A Provider’s Guide to OIG Exclusions

A Provider’s Guide to OIG Exclusions
Federal Exclusion Regulations and Enforcement Authorities, and How Providers Can Avoid Risk with Proper Exclusion Screening–Part 1Paul S. Weidenfeld, JD

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[1]“OIG” in this paper refers to “Office of Inspector General, Department of Health and Human Services” unless otherwise stated. The term “OIG Exclusion” is used as shorthand for an administrative action taken by the OIG barring an individual or entity from participating in Federal health care programs pursuant to §1128(a)(1)-(4), (b)(1)-(b)(16) or §1156 of the Social Security Act (SSA).
[2] This article focuses on exclusions from a regulatory and enforcement perspective, but exclusions also play a critical role in compliance and risk management programs. See, e.g., HCCA, Measuring Compliance Program Effectiveness: A Resource Guide (Jan. 2017), available at ttps://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/compliance-resource-portal/files/HCCA-OIG-Resource-Guide.pdf. (guidance reconfigures the traditional “Seven Elements of an Effective Compliance Program” and makes the “Screening and Evaluation of Employees, Physicians, Vendors and other Agents” an element unto itself – or the new “Seventh Element of Compliance”).
[3] The Medicare-Medicaid Anti-Fraud and Abuse Amendments of 1977, Public Law 95–142. In 1979, the Department of Health Education and Welfare was renamed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
[4]See e.g. Crackdown on Health Care Fraud, https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/22/us/in-crackdown-on-health-care-fraud-us-focuses-on-training-hospitals-and-clinics.html.
[5] In addition to establishing the principle of insurance portability, HIPAA contained several provisions related to health care fraud enforcement, including containing legislation that significantly increased the ability of law enforcement agencies to obtain and share information and establishing the Health Care Fraud and Abuse Fund (HCFAC) as a permanent funding source specifically designated for health care fraud enforcement.
[6] The effect of an OIG Exclusion is addressed in the Special Advisory Bulletin on the Effects of Exclusion from Federal Health Care Programs,” issued September 2, 1999, and in the “Updated Special Advisory Bulletin on the Effect of Exclusions from Participation in Federal Health Care Programs,” issued May 8, 2013. Hereinafter, the initial advisory will be referred to as the “1999 Special Advisory” and the update will be referred to as the “Updated Special Advisory” or the “2013 Special Advisory.” The 1999 Special Advisory can be found at: https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/alertsandbulletins/effected.htm; the 2013 Updated Special Advisory can be found at https://oig.hhs.gov/exclusions/files/sab-05092013.pdf.
[7] Inspector General June Gibbs Brown, in the press release for the 1999 Special Advisory.
[8] See 42 C.F.R. § 1001.10. Definitional changes were made to direct and indirect claims pursuant to rulemaking authority granted to the OIG in the MMA and the ACA; See also, OIG Advisory Opinion No. 18-01 at 5 (Feb. 20, 2018) available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/advisoryopinions/2018/AdvOpn18-01.pdf.
[9] The Data in the figures in this section come from the exclusion data reportered in the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE) by calendar year.
[10] The data in the charts in this section comes from exclusion data reported in the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE).
[11] These calculatiosn are based on the composition of the LEIE through December 31, 2017.
[12] See, §§ 1128(c)(3)(G)(i) and (G)ii of the SSA. See also 82 Fed. Reg. 4100.
[13] See https://oig.hhs.gov
[14] See Criteria for implementing section 1128(b)(7) exclusion authority (April 18, 2016) available at https://oig.hhs.gov/exclusions/files/1128b7exclusion-criteria.pdf. The OIG breaks these down into “high risk factors,” “low risk factors,” and factors that have “no effect.” High risk factors include the impact on beneficiaries cooperation, and whether an adverse licensing action occurred. “Lower risk” factors include acceptance of responsibility and self-disclosure. Factors that are “expected,” and thsu have “no effect”, are coopearation in the investigation and having a compliance plan with the seven elements of compliance.
[15] See Guidance for the Implentation of its Permissive Exclusion Authority Under Sectino 1128(b)(15) at 1, available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/exclusions/files/permissive_excl_under_1128b15_10192010.pdf. The guidance was issued because 1128(b)(15) provides for exclusion based on whether the individual in question is either an owner or an officer or a managing employee and the analysis is different for each.
[16] Criteria for implementing section 1128(b)(7) exlcusion authority (April 18, 2016) avialable at https://oig.hhs.gov/exclusions/files/1128b7exclusion-criteria.pdf.See also 81 Fed. Reg. 88, 334 (Dec. 7, 2016): “In 1981, Congress enacted the CMPL, section 1128A of the Act (42 U.S.C. §1320a-7a), as one of several administrative remedies to combat fraud and abuse in Medicare and medicaid”
[17]Id. 81 Fed. Reg. at 88.
[18] This is a listing of the CMP authorities related to exclusion violations. A complete listing of the OIGs CMP authorities can be found on the OIG’s website, or at 42 C.F.R. § 1003.210.
[19] The OIG may also impose a penalty or, when applicable, an assessment, against a Medicare Advantage or Part D contracting organization with a contract under section 1857 or 1860D-12 of the SSA if any of its employees, agents, or contracting providers violate § 1003.400(a) – (d).
[20] The penalty amounts for CMPs and assessments are updated annually and are published at 45 C.F.R. § 102.
[21] A discussion of the change is found in 81 Fed. Reg. 88, 334 (Dec. 7, 2016).
[22] See 42 CFR § 1004.140(c); see also Criteria for implementing section 1128(b)(7) exclusion authority (April 18, 2016), available at https://oig.hhs.gov/exclusions/files/1128b7exclusion-criteria.pdf..
[23]See § 3729(a)(1) of the Fraud Enforcement Recovery Act of 2009 and § 6401of the Affordable Care Act (2010).
Exclusion Screening Basics for Providers
Exclusion Screening Is Mandatory
Providers of medical services that participate in Federal or State Health Care Programs are required to screen all of their employees, vendors, and contractors monthly to ensure that none have been excluded from either the Medicare or Medicaid programs. Practices that fail to meet this requirement risk Civil Monetary Penalties (CMPs) and overpayments because Federal and State regulations prohibit payment for any item or service that was provided, directly or indirectly, by an excluded person.
Enforcement cases involving the employment of excluded persons are increasing dramatically. The imposition of CMPs more than doubled from 2013 to 2014, and recent case investigations have been supported by data analysis projects by the Office of Audit Services and the Office of Evaluation and Inspections. In light of the increasing enforcement efforts and the potential consequences, it is critical that providers gain a basic understanding of the issues relating to Exclusion Screening and how they can be addressed.
What is an Exclusion?
HHS/OIG has the authority (by delegation from the Secretary) to deny persons and entities the ability to participate in federal healthcare programs. When such an action is taken by the OIG, that person or entity is said to be “excluded” and placed on the List of Excluded Individuals and Entities (commonly abbreviated “LEIE”).
Federal exclusions can be either mandatory or permissive, but both have the effect of barring participation in all federal healthcare programs until such time, if ever, that the government agrees to reinstatement. Mandatory exclusions last a minimum of 5 years and generally involve felony convictions for defrauding health care programs, felony drug offenses, and convictions for patient abuse or neglect. Permissive exclusions implicate a wider range of conduct and most often involve misdemeanor health care fraud, misdemeanor drug offenses, and licensing issues.
States also have the authority to exclude individuals and entities from participating in their own programs, such as Medicaid. Currently, 40 states maintain their own exclusion lists that are separate from the OIG’s LEIE. States will generally add OIG Exclusions to their own list, but they are also free to adopt their own exclusion criteria. It is important to note that states also often fail to report their own exclusions to CMS or the OIG such that it is not uncommon for an individual to end up on a state exclusion list and not the LEIE.
Federal and State Regulations Prohibit Payment for any Item or Service Performed by an Excluded Person
Neither Medicare nor Medicaid will pay for any item or service that results in a claim for reimbursement if an excluded individual contributed to it either directly or indirectly. The so-called “payment prohibition” is broadly interpreted by the OIG. For instance, in it’s May, 2013 “Special Advisory on the Effect of Exclusions,” they expressed the view that the preparation of a surgical tray or the inputting of information by an excluded person or vendor could taint a claim. Even volunteer work by an excluded person could trigger the prohibition unless the volunteer activities were “wholly unrelated to federal health care programs.”
Thus, a practice that hires an excluded person or does business with an excluded vendor or contractor could find that every billable service he or it contributes to is tainted. They would then be liable for a potential overpayment. Most states have also adopted this rationale and apply it to their Medicaid claims.
Don’t Risk Civil Money Penalties, Overpayments and Potential Actions under the False Claims Act
CMPs are often employed by the OIG as an enforcement tool when it discovers that claims have been made for an item or service that was provided, or contributed to, by an excluded employee. CMPs are very difficult to defend since the OIG has interpreted the relevant federal regulations to mean that the entity either “knew” of the exclusion and still submitted the claim, or that the entity “should have known,” but failed to properly screen the employee. Either way, penalties are appropriate, according to the OIG.
It should also be noted that Section 6501 of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires “State Medicaid Agencies to terminate the participation of any individual or entity if such individual or entity is terminated under Medicare or any other State Medicaid plan.” As such, any person terminated under any federal or state authority is subject to exclusion by all federal or state authorities. Therefore, claims by them are potentially problematic.
The failure to screen also creates a risk for providers of being sued under the False Claims Act (FCA). The theory behind FCA claims, which is employed with increasing frequency, asserts simply that since providers know that Medicare will not pay for a claim by an excluded person, a provider that fails to screen has constructive knowledge of the person’s status or is acting in deliberate ignorance.
Federal and State Screening Requirements
Federal screening requirements, as contained in the May, 2013 Special Advisory Bulletin, requires providers to check the LEIE for employees and contractors. According to the Bulletin’s guidance, providers should “review each job category or contractual relationship to determine whether the item or service being provided is directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, payable by a Federal health care program.” Then, providers should “screen everyone that perform[s] under that contract or in that job category” on a regular (read monthly) basis. If only it was that simple.
It is important to remember that the OIG’s guidance addresses only federal concerns. State Medicaid programs also have screening requirements that generally require, at a minimum, that providers screen their own State Exclusion List (37 States have them plus Washington, D.C.) in addition to the LEIE. Many also require screening of the System for Award Management list (SAM), and/or other State specific exclusions lists (such as sex offender lists, elder abuse lists, etc.). Furthermore, it is not uncommon for States to add onerous screening requirements in enrollment or re-enrollment applications and provider agreements. For example, a number of states require a certification that it has no employees that are suspended or excluded from any Federal or State Health Care Program. Some even require certification that their employees have never been excluded or suspended from any Federal or State exclusion list.
The Difficulty in Meeting Federal and State Exclusion Screening Requirements
Despite the OIG suggestions, the ability of individual practices to meet their federal screening requirements is difficult for a provider of any size. The current web-based LEIE interface allows only five employees to be screened at a time, each of which must be entered manually. Subsequently, potential matches must be verified individually by entering their Social Security Number. This might work for a provider who only has to screen a handful of employees or contractors. For a provider with a large number of employees, however, this would be a long and difficult undertaking.
The alternative OIG suggestion is to download the entire LEIE database and compare it to an employee list, but this is equally problematic – if not more so. The LEIE currently contains almost 60,000 names and few providers have the ability to compare that to their own employee database in any reliable or economically viable way.
Even if a provider has the ability to meet the OIG’s screening obligation, State exclusion lists must also be checked and they present additional problems. To start, State lists come in a variety of formats (Word, Excel, or PDF) with different data fields. Indeed, some State lists have little more than a name and an address. Furthermore, many states have additional state-specific screening requirements for lists. Finally, as previously indicated, practices need to be aware that a number of States have enrollment applications and provider agreements that require providers to certify that they have screened all employees and contractors with all federal and state exclusion lists.
Outsourcing is the Solution that makes Sense
In addition to the logistical problems associated with screening federal and state exclusion lists, there are the practical concerns associated with ensuring compliance with a repetitive and difficult task that may be viewed as “unnecessary” by the person tasked with the job. The best solution all around is to find a vendor who will perform the task for you for a reasonable fee. This fee will probably be considerably less than the cost of doing the screening yourself.
A provider’s choice of a company price is an obvious concern, but there are other important factors to consider. For instance, a provider should ask: What is the company’s background in healthcare? Does it have an understanding of exclusion related issues? Does it have a willingness and ability to assist the provider in determining vendor related issues (such as who to screen and vendor certifications)? Will it provide support as needed? Does it have complimentary products such as hotline services that it can provide at little or no cost?
Conclusion
Exclusion Screening, LLC is one such vendor that is worthy of consideration. It’s co-founders, Robert Liles and Paul Weidenfeld, have both served as National Health Care Fraud Coordinators for the Department of Justice, and for the last several years they have both represented healthcare providers nationwide. They are healthcare lawyers who saw a problem that healthcare providers were having, and through Exclusion Screening, LLC they have created a simple and cost effective solution. A provider need only put together a list of employees and vendors (with our assistance), and it does the rest for prices that are hard to believe.
Are you taking the necessary precautions to ensure you are not working with an excluded entity? We know it can be difficult to screen every Federal and State exclusion list. Call Exclusion Screening at 1-800-294-0952 or fill out the form below to hear about our cost-effective solution and for a free quote and assessment of your needs.
Paul Weidenfeld is the author of this article. Contact Paul should you have any questions at: pweidenfeld@exclusionscreening.com or 1-800-294-0952.