Behavioral Health System to Pay $860,000 for Anti-Kickback Statute Violations
By David Leatherberry on February 18, 2017
Under a civil settlement with the Department of Justice, El Paso Behavioral Healthcare, formerly University Behavioral Health of El Paso, LLC (“UBH”), has been ordered to pay over three-quarters of a million dollars to resolve allegations that it made improper payments to a doctor in exchange for patient referrals, and submitted false claims to Medicare.
The allegations focused on the Medicare claims of several patients from a physician whose office received payments above fair market value, or payments for services that were not rendered pursuant to a physician services agreement which also provided for the improper referral of the physician’s patients to UBH for Medicare-reimbursed services.
Federal law, including the Anti-Kickback Act and the Stark Law, seeks to ensure that services reimbursable by federal healthcare programs are paid at fair market value and based on the best interests of patients rather than the personal financial interests of referring physicians.
Periodic review of physician agreements should be a key component of any effective compliance program. In addition to the potential criminal sanctions that may be imposed for anti-kickback violations, Medicare claims arising from such improper financial relationships may result in substantial additional false claims liability. Healthcare facilities which discover Medicare overpayments through an effective compliance program can limit their liability through self-reporting. Read more here.