A U.S. lawmaker is taking action after a KHN investigation exposed weaknesses in the federal system meant to stop repeat Medicare and Medicaid fraud and abuse.
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) said he decided to introduce a bill late last week after KHN鈥檚 reporting revealed what he called a 鈥渟hocking loophole.鈥
鈥淭he ability of fraudsters to continue billing Medicare for services is outrageous,鈥 Doggett said. 鈥淭his is an obvious correction that is needed to safeguard our system. Wherever there are large amounts of government money available, someone tries to steal it.鈥
KHN found a laundry list of weaknesses that allows people accused or convicted of fraud to easily sidestep bans imposed by federal officials. Among those gaps is the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services鈥 lack of authority to deny or revoke National Provider Identifier, or NPI, numbers after federal regulators have prohibited a person or business from receiving payments from government programs.
Doctors, nurses, other practitioners, and health businesses use the unique, 10-digit NPI numbers to bill and file claims with insurers and others, including Medicare and Medicaid.
Taking away the NPI would 鈥渂e equivalent of prohibiting a practitioner from practicing in total,鈥 Dara Corrigan, director of CMS鈥 Center for Program Integrity, wrote in an email response to questions about KHN鈥檚 investigation. CMS declined to comment on Doggett鈥檚 proposed legislation.
The bill, , would give CMS the authority to deactivate NPIs tied to anyone convicted of waste, fraud, or abuse and whose name appears on the kept by the Office of Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The would also require CMS to implement recommendations that the inspector general has made to improve NPI reporting and provider transparency.
鈥淭his strikes me as what should be an easy bipartisan measure,鈥 Doggett said, adding that he had presented the bill in a face-to-face meeting with Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.), who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee. Doggett also alerted that panel鈥檚 health subcommittee chair, Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.).
鈥淭hey both talk about the need to eliminate fraud, and this is one modest but important way to do it,鈥 Doggett said. Neither Smith鈥檚 nor Buchanan鈥檚 offices responded to requests for comment.
The OIG declined to comment.
Former Justice Department officials told KHN that repeat violators are savvy and find ways to circumvent the system. KHN examined a sample of 300 health care business owners and executives who are among more than 1,600 on the OIG鈥檚 exclusion list since January 2017. Journalists reviewed court and property records, social media, and other publicly available documents.
KHN found:
- Eight people appeared to be serving or served in roles that could violate their bans.
- Six transferred control of a business to family or household members.
- Nine had previous, unrelated felony or fraud convictions, and went on to defraud the health care system.
- And seven were repeat violators, some of whom raked in tens of millions of federal health care dollars before getting caught by officials after a prior exclusion.
Doggett鈥檚 bill is 鈥渁 pretty smart step in the right direction in fixing this issue,鈥 said John Kelly, a former assistant chief of health care fraud at the Department of Justice who is now a partner for the law firm Barnes & Thornburg. Kelly had previously recommended that NPIs should be 鈥渆ssentially wiped clean鈥 when a person is on the exclusions list.
Kelly, who confirmed that Doggett鈥檚 office reached out to him after KHN鈥檚 investigation was published in December, said taking the NPI number away 鈥渃ertainly doesn鈥檛 eliminate all risk鈥 but it鈥檚 a move 鈥渋n the right direction.鈥
鈥淚f you want to bill Medicare, you have to have a valid NPI,鈥 Kelly said.
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