While the mission of this group is superficially about how to "find and 
connect with" partners, our discussion has consistently included 
consideration of how to "find, connect, and do business with" a 
partner.  If the CPP will be the primary source of information about this, 
then it will definitely need to include or point to the details of various 
supported COB arrangements and any important "companion guide" info.  To 
me, this seems no less critical than information about which transactions 
are supported, real-time vs. batch mode support, what sort of testing 
certification is required, etc.

In "phase one" we want to at least identify all the CPP elements, but I 
think it's safe to assume that none of them will be machine-understandable 
in the first version.  In the context of this workgroup, I would suggest 
that the "legality" of a companion guide element is irrelevant because all 
CG or IG elements are simply instructions.  The goal of the CPP is to 
convey those and all other relevant instructions to the sender system.  At 
the moment both "guides" are published exclusively in human readable form 
and everyone already has a copy of (or knows where to find) one of them, so 
only the supplemental CG instructions need to be referenced in the CPP.

I'm not sure if anyone is currently working on a methodology for reducing 
all X12 IG instructions (whether the "real" or the "companion" variety) to 
a universal, machine readable XML format... but this would be a terrific 
idea.  When IGs are machine-readable by compliant EDI manager applications, 
the maintainers of the CPP standard may wish to consider supplementing the 
pointer to the .pdf version of the CG with a group of XML instructions for 
auto-implementation of the CG instructions.

SIDE BAR: There seems to be a general feeling today that CGs are "bad" 
because they move us away from "true standardization"... i.e., that CGs 
essentially spawn different "flavors" of the standard, leading to a world 
that looks like the one we are trying to get away from.  As a provider, 
however (and I can't imagine that payors would feel differently) I could 
care less if there 100 or 1000 "flavors" of the "837-P"... or even a unique 
one for every payor... provided there was an EASY/CHEAP/AUTOMATIC means for 
my system to discover and implement these business requirements.  The 
requirements, themselves, do not have to be identical... only the method 
for implementing them.  Same goes for the main IGs coming out of the X12 
workgroups.  As long as my billing system can suck new IGs in as easily as 
QuickBooks gobbles down and installs its updates every few weeks, then I 
could care less how complex they are or how may variants are supported.

Payor-payor COB and companion guides might be examples of trading partner 
business requirements that are not fully fleshed out and agreed upon at the 
moment... in which case, the CPP should at least include a place-holder 
element to let the world know that we consider the CPP to be the ultimate 
home for this information.

Regards,
Chris



At 10:21 AM 7/8/2002 -0400, Fody, Kenneth W. wrote:
>Larry, William, et al --
>
>I would agree with Larry's point with regard to COB on both aspects.
>
>First, for a payer to accept a COB transaction from either a provider or
>another payer, there will have to be some type of agreement in place between
>the sender and receiver -- the same way there is with any other transaction.
>This is particularly true if a Payer is truly hoping to use EDI to simplify
>and improve their COB process, because real improvement requires a lot more
>work than just taking in an 837.
>
>Second, I agree with Larry that CPP is valuable in this context and I would
>offer a some details on why that is true.  Independence Blue Cross and Aetna
>are the two biggest players in the tri-state Philadelphia area (e.g.
>PA/southern NJ/DE).  Lets say we decided to collaborate on COB.
>
>If you look behind the curtain, you'll see Aetna is not just one company.
>Rather Aetna is a lot of different HMOs -- probably at least one for every
>state in which they do business -- and some insurance companies all trading
>under the name Aetna.
>
>And the same is true for us, albeit not on as grand a scale.  We do business
>in just three states, but we have six different entities underwriting
>coverage and a TPA.  All of these use the same entry point for electronic
>transactions.
>
>So, as you can see, when two carriers get together to do COB, Larry is
>correct when he says it is not just a connect and send type of arrangement.
>There clearly is a fair amount of routing that has to take place, which
>depends on one party correctly identifying the other carrier to whom they
>are sending the transaction.
>
>As Larry said, anything that makes that process easier is a good thing.
>
>Ken Fody
>Independence Blue Cross
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Larry Watkins [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Saturday, July 06, 2002 11:34 AM
>To: William J. Kammerer; 'WEDi/SNIP ID & Routing'
>Subject: RE: CPP and COB, was The use of Supplemental IG's
>
>
>William, et al --
>
>There are 2 issues I'd like to weigh in on:
>
>1) While you (via Kepa) make a valid point that payer-to-payer COB will not
>necessarily always mean a separate trading partner agreement, the fact is
>that real business payer-to-payer almost certainly does have such
>contracts/agreements.  Remember the complex business arrangement implicit in
>payer-to-payer COB.  It's not just a simple connect-and-send type
>arrangement, and is not treated as such today.  And, where such agreements
>exist, HIPAA mandates that the standard be used.  Regardless, it seems to me
>that any CPP solution that is to help with COB relationships would need to
>support TPA's.  We can work towards automation in this regard within the
>industry, but that will take time.
>
>2) It seems clear to me that the discussion relating to Companion Documents
>most certainly does belong outside of the Addressing/Routing group.  There
>are a multitude of issues related to this topic, and it warrants its own
>discussion.  I believe the Transactions WG is already considering how to
>proceed with this issue (SIG, white paper, etc.).  As this discussion / work
>ensues, clearly the Addressing/Routing group needs to coordinate with that
>work, taking into account recommendations coming out of such discussions.
>However, this group needs to keep the focus narrow enough to accomplish its
>objectives.  Issues like the Companion Documents can easily bog your group
>down, since they have their own multitude of complexities and rabbit trails.
>
>Larry
>
>
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>participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of
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Christopher J. Feahr, OD
http://visiondatastandard.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cell/Pager: 707-529-2268        


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