Department of Justice Reports Record False Claims Recoveries

According to a Department of Justice press release the DOJ recovered a record $3.1 Billion in settlements and judgments in cases involving allegations of fraud against the government.  $1.3 billion of the recoveries were initiated by whistleblowers under the federal qui tam whistleblower statute.  Of the recoveries, 72% ($2.2 billion) were related to health care fraud. 

It is apparent from this development that false claims actions are on the rise, so physicians and other providers who have not yet developed compliance policies and procedures to prevent false claims and whistleblower actions by their employees are well advised to do so. 

CMS Issues Stark Law Advisory Opinion

In November 2006 the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued Advisory Opinion 2006-01 dealing with the Stark exception for physician recruitment arrangements.  Specifically, the Opinion addressed a proposed arrangement whereby a hospital and a medical practice would share the expense of recruiting a new physician into the hospital's service area and the hospital would provide certain forgivable loans to the physician. 

Although the recruited physician would either would move his or her practice at least 25 miles or would derive at least 75% of revenues from professional services furnished to patients not seen or treated by the Physician previously, as required by the recruitment exception, 10 to 20% of the recruited physician's time would be spent providing medical services at a practice location outside of the hospital’s geographic service area.  The parties seeking the advisory opinion sought clarification of whether a physician would be deemed to have relocated his practice to the a hospital's service area if the physician spends a percentage of his time practicing medicine outside of the hospital's service area.

Based on the fact that the recruitment exception includes no explicit requirement that the recruited physician spend 100% of his medical practice time in the geographic area served by the recruiting hospital, CMS concluded that the proposed arrangement would meet the recruitment exception.  However, CMS notes that it might reach a different conclusion if the time spent by the recruited
physician outside of the geographic service area was more substantial than under the proposed arrangement.

AO-206-01 is noteworthy in that it signals a willingness on the part of CMS to provide more meaningful guidance through the Advisory Opinion process than it has in the past.  It also serves as a reminder to physicians and counsel that CMS will apply a technical reading when applying the Stark exceptions.

Pennsylvania Managed Care Plan to Pay $5 Million to Settle False Claims Allegations

According to a press release by the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Keystone Mercy Health Plan has agreed to pay $5 million to resolve civil liabilities under the federal False Claims Act and other federal and state statutes and common law principles.  According to the complaint filed by the U.S. Attorney, KMHP allegedly violated the federal False Claims Act by failing to remit to the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare overpayments recouped by KMHP from providers.  Of note is the fact that the case was initiated by a former employee of KMHP under the whistleblower provisions of the False Claims Act.  According to the complaint, the whistleblower stands to receive $780,000 from the settlement proceeds.