provider Relief Fund and/or ARP Rural payments may be used to cover those quarters where patient care revenue losses occurred as long as those losses were attributable to coronavirus. The opportunity to apply Provider Relief Fund payments (excluding the Nursing Home Infection Control Distribution) and ARP Rural payments for lost revenues will be available up to June 30, 2023, the end of the quarter in which the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency ends.
(Updated 5/5/2023)