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Legislative &
Administrative
Update for 2003
Congressional
activity in 2003 relating to the False Claims Act
(FCA) revolved around the massive Medicare
prescription drug legislation, which became law
in December after six months of difficult
negotiations (P.L. 108-173). At one point in the
legislative process, the Senate version of the
bill included a provision that would have
increased the minimum FCA penalty per false claim
from $5,500 to $7,500 and the maximum from
$11,000 to $15,000 (section 612 of S. 1). The
House-passed bill had no comparable provision,
and it was not incorporated into the final
conference agreement. Nonetheless, the new
Medicare law contains an important provision
clarifying the applicability of the FCA and its
qui tam provisions to Medicare administrative
contractors, which are responsible for the
processing and payment of hundreds of millions of
Medicare fee-for-service claims annually. In
addition, Congress expressed its intent to rely
on the FCA to ensure the accuracy of pricing data
submitted by drug manufacturers to the Secretary
of HHS.
The year 2003
also saw a proposal by the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS), which administers
the Medicaid program at the federal level, to
limit to three years the period that drug
manufacturers participating in the Medicaid drug
rebate program are required to retain their
pricing data. TAF joined Senator Charles Grassley
(R-IA), the Department of Justice (DOJ), and the
Office of Inspector General (OIG) of the
Department of Health and Human Services in urging
CMS to reconsider its position and,
provisionally, to extend the record retention
requirement to 10 years, consistent with the FCA.
In addition, the TAF Education Fund worked to
educate policymakers and the general public about
the contributions of the FCA and its qui tam
provisions in protecting the Medicare and
Medicaid programs against fraud by commissioning
and disseminating several policy reports.
I.
Medicare Administrative Contractor Reform
The
Medicare program uses private insurers as fiscal
intermediaries and carriers to process over 900
million claims for payment it receives each year
from hospitals, physicians, and other
fee-for-service providers. There has for several
years been an interest on the part of the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which
administers Medicare, as well as the General
Accounting Office (GAO) and the Office of
Inspector General (OIG) at HHS, in reforming the
way in which Medicare selects and contracts with
intermediaries and carriers. Legislation to
accomplish this was debated but not enacted
during the 107th Congress (2001 2002).
TAF, in collaboration with Osman &
Associates, worked to ensure that the statutory
and report language did not undermine pending or
future FCA cases against fraudulent Medicare
administrative contractors. To date, there have
been 11 FCA settlements involving fiscal
intermediaries or carriers, mostly Blue
Cross/Blue Shield plans, for a total of over $425
million.
Early
in 2003, at the beginning of the 108th Congress,
bipartisan contracting reform legislation was
introduced in the House by Representative Nancy
Johnson (R-CT). This bill, H.R. 810, was reported
by both the Committee on Ways and Means (H. Rept.
108-74, Part 1, filed April 11) and the Committee
on Energy and Commerce (H. Rept. 108-74, Part 2,
filed April 29). The statutory language in the
two versions relating to liability for fraud was
identical and reflected the position supported by
TAF. A Medicare administrative contractor would
be liable if, in connection with a payment to a
Medicare provider or plan, it acted "with
reckless disregard of its obligations under its
Medicare administrative contract or with intent
to defraud the United States." The provision
also clarified that this statutory standard was
not to be construed to limit liability for
conduct that would constitute a violation of the
FCA.
The
House did not take up H.R. 810, and there was no
companion bill in the Senate. Instead, the
contractor reform provisions of H.R. 810 were
folded into the House and Senate versions of the
massive Medicare prescription drug bills, H.R. 1
and S.1, introduced in June 2003 and passed by
the House and the Senate, respectively, that same
month. The language in both bills relating to
contractor liability was identical to the
language in H.R. 810 (see section 911(a) of H.R.
1, section 521(a) of S. 1). On July 24, the
conferees announced an agreement on the portions
of the bills relating to regulatory and
contracting reform. This agreement adopts the
House language on contractor liability. See
Summary of Regulatory and Contracting Reform
Conference Agreement, http://waysandmeans.house.gov/media/pdf/hr1/hr1summaryregreform.pdf. This
agreement was incorporated into the final
conference report, which was adopted by the House
and the Senate in November and signed into law by
the President on December 8 as the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization
Act of 2003, P.L. 108-173. The contractor
liability language is found in section 911(a) of
the new law, which adds a new section 1874A(d)(3)
to the Social Security Act.
II.
Medicare Part B Drug Reform
It
is widely known that the Medicare drug
legislation establishes an outpatient drug
benefit under a new Part D that is to take effect
January 1, 2006. Less well known is that this
same legislation also makes a fundamental policy
change in the current Medicare Part B drug
benefit, which covers chemotherapy and other
physician-administered drugs. Prior to this
change, Medicare paid for the drugs it covered at
95 percent of the Average Wholesale Price (AWP),
as reported by the manufacturers. This payment
methodology led to abuses that were uncovered by
qui tam relators in the mid- to late-1990s
and were the basis for several landmark
settlement agreements with drug manufacturers
totaling over $1.6 billion. These settlements
included Corporate Integrity Agreements (CIAs)
that contain a more accurate and reliable basis
for payment than the AWP: the Average Sales Price
(ASP). In revising the Medicare Part B payment
rules for physician-administered drugs, Congress
replaced AWP with Average Sales Price as the
basis for payment, effective January 1, 2005.
To
implement this new payment methodology, the
Medicare drug bill requires manufacturers to
report to the Secretary of HHS, on a quarterly
basis, their Average Sales Prices for all
physician-administered drugs covered under Part
B. This reporting requirement is effective
January 1, 2004. The ASP data reported is subject
to audit by the OIG. In addition, Congress is
relying on the qui tam provisions of the FCA to
ensure the accuracy of the reported data:
"The
Conferees intend that if a manufacturer knowingly
(as defined in section 3729(b) of the False
Claims Act) submits false information, that such
submission be considered a false record or
statement made or used to get a false
or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the
government for purposes of section
3729(a)(2) of title 31, United States Code, known
as the False Claims Act. Thus, if a manufacturer
knowingly submits any false information, the
manufacturer would be fully subject to liability
under the False Claims Act." (H. Rep.
108-391, p. 592).
III.
Retention of Medicaid Rebate Records by Drug
Manufacturers
Under
current law, pharmaceutical manufacturers that
want Medicaid to cover their products must agree
to pay rebates on a quarterly basis to the
federal government and the states for the drugs
that Medicaid purchases. The amounts of these
rebates are calculated on the basis of pricing
data submitted to the Secretary of HHS by the
manufacturers. Since 2001 the Department of
Justice has entered into agreements with five
different drug manufacturers settling allegations
of fraud against the Medicare and Medicaid
programs; among the allegations in each agreement
was the concealment by the manufacturer of
accurate pricing data, resulting in the
underpayment of rebates owed the federal and
state governments. The conduct at issue took
place over periods as long as 11 years.
On
August 29, 2003, CMS issued a final regulation
limiting to three years the time a manufacturer
participating in Medicaid must retain pricing
data relevant to the rebate program unless the
manufacturer is aware of a government audit or
investigation that has not been resolved.This
regulation was scheduled to take effect January
1, 2004. TAF joined Senator Grassley, DOJ, and
the OIG in urging CMS to revise this requirement
so as to conform to the 10-year statute of
limitations in the FCA (TAFs comments are
posted elsewhere on this web site).
On
January 6, 2004, CMS published in the Federal
Register a proposed rule that would replace the
three-year recordkeeping requirement with a
10-year requirement. On the same day, CMS
published an interim final rule, effective
January 1, 2004, that imposes a 10-year
recordkeeping requirement through December 31,
2004. In explaining its actions, the agency
expressed "concern" that, in the
absence of a 10-year requirement, manufacturers
"will destroy records concerning drug price
calculations, as well as data supporting those
calculations after three years" and that, as
a result, "the effective use of the FCA to
investigate fraud regarding the Medicaid drug
rebate program could be severely limited at a
considerable cost to the Federal and State
treasuries." If CMS does not publish a final
rule implementing the 10-year requirement before
the December 31, 2004, a sunset provision in the
interim final rule will go into effect, and
manufacturers will be able to destroy pricing
records more than three years old. TAF will
continue to advocate for the 10-year
recordkeeping requirement.
IV.
Informing the Medicare and Medicaid Policy Debate
The
core mission of the TAF Education Fund is to
educate the general public, the legal community,
policymakers, and other interested parties about
the FCA and its qui tam provisions. Toward this
end, the TAF Education Fund commissioned and
disseminated three studies in 2003 relating to
the contributions of the FCA to federal health
care policy. One had to do with Medicare; one
with Medicaid; and one with both Medicare and
Medicaid. Each of these reports is posted on this
web site.
In
June 2003 the TAF Education Fund released a
report by health care economist Jack Meyer
finding that, over the 5-year period 1997
2001, the federal government recovered nearly $9
for every $1 spent in investigating and
prosecuting civil fraud cases under the FCA. The
report, Fighting Medicare Fraud: More Bang for
the Federal Buck, was an update of Meyers
ground-breaking 2001 study for TAF that found an
$8-to-$1 return on investment over a 4-year
period. Both studies emphasize that these direct
returns to the federal government significantly
understate the value of the FCA because they do
not include the indirect benefit of large FCA
recoveries in deterring fraud against Medicare by
providers and plans not involved in the
settlements. These indirect benefits, while not
quantifiable, "undoubtedly add substantially
to the publics benefit" from the FCA
and its qui tam provisions.
June
2003 also saw the release of a TAF Education Fund
report on the role of the FCA in combating fraud
against the federal-state Medicaid program. The
report, Reducing Medicaid Fraud: The Potential of
the False Claims Act, found that over the
five-year period 1997 2001, federal FCA
recoveries from fraud against Medicare were 25
times as great as federal FCA recoveries from
fraud against Medicaid, even though federal
Medicare outlays were only twice as great as
federal Medicaid outlays. The author, Andy
Schneider, J.D., identified the reasons for this
startling discrepancy and made a number of
recommendations for improving the effectiveness
of the FCA in fighting fraud against the Medicaid
program. Among the recommendations is that
Congress encourage states to enact their own FCAs
with qui tam provisions by increasing the federal
share of Medicaid administrative costs in states
with such laws in place.
Finally,
in November 2003, TAFEF, in collaboration with
Getnick & Getnick, released a report
detailing six FCA settlements and one state FCA
settlement with pharmaceutical manufacturers,
including three of the nations five largest
drug companies, which recovered over $1.6
billion. The report, Reducing Medicare and
Medicaid Fraud by Drug Manufacturers: The Role of
the False Claims Act, documents the vital role of
whistleblowers in surfacing information about
complex, sophisticated corporate fraud against
federal health care programs, information that
would not otherwise become available to
government officials. The author of the report,
Andy Schneider, J.D., concludes that, in light of
these settlements, the cases not yet settled but
out from under seal, and the additional cases
likely to be under seal, "[w]histleblowers,
federal prosecutors, and state attorneys general
appear to be on the verge of forcing fundamental
changes in the marketing and pricing practices of
the pharmaceutical industry."
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