When one physician offers to pay another physician for the referral of patients this illegal practice is known as?

There can be confusion understanding the differences between the Anti-kickback Statute and the Physician Self-Referral Laws, or Stark laws. Although both are aimed at limiting cost and corruption of medical decision making, there are important differences between the two.

The federal Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) (See 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b.) is a criminal statute that prohibits the exchange (or offer to exchange), of anything of value, in an effort to induce (or reward) the referral of business reimbursable by federal health care programs. Examples of prohibited kickbacks include receiving financial incentives for referrals, free or very low rent for office space, or excessive compensation for medical directorships. Other kickbacks include waving copayments, either routinely or on a selective case-by-case basis. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) claims that kickbacks have led to overutilization and increased costs of healthcare services, corruption of medical decision making, steering patients away from valid services or therapies and unfair, non-competitive service delivery. Possible penalties for violating the AKS include: fines of up to $25,000, up to five years in jail, and exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid care program business.

The physician self-referral laws (Stark Laws) (See 42 U.S.C. § 1395nn) are a set of United States federal civil laws that prohibit physician self-referral, specifically a referral by a physician of a Medicare or Medicaid patient to an entity providing designated health services (DHS) if the physician (or his/her immediate family member) has a financial relationship with that entity. Although the financial penalties may be even greater than with the AKS, these are non-criminal charges. Penalties for violations of Stark Law include denial of payment for the DHS provided, refund of monies received by physicians and facilities for amounts collected, payment of civil penalties of up to $15,000 for each service that a person "knows or should know" was provided in violation of the law, and three times the amount of improper payment the entity received from the Medicare program, exclusion from the Medicare program and/or state healthcare programs including Medicaid and payment of civil penalties for attempting to circumvent the law of up to $100,000 for each circumvention scheme.

Please refer to Table 1 at the end of this article for a summary of the characteristics of AKS and Stark.

CMS maintains a list of designated health services by CPT® code. That list is updated annually and available at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Fraud-and-Abuse/PhysicianSelfReferral/List_of_Codes.html

As part of efforts to review and refine regulatory processes to reduce administrative burden, CMS issued a Request for Information (RFI) regarding Physician Self-Referral Laws (Stark) via a proposed rule in June 2018 and accepted comments through August. The Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General (HHS-OIG) also actively sought input via RFI in a separate proposed rule on whether AKS rules present barriers to coordinated or value-based care and how any such barriers might be addressed. That proposed rule was released in August 2018 and included a comment period that ran until October 2018. ASA submitted comments on the AKS RFI which can be viewed here.

We can anticipate further rulemaking but at this point, it is difficult to predict when that might happen. However, ASA members and their practices will need to stay informed on any changes to either of these sets of rules.

TABLE 1:

Antikickback Statute

Physician Self-Referral Laws (Stark Laws)

Penalty types

Criminal and civil

Civil only

Proof of intent

Requires proof of improper intent

Strict liability
(no proof of intent required)

Jail time

Up to 5 years

N/A

Financial penalties

Fines up to $25,000

$15,000 and 3x the amount of improper payment and civil penalties of up to $100,000 per circumvention scheme

Applies to: Patients

Applies to Medicare and any Federal Healthcare Program

Applies only to Designated Health Services (DHS) paid for by Medicare

Applies to: Healthcare providers

Applies to any referral source
(not just physicians)

Must involve a physician and an entity

Exceptions

Yes, statutory exceptions and safe harbors available

Yes, exceptions available

When one physician offers to pay another physician for the referral of patients this illegal practice is known as quizlet?

When one physician offer to pay another physician for the refferal of patients, this illegal practice is known as? Fee spliting.

Which document is a combination form that can be used as a bill?

The multipurpose billing form is a combination bill, insurance form, and routing document, which may be given to the Pt. at the time of the office visit. It is also referred to as a charge slip, communicator, encounter form, fee ticket, Pt.

What is professional courtesy and why is it less common now?

What is professional courtesy and why is it less common now than in years past? physicians use to treat their employees and their family free of charge. Less common because managed care plans forbid it.

Which of the following is a financial record that shows payments for minor office expenses?

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