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Department of Health
& Human Service Office of
Inspector General Cracks
Down on Discounts: Is your
Practice at Risk?
Heath care providers have
grown increasingly concerned
about governmental scrutiny
of health care transactions
in recent years.
Particularly concerned, are
physicians practicing
individually or in small
groups. Running a busy
practice can be hectic
enough, as physicians
struggle with insurance red
tape and frivolous
malpractice claims, while
trying to provide the best
care to their patients. Now
more and more physicians are
finding themselves having to
justify their billing
practices; and worse, defend
against false accusations of
health care fraud. The best
defense, however, is a
prudent office management
approach designed to avoid
allegations of misconduct
before they arise.
In October of 2001 health
care fraud gained national
attention when TAP
Pharmaceutical Products Inc.
("TAP") paid the Government
$875 million to resolve
allegations that the company
had bribed physicians in
violation of the Medicaid
Anti-Kickback Statute,
conspired to submit false
billing claims to Medicare
and Medicaid, and conspired
with providers to violate
the Prescription Drug
Marketing Act.
The United States Attorney
General recently stated that
the detection and prevention
of health care fraud is one
of the Government’s top
priorities. There are
various Federal and State
law enforcement agencies
involved with this pursuit
and an array of remedies
available to discipline
providers accused of
misconduct. These remedies
range from large fines or
prison sentences to civil
lawsuits or exclusion from
federal funded health care
programs.
While the Tap settlement
made national headlines,
what was not reported was
the massive fallout, which
resulted in the
investigation of hundreds of
independent and small groups
of physicians across the
country.
The Department of Health and
Human Services Office of
Inspector General (OIG) has
aggressively pursued illegal
contacts that physicians may
have with companies like Tap
and others who have
allegedly violated federal
or state health care laws.
Last year the Department of
Justice (DOJ) issued
subpoenas to physicians in
Texas and across the country
in connection with ongoing
investigations into
pharmaceutical marketing
practices. These
investigations are ongoing.
The American Medical
Association (AMA) Ethical
Opinion E-8.061 on gifts to
physicians from industry is
simple and straight forward.
Essentially, the AMA advises
that physicians should only
accept gifts of minimum
value and that primarily
benefit patients, such as
textbooks and other
educational materials.
Physicians should not accept
cash gifts or free drug
samples for personal use.
Conferences or meetings
should be primarily
dedicated to scientific and
educational activities and
faculty should only accept
reasonable honoraria and
reimbursement for expenses
for participation in
industry sponsored
educational expenses.
Physicians attending
conferences should not
accept payments or
reimbursement for the cost
of travel, lodging or other
personal expenses.
While adherence to the AMA
guidelines is relatively
simple and sufficient to
avoid many legal problems,
the voluminous provisions of
health care laws that govern
the practice of medicine are
anything but simple and
sometimes even the
well-meaning can run afoul.
Physicians who have regular
business dealings with
pharmaceutical companies,
especially those who stock
and dispense pharmaceuticals
in-house, such as
injectables like Lupron or
Zoladex, should take extra
caution. The OIG has
recently warned that even
discounts on products are
potentially illegal
kickbacks.
Discounts are not
necessarily prohibited by
law, but a prudent health
care provider should take
extreme care to be sure that
any discounts they receive
are in compliance with very
strict legal requirements.
In addition, all physicians
should take causation in
accepting gifts, forgiveness
of debt, or anything of
value from pharmaceutical
companies.
Why is this so? In the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997
(BBA), Congress set
Medicare’s payment for drugs
at the lesser of the billed
charges or the reimbursement
amount based on the Average
Wholesale Price (AWP). Over
the last several years this
has resulted in an increased
tendency for manufactures to
report an inflated AWP to
the government to get a high
reimbursement through
federal health care
programs, while offering
“discounts” to providers and
marketing the “spread” to
induce providers to switch
to their product.
On October 3, 2002, the
Office of Inspector General
(OIG) addressed this issue
of how this so-called
“marketing of the spread” by
pharmaceutical companies can
violate the federal
anti-kickback statute. The
anti-kickback statute
prohibits knowingly and
willfully paying or
receiving any remuneration
directly or indirectly,
overtly or covertly, in cash
or kind, in exchange for
prescribing, purchasing or
recommending any service,
treatment or item for which
payment will be made by
Medicare, Medicaid or any
other federally funded
healthcare program. In the
October 3, 2002 “Draft OIG
Compliance Program Guidance
for Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers”, the OIG
states that "manipulation of
the AWP to induce customers
to purchase a product,
coupled with active
marketing of the spread is
evidence of unlawful intent
necessary to trigger the
anti-kickback statute."
While the OIG intended this
guidance as a warning to the
pharmaceutical industry, it
is certainly applicable to
physicians as well. Thus, on
the provider side, any
increase in a providers
utilization of certain drugs
coupled with an increased
spread due to a
manufacturer’s discount
would likely be viewed as
evidence of illegal
inducements violating the
anti-kickback statute.
While the OIG opinion does
not prohibit manufactures
from offering discounts to
physicians, it does caution
manufacturers to “review
their AWP reporting
practices and methodology to
confirm that marketing
considerations do not
influence the process.”
Similarly, physicians should
review their prescribing
practices to confirm that
their profit on a certain
product is not influencing
their prescribing patterns.
Even the appearance of such
influence can cause major
legal problems.
Perhaps most applicable to
providers, the OIG opinion
speaks specifically about
discounts offered to
providers in "switching"
arrangements, in which a
provider receives a discount
on a product in exchange for
switching patients over to a
particular product.
Obviously, a provider would
want to avoid even the
appearance that such an
arrangement had taken
place.
Although the AWP
reimbursement system (which
allows providers an
opportunity to derive
profits from certain drugs)
appears to be seriously
flawed and viewed in
contempt by many critics,
many physicians rely on
these profits from
pharmaceuticals to
cross-subsidize inadequate
reimbursements for services.
Nevertheless, providers
should take extra caution to
avoid allegations of illegal
activities. Providers who
receive discounts should
take great care to ensure
that any discounts are
properly offered, disclosed,
and reported in accordance
with federal and state
regulations.
In addition, providers
should document and
clinically justify all
prescriptions, especially
when prescribing for a
higher priced innovator
drugs in cases where cheaper
alternatives are available.
Doing so can help avoid
later allegations that
certain prescriptions were
made for pecuniary or
otherwise unethical reasons.
Also, providers should pay
all debts to pharmaceutical
companies on a regular basis
so as to avoid allegations
that a company has provided
illegal remuneration in the
form of an interest free
loan or forgiveness of
debt.
Because the laws are
constantly changing,
providers should stay
abreast of these changes by
paying careful attention to
any legal bulletins or
notices received by
governmental entities or
contractors. It is likely
that the current
reimbursement system will be
overhauled in the near
future given the current
pressures to reduce drug
expenditures. It is also
likely that scrutiny of
health care costs will
continue to increase. The
OIG has particularly
emphasized that the
Government will pressure
manufactures to either
curtail discounting to
physicians or lower AWP so
that reimbursements are more
in-step with actual market
prices. |