Santa Fe New Mexican

White House health care plea stuns industry

- By Robert Pear

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has labored zealously to cut federal regulation­s, but its latest move has still astonished some experts on health care: It has asked for recommenda­tions to relax rules that prohibit kickbacks and other payments intended to influence care for people on Medicare or Medicaid.

The goal is to open pathways for doctors and hospitals to work together to improve care and save money. The challenge will be to accomplish that without also increasing the risk of fraud.

With its request for advice, the administra­tion has touched off a lobbying frenzy. Health care providers of all types are urging officials to waive or roll back the requiremen­ts of federal fraud and abuse laws so they can join forces and coordinate care, sharing cost reductions and profits in ways that would not otherwise be allowed.

From hundreds of letters sent to the government by health care executives and lobbyists in the past few weeks, some themes emerge: Federal laws prevent insurers from rewarding Medicare patients who lose weight or take medicines as prescribed. And they create legal risks for any arrangemen­t in which a hospital pays a bonus to doctors for cutting costs or achieving clinical goals.

The existing rules are aimed at preventing improper influence over choices of doctors, hospitals and prescripti­on drugs for Medicare and Medicaid beneficiar­ies. The two programs cover more than 100 million Americans and account for more than one-third of all health spending, so even small changes in law enforcemen­t priorities can have big implicatio­ns.

Federal health officials are reviewing the proposals for what they call a “regulatory sprint to coordinate­d care” even as the Justice Department and other law enforcemen­t agencies crack down on health care fraud, continuall­y exposing schemes to bilk government health programs.

Federal laws make it a crime to offer or pay any “remunerati­on” in return for the referral of Medicare or Medicaid patients, and they limit doctors’ ability to refer patients to medical businesses in which the doctors have a financial interest, a practice known as self-referral.

Health care providers can be fined if they offer financial incentives to Medicare or Medicaid patients to use their services or products. Drug companies have been found to violate the law when they give kickbacks to pharmacies in return for recommendi­ng their drugs to patients. Hospitals can also be fined if they make payments to a doctor “as an inducement to reduce or limit services” provided to a Medicare or Medicaid beneficiar­y.

This month, the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services refused to approve a proposal by a drug company to give hospitals free vials of an expensive drug to treat a seizure disorder in children. The inspector general said this arrangemen­t could encourage doctors to continue prescribin­g the drug for patients outside the hospital, driving up costs for consumers, Medicare, Medicaid and commercial insurance.

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