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OIG Issues Hospital Compliance Guide
By Ingrid
Brydolf and Edwin
D. Rauzi
[June 2004]
The Office of Inspector General (OIG) of the Health and Human
Services Department recently published Draft Supplemental Compliance
Program Guidance for Hospitals (the “Guidance”).
The Guidance will be of interest to hospital administrators,
compliance personnel and others in their efforts to understand
the enforcement priorities of the OIG.
The OIG initially published guidance in 1998. In light of subsequent
industry and regulatory changes, the OIG decided to provide
additional guidance to assist hospitals in furthering their
compliance efforts. Comments to the June draft may be submitted
on or before July 23.
| I. |
Hospital Compliance Program Effectiveness1
A compliance program that is ineffective not only wastes
resources, but it may put the organization in a worse
position in negotiating with the OIG. To assist hospitals
in their quest to be effective, the OIG outlined factors
that it considers determinative. Notably, hospitals should
involve their boards of directors and senior management
in the development of all aspects of the compliance program
and hospital leadership should ensure that compensation
structures and other policies “do not create undue
pressure to pursue profit over compliance.” The
culture of the organization should foster clear, open
communication without fear of retribution. At least annual
review and assessment of all elements of compliance plans
should be undertaken and will likely include measurement
of outcome indicators, such as billing and coding audits.
The compliance officer should be a member of senior management
with direct access to the board of directors, senior management
and legal counsel. Training and education should include
“[any] other individual that functions on behalf
of the hospital[.]” Scheduled and unscheduled billing
audits should be conducted and response teams should be
created to address all detected deficiencies. Finally,
disciplinary standards should be enforced, including the
annual (or more frequent) check of employees,
contractors and medical staff members against applicable
exclusion lists. |
| II. |
Self-Reporting
The OIG recommends that “Where the compliance officer,
compliance committee, or a member of senior management
discovers credible evidence of misconduct from any source
and, after a reasonable inquiry, believes that the misconduct
may violate criminal, civil or administrative law, the
hospital should promptly report the existence of misconduct
to the appropriate federal and state authorities within
a reasonable period, but not more than 60 days, after
determining that there is credible evidence of a violation.” |
| III. |
Particular Areas of OIG Concern |
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A. |
Submission of accurate claims and
information
The Guidance focuses risks that the OIG believes the
hospital community does not fully appreciate, which include: |
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1. |
Outpatient procedure coding
Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS)
coding errors may lead to overpayments and subject a hospital
to liability for the submission of false claims. The Guidance
recommends that hospitals pay close attention to coder
training and qualifications. Hospitals are urged to review
their outpatient documentation practices to ensure that
claims are based on complete medical records that support
the level of service claimed.
Specific problems identified in the Guidance include:
- Billing on an outpatient basis for inpatient-only
procedures
- Submitting claims for medically unnecessary services
by failing to follow the fiscal intermediary’s
local medical review policies
- Submitting duplicate claims or otherwise not following
the National Correct Coding Initiative guidelines
- Submitting incorrect claims for ancillary services
because of outdated Charge Description Masters
- Circumventing the multiple procedure discounting
rules
- Failing to follow the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) instructions regarding the selection
of proper evaluation and management codes
- Improperly billing for observation services
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2. |
Admissions and discharges
Risk areas with respect to the admission and discharge
processes include:
- Failure to follow the "same-day rule"
- Abuse of partial hospitalization payment
- Same-day discharges and readmissions
- Violation of Medicare’s post-acute care transfer
policy
- Churning of patients by long-term care hospitals
co-located in acute care hospitals
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3. |
Supplemental payment considerations
In limited situations, hospitals receive payments that
otherwise would not be made under regular payment systems.
Examples of specific risks that hospitals should address
include:
- Improper reporting of the costs of pass-through
items
- Abuse of DRG outlier payments
- Improper claims for incorrectly designated provider-based
entities
- Improper claims for clinical trials
- Improper claims for organ acquisition costs
- Improper claims for cardiac rehabilitation services
- Failure to follow Medicare rules regarding payment
for costs related to educational activities
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4. |
Use of information technology
OPPS requires heightened attention to detailed and accurate
record keeping. Hospital billing computer programs have
the potential to omit or mischaracterize certain data,
thus creating problematic claims. |
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B. |
“Stark” and the anti-kickback
statute |
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1. |
The physician self-referral law
(“Stark”)
According to the Guidance, “hospitals face significant
financial exposure unless their financial relationships
with referring physicians fit squarely in statutory or
regulatory exceptions to the statute.” That assertion
is underscored by CMS’ recent Stark II, Phase II
regulations that will go into effect in July 2004.
The statute prohibits hospitals from submitting—and
Medicare from paying—any claim for a designated
health service if the referral comes from a physician
with whom the hospital has a prohibited financial relationship.
This is true even if the prohibited financial relationship
is the result of inadvertence or error. Particular areas
that hospitals should pay attention to are:
- Frequent and thorough review of physician contracts
and contracting processes2
- Appropriate processes for making and documenting reasonable,
consistent, and objective determinations of fair market
value for physician services
- Ensuring that needed items and services are furnished
or rendered
- Tracking the total value of non-monetary compensation
provided annually to each referring physician
- Tracking the provision and value of medical staff
incidental benefits, and monitoring the provision of
professional courtesy
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2. |
The federal anti-kickback statute
The anti-kickback statute prohibits payments made purposely
to induce or reward referrals or generation of federal
health care program business. Areas of particular concern
and risk are briefly noted below. |
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a. |
Joint ventures
In analyzing current or future joint ventures, hospitals
should examine the following factors:
- The manner in which joint venture participants are
selected and retained.
- The manner in which the joint venture is structured.
- The manner in which the investments are financed and
profits are distributed.
According to the OIG, if a hospital is planning to participate,
then—at a minimum—a hospital should consider
(i) barring physicians employed by the hospital or its
affiliates from referring to the joint venture; (ii) taking
steps to ensure that medical staff and other affiliated
physicians are not encouraged in any manner to refer to
the joint venture; (iii) notifying physicians annually
in writing of the preceding policy; (iv) refraining from
tracking in any manner the volume of referrals attributable
to particular referrals sources; (v) ensuring that no
physician compensation is tied in any manner to the volume
or value of referrals to, or other business generated
for, the venture; (vi) disclosing all financial interests
to patients; and (vii) requiring that other participants
in the joint venture adopt similar steps. |
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b. |
Compensation arrangements with physicians
Examples of compensation arrangements include medical
director agreements, personal or management services agreements,
space or equipment leases, and agreements for the provision
of billing, nursing, or other staff services. Many compensation
arrangements are legal.
The general rule is that any remuneration between hospitals
and physicians should be at fair market value for actual
and necessary items furnished or services rendered based
upon an arm’s-length transaction. Arrangements under
which hospitals provide physicians with items or services
for free or less than fair market value, relieve physicians
of financial obligations they would otherwise incur, or
inflate compensation paid to physicians for items or services
pose significant legal risk to both the hospital and the
physician.
The OIG is particularly concerned about arrangements
with physicians that:
- do not achieve legitimate business purposes
- exceed the needs of the hospital
- exceed fair market value or do not have a documented
basis for the fair market valuation
- take into account referrals or business generated
between the parties
- are not documented in writing
- do not document physician services provided
- are not monitored by the hospital
- allow physicians to improperly use hospital property
or services for their private practices
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c. |
Relationships with other health care entities
Hospitals should review relationships with home health
agencies, skilled nursing facilities, durable medical
equipment companies, laboratories, pharmaceutical companies,
and other hospital and managed care organizations using
the principles identified. |
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d. |
Physician recruitment arrangements
When assessing the degree of risk associated with recruitment
arrangements, hospitals should examine the following factors,
among others:
- Is the benefit extended reasonably necessary to attract
a qualified physician to the particular community?
- Are total benefit payout periods longer than three
years?
- Is the physician a new physician (or a physician
relocating from a great distance) with few or no patients
or an established practitioner with a ready stream of
referrals?
- Is the recruited physician’s specialty necessary
to provide adequate access to medically necessary care
for patients in the community? An assessment of community
need based wholly or partially on the competitive interests
of the recruiting hospital or existing physician practices
would subject the recruitment payments to heightened
scrutiny under the statute.
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e. |
Discounts
Public policy favors open and legitimate price competition
in health care. Thus, the anti-kickback statute contains
an exception for discounts offered to customers if the
discounts are properly disclosed and accurately reported.
However, to qualify for the exception, the discount must
be in the form of a reduction in the price of the good
or service based on an arm’s-length transaction.
Moreover, the regulation provides that the discount must
be given at the time of sale or, in certain cases, set
at the time of sale, even if finally determined subsequent
to the time of sale (e.g., a rebate).
A hospital should not engage in “swapping”
by accepting from a supplier an unreasonably low price
on Part A services that the hospital pays for out of its
own pocket in exchange for hospital referrals that are
billable by the supplier directly to Part B (e.g.,
ambulance services). Suspect arrangements include below-cost
arrangements or arrangements at prices lower than the
prices offered by the supplier to other customers with
similar volumes of business, but without federal health
care program referrals. |
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f. |
Medical staff credentialing
Conditioning privileges on a particular number of referrals
or requiring the performance of a particular number of
procedures, beyond volumes necessary to ensure clinical
proficiency, raises risks. However, a credentialing policy
that categorically refuses privileges to physicians with
significant conflicts of interest should not implicate
the anti-kickback statute in most situations. |
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g. |
Malpractice insurance subsidies
Hospitals should review malpractice insurance subsidy
arrangements including:
- Whether the subsidy is being provided on an interim
basis for a fixed period in areas experiencing severe
access or affordability problems;
- Whether the subsidy is being offered only to current
active medical staff (or physicians new to the locality
or in practice less than a year, i.e., physicians with
no or few established patients);
- Whether the criteria for receiving a subsidy is unrelated
to the volume or value of referrals or other business
generated by the subsidized physician or his practice;
- Whether physicians receiving subsidies are paying
at least as much as they currently pay for malpractice
insurance;
- Whether physicians are required to perform services
or relinquish rights, which have a value equal to the
fair market value of the insurance assistance; and
- Whether the insurance is available regardless of
the location at which the physician provides services,
including, but not limited to, other hospitals.
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C. |
“Gainsharing” arrangements
The Civil Monetary Penalty (CMP) prohibits a hospital
from knowingly making a payment to a physician to induce
her to reduce or limit items or services furnished to
Medicare or Medicaid beneficiaries under the physician’s
direct care. While the OIG recognizes that some gainsharing
arrangements may serve legitimate purposes, they must
be analyzed in light of the CMP and anti-kickback prohibitions.
Therefore, the OIG recommends that gainsharing arrangements
should be structured to fit within the personal services
safe harbor. That recommendation is of limited value,
however, because it requires that compensation be set
in advance, when the "gains" are difficult to
predict. |
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D. |
EMTALA
The OIG urges clear understanding by hospitals of their
EMTALA obligations and implementing policies and training
that accurately reflect those legal responsibilities. |
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E. |
Substandard care
The OIG asserts that is has the authority to exclude
providers from participation in federal health care programs
if the care provider fails to meet professionally recognized
standards of health care. |
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F. |
Relationships with federal health
care beneficiaries
Civil Monetary Penalties may be imposed on hospitals
that offer remuneration to Medicare or Medicaid beneficiaries
where the hospital knows or should know that the offer
is likely to influence the beneficiary to order or receive
items or services from a particular provider. Simply put,
hospitals cannot offer valuable items or services to attract
Medicare and Medicaid patients. Examples discussed in
the Guidance include: gifts over nominal amounts, cost-sharing
waivers (some of which may be acceptable), and free transportation
over nominal value. |
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G. |
HIPAA privacy and security rules
The Guidance reinforces the need to comply with the law,
but recognizes that some flexibility exists in tailoring
a hospital's security plans and procedures in light of
the particular hospital’s organization and capabilities. |
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H. |
Billing medicare or medicaid substantially
in excess of usual charges
Emphasizing that “providers cannot routinely charge
Medicare or Medicaid substantially more than they usually
charge others,” the OIG reminded hospitals of its
authority to exclude providers who submit claims based
on costs or charges that are “substantially in excess”
of their usual costs or charges unless there is “good
cause.” |
Conclusion
Implicit in the OIG's Guidance is the philosophy that "compliance
is here to stay." The OIG is urging that the Compliance
Officer become more integrated into senior management, have
greater access to the Board and marshal more budgetary resources.
While hospitals have learned that they cannot ignore the OIG's
views, they cannot help but ask how they will handle yet another
unfunded compliance mandate.
FOOTNOTES
1
The entire text of the Guidance can be found at 69 Fed. Reg.
32012-32031 (June 8, 2003). http://oig.hhs.gov/authorities/docs/04/060804hospitaldraftsuppCPGFR.pdf
2
For a tool that can be used or modified to track relationships
with physicians, see the Stark
database entry form. (Note: The program
requires Microsoft Access to open.)
For further information, contact:
Kathy
Drummy, Los Angeles, (213) 633-6870, kathydrummy@dwt.com
Thomas E. Jeffry, Los Angeles, (213) 633-6882, tomjeffry@dwt.com
John
P. Krave, Los Angeles, (213) 633-6873, johnkrave@dwt.com
M. Steven
Lipton, San Francisco, (415) 276-6550, stevelipton@dwt.com
This Advisory is a publication
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Copyright © 2004, Davis Wright Tremaine
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