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June 21‚ 2011
The Government Announces Predictive Modeling
Technology for Medicare To Go Live on July 1, 2011
By Ellyn L. Sternfield,
Stephanie D. Willis,
and Thomas W. Williams
Health care providers have known for some time that the
government intended to adopt a predictive modeling data analysis system to
supplement its Medicare fraud-fighting efforts.1
And on Friday, June 17th, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
announced that through a competitive bidding process, Northrop Grumman had
been selected to develop and implement CMS’s national predictive modeling
technology format for Medicare data, utilizing the best practices of both
public and private stakeholders.
CMS plans to begin using the technology on July 1, 2011.
Northrup Grumman will partner with two other government information systems
analysis contractors—National Government Services and Federal Network
Systems, LLC—to analyze CMS claims by beneficiary, provider, service
origin, and/or other identifying information. The technology is based upon
that used by credit card companies to identify fraudulent practices early.
By identifying what appear to be aberrant billing and claims patterns,
these contractors will assign “risk scores” to questionable claims and
potentially stop reimbursements from being issued to the providers that
submitted them. Through an as-of-yet unspecified process, CMS plans to use
this information to determine which claims merit further investigation or
enforcement action. “CMS has worked with public and private stakeholders
throughout the process of developing this program, and the key insight they
shared on their successes and innovations have helped ensure it will
significantly help us address fraud in the Medicare program,” said Peter
Budetti, M.D, J.D., director of CMS’s Center for Program Integrity (CPI).2
The announcement of the implementation of predictive modeling
coincided with the Sixth Regional Health Care Fraud Prevention Summit held
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 17th (Summit). At that meeting, U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
highlighted the success of private-public partnerships in investigating and
prosecuting health care fraud, including the conviction of a chiropractor
who attempted to bill nearly two million dollars to a private insurer for
treatments he never performed.3
In his remarks at the Summit, Attorney General Holder stressed the
importance of the government obtaining input and guidance from the private
sector to enhance the government’s continued anti-fraud efforts in health
care.4
However, the Attorney General’s comments fell short of what
some in the private sector seek: a true government/private sector health
care fraud-fighting partnership. In testimony earlier this year before the
Oversight Subcommittee of the House Committee on Ways and Means, Louis
Saccoccio, the Executive Director of the National Healthcare Anti-Fraud
Association, called on government investigators to fully share investigative
information with the private sector to enhance health care fraud
investigations.5 Noting
that some government agents and agencies have a “misapprehension” about
sharing investigative information, Saccoccio encouraged the creation of
government guidelines for sharing health care fraud investigative
information with the private sector.
But in his prepared remarks, Attorney General Holder steered
clear of any mention of the government sharing investigative information
with the private sector. And the day before the Philadelphia Summit, in a
speech before a lunchtime audience at the American Bar Association’s
Physician-Legal Issues Conference, Lewis Morris, Chief Counsel to the
Inspector General of HHS, acknowledged that government agencies have not
effectively facilitated partnerships between the private and public sector
to combat health care fraud, but noted existing legal prohibitions
complicate the issue.6
So as of now, the government/private sector “partnership” is
largely a one-way street. Relying on technology developed in the private
sector, and using private sector contractors, HHS and the Department of
Justice hope to accelerate government health care fraud investigations and
prosecution through early detection of fraudulent trends to identify
government investigation and prosecution targets. But qui tam seals,
HIPAA prohibitions on dissemination of protected health information, state
and federal legal limits on sharing pre-indictment criminal investigative
information, and state/federal grand jury secrecy laws will continue to
limit the government’s ability to share with private payors the information
developed in the course of those government investigations.
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1 Mintz Levin Health Care
Enforcement Defense Alert, DOJ and HHS Announce Efforts to Obtain Proactive
Data Mining Tools to Supplement Anti-Fraud Efforts, 12/17/2010.
2 Press Release, HHS Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, New Technology to Help Fight Medicare
Fraud, (June 17, 2011), available at: http://www.cms.gov/apps/media/press/release.asp?Counter=3983.
3 Press Release, Departments of
Justice, Health and Human Services Highlight Joint Efforts to Combat Health
Care Fraud in Philadelphia, (June 17, 2011), available at: http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2011pres/06/20110617a.html.
4 Eric Holder, Attorney General Eric
Holder Speaks at the Health Care Fraud Summit in Philadelphia, (June 17,
2011), available at: http://www.justice.gov/iso/opa/ag/speeches/2011/ag-speech-110617.html.
5 Oversight Subcommittee Hearing on
Improving Efforts to Combat Health Care Fraud, Waste, and Abuse: Hearing
Before the H. Committee on Ways and Means, 112th Cong. (March 2, 2011)
(statement of Louis Saccoccio, available at: http://waysandmeans.house.gov/UploadedFiles/Socc.pdf.
6 Press Release, Fraud and Abuse: HHS,
Justice Department to Kick Off Anti-Fraud Initiative with Private Insurers,
BNA Health Care Daily Report (June 16, 2011).
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