Organizations across the health care continuum, including the home-based care industry, have responded to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS)’ request for information regarding Medicare and Medicaid fraud.
The request for information (RFI) related to Comprehensive Regulations To Uncover Suspicious Healthcare (CRUSH) is part of the second Trump administration’s focus on fraud, waste and abuse. The RFI is designed to solicit feedback on potentially fraud-focused regulatory changes that could be included in a potential future proposed rule.
The CRUSH RFI demonstrates that CMS has been pondering these questions and policies for some time, Hillary Loeffler, vice president of policy and regulatory affairs at the National Alliance for Care at Home (the Alliance), told Home Health Care News in an email.
“CMS is often thinking about ways to improve program integrity, and we commend efforts to gather information and recommendations from the care at home community,” Loeffler said.
The Alliance, which has expressed support for CMS’ efforts to root out fraud in the home health industry, was among the organizations that submitted a comment letter to CMS in response to the agency’s RFI.
“The Alliance appreciates CMS’s continued leadership in strengthening program integrity and addressing persistent vulnerabilities in Medicare,” the Alliance’s letter read. “We strongly support efforts to combat fraud, waste and abuse, and we encourage CMS to advance a framework that is precise, targeted and focused on holding bad actors accountable. Fraud should be distinguished as intentional misconduct by bad actors seeking financial gain.”
Efforts to root out fraud should focus on early detection and removal, the Alliance’s letter continued, preventing bad actors from becoming Medicare-certified or Medicaid-enrolled in the first place. Waste and abuse efforts, meanwhile, should focus on education and prevention so as to avoid “imposing unnecessary burden on legitimate providers that deliver vital care in the home.”
Among its other recommendations, the Alliance said that CMS should better leverage and enforce its existing authorities, rather than creating new requirements that would burden compliant providers. The Alliance also suggested that CMS shift its oversight to evolving high-risk areas and require home health agencies and hospices in these targeted areas to undergo more frequent enrollment revalidations.
“The Alliance appreciates CMS’s continued leadership in strengthening program integrity and addressing persistent vulnerabilities in the Medicare and Medicaid programs,” Loeffler told HHCN. “We look forward to continued dialogue and collaboration with CMS aimed at strengthening program integrity through targeted, risk-based enforcement and protecting legitimate providers and access to care at home.”
To read the Alliance’s full letter, click here.
Organizations across the health care continuum also responded to CMS’ CRUSH RFI.
ATA Action, the advocacy arm of the American Telemedicine Association, suggested CMS “tailor its approach to fraud, waste and abuse” to ensure program integrity while modernizing the Medicare program and fostering innovation.
“We urge the agency to take a more nuanced and risk-based approach to health care fraud, waste and abuse to support innovation,” ATA Action’s comment letter read. “While we understand the desire to eliminate fraud, waste and abuse, broad approaches that seem warranted for traditional providers and suppliers can have a disparate impact on the providers and suppliers of innovative services and products.”
The American Hospital Association (AHA) also penned a letter to Oz on Monday, lauding CMS’ efforts to combat fraud, waste and abuse in federal health care programs while cautioning the agency.
“Given that hospitals already operate under extensive oversight requirements, we urge CMS to ensure that any regulatory or programmatic changes related to [fraud, waste and abuse] are appropriately data-driven and do not add unnecessary administrative burden for the nation’s hospitals,” the letter read.
In its own letter, the National Association of Medicaid Directors, a professional community of Medicaid and CHIP leaders, specified that CMS must collaborate with federal, state and territory partners to ensure Medicaid program integrity.
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