By David Engel, J.D., Gary Azorsky, J.D., Jeanne Markey, J.D., and Ray Sarola, J.D.
MedPage Today, March 13, 2021
Can a patient have and not have diabetes at the same time? According to private insurers participating in the Medicare Advantage program, the answer is yes. The data architecture of Medicare Advantage is vulnerable to fraud perpetrated by the Medicare Advantage Organizations (MAOs) who administer Medicare Advantage plans. These MAOs stand to collect inflated profits if they determine that their beneficiaries have complicating diagnoses for certain purposes but not for others.
Why does it matter?
The stakes for the new administration – and the country as a whole – are enormous. Over 23 million Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, for whom the federal government paid out $264 billion in 2019 alone. It is increasingly clear that these public funds are vulnerable to fraud. The HHS Office of Inspector General recently reported that in just one year $2.6 billion was paid to MAOs based on their reports of patient diagnoses that lacked supporting data from providers. It is widely anticipated that investigations and prosecutions of corporate fraud will increase under the Biden administration, and given the dollars at issue and the critical importance of our national healthcare system, fraud in the Medicare Advantage program should be a particular focus of this renewed enforcement effort.
Why is the program so vulnerable to fraud?
To illustrate Medicare Advantage’s vulnerability to fraud, consider how it relies upon two independent data systems to pay for a beneficiary’s inpatient hospital care.
The first system determines the amounts MAOs pay hospitals. This system uses the same MS-DRG prospective payment methodology as traditional Medicare, under which payment for each episode of care is a fixed fee. This fee is based on the procedures performed and the patient’s current diagnoses as reported by the hospital to the MAO.
The second system determines the capitated amount the government pays the MAO for insuring all of a beneficiary’s covered care during the relevant period. The government estimates the cost of this care by calculating a Risk Adjustment Factor (RAF) for each beneficiary. The RAF is based on information regarding each beneficiary’s demographic information and current diagnoses as reported to the government by the patient’s MAO. The higher the RAF, the greater the payment the MAO will receive for that beneficiary.
In the first system, the data flow is between the hospital and the MAO. In the second, it is between the MAO and the government. The problem arises because the government does not have real-time access to hospital claims data in the first system, and hospitals do not have access to the MAO’s reports to the government in the second system.
Our diabetes example demonstrates the consequences of this lack of integration and transparency, particularly in the context of secondary diagnoses. For instance, suppose that a Medicare Advantage member with type 2 diabetes is admitted for surgery, and the hospital later codes this secondary diagnosis on its bill to the MAO. This diagnosis may move the episode of care into a more heavily weighted DRG, which can increase by thousands of dollars the amount the MAO must pay the hospital. These increased payments incentivize MAOs to challenge the propriety of such secondary diagnoses by contending that they are inactive conditions or otherwise irrelevant to the episode of care. Some MAOs have initiated programs to routinely delete certain diagnoses in order to downgrade DRGs and reduce payments to hospitals.
Whether a patient has type 2 diabetes is also an important datum in the Medicare Advantage risk adjustment system. A beneficiary with a current diabetes diagnosis will receive a higher RAF score, and the government will pay the MAO more to insure that beneficiary. While the MAO has an incentive to delete this secondary diagnosis to reduce its payment to the hospital, it can increase its own payments from the government by including this diagnosis in the risk adjustment reports it transmits to the government. If the MAO does not synchronize its provider payment determinations with its risk adjustment reports, our patient will both have and not have diabetes at once. The MAO will improperly profit by being paid to insure a diabetic patient while not paying a hospital to care for one.
How can we prevent this fraud?
It is unfortunate that the current Medicare Advantage data reporting systems are vulnerable to this type of fraud and do not have real-time policing mechanisms. MAOs are likely to continue to take advantage of a system that lets them act as though a patient is less sick when paying for their care, and more sick when seeking money from the government to cover that same patient. The most effective tool to deter and remedy this type of fraud is the federal False Claims Act, which imposes treble damages and significant monetary penalties on companies that defraud the government. Prosecuting those who engage in this fraud under the False Claims Act, including through cases brought by whistleblowers, is the most effective remedy and deterrent.
David Engel, J.D., is a health care attorney admitted to the New York Bar. Gary Azorsky, J.D., Jeanne Markey, J.D., and Ray Sarola, J.D., are members of the Whistleblower/False Claims Act practice group at Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll.
Comment:
By Don McCanne, M.D.
It is not clear that the multitude of our Quote of the Day messages on the problems with the private Medicare Advantage plans have been getting through. Today’s message gets right to the point. The attorney authors of this article say it like it is: This is fraud!
The Medicare Advantage plans are run by crooks. They use slick marketing to sell these plans to new arrivals in the Medicare program. They add nominal teaser benefits, plus they add the important benefit of providing catastrophic coverage. Although the purchasers of these plans may realize that they have limited networks, they are usually satisfied if their own primary care physician is on the list (not realizing that they may later develop problems that are best handled by physicians and facilities that are out of network). The more expensive patients soon learn that narrow networks and prior authorization requirements serve as significant barriers to the care that they need. The Medicare Advantage plans have developed a well earned reputation that the healthy go in and the sick come out. By outside appearances, the system does seem to work well enough for people that they have managed to entice into their programs, but those are individuals who have not discovered the problems lurking ahead.
This article reveals the heart of the matter. The nation’s largest insurers are using these private Medicare Advantage plans to post record profits on the stock exchange. These excess profits are obtained by cheating the taxpayers who are paying for the Medicare program. Congress and the various administrations have been complicit since each year they authorize financing gimmicks that game the system, while neglecting much needed revisions to the traditional Medicare program – revisions such as reducing out-of-pocket expenses and establishing a reasonable cap on catastrophic losses.
The wake-up call that we really need is for the public to realize what crooks these are and that it is time to get rid of them and to upgrade the traditional Medicare program so it works well for all of us – a single payer, improved Medicare for All. That won’t eliminate all abuses, but it would establish a financing framework that works much better for the patients and the taxpayers.
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