By Fred Schulte
July 19, 2017
Federal health officials made more than $16 billion in improper
payments to private Medicare Advantage health plans last year and need to crack
down on billing errors by the insurers, a top congressional auditor testified
Wednesday.
James Cosgrove, who directs health care
reviews for the Government Accountability Office, told the House Ways and Means
oversight subcommittee that the Medicare Advantage improper payment rate was 10
percent in 2016, which comes to $16.2 billion.
Adding in the overpayments for standard
Medicare programs, the tally for last year approached $60 billion — which is
almost twice as much as the National Institutes of Health spends on
medical research each year.
“Fundamental changes are necessary” to improve
how the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services ferrets out billing
mistakes and recoups overpayments from health insurers, he said.
Medicare serves about 56 million people, both
those 65 and older and disabled people of any age. About 19 million have chosen
to enroll in Medicare Advantage plans as an alternative to standard Medicare.
Federal officials predict the Medicare
Advantage option will grow further as massive numbers of baby boomers retire in
coming years.
Standard Medicare has a similar problem making
accurate payments to doctors, hospitals and other health care providers,
according to statistics presented at the hearing. Standard Medicare’s payment
error rate was cited at 11 percent, or $41 billion for 2016.
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Last week, Attorney General Jeff
Sessions announced the
arrest of 412 people, some 100 doctors among them, in a scattershot of health
care fraud schemes that allegedly ripped off the government for about $1.3
billion, mostly from Medicare.
CMS official Jonathan Morse said that the
“largest contributors” to billing mistakes in standard Medicare were claims
from home health care and inpatient rehabilitation facilities.
Some lawmakers appeared frustrated that CMS
cannot say for sure how much of the “improper payments” in both Medicare
options are caused by fraud. The agency uses the term broadly to cover billing
fraud, waste and abuse, as well as simply overcharges and underpayments.
“When trying to understand how much fraud is
in Medicare, the answer is simply we don’t know,” subcommittee Chairman Vern
Buchanan (R-Fla.) said.
Yet he added that “it doesn’t take a big
percentage [of fraud] to get a giant number” of dollars.
CMS official Morse did little to clear up any
confusion over billing mistakes. In his written testimony, he said that
improper payments are “most often payments for which there is no or
insufficient supporting documentation to determine whether the service … was
medically necessary.”
In his testimony, GAO official Cosgrove
focused on the Medicare Advantage program. He took aim at a little-known government
audit process called Risk Adjustment Data Validation, or RADV. These audits
require health plans to submit a sample of patient records for review.
Cosgrove said that the RADV audits take too
long to complete and failed to focus on health plans with the greatest
potential for recovery of overcharges. He also said that CMS officials had not
done enough to make sure the payment data they use are accurate. As a result,
“the soundness of billions of dollars in Medicare expenditures remains
unsubstantiated,” according to written testimony.
The GAO, the watchdog arm of Congress, has
previously criticized CMS for its failure to ferret out overcharges in Medicare
Advantage. In an April report, GAO found that
CMS has spent about $117 million on the Medicare Advantage audits since 2010
but recouped just under $14 million in total.
Payment errors and overcharges by Medicare
Advantage plans were the subject of a lengthy investigation by
Kaiser Health News and the Center for Public Integrity. Federal officials have
struggled for years to weed out billing irregularities by Medicare Advantage plans,
according to CMS records obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by
the Center for Public Integrity.
The investigation found that Medicare
Advantage payment errors result mostly from flaws in a billing formula called
a risk score. Congress
expected risk scores would pay higher amounts for sicker patients and less for
people in good health when it began phasing in the billing scales in 2004.
But since then, a wide range of CMS audits and
other reviews have found that Medicare wastes billions of tax
dollars annually because some health plans inflate risk scores by exaggerating
how sick their patients are. One CMS memo made public through the FOIA lawsuit
referred to risk-based payments as essentially an “honor system,” with few
audits to curtail fraud and abuse.
Even when RADV audits have detected widespread
overpayments, CMS officials have failed to recoup money after years of haggling
with the health plans.
In January, Kaiser Health News reported that
Medicare had potentially overpaid five Medicare Advantage health plans by $128
million in 2007, but under pressure from the insurance industry collected just
$3.4 million and settled the cases.
Morse testified on Wednesday that CMS is still
in the process of completing appeals of RADV audits from 2007. He said that
payment errors have been calculated for 2011 and that reviews for 2012 and 2013
were underway.
These results are years behind schedule,
according to CMS documents, which show the results were expected in early 2014.
In the past, officials have said that they expected to collect as much as $370
million from the 2011 audits.
Morse said on Wednesday he didn’t know when
the 2011 audit results would be released. “Hopefully soon,” he said after the
hearing. “I actually don’t know.”
This story was produced by Kaiser Health News, an editorially
independent program of the Kaiser Family
Foundation.
Fred Schulte: fschulte@kff.org,
@fredschulte
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