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Report on Medicare Compliance Volume 30, Number 13 News Briefs: April 2021 | Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA)

◆ Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, CMS said April 1 that it won’t update the 855 enrollment form with sections on “affiliation disclosures,” as planned in a 2019 program integrity regulation, [1] MLN Matters (SE21003). [2] It also will adopt a phased-in approach to affiliation disclosures. The regulation, which implements provisions of the Affordable Care Act, is designed to keep, or kick, providers out of Medicare if they pose an “undue risk” of fraud, waste or abuse. It requires providers to disclose “affiliations” with other providers who have been suspended or excluded from Medicare, Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP); owe the programs money; or had their billing privileges denied or revoked.

Telehealth Risks Come into Focus; Some Payers Don t Cover Audio-Only | Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA)

After the 2021 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule extended coverage of many telehealth services until the end of the public health emergency (PHE), including audio-only visits by physicians and nonphysician practitioners, UofL Health in Louisville, Kentucky, was informed that one of its commercial insurers wouldn’t be jumping on that bandwagon. Some commercial payers insist on real-time audiovisual technology for telehealth services to qualify for reimbursement, said Shelly Denham, senior vice president of compliance, risk & audit services. “It’s a challenge,” she said. “I thought the whole idea is to not make it burdensome to provide telehealth services. We are put in a bad situation when it comes to navigating telehealth” because payers have different rules.

Report on Medicare Compliance Volume 30, Number 7 News Briefs - February 2021 | Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA)

◆ A Michigan woman is the first in the nation to be charged criminally with misappropriating money from the Provider Relief Fund (PRF), the Department of Justice (DOJ) said Feb. 11. [1] Amina Abbas of Taylor previously owned 1 on 1 Home Health, which she shuttered in early 2020 after Medicare hit her with a $1.620 million overpayment demand because the home health agency had billed Medicare for patients who didn’t qualify for home health care, DOJ alleged. “According to the indictment, 1 on 1, which was never operational during the pandemic, received approximately $37,656.95 designated for the medical treatment and care of COVID-19 patients,” and Abbas gave the money to her family members for personal use, DOJ alleged. She was charged with embezzlement of government property in the Eastern District of Michigan. In an unrelated case, a California ambulatory surgery center recently entered into a civil monetary penalty settlement

CMS to Take Back Money It Returned Under Site-Neutral Payment Policy | Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA)

CMS is taking back money from hospitals for outpatient clinic visits provided in 2019 at excepted off-campus provider-based departments (PBDs) after returning the money when it lost a federal court decision on the site-neutral payment policy introduced in the 2019 Outpatient Prospective Payment System regulation. Now that CMS won its appeal [1] of the decision at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which restored the site-neutral payment policy, CMS “will begin reprocessing the claims” by July 1, 2021, according to an MLN Connects [2] posted Jan. 14. “It is a shame CMS is taking this action now, when hospitals are struggling with the increased costs of responding to community need around the COVID pandemic,” said attorney Larry Vernaglia, with Foley & Lardner in Boston. “While CMS has done many great things to assist the hospital community in the past 10 months, this will sting. Many hospitals will not have reserved for this recoupment. Ind

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