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Among the plethora of different contractors used by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to administer the Medicare program is the Supplemental Medical Review Contractor, or SMRC. Like the Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs), Unified Program Integrity Contractors (UPICs), and others, the SMRC – of which there is only one at any given time – also audits the claims submitted for reimbursement by Medicare providers and suppliers and issues allegations that providers have received overpayments. Noridian Healthcare Solutions, which is also a MAC, was selected as the SMRC in 2018 and remains the current SMRC.

SMRC audits generally begin with an Additional Documentation Request (ADR), usually in a distinctive green envelope with the Noridian SMRC letterhead or logo. After the provider submits the requested records, the SMRC conducts the review based on the analysis of national claims data, statutory and regulatory coverage, and coding, payment, and billing requirements. The SMRC should eventually issue a Review Results Letter. Providers should be aware that a SMRC review can sometimes last for several months with no intervening correspondence or status updates from the SMRC. Providers who expect, but have not received, a SMRC response should consider carefully checking their Medicare EOBs for activity their MAC may have taken based on the SMRC audit and note any appeal deadlines. Also, providers should be aware that the SMRC is a regional contractor who is allowed to conduct audits nationwide and thus may misunderstand local rules, state laws, or LCDs. SMRC audit findings should generally be carefully scrutinized.

SMRC audit findings also have an additional appeal mechanism available to them. Where the SMRC denies claims, the provider generally has a right to appeal the findings directly to the SMRC and can sometimes request a discussion and education session directly with the SMRC. If the SMRC denies the appeal, it will refer the case to the provider’s local MAC to collect the alleged overpayment or to other government agencies for further action. Where the MAC demands that the provider return an overpayment based on the SMRC’s findings, that demand is subject to the standard Medicare claims appeal process.

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The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into healthcare represents a frontier of innovation, offering transformative potential for patient care, diagnostic accuracy, and operational efficiency. However, as healthcare providers and technology companies rapidly adopt AI solutions, navigating the complex landscape of regulatory compliance becomes increasingly crucial. This landscape is defined by focuses on patient safety, data privacy, and ethical standards, making regulatory compliance as critical as the technological advancements themselves.

At the heart of healthcare regulation is the imperative to ensure patient safety and efficacy of care. Regulatory bodies like the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have been active in establishing frameworks for the approval and use of AI-driven medical devices and software. While FDA generally has authority to regulate medical devices, there are important limits on its authority. Users of AI tools that assist practitioners in analyzing a patient’s symptomology and rendering a diagnosis may want to explore whether the tool constitutes a Clinical Decision Support tool, which are generally beyond the scope of FDA regulation.

While AI can provide powerful tools to assist licensed healthcare practitioners, there may be significant implications where an AI tool attempts to replace a licensed healthcare practitioner. These implications include both ethical considerations for the licensed practitioner and compliance consideration for the unlicensed user of an AI-driven tool. Every state issues licenses to practice within a certain scope of practice and limits conduct within that scope of practice to holders of a license. For example, generally only licensed medical doctors may practice medicine. A licensed medical practitioner who allows an AI-driven tool to dictate patient care and fails to exercise independent medical judgement may have violated ethical and legal obligations under their applicable license. On the other hand, the unlicensed user of an AI-driven tool may face accusations of authorized practice where the tool is performing activities that are limited only to licensed physicians, nurses, etc.

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When structuring healthcare arrangements, three major compliance challenges frequently emerge: the Stark Law (officially the Physician Self-Referral Law), the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), and the Eliminating Kickbacks in Recovery Act (EKRA). These laws govern referrals to or from a healthcare provider or supplier and carry the risk of severe, sometimes criminal, penalties. Yet, each also offers several exceptions or safe harbors that certain business models might meet. Even a simple arrangement with a healthcare entity can involve complex analysis regarding these three statutes.

The Stark Law (42 U.S.C. 1395nn) prohibits doctors from referring patients to entities providing “designated health services” covered by Medicare or Medicaid if there is a financial relationship between the physician (or their immediate family) and the entity, except under specific exceptions. Financial relationships subject to the Stark Law encompass both compensation and investment interests. Covered services range from clinical labs to physical and occupational therapy, durable medical equipment, certain imaging services, and more. Common exceptions include provisions for in-office ancillary services, fair market value compensation, and legitimate employment relationships. Recently, CMS introduced additional exceptions for value-based arrangements to accommodate evolving healthcare delivery models.

Similarly, the AKS (42 U.S.C. 1320a-7b(b)) criminalizes the exchange of “remuneration” to influence patient referrals or generate business for services billed to federal healthcare programs. “Remuneration” is broadly defined to include any item of value, not just cash. Nonetheless, where conduct implicates the AKS, it may still be lawful if the conduct fits within one of the statute’s “safe harbors,” which cover certain investments, rental agreements, and personal service contracts, among others. Recent updates have also added safe harbors for value-based healthcare arrangements, reflecting the industry’s shift towards this model.

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Nearly 4 years after the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare providers continue to see payor audits and demands for repayment for services provided during the pandemic, primarily COVID-19 testing and vaccinations. While these services were an essential public function during the pandemic, constantly changing and often unclear rules and regulations governing the coverage of these services have created fertile ground for payors to allege after-the-fact that provider were not entitled to payment.

The issues asserted by payors tend to be systemic; that is, related to the process used by the provider rather than issues related to any unique characteristics of any specific claim. Therefore, these allegations often lead to demands that the provider pay back a significant portion of reimbursements for their COVID-19 services, often in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars.

COVID-19 audits tend to focus on a few common issues. Payors may audit providers based on the requirement for an “individualized clinical assessment,” including whether the ordering provider was authorized, whether the order for testing was within the scope of state law, whether the assessment was conducted by telemedicine or by a questionnaire, whether the ordering provider used a standing order, and what rules apply where a state does not or did not require an order for COVID-19 testing. The use of standing orders has become a particular point of contention, especially in cases where the practitioner who issued the standing order did not personally examine patients, was located offsite, or was under contract with and receiving reimbursement from the entity billing for the services.

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Both the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and its plethora of contractors rely on the mail to notify providers and suppliers of document requests, audit findings, disciplinary actions, and many other important items. Providers should be careful that their mailing addresses on file with Medicare are current and accurate. Failure to do so can result in the provider not receiving an important piece of correspondence and inadvertently causing significant consequences for the provider.

The Medicare Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS) is the online Medicare enrollment management system. It allows individuals and entities to enroll as Medicare providers or suppliers. When a provider or supplier enrolls in Medicare, it must provide a series of addresses, including a correspondence address, medical review address, and payment address. Whether a provider enrolls online or uses a paper application, once the provider is enrolled, these addresses are stored in PECOS. In PECOS, a provider can check and edit their listed addresses. When CMS or a contractor needs to mail correspondence to the provider, they will look to PECOS for the address to use. As there are multiple address types listed in PECOS, which may list different addresses, the address selected may relate to the purpose of the correspondence, or a contractor may simply choose an address seemingly at random.

Items that may be sent to a provider’s address or addresses listed in PECOS may be Additional Documentation Requests (ADRs), notices of audits, notices of audit findings with appeal rights, and notices of disciplinary proceedings such as Medicare suspensions, revocations, and exclusions. A provider that does not receive one of these because of an incorrect address listed in PECOS may inadvertently fail to provide records, miss an appeal deadline, or otherwise miss the chance to address some action that Medicare takes against them. In general, where correspondence is sent to the address in PECOS, Medicare will assume that it was received and shift the responsibility to the provider to keep PECOS updated. Not receiving such mail can have devastating consequences for the provider and make subsequent appeal or remedials actions much more difficult.

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Medicare providers who use skin substitutes, allografts, and similar products for wound care are seeing a sharp increase in audits by Medicare contractors. These products often carry high reimbursement rates and require frequent reapplication. Therefore, they are seen by the Medicare program as high risk for improper payments or outright fraud. Providers who use these products or who are subjected to audit should know the consequences of an audit and that there are avenues to respond.

Many of these audits are conducted by Unified Program Integrity Contractors (UPICs), such as CoventBridge group. UPICs are Medicare contractors tasked with auditing providers for suspected fraud in claims submitted to the Medicare or Medicaid programs. Notably, UPICs are quick to deny claims and allege that the provider has committed fraud for any perceived noncompliance with documentation requirements, no matter how minor. A UPIC’s allegation of fraud can nonetheless have serious consequences for a provider, especially when not rebutted, but such allegations may be addressed through the timely appeal of claims denied by the UPIC.

Denial reasons in wound care audits generally include: the specific product was investigational or experimental, conservative treatment was not documented prior to application of the product, there is no documentation regarding why one product was chosen over another product or another course of treatment, the product was reapplied too many times or over too long a period, the patient did not show significant enough improvement to justify continued use, and that the product was not used for a “homologous use.” “Homologous use” is defined by statutes and regulations governing FDA approval for a product and generally means that tissue is used by the patient in the same manner as it was used by the donor. For example, auditors often claim that placental-derived products can only be used as a “wound covering” because the placenta “covers” the fetus, and that “wound healing” is a separate, inappropriate use. Each of these denial reasons can be addressed in the claims appeal process.

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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recently released a joint statement suggesting that the FDA is about to end its decades-long policy of declining to regulate lab-developed tests (LDTs). The statement casts the policy as outdated and suggests that the FDA is about to impose regulation to treat LDTs with the same approach as all other laboratory tests.

Testing by clinical laboratories is regulated by both the FDA and by the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA), as administered by CMS. The FDA regulates medical devices, including in vitro diagnostic products (“IVDs”). The FDA considers LDTs to be IVDs that are intended for clinical use and are designed, manufactured, and used within a single laboratory. CLIA, on the other hand, regulates the laboratory itself and classifies LDTs as “high complexity tests,” with corresponding standards imposed on the laboratory. Importantly, regarding the LDT itself, CLIA generally requires only analytical validation, which can occur after testing has already begun. LDTs may also be subject to more stringent state and private sector oversight.

Historically, the FDA had exercised enforcement discretion and not regulated LTDs, but this began to change in recent decades and accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic caused an explosion in the need for quick, accurate, and cost-effective means to detect the virus that causes COVID-19. Many clinical labs responded by developing LDTs to detect COVID-19. As LDTs, labs were quickly able to innovate and begin bringing tests for COVID-19 to market. FDA responded by muddying the waters and adding regulatory burden. Initially, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), then under the Trump administration, released guidance that, during the public health emergency (PHE), LDTs for COVID-19 would not require pre-market approval. FDA then, in seeming contradiction of HHS, determined that the at-home collection kit of a COVID-19 LDT was distinct from the test itself and subject to FDA regulation. Later in the pandemic, HHS, now under the Biden administration, changed policy again and allowed the FDA to regulate all COVID-19 LDTs.

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The Michigan Medicaid program recently sent a program-wide email to healthcare providers and suppliers reminding them of certain duties under the Michigan Medicaid program. Specifically, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (“MDHHS”), which oversees the Michigan Medicaid program, emailed providers that:

“As a reminder, all Medicaid-reimbursed services are subject to review for conformity with accepted medical practice and Medicaid coverage and limitations. The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) conducts post-payment reviews to verify services, providers, settings, and appropriate billing. Providers must, upon request from authorized agents of the state or federal government, make available for examination and photocopying all medical records, quality assurance documents, financial records, administrative records, and other documents and records that must be maintained. Providers must maintain, in English and a legible manner, written or electronic records necessary to fully disclose and document the extent of services provided to beneficiaries. The records are to be retained for a period of not less than seven years from the date of service, regardless of a change in ownership or termination of participation in Medicaid for any reason.”

Generally, each of these is a basic program requirement applicable to all providers and suppliers who submit claims to the Michigan Medicaid program and are found in state statute, regulation, policy, participation agreement, or other sources.

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Earlier this month, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a concept paper that outlines the Department’s cybersecurity strategy for the healthcare sector. The concept paper builds on the Biden Administration’s National Cybersecurity Strategy, specifically focusing on strengthening resilience for hospitals, patients, and communities threatened by cyber-attacks. The paper arrives at a crucial time for healthcare providers since, according to the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR), large breach cyber incidents in the healthcare sector have increased 93% from 2018-2022, with a 278% increase in large breaches involving ransomware.

The HHS healthcare cybersecurity strategy is comprised of four concurrent components, with the overarching goal of strengthening cyber resiliency in the healthcare sector. The four components established by HHS are:

  • Establish voluntary cybersecurity performance goals for the healthcare sector;
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Recently, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published the calendar year (CY) 2024 physician fee schedule (PFS) final rule, which solidified certain proposed changes to Medicare provider enrollment requirements. The changes discussed below go into effect January 1, 2024.

The final rule expands CMS’s current revocation and denial authorities in two significant ways. First, CMS now has the ability to revoke enrollment if a provider, supplier, or any owner, managing employee or organization, officer, or director has been convicted of a misdemeanor under federal or state law within the previous 10 years that CMS deems detrimental to the best interests of the Medicare program and its beneficiaries. Previously, CMS only had the authority to revoke a provider’s Medicare enrollment in the event of a conviction for certain felonies. CMS has stated that this could include any misdemeanor that, in its judgment, places the Medicare program or its beneficiaries at immediate risk, such as a malpractice suit that results in a conviction of criminal neglect or misconduct.

Second, the final rule expands CMS’s authority to revoke and deny enrollment if a provider, supplier, or any owner, managing employee or organization, officer, or director has had a civil judgment under the False Claims Act (FCA) imposed against them within the previous 10 years. Prior to the CY 2024 final rule, CMS did not have the authority to revoke a provider’s Medicare enrollment solely related to FCA activity. For purposes of this ground for revocation or denial, the term “civil judgment” would not include FCA settlement agreements – the provision requires a judgment against the provider or supplier.

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