fraud and abuse. what does the government care about? cost utilization (medical necessity) quality
TRANSCRIPT
Fraud and Abuse
What does the government care about?
Cost Utilization (medical necessity) Quality
Cost
This is controlled directly The feds decide what they want to pay What are the constraints on pricing?
Utilization (Medical Necessity)
What are the issues we have seen on medical necessity? Is the treatment needed? Is it experimental? Is it effective? Is it covered by the policy
What are the political constraints on the government in setting utilization rules?
Quality
Does the government care about costs? What about when quality and cost colide? Should patients have a right to cheaper, lower
quality care? Does the federal government directly control
quality? States? JCAHO?
Fraud Issues
Was the care delivered at all? Durable medical equipment scams Billing for more care that was actually delivered
Was the care necessary? Was the care unbundled?
(Charging separately for care that should be one charge)
Where kickbacks paid?
Related Laws
General government contracting laws Mail and wire fraud RICO False Claims Act
Statutory penalties - $5-11,000 per claim Treble damages (whichever is higher)
Qui tam - private enforcement
Coding
CPT codes - AMA Some are time based, like in the Krizek case Others are work-based
You get paid more for doing more It does not matter how long you take Levels 1-5
Is it better to see a lot of patients or do a lot to each you see?
Why use Codes?
Uniform billing for all claims Equalize billing across specialties Provide incentives for more comprehensive care Allows computerized payment Allows tracking of medical information derived
from claims forms
Upcoding
Anything that increases the payment for the encounter
Can be legal Optimizing coding
Can be illegal Work that was not do, or work that was not
properly documented Misstating the patient's medical condition
Conditions of Participation (COP)
The contract between the providers and CMS If you do not comply with the COP you can be
denied payment or excluded from the program If you knowingly violate the provisions of COP it
can be grounds for false claims and criminal prosecution
US v. Krizek
The judge thinks the doc is a good guy Criticizes the crazy reimbursement system Lets the doc put on evidence of standard billing
practices to refute fraud charges Thinks the law is crazy because the feds can
assess $81,000,000
What did Krizek do wrong?
Did he actually treat the patients? Was his treatment medically necessary? What were the issues in billing? Billed for 40-50 minute time code for everyone
Who did this What was the justification? Did the doc know?
Doc's Defense
He really did spend the time, he just did not spend it all on the patient
Lots of stuff you do in the office as part of the care
What is the Scienter requirement?
Intent to defraud? Knowing that the claim is wrong but submitting it
anyway? Why does the statute specifically say that there is
no need to prove intent to defraud? What is the doc's certification problem?
District Court Ruling
Found liablity on the days when there were more than 12 codes for 50 minutes
Thought that the doc was liable, but an unfortuante system
Appeals Court
Makes it clear that reckless ignorance is wrong and grounds for liability under the Act
Is not sympathetic to the doc's claimed slipshod accounting
Is Bad Care Fraud?
US ex Rel Mikes What would make the care fraudulent?
Whistleblower Provisions
Only protection if you bring suit Not a good protection
Interesting issues
Bribes by device and drug companies PATH audits (medical schools) HCA
Qui Tam
Standing in the shoes of the government 15-20% Feds can march in May not apply to claims against states
What do you tell clients about False Claims?
Understanding Self-Referral Laws
Physicians as Fiduciaries
Model Penal Code Informed consent law General principles
Knowledge differential Power differential
Fiduciary Obligations
The physician acts as purchasing agent for the patient
Self-referral laws target incentives that encourage the physician to make certain decisions contrary to the patient's interests Order unnecessary care or tests Choose providers based on criteria other than
the best interests of the patient
Why Does the Federal Government Care?
They claim to care about quality FTC undermines this with talk about the right to
buy cheap, crummy care They care a lot about costs
Unnecessary care is wasted money and bad for the patient
It is assumed that if a kickback is necessary, the care is either worse or more expensive
Problems with the Federal Bias
The feds are only concerned with incentives to order more care or to steer care
They do not care if there are incentives to deny care Big issue with HMOS and other structured
plans Underlines the problem with consumer directed
care
The General Self-Referral Laws
There is broad statutory authority banning deals that create incentives to refer business
These deals have to be analyzed to map out the cash flow to determine what incentives the physicians see
The Lease Scam
Hospitals often own professional buildings Physicians in the professional are more likely to
admit patients to the hospital Proximity Shared services
Is the hospital providing incentives for physicians to be in their professional building?
How do you put a fair market value on proximity?
The Recruitment Scam
The hospital sees that there is a need for physicians with specific skills in the community
The hospital recruits a physician with a relocation package Moving expenses Salary support for a period of time
Does any of this obligate the physician to refer to that hospital?
What if it is the only hospital in the community?
The Lab Scam
There is a huge amount of money in medical lab tests Hence my skepticism about the real causes of
defensive medicine Is the lab providing incentives to the physician?
Direct kickbacks Subsidized services, like renting space in the
physician's office Gifts - trips to the fishing camp
The Hospital Investment Scam
Hospital wants to increase the flow of surgical patients
Hospital sets up surgical suite as a separate corporation and sells surgeons shares
Earnings are based on the capital contribution What is the impact of a admitting patients on the
physician's return on investment?
The Practice Purchase Scam
Hospital buys the physician's practice Hires the physicians to deliver care in the new
hospital practice Is this really a sale or just a kickback scheme? How was the business valued? What are the terms for payment?
Is any of the payment contingent on referrals?
The Stark Law Approach
Start has a list of 11 defined services Any deals that influence the ordering of these
services are banned There are a series of safe harbors for transactions
that are not thought to be abusive
Philosophy of Stark
Simplify the law by clearly outlining the forbidden areas
Create safe harbors that can be used as models
Problems with Stark
Too much money in the forbidden areas Doc and hospitals go the extra yard to game the
system Spotty to non-existent enforcement
No clear boundaries Puts complying entities at a completive
disadvantage
Exceptions to Stark
Physician controlled ancillary services If the doc runs the lab and it is part of the
practice, it is not covered by Stark What is the incentive? Is it even worse than for an outside lab?
Analyzing Stark Transactions
Is it a covered service? Does it met the ancillary service exception? Is there any financial linkage between the provider
and the referring doc?
The Integrated Provider Exception
Integrated providers provide both medical and hospital and other services
It is OK to tell employees where to refer patients You cannot pay employees a bonus for referrals,
but they can share in the profits (gain share) Does this exception make any sense? Does it just provide a way for hospitals to avoid
self-referral laws by buying physician's practices?