HHS Proposes Sweeping Changes to AKS and Stark Law, Part 6: Proposed Changes to the AKS Related to Beneficiary Inducement


As reported previously, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) recently published two proposed rules that seek to implement wholesale changes to the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) and the Physician Self-Referral Law (commonly known as the Stark Law).  This final post in our blog series focuses on a proposed new safe harbor that would protect patient engagement and support arrangements designed to improve quality, efficiency of care, and health outcomes.  The OIG is also proposing modifications to the existing safe harbor for local transportation and a new safe harbor for remuneration provided in connection with certain payment and care delivery models developed by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation Center or by the Medicare Shared Savings Program.  Lastly, the OIG is codifying an existing statutory safe harbor for Accountable Care Organization (ACO) beneficiary incentives and an existing statutory exception to the Civil Monetary Penalty (CMP) rules on beneficiary inducement for telehealth technology related to in-home dialysis services.

Patient Engagement and Support Safe Harbor

This new safe harbor would protect certain patient engagement tools and support services furnished by value-based enterprise (VBE) participants to patients in a target patient population in order to improve quality, health outcomes, and efficiency.  (For more information on VBEs, please see our first blog post in this series on value-based arrangements.)

Interestingly, the OIG chose to implement protection for patient engagement tools and support services as an AKS safe harbor, rather than as an exception to the CMP rules on beneficiary inducement.  Because one of the exceptions to the beneficiary inducement provisions of the CMP is an exclusion of practices protected by safe harbors to the AKS, this proposed safe harbor would protect certain patient engagement tools and supports for both AKS and CMP purposes.  In recent years, the OIG has opted to protect certain types of items and services provided to patients as exceptions to the CMP rules, but these exceptions only protect arrangements for CMP purposes, and the OIG has made clear that parties structuring their arrangements in reliance on these exceptions still need to be mindful of the AKS.  The OIG is proposing broader protection for patient engagement tools and support by removing barriers presented by both the AKS and CMP rules.

The OIG does not provide many examples of the types of tools and supports that could be furnished under this safe harbor, and, in fact, the OIG is seeking comments on this topic.  However, the OIG did mention a smart watch that monitors a patient's health and transmits health data to the patient's physicians, a smart pill bottle that dispenses medications to a patient at preset times, and a parking voucher or free childcare during medical appointments.

Of note, this safe harbor, as proposed, is very limited because tools and supports can only be furnished by a VBE participant, which, by definition, excludes pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, or supplies (DMEPOS), and laboratories.  There are also detailed compliance, monitoring, and oversight requirements in order for an arrangement to qualify as a VBE that may be difficult to implement in practice.  This safe harbor thus may have limited utility for the majority of health care entities wishing to provide patient engagement tools and supports.  Fortunately, the OIG is considering whether to remove the requirement that the offeror be a VBE participant and what additional safeguards may be appropriate to offset any risks associated with opening the safe harbor to more types of offerors.  However, the OIG is likely to continue to exclude manufacturers from this safe harbor given the OIG’s stated concern that manufacturers may inappropriately use patient engagement tools and supports to market their products and divert patients from more clinically appropriate items or induce demand for medically unnecessary items and services.

The OIG also proposes to impose the following requirements under this safe harbor:

Further, the OIG is seeking comments on whether to include the following additional conditions not yet built into the proposed safe harbor:

CMS-Sponsored Model Arrangements and CMS-Sponsored Model Patient Incentives

This proposed new safe harbor would protect certain payment and care delivery models established and tested by the CMS Innovation Center or by the Medicare Shared Savings Program (CMS-sponsored models), such as the various ACO models, the Bundled Payment for Care Improvement (BPCI) Model, and Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) Model.  The OIG and CMS have jointly implemented fraud and abuse waivers of certain provisions of the AKS, the Stark Law, and CMP Law for CMS-sponsored models, and they are fairly complex and vary greatly in that they are each tailored to a particular model.  This proposed safe harbor would provide uniformity and predictability for parties participating in CMS-sponsored models by providing uniform conditions across all CMS-sponsored models.  Model participants could chose to use the waivers to protect their arrangements or choose to structure arrangements to comply with the new safe harbor (or any other relevant safe harbor, such as the proposed VBE or patient engagement and support safe harbors). 

The safe harbor would permit (i) remuneration between CMS-sponsored model participants (e.g., distribution of capitated payments, shared savings or losses distributions); and (ii) remuneration in the form of incentives and supports provided by model participants to patients covered by the model (e.g. transportation, nutrition support, home monitoring technology, and gift cards).  Under the proposed safe harbor, model participants also must:

The safe harbor would protect arrangements for as long as the model participant participates in a CMS-sponsored model but would not protect remuneration exchanged after participation in the model ends, though OIG is evaluating other triggering events to determine when the exchange of remuneration will no longer be protected.

Local Transportation Safe Harbor

The existing safe harbor for local transportation protects free or discounted local transportation made available by certain health care entities to federal health care program beneficiaries as long as certain conditions are met.  The safe harbor currently limits the distance that a beneficiary may be transported to 25 miles or 50 miles if the beneficiary is in a rural area.  The OIG is now proposing to increase the distance which residents of rural areas may be transported to 75 miles, though it seeks comments on whether the 75-mile increase is sufficient.  Also, the OIG proposes to do away with the mileage limit for transportation of a discharged patient from a healthcare facility to his or her home, and is considering whether transportation home or to another facility should be protected when a patient has not been admitted to an inpatient facility.

OIG also invites comments on whether the safe harbor should protect transportation for non-medical purposes that may improve or maintain health, such as transportation to food banks, social services facilities, exercise facilities, or chronic disease support groups.  Lastly, the OIG clarifies that it sees ride-sharing (e.g., Uber) as indistinguishable from taxi services, which are protected by the safe harbor, though the OIG is considering amending the safe harbor to explicitly protect transportation through ride-sharing.

ACO Beneficiary Incentive Program Safe Harbor

The OIG is codifying a statutory safe harbor created by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 that protects incentive payments made by an ACO to a Medicare fee-for-service beneficiary under a beneficiary incentive program, if the payment is made in accordance with program requirements. These beneficiary incentive programs are meant to encourage ACO beneficiaries to obtain medically necessary primary care services.  The OIG proposes to adopt regulatory language nearly identical to the statutory language except it would also require that incentive payments be made only to assigned beneficiaries, and the payments must meet all requirements related to both ACO Beneficiary Incentive Programs and incentive payments made pursuant to these programs.  

Beneficiary Inducements CMP Exception – Telehealth Technologies for In-Home Dialysis

The OIG proposes amending the regulations to codify a statutory exception to the CMP Law enacted by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, which excludes from the definition of remuneration telehealth technologies furnished by providers to patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) receiving in-home dialysis payable by Medicare Part B.  Under both the statutory exception and the proposed regulations, the telehealth technologies must not be advertised and must be provided for telehealth services related to the patient’s ESRD.  Additionally, the OIG proposes the following requirements: (i) the telehealth technologies must be furnished by the provider currently providing in-home dialysis, telehealth visits, or other ESRD care; (ii) the technologies must contribute substantially to the provision of telehealth services, not be of excessive value, and not be duplicative of technology the patient already owns; and (iii) the provider cannot claim the cost of the telehealth technology – and the costs attendant to providing it to the patient – as bad debt or otherwise shift the burden of the cost onto Medicare, state healthcare programs, other payors, or the individual. 

The OIG’s proposed definition for “telehealth technologies” aligns with Medicare’s conditions of payment for telehealth services, found at 42 CFR 410.78.  The telehealth technologies must allow for live, interactive videoconferencing.  Smartphones with video capabilities would qualify, but telephones without video capabilities, facsimile machines, electronic mail systems, and other store-and-forward technologies do not.

OIG invites comments on the following additional conditions under consideration:


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National Law Review, Volume IX, Number 352