Wednesday, March 25, 2009

OIG Issues Modified Position on Stark Self Disclosure Protocol

Yesterday the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) issued an Open Letter to Health Care Providers making several changes to the Self-Dislcosure Protocol relating to the physician self referral law or Stark Law.

The OIG indicates in the letter that they are no longer going to accept under the self disclosure protocol pure Stark related liability issues. Instead the disclosure must have some type of colorable anti-kickback violation associated with the disclosure. Also, the OIG has established a new floor of $50,000 for settlement of kickback related submissions.

The letter indicates that the OIG is realigning its resources to go after larger violators of the Stark and anti-kickback laws. Inferences can be drawn from the letter that the OIG is not concerned with pure Stark related violations - but the OIG adds caution by stating that providers are not to draw any inferences about the Government's approach to enforcement of the physician self-referral law."

For more information check out the OIG's fraud prevention and detection resources.

Below is a complete copy of the text of the March 24, 2009 Open Letter to Health Care Providers:

An Open Letter to Health Care Providers
March 24, 2009


This Open Letter refines the OIG’s Self-Disclosure Protocol (SDP) to build upon the initiative announced in my April 24, 2006, Open Letter. The 2006 Open Letter promoted the use of the SDP to resolve matters giving rise to civil monetary penalty (CMP) liability under both the anti-kickback statute and the physician self-referral (“Stark”) law. As part of our ongoing efforts to evaluate and prioritize our work, these refinements aim to focus our resources on kickbacks intended to induce or reward a physician’s referrals. Kickbacks pose a serious risk to the integrity of the health care system, and deterring kickbacks remains a high priority for OIG.


To more effectively fulfill our mission and allocate our resources, we are narrowing the SDP’s scope regarding the physician self-referral law. OIG will no longer accept disclosure of a matter that involves only liability under the physician self-referral law in the absence of a colorable anti-kickback statute violation. We will continue to accept providers into the SDP when the disclosed conduct involves colorable violations of the anti-kickback statute, whether or not it also involves colorable violations of the physician self-referral law. Although we are narrowing the scope of the SDP for resources purposes, we urge providers not to draw any inferences about the Government’s approach to enforcement of the physician self-referral law.
To better allocate provider and OIG resources in addressing kickback issues through the SDP, we are also establishing a minimum settlement amount. For kickback-related submissions accepted into the SDP following the date of this letter, we will require a minimum $50,000 settlement amount to resolve the matter. This minimum settlement amount is consistent with OIG’s statutory authority to impose a penalty of up to $50,000 for each kickback and an assessment of up to three times the total remuneration. See 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7a(a)(7). We will continue to analyze the facts and circumstances of each disclosure to determine the appropriate settlement amount consistent with our practice, stated in the 2006 Open Letter, of generally resolving the matter near the lower end of the damages continuum, i.e., a multiplier of the value of the financial benefit conferred.

These refinements to OIG’s SDP are part of our ongoing efforts to develop the SDP as an efficient and fair mechanism for providers to work with OIG collaboratively. Further information about our SDP can be found at: http://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/selfdisclosure.asp. I look forward to continuing our joint efforts to promote compliance and protect the Federal health care programs and their beneficiaries.


Sincerely,
/Daniel R. Levinson/
Daniel R. Levinson Inspector General

1 comment:

David Szabo said...

What can we surmise from this? Was the OIG seeing too many self disclosures of good faith "technical violations" of Stark? The number of possible technical violations is almost without limit, as is the potential repayment liability.