CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 5, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Announces New Enforcement Authorities to Reduce Criminal
Behavior in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP
The Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) today issued a final rule that strengthens the
agency’s ability to stop fraud before it happens by keeping unscrupulous
providers out of our federal health insurance programs. This
first-of-its-kind action – stopping fraudsters before they get paid – marks a
critical step forward in CMS’ longstanding fight to end “pay and chase” in
federal healthcare fraud efforts and replace it with smart, effective and
proactive measures. Today’s action is part of the Trump Administration’s
ongoing effort to safeguard taxpayer dollars and protect the core integrity
of the critical Medicare and Medicaid programs that millions rely on.
The final rule, Program
Integrity Enhancements to the Provider Enrollment Process (CMS-6058-FC),
creates several new revocation and denial authorities to bolster CMS’ efforts
to stop waste, fraud and abuse. Importantly, a new “affiliations” authority
in the rule allows CMS to identify individuals and organizations that pose an
undue risk of fraud, waste or abuse based on their relationships with other
previously sanctioned entities. For example, a currently enrolled or newly
enrolling organization that has an owner/managing employee who is
“affiliated” with another
previously revoked organization can be denied enrollment in Medicare,
Medicaid, and CHIP or, if already enrolled, can have its enrollment revoked
because of the problematic affiliation.
“For too many years, we
have played an expensive and inefficient game of ‘whack-a-mole’ with
criminals – going after them one at a time -- as they steal from our
programs. These fraudsters temporarily disappear into complex, hard-to-track
webs of criminal entities, and then re-emerge under different corporate
names. These criminals engage in the same behaviors again and again,” said
CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Now, for the first time, we have tools
to stop criminals before they can steal from taxpayers. This is CMS hardening
the target for criminals and locking the door to the vault. If you’re a bad
actor you can never get into the program, and you can’t steal from it.”
The rule also includes
other authorities that will effectively improve CMS’ fraud-fighting
capabilities. Similar to the affiliations component, these authorities
provide a basis for administrative action to revoke or deny, as applicable,
Medicare enrollment if:
The new rule also gives
CMS the ability to prevent applicants from enrolling in the program for up to
3 years if a provider or supplier is found to have submitted false or
misleading information in its initial enrollment application. Furthermore,
the new rule expands the reenrollment bar that prevents fraudulent or
otherwise problematic providers from re-entering the Medicare program. CMS
can now block providers and suppliers who are revoked from re-entering the
Medicare program for up to 10 years. Previously, revoked providers could only
be prevented from re-enrolling for up to 3 years. Additionally, if a provider
or supplier is revoked from Medicare for a second time, CMS can now block
that provider or supplier from re-entering the program for up to 20 years.
These important new
authorities and restrictions, effective November 4, 2019, ensure that the
only providers and suppliers that will face additional burdens are “bad
actors” — those who have real and demonstrable histories of conduct and
relationships that pose undue risk to taxpayers, patients and program
beneficiaries. This new rule ushers in an important new era of smart,
effective, proactive and risk-based tools designed to protect the integrity
of these vitally important federal healthcare programs we rely on every day
to care for millions of Americans.
This new rule builds on
CMS’ previous successful efforts to protect beneficiaries and taxpayer
dollars while limiting burden on our provider partners without whom we could
not deliver high quality care to the millions of people we are honored to
serve. “Every dollar that is stolen from federal programs is a dollar that
will never contribute to paying for an item or service for seniors and
eligible people who need them,” said Administrator Verma.
The Trump Administration’s
program integrity activities saved Medicare an estimated $15.5 billion in
Fiscal Year (FY) 2017, for an annual return on investment of $10.8 to $1. The
2018 Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) improper payment rate was 8.12%, the
lowest since 2010. This translates to about $4.5 billion less in estimated
improper payments from 2017. For Medicaid, in FY 2018 CMS recovered $10.5
billion in FFS improper payments. An improper payment is any payment that
should not have been made or that was made in an incorrect amount under
statutory, contractual, administrative or other legally applicable
requirements.
In addition to today’s
rule, CMS has implemented several new initiatives to increase provider and
supplier transparency and accountability while reducing burden in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs. To learn more, click here.
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Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Friday, September 6, 2019
CMS Announces New Enforcement Authorities to Reduce Criminal Behavior in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP
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