Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    talk.politics.medicine    |    talk.politics.medicine    |    20,955 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 19,926 of 20,955    |
|    =?UTF-8?B?4oqZ77y/4oqZ?= to All    |
|    New Fraud Alert Shows OIG Focus on Physi    |
|    13 Jun 15 17:07:19    |
      From: hounddog23x@gmail.com              New Fraud Alert Shows OIG Focus on Physicians               posted on: Thursday, June 11, 2015                             On June 9, 2015, the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health       and Human Services (OIG) issued a new fraud alert concerning physician       compensation arrangements and compliance with the federal Anti-Kickback       Statute (AKS). While the fraud        alert itself does not break new ground interpreting the AKS, it signals OIG's       steadily increasing scrutiny and enforcement activity of physicians and       physician arrangements.               The fraud alert encourages physicians who enter into compensation       arrangements, such as medical directorships, to "ensure that those       arrangements reflect fair market value for bona fide services the physicians       actually provide" by "carefully consider[ing]        the terms and conditions of medical directorships and other compensation       arrangements before entering into them." Payments that take into account the       volume or value of referrals, do not reflect fair market value for the       services performed, or        compensate the physician in ways that are unrelated to providing       services--such as subsidizing office staff costs--raise compliance risks,       according to the OIG. Similarly, not providing the services called for under       the arrangement can also create        liability issues.               Rather than provide new or updated AKS guidance to the health care community,       however, this fraud alert's purpose appears to be to publicize a series of 12       settlements under the OIG's Civil Monetary Penalties Law (CMPL) authorities       obtained over the past        two years with individual physicians who had medical director arrangements       with Fairmont Diagnostic Center and Open MRI Inc. (Fairmont), an imaging       facility in Houston owned and operated by Dr. Jack L. Baker. In 2012, Dr.       Baker and Fairmont entered into        a $650,000 False Claims Act settlement concerning allegations that Dr. Baker       and Fairmont paid illegal compensation to physicians through medical director       agreements to induce patient referrals. As part of the settlement, Dr. Baker       agreed to be excluded        from federal health care programs for six years. Following the settlement, OIG       pursued "spin-off" CMPL cases against some of the physicians who had these       suspect medical director agreements. In total, the OIG collected over $1.4       million in penalties from        11 physicians and excluded one physician for three years. The settlement       amounts ranged from $50,000 to $195,016.               The fraud alert highlights that the OIG is stepping up its own administrative       enforcement activities of physicians separate from the government's more       traditional False Claims Act efforts. With a large budget increase this year,       the OIG is able to hire        more lawyers who can investigate and bring CMPL cases. The OIG has displayed       additional signs of interest in physicians, including a ramped-up issuance of       guidance. After a somewhat lengthy span without issuing much guidance, the OIG       has issued a new        fraud alert specifically addressing physician issues each year for the past       three years. In 2013, the OIG warned the industry about its concerns with       physician-owned distributors and other joint ventures. In 2014, the OIG       cautioned labs and physicians        about labs making certain suspect specimen collection and other payments to       physicians.               We should expect to see more OIG scrutiny of physicians and their financial       arrangements with the recipients of their referrals. To avoid this scrutiny,       health care entities should consider examining their compliance program's       policies and systems        regarding               Review and approval of physician arrangements, including               The physician selection process               The business justification for the arrangement               An appropriate internal and legal review process               Making fair market value determinations               Monitoring physician performance of the services provided for in the       arrangement               Contract management to avoid potential technical Stark Law issues               (c) 2015 McDermott Will & Emery        PRINTER-FRIENDLYEMAIL THIS PAGESHARETHISREPRINTS & PERMISSIONS        RELATED ARTICLES        Latest Office of Inspector General Fraud Alert Signals Heightened Focus on       Physician Compensation ArrangementsMay 2015 Health Care Qui Tam Update:       Recently Unsealed Whistleblower CasesSupreme Court Decides Qui Tam       First-to-File Issues        Advertisement        Attend the Federal Bar Association's Bankruptcy Litigation CLE New York       City June 24 2015        TRENDING LEGAL ANALYSIS                                           http://www.natlawreview.com/article/new-fraud-alert-shows-oig-focus-physicians              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca