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Furnishing Your Compliance House: OIG Risk Areas

Furnishing Your Compliance House: OIG Risk Areas. Marie C. Infante, Sr. VP, Chief Compliance Officer, Golden Living & Affiliated Companies Ken Burgess, Esq. Poyner Spruill, LLP. Furnishing Your Compliance House. Our “house” analogy Structural aspects of compliance program (written)

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Furnishing Your Compliance House: OIG Risk Areas

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  1. Furnishing Your Compliance House: OIG Risk Areas Marie C. Infante, Sr. VP, Chief Compliance Officer, Golden Living & Affiliated Companies Ken Burgess, Esq. Poyner Spruill, LLP

  2. Furnishing Your Compliance House • Our “house” analogy • Structural aspects of compliance program (written) • Compliance officer, committee • Employee codes of conduct • Training and education • Auditing and monitoring • Reporting • Compared to the laws and company policies that make up the interior or “guts” of the program

  3. Stated Differently • Think of compliance in 2 parts: • The laws/policies you must comply with • The mechanical systems that help ensure you do • Now, we’re ready to start discussing the “furniture” or, in OIG-speak, the risk areas nursing facilities should focus on in their compliance programs

  4. The Anti-Kickback Statute • Focus: referrals of residents and/or services paid for in whole or in part by any federal health care program (Medicare, Medicaid, TriCare, etc.). Focuses on: • How you make or receive referrals, and • Whether you give, receive, solicit or help arrange anything of value as part of process of obtaining or making referrals.

  5. Major Sources of Referrals We Get • MDs • Other health care professionals • Hospital/hospital discharge planners • Hospices • Home health agencies • Other SNFs

  6. Major Referrals We Make • Hospices • DME • Labs • LTC pharmacies • Hospitals • MDs • Other SNFs • Therapy companies/therapists

  7. Both Types Must Comply with Anti-Kickback Statute • Places limits on business arrangements relating directly/indirectly to federal health care program business which in any other context would be permissible and/or encouraged • Examples: free computer from pharmacy, free training of certain types, swapping Part B business for the fixed-price Part A

  8. What the Statute Prohibits • 1) Giving, accepting, soliciting (asking for) or arranging for 2)items of value, in any form (gifts, certain discounts, cross-referrals, cash), 3) directly or indirectly 4) for purpose of inducing or rewarding another party to make referrals of services 5) paid for in whole or part by any federal health care program.

  9. What It Prohibits • Very broad statute covering: • Referrals of residents or services residents need • And purchasing, ordering, leasing • Or arranging for or recommending purchase, lease or ordering of services paid for by any federal health care program • In exchange for any item of value • Value is broadly defined and interpreted

  10. Criminal Statute • Prison time, criminal fines, exclusion from federal health care programs • Potential basis for False Claims Act violation • Sanctions apply to all parties in transaction • Giver, receiver, “arranger” of payment for referrals • “Intent” to engage in prohibited act • Not necessarily intent to break the law • If even one purpose of transaction is to induce/reward referrals, that’s sufficient for violation

  11. Highly Scrutinized Transactions • Some transactions have characteristics that essentially lead OIG to presume illegal intent • Does facility or its representatives/affiliates provide anything of value to persons in position to influence or generate referrals of federal health care program business? • Does facility or its representatives/affiliates receive anything of value from persons for whom facility generates referrals of federal health care program business?

  12. OIG’s Recommended Queries to Spot “Aggravating Factors” • Does arrangement have potential to skew or interfere with objective clinical decision-making? • Or have potential to increase costs to federal health care program? • Or increase risk of over-utilization or inappropriate utilization (e.g., not medically necessary)?

  13. OIG’s Recommended Queries to Spot “Aggravating Factors” • Or raise patient safety or qualify of care concerns • If arrangement involves appropriate & medically necessary services, is payment made or received consistent with fair market value for similar services?

  14. The “Safe Harbors” • Transactions that fit squarely within one of these will not be prosecuted even if may otherwise seem prohibited by statute • See list in our materials at www.ahcancal.org • If it doesn’t fit, they don’t have to acquit • Must then prove lack of illegal intent or other elements of a kickback offense • Risk of heightened scrutiny for these

  15. Help Me! I’m Confused! • Re the Anti-Kickback Statute • Ensure your employees are aware of a general prohibition on items of value exchanging hands between actual or potential referral sources • In either direction or through third parties • Ensure all such arrangements are in writing and reviewed by legal counsel • When possible, fit it within a safe harbor • All transactions at fair market value (unless permissible discount applies) • When in doubt, don’t

  16. Sub-Risk Areas Under the Anti- Kickback Statute • OIG has identified several specific types of transactions with heightened risk under the statute • We’ll cover several over next couple of webinar sessions • Today, begin with: • Free goods and services • Services contracts (physician services & non-physician services)

  17. Strategic Direction • Align Compliance Goals with Business Objectives • More Doing; Less Checking • Decision Support • Consultation • Training & Education • Getting to YES • Identify and remove barriers to compliance • Find solutions to business problems

  18. ComplianceBusiness Asset or Necessary Evil? • Compliance ensures that Golden Living & Affiliates have the appropriate risk and control framework in place to minimize risks

  19. Regulatory Civil Criminal Transactional Operational Financial Ethical Strategic Competition Market Evolution Brand Image & reputation Technology Innovation What Risks?

  20. Schizophrenic Role of Compliance Department • Old View: Compliance is Best Procured by Vigorous Enforcement, Oversight • Police function • Militaristic Adherence to rigid rules and regs • Enforcement will produce compliance - if only there were enough resources to get the job done • Tattletale • Shadow Effects; Second Guessing • Learned Helplessness, Disincentives

  21. Old Thinking • “We’ve always done it this way…” • “Our hands are tied…” • “Learned helplessness” • “…A moose around your neck…”

  22. Corporate Compliance Programs – A Work in Progress • Why the Supplemental Guidance Helps a CCO • Compliance programs are a work in process • Changed circumstances • New developments • Employee turnover • New leadership direction

  23. Risk Areas • The Federal Anti-Kickback Statute • Free Goods and Services • Service Contracts • Physician Services • Non-physician Services

  24. Federal Anti-Kickback Statute Establishes criminal penalties for Offering OR providing OR receiving Inducements For the referral of business paid for By Federal healthcare programs

  25. Tends to ensnare harmless or even beneficial business arrangements Implications for healthcare reform efforts? Joint ventures or relationships intended to increase efficiency and produce cost-savings may induce referrals May also induce underutilization Uncertainty of enforcement Priorities of the local US Attorneys Office Personality of the particular prosecutor Uncertainty of the enforcement climate AKS Anxiety

  26. Remuneration: Can be anything of value Money Gifts Vacations Expensive dinners Free or below fair market value services or rent Event tickets Also implicated Rental payments Number of Medical Directors Routine waiver of co-payments Pricing arrangements for goods and services “value added” services Bundled payments What is Remuneration?

  27. The “One Purpose Test” • If any intent of giving anything of value is to induce a referral it is a crime • "knowingly and willfully" • "to induce" or "in return for" referring or arranging for program-subsidized business. • Proof may rest on a lone email about expected revenue benefits of a deal or relationship • Must be able to defend the business purpose for why you provided a referral source with any item of remuneration.

  28. Defensible Arrangements • Fit exactly into a “safe harbor” OR, • Are Clinically sound • Arm’s length • Based on FMV

  29. Contracting Issues • Legitimate need for the services • Services actually performed & documented • FMV- $$$ not related to value or volume of referrals; commensurate with skills, experience • Arm’s length transaction • no conflicts of interest; • manner of selection; • ability to influence referrals

  30. Kickbacks in Sheep’s Clothing • “Value added” services • Bundled services • De minimus payments or gifts • Other excuses • Our hands are tied • Everybody else is doing it!

  31. From Compliance to Commitment • The Best Approach to Compliance is to Minimize the Need for It • More Intelligent Use of Data • Dissemination of Information • Evidence-Based Practices, CPGs • Education • Partnerships • Negotiation • Alignment of Information Systems • Compliance visibility; Decision support; consultation

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