Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sunrise Hospital was told to refund more than $26 million for Medicare billing errors.

Audit says hospital improperly billed Medicare; it differs

- By Jonah Dylan

A federal audit has concluded that Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center of Las Vegas improperly billed Medicare for more than $23.6 million in services and called on it to refund the money.

Sunrise Hospital will appeal the decision by the Office of the Inspector

General for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, triggering a process that could take “several years,” CEO Todd Sklamberg said Thursday.

“We strongly disagree with the OIG’S findings related to our inpatient rehab facility because we believe that the care we provided to our patients was necessary and effective,” he said.

As part of a routine audit, the

OIG’S office looked at 100 inpatient and outpatient claims. According to the report, the hospital did not comply with Medicare billing procedures in 54 of the claims, although five were reprocesse­d during the course of the audit. Those claims have been accepted by the OIG and removed from the amount it wants Sunrise to repay.

According to the report, Sunrise billed Medicare for unnecessar­y inpatient visits, or situations where the patient did not meet the standard for necessary inpatient care — a situation where “the ordering physician expects the patient to require care for a period of time that crosses two midnights.”

The report, which was released last month, also asks Sunrise to strengthen its policies to comply with Medi

care requiremen­ts.

Sklamberg said Sunrise received a preliminar­y version of the report and noted that it acknowledg­es multiple instances where the hospital disputes the audit’s findings. He also noted that Sunrise’s inpatient program is the only one certified by the Commission on Accreditat­ion of Rehabilita­tion Facilities (CARF) in Southern Nevada.

Among the conclusion­s Sunrise is disputing is the audit’s contention that inpatient admissions did not meet Medicare criteria.

”Based on determinat­ions by our independen­t medical review, the medical records did not support the necessity for inpatient hospital services and should have been billed as outpatient or outpatient with observatio­n,” the report reads.

The report also contended that Sunrise billed Medicare for treatments that were not “reasonable and necessary,” and submitted some outpatient claims with incorrect Medicare codes.

The report looked at 85 inpatient claims and 15 outpatient claims from Jan. 1, 2017, to Dec. 31, 2018.

The hospital “disagreed with almost all of our findings,” the report noted. After back-and-forth arguments between the OIG’S office and the hospital, which are detailed in the report, the OIG’S office maintained that the findings were correct.

In Sunrise’s response, included at the bottom of the report, Sklamberg took exception with the audit and the OIG’S methods.

“OIG’S audit of Sunrise is fundamenta­lly flawed due to its reliance on questionab­le medical reviews, its misapplica­tion of coverage criteria, its refusal to further review the denied claims and its inappropri­ate use of extrapolat­ion,” he stated. “If finalized, OIG’S report will harm Sunrise’s reputation, jeopardizi­ng its patient care mission and its ability to continue serving the health care needs of the community.”

HCA Healthcare, which owns Sunrise and is one of the nation’s biggest health care providers, has had issues with Medicare payments in the past. The company agreed to pay $1.7 billion between 1997 and 2003 in what the Justice Department said at the time was “the largest health care fraud case in U.S. history.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal ?? An audit found that Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center of Las Vegas improperly billed Medicare for more than $23.6 million. Sunrise will appeal the decision.
Las Vegas Review-journal An audit found that Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center of Las Vegas improperly billed Medicare for more than $23.6 million. Sunrise will appeal the decision.

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