This week, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued OIG Advisory Opinion No. 15-15 regarding a proposed arrangement in which a hospital would bill a radiology group for transcription of the radiology group’s reports for patients who are not hospital patients, but rather patients of a third-party clinic that provides radiology studies and refers to the radiology group. Under the proposed arrangement, the clinic would perform the technical component of radiology studies and transmit the results of the studies to the radiology group for interpretation.  The hospital would transcribe the professional component interpretive reports and bill the radiology practice a fixed transcription fee on a per line basis.

The OIG noted that because the clinic is a referral source to the radiology group, if transcription costs were reimbursed as part of the Medicare payment for the technical component, these costs would be the responsibility of the clinic and the payment of the transcription fees by the radiology group could be viewed as an improper kickback to the clinic. However, according to the OIG, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services takes the position that when the technical and professional components of a test are performed by different parties, the parties may determine who will pay the transcription costs.  Accordingly, the OIG concluded that payment of the transcription fees by the radiology group would not be an improper inducement and, therefore, that the arrangement would not violate the anti-kickback statute.