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Deconstructing an OIG Medicare Hospital Compliance Review

Published on 

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

 | FAQ 
 | OIG 

“Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direction and skillful execution; it represents the wise choice of many alternatives.”- William A. Foster

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) began releasing Hospital Medicare Compliance Review (Compliance Reviews) Reports in early 2011. In Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 Compliance Reviews became part of the OIG’s Work Plan. Although the name of the project may have changed since 2012, Compliance Reviews remain a part of the Work Plan in FY 2016.

FY 2012 OIG Work Plan Project

  • Medicare Inpatient and Outpatient Payments to Acute Care Hospitals (New)

We will review Medicare payments to hospitals to determine compliance with selected billing requirements. We will use the results of these reviews to recommend recovery of overpayments and identify providers that routinely submit improper claims. Prior OIG audits, investigations, and inspections have identified areas that are at risk for noncompliance with Medicare billing requirements. Based on computer matching and data mining techniques, we will select hospitals for focused reviews of claims that may be at risk for overpayments. Using the same data analysis techniques, we will identify hospitals that broadly rank as least risky across compliance areas and those that broadly rank as most risky. We will then review the hospitals’ policies and procedures to compare the compliance practices of these two groups of hospitals. We will also survey or interview hospitals’ leadership and compliance officers to provide contextual information related to hospitals’ compliance programs. (OAS; W-00-11-35538; various reviews; expected issue date: FY 2012; work in progress; and OEI; 00-00-00000; expected issue date: FY 2012; new start)

FY 2016 OIG Work Plan Project

  • Selected inpatient and outpatient billing requirements

We will review Medicare payments to acute care hospitals to determine hospitals’ compliance with selected billing requirements and recommend recovery of overpayments. Prior OIG audits, investigations, and inspections have identified areas at risk for noncompliance with Medicare billing requirements. Our review will focus on those hospitals with claims that may be at risk for overpayments. (OAS; W-00-12-35538; W-00-13-35538; W-00-14-35538; W-00-15-35538; various reviews; expected issue date: FY 2016)

Compliance Reviews by the Numbers

As of February 2016, the OIG has released over 140 Compliance Reviews. According to these reviews, collectively this group of hospitals was overpaid $76,447,380.00. Adding insult to injury, in 2013 the OIG began extrapolating their findings. To date, 21 hospitals have been subject to extrapolation, including the most recent hospital Compliance Review released on February 3, 2016 for the University of Minnesota Medical Center for 2012 and 2013.

Extrapolating overpayments has exponentially increased the amount hospitals are to refund to the Contractor. Collectively, the $7,780,049.00 overpaid by 21 hospitals was extrapolated to $66,495,541.00. When you add this subset of hospitals to the overall amounts, the $76,447,380.00 that all hospitals were overpaid increased to $135,262,862.00 to be refunded to the Contractor. Now let’s take a closer look at the most recent Report released.

Medicare Compliance Review of University of Minnesota Medical Center for 2012 and 2013

The objective of this review was to “determine whether University of Minnesota Medical Center (the Hospital) complied with Medicare requirements for billing inpatient and outpatient services on selected types of claims.”

Audit Scope

This Compliance Review covered $24,360,864 in Medicare payments to the hospital for 3,351 claims potentially at risk for billing errors. The OIG selected a stratified random sample of 255 claims with payments totally $2,370,592. Claims consisted of 75 inpatient and 180 outpatient claims with dates of service in Calendar Year 2012 and 2013.

Risk Areas

Specific “risk areas” identified as being at risk for noncompliance with Medicare billing requirements included:

  • Inpatient Rehabilitation Claims,
  • Inpatient claims billed with high-severity-level DRG codes,
  • Inpatient and Outpatient manufacturer credits for replaced medical devices,
  • Outpatient dental claims,
  • Outpatient claims billed with modifier -59,
  • Outpatient claims billed for Doxorubicin Hydrochloride; and
  • Outpatient claims billed for Herceptin.

Note that manufacturer credits for replaced medical devices and outpatient dental claims are also stand-alone projects within the FY 2016 Work Plan. This should be a red flag for hospitals to make sure you are in compliance with these two “risk areas.” A valuable resource is readily available in the specific findings in the report where the OIG provides references such as the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and the CMS Provider Reimbursement Manual (PRM) as guidance for compliance with billing requirements.

Audit Findings

The Hospital complied with Medicare billing requirements for 125 of the 255 inpatient and outpatient claims reviewed. The remaining 130 claims resulted in overpayments of $565,286, specifically:

  • 29 Inpatient claims had billing errors, resulting in overpayments of $261,886, and
  • 101 Outpatient claims had billing errors, resulting in overpayments of $303,400.

The OIG indicated that “these errors occurred primarily because the Hospital did not have adequate controls to prevent the incorrect billing of Medicare claims within the selected risk areas that contained errors.” On the basis of this sample, the OIG extrapolated that the hospital received overpayments of at least $3,266,841 for the audit period and recommended that the Hospital refund this amount to the Medicare contractor.

Looking at the dollars to be refunded, it is easy to see why Compliance Reviews continue to be a part of the OIG’s annual Work Plan. While Compliance Reviews are a part of the OIG Work Plan, hospitals should consider closely monitoring “risk areas” in these reports as an additional tool in your annual and ongoing compliance assessment, plan and actions.

Article Author: Beth Cobb, RN, BSN, ACM, CCDS
Beth Cobb, RN, BSN, ACM, CCDS, is the Manager of Clinical Analytics at Medical Management Plus, Inc. Beth has over twenty-five years of experience in healthcare including eleven years in Case Management at a large multi-facility health system. In her current position, Beth is a principle writer for MMP’s Wednesday@One weekly e-newsletter, an active member of our HIPAA Compliance Committee, MMP’s Education Department Program Director and co-developer of MMP’s proprietary Compliance Protection Assessment Tool.

This material was compiled to share information.  MMP, Inc. is not offering legal advice. Every reasonable effort has been taken to ensure the information is accurate and useful.