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PRACTICAL SIDE OF INVESTIGATING AND REPORTING OVERPAYMENTS. ABA Health Law Section Emerging Issues in Healthcare Law February 24, 2012 San Diego, California. Bill Mathias Ober | Kaler 410-347-7667 wtmathias@ober.com. Now What Do I Do?. Why Are Internal Investigations Important?.
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PRACTICAL SIDE OF INVESTIGATING AND REPORTING OVERPAYMENTS ABA Health Law Section Emerging Issues in Healthcare Law February 24, 2012 San Diego, California Bill Mathias Ober | Kaler410-347-7667wtmathias@ober.com
Why Are Internal Investigations Important? • Increasing promotion of self-identification and self-disclosure • 60-day repayment of overpayments & potential FCA liability • Enforcement remains aggressive • Federal Level • State Level • Government view Fraud, Waste, and Abuse as a significant source of revenue
When Must You Investigate? • Any time there is: • An allegation of a violation of law. • A suggestion of improper conduct. • A potential for an overpayment by the government. • A potential for a significant overpayment by a commercial insurer or other third-party payor. • A potential for whistleblower activity.
How Much Must You Investigate? • Depends on the facts. • Initially, need to investigate enough to gauge the credibility of the allegation. • Believable on its face • Documentary evidence exists • Dollar amount of potential exposure impacts practical decisions regarding scope, depth, and personnel involved in investigation.
Who Should Investigate? • Depends on the type of issue: • Human resources issues (such as sexual harassment or discrimination) – investigated by HR Department and/or employment counsel. • Other general issues (non-criminal in nature, unlikely to result in substantial civil liability) – initially investigated in-house. • Consider whether attorney-client privilege may be important? If so, involve counsel (in house or outside).
Who Should Investigate? • Criminal issues or issues likely to result in significant civil liability (whistleblower situations, high dollar overpayments, systemic problems) – shouldn’t be investigated without legal counsel. • Attorney-client privilege important – may want outside counsel involved to strengthen argument supporting attorney-client privilege.
Results of Your Investigation • No problem Done!!! • Problem Fix it???
Fix The Problem • Take corrective action • Assess existing compliance process and policies to identify shortfalls • Discipline responsible employees, as appropriate • Add policies, procedures, or reporting layers as necessary to prevent reoccurrence
Now What? • Need to discuss with client: • Whether the past conduct needs to be reported • If so, to whom?
Disclosure Calculus • Decision to disclose is a business decision – weighing potential risks and benefits. • Where available, disclosure offers protections too significant to pass up • Useful for substantial violations of law • More difficult question for more minor or isolated violations – time + expense • Continuing focus on compliance programs, good faith cooperation, and prompt disclosure
What Gets Disclosed Where? • To OIG – only “potential fraud against the Federal health care programs, rather than merely an overpayment.” • “Potential fraud” does not include Stark only violations – must be at least a “colorable” AKS violation • To CMS – Stark only violation • To Contractor – “merely an overpayment” • To U.S. Attorney’s Officer – depends • To State – depends on state laws • NY OIG has been aggressive in seeking disclosures
Good & Bad of Investigations • Good news • CMS recognized importance of investigating before overpayment can be identified and 60-day clock violated • Bad news • Must conduct “reasonable inquiry” to determine if overpayment exists • Not sure what it means to investigate with “all deliberate speed”? • Do you have to investigate all reports of overpayments?
Anti-kickback Violations • Claims submitted in violation of AKS • Don’t meet conditions of payment • False or fraudulent claims • Overpayment
Anti-kickback Violations (cont.) • Party submitting claim is unaware of improper arrangement • No overpayment “identified” • No reporting requirement
Anti-kickback Violations (cont.) • Party submitting claim has “sufficient knowledge” of arrangement • Obligation to report overpayment • BUT repayment obligation suspended • CMS will refer matter to OIG • CMS expectation that OIG would seek repayment from parties to kickback scheme, NOT “innocent” provider reporting overpayment • Doesn’t close the door – “the government may always seek repayment of claims paid that do not satisfy a condition of payment.”
OIG Disclosure & 60-Day Rule • Disclosure to OIG tolls 60-day repayment clock • When OIG acknowledges acceptance into program • Time lab between submission and acceptance • Disclosure to OIG satisfies 60-day reporting obligation
Self-Referral Disclosure Protocol& 60-Day Rule • Disclosure to CMS under SRDP tolls 60-day repayment clock • When CMS acknowledges acceptance into SRDP • Time lab between submission and acceptance • Disclosure to CMS under SRDP does NOT satisfy 60-day reporting obligation • Still must report under 60-day rule • CMS seeks comment
Pending Gov’t Investigation • Rule doesn’t address effect of pending government investigation on 60-day repayment obligation • Is this part of investigation with “all deliberate speed”? • Presumably provider and gov’t disagree on overpayment amount • Is overpayment not quantified and thus not “identified”?
Formalized Refund Policy • Use current contractor refund process • CMS to develop uniform reporting form “eventually” • Forms ask for claim numbers • Claim numbers may not be readily available, especially if refund based on statistical sampling • Will letter to contractor describing the problem and including a check be sufficient?
Probe Samples & 60-Day Rule • Probe sample shows overpayments • Further investigation conducted • Full sample required • When does 60-day repayment clock start to run on probe sample?
Why 10 Year Look-back? • Current 4 year reopening on claims • FCA statute of limitations is 6 years • FCA statute of repose is 10 years • Why should look-back be 10 years? • “further our interest in ensuring that overpayments are timely returned to the Medicare Trust Fund.” • If you reach FCA settlement of billing issue going back 6 years, do you have overpayment liability for remainder of 10 year look-back?
Practical Problems of 10 Year Look-back • Difficult to investigate issues back 10 years • Need to consider how laws, regulations, and other guidance changed over 10 years • Need to expand record retention requirements
Final Words of Advice “Be careful out there”
QUESTIONS? Bill Mathias Ober | Kaler410-347-7667wtmathias@ober.com