Title: STARK PHASE III UPDATE
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- STARK PHASE III UPDATE
- Miami Valley Medical Group Management Association
- Wednesday, November 14, 2007
- Presenters
- John L. Green, Esq.
- Timothy M. Grimes, Esq.
- Michael G. Leesman, Esq.
2TODAYS PRESENTATION
- STARK Phase III (Phase III) Overview
Background - Areas of Discussion
- Issues of General Interest
- Issues specific to the Physician Recruitment
Exception - Other Notable Phase III Changes and Updates
3STARK HISTORY TIMELINE
- Initial Stark Law (January 1992)
- Stark I Regulations (August 1995)
- Stark Law Expansion Designated Health
Services (January 1995) Most defined by CPT
Code - Stark II Regulations in multiple phases
- Phase I (January 4, 2001)
- Phase II (March 26, 2004)
- Phase III (September 5, 2007)
4STARK LAW GENERALLY
- Prohibits a physician from making referrals for
certain designated health services (DHS)
payable by Medicare to an entity with which he or
she (or an immediate family member) has a
financial relationship (ownership or
compensation) and - Prohibits the entity from filing claims with
Medicare (or billing another individual, entity,
or third party payer) for those referred services.
5STARK - Phase III
- Display copy released August 27, 2007
- Published in the Fed. Reg. September 5, 2007
- Effective 90 days after publication, (December
4, - 2007)
62008 MEDICARE PHYSICIANFEE SCHEDULE
- Published July 12, 2007 and since that time there
has been a great deal of discussion regarding its
content. - Recently, CMS indicated that only the anti-markup
portions are going to be instituted at this time,
(final rule expected to be published November 27,
2007) but that the other proposed changes are
likely coming in the near future.
7ISSUES OF GENERAL INTEREST
- Alteration of the definition of Physician in the
Group Practice - In-office Ancillary Services Exception update
- Profit sharing/Productivity bonuses and the
Incident to definition update
8PHYSICIAN IN THE GROUP PRACTICE
- Phase III revises this definition to require a
direct contractual relationship between the group
practice and the physician - This definitional change could remove certain
physicians from being considered physicians in
the group - Therefore, you may need to reevaluate your
contractual relationships in situations where you
utilize the physician services exception and the
in-office ancillary services exception
9IN-OFFICE ANCILLARY SERVICES EXCEPTION UDPATE
- No significant changes, but CMS makes some
important points. - A Shared Facility Arrangements, i.e. the
provision of designated health service in shared
space, say on an imaging suite, must meet all
requirements not merely on paper, but in
operation. - A block lease arrangement for the space and
equipment used to provide the designated health
service is probably required.
10IN-OFFICE ANCILLARY SERVICES EXCEPTION UDPATE
(contd)
- CMS also reaffirmed the importance of the
definition of centralized building and warned
about independent contractor physicians termed
physicians in the group practice only when
performing services on the group practices
premisesespecially in condominium arrangements
11PRODUCTIVITY BONUSES AND THE INCIDENT TO
DEFINITION UPDATE
- Revenue shares in a group practice may no longer
be based on the volume or value of incident to
services referred by the physicians. - Now, a profit distribution, which contains
revenue from incident to services, may be paid
out only on an indirect basis such as a formula
set in advance such a conversing interest.
12ISSUES SPECIFIC TO THE PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT
EXCEPTION
- Generally, recruited physician must relocate from
outside the area - 75 new patients test or
- 25 miles test and
- Relocation into the area
- Relocation into the area means into the
geographic area served by the hospital - lowest number of contiguous zip codes from which
the hospital draws at least 75 of its inpatients
- contiguous with each other, not necessarily with
hospital - hole zip code allowed
- determined at the hospital level, not the system
level - special rule for hospitals who cannot satisfy 75
test
13PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Exceptions
- Resident/Fellow or in practice one (1) year or
less - Employed full time at least prior two (2) years
by - Federal or state bureau of prisons
- Department of Defense or Veterans Affairs
- Indian health service facility
- Get an advisory opinion from CMS
- does not have an established practice
- that serves or could serve
- a significant number of patients
- who are or could become
- patients of the recruitment hospital
14PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Practice Restrictions
- may not impose on the recruited physician
practice restrictions that unreasonably restrict
the recruited physicians ability to practice
medicine in the geographic area served by the
hospital - non-compete provisions
- if they result in the recruited physician being
forced to leave the geographic area served by the
hospital unreasonable - hospital area 15 miles
- non-compete area 2 miles
- may be acceptable
15PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Watch for Practice will not impose on the
recruited physician restrictions
that unreasonably restrict the recruited
physicians ability to practice
medicine in the hospitals geographic area - Hospitals can still require that there be no
non-compete in the recruitment agreement - protecting the hospitals investment
- CMS indicated approval of certain types of
restrictions - restrictions on moonlighting
- non-solicitation (employees and patients)
- requiring to treat Medicaid (indigent patients)
- repayment of losses beyond hospital recruitment
payments - liquidated damages (reasonable)
16PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Income guarantees/lines of credit
- declined to relax restrictions
- additional, incremental expenses
- all variations are subject to restrictions
- revenue guarantee
- salary guarantee
- gross income guarantee
- line of credit
- Narrow change physician recruited to replace a
deceased, retiring or relocating physician in a
HPSA or rural area can allocate lt per capita or
20 of all practice expenses
17PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Types of recruiting expenses a hospital can
reimburse to a practice - tail malpractice insurance
- recruitment firm fees
- travel expenses for physician and family
- relocation expenses
- must be accomplished through a written agreement
(recruitment agreement with practice) - Parties to recruitment agreement
- hospital
- recruited physician
18PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Practice liability for repayment if physician
recruit leaves the hospitals geographic area - generally, practice not liable
- hospital can require the practice to guarantee
payment - all practice assets
- recruited physicians A/R
- cannot require practice to guarantee if used to
shield recruited physician from any exposure - if required, hospitals must enforce it
- recruited physician
- practice
- practice (optional)
19PHYSICIAN RECRUITMENT EXCEPTION (contd)
- Cannot already be on medical staff
- includes courtesy staff
- Physician extender (NP, PA) recruitment still not
protected
20OTHER PHASE III CHANGES AND UPDATES
- In-direct Compensation Arrangements and Stand in
the Shoes - Fair Market Value Safe Harbor
- Non-monetary Compensation Update
- Unit-of-Service (Per-Click) Lease Arrangements
21STAND IN THE SHOES STANDARD FOR INDIRECT
COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS
- Phase III makes no substantive changes to this
exception, but CMS interpretation of the rule is
given greater clarity with the Stand in the
Shoes standard. - A referring physician stands in the shoes of
his group practice, which acts on behalf of its
physician members and contractors, and has a
direct compensation arrangement with the DHS
Entity contracting with his/her group.
22STAND IN THE SHOES STANDARD FOR INDIRECT
COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS (contd)
- Certain arrangements are not impacted
- If an arrangement existed as of publication date
of Phase III, it does not need to be amended
during the original term of the arrangement or
the current renewal term, and - May continue as if stand in the shoes does not
apply
23FAIR MARKET VALUE SAFE HARBOR
- CMS deleted the safe harbor for hourly payments
to physicians for personal services. - This safe harbor allowed physicians and hospitals
to guarantee that hourly payments did not exceed
fair market value by relying on certain rates for
particular physician specialties and data
obtained from the six physician compensation
surveys. - The real benefit is the removal of the negative
connotation an hourly rate carried with it if it
was above the average from the surveys. - Now hospitals and physicians must use other
reasonable methodologies to determine such hourly
rates. - For example MGMA Salary Survey
24NON-MONETARY COMPENSATION
- Phase III makes a few clarifications/changes
to the exception - Applies on a calendar basis,
- Physicians may repay certain excess non-monetary
compensation when the limit is exceeded by no
more than 50 during the calendar year - Must be repaid within the same calendar year or
180 days from receipt to preserve compliance with
the exception. - Repayment provision may not be used more than
once every three years. - Medical Staff event not included (ex. Holiday
Party)
25UNIT-OF-SERVICE (PER-CLICK) LEASE ARRANGEMENTS
- Phase III does not address Per-Click directly,
but does provide direction in its commentary that
suggests that this type of arrangement does not
satisfy the exclusive use requirements of the
office equipment lease exception. - These comments may signal the intent of CMS to
eliminate all Per Click lease arrangements, so
be prepared for an adjustment if necessary.
26THANK YOU!