The Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued a Proposed Rule on October 2, 2014 that would amend the safe harbors to the Anti-Kickback Statute and the civil monetary penalty (CMP) rules to add new safe harbors to codify statutory changes in the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, that would protect certain payment practices and business arrangements from criminal prosecution or civil sanctions under the Anti-Kickback Statute. The OIG also proposed to codify certain revisions to the definition of “remuneration,” added by the Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 and ACA and add a gainsharing CMP provision in the OIG’s regulations. Continue reading
Category Archives: Physicians
POD Liability May Create Compliance Issues for Hospitals
Physician Owned Distributors (“PODs”) of medical implantable devices are increasingly the subject of both governmental scrutiny and False Claims Act cases. PODs are companies created to sell medical implants to hospitals, and are by definition owned, in whole or in part, by the physicians who may use the implants at the hospitals that purchase the medical devices. Allegations against PODs and their investor-physicians typically include allegations of violating the False Claims Act based on Anti-Kickback violations and that certain surgeries performed by physician owners of a POD may be medically unnecessary. The government has alleged in some complaints that Medicare claims submitted by hospitals for the related hospital services also were tainted by kickbacks by PODs to the PODs’ physician owners and accordingly were false claims. The False Claims Act exposure for a hospital may be significant, and could be considered in the hospital purchasing process for medical devices. Potential allegations that surgical cases (i.e., spinal infusions) are medically unnecessary may seem like a stretch, but are being brought today in complaints filed by the government under the False Claims Act. As a result, when a hospital does business with a POD, in addition to insuring that the agreement complies with an applicable exception to the Stark Law and safe harbor to the AKS, a hospital may also want to implement a process for reviewing potential quality cases through the hospital’s compliance program to prepare for any potential allegations that some surgeries were medically unnecessary. A thorough process of reviewing selection and purchasing medical devices by a hospital from a POD or similarly physician-owned vendors could go a long way toward addressing potential compliance issues for Hospitals under the False Claims Act.
The following is a report issued by the OIG on October 23, 2013 regarding spinal devices supplied by physician-owned distributors. Read the full report here.
Written by: Clay Countryman
House Passes ICD-10 Delay Bill
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill on March 27 that would delay the ICD-10 implementation deadline by one year to October 1, 2015. A similar bill in the Senate is expected to be voted on soon. The bill, H.R. 4302, Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014, also adjusts Medicare’s sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula to prevent the 24 percent cut to physician reimbursement rates scheduled to begin April 1. Medicare payment cuts to physicians would be delayed until April 1, 2015.
Opposition to the bill focuses on the need for a permanent replacement of the Medicare physician payment system instead of the proposed one year “patch” currently being considered. Opponents of the ICD-10 implementation provision claim that the delay could cost the industry billions of dollars. Others support the measure noting that providers are not prepared for the October 1, 2014 implementation.
Written by: Traci Thompson
