98-282. Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Physicians' Referrals to Health Care Entities With Which They Have Financial Relationships  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 6 (Friday, January 9, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 1659-1728]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-282]
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 6 / Friday, January 9, 1998 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 1659]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Health Care Financing Administration
    
    42 CFR Parts 411, 424, 435, and 455
    
    [HCFA-1809-P]
    RIN 0938-AG80
    
    
    Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Physicians' Referrals to Health 
    Care Entities With Which They Have Financial Relationships
    
    AGENCY: Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), HHS.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This proposed rule would incorporate into regulations the 
    provisions of sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Social Security Act. 
    Under section 1877, if a physician or a member of a physician's 
    immediate family has a financial relationship with a health care 
    entity, the physician may not make referrals to that entity for the 
    furnishing of designated health services under the Medicare program, 
    unless certain exceptions apply. The following services are designated 
    health services:
         Clinical laboratory services.
         Physical therapy services.
         Occupational therapy services.
         Radiology services, including magnetic resonance imaging, 
    computerized axial tomography scans, and ultrasound services.
         Radiation therapy services and supplies.
         Durable medical equipment and supplies.
         Parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies.
         Prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices and 
    supplies.
         Home health services.
         Outpatient prescription drugs.
         Inpatient and outpatient hospital services.
        In addition, section 1877 provides that an entity may not present 
    or cause to be presented a Medicare claim or bill to any individual, 
    third party payer, or other entity for designated health services 
    furnished under a prohibited referral, nor may the Secretary make 
    payment for a designated health service furnished under a prohibited 
    referral.
        Section 1903(s) of the Social Security Act extended aspects of the 
    referral prohibition to the Medicaid program. It denies payment under 
    the Medicaid program to a State for certain expenditures for designated 
    health services. Payment would be denied if the services are furnished 
    to an individual on the basis of a physician referral that would result 
    in the denial of payment for the services under Medicare if Medicare 
    covered the services to the same extent and under the same terms and 
    conditions as under the State plan.
        This proposed rule incorporates these statutory provisions into the 
    Medicare and Medicaid regulations and interprets certain aspects of the 
    law. The proposed rule is based on the provisions of section 1903(s) 
    and section 1877 of the Social Security Act, as amended by section 
    13562 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, and by section 
    152 of the Social Security Act Amendments of 1994.
    
    DATES: Comments will be considered if we receive them at the 
    appropriate address, as provided below, no later than 5 p.m. on March 
    10, 1998. We will also consider comments that we received in response 
    to the final rule with comment period, ``Physician Financial 
    Relationships With, and Referrals to, Health Care Entities That Furnish 
    Clinical Laboratory Services and Financial Relationship Reporting 
    Requirements,'' which we published in the Federal Register on August 
    14, 1995 (60 FR 41914).
    
    ADDRESSES: Mail written comments (1 original and 3 copies) to the 
    following address: Health Care Financing Administration, Department of 
    Health and Human Services, Attention: HCFA-1809-P, P.O. Box 26688, 
    Baltimore, MD 21207.
        If you prefer, you may deliver your written comments (1 original 
    and 3 copies) to one of the following addresses:
    
    Room 309-G, Hubert H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue, SW., 
    Washington, DC 20201, or
    Room C5-09-26, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
    
        Comments may also be submitted electronically to the following e-
    mail address: hcfa1809p.hcfa.gov. E-mail comments must include the full 
    name and address of the sender and must be submitted to the referenced 
    address in order to be considered. All comments must be incorporated in 
    the e-mail message because we may not be able to access attachments. 
    Because of staffing and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments 
    by facsimile (FAX) transmission. In commenting, please refer to file 
    code HCFA-1809-P. Comments received timely will be available for public 
    inspection as they are received, generally beginning approximately 3 
    weeks after publication of a document, in Room 309-G of the 
    Department's offices at 200 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC, 
    on Monday through Friday of each week from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. (phone: 
    (202) 690-7890).
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        This Federal Register document is also available from the Federal 
    Register online database through GPO Access, a service of the U.S. 
    Government Printing Office. Free public access is available on a Wide 
    Area Information Server (WAIS) through the Internet and via 
    asynchronous dial-in. Internet users can access the database by using 
    the World Wide Web; the Superintendent of Documents home page address 
    is http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/, by using local WAIS client 
    software, or by telnet to swais.access.gpo.gov, then log in as guest 
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    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joanne Sinsheimer (410) 786-4620.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: To assist readers in referencing sections 
    contained in this proposed rule, we are providing the following table 
    of contents:
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Background
        A. Problems Associated with Physician Self-referrals
        B. Legislation Designed to Address Self-referrals and Similar 
    Practices
        1. Legislative history of section 1877
        2. Recent provisions and how they relate to each other
        C. HCFA and OIG Regulations Relating to Section 1877
    II. Sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Act and the Provisions of This 
    Proposed Rule
        A. Reflecting the Statutory Changes in Section 1877
        1. General prohibition
        2. Definitions
        a. Referral, referring physician
    
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        b. Designated health services
        c. Financial relationship
        d. Compensation arrangement, remuneration
        3. General Exceptions to the Prohibition on Physician Referrals
        a. Exception--physician services
        b. Exception--in-office ancillary services
        c. Exception--certain prepaid health plans
        d. Other exceptions
        4. Exceptions That Apply Only to Certain Ownership or Investment 
    Interests
        a. Exception--certain investment securities and shares
        b. Exception--ownership or investment interest in certain health 
    care facilities
        5. Exceptions That Apply Only to Certain Compensation 
    Arrangements
        a. Exception--rental of office space
        b. Exception--rental of equipment
        c. Exception--bona fide employment relationship
        d. Exception--personal service arrangements
        e. Exception--remuneration unrelated to the provision of 
    designated health services
        f. Exception--physician recruitment
        g. Exception--isolated transaction
        h. Exception--certain group practice arrangements with a 
    hospital
        i. Exception--payments by a physician for items and services
        6. Requirements Related to the ``Substantially All'' Test
        7. Reporting Requirements
        8. Sanctions
        9. Additional Definitions
        a. ``Clinical laboratory services''
        b. ``Entity''
        c. ``Hospital''
        d. ``HPSA''
        e. ``Immediate family member'' or ``member of a physician's 
    immediate family''
        f. ``Laboratory''
        g. ``Plan of care''
        10. Conforming Changes
        11. Editorial Changes
        B. Applying The Referral Prohibition to the Medicaid Program: 
    Section 1903(s) of the Act and the Provisions of this Proposed Rule
    III. Interpretations of Sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Act
        A. Definitions
        1. Designated health services
        a. Clinical laboratory services
        b. Physical therapy services (including speech-language 
    pathology services)
        c. Occupational therapy services
        d. Radiology services, including magnetic resonance imaging, 
    computerized axial tomography scans, ultrasound services, and 
    radiation therapy services and supplies
        e. Durable medical equipment and supplies
        f. Parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies
        g. Prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices
        h. Home health services
        i. Outpatient prescription drugs
        j. Inpatient hospital services
        k. Outpatient hospital services
        2. Direct supervision
        3. Entity
        4. Fair market value
        5. Financial relationship
        6. Group practice
        7. Referral
        8. Remuneration
    B. General Prohibition on Referrals
    C. General Exceptions That Apply to Ownership or Investment 
    Interests and to Compensation Arrangements
        1. Exception for physician services
        2. Exception for in-office ancillary services
        a. The site requirement
        b. The billing requirement
        c. Designated health services that do not trigger the in-office 
    exception
        3. Exception for services provided under prepaid health plans
        a. Physicians, suppliers, and providers that contract with 
    prepaid organizations
        b. Managed care organizations under the Medicaid program
        c. Evolving structures of integrated delivery and other health 
    care delivery systems
        d. Designated health services furnished under a demonstration 
    project or waiver
        D. Exceptions That Apply Only to Ownership or Investment 
    Interests
        1. Exception for ownership in publicly traded securities
        2. Exception for hospital ownership
        E. Exceptions That Apply Only to Compensation Arrangements
        1. A new exception for all compensation arrangements that meet 
    certain standards
        2. A new exception for certain forms of ``de minimis'' 
    compensation
        3. The ``volume or value of referrals'' standard
        4. The commercial reasonableness standard
        5. The Secretary's authority to create additional requirements
        6. Exception for bona fide employment relationships
        7. Exception for personal services arrangements
        8. Exception for remuneration unrelated to the provision of 
    designated health services
        9. Exception for a hospital's payments for physician recruitment
        10. Exception for certain group practice arrangements with a 
    hospital
        11. Exception for payments by a physician for items and services
        F. The Reporting Requirements
        1. Which financial relationships must be reported
        2. What entities outside the United States must report
        G. How the Referral Prohibition Applies to the Medicaid Program
        1. Who qualifies as a ``physician'' for purposes of section 
    1903(s)
        2. How the referral prohibition and sanctions affect Medicaid 
    providers
        3. How the referral rules apply when Medicaid-covered designated 
    health services differ from the services covered under Medicare
        4. How the reporting requirements apply under the Medicaid 
    program
    IV. Our Responses to Questions About the Law
        A. Definitions
        1. Compensation arrangement
        What is an ``indirect'' compensation arrangement?
        Which exceptions apply in indirect situations?
        2. Entity
        What are the characteristics of an ``entity'' that provides for 
    the furnishing of designated health services?
        When is an entity furnishing, or providing for the furnishing 
    of, designated health services?
        3. Financial relationship
        How do equity and debt qualify as ownership?
        Is membership in a nonprofit corporation an ownership or 
    investment interest?
        Do stock options and nonvested interests constitute ownership?
        4. Group practice
        What is the ``full range of services'' test?
        5. Immediate family member or member of a physician's immediate 
    family
        How does the prohibition affect a physician's referrals to 
    immediate family members?
        If one member of a group practice cannot make a referral to an 
    entity, are all other group practice physicians also precluded?
        6. Remuneration
        Do payments qualify as remuneration only if they result in a net 
    benefit?
        B. General prohibition--What constitutes a prohibited referral
        Does the prohibition apply only if a physician refers directly 
    to a particular related entity?
        When is the owner of a designated health services provider 
    considered as equivalent to that provider?
        Has a physician made a referral to a particular entity if 
    another individual directs the patient there?
        How will HCFA interpret situations in which it is not clear 
    whether a physician has referred to a particular entity?
        C. General Exceptions That Apply to Ownership or Investment 
    Interests and to Compensation Arrangements
        1. The in-office ancillary exception
        Can a physician supply crutches as in-office ancillary services?
        2. Exception for services furnished by organizations operating 
    under prepaid plans.
        Can a physician refer non-enrollees to a related prepaid 
    organization or to its physicians and providers?
        3. Other permissible exceptions for financial relationships that 
    do not pose a risk of program or patient abuse.
        Should situations that meet a safe harbor under the anti-
    kickback statute be automatically excepted?
        D. Exceptions That Apply Only to Ownership or Investment 
    Interests
        1. Exception for ownership in publicly traded securities or 
    mutual funds
        Does the exception for publicly traded securities apply to stock 
    options?
        2. Exception for services provided by a hospital in which a 
    physician or family member has an interest
        Can a physician or family member own an interest in a chain of 
    hospitals?
    
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        E. Exceptions That Apply Only to Compensation Arrangements
        1. Compensation arrangements in general
        Can a lease or arrangement for items or services have a 
    termination clause?
        Will a physician's referrals be prohibited if an entity pays for 
    certain incidental benefits?
        2. Exception for agreements involving the rental of office space 
    or equipment
        Can a lessee sublet office space or equipment?
        Does the lease exception apply to any kind of lease covering 
    space or equipment?
        Can a lease provide for payment based on how often the equipment 
    is used?
        3. Exception for personal services arrangements
        How does the physician incentive plan exception apply when an 
    enrolling entity contracts with a group practice?
    V. Regulatory Impact Statement
        A. Background
        B. Anticipated Effects and Alternatives Considered
        1. Physicians
        2. Entities, including hospitals
        C. Conclusion
    VI. Collection of Information Requirements
    VII. Response to Comments
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Problems Associated With Physician Self-referrals
    
        When a patient seeks medical care, his or her physician has a major 
    role in determining the kind and amount of health care services the 
    patient will receive. Having a financial interest in an entity that 
    furnishes these services can affect a physician's decision about what 
    medical care to furnish a patient and who should furnish the care. In 
    fact, numerous studies have raised serious concerns about the referral 
    patterns of physicians who make self-referrals (referrals to entities 
    with which they or their family members have financial relationships).
        In June 1988, Congress mandated that the Office of Inspector 
    General (OIG) of the Department of Health and Human Services conduct a 
    study on physician ownership of and compensation from health care 
    entities to which the physicians make referrals. The OIG reported that 
    patients of referring physicians who owned or invested in independent 
    clinical laboratories received 45 percent more laboratory services than 
    all Medicare patients in general. The OIG found similar effects on 
    utilization associated with the existence of compensation arrangements 
    between laboratories and physicians. Patients of these physicians used 
    32 percent more laboratory services than all Medicare patients in 
    general. (``Financial Arrangements Between Physicians and Health Care 
    Businesses: Report to Congress,'' Office of Inspector General, DHHS, 
    pages 18 and 21 (May 1989)). Based in part on the results of this 
    study, Congress enacted, in November of 1989, section 1877 of the 
    Social Security Act (the Act). (Unless otherwise indicated, references 
    to sections of the law below are to sections of the Act.) We discuss 
    section 1877 in detail below.
        Subsequent studies have supported the OIG findings on self-
    referrals. The studies indicate that other types of services are also 
    associated with higher utilization and increased costs. For example, in 
    1991 the Florida Cost Containment Board (the Board) analyzed the effect 
    of joint venture arrangements on the following aspects of health care: 
    access, costs, charges, utilization, and quality. A joint venture was 
    defined as any ownership or investment interest or compensation 
    arrangement involving physicians (or any health care professionals who 
    make referrals) and an entity providing health care goods or services.
        The Board found that doctor-owned clinical laboratories, diagnostic 
    imaging centers, and physical therapy and rehabilitation centers 
    performed more procedures on a per-patient basis and charged higher 
    prices than nondoctor-affiliated facilities. The Board concluded that 
    there might be referral problems or the results did not allow clear 
    conclusions for ambulatory surgical centers, durable medical equipment 
    suppliers, home health agencies, and radiation therapy centers. The 
    study revealed that little or no impact existed for acute care 
    hospitals and nursing homes. (``Joint Ventures Among Health Care 
    Providers in Florida,'' State of Florida Health Care Cost Containment 
    Board (Sept. 1991)).
        Additionally, in 1994, the General Accounting Office (GAO) released 
    an analysis of 2.4 million diagnostic imaging services ordered by 
    17,900 physicians in the State of Florida. The GAO found that Florida 
    physicians with a financial interest in joint venture imaging centers 
    had higher referral rates for almost all types of imaging services than 
    other Florida physicians. The differences in the referral rates were 
    greatest for costly high-technology imaging services. For example, 
    owners of joint ventures ordered 54 percent more magnetic resonance 
    imaging scans for patients than did non-owners.
        The GAO study also found that Florida physicians, group practices, 
    or other practice affiliations with imaging facilities in their own 
    offices ordered imaging tests more frequently than physicians who 
    referred their patients to imaging facilities outside their practices. 
    The in-practice imaging rates were about 3 times higher for magnetic 
    resonance imaging scans; about 2 times higher for computed tomograph 
    scans; 4.5 to 5.1 times higher for ultrasound, echocardiography, and 
    diagnostic nuclear medicine imaging; and about 2 times higher for 
    complex and simple X-rays. (GAO Report, ``Medicare: Referrals to 
    Physician-owned Imaging Facilities Warrant HCFA's Scrutiny,'' No. B-
    253835; pages 2, 3, and 10, October 1994.)
        Several other studies, appearing in the New England Journal of 
    Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association, have 
    found increased utilization for a variety of services when the 
    physicians have a financial relationship with the entity to which they 
    refer their patients. (See, for example, Bruce J. Hillman, M.D., and 
    others, ``Physicians' Utilization and Charges for Outpatient Diagnostic 
    Imaging in a Medicare Population,'' Journal of the American Medical 
    Association, Vol. 268, No. 15 (Oct. 21, 1992), pp. 2050-2054; Hemenway 
    D., Killen A., and others, ``Physicians' Responses to Financial 
    Incentives--Evidence From a For-profit Ambulatory Care Center,'' New 
    England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 322, No. 15 (April 12, 1990), pp. 
    1059-1063; Alex Swedlow and others, ``Increased Costs and Rates of Use 
    in the California Workers' Compensation System as a Result of Self 
    Referral by Physicians,'' New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 327, 
    No. 21 (Nov. 19, 1992), pp. 1502-1506.)
    
    B. Legislation Designed to Address Self-referrals and Similar Practices
    
    1. Legislative History of Section 1877
        Section 6204 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA 
    '89), Public Law 101-239, enacted on December 19, 1989, added section 
    1877 to the Social Security Act. In general, section 1877 as it read 
    under OBRA '89 provided that, if a physician (or an immediate family 
    member of a physician) had a financial relationship with a clinical 
    laboratory, that physician could not make a referral to the laboratory 
    entity for the furnishing of clinical laboratory services for which 
    Medicare might otherwise pay. (For the sake of brevity, whenever we 
    refer to ``immediate family member'' or ``family member,'' this means 
    ``a member of the physician's immediate family.'') It also provided 
    that the laboratory could not present or cause to be presented a 
    Medicare claim or bill to any individual, third party payer, or other 
    entity for clinical laboratory services furnished under the prohibited 
    referral. Additionally, it required a refund of any
    
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    amount collected from an individual as a result of a billing for an 
    item or service furnished under a prohibited referral.
        The statute defined ``financial relationship'' as an ownership or 
    investment interest in the entity or a compensation arrangement between 
    the physician (or immediate family member) and the entity. The statute 
    provided a number of exceptions to the prohibition. Some of these 
    exceptions applied to both ownership/investment interests and 
    compensation arrangements, while other exceptions applied to only one 
    or the other of these. Additionally, the statute imposed reporting 
    requirements and provided for sanctions.
        Section 4207(e) of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 
    (OBRA '90), Public Law 101-508, enacted on November 5, 1990, amended 
    certain provisions of section 1877 to clarify definitions and reporting 
    requirements relating to physician ownership and referral and to 
    provide an additional exception to the prohibition.
        Section 13562 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 
    (OBRA '93), Public Law 103-66, enacted on August 10, 1993, extensively 
    revised section 1877. It modified the prior law to apply to referrals 
    for ten ``designated health services'' in addition to clinical 
    laboratory services, modified some exceptions, and added new ones. 
    Section 152 of the Social Security Act Amendments of 1994 (SSA '94), 
    Public Law 103-432, enacted on October 31, 1994, amended the list of 
    designated services, effective January 1, 1995. (Section II of this 
    preamble contains a listing of the designated health services.) It also 
    changed the reporting requirements in section 1877(f) and amended some 
    of the effective dates of the OBRA '93 provisions.
        Section 13624 of OBRA '93 extended aspects of the referral 
    prohibition to the Medicaid program. It amended section 1903 of the Act 
    by adding a new paragraph (s). This provision denies Federal financial 
    participation (FFP) payment under the Medicaid program to a State for 
    certain expenditures for designated health services. A State cannot 
    receive FFP for designated health services furnished to an individual 
    on the basis of a physician referral that would result in a denial of 
    payment under the Medicare program if Medicare covered the services to 
    the same extent and under the same terms and conditions as under the 
    State Medicaid plan. Section 13624 also specified that the reporting 
    requirements of section 1877(f) and the civil money penalty provision 
    of section 1877(g)(5) (which relates to reporting) apply to a provider 
    of a designated health service for which payment may be made under 
    Medicaid in the same manner as they apply to a provider of a designated 
    health service for which payment may be made under Medicare.
        We describe the provisions of section 1877, as amended, in detail 
    in part A of section II of this preamble. We discuss section 1903(s) in 
    part B of section II.
    2. Recent Provisions and How They Relate to Each Other
        Congress has enacted into law several provisions governing 
    financial relationships between entities furnishing health care 
    services and those health care professionals who refer patients to 
    them. For example, the ``anti-kickback statute'' provides criminal 
    penalties for individuals or entities that knowingly and willfully 
    offer, pay, solicit, or receive remuneration to induce the furnishing 
    of items or services covered by Medicare or State health care programs 
    (including Medicaid, and any State program receiving funds under titles 
    V or XX of the Act). (This provision was originally enacted in 1972 as 
    part of the Social Security Amendments of 1972, Public Law 92-603. It 
    was revised in 1977 (in Public Law 95-142) to read as it does today. It 
    was subsequently recodified by the Medicare and Medicaid Program 
    Patient Protection Act of 1987 (Public Law 100-93). It currently 
    appears at 42 U.S.C. 1320a-7b(b)(2) and section 1128B(b) of the Social 
    Security Act.)
        Both the anti-kickback statute and section 1877 address Congress' 
    concern that health care decisionmaking can be unduly influenced by a 
    profit motive. When physicians have a financial incentive to refer, 
    this incentive can affect utilization, patient choice, and competition. 
    Physicians can overutilize by ordering items and services for patients 
    that, absent a profit motive, they would not have ordered. A patient's 
    choice can be affected when physicians steer patients to less 
    convenient, lower quality, or more expensive providers of health care, 
    just because the physicians are sharing profits with, or receiving 
    remuneration from, the providers. And lastly, where referrals are 
    controlled by those sharing profits or receiving remuneration, the 
    medical marketplace suffers since new competitors can no longer win 
    business with superior quality, service, or price. Although the 
    purposes behind the anti-kickback statute and section 1877 are similar, 
    it is important to analyze them separately. In other words, to operate 
    lawfully under Medicare and Medicaid, one must comply with both 
    statutes.
        Anti-kickback statute: The anti-kickback statute is a criminal 
    statute that applies to those who knowingly and willfully offer, pay, 
    solicit, or receive remuneration to induce the furnishing of items or 
    services under Medicare or State health care programs (including 
    Medicaid). The offense is classified as a felony and is punishable by 
    fines of up to $25,000 and imprisonment for up to 5 years. Violation of 
    the statute is also a basis for exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid.
        Since the statute on its face is very broad, a number of health 
    care entities expressed concern after its enactment that many 
    relatively innocuous, or even beneficial, commercial arrangements are 
    technically covered by the statute and can therefore lead to criminal 
    prosecution. Congress addressed this fact by enacting section 14 of the 
    Medicare and Medicaid Patient and Program Protection Act of 1987. This 
    provision requires the Department of Health and Human Services to issue 
    ``safe harbors,'' specifying those payment practices that will not be 
    subject to criminal prosecution under the anti-kickback statute and 
    will not provide a basis for an exclusion. The safe harbors are not 
    mandatory in the sense that one is required to fit into a safe harbor. 
    The safe harbors exist to provide absolute immunity to those 
    arrangements.
        Section 1877: Section 1877 prohibits physicians from referring 
    Medicare patients to certain entities for designated health services if 
    the physician (or an immediate family member) has a financial 
    relationship with the entity, unless the relationship fits into an 
    exception. Certain aspects of section 1877 also affect Medicaid 
    referrals. While there are other remedies, section 1877 is primarily a 
    payment ban that is effective regardless of intent. Many of the 
    exceptions in section 1877 are similar to the safe harbors under the 
    anti-kickback statute, such as exceptions for certain employees, 
    personal service arrangements, and space and equipment rentals. The 
    exceptions are different in the sense that, under section 1877, a 
    physician is required to meet an exception if the physician wants to 
    make an otherwise prohibited referral, while under the anti-kickback 
    statute, a health care provider is not required to meet a safe harbor. 
    That is, if a provider meets a safe harbor, it is automatically 
    protected from prosecution. If a provider does not meet a safe harbor, 
    it may still be in compliance with the anti-kickback statute and 
    therefore be safe from prosecution, but that
    
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    determination would be based on a case-by-case assessment of the facts.
    
    C. HCFA and OIG Regulations Relating to Section 1877
    
        On December 3, 1991, we issued an interim final rule with comment 
    period (56 FR 61374) setting forth the reporting requirements under 
    section 1877(f). On March 11, 1992, we published a proposed rule (57 FR 
    8588) setting forth the self-referral prohibition and exceptions to the 
    prohibition in section 1877, as these provisions were amended by OBRA 
    '90, and as they relate to referrals for clinical laboratory services.
        On October 20, 1993, the OIG published a proposed rule (58 FR 
    54096) that would set forth in regulations the penalty provisions 
    specified in sections 1877(g)(3) and (g)(4). The final rule with 
    comment period implementing the civil money penalty provisions was 
    published on March 31, 1995 (60 FR 16580).
        On August 14, 1995, we published a final rule with comment period 
    in the Federal Register (60 FR 41914) that incorporated into 
    regulations the provisions of section 1877 that relate to the 
    prohibition on physician referrals for clinical laboratory services. 
    The August 1995 final rule contains revisions to the March 11, 1992 
    proposal based on comments submitted by the public. Further, it 
    incorporates the amendments and exceptions created by OBRA '93 and the 
    amendments in SSA '94 that relate to referrals for clinical laboratory 
    services.
        The final rule addresses only those changes that had a retroactive 
    effective date of January 1, 1992; it does not incorporate those 
    modifications made to section 1877 that became effective for referrals 
    made after December 31, 1994. (Even though the August 1995 final rule 
    incorporates OBRA '93 and SSA '94 provisions, it generally only 
    reiterates them without interpreting them. We interpreted the new 
    provisions only in a few instances in which it was necessary to do so 
    in order to implement the statute at all.) The final rule also responds 
    to comments received on the December 1991 interim final rule covering 
    the reporting requirements. In addition, it revises the regulations 
    established by that rule to incorporate the amendments to section 
    1877(f) made by SSA '94, to apply to any future reporting that we 
    require.
    
    II. Sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Act and the Provisions of This 
    Proposed Rule
    
        Many of the provisions covered below are discussed in detail in the 
    preamble of either the March 1992 proposed rule or the August 1995 
    final rule in the context of referrals for clinical laboratory 
    services. We are proposing, as discussed below, to leave a number of 
    these provisions unchanged except to apply them to the additional 
    designated health services. Readers who desire more background 
    information on these provisions are referred to the earlier documents.
        We are also proposing to amend the provisions of the August 1995 
    final regulation to reflect other changes in section 1877 that were 
    enacted in OBRA '93 or in SSA '94 and became effective on January 1, 
    1995. In part A of this section, we discuss how we have altered the 
    final regulation to apply it to the additional designated health 
    services, and to reflect the statutory changes in section 1877 that 
    took effect on January 1, 1995. Part B of this section covers the 
    changes made by section 13624 of OBRA '93 to the Medicaid program in 
    section 1903(s) of the Act. Section 13624 applies aspects of the 
    referral prohibition to the Medicaid program for referrals made on or 
    after December 31, 1994. We discuss in part B how we propose to amend 
    the Medicaid regulations to reflect the statutory changes.
        In section III of this preamble we discuss in detail how we propose 
    to interpret any provisions in sections 1877 and 1903(s) that we 
    believe are ambiguous, incomplete, or that provide the Secretary with 
    discretion. We also discuss policy changes or clarifications we propose 
    to make to the August 1995 rule. In section IV, we present some of the 
    most common questions concerning physician referrals that we received 
    from the health care community. We include in section IV our 
    interpretations of how the law applies in the situations described to 
    us.
    
    A. Reflecting the Statutory Changes in Section 1877
    
    1. General Prohibition
        With certain exceptions, section 1877(a)(1)(A) prohibits a 
    physician from making a referral to an entity for the furnishing of 
    designated health services, for which Medicare may otherwise pay, if 
    the physician (or an immediate family member) has a financial 
    relationship with that entity. This provision as it related to clinical 
    laboratory services was incorporated into our regulations at 
    Sec. 411.353(a) by the August 1995 final rule. We would revise 
    Sec. 411.353(a) to apply the prohibition to referrals for designated 
    health services.
        Section 1877(a)(1)(B) prohibits an entity from presenting, or 
    causing to be presented, either a Medicare claim or a bill to any 
    individual, third party payor, or other entity for designated health 
    services furnished under a prohibited referral. This provision, with 
    regard to clinical laboratory services, was incorporated into our 
    regulations at Sec. 411.353(b) by the August 1995 final rule. We would 
    revise Sec. 411.353(b) to apply it to claims or bills for any of the 
    designated health services.
    2. Definitions
        For purposes of section 1877, the statute provides definitions of a 
    number of terms. Because they are important to understanding the 
    general prohibition set forth above, we discuss certain of these 
    definitions immediately below. The statutory definitions of other terms 
    are presented elsewhere in this preamble when relevant.
    
    a. Referral, referring physician
    
        As defined by section 1877(h)(5), a ``referral'' means the 
    following:
         The request by a physician for an item or service for 
    which payment may be made under Medicare Part B, including the request 
    by a physician for a consultation with another physician (and any test 
    or procedure ordered by, or to be performed by (or under the 
    supervision of) that other physician).
         The request or establishment of a plan of care by a 
    physician that includes the furnishing of designated health services.
        Section 1877(h)(5)(C), however, provides an exception to this 
    definition in the case of a request by a pathologist for clinical 
    diagnostic laboratory tests and pathological examination services, (and 
    as added by OBRA '93) a request by a radiologist for diagnostic 
    radiology services, and a request by a radiation oncologist for 
    radiation therapy if the services are furnished by (or under the 
    supervision of) the pathologist, radiologist, or radiation oncologist, 
    respectively, as a result of a consultation requested by another 
    physician.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated section 1877(h)(5), with 
    regard to clinical laboratory services, into our regulations by 
    defining ``referral'' at Sec. 411.351. We interpreted a referral as the 
    request by a physician for, or the ordering of, any item or service 
    covered under Medicare Part B. We interpreted the referral for other 
    items or services as a request by a physician that includes the 
    provision of laboratory services or the establishment of a plan of care 
    by a physician that includes the provision of laboratory services. We 
    also included the statutory exception for certain clinical diagnostic 
    laboratory tests and pathological examination services requested by a 
    pathologist.
    
    [[Page 1664]]
    
        This proposed rule would revise the definition of ``referral'' to 
    apply it to referrals for designated health services. In accordance 
    with section 1877(h)(5)(C), we would also add the exception to the 
    definition described above relating to a request by a radiologist for 
    diagnostic radiology services and a request by a radiation oncologist 
    for radiation therapy. In addition, we would make a technical change in 
    this section. We would remove the phrase ``any item or service'' and 
    replace it with the phrase ``any service.'' Because the term 
    ``services'' is defined in our regulations (at Sec. 400.202) to include 
    ``items,'' the phrase ``any item or service'' contains a redundancy. 
    Hereinafter, unless we specifically state otherwise, we use the term 
    ``service(s)'' as including ``item(s).'' We have also made several 
    other changes to the definition that are discussed in section III of 
    this preamble.
        Also, in accordance with section 1877(h)(5), the August 1995 final 
    rule at Sec. 411.351 defined ``referring physician'' as a physician (or 
    group practice) who makes a referral as defined in Sec. 411.351. This 
    proposed rule would retain this definition, but with one amendment that 
    is described in section IV.A.5 of this preamble.
    
    b. Designated health services
    
        Section 1877(h)(6) defines ``designated health services'' as any of 
    the following services:
         Clinical laboratory services.
         Physical therapy services.
         Occupational therapy services.
         Radiology services, including magnetic resonance imaging, 
    computerized axial tomography scans, and ultrasound services.
         Radiation therapy services and supplies.
         Durable medical equipment and supplies.
         Parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies.
         Prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices and 
    supplies.
         Home health services.
         Outpatient prescription drugs.
         Inpatient and outpatient hospital services.
        This proposed rule would incorporate this definition of 
    ``designated health services'' into our regulations at Sec. 411.351, 
    except that, for purposes of definition, we would combine radiology 
    services and radiation therapy services and supplies. Also, we propose 
    to define each of these designated health services in Sec. 411.351. We 
    explain our definitions and interpretations in section III of this 
    preamble.
    
    c. Financial relationship
    
        Section 1877(a)(2) describes a financial relationship between a 
    physician (or an immediate family member) and an entity as being an 
    ownership or investment interest in the entity or a compensation 
    arrangement between a physician (or immediate family member) and the 
    entity. (We discuss compensation arrangements in the next section). The 
    statute provides that an ownership or investment interest may be 
    established through equity, debt, or other means. The statute further 
    specifies that an ownership or investment interest includes an interest 
    in an entity that holds an ownership or investment interest in any 
    entity furnishing designated health services.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated this definition into our 
    regulations, with regard to clinical laboratory services, at 
    Sec. 411.351. That section specifies that a financial relationship 
    includes an interest in an entity that holds an ownership or investment 
    interest in any entity providing laboratory services. This proposed 
    rule would revise the definition to specify that a financial 
    relationship includes an interest in an entity that holds an ownership 
    or investment interest in any entity providing designated health 
    services. We have also made certain other changes described in section 
    III of this preamble.
    
    d. Compensation arrangement, remuneration
    
        Section 1877(h)(1)(A) defines a ``compensation arrangement'' as any 
    arrangement involving any remuneration between a physician (or 
    immediate family member) and an entity, other than an arrangement 
    involving only remuneration described in section 1877(h)(1)(C). Section 
    1877(h)(1)(B) defines ``remuneration'' to include ``any remuneration, 
    directly or indirectly, overtly or covertly, in cash or in kind.'' 
    Section 1877(h)(1)(C) provides that a compensation arrangement does not 
    include the following types of remuneration:
         The forgiveness of amounts owed for inaccurate tests or 
    procedures, mistakenly performed tests or procedures, or the correction 
    of minor billing errors.
         The provision of items, devices, or supplies that are used 
    solely to--
        + Collect, transport, process, or store specimens for the entity 
    providing the item, device, or supply; or
        + Order or communicate the results of tests or procedures for the 
    entity.
         A payment made by an insurer or a self-insured plan to a 
    physician to satisfy a claim, submitted on a fee-for-service basis, for 
    the furnishing of health services by that physician to an individual 
    who is covered by a policy with the insurer or by the self-insured 
    plan, if--
        + The health services are not furnished, and the payment is not 
    made, under a contract or other arrangement between the insurer or the 
    plan and the physician;
        + The payment is made to the physician on behalf of the covered 
    individual and would otherwise be made directly to the individual;
        + The amount of the payment is set in advance, does not exceed fair 
    market value, and is not determined in a manner that takes into account 
    directly or indirectly the volume or value of any referrals; and
        + The payment meets any other requirements the Secretary may impose 
    by regulation as needed to protect against Medicare program or patient 
    abuse.
        The above definitions of a ``compensation arrangement'' and 
    ``remuneration'' were incorporated into our regulations at Sec. 411.351 
    by the August 1995 final rule. In the definition of ``compensation 
    arrangement,'' we clarified that such an arrangement could be either 
    direct or indirect. This proposed rule would retain that definition. 
    Also, because the statute defines ``remuneration'' only by referring to 
    how the remuneration might be made (for example, in cash or in kind), 
    we interpreted remuneration to mean any payment, discount, forgiveness 
    of debt, or other benefit. This proposed rule would retain the 
    definition of ``remuneration,'' with one change. We will consider that 
    payments made by an insurer to a physician are not ``remuneration'' if 
    they meet the requirements in the statute, and if the amount of the 
    payment does not take into account directly or indirectly other 
    business generated between the parties. We explain this change in 
    section III.E.3 of this preamble.
    3. General Exceptions to the Prohibition on Physician Referrals
        Section 1877(b) provides for general exceptions to the prohibition 
    on referrals. (General exceptions are exceptions that apply to both 
    ownership/investment interests and compensation arrangements.)
        Because the first two of these exceptions apply to a ``group 
    practice,'' we begin with a discussion of ``group practice'' as defined 
    in section 1877. A ``group practice,'' as defined in section 
    1877(h)(4), is a group of two or more physicians legally organized as a
    
    [[Page 1665]]
    
    partnership, professional corporation, foundation, not-for-profit 
    corporation, faculty practice plan, or similar association, that meets 
    the following conditions:
         Each physician member of the group furnishes substantially 
    the full range of services that the physician routinely furnishes, 
    including medical care, consultation, diagnosis, or treatment, through 
    the joint use of shared office space, facilities, equipment, and 
    personnel.
         Substantially all of the services of the physician members 
    of the group are furnished through the group, are billed under a 
    billing number assigned to the group, and amounts so received are 
    treated as receipts of the group (the ``substantially all'' test, which 
    we discuss below). (The predecessor provision, that is, the provision 
    as it read before January 1, 1995, required that the services be billed 
    in the name of the group (not that they be billed under a billing 
    number assigned to the group).)
         The overhead expenses of and the income from the practice 
    are distributed in accordance with methods previously determined.
         Except for profits and productivity bonuses that meet the 
    conditions described below, no physician member of the group directly 
    or indirectly receives compensation based on the volume or value of 
    referrals by the physician. (Added by OBRA '93 to be effective January 
    1, 1995.)
         Members of the group personally conduct at least 75 
    percent of the physician-patient encounters of the group practice. 
    (Added by OBRA '93 to be effective January 1, 1995.)
         The group practice complies with all other standards 
    established by the Secretary in regulations.
        With regard to the above definition, section 1877(h)(4)(B) 
    establishes the following ``Special Rules'':
         A physician in a group practice may be paid a share of the 
    overall profits of the group, or a productivity bonus based on services 
    personally performed or services incident to the personally performed 
    services, so long as the share or bonus is not determined in any manner 
    that is directly related to the volume or value of referrals by the 
    physician. (Added by OBRA '93 to be effective for referrals made on or 
    after January 1, 1995.)
         In the case of a faculty practice plan associated with a 
    hospital, institution of higher education, or medical school with an 
    approved medical residency training program in which physician members 
    may furnish a variety of different specialty services and furnish 
    professional services both within and outside the group, as well as 
    perform other tasks such as research, the conditions contained in the 
    definition of ``group practice'' apply only with respect to the 
    services furnished within the faculty practice plan.
        Our August 1995 final rule established a definition of ``group 
    practice'' at Sec. 411.351 based on the statute as it read effective 
    January 1, 1992. In implementing the statute, we interpreted the 
    provision requiring that ``substantially all'' of the services of the 
    physician members be furnished through the group as meaning 75 percent 
    of the patient care services of the group practice. (We discuss 
    additional requirements and definitions related to the ``substantially 
    all'' test in section II.A.6. of this preamble.) As stated above, OBRA 
    '93 made certain revisions to the definition of a group practice, 
    effective January 1, 1995. This proposed rule would revise the 
    definition of ``group practice'' at Sec. 411.351 to conform with the 
    changes made by OBRA '93. Therefore we would do the following:
         Remove the requirement that substantially all of the 
    services must be billed in the name of the group. We would specify, 
    instead, that substantially all of the services must be billed under a 
    billing number assigned to the group.
         Add the above provisions restricting payments made to 
    physicians based on volume or value of referrals, with the exception 
    for profits and productivity bonuses.
         Add that members of the group must personally conduct at 
    least 75 percent of the physician-patient encounters of the group 
    practice.
        In addition, for reasons explained in the August 1995 final rule, 
    the definition would continue to provide that the ``substantially all'' 
    test does not apply to any group practice that is located solely in a 
    health professional shortage area (HPSA). Also, for group practices 
    located outside of a HPSA, any time spent by group practice members 
    providing services in a HPSA should not be used to calculate whether 
    the group practice located outside the HPSA has met the ``substantially 
    all'' test. We have also made several other changes to the definition 
    of a group practice, which are discussed later in this preamble.
    
    a. Exception--physician services
    
        Section 1877(b)(1) specifies that the prohibition does not apply to 
    services furnished on a referral basis if the services are physician 
    services, as defined in section 1861(q), furnished personally by (or 
    under the personal supervision of) another physician in the same group 
    practice as the referring physician. Our August 1995 final rule 
    incorporated this provision at Sec. 411.355(a), covering physician 
    services as we have defined them at Sec. 410.20(a). This proposed rule 
    retains Sec. 411.355(a).
    
    b. Exception--in-office ancillary services
    
        Section 1877(b)(2) specifies that the prohibition does not apply to 
    referrals for certain in-office ancillary services. We consider in-
    office ancillary services to be all designated health services that can 
    be provided in an in-office setting, except durable medical equipment 
    (excluding infusion pumps) and parenteral and enteral nutrients, 
    equipment, and supplies. (In other words, referrals for infusion pumps 
    can qualify for the exception. However, the exception does not apply to 
    referrals for the in-office provision of other durable medical 
    equipment and parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and 
    supplies.) To qualify for the exception, an ownership or investment 
    interest in the services must meet any requirements the Secretary sets 
    forth in regulations to protect against Medicare program or patient 
    abuse. Additionally, the ancillary services must meet the following 
    requirements:
         The services must be furnished personally by the referring 
    physician, a physician who is a member of the same group practice as 
    the referring physician, or an individual who is directly supervised by 
    the physician or by another physician in the group practice. Also, the 
    services must be furnished in either of the following:
        + A building in which the referring physician (or another physician 
    who is a member of the same group practice) furnishes physician 
    services unrelated to the furnishing of designated health services. 
    (The predecessor provision read ``* * * unrelated to the furnishing of 
    clinical laboratory services.'')
        + In the case of a referring physician who is a member of a group 
    practice, in another building that is used by the group practice for 
    either of the following:
        ++ Furnishing some or all of the group's clinical laboratory 
    services.
        ++ The centralized provision of the group's designated health 
    services (other than clinical laboratory services). (This provision, 
    which was added by OBRA '93, became effective January 1, 1995.) Note 
    that OBRA '93 also contains an undesignated paragraph following this 
    provision that reads as follows: ``unless the Secretary determines 
    other terms and conditions under which the
    
    [[Page 1666]]
    
    provision of such services does not present a risk of program or 
    patient abuse, * * *.'' As discussed in the August 1995 final rule, it 
    is our interpretation that this paragraph is intended to provide for 
    the possibility of our liberalizing the conditions described in section 
    1877(b)(2)(A)(ii)(II); that is, the conditions concerning the provision 
    of services in ``another building'' that is used by a group practice.
         The ancillary services must be billed by one of the 
    following:
        + The physician performing or supervising the services.
        + A group practice of which the physician is a member under a 
    billing number assigned to the group practice. (Prior to January 1, 
    1995, this provision did not require that the services be billed under 
    a group practice's billing number.)
        + An entity that is wholly owned by the physician or group 
    practice.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated into our regulations an in-
    office ancillary services exception that was based on the statutory 
    provision, as it was in effect on January 1, 1992, at Sec. 411.355(b). 
    This proposed rule would revise Sec. 411.355(b) to conform it to the 
    current statutory provision. That is, it would--
         Specify that the exception does not apply to durable 
    medical equipment (other than infusion pumps) or to parenteral and 
    enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies; and
         Revise paragraph (b)(2) of Sec. 411.355 to require that 
    the services be furnished in one of the following locations:
        + A building in which the referring physician (or another physician 
    who is a member of the same group practice) furnishes physician 
    services unrelated to the furnishing of designated health services.
        + A building that is used by the group practice for the provision 
    of some or all of the group's clinical laboratory services.
        + A building that is used by the group practice for the centralized 
    provision of the group's designated health services (other than 
    clinical laboratory services).
         Indicate that when a group practice bills for ancillary 
    services, the services must be billed under a billing number assigned 
    to the group practice.
        We have also made several other changes to the in-office ancillary 
    services exception that we discuss in section III of this preamble.
        For purposes of the in-office ancillary services exception, the 
    August 1995 final rule also defined ``direct supervision'' at 
    Sec. 411.351. The rule defines this term as supervision by a physician 
    who is present in the office suite and immediately available to provide 
    assistance and direction throughout the time services are being 
    performed. This proposed rule would retain that definition, with 
    several changes that are meant to clarify the meaning of the term 
    ``present in the office suite.'' We discuss these changes in section 
    III of this preamble.
    
    c. Exception--certain prepaid health plans
    
        Section 1877(b)(3) specifies that the prohibition on referrals does 
    not apply to services furnished by certain prepaid health plans. To 
    qualify for the exception, the services must be furnished by a 
    Federally-qualified health maintenance organization (within the meaning 
    of section 1310(d) of the Public Health Services Act) to its enrollees 
    or by a prepaid health care organization to its enrollees under a 
    contract or agreement with Medicare under one of the following 
    statutory authorities:
         Section 1876, which authorizes us to enter into contracts 
    with health maintenance organizations and competitive medical plans to 
    furnish covered items and services on a risk-sharing or reasonable cost 
    basis.
         Section 1833(a)(1)(A), which authorizes payment for 
    Medicare Part B services to prepaid health plans on a reasonable cost 
    basis.
         Section 402(a) of the Social Security Amendments of 1967 
    or section 222(a) of the Social Security Amendments of 1972, both of 
    which authorize us to conduct demonstration projects involving payments 
    on a prepaid basis.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated section 1877(b)(3) into our 
    regulations at Sec. 411.355(c). We are proposing to set forth at 
    Sec. 435.1012(b) an exception for services provided by organizations 
    analogous to those cited above to enrollees under the Medicaid program. 
    We discuss this proposal in section III of this preamble.
    
    d. Other exceptions
    
        Effective January 1, 1995, section 1877(b)(4) authorizes the 
    Secretary to provide in regulations for additional exceptions for 
    financial relationships, beyond those specified in the statute, if she 
    determines that they do not pose a risk of Medicare program or patient 
    abuse. The Secretary determined, based on the rationale explained in 
    the August 1995 final rule, that referrals for certain clinical 
    laboratory services furnished in an ambulatory surgical center or end 
    stage renal disease facility, or by a hospice do not pose a risk of 
    Medicare program or patient abuse. The Secretary found no risk of abuse 
    when payments for these services are included in the ambulatory 
    surgical center payment rate, the end stage renal disease composite 
    payment rate, or as part of the hospice payment rate, respectively. 
    Therefore, the August 1995 final rule incorporated an exception for 
    those services into our regulations at Sec. 411.355(d). This proposed 
    rule would retain that provision, with a change discussed below. 
    Because this proposed rule covers 10 additional designated health 
    services, this exception would now apply to any of the designated 
    health services provided in the same manner.
        As we noted in the August 1995 final rule, we excepted the listed 
    services because they are furnished as part of a composite rate that 
    cannot vary in response to utilization. We are amending Sec. 411.355(d) 
    to allow the Secretary to except services furnished under other payment 
    rates that the Secretary determines provide no financial incentive for 
    either underutilization or overutilization, or any other risk of 
    program or patient abuse. We are specifically soliciting comments on 
    whether there are analogous composite rates under the Medicaid program 
    that are similarly guaranteed not to result in program or patient 
    abuse. Commenters who are interested in this issue should demonstrate 
    why they believe a particular kind of service should qualify for the 
    exception.
    4. Exceptions That Apply Only to Certain Ownership or Investment 
    Interests
        The statute also provides that certain ownership or investment 
    interests do not constitute a ``financial relationship'' for purposes 
    of the section 1877 prohibition on referrals.
    
    a. Exception--certain investment securities and shares
    
        Under section 1877(c), the prohibition on referrals does not apply 
    in the case of ownership by a physician (or immediate family member) of 
    the following:
         Investment securities (including shares or bonds, 
    debentures, notes, or other debt instruments) that may be purchased on 
    terms generally available to the public and that are--
         Securities listed on the New York Stock Exchange, the 
    American Stock Exchange, or any regional exchange in which quotations 
    are published on a daily basis, or foreign securities listed on a 
    recognized foreign, national, or regional exchange in which quotations 
    are published on a daily basis, or
    
    [[Page 1667]]
    
         Securities traded under an automated interdealer quotation 
    system operated by the National Association of Securities Dealers, and
         In a corporation that had, at the end of the corporation's 
    most recent fiscal year or on average during the previous 3 fiscal 
    years, stockholder equity exceeding $75 million. (OBRA '93 also 
    included, until January 1, 1995, securities in a corporation that, at 
    the end of the corporation's most recent fiscal year, had total assets 
    exceeding $100 million.)
         Ownership of shares in a regulated investment company as 
    defined in section 851(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 if the 
    company had, at the end of the company's most recent fiscal year or on 
    average during the previous 3 fiscal years, total assets exceeding $75 
    million.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the above provision into 
    our regulations at Secs. 411.356 (a) and (b). This proposed rule would 
    remove from Sec. 411.356(a) that portion of the provision that expired 
    on January 1, 1995, and would make certain other changes described in 
    section III of this preamble.
    
    b. Exception--ownership or investment interest in certain health care 
    facilities
    
        Section 1877(d) provides additional exceptions to the prohibition 
    on physician referrals for certain designated health services furnished 
    by three types of facilities if the physician (or immediate family 
    member) has an ownership or investment interest in the facilities:
         Designated health services furnished by a hospital located 
    in Puerto Rico.
         Designated health services furnished in a rural area by an 
    entity if substantially all of the designated health services furnished 
    by the entity are furnished to individuals residing in a rural area. A 
    ``rural area'' is defined in section 1886(d)(2)(D) as meaning an area 
    outside of a Metropolitan Statistical Area. (Until January 1, 1995, 
    this provision read as follows: ``In the case of clinical laboratory 
    services if the laboratory furnishing the services is in a rural area 
    (as defined in section 1886(d)(2)(D)).'')
         Designated health services furnished by a hospital outside 
    of Puerto Rico if the referring physician is authorized to perform 
    services at the hospital and the ownership or investment interest is in 
    the hospital itself (and not merely in a subdivision of the hospital).
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated section 1877(d), as it 
    related to clinical laboratory services, into our regulations at 
    Sec. 411.356(c). In establishing the rural provider exception in the 
    regulations, we required that referred laboratory testing be performed 
    on the premises of the rural laboratory (if not performed on the 
    premises, the laboratory performing the testing was required to bill 
    the Medicare program directly). As described in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule covering referrals for clinical laboratory services (57 
    FR 8598 (March 11, 1992)), we believe that Congress included this 
    exception in order to benefit Medicare beneficiaries who live in rural 
    areas where laboratories may not be available without the financial 
    support of local physicians. We included the additional requirement to 
    prevent situations in which physicians who own an urban laboratory set 
    up a storefront or ``shell'' laboratory with a rural address in order 
    to use the rural exception. In this scenario, the urban owner could 
    make referrals to the rural laboratory, which would in turn refer the 
    tests to the physician's urban laboratory. Alternatively, urban 
    laboratories with physician owners could set up rural laboratories for 
    the purpose of performing tests referred by the physician owners for 
    their urban patients.
        Because section 1877(d)(2) has been amended to apply only to 
    designated health services that are actually furnished in a rural area 
    (they cannot be transferred to an urban provider), and only by 
    providers that provide designated health services to a predominantly 
    rural population, we no longer believe that the extra requirement is 
    necessary. We are therefore proposing to remove it from 
    Sec. 410.356(c).
        The August 1995 final regulation adopted the OBRA '93 standard that 
    substantially all of the designated health services furnished by the 
    rural entity are furnished to individuals residing in a rural area. We 
    interpreted ``substantially all'' as meaning at least 75 percent of the 
    services. In addition, Sec. 411.356(c) provided an exception, until 
    January 1, 1995, for an ownership or investment interest in a hospital 
    if the physician's ownership or investment interest does not relate 
    (directly or indirectly) to the furnishing of clinical laboratory 
    services. This exception was based on section 1877(b)(4) as it read 
    under OBRA '90. OBRA '93, as amended by SSA '94, retained this 
    provision only until January 1, 1995.
        This proposed rule would revise Sec. 411.356(c) to reflect the 
    statutory provision as it became effective on January 1, 1995 and to 
    apply Sec. 411.356(c) to entities providing any of the designated 
    health services. We would change the requirement that a rural entity be 
    located in a rural area to instead except referrals for designated 
    health services furnished in a rural area by an entity that furnishes 
    substantially all of its designated health services to individuals 
    residing in a rural area. We would continue to interpret 
    ``substantially all'' as being at least 75 percent of the services 
    furnished by the entity. In addition, this proposed rule would remove 
    the exception that expired on January 1, 1995.
    5. Exceptions That Apply Only to Certain Compensation Arrangements
        Section 1877(e) provides that certain compensation arrangements are 
    not considered a ``financial relationship'' for purposes of the 
    prohibition on physician referrals.
    
    a. Exception--rental of office space
    
        Section 1877(e)(1)(A) provides an exception for payments made by a 
    lessee to a lessor for the use of premises if the following conditions 
    are met:
         The lease is in writing, signed by the parties, and 
    specifies the premises covered by the lease.
         The space rented or leased does not exceed that which is 
    reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes of the 
    rental or lease. Also, the space is used exclusively by the lessee when 
    being used by the lessee, except that the lessee may make payments for 
    the use of space consisting of common areas under certain conditions. 
    That is, acceptable payments for common areas cannot exceed the 
    lessee's pro rata share of expenses for that space based upon the ratio 
    of the space used exclusively by the lessee to the total amount of 
    space (other than common areas) occupied by all persons using the 
    common areas.
         The lease provides for a term of rental or lease of at 
    least 1 year.
         The rental charges over the term of the lease are set in 
    advance, are consistent with fair market value, and are not determined 
    in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of any 
    referrals or other business generated between the parties.
         The lease would be commercially reasonable even if no 
    referrals were made between the parties.
         The lease meets any other requirements the Secretary may 
    impose by regulation, as needed to protest against Medicare program or 
    patient abuse.
        ``Fair market value'' is defined by section 1877(h)(3) as the value 
    in arm's-length transactions, consistent with the general value market, 
    and, with respect
    
    [[Page 1668]]
    
    to rentals or leases, the value of rental property for general 
    commercial purposes (not taking into account its intended use) and, in 
    the case of a lease of space by a lessor that is a potential source of 
    patient referrals to the lessee, not adjusted to reflect the additional 
    value the prospective lessee or lessor would attribute to the proximity 
    or convenience to the lessor. (Meeting the fair market value standard 
    is a requirement for several of the other compensation-related 
    exceptions in the statute. We discuss these other exceptions later in 
    this preamble.)
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(1)(A) into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(a), without imposing 
    any additional requirements. This proposed rule would retain 
    Sec. 411.357(a). In addition, the final rule incorporated the 
    definition of ``fair market value'' in Sec. 411.351. This proposed rule 
    would retain the definition. Also, since the statute requires that fair 
    market value be ``consistent with the general market value,'' we have 
    added to the definition an explanation of ``general market value.''
    
    b. Exception--rental of equipment
    
        Section 1877(e)(1)(B) provides an exception for payments made by a 
    lessee of equipment to the lessor for the use of the equipment if the 
    following conditions are met:
         The lease is set out in writing, signed by the parties, 
    and specifies the equipment covered by the lease.
         The equipment rented or leased does not exceed that which 
    is reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes of the 
    rental or lease and is used exclusively by the lessee when being used 
    by the lessee.
         The lease provides for a term of rental or lease of at 
    least 1 year.
         The rental charges over the term of the lease are set in 
    advance, are consistent with fair market value, and are not determined 
    in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of any 
    referrals or other business generated between the parties.
         The lease would be commercially reasonable even if no 
    referrals were made between the parties.
         The lease meets any other requirements the Secretary may 
    impose by regulation as needed to protect against Medicare program or 
    patient abuse.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated this provision into our 
    regulations at Sec. 411.357(b), without imposing any additional 
    requirements. This proposed rule would retain Sec. 411.357(b), with 
    minor editorial changes.
    
    c. Exception--bona fide employment relationship
    
        Under section 1877(e)(2), any amount paid by an employer to a 
    physician (or an immediate family member of the physician) who has a 
    bona fide employment relationship with the employer for the provision 
    of services does not constitute a compensation arrangement for purposes 
    of the prohibition if the following conditions are met:
         The employment is for identifiable services.
         The amount of the remuneration under the employment is 
    consistent with the fair market value of the services and (except for 
    certain productivity bonuses) is not determined in a manner that takes 
    into account (directly or indirectly) the volume or value of any 
    referrals by the referring physician.
         The remuneration is made in accordance with an agreement 
    that would be commercially reasonable even if no referrals were made to 
    the employer.
         The employment meets any other requirements the Secretary 
    may impose by regulation as needed to protect against Medicare program 
    or patient abuse.
        The statute provides that, under this exception, a productivity 
    bonus that is based on services performed personally by the physician 
    (or immediate family member) does not violate the ``volume or value of 
    referrals'' standard.
        ``Employee'' is defined in section 1877(h)(2) as an individual who 
    would be considered to be an employee of the entity under the usual 
    common law rules that apply in determining employer-employee 
    relationships, as applied for purposes of section 3121(d)(2) of the 
    Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(2) into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(c), without imposing 
    any additional requirements. This proposed rule would retain 
    Sec. 411.357(c), but with additional requirements that we describe in 
    section III. The final rule also incorporated the definition of 
    ``employee'' into our regulations at Sec. 411.351. Again, this proposed 
    rule would retain that definition.
    
    d. Exception--personal service arrangements
    
        Under section 1877(e)(3)(A), remuneration from an entity under an 
    arrangement (including remuneration for specific physician services 
    furnished to a nonprofit blood center) does not constitute a 
    compensation arrangement for purposes of the prohibition on referrals 
    if the following conditions are met:
         The arrangement is set out in writing, signed by the 
    parties, and specifies the services covered by the arrangement.
         The arrangement covers all of the services to be furnished 
    by the physician (or immediate family member) to the entity.
         The aggregate services contracted for do not exceed those 
    that are reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes 
    of the arrangement.
         The term of the arrangement is for at least 1 year.
         The compensation to be paid over the term of the 
    arrangement is set in advance, does not exceed fair market value, and, 
    except in the case of a physician incentive plan (as described below) 
    is not determined in a manner that takes into account the volume or 
    value of any referrals or other business generated between the parties.
         The services to be performed under the arrangement do not 
    involve the counseling or promotion of a business arrangement or other 
    activity that violates State or Federal law.
         The arrangement meets any other requirements the Secretary 
    may impose by regulation as needed to protect against program or 
    patient abuse.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated section 1877(e)(3)(A) into 
    our regulations at Sec. 411.357(d)(1), without imposing any additional 
    requirements. This proposed rule would retain Sec. 411.357(d)(1), with 
    several changes that we discuss in section III of this preamble.
        Section 1877(e)(3)(B)(i) provides that, in the case of a physician 
    incentive plan between a physician and an entity, the compensation may 
    be determined in a manner (through a withhold, capitation, bonus, or 
    otherwise) that takes into account, directly or indirectly, the volume 
    or value of any referrals or other business generated between the 
    parties, if the plan meets the following requirements:
         No specific payment is made (directly or indirectly) under 
    the plan to a physician or a physician group as an inducement to reduce 
    or limit medically necessary services provided with respect to a 
    specific individual enrolled with the entity.
         If the plan places a physician or a physician group at 
    substantial financial risk as determined by the Secretary under section 
    1876(i)(8)(A)(ii), the plan
    
    [[Page 1669]]
    
    complies with any requirements the Secretary may impose under that 
    section.
         Upon request by the Secretary, the entity provides the 
    Secretary with access to descriptive information regarding the plan, in 
    order to permit the Secretary to determine whether the plan is in 
    compliance with the requirements listed above.
        (Note: Sections 1876(i)(8) and 1903(m)(2)(A) require that physician 
    incentive plans be regulated. On March 27, 1996, we published, at 61 FR 
    13430, a final rule with comment period that implemented this 
    legislation for purposes of both the Medicare and Medicaid programs by 
    establishing requirements at Sec. 417.479 (for Medicare) and at 
    Sec. 434.70 (for Medicaid). A final rule amending the final rule with 
    comment was published on December 31, 1996 at 61 FR 69034.)
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated section 1877(e)(3)(B)(i) 
    into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(d)(2). Because of the 
    establishment at Sec. 417.479 of requirements concerning incentive 
    plans, this proposed rule would revise Sec. 411.357(d)(2). It would 
    replace the reference to requirements established by the Secretary 
    under section 1876(i)(8)(A)(ii) of the Act with a reference to the 
    requirements of Sec. 417.479. We would also reverse the order of 
    paragraphs (ii) and (iii) of Sec. 411.357(d)(2) because we believe this 
    order reflects a more logical progression. In addition, we would delete 
    existing Sec. 411.357(d)(3), which contains a time-sensitive provision 
    related to personal services arrangements that, based on the statute, 
    is now obsolete.
        Section 1877(e)(3)(B)(ii) defines a ``physician incentive plan'' as 
    any compensation arrangement between an entity and a physician or 
    physician group that may directly or indirectly have the effect of 
    reducing or limiting services provided with respect to individuals 
    enrolled with the entity. The August 1995 final rule incorporated this 
    definition into our regulations at Sec. 411.351. This proposed rule 
    would retain that definition.
    
    e. Exception--remuneration unrelated to the provision of designated 
    health services
    
        Prior to OBRA '93, section 1877(b)(4) provided an exception for any 
    financial relationship with a hospital if the financial relationship 
    does not relate to the provision of clinical laboratory services. OBRA 
    '93 eliminated this provision, but SSA '94 reinstated it until January 
    1, 1995. OBRA '93 also added paragraph (e)(4) to section 1877, 
    retroactive to January 1, 1992. Under section 1877(e)(4), remuneration 
    provided by a hospital to a physician that does not relate to the 
    furnishing of designated health services does not constitute a 
    compensation arrangement for purposes of the prohibition on referrals. 
    Section 1877(e)(4) differs from the predecessor provision at section 
    1877(b)(4) in that it retains only the compensation aspect of the 
    exception. In addition, it applies only to remuneration from a hospital 
    to a physician (that is, it does not include remuneration from a 
    physician to a hospital) if the remuneration does not relate to the 
    furnishing of designated health services. Also, the exception does not 
    apply to remuneration from a hospital to a member of a physician's 
    immediate family.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of sections 
    1877(b)(4) and (e)(4) as they were effective on January 1, 1992, and as 
    they relate to compensation, into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(g). 
    This proposed rule would revise Sec. 411.357(g) by removing that 
    portion that was based on the predecessor provision of section 
    1877(b)(4), since that provision has expired. We would also revise that 
    portion of Sec. 411.357(g) that was based on section 1877(e)(4) by 
    changing the reference to remuneration not related to the furnishing of 
    clinical laboratory services to remuneration not related to the 
    furnishing of designated health services. We have also made several 
    other changes described in section III of this preamble.
    
    f. Exception--physician recruitment
    
        Section 1877(e)(5) provides that remuneration provided by a 
    hospital to a physician to induce the physician to relocate to the area 
    serviced by the hospital in order to be a member of the hospital's 
    medical staff does not constitute a compensation arrangement for 
    purposes of the prohibition on referrals if the following conditions 
    are met:
         The physician is not required to refer patients to the 
    hospital.
         The amount of remuneration under the arrangement is not 
    determined in a manner that takes into account (directly or indirectly) 
    the volume or value of any referrals by the referring physician.
         The arrangement meets any other requirements the Secretary 
    may impose by regulation as needed to protect against program or 
    patient abuse.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(5) into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(e), with additional 
    requirements. Under our authority to impose additional requirements, we 
    specified that the arrangement and its terms must be in writing and 
    signed by both parties. We also specified that the physician must not 
    be precluded from establishing staff privileges at another hospital or 
    referring business to another entity. This proposed rule would retain 
    Sec. 411.357(e), with a minor editorial change.
    
    g. Exception--isolated transaction
    
        Section 1877(e)(6) provides that an isolated transaction, such as a 
    one-time sale of property or a practice, is not considered to be a 
    compensation arrangement for purposes of the prohibition on referrals 
    if the following conditions are met:
         The amount of remuneration for the transaction is 
    consistent with fair market value and is not determined, directly or 
    indirectly, in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of 
    referrals by the physician.
         The remuneration is provided under an agreement that would 
    be commercially reasonable even if no referrals were made to the 
    entity.
         The arrangement meets any other requirements the Secretary 
    may impose by regulation as needed to protect against Medicare program 
    or patient abuse.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(6) into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(f), with additional 
    requirements. Under our authority to impose additional requirements, we 
    specified that there can be no additional transactions between the 
    parties for 6 months after the isolated transaction, except for 
    transactions that are specifically excepted under one of the other 
    exceptions provided in the regulations. This proposed rule would retain 
    Sec. 411.357(f), with a minor editorial change. In addition, we 
    established definitions of ``transaction'' and ``isolated transaction'' 
    at Sec. 411.351. We defined a ``transaction'' as an instance or process 
    of two or more persons doing business. We defined an ``isolated 
    transaction'' as one involving a single payment between two or more 
    persons. We specified that a transaction that involves long-term or 
    installment payments is not considered an isolated transaction. This 
    proposed rule would retain those definitions, with the clarification 
    that ``transactions'' can involve persons or entities.
    
    h. Exception--certain group practice arrangements with a hospital
    
        Section 1877(e)(7) provides that an arrangement between a hospital 
    and group under which designated health services are furnished by the 
    group but
    
    [[Page 1670]]
    
    are billed by the hospital does not constitute a compensation 
    arrangement for purposes of the prohibition on referrals if the 
    following conditions are met:
         With respect to the services furnished to a hospital 
    inpatient, the arrangement is for the provision of inpatient hospital 
    services under section 1861(b)(3).
         The arrangement began before December 19, 1989, and has 
    continued in effect without interruption since that date.
         With respect to the designated health services covered by 
    the arrangement, substantially all of those services furnished to 
    patients of the hospital are furnished by the group under the 
    arrangement.
         The arrangement is set out in a written agreement that 
    specifies the services to be furnished by the parties and the amount of 
    compensation.
         The compensation paid over the term of the agreement is 
    consistent with fair market value, and the compensation per unit of 
    services is fixed in advance and is not determined in a manner that 
    takes into account the volume or value of any referrals or other 
    business generated between the parties.
         The compensation is provided under an agreement that would 
    be commercially reasonable even if no referrals were made to the 
    entity.
         The arrangement between the parties meets any other 
    requirements the Secretary may impose by regulation as needed to 
    protect against Medicare program or patient abuse.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(7), as they relate to clinical laboratory services, into our 
    regulations at Sec. 411.357(h), without imposing any additional 
    requirements. This proposed rule would revise Sec. 411.357(h) to apply 
    the provisions to the designated health services, and would make 
    certain minor changes described in section III.
    
    i. Exception--payments by a physician for items and services
    
        Section 1877(e)(8) provides that the following do not constitute 
    compensation arrangements for purposes of the prohibition on referrals:
         Payments made by a physician to a laboratory in exchange 
    for the provision of clinical laboratory services.
         Payments made by a physician to an entity as compensation 
    for items or services other than clinical laboratory services if the 
    items or services are furnished at fair market value.
        The August 1995 final rule incorporated the provisions of section 
    1877(e)(8) into our regulations at Sec. 411.357(i). This proposed rule 
    would retain Sec. 411.357(i), but clarify that ``services'' as used in 
    the provision means services of any kind (not just those defined as 
    ``services'' for purposes of the Medicare program in Sec. 400.202).
    6. Requirements Related to the ``Substantially All'' Test
        As mentioned earlier, the definition of ``group practice'' in 
    section 1877(h)(4) contains a requirement that substantially all of the 
    services of the physicians who are members of the group be furnished 
    through the group. In the August 1995 final rule, we interpreted 
    ``substantially all'' to mean at least 75 percent of the total patient 
    care services of the group practice members. Further, we defined 
    ``members of the group,'' at Sec. 411.351, as physician partners and 
    full-time and part-time physician contractors and employees during the 
    time they furnish services to patients of the group practice that are 
    furnished through the group and are billed in the name of the group. 
    This proposed rule would revise the definition of ``members of the 
    group'' to exclude independent contractors, to count physician owners 
    other than partners, and to count physicians as members during the time 
    they furnish ``patient care services'' to the group. We discuss these 
    changes in section III of this preamble.
        The August 1995 final rule defined ``patient care services,'' at 
    Sec. 411.351, as any tasks performed by a group practice member that 
    address the medical needs of specific patients, regardless of whether 
    they involve direct patient encounters. We included, as examples, the 
    services of physicians who do not directly treat patients, time spent 
    by a physician consulting with other physicians, and time spent 
    reviewing laboratory tests. Under Sec. 411.351, ``patient care 
    services'' are measured by the total patient care time each member 
    spends on these services.
        This proposed rule would retain the definition of patient care 
    services, but would broaden the definition to include tasks that 
    benefit patients in general or the group practice. We are also 
    proposing minor changes that we believe are necessary to clarify what 
    tasks qualify under the definition. We describe these changes in 
    section III of this preamble.
        The August 1995 final rule also required, at Sec. 411.360, that a 
    group practice submit a written statement to its carrier annually to 
    attest that, during the most recent 12-month period (calendar year, 
    fiscal year, or immediately preceding 12-month period) 75 percent of 
    the total patient care services of group practice members was furnished 
    through the group, was billed under a billing number assigned to the 
    group, and the amounts so received were treated as receipts of the 
    group.
        Section 411.360 also provides that a newly-formed group practice 
    (one in which physicians have recently begun to practice together) or 
    any group practice that has been unable in the past to meet the 
    definition of a group practice as set forth at section 1877(h)(4) 
    must--
         Submit a written statement to attest that, during the next 
    12-month period (calendar year, fiscal year, or next 12 months), it 
    expects to meet the 75 percent standard and will take measures to 
    ensure the standard is met; and
         At the end of the 12-month period, submit a written 
    statement to attest that it met the 75 percent standard during that 
    period, billed for those services under a billing number assigned to 
    the group, and treated amounts received for those services as receipts 
    of the group. If the group did not meet the standard, any Medicare 
    payments made to the group during the 12-month period that were 
    conditioned on the group meeting the standard are overpayments.
    
    In addition, Sec. 411.360 specifies that--
    
         Once any group has chosen to use its fiscal year, the 
    calendar year, or some other 12-month period, the group practice must 
    adhere to this choice.
         The attestation must contain a statement that the 
    information furnished in the attestation is true and accurate and must 
    be signed by a group representative.
         Any group that intends to meet the definition of a group 
    practice in order to qualify for one of the exceptions provided in the 
    regulations must submit the required attestation to its carrier by 
    December 12, 1995.
        The August 1995 final rule contains a discussion of the rationale 
    for the above provisions. On December 11, 1995, we published in the 
    Federal Register, at 60 FR 63438, a final rule that delays the date by 
    which a group of physicians must file an attestation statement. The 
    December final rule amended Sec. 411.360 to require that a group that 
    intends to meet the definition of a group practice must submit an 
    attestation statement to its carrier no later than 60 days after the 
    group receives attestation instructions from its carrier. The preamble 
    to the December rule points out that a group can regard itself as a 
    group practice in the interim period before it receives attestation 
    instructions, provided the group believes that it meets the
    
    [[Page 1671]]
    
    definition of a group practice under Sec. 411.351.
        This proposed rule would retain Sec. 411.360, as amended by the 
    December 1995 final rule. We propose to make several minor changes to 
    clarify that a group is only required to complete an attestation if it 
    wishes to qualify as a group practice for purposes of meeting an 
    exception that requires group status. We are also changing the 
    provision to require that the attestation be signed by an authorized 
    representative of the group practice who is knowledgeable about the 
    group, and to contain a statement that the information furnished in the 
    attestation is true and accurate to the best of the representative's 
    knowledge and belief. The proposed provision also states that any 
    person filing a false statement will be subject to applicable criminal 
    and civil penalties.
    7. Reporting Requirements
        Prior to SSA '94, section 1877(f) included the requirement that 
    each entity furnishing Medicare covered items or services must provide 
    us with certain information concerning its ownership or investment 
    arrangements. In our December 3, 1991 interim final rule with comment 
    period, published in the Federal Register at 56 FR 61374, we extended 
    the rule to include certain information concerning an entity's 
    compensation arrangements for the reasons discussed in the preamble of 
    that rule.
        Section 1877(f) also gave the Secretary the option of waiving the 
    reporting requirements, for certain entities that do not furnish 
    clinical laboratory services, in all but 10 States. The interim final 
    rule discussed our decision to waive the reporting requirements for all 
    entities (other than those providing clinical laboratory services) in 
    States other than the minimum 10 States specified in the statute. In 
    the 10 States, we were required to obtain data from at least six 
    specific types of entities. We gathered data from these providers in 
    the fall of 1991.
        Section 152 of SSA '94 amended section 1877(f) extensively. It 
    extended the reporting requirements to specifically cover information 
    not only about an entity's ownership or investment interests, but about 
    compensation arrangements as well. SSA '94 also eliminated the 
    Secretary's authority to waive the reporting requirements for certain 
    States or services, although the Secretary continues to have the right 
    to determine that an entity is not subject to the reporting 
    requirements because it provides services covered under Medicare very 
    infrequently. In addition, the requirements continue to not apply to 
    designated health services furnished outside of the United States. 
    Section 1877(f) allows the Secretary to gather the information in such 
    form, manner, and at such times as she specifies.
        We discussed the provisions of section 1877(f), as they relate to 
    clinical laboratories and as they read under OBRA '90, in detail in the 
    December 1991 interim final rule. The August 1995 final rule adopted 
    the provisions of the interim final rule with revisions that reflect 
    the changes made by SSA '94. While the August 1995 final rule reflects 
    the amendments made to section 1877(f), it did not interpret these 
    amendments. This proposed rule retains the reporting requirements as 
    they appear in the August 1995 final rule, subject to certain 
    interpretations we have added in section III of this preamble. These 
    requirements are set forth at existing Sec. 411.361, and we would apply 
    them to any future reporting we may require.
    8. Sanctions
        Prior to OBRA '93, section 1877(g)(1) required a denial of payment 
    for a clinical laboratory service that was provided in violation of the 
    referral prohibition. Paragraph (g)(2) of section 1877 required the 
    timely refund of amounts collected in violation of the prohibition. 
    OBRA '93 extended these provisions to apply to all of the designated 
    health services, effective January 1, 1995. The August 1995 final rule 
    incorporated these provisions as they relate to clinical laboratory 
    services into our regulations at Secs. 411.353(c) and (d), 
    respectively. This proposed rule would revise Secs. 411.353(c) and (d) 
    to extend their application to the other designated health services.
        Paragraph (g)(3) of section 1877 provides for the imposition of a 
    civil money penalty of $15,000 per service and exclusion from Medicare 
    and any State health care program, including Medicaid, for any person 
    who presents or causes to be presented a bill or claim the person knows 
    or should know is for a service for which payment may not be made under 
    Sec. 1877(a). The same penalty applies for a service for which a person 
    has not made a refund as described in paragraph (g)(2).
        Paragraph (g)(4) provides for a $100,000 civil money penalty and 
    the same exclusion penalty for any physician or other entity that 
    enters into a circumvention scheme that the physician or entity knows 
    or should know has a principal purpose of assuring referrals by the 
    physician to a particular entity which, if the physician made the 
    referrals directly, would be in violation of section 1877. A proposed 
    rule published by the Office of Inspector General on October 20, 1993 
    (58 FR 54096) addresses sections 1877(g)(3) and (g)(4). That rule 
    became final on March 31, 1995 (60 FR 16580).
        Paragraph (g)(5) of section 1877 provides for possible exclusion 
    and a civil money penalty of not more than $10,000 per day for each day 
    in which a person has failed to meet a reporting requirement in section 
    1877(f). The December 1991 interim final rule covering the reporting 
    requirements incorporated this provision into our regulations at 
    Sec. 411.361(g), and the August 1995 final rule redesignated 
    Sec. 411.361(g) as Sec. 411.361(f). This proposed rule would retain 
    Sec. 411.361(f).
    9. Additional Definitions
        In implementing provisions of section 1877 as they were effective 
    on January 1, 1992, the August 1995 final rule established definitions 
    of the following terms (which were not discussed above) at 
    Sec. 411.351:
        a. Clinical laboratory services means the biological, 
    microbiological, serological, chemical, immunohematological, 
    biophysical, cytological, pathological, or other examination of 
    materials derived from the human body for the purpose of providing 
    information for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease 
    or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings. 
    These examinations also include procedures to determine, measure, or 
    otherwise describe the presence or absence of various substances or 
    organisms in the body.
        b. Entity means a sole proprietorship, trust, corporation, 
    partnership, foundation, not-for-profit corporation, or unincorporated 
    association. For reasons discussed in section III of this preamble, 
    this proposed rule would revise the definition of ``entity'' to include 
    a physician's sole proprietorship and any practice of multiple 
    physicians that provides for the furnishing of a designated health 
    service.
        c. Hospital means any separate legally-organized operating entity 
    plus any subsidiary, related, or other entities that perform services 
    for the hospital's patients and for which the hospital bills. However, 
    we have excluded from this definition entities that perform services 
    for hospital patients ``under arrangements'' with the hospital. We 
    propose to amend this definition to make it clear that ``hospitals'' 
    include regular hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, and rural primary 
    care hospitals.
    
    [[Page 1672]]
    
        d. HPSA means, for purposes of the August 1995 final rule, an area 
    designated as a health professional shortage area under section 
    332(a)(1)(A) of the Public Health Service Act for primary medical care 
    professionals (in accordance with the criteria specified in 42 CFR part 
    5, Appendix A, Part I--Geographic Areas). In addition, with respect to 
    dental, mental health, vision care, podiatric, and pharmacy services, 
    an HPSA means an area designated as a health professional shortage area 
    under section 332(a)(1)(A) of the Public Health Service Act for dental 
    professionals, mental health professionals, vision care professionals, 
    podiatric professionals, and pharmacy professionals, respectively.
        e. Immediate family member or ``member of a physician's immediate 
    family'' means husband or wife; natural or adoptive parent, child, or 
    sibling; stepparent, stepchild, stepbrother, or stepsister; father-in-
    law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, or 
    sister-in-law; grandparent or grandchild; and spouse of a grandparent 
    or grandchild.
        f. Laboratory means an entity furnishing biological, 
    microbiological, serological, chemical, immunohematological, 
    hematological, biophysical, cytological, pathological, or other 
    examination of materials derived from the human body for the purpose of 
    providing information for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of 
    any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human 
    beings. These examinations also include procedures to determine, 
    measure, or otherwise describe the presence or absence of various 
    substances or organisms in the body. Entities only collecting or 
    preparing specimens (or both) or only serving as a mailing service and 
    not performing testing are not considered laboratories.
        g. The August 1995 final rule defined a ``plan of care'' as the 
    establishment by a physician of a course of diagnosis or treatment (or 
    both) for a particular patient, including the ordering of items or 
    services. For reasons discussed earlier, this proposed rule would 
    remove the words ``items or'' from this definition.
        (We explain our rationale for some of these definitions in the 
    March 1992 proposed rule, and we explain the remainder in the August 
    1995 final rule.) We would extend these definitions to apply to 
    referrals involving any of the designated health services.
        We have made some changes to the definitions in addition to those 
    noted above. Any changes in definitions that we have included in this 
    proposed rule do not result from changes in the legislation, but 
    reflect our most recent interpretations of the statute. In section III 
    of this preamble, we discuss in detail how we propose to interpret 
    provisions in section 1877 and in section 1903(s) that we have either 
    not interpreted in the August 1995 final rule or that we believe we 
    must reconsider in the context of the designated health services. In 
    section III, we also define or interpret terms that are present in the 
    statute (such as each of the designated health services) as well as 
    include new definitions that we propose to add to the rule to enable us 
    to implement other parts of the statute.
    10. Conforming Changes
        We propose to revise existing Secs. 411.1(a) and 411.350(a), which 
    set forth the statutory basis for the provisions in part 411, subpart 
    A, and part 411, subpart J, respectively, by changing the reference to 
    ``clinical laboratory services'' to ``designated health services.''
    11. Editorial Changes
        In addition to the proposed changes discussed above, we would also 
    make a number of editorial changes to subpart J of part 411. These 
    changes would not affect the substance of the provisions. As an example 
    of the type of change we would make, in Sec. 411.355(a), we would add 
    the words ``of this chapter'' after the reference to Sec. 410.20(a).
    
    B. Applying The Referral Prohibition to the Medicaid Program: Section 
    1903(s) of the Act and the Provisions of This Proposed Rule
    
        Title XIX of the Act authorizes Federal grants to States to 
    establish Medicaid programs to provide medical assistance to needy 
    individuals. Medicaid programs are administered by the States in 
    accordance with Federal laws and regulations. State Medicaid agencies 
    operate their programs in accordance with a Medicaid State plan that is 
    approved by us.
        While Medicaid programs are administered by the States, they are 
    jointly financed by the Federal and State governments. The Federal 
    government pays its share of medical assistance expenditures to the 
    State on a quarterly basis according to a formula described in sections 
    1903 and 1905(b). The amount of the Federal share for medical 
    assistance is called Federal financial participation (FFP). Before the 
    enactment of OBRA '93, there were no statutory or regulatory 
    requirements concerning the availability of FFP for Medicaid services 
    resulting from physician referrals.
        Section 13624 of OBRA '93, entitled ``Application of Medicare Rules 
    Limiting Certain Physician Referrals,'' added a new paragraph (s) to 
    section 1903 of the Act. This new provision extends aspects of the 
    Medicare prohibition on physician referrals to Medicaid. Specifically, 
    this provision restricts FFP for expenditures for medical assistance 
    under the State plan consisting of designated health services, as 
    defined under section 1877(h)(6), that are furnished to an individual 
    on the basis of a physician referral that would result in the denial of 
    payment under the Medicare program if Medicare covered the services to 
    the same extent and under the same terms and conditions as under a 
    State's Medicaid plan.
        This proposed rule would revise Sec. 435.1002, ``FFP for 
    services,'' to reflect section 1903(s). We would specify in 
    Sec. 435.1002(a) that the availability of FFP for expenditures for 
    Medicaid services is subject to the limitations set forth in new 
    Sec. 435.1012. We would entitle Sec. 435.1012 as ``Limitation on FFP 
    Related to Prohibited Referrals.'' The proposed new provision states 
    that we will deny FFP for designated health services (as defined in 
    Sec. 431.351) furnished under the State plan to an individual on the 
    basis of a physician referral that would result in the denial of 
    payment under the Medicare program if Medicare covered the services to 
    the same extent and under the same terms and conditions as under the 
    State plan. We believe that certain aspects of section 1903(s) require 
    our interpretation, and we discuss these aspects in section III of this 
    preamble.
        Section 4314 of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 established section 
    1877(g)(6) of the Act. It requires that the Secretary issue written 
    advisory opinions to outside parties concerning whether the referral of 
    a Medicare patient by a physician for designated health services (other 
    than clinical laboratory services) is prohibited under the physician 
    referral provisions in section 1877. Because the Medicare rules can 
    affect whether a State will receive FFP for certain services, States, 
    as well as individuals and entities that provide services under the 
    Medicaid program, may be interested in the advisory opinion process. As 
    a result, we have included in Sec. 435.1012(c) a cross reference to the 
    Medicare regulations that set forth the specific procedures we will use 
    in issuing advisory opinions.
        Section 1903(s) also specifies that the reporting requirements of 
    section
    
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    1877(f) and the penalties for failing to report in section 1877(g)(5) 
    apply to a provider of a designated health service for which payment 
    may be made under Medicaid in the same manner as they apply to a 
    provider that furnishes a designated health service for which payment 
    may be made under Medicare.
        This proposed rule would incorporate the provisions of sections 
    1877(f) and (g)(5) into our Medicaid regulations by adding new 
    Secs. 455.108 and 455.109 to part 455 (``Program Integrity: 
    Medicaid''). These two provisions would appear under a new subpart C 
    entitled ``Disclosure of Information by Providers for Purposes of the 
    Prohibition on Certain Physician Referrals.'' Section 455.108, 
    ``Purpose,'' would specify that subpart C implements section 1903(s) of 
    the Act. Section 455.109, ``Disclosure of ownership, investment, and 
    compensation arrangements,'' would list the specific disclosure 
    requirements, and the sanctions for failing to comply. We interpret 
    these disclosure requirements, as we believe they apply to Medicaid 
    providers, in section III of this preamble.
    
    III. Interpretations of Sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Act
    
        In this section of the preamble, we discuss in detail how we 
    propose to interpret provisions in section 1877 and in section 1903(s) 
    that we either did not interpret in the August 1995 final rule or that 
    we interpreted in the context of referrals for clinical laboratory 
    services, but must reconsider in the context of the additional 
    designated health services. We propose to define or interpret terms 
    that are present in the statute (such as each of the designated health 
    services) or to reinterpret or clarify certain statutory terms that we 
    interpreted in the past. We also propose to add certain new terms and 
    definitions to the rule that we believe are necessary for us to 
    implement parts of the statute. This section is structured in the order 
    we used to present the statutory provisions and our interpretations in 
    the August 1995 final rule. We would like to point out that, in these 
    proposed regulations, we intend to interpret only the provisions of 
    section 1877 of the Act, and not the provisions of any other State or 
    Federal laws, such as the antitrust laws, the anti-kickback statute, or 
    the Internal Revenue Code.
    
    A. Definitions
    
    1. Designated Health Services
        As we noted above, OBRA '93 expanded the physician referral 
    prohibition to apply to ten designated health services in addition to 
    clinical laboratory services. Section 1877(h)(6) lists these services, 
    but does not define them. Because the designated health services are 
    not defined in section 1877, we would define them in Sec. 411.351.
        Designated health services as components of other services. We 
    believe that a designated health service remains one, even if it is 
    billed as something else or is subsumed within another service category 
    by being bundled with other services for billing purposes. For example, 
    most services provided by a skilled nursing facility (SNF) are 
    considered SNF services, which are not themselves designated health 
    services. Nonetheless, SNF services can encompass a variety of 
    designated health services, such as physical therapy services or 
    laboratory services.
        Similarly under Medicaid, services provided by a clinic are 
    considered ``clinic services'' under section 1905(a)(9) of the Act, but 
    could encompass a variety of designated health services, such as 
    occupational therapy, physical therapy, or radiology services.
        We base our interpretation on the fact that Congress compiled its 
    list of designated health services based on abuses or potential abuses 
    it perceived in regard to a variety of specific kinds of services. The 
    list in section 1877(h)(6), in fact, does not exactly track the service 
    categories as they are defined under either Medicare or Medicaid. In 
    short, we regard the services designated in section 1877 as subject to 
    the requirements of that section regardless of the setting in which 
    they are provided or the payment category under which they are billed.
        On the other hand, we are also aware that designated health 
    services are sometimes provided as merely peripheral parts of some 
    other major service that a physician has prescribed. For example, 
    physicians often employ echocardiography (to obtain ultrasound signals 
    from the heart) as a mechanism to intraoperatively view the results of 
    bypass surgery. We do not believe that a physician using 
    echocardiography this way has made a specific referral for a designated 
    health service; instead, we regard the physician as prescribing a 
    physician service that happens to incidentally include 
    echocardiography. In other words, it is our view that a physician is 
    unlikely to over-prescribe bypass surgery in order to enhance his or 
    her investment in an echocardiography machine. Because we believe that 
    Congress meant to include under designated health services specific 
    services that are or could be subject to abuse, we are proposing to 
    define those services accordingly. Thus, we propose to deviate from 
    standard Medicare or Medicaid definitions of certain services in order 
    to meet the intent of the statute.
        How we define designated health services. We have chosen, in 
    general, to base the definitions for the designated health services on 
    existing definitions in the Medicare program. Except for inpatient 
    hospital services and home health services, our definitions are based 
    on how Medicare covers a service under Part B. As noted above, we have 
    chosen to deviate from these definitions when we believe it is 
    appropriate to fulfill the purpose of the statute.
        These definitions would apply for purposes of physician referrals 
    that are made for services covered under Medicare and for analogous 
    services covered under the Medicaid program. However, section 1903(s) 
    precludes FFP for medical assistance under a State plan consisting of a 
    designated health service furnished to an individual on the basis of a 
    referral that would result in a denial of payment under Medicare if 
    Medicare provided for coverage of the service to the same extent and 
    under the same terms and conditions as under the State plan. We believe 
    that in enacting section 1903(s), Congress was clearly concerned that 
    financial relationships of the kind that would prohibit a referral for 
    services under Medicare may also lead to improper utilization of 
    Medicaid services. However, because Medicaid has its own unique set of 
    coverage requirements, a State can cover and reimburse designated 
    health services very differently from the way these services are 
    covered and reimbursed under the Medicare program. We believe that 
    Congress was aware of these program differences and specifically meant 
    to provide us with some flexibility in applying the Medicare physician 
    referral rules in the Medicaid context. Therefore, we intend to apply 
    this flexibility in the following manner, which we believe will further 
    the goals of the statute:
        When the definition of a designated health service is the same 
    under both programs, we intend to use the same definition, as described 
    in this preamble, for both programs. However, when the definition of a 
    designated health service differs under a State's plan from the 
    definition under Medicare, we will assume that the services under the 
    State's plan take precedence, even if the definition will encompass 
    services that are not covered by Medicare. However, we propose not to 
    include Medicaid services as designated health services in situations
    
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    in which including those services appears to run counter to the 
    underlying purpose of the legislation. Because Medicaid is administered 
    by the States, we do not believe that we are in the best position to 
    determine when including particular services will have this effect. As 
    a result, we are specifically soliciting comments on how to implement 
    our policy in a manner that will achieve the goals of the statute.
        We have received a number of inquiries from individuals who were 
    confused about whether a particular service falls under one of the 
    designated service categories listed in section 1877(h)(6). In order to 
    remedy this problem, we have included below general explanations of 
    each of the designated health services, including explanations of how 
    we interpret similar or parallel services under Medicare. In the text 
    of the proposed regulation, however, we have defined designated health 
    services whenever we could by simply cross-referencing existing 
    definitions in the Medicare statute, regulations, or manuals or by 
    including specific language whenever we believe the definitions should 
    deviate from standard Medicare definitions.
    
    a. Clinical laboratory services
    
        We would retain the definition that was incorporated into our 
    regulations at Sec. 411.351 by the August 1995 rule.
    
    b. Physical therapy services (including speech-language pathology 
    services)
    
        Physical therapy services. Sections 1861(s)(2)(D) and 1832 provide 
    for coverage of outpatient physical therapy services under Part B, 
    which are defined in section 1861(p). Under section 1861(p), outpatient 
    physical therapy services may be furnished by a provider of services, a 
    clinic, rehabilitation agency, or public health agency, or by others 
    under arrangements with and under the supervision of one of these 
    entities. The services must be furnished to an outpatient who is under 
    the care of a doctor of medicine or osteopathy, or a doctor of 
    podiatric medicine, under a plan of care established by one of these 
    physicians or by a qualified physical therapist. The plan must be 
    periodically reviewed by the physician and must include the type, 
    amount, and duration of physical therapy services to be furnished. No 
    service is included as outpatient physical therapy if it would not be 
    included as an inpatient hospital service if furnished to an inpatient 
    of a hospital. Outpatient physical therapy may be furnished by a 
    provider to an individual as an inpatient of a hospital or extended 
    care facility if the individual has exhausted or is otherwise 
    ineligible for benefit days under Medicare Part A.
        Outpatient physical therapy services may be furnished by an 
    independent physical therapist in his or her office or in an 
    individual's home. The physical therapist must meet any standards 
    created by the Secretary in regulations, including health and safety 
    standards. Special provisions concerning services furnished by a 
    physical therapist in independent practice are set forth at 
    Sec. 410.60(c).
        Under section 1861(p), the term ``outpatient physical therapy 
    services'' also includes speech-language pathology services. Medicare 
    covers speech-language pathology services if furnished to an outpatient 
    by a provider of services, a clinic, rehabilitation agency, or public 
    health agency, or by others under arrangements with and under the 
    supervision of one of these entities. However, the statute does not 
    provide for coverage of services furnished by speech-language 
    pathologists in independent practice.
        Plan of treatment requirements for outpatient physical therapy and 
    speech-language pathology services are set forth in Sec. 410.61. 
    Conditions for outpatient physical therapy services are set forth in 
    Sec. 410.60(a) and (b), and conditions and exclusions for outpatient 
    speech-language pathology services are set forth in Sec. 410.62.
        Basically, covered outpatient physical therapy services include 
    three types of services, which are best described in Sec. 410.100(b) 
    (which specifically concerns services provided by a comprehensive 
    outpatient rehabilitation facility). Section 410.100(b) provides that 
    the following are physical therapy services:
         Testing and measurement of the function or dysfunction of 
    the neuromuscular, musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, and respiratory 
    systems.
         Assessment and treatment related to dysfunction caused by 
    illness or injury and aimed at preventing or reducing disability or 
    pain and restoring lost function.
         The establishment of a maintenance therapy program for an 
    individual whose restoration has been reached. (However, maintenance 
    therapy itself is not covered as part of these services. Sections 
    3101.8 of the Medicare Intermediary Manual (HCFA Pub. 13, Part 3) and 
    2210 of the Medicare Carriers Manual provide guidelines for coverage of 
    restorative therapy and maintenance programs.)
        Speech-language pathology services. These services are defined in 
    section 1861(ll)(1) as such speech, language, and related function 
    assessment and rehabilitation services furnished by a qualified speech-
    language pathologist as this pathologist is legally authorized to 
    perform under State law (or the State regulatory mechanism) as would 
    otherwise be covered if furnished by a physician. Section 1877(ll)(3) 
    defines a ``qualified speech-language pathologist.''
        Speech-language pathology services are briefly described in 
    Sec. 410.100(d) as those necessary for the diagnosis and treatment of 
    speech and language disorders that create difficulties in 
    communication. Section 2216 of the Medicare Carriers Manual provides 
    that speech-language pathology services are also services necessary for 
    the diagnosis and treatment of swallowing disorders (dysphagia), 
    regardless of the presence of a communication disability. This section 
    of the manual also discusses restorative therapy and maintenance 
    programs and group speech pathology services under the two main 
    categories of diagnostic or evaluation services and therapeutic 
    services.
        Services that are essentially the same as ``outpatient physical 
    therapy services'' and ``outpatient speech pathology services'' are 
    also covered by Medicare in other contexts and in different settings, 
    and may be billed under different categories. For example, section 
    1861(b)(3) lists as ``inpatient hospital services'' other diagnostic or 
    therapeutic items or services furnished by a hospital or by others 
    under arrangements with the hospital, as are ordinarily furnished to 
    inpatients. We have a longstanding policy of covering physical therapy 
    and occupational therapy as diagnostic or therapeutic ``inpatient 
    hospital services.'' The Medicare regulations in Sec. 482.56, in fact, 
    include conditions of participation for hospitals that provide physical 
    therapy, occupational therapy, or speech pathology services.
        Similarly, these services can also be covered as SNF services. 
    Section 1861(h)(3) includes as ``extended care services'' physical or 
    occupational therapy or speech-language pathology services furnished by 
    the SNF (or by others under arrangements made by the facility), to an 
    inpatient of the facility. These services can also be furnished as 
    ``incident to'' a physician's services under section 1861(b)(2)(A). 
    This provision covers services and supplies furnished as an incident to 
    a physician's professional service, of kinds that are commonly 
    furnished in physicians' offices and are commonly either furnished 
    without charge or included in the physicians' bills. Physical and 
    occupational therapy can qualify as
    
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    ``incident to'' services, as reflected in section 2050.2 of the 
    Carriers Manual, if the physician directly supervises auxiliary 
    personnel who furnish these services and if these personnel are 
    employed by the physician.
        Section 1877(h)(6)(B) lists as a designated health service 
    ``physical therapy services,'' rather than the more limited category of 
    ``outpatient physical therapy services.'' Therefore, we believe that we 
    can include within our definition of these services any physical 
    therapy or speech-language pathology services that are covered under 
    Medicare, regardless of where they are furnished and by whom, or how 
    they are billed.
        For purposes of section 1877, we would define ``physical therapy 
    services'' as those outpatient physical therapy services (including 
    speech-language pathology services) described at section 1861(p) of the 
    Act and at Sec. 410.100(b) and (d). Physical therapy services also 
    include any other services with the characteristics described in 
    Sec. 410.100(b) and (d) that are covered under Medicare Part A or B, 
    regardless of who provides them, the location in which they are 
    provided, or how they are billed.
    
    c. Occupational therapy services
    
        Sections 1861(s)(2)(D) and 1832 of the Act provide for coverage of 
    outpatient occupational therapy services under Part B. Section 1861(g) 
    defines ``outpatient occupational therapy services'' by substituting 
    the word ``occupational'' for the word ``physical'' each place that it 
    appears in the definition of outpatient physical therapy services in 
    section 1861(p).
        Under section 1861(g), outpatient occupational therapy services may 
    be furnished by a provider of services, a clinic, rehabilitation 
    agency, or public health agency, or by others under arrangements with 
    and under the supervision of one of these entities. The services must 
    be furnished to an outpatient who is under the care of a doctor of 
    medicine or osteopathy, or a doctor of podiatric medicine, under a plan 
    of care established by one of these physicians or by a qualified 
    occupational therapist. The plan must be periodically reviewed by the 
    physician and must include the type, amount, and duration of 
    occupational therapy services to be furnished. No service is included 
    as outpatient occupational therapy if it would not be included as an 
    inpatient hospital service if furnished to an inpatient of a hospital. 
    Outpatient occupational therapy may be furnished by a provider to an 
    individual as an inpatient of a hospital or extended care facility if 
    the individual has exhausted or is otherwise ineligible for benefit 
    days under Medicare Part A.
        Outpatient occupational therapy services may be furnished by an 
    independent occupational therapist in his or her office or in an 
    individual's home. The occupational therapist must meet any standards 
    created by the Secretary in regulations, including health and safety 
    standards.
        Coverage guidelines for occupational therapy services are set forth 
    in sections 3101.9 of the Medicare Intermediary Manual (HCFA Pub. 13, 
    Part 3) and 2217 of the Medicare Carriers Manual. The purpose of 
    occupational therapy services is described generally in section 3101.9 
    of the Intermediary Manual as follows: ``Occupational therapy is a 
    medically prescribed treatment concerned with improving or restoring 
    functions which have been impaired by illness or injury or, where 
    function has been permanently lost or reduced by illness or injury, to 
    improve the individual's ability to perform those tasks required for 
    independent functioning.''
        Basically, covered outpatient occupational therapy services include 
    the following types of services, which are best described in section 
    410.100(c), a section that specifically concerns services provided by a 
    comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facility. For purposes of 
    section 1877, we would use the same services that are described in 
    section 410.100(c). In Sec. 411.351, occupational therapy services 
    would include the following:
         Teaching of compensatory techniques to permit an 
    individual with a physical impairment or limitation to engage in daily 
    activities.
         Evaluation of an individual's level of independent 
    functioning.
         Selection and teaching of task-oriented therapeutic 
    activities to restore sensory-integrative function.
         Assessment of an individual's vocational potential, except 
    when the assessment is related solely to vocational rehabilitation.
        As we pointed out in the section covering physical therapy 
    services, services that are essentially the same as ``outpatient 
    occupational therapy services'' are also covered by Medicare in other 
    contexts and in different settings, and may be billed under different 
    categories. For example, they might be covered as ``inpatient hospital 
    services'' under section 1861(b)(3) as ``other diagnostic or 
    therapeutic items or services'' furnished by a hospital or by others 
    under arrangements with the hospital; they might be covered as SNF 
    services under section 1861(h)(3) as part of a patient's ``extended 
    care services''; or they might be furnished in a physician's office as 
    services ``incident to'' the physician's services under section 
    1861(b)(2)(A).
        Section 1877(h)(6)(C) lists as a designated health service 
    ``occupational therapy services,'' rather than the more limited 
    category of ``outpatient occupational therapy services.'' Therefore, we 
    believe that we can include within our definition of these services any 
    occupational therapy services which are covered under Medicare, 
    regardless of where they are furnished and by whom, or how they are 
    billed.
        For purposes of section 1877, we would define ``occupational 
    therapy services'' as those outpatient occupational therapy services 
    described at section 1861(g) of the Act and at 42 CFR 410.100(c). 
    Occupational therapy services also include any other services with the 
    characteristics described in Sec. 410.100(c) that are covered under 
    Medicare Part A or B, regardless of who furnishes them, the location in 
    which they are furnished, or how they are billed.
    
    d. Radiology services, including magnetic resonance imaging, 
    computerized axial tomography scans, ultrasound services, and radiation 
    therapy services and supplies
    
        Section 1877(h)(6)(D) identifies ``radiology services, including 
    magnetic resonance imaging, computerized axial tomography scans, and 
    ultrasound'' as a designated health service. Section 1877(h)(6)(E) 
    identifies ``radiation therapy services and supplies'' as a designated 
    health service.
        Sections 1861(s)(3) and 1832 establish that ``diagnostic X-ray 
    tests,'' including diagnostic mammography services under certain 
    conditions, are considered medical or other health services under Part 
    B. Similarly, section 1861(s)(4) establishes that ``X-ray, radium, and 
    radioactive isotope therapy, including materials and services of 
    technicians'' are considered medical or other health services under 
    Part B. Even though the statute does not define these terms, the 
    payment provisions in section 1833(a)(2)(E) prescribe rules for paying 
    for outpatient hospital radiology services. These include diagnostic 
    and therapeutic radiology, nuclear medicine, computer assisted 
    tomography (CAT scan) procedures, magnetic resonance imaging, and 
    ultrasound and other imaging services (but excluding screening 
    mammography). We cover these services under the conditions described in 
    Secs. 410.32(a) and 410.35 of the regulations and in the Coverage
    
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    Issues Manual (HCFA Pub. 6) and in other manuals.
        Section 1861(s)(13) includes as medical or other health services 
    screening mammography services, which are defined in section 1861(jj) 
    as a ``radiologic procedure'' provided to a woman for the purpose of 
    early detection of breast cancer. We believe that screening mammography 
    could qualify as one of the ``radiology services'' listed in section 
    1877(h)(6)(D) as a designated health service. However, as we have 
    stated elsewhere, we believe that Congress enacted the physician 
    referral prohibition to limit the tendency for referring physicians to 
    overutilize services because they have a financial incentive to do so. 
    It is our view that screening mammography services cannot be subject to 
    overutilization. We base this conclusion on the fact that the statute 
    specifically limits the frequency with which the Medicare program will 
    cover these services. That is, section 1834(c)(2) specifically 
    prescribes how frequently the screenings will be covered for different 
    age groups. In addition, we never consider the covered level of 
    screenings to be unnecessary services--we believe that all women should 
    receive the screenings that are covered for them under the statute. (We 
    cover these screening services under the conditions described in 
    Sec. 410.34 and in the Coverage Issues Manual.)
        We wish to make it clear that the only type of mammography that we 
    would exclude from the definition of ``radiology services'' listed 
    under section 1877(h)(6)(D) would be screening mammography as covered 
    under section 1861(s)(13) and as defined in section 1861(jj). It is our 
    view that ``radiology services'' does include diagnostic mammography, 
    which is not subject to the same limits. (Diagnostic mammography 
    services are defined in Sec. 410.34(a) as mammography furnished to a 
    symptomatic patient for the purpose of detecting breast disease, while 
    screening mammography is furnished to asymptomatic patients.)
        Although Congress did not set up section 1877(h)(6)(D) and (E) in a 
    manner that parallels section 1861(s)(3) and (4), we believe that 
    paragraphs (D) and (E) of section 1877(h)(6), taken together, cover the 
    same services that are covered as Part B services under section 
    1861(s)(3) and (4). Therefore, throughout this document the terms 
    ``radiology'' and ``imaging'' mean any diagnostic test or therapeutic 
    procedure using X-rays, ultrasound and other imaging services, CT 
    scans, MRIs, radiation, or nuclear medicine, including diagnostic 
    mammography services, except for the distinctions that follow.
        The physician's professional component--Medicare has traditionally 
    considered a physician's professional services related to radiology to 
    in general be covered as physician services under section 1861(s)(1) 
    rather than as radiology services under either paragraph (3) or (4) of 
    section 1861(s). However, we believe that it is appropriate for 
    purposes of section 1877 to consider radiology services as including 
    these physician services. We are proposing to include the professional 
    component because radiology always consists of a technical service 
    combined with a physician's professional service. Whenever a technical 
    radiological service is overutilized, it follows that a physician's 
    radiological service will also be overutilized.
        Several studies have found that nonradiologists with imaging 
    facilities in their own offices order imaging tests far more frequently 
    than physicians who refer their patients to imaging facilities outside 
    their practices. We mentioned several of these studies in section I.A 
    of this preamble in the general discussion concerning studies that have 
    raised serious concerns about physicians who make self-referrals. For 
    example, one GAO study found that Florida nonradiologists who were sole 
    practitioners or in group practices or other practice affiliations with 
    imaging facilities in their own offices, when compared to physicians 
    who referred outside their practices, had imaging rates about 3 times 
    higher for MRIs; about 2 times higher for CT scans; 4.5 to 5.1 times 
    higher for ultrasound, echocardiography, and diagnostic nuclear 
    medicine imaging; and about 2 times higher for complex and simple X-
    rays. (GAO Report, ``Medicare: Referrals to Physician-owned Imaging 
    Facilities Warrant HCFA's Scrutiny,'' No. B-253835, pages 2, 3, and 10 
    (October 1994).)
        Similarly, a study appearing in the New England Journal of Medicine 
    compared the frequency and costs of diagnostic imaging furnished by 
    self-referring physicians to the frequency and costs of these same 
    services when physicians refer patients to an unrelated radiologist. 
    The study covered referrals for four medical conditions. The study 
    determined that the self-referring physicians obtained imaging 
    examinations 4.0 to 4.5 times more often than the physicians who 
    referred to unrelated radiologists. In addition, with respect to three 
    of the four medical conditions, the self-referring physicians charged 
    significantly more than the radiologists for imaging examinations of 
    similar complexity. The combination of more frequent imaging and higher 
    charges resulted in mean imaging charges per episode of care that were 
    4.4 to 7.5 times higher for the self-referring physicians. (Bruce J. 
    Hillman, M.D., and others, ``Frequency and Costs of Diagnostic Imaging 
    In Office Practice--A Comparison of Self-Referring and Radiologist-
    Referring Physicians,'' The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 323, 
    No. 23 (Dec. 6, 1990), pp. 1604-1608)
    
    Exclusion for Invasive or Interventional Radiology
    
        We would exclude from the meaning of radiology, for the purposes of 
    section 1877, any ``invasive'' radiology (also commonly referred to as 
    interventional radiology). Invasive radiology is any procedure in which 
    the imaging modality is used to guide a needle, probe, or a catheter 
    accurately. Examples include percutaneous transluminal angioplasty 
    (PTA); the placement of catheters for therapeutic embolization of 
    tumors, arteriovenous malformations, or bleeding sites; the placement 
    of drainage catheters; removal of stones; balloon dilation of 
    strictures; biopsies; arthrograms; and myelograms.
        We are basing this exclusion on the theory that the radiology 
    services in these procedures are merely incidental or secondary to 
    another procedure that the physician has ordered. As we have stated 
    earlier, we believe that Congress meant for the categories listed in 
    the statute as designated health services to encompass services that 
    tend to be subject to abuse. It is our view that physicians do not 
    routinely refer patients for the main procedures listed in the last 
    paragraph, such as angioplasty, in order to profit from unnecessary 
    radiology services. As a result, we are proposing not to include these 
    ``secondary'' radiology procedures as designated health services. We 
    are also specifically soliciting comments on any other types of 
    services that would qualify as designated health services, but which 
    may actually be incidental to other procedures.
        We would include the following definition at Sec. 411.351:
    
        Radiology services and radiation therapy and supplies means any 
    diagnostic test or therapeutic procedure using X-rays, ultrasound or 
    other imaging services, computerized axial tomography, magnetic 
    resonance imaging, radiation, or nuclear medicine, and diagnostic 
    mammography services, as covered under section 1861(s)(3) and (4) of 
    the Act and Secs. 410.32(a), 410.34, and 410.35, including the 
    professional
    
    [[Page 1677]]
    
    component of these services, but excluding any invasive radiology 
    procedure in which the imaging modality is used to guide a needle, 
    probe, or a catheter accurately.
    
    e. Durable medical equipment and supplies
    
        Sections 1861(s)(6) and 1832 establish DME as one of the 
    ``medical or other health services'' covered under Medicare Part B. 
    Section 1861(n) defines DME as including iron lungs, oxygen tents, 
    hospital beds, and wheelchairs (under certain conditions), used in a 
    patient's home (including certain institutions that can qualify as 
    the patient's home), whether furnished on a rental basis or 
    purchased. The definition of DME is explained further in the 
    Medicare regulations. Section 414.202 defines DME as equipment 
    furnished by a supplier or a home health agency that meets the 
    following conditions:
         Can withstand repeated use.
         Is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical 
    purpose.
         Generally is not useful to an individual in the absence 
    of an illness or injury.
         Is appropriate for use in the home.
        Durable medical equipment includes equipment such as 
    wheelchairs, hospital beds, nebulizers, and walkers. We also regard 
    DME that is furnished to a patient under a home health plan under 
    section 1861(m)(5) as DME for purposes of section 1877. The 
    conditions under which we cover DME are described in Sec. 410.38. 
    For the purposes of this proposed rule, we would use the definition 
    of DME set forth in section 1861(n) and in Sec. 414.202.
        We have received a number of inquiries concerning Medicare 
    claims processed by the four Durable Medical Equipment Regional 
    Carriers (DMERCs). Many people erroneously believe that all devices, 
    items, or supplies processed by the DMERCs are items of DME. This is 
    not so, because the DMERCs are also responsible for paying claims 
    for other items, such as immunosuppressive drugs, orthotics, 
    prosthetics, and prosthetic devices and related supplies.
        We have received requests that we clearly identify in this 
    regulation which items are considered DME and which are not. Because 
    the number of items considered to be DME is so extensive, we cannot 
    in this proposed rule identify each of them. However, in response to 
    these requests, we have provided below the general categories of 
    DME.
        We have also listed below the types of supplies used with the 
    DME. We are listing the supplies because when identifying DME as a 
    designated health service, Congress also included the supplies 
    necessary for the effective use of the DME as part of the designated 
    health service. For example, supplies used with DME could include 
    such items as test strips and lancets used with blood glucose 
    monitoring equipment or drugs used with a nebulizer. In general, 
    supplies are items that cannot be reused. We would also like to 
    point out that, effective December 1, 1996, in order for drugs used 
    in conjunction with DME to be covered by Medicare, the entity 
    dispensing the drug must have a Medicare supplier number, must be 
    licensed to dispense the drug in the State in which it will be 
    dispensed, and must bill and receive payment in its own name.
        An infusion pump may be covered as DME, in which case the 
    supplies necessary for its effective use are covered as designated 
    health services; these supplies include the drugs and biologicals 
    that must be put directly into the infusion pump.
        External infusion pumps--External infusion pumps may be covered 
    as DME under Medicare if certain coverage requirements are met, 
    including use in the home. The Medicare Coverage Issues Manual 
    provides for the coverage of infusion pumps for certain indications 
    and under certain circumstances, as described in sections 60-9 and 
    60-14. Other uses of external infusion pumps are covered if the 
    DMERC's medical staff verifies the appropriateness of the therapy 
    and of the prescribed pump for the individual patient. Payment may 
    also be made for the drugs necessary for the effective use of an 
    infusion pump as long as they are reasonable and necessary for the 
    patient's treatment.
        Section 1877(b)(2) provides an exception for in-office ancillary 
    services ``other than durable medical equipment (excluding infusion 
    pumps) and parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and 
    supplies.'' Section 1877(b)(2) has the effect of specifically 
    excepting infusion pumps from the prohibition on a physician 
    referring durable medical equipment furnished in the physician's own 
    office. External infusion pumps may be used in a physician's office 
    to administer drug therapy, including chemotherapy. However, 
    external infusion pumps (or other drug delivery systems used in the 
    physician's office (and not in the patient's home) are covered by 
    Medicare under section 1861(s)(2)(A) as a service incident to the 
    physician's service and not as DME. In addition, we do not believe 
    that the in-office ancillary exception applies to external infusion 
    pumps used outside a physician's office. That is, we do not believe 
    that Congress intended for the in-office exception to apply to 
    infusion pumps that are only picked up at a physician's office to be 
    used in the home, or that are delivered to the home.
        Implantable infusion pumps--Implantable infusion pumps may also 
    be covered as DME in accordance with the policy described in the 
    Medicare Coverage Issues Manual when they are used for certain 
    indications. Coverage for other uses of implantable infusion pumps 
    is allowed if the carrier's medical staff verifies that the drug and 
    the infusion pump are reasonable and necessary. (Implantable devices 
    are not billed to the DMERC carriers; rather, they are billed to the 
    local carrier.)
        If an implantable infusion pump is implanted in the physician's 
    office, but will be used at home and elsewhere, we believe that it 
    qualifies as DME that has been furnished in the physician's office. 
    Hence, the in-office ancillary services exception could apply, since 
    section 1877(b)(2) specifically includes infusion pumps, but not 
    other DME.
        End-Stage Renal Disease equipment and supplies--Section 
    1861(s)(2)(F) includes as covered medical and other health services 
    home dialysis supplies, equipment, and self-care home dialysis 
    support services, as well as institutional dialysis services and 
    supplies provided to individuals with end-stage renal disease 
    (ESRD). This ESRD benefit is separate from the DME benefit under 
    section 1861(s)(6). Therefore, the equipment, services, and supplies 
    covered under this section of the statute are not covered as DME 
    under Medicare. Examples of home dialysis equipment and supplies 
    include needles and syringes, blood pressure cuffs, dialysate 
    solution, and intermittent peritoneal dialyzers.
        Other items of equipment furnished in a physician's office--As 
    mentioned above, Medicare does not cover equipment used in a 
    physician's office as DME but may pay for the equipment under other 
    provisions in the statute. For example, section 1861(s)(2)(A) covers 
    services and supplies furnished incident to a physician's services, 
    and can include the use of any equipment that is needed in order for 
    a physician to provide a covered service.
        In addition, we may cover diagnostic testing under the 
    diagnostic services benefit under section 1861(s)(3), which would 
    include equipment used in diagnostic testing irrespective of where 
    the equipment is used. For example, dynamic electrocardiography 
    (EKG), commonly known as Holter monitoring, is a diagnostic 
    procedure that provides a continuous record of the 
    electrocardiographic activity of a patient's heart while he or she 
    is engaged in daily activities. Diagnostic services under section 
    1861(s)(3) are not themselves included as a designated health 
    service and thus are not specifically covered by this rule.
        General Categories of DME--Under certain circumstances (which 
    include use in the patient's home), the following items may be 
    covered as DME. (Readers should refer to section 60-9 of the 
    Medicare Coverage Issues Manual for additional information.)
    
    Alternating pressure pads and mattresses and miscellaneous support 
    surfaces
    Bed pans
    Blood glucose monitors
    Canes/crutches and walkers
    Commodes
    Continuous positive airway pressure
    Cushion lift, power seat
    Decubitus care equipment
    Gel flotation pads and mattresses
    Heating pads
    Heat lamps
    Hospital beds and accessories
    Intermittent positive pressure breathing equipment
    Infusion pumps, supplies and drugs
    Lymphedema pumps
    Manual wheelchair base
    Motorized wheelchair/power wheel chair base
    Nebulizers
    Wheel chair options/accessories
    Oxygen and related respiratory equipment
    Pacemaker monitor
    Patient lifts
    Pneumatic compressor and appliances
    Power operated vehicles
    Restraints
    Roll about chairs
    Safety equipment
    Support surfaces
    
    [[Page 1678]]
    
    Suction pumps
    Traction equipment
    Transcutaneous electric nerve simulators and supplies
    Trapeze equipment, fracture frame, and other orthopaedic devices
    Ultraviolet cabinets
    
        We would include the following definition at Sec. 411.351:
    
        Durable medical equipment has the meaning given in section 
    1861(n) of the Act and Sec. 414.202.
    
    f. Parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies
    
        Coverage of enteral and parenteral therapy as a Medicare Part B 
    benefit is provided under the prosthetic device benefit provision in 
    section 1861(s)(8). The regulations cover prosthetic devices in 
    Sec. 410.36(a)(2). Details for enteral and parenteral therapy are 
    set forth in the Medicare Coverage Issues Manual at section 65-10. 
    When the coverage requirements for enteral or parenteral nutritional 
    therapy are met, Medicare also covers related supplies, equipment 
    and nutrients.
        Enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies--Enteral nutrition 
    therapy provides nutrients to an individual with a functioning 
    gastrointestinal tract who, due to pathology to or nonfunction of 
    the structures that normally permit food to reach the digestive 
    tract, cannot maintain weight and strength commensurate with his or 
    her general condition. Enteral nutritional therapy may be 
    administered by nasogastric, jejunostomy, or gastrostomy tubes. This 
    benefit also includes supplies appropriate for the method of 
    administration.
        Therefore, at Sec. 411.351, we would define ``enteral nutrients, 
    equipment, and supplies'' as ``items and supplies needed to provide 
    enteral nutrition to a patient with a functioning gastrointestinal 
    tract who, due to pathology to or nonfunction of the structures that 
    normally permit food to reach the digestive tract, cannot maintain 
    weight and strength commensurate with his or her general condition, 
    as described in section 65-10 of the Medicare Coverage Issues Manual 
    (HCFA Pub. 6).''
        Parenteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies--Parenteral 
    nutrition therapy provides nutrients to an individual with severe 
    pathology of the alimentary tract that does not allow adequate 
    absorption of sufficient nutrients to maintain weight and strength 
    commensurate with the patient's general condition. Since the 
    alimentary tract of such a patient does not function adequately, 
    parenteral nutrition may be provided through an indwelling catheter 
    placed percutaneously in the subclavian vein and then advanced into 
    the superior vena cava. An example of a condition that may typically 
    qualify for coverage is a massive small bowel resection resulting in 
    a severe inability to absorb nutrition in spite of oral intake.
        Parenteral nutritional therapy would include the equipment and 
    supplies necessary to furnish the parenteral nutrition therapy. 
    (Parenteral nutrients are commonly considered as prescription drugs. 
    Effective December 1, 1996, any entity dispensing drugs that are 
    used in conjunction with a prosthetic device, including parenteral 
    equipment, must meet certain conditions in order for the drugs to be 
    covered under Medicare. These conditions are described in the 
    section covering DME and the supplies used in conjunction with DME.)
        At Sec. 411.351, we would define ``parenteral nutrients, 
    equipment, and supplies'' as ``items and supplies needed to provide 
    nutriment to a patient with permanent, severe pathology of the 
    alimentary tract that does not allow absorption of sufficient 
    nutrients to maintain strength commensurate with the patient's 
    general condition, as described in section 65-10 of the Medicare 
    Coverage Issues Manual (HCFA Pub. 6).''
        We wish to point out that section 1877(b)(2) specifically 
    excludes parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies 
    as a service that can qualify for the in-office ancillary services 
    exception.
    
    g. Prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices
    
        Prosthetics--Section 1861(s)(9) provides for inclusion as 
    medical and other health services artificial legs, arms, and eyes, 
    including replacements if required because of a change in a 
    patient's physical condition. Prosthetics are covered in the 
    regulations in Secs. 410.36(a)(3) and 414.202. As described in 
    section 2133 of the Medicare Carriers Manual, these appliances are 
    covered when furnished under a physician's order. We also cover 
    adjustments to artificial limbs or other appliances required by wear 
    or by a change in the patient's condition when ordered by a 
    physician.
        We would define ``prosthetics,'' at Sec. 411.351, as artificial 
    legs, arms, and eyes, as described in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act.
        Orthotics--Orthotics are included as a medical service under 
    section 1861(s)(9) as leg, arm, back, and neck braces. The 
    regulations at Sec. 410.36(a)(3) allow payment for these services to 
    include replacements if required because of a change in the 
    individual's condition. We have interpreted the statute in section 
    2133 of the Medicare Carriers Manual to cover these items when used 
    for the purpose of supporting a weak or deformed body member or 
    restricting or eliminating motion in a diseased or injured part of 
    the body. In the Carriers Manual, orthotics are covered only when 
    furnished under a physician's order.
        Under section 2133D of the Medicare Carriers Manual, orthopedic 
    footwear is covered under the orthotic benefit if the footwear is an 
    integral part of a leg brace. Diabetic shoes are covered under 
    section 1861(s)(12) of the Act in a separate benefit category. 
    Splints, casts, and other devices used for the reduction of 
    fractures and dislocations are covered under section 1861(s)(5). We 
    do not consider diabetic shoes, casts, splints, or these other 
    devices to be included under orthotics, prosthetics, or prosthetic 
    devices.
        At Sec. 411.351, we would define ``orthotics'' as ``leg, arm, 
    back, and neck braces, as listed in section 1861(s)(9) of the Act.''
        Prosthetic devices--Section 1861(s)(8) provides for inclusion as 
    medical and other health services ``prosthetic devices (other than 
    dental) which replace all or part of an internal body organ 
    (including colostomy bags and supplies directly related to colostomy 
    care), including replacement of such devices, and including one pair 
    of conventional eyeglasses or contact lenses furnished subsequent to 
    each cataract surgery with insertion of an intraocular lens.'' This 
    definition is reflected in the regulations at Secs. 410.36(a)(2) and 
    414.202. The statute specifically excludes dental devices from 
    Medicare coverage as prosthetic devices. (In addition, renal 
    dialysis machines are covered under the end stage renal disease 
    benefit and are discussed elsewhere in this section.)
        Under the prosthetic device benefit, Medicare also includes 
    supplies that are necessary for the effective use of a prosthetic 
    device, for example, tape to secure an indwelling catheter. Section 
    1877(h)(6)(H) includes prosthetic devices as a designated health 
    service and also specifically includes the supplies associated with 
    these devices. (Effective December 1, 1996, any entity dispensing 
    drugs that are used in conjunction with a prosthetic device must 
    meet certain conditions in order for the drugs to be covered under 
    Medicare. These conditions are described in the section covering DME 
    and drugs used in conjunction with DME.) Section 410.100(f)(2) 
    provides that services necessary to design the device, select 
    materials and components, measure, fit, and align the device, and 
    instructions to the patient are also included in this benefit. 
    Examples of prosthetic devices include cochlear implants, cardiac 
    pacemakers, and incontinence control appliances.
        We have received many questions concerning whether Medicare 
    considers an intraocular lens to be a prosthetic device. The answer 
    is yes. We have also been asked, for purposes of the designated 
    health services listed in section 1877(h)(6), to define a prosthetic 
    device to exclude any device that is implanted by a physician as 
    part of a surgical procedure. The theory behind this exclusion is 
    that such devices are only a small component of a central procedure, 
    which is the surgery needed to implant them. Physicians would not 
    unnecessarily subject patients to a surgical procedure just to boost 
    profits on intraocular lenses or other implantable devices, and are 
    thus not the kind of services Congress meant to cover. In addition, 
    some physicians believe that it is critical in many cases that they 
    have the freedom to prescribe their own choice of an implantable 
    device because they have particularized the design or find the 
    device better to work with than others.
        On the other hand, we have also been advised that only a very 
    small percentage of surgeons ``customize'' prosthetic devices by 
    developing their own, or by modifying existing devices. In addition, 
    it is not uncommon for physicians to receive compensation from 
    companies that manufacture or supply these devices, sometimes in the 
    form of ``consulting fees,'' perhaps in exchange for the physician's 
    agreement to use that company's device exclusively. Physicians might 
    also have an ownership interest in a supplier or manufacturer, thus 
    realizing a profit every time the device is used.
    
    [[Page 1679]]
    
        It has also come to our attention that physicians who have some 
    relationship with a manufacturer or supplier are in a position to 
    manipulate a hospital's or an ASC's choice of a prosthetic device in 
    exchange for the physicians' referrals. Although these practices 
    might not lead to the overutilization of services, we believe that 
    they can drive up the cost of certain services that are not subject 
    to a fee schedule, which we would regard as a form of potential 
    program abuse. Such an arrangement might also result in patient 
    abuse, since a physician may choose a prosthetic device based on 
    financial incentives rather than on the best interest of the 
    patient. Because of the controversy surrounding surgically implanted 
    devices, we have not excluded them from the definition of 
    ``prosthetic devices,'' but specifically solicit comments on this 
    issue.
        We would also like to point out that intraocular lenses that are 
    implanted in an ambulatory surgical center (ASC) would be covered 
    under the ASC payment rate. We have excluded any services covered 
    under the ASC rate from the referral prohibition under an exception 
    we created in Sec. 411.355(d).
        We have also been asked whether, if an ophthalmologist has an 
    optical shop as part of his or her office, he or she can refer 
    Medicare patients to the optical shop for eyeglasses. Medicare 
    coverage of eyeglasses and contact lenses is very limited, covering 
    only those that qualify as ``prosthetic devices'' used after 
    intraocular lenses are implanted during cataract surgery. Thus, a 
    physician would not be prohibited from referring a Medicare patient 
    to the optical shop for any conventional eyewear that is not covered 
    under the Medicare program. For eyeglasses that are covered by 
    Medicare, the physician could prescribe and fill the eyeglass 
    prescription if an exception applies. For example, the services 
    might meet the in-office ancillary services exception if the optical 
    shop is located in the physician's office suite. Alternatively, the 
    optical shop might qualify as a rural provider so that the exception 
    for rural ownership in section 1877(d)(2) of the Act could apply.
        At Sec. 411.351, we would define a ``prosthetic device'' as a 
    device (other than a dental device) listed in section 1861(s)(8) 
    that replaces all or part of an internal body organ, including 
    colostomy bags and including one pair of conventional eyeglasses or 
    contact lenses furnished subsequent to each cataract surgery with 
    insertion of an intraocular lens. We would define ``prosthetic 
    supplies'' as ``supplies that are necessary for the effective use of 
    a prosthetic device (including supplies directly related to 
    colostomy care).''
    
    h. Home health services
    
        How we will define home health services. Medicare-covered home 
    health services are defined in section 1861(m), and requirements for 
    payment for home health services furnished to eligible beneficiaries 
    are set forth in part 409, subpart E (``Home Health Services Under 
    Hospital Insurance'') of our regulations. For purposes of the 
    physician referral prohibition, ``home health services'' would have 
    the same meaning as the appropriate provisions described in part 
    409, subpart E. A brief explanation of the home health benefit 
    follows:
        Home health services are items and services furnished to an 
    individual who is confined to the home, under the care of a 
    physician, and in need of at least one of the following skilled 
    services: intermittent skilled nursing services, physical therapy 
    services, speech-language pathology services, or continuing 
    occupational therapy services.
        To receive covered home health services, a beneficiary must be 
    under a plan of care established and periodically reviewed by a 
    physician. Home health services are furnished by, or under 
    arrangements made by, a participating home health agency. Home 
    health services are furnished on a visiting basis in a place of 
    residence used as an individual's home. (A patient may not receive 
    home health services in a physician's office.) An individual's home 
    is wherever the individual makes his or her home. This may be his or 
    her own dwelling, an apartment, a relative's home, a home for the 
    aged, or some other type of institution. However, an institution is 
    not considered a patient's home if the institution meets the basic 
    requirements in the definition of a hospital (as defined in section 
    1861(e)(1)), an SNF (as defined in section 1819(a)(1)), or a nursing 
    facility (as defined in section 1919(a)(1)).
         The following services may be furnished under the home 
    health services benefit if appropriate requirements are met:
         Part-time or intermittent nursing care furnished by or 
    under the supervision of a registered professional nurse.
         Physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-
    language pathology services.
         Medical social services furnished under the direction 
    of a physician.
         Part-time or intermittent services of a home health 
    aide.
         Medical supplies (including catheters, catheter 
    supplies, ostomy bags, and supplies related to ostomy care, and a 
    covered osteoporosis drug, but excluding biologicals and other 
    drugs), the use of durable medical equipment, and appliances 
    suitable for home use.
         The medical services of an intern or resident in 
    training under an approved hospital teaching program if a home 
    health agency is affiliated with or under the common control of the 
    hospital furnishing the medical services.
        A beneficiary may also receive home health services on an 
    outpatient basis at a hospital, SNF, or a rehabilitation center 
    under arrangements made by the home health agency if equipment is 
    required that cannot be made available at the beneficiary's home or 
    the services are furnished while the beneficiary is at the facility 
    to receive services requiring equipment that cannot be made 
    available at the beneficiary's home. Home health services do not 
    include transportation of the beneficiary to the facility for these 
    home health services.
        Existing Sec. 409.49 identifies services that are excluded from 
    payment under the Medicare home health benefit. Note that included 
    among those services is any service that would not be covered as 
    inpatient hospital services.
        Also note that under the Medicare statute, home health services 
    can be provided only by an HHA. That is, under section 1814(a), 
    payments for services furnished to an individual may be made only to 
    providers of services that are eligible for that payment. To be 
    eligible, an HHA must, among other things, have in effect its own 
    provider agreement with Medicare, as described in section 1866, and 
    meet the specific conditions of participation for HHAs, as described 
    in section 1891. As a result, we regard home health services as 
    services ``provided by an HHA'' and not as services provided by any 
    other entity, even if the HHA is owned by the other entity or is 
    otherwise financially related to it. (We regard hospital services 
    the same way; that is, they can be provided only by an entity that 
    meets the requirements for participation as a hospital.) Therefore, 
    even if a hospital owns an HHA, the exception for hospital ownership 
    in section 1877(d)(3), which applies to designated health services 
    ``provided by a hospital,'' would not apply to home health services 
    provided by a hospital-based HHA.
        At Sec. 411.351, we would include the following definition: 
    ``Home health services'' means the services described in section 
    1861(m) of the Act and part 409, subpart E of this chapter.''
    
    How We Propose to Reconcile Section 1877 and the Physician 
    Certification Requirements for Home Health Services Under 42 CFR 
    424.22(d)
    
        Section 903 of the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1980 amended 
    sections 1814(a) and 1835(a) of the Act to prohibit the certification 
    of need for home health services, and the establishment and review of a 
    home health plan of care for those services, by a physician who has a 
    significant ownership interest in, or a significant contractual or 
    financial relationship with, the home health agency that provides those 
    services. These amendments were incorporated into the regulations at 42 
    CFR 405.1633(d) (which was redesignated as section 424.22(d)), by an 
    interim final rule with comment period that we published in the Federal 
    Register on October 26, 1982, at 42 FR 47388, and that became effective 
    on November 26, 1982.
    
        On June 30, 1986, we published a final rule in the Federal 
    Register at 51 FR 23541 that confirmed the provisions of the October 
    26, 1982 rule and clarified that under the term, ``significant 
    ownership interest in or a significant financial or contractual 
    relationship with'' the home health agency, we intended to include 
    salaried employment. This clarification was made effective on August 
    29, 1986.
        The only exceptions to the home health regulations were 
    uncompensated officers or directors of an HHA, HHAs operated by 
    Federal, State, or local governmental authority, and sole community 
    HHAs. The home health certification restrictions of sections 1814(a) 
    and 1835(a) and Sec. 424.22(d) have not been significantly updated 
    since 1986.
    
    [[Page 1680]]
    
        On November 5, 1997, we published a notice with comment period 
    in the Federal Register (62 FR 59818) that announced our intention 
    to reconcile the statutory prohibitions in sections 1814(a) and 
    1835(a) concerning physician certification for home health services 
    with the related section 1877 prohibition. In that notice we stated 
    that we had decided to reexamine appropriate provisions of section 
    1877 and the home health regulations as they pertain to indirect 
    compensation arrangements involving physicians who are compensated 
    by entities that own HHAs. We announced that, pending that 
    evaluation, we had decided to withdraw certain recent 
    interpretations of Sec. 424.22(d), as it applies to certification 
    and recertification or establishment and review of plans of care by 
    physicians who are salaried employees of, or have a contractual 
    arrangement to provide services to, an entity that also owns the 
    HHA. In addition, we stated that we would address the issue of 
    indirect compensation, applicable to the health services designated 
    in section 1877, in this proposed rule.
        We believe that sections 1814(a), 1835(a), and 1877 address the 
    same behaviors and are identical in purpose: they each prohibit a 
    physician who has a significant ownership interest in, or a 
    significant financial relationship with, a home health agency from 
    certifying or recertifying a patient's need for home health 
    services. We have defined the concepts of ``significant ownership 
    interests and significant financial relationships'' in the home 
    health context in Sec. 424.22(d)(1) through (d)(3), based on a fixed 
    percentage of ownership and, for financial or contractual 
    relationships, based on a specific dollar amount of compensation 
    (or, if less, a percent of the agency's operating expenses).
        Under section 1877, in contrast, any level of ownership or 
    compensation amounts to a financial relationship unless the 
    arrangement meets any of a number of exceptions. We believe that the 
    provisions we are developing under section 1877 are more effective 
    than the current provisions in Sec. 424.22(d) in accommodating 
    Congress' desire to discourage physicians from overutilizing certain 
    services. Furthermore, section 1877 relates more specifically and in 
    greater detail to the issue of referrals for home health services by 
    physicians who have a financial relationship with the entity 
    providing those services, and reflects Congress' most recent 
    thoughts on that issue.
        We believe that it is confusing to have in effect two provisions 
    that address prohibited referrals, each of which includes different 
    criteria, and can lead to different results.
    
        We are therefore proposing to use the section 1877 definition of a 
    ``financial relationship,'' and our interpretations of this definition, 
    for the concept of a ``significant ownership interest in, or a 
    significant financial or contractual relationship with, a home health 
    agency'' in sections 1814(a) and 1835(a). In order to do this, we are 
    proposing to amend Sec. 424.22(d) to state that a physician cannot 
    certify or recertify a patient's need to receive home health services 
    from an agency if the physician has a ``financial relationship'' with 
    that agency, as defined in Sec. 411.351, unless the financial 
    relationship meets one of the exceptions in Secs. 411.355 through 
    411.357. In addition, we will list sections 1814(a) and 1835(a) in 
    Sec. 411.1 as part of the statutory basis for this proposed regulation.
    
        Section 424.22, paragraphs (d)(4), (e), (f), and (g) relate to 
    certain specific exceptions to the prohibition on certification in 
    sections 1814(a) and 1835(a). These paragraphs except physicians who 
    serve as uncompensated officers or directors of an HHA, HHAs that 
    are operated by a Federal, State, or local governmental authority, 
    or HHAs that are classified as sole community HHAs in accordance 
    with our regulations. Even if a physician and an HHA are involved in 
    an arrangement that meets one of these exceptions, the arrangement 
    simultaneously remains subject to the requirements in section 1877. 
    That is, if an exception in Sec. 424.22 is subsumed within the 
    exceptions in section 1877, a physician will be able to refer; if it 
    is not, the arrangement will disqualify the physician from referring 
    in spite of Sec. 424.22. Thus, we believe the exceptions listed in 
    Sec. 424.22 have been superseded by section 1877 and should not be 
    separately listed; we are therefore proposing to eliminate them. We 
    are particularly interested in hearing from the public about these 
    proposed changes.
    
    i. Outpatient prescription drugs
    
        Medicare does not cover a category of services called 
    ``outpatient prescription drugs.'' Without additional direction from 
    Congress on what constitutes ``outpatient prescription drugs'' for 
    the purposes of section 1877, we believe that it is reasonable to 
    assume that Congress intended to include only drugs furnished to 
    individuals under the Medicare Part B benefit and to exclude drugs 
    furnished by providers under Medicare Part A. We also propose to 
    limit ``outpatient prescription drugs'' to drugs that a patient 
    would be able to obtain from a pharmacy with a prescription. We 
    consider that this category includes any drugs that a patient could 
    get with a prescription, even if patients generally do not do so. 
    For example, we would include such drugs as oncology drugs that are 
    routinely furnished in a physician's office, under the physician's 
    direct supervision, provided the drugs could be obtained by 
    prescription from a pharmacy.
        Coverage for prescription drugs furnished outside of a provider 
    setting is very limited under Medicare Part B. ``Drugs and 
    biologicals'' are defined in the Medicare statute in section 1861(t) 
    and the coverage of drugs and biologicals is explained in part 410 
    of our regulations. We consider a ``biological'' to be a drug 
    product that is derived from a living organism or its products, 
    including, but not limited to, serums, vaccines, antigens, and 
    antitoxins. We apply to biologicals the same rules that we apply to 
    any drugs. Therefore, for purposes of section 1877, we propose to 
    define outpatient prescription drugs to include biologicals.
    
        An explanation of the drug and biological benefit is set forth in 
    section 2049 of the Medicare Carriers Manual. This section of the 
    manual provides general requirements for drugs and biologicals that are 
    covered under Medicare Part B. (These requirements do not apply to 
    certain kinds of drugs that are covered under specific provisions of 
    the statute. We discuss these other provisions below, following the 
    general requirements.) In general, drugs are covered only if all of the 
    following requirements are met:
         The drug or biological is included, or approved for 
    inclusion, in the latest official edition of the United States 
    Pharmacopoeia, the National Formulary, or the United States Homeopathic 
    Pharmacopoeia, unless unfavorably evaluated in AMA Drug Evaluations or 
    Accepted Dental Therapeutics.
         The drug or biological is furnished incident to a 
    physician's services.
         The drug or biological is reasonable and necessary for the 
    diagnosis or treatment of the illness for which it is administered 
    according to accepted standards of medical practice.
         The drug or biological is not excluded as a preventive 
    immunization.
         The drug or biological has not been determined by the Food 
    and Drug Administration (FDA) to be less than effective. Drugs or 
    biologicals must be approved for marketing by the FDA to be considered 
    safe and effective, for purposes of the Medicare program, when used for 
    indications specified on the labeling.
         Based on the usual method of administration of the form of 
    a drug or biological as furnished by a physician, the drug or 
    biological is of a type that cannot be self-administered.
        Drugs and biologicals that are specifically covered under Part B 
    would include those furnished in a physician's office incident to the 
    physician's professional services under section 1861(s)(2)(A); as part 
    of outpatient hospital services under section 1861(s)(2)(B); and, even 
    though they are preventive immunizations, pneumococcal vaccine, 
    influenza vaccine, and hepatitis B vaccine under section 1861(s)(10); 
    and antigens under section 1861(s)(2)(G).
        Drugs that are or can be self-administered, such as those in pill 
    form or in a self-injectable form, are not covered by Medicare Part B 
    unless the statute specifically provides this coverage. The statute 
    currently provides for the coverage of the following self-administered 
    drugs under limited conditions: blood clotting factors under section 
    1861(s)(2)(I), drugs used in
    
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    immunosuppressive therapy under section 1861(s)(2)(J), erythropoietin 
    (EPO) for dialysis patients under section 1861(s)(2)(O), and certain 
    oral cancer drugs under section 1861(s)(2)(Q). (The statute provides 
    under section 1861(m) for the coverage of certain osteoporosis drugs, 
    defined in section 1861(kk), that can be self-administered but are 
    furnished to a home health patient who is unable to self-administer the 
    drugs. However, these drugs are covered under section 1861(m) as part 
    of the Medicare Part A home health services benefit.)
        After much consideration, we believe it would be inappropriate to 
    include as outpatient prescription drugs, for purposes of section 1877, 
    EPO and other drugs furnished as part of dialysis treatment for ESRD 
    patients who dialyze at home or in a dialysis center, even though these 
    drugs are not included in the end stage renal disease composite payment 
    rate, but are billed separately. We base this policy on our perception 
    that what the patient is primarily receiving is the dialysis treatment. 
    EPO and several other drugs are a relatively minor (although important) 
    part of a much larger and more complicated treatment and are 
    inextricably linked to the dialysis service. That is, it would not be 
    possible to provide dialysis safely and effectively without these drugs 
    because they are critical to the overall effectiveness of the treatment 
    and well-being of the patient. In addition, although many dialysis 
    patients self-administer EPO, we believe that the opportunity for 
    program abuse involving EPO is extremely unlikely. That is because 
    section 1881(b)(11)(B)(ii)(I) establishes the payment rate for EPO, 
    regardless of whether the beneficiary purchases the drug for self-
    administration or it is administered by the dialysis facility. Also, we 
    have recently implemented a claims processing mechanism to ensure that 
    payment is not made for excessive administration. That is, payment will 
    not be made for EPO when a patient's hematocrit reading over a 3-month 
    average exceeds 36.5, the upper limit of the drug labeling indication.
        We would define ``outpatient prescription drugs'' at Sec. 411.351 
    as ``those drugs (including biologicals) defined or listed under 
    section 1861(t) and (s) of the Act and part 410 of this chapter, that a 
    patient can obtain from a pharmacy with a prescription (even if 
    patients can only receive the drug under medical supervision), and that 
    are furnished to an individual under Medicare Part B, but excluding EPO 
    and other drugs furnished as part of a dialysis treatment for an 
    individual who dialyzes at home or in a facility.''
    
    j. Inpatient hospital services
    
        Services generally regarded as inpatient hospital services. 
    Inpatient hospital services are a Part A benefit defined under section 
    1861(b). The definition of these services in section 1861(b) is 
    reflected in Sec. 409.10(a) of our regulations. As defined at 
    Sec. 409.10(a), inpatient hospital services include the following 
    services when furnished to an inpatient of a participating hospital or, 
    in the case of emergency services or services in foreign hospitals, to 
    an inpatient of a qualified hospital (as described below).
         Bed and board.
         Nursing services and other related services.
         Use of hospital facilities.
         Medical social services.
         Drugs, biologicals, supplies, appliances, and equipment.
         Certain other diagnostic or therapeutic services.
         Medical or surgical services provided by certain interns 
    or residents-in-training.
        We propose to use the definition in section 1861(b) and 
    Sec. 409.10(a). As a clarification, we would state in the definition 
    that inpatient hospital services include services that a hospital 
    provides for its patients that are furnished either by the hospital or 
    by others under arrangements with the hospital; that is, the hospital 
    bills for these services on behalf of its patients. We would specify 
    that the definition does not encompass the services of other 
    physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse 
    specialists, certified nurse midwives, and certified registered nurse 
    anesthetists and qualified psychologists who bill independently. Also, 
    we would refer to existing Sec. 409.10(b), which states that 
    ``inpatient hospital services'' do not include SNF-type care furnished 
    by a hospital or an RPCH that has a swing-bed approval, or any nursing 
    facility-type care that may be furnished as a Medicaid service.
        Psychiatric hospital and RPCH services. We propose to also include 
    as inpatient hospital services inpatient psychiatric hospital services, 
    which are defined in section 1861(c). These services are defined as 
    ``inpatient hospital services'' furnished to an inpatient of a 
    psychiatric hospital (defined in section 1861(ff)), which means that 
    they are essentially the same services as those furnished to an 
    inpatient of a regular hospital. In addition, we believe that a 
    psychiatric hospital qualifies as a hospital, for all practical 
    purposes, except that it is primarily engaged in providing psychiatric 
    services for the diagnosis and treatment of mentally ill persons rather 
    than the more general care and treatment that a regular hospital 
    provides to injured, disabled, or sick persons. Also, a psychiatric 
    hospital must meet all of the nine basic requirements that a regular 
    hospital must meet in order to qualify as a hospital, except that for 
    two of the requirements, it must meet analogous standards that relate 
    particularly to psychiatric care.
        We also propose to regard as ``inpatient hospital services,'' for 
    purposes of section 1877, inpatient services provided by a 
    participating rural primary care hospital (RPCH). This term refers to 
    facilities designated as RPCHs by the Secretary under section 
    1820(i)(2). ``Inpatient rural primary care hospital services'' are 
    defined in section 1861(mm)(2) as items and services, furnished to an 
    inpatient of an RPCH by such a hospital, that would be inpatient 
    hospital services if furnished to an inpatient of a hospital by a 
    hospital.
        Section 1861(e) of the Act states that ``the term 'hospital' does 
    not include, unless the context otherwise requires, a rural primary 
    care hospital * * *.'' While it seems clear from this provision that 
    RPCHs are not to be considered hospitals under the Medicare law for 
    most purposes, we also believe the reference to context in this 
    provision indicates that RPCHs may be classified as hospitals where, in 
    specific contexts, it is consistent with the purpose of the legislation 
    to do so. We base the policy to include inpatient RPCH services as 
    ``inpatient hospital services'' on our belief that a physician who has 
    a financial relationship with an RPCH is in as much of a position to 
    profit from overutilizing referrals to the RPCH as he or she would be 
    if the financial relationship were with an ordinary hospital. In 
    addition, the RPCH provides services that are very similar to inpatient 
    hospital services.
        Because we propose to consider RPCH and psychiatric hospital 
    services as inpatient hospital services, the exception for hospital 
    services included in section 1877(d)(3) could apply. This exception 
    applies to services furnished by a hospital if a physician refers to a 
    hospital in which he or she is authorized to perform services and if 
    the physician has an ownership or investment interest in the hospital 
    as a whole, and not in a subdivision of the hospital.
        Emergency hospital services. We propose to not include within the 
    definition of ``inpatient hospital services'' emergency inpatient 
    services provided by a hospital located outside
    
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    the United States and covered under the authority in section 1814(f)(2) 
    of the Act and part 424, subpart H. We also propose to exclude 
    inpatient hospital services provided by a nonparticipating hospital 
    within the United States under emergency conditions, as authorized by 
    section 1814(d) and described in part 424, subpart G. We are excluding 
    these services because Medicare covers them infrequently and only when 
    they result from an emergency situation.
        The regulations define ``emergency services'' in Sec. 424.101 as 
    only those services necessary to prevent death or serious impairment of 
    health and, because of the danger to life or health, require use of the 
    most accessible hospital available and equipped to furnish the 
    services. In order to receive payment, a physician or the hospital must 
    submit medical information that describes the nature of the emergency 
    and specifies why it required that the beneficiary be treated in the 
    most accessible hospital. Because Medicare covers these services only 
    if they involve a documented emergency situation, we do not believe 
    that physicians have the opportunity or incentive to overutilize them.
        For the reasons cited above, we are also proposing to exclude from 
    the definition of ``designated health services'' any physician services 
    that otherwise qualify as designated health services but are furnished 
    to an individual in conjunction with emergency inpatient hospital 
    services furnished outside of the United States. These physician 
    services are covered by Medicare under the authority in section 
    1862(a)(4), which permits coverage of inpatient hospital services, 
    accompanying physician services, and ambulance services (which are not 
    designated health services) furnished outside of the United States 
    under certain limited conditions. To reflect this proposal, we are 
    defining ``designated health services'' for purposes of the referral 
    prohibition to exclude emergency physician services furnished outside 
    of the United States.
        Certain dialysis services. We are aware that there are situations 
    in which a physician might own a dialysis machine, rent it to a 
    hospital, and provide the hospital with a technician to run the 
    machine. This arrangement might fail to meet an exception if the 
    physician refers patients for dialysis services, and also receives 
    rental payments based on the volume or value of those referrals. The 
    physician might also fail to meet an exception if he or she owns a part 
    of the dialysis unit in the hospital (rather than owning part of the 
    hospital as a whole, as required under the ``hospital exception'' in 
    section 1877(d)(3)).
        We believe there are certain unique situations involving dialysis 
    in which there would be no risk of overutilization. We intend to 
    exclude from the definition of ``inpatient hospital services'' dialysis 
    furnished by a hospital that is not certified to provide end stage 
    renal dialysis (ESRD) services under subpart U of 42 CFR 405. In these 
    circumstances, we do not believe there would be a risk of program or 
    patient abuse because dialysis would be provided only under the 
    following emergency circumstances, when there is no other appropriate 
    treatment:
         A non-ESRD patient needs dialysis because of renal 
    dysfunction or for augmenting clearance of toxins. For example, a 
    patient with acute tubular necrosis or a patient with theophylline 
    overdose requires dialysis.
         The primary reason for a hospital admission for an ESRD 
    patient is not maintenance dialysis. For example, an ESRD patient needs 
    surgery unrelated to his or her kidney condition, and the surgeon has 
    operating privileges only at a participating Medicare, but non-ESRD, 
    certified hospital and the individual receives maintenance dialysis 
    while he or she is an inpatient.
        Certain lithotripsy services. We have been asked to consider 
    excluding from the definition of ``inpatient hospital services'' 
    services involving certain lithotriptors. Specifically, we are 
    referring to services involving lithotriptors that employ 
    extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) when used to break up 
    upper urinary tract kidney stones. ESWL focuses shock waves generated 
    outside of the body specifically on stones under X-ray visualization, 
    pulverizing them by repeated shocks. (The use of lithotripsy for 
    breaking up kidney stones is discussed in section 35-81 of the Medicare 
    Coverage Issues Manual.)
        The theory behind excluding from ``inpatient hospital services'' 
    services involving ESWL is that there is no risk of overutilization of 
    these services. In general, severe obstruction, infection, intractable 
    pain, or serious bleeding are indications of the need for surgical 
    removal of a stone. Only when a patient requires surgical treatment 
    would a physician prescribe ESWL. When a patient needs additional 
    treatment, there is no alternative available that is less invasive or 
    less expensive than ESWL. In addition, the procedure itself apparently 
    documents the medical necessity to prescribe it. As we understand ESWL, 
    the kidney stone is located, identified, and the progress of the 
    therapy is recorded as part of the visualization process.
        While we agree that it might be unlikely that physicians would 
    overutilize ESWL, we wish to raise some of the same concerns that we 
    raised under our discussion on surgically-implanted prosthetic devices. 
    That is, we believe that these arrangements can potentially lead to 
    patient abuse, with physicians requiring the use of certain equipment 
    based on financial incentives, rather than on the best interests of the 
    patient. Because of the controversial nature of lithotripsy, we have 
    not excluded it from the definition, but specifically solicit comments 
    on this issue.
        Inpatient hospital services and the definition of a ``hospital.'' 
    Note that our proposed definition of ``inpatient hospital services'' 
    would affect in only a limited way the definition of the term 
    ``hospital'' that we included in the August 1995 final rule. We 
    included the definition of a ``hospital'' in Sec. 411.351 solely for 
    the purpose of determining ownership of a hospital as an entity, and we 
    did not include as part of the hospital any entities furnishing 
    services under arrangements. However, we would amend the definition of 
    a hospital to make it clear that the entities covered by that 
    definition are those that qualify as a ``hospital'' under section 
    1861(e), as a ``psychiatric hospital'' under section 1861(f), or as a 
    ``rural primary care hospital'' under section 1861(mm)(1).
        We would include the following definition at Sec. 411.351: 
    ``Inpatient hospital services'' are those services defined in section 
    1861(b) of the Act and Sec. 409.10(a) and (b) and include inpatient 
    psychiatric hospital services listed in section 1861(c) of the Act and 
    inpatient rural primary care hospital services, as defined in section 
    1861(mm)(2). ``Inpatient hospital services'' do not include emergency 
    inpatient services provided by a hospital located outside the United 
    States and covered under the authority in section 1814(f)(2) and 42 CFR 
    part 424, subpart H and emergency impatient services provided by a 
    nonparticipating hospital within the United States, as authorized by 
    section 1814(d) and described in 42 CFR part 424, subpart G. These 
    services also do not include dialysis furnished by a hospital that is 
    not certified to provide end stage renal dialysis (ESRD) services under 
    subpart U of 42 CFR 405.
        Inpatient hospital services include services that a hospital 
    provides for its patients that are furnished either by the hospital or 
    by others under arrangements with the hospital. They do
    
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    not encompass the services of other physicians, physician assistants, 
    nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, certified nurse 
    midwives, and certified registered nurse anesthetists and qualified 
    psychologists who bill independently.
    
    k. Outpatient hospital services
    
        Sections 1861(s)(2)(B) and (C) and 1832 provide for coverage of 
    outpatient hospital services under Part B. Section 1861(s)(2)(B) 
    provides for coverage of hospital services (including drugs and 
    biologicals that cannot, as determined in accordance with regulations, 
    be self-administered) incident to physician services furnished to 
    outpatients (we consider these ``therapeutic services'') and partial 
    hospitalization services incident to these services. Section 
    1861(s)(2)(C) provides for coverage of ``diagnostic services which 
    are--(i) furnished to an individual as an outpatient by a hospital or 
    by others under arrangements with them made by a hospital; and (ii) 
    ordinarily furnished by such hospital (or by others under such 
    arrangements) to its outpatients for the purpose of diagnostic study.'' 
    We describe below the coverage provisions concerning outpatient 
    hospital services under the categories of therapeutic and diagnostic 
    services, and partial hospitalization services. We also discuss briefly 
    the special rules for physical therapy, occupational therapy, and 
    speech pathology services furnished to a hospital outpatient.
        We would consider all covered services (either diagnostic or 
    therapeutic) performed on hospital outpatients that are billed by the 
    hospital to Medicare (including arranged for services) as outpatient 
    hospital services. In addition, it should be noted that outpatient 
    hospital emergency services may be therapeutic (furnished incident to a 
    physician's service) or may be diagnostic in nature. Unlike other 
    outpatient hospital services, emergency services may be covered in 
    nonparticipating hospitals subject to the conditions described in 
    section 1835(b) and 42 CFR part 424, subpart G. We propose to exclude 
    these emergency services from the definition of ``outpatient hospital 
    services'' for the same reasons that we cited above in excluding them 
    from the definition of ``inpatient hospital services.''
        We have also been asked to exclude services involving lithotriptors 
    that employ ESWL when used to break up upper urinary tract kidney 
    stones. We have the same concerns in the outpatient context about the 
    potential for patient abuse that we raised in our discussion about 
    excluding these services from the definition of ``inpatient hospital 
    services.'' In addition, we have learned of situations in which 
    urologists in a particular geographic area invest in lithotriptors, 
    then require that outpatient departments use the physicians' equipment 
    if they want to receive any urology referrals. Because this kind of 
    manipulation can lead to increases in the cost of services, we regard 
    it as creating the potential for program abuse. Because of the 
    controversial nature of lithotripsy, we have not excluded it as an 
    outpatient hospital service, but specifically solicit comments on this 
    issue.
        However, we are proposing to include under the definition of 
    ``outpatient hospital services'' outpatient services furnished by a 
    psychiatric hospital (as defined in section 1861(f)) and RPCH services, 
    which are included under Medicare Part B by section 1832(a)(2)(H). 
    ``Outpatient rural primary care hospital services'' are defined in 
    section 1861(mm)(3) as medical and other health services furnished by 
    an RPCH. We are including both of these kinds of services as 
    ``outpatient hospital services'' for the same reasons that we have 
    included them as ``inpatient hospital services,'' as described in the 
    section above covering inpatient hospital services.
        Outpatient hospital services incident to physician services 
    (therapeutic services)--Under sections 1861(s)(2)(B) of the Act and 42 
    CFR 410.27, these ``incident to'' services specifically include drugs 
    and biologicals that cannot be self-administered. ``Incident to'' 
    services must be furnished by or under arrangements made by a 
    participating hospital and as an integral though incidental part of a 
    physician's services. We consider these services as therapeutic 
    services that aid the physician in the treatment of the patient. Under 
    section 230.4 of the Medicare Hospital Manual (HCFA Pub. 10), 
    therapeutic services that hospitals furnish on an outpatient basis are 
    those services and supplies (including the use of hospital facilities) 
    that are incident to the services of physicians in the treatment of 
    patients. These services include clinic services and emergency room 
    services. To be covered as ``incident to'' a physician's services, the 
    services and supplies must be furnished on a physician's order by 
    hospital personnel under hospital medical staff supervision in the 
    hospital or, if outside the hospital, by hospital-affiliated personnel 
    who are under the direct personal supervision of a physician who is 
    treating the patient.
        Diagnostic outpatient hospital services--Under Sec. 410.28, 
    diagnostic services furnished in a hospital to outpatients, including 
    certain drugs and biologicals required to perform the services (even if 
    those drugs or biologicals are self-administered), are covered if the 
    services meet the following conditions:
         They are furnished by or under arrangements made by a 
    participating hospital.
         They are ordinarily furnished by, or under arrangements 
    made by, the hospital to its outpatients for the purpose of diagnostic 
    study.
         They would be covered as inpatient hospital services if 
    furnished to an inpatient.
         If furnished under arrangements, they are furnished in the 
    hospital or in other facilities operated by or under the supervision of 
    the hospital or its organized medical staff.
        Section 230.3 of the Medicare Hospital Manual explains that a 
    service is diagnostic if it is an examination or procedure to which the 
    patient is subjected, or which is performed on materials derived from a 
    hospital outpatient, to obtain information to aid in the assessment of 
    a medical condition or the identification of a disease. Among these 
    examinations and tests are diagnostic laboratory services such as 
    hematology and chemistry; diagnostic x-rays; isotope studies; EKGs; 
    pulmonary function tests; and other tests given to determine the nature 
    and severity of an ailment or injury. Hospital personnel may furnish 
    diagnostic services outside the hospital premises without the direct 
    personal supervision of a physician.
        Partial hospitalization services--Partial hospitalization services 
    are included as ``medical or other health services'' covered by 
    Medicare Part B under section 1861(s)(2)(B) and must be provided 
    ``incident to'' a physician's services. Partial hospitalization 
    services are defined in section 1861(ff). This definition is reflected 
    in Secs. 410.27(d) and 410.43, which provide that partial 
    hospitalization services consist of a variety of outpatient psychiatric 
    services. These services must be prescribed by a physician, who 
    certifies and recertifies the need for the services, and the services 
    must be furnished under a plan of treatment, all in accordance with 
    provisions in subpart B of part 424. Section 424.24(e)(1) requires that 
    a physician certify that an individual would require inpatient 
    psychiatric care if the partial hospitalization services were not 
    provided.
        Section 230.5 of the Medicare Hospital Manual further explains the 
    partial hospitalization services benefit. It points out that there is a 
    wide range
    
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    of services and programs that a hospital may provide to its outpatients 
    who need psychiatric care, ranging from a few individual services to 
    comprehensive, full-day programs. However, payment may be made only for 
    services meeting the requirements of the outpatient hospital benefit. 
    That is, the services must be incident to a physician's service and be 
    reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of the 
    patient's condition. This means the services must be for the purpose of 
    diagnostic study or the services must reasonably be expected to improve 
    the patient's condition.
        Special rules that apply to physical therapy, occupational therapy, 
    and speech pathology services furnished to a hospital outpatient 
    covered under Part B--The rules for these services appear in sections 
    241 and 242 of the Medicare Hospital Manual. Sections 210.8, 210.9, and 
    210.11 of the Medicare Hospital Manual describe these therapies (which 
    do not require direct physician supervision) and set forth the 
    conditions that must be met for the services to be covered as 
    outpatient hospital services.
        We would include the following definition at Sec. 411.351: 
    ``Outpatient hospital services'' means the therapeutic, diagnostic, and 
    partial hospitalization services listed under section 1861(s)(2)(B) and 
    (C); outpatient services furnished by a psychiatric hospital, as 
    defined in section 1861(f); and outpatient rural primary care hospital 
    services, as defined in section 1861(mm)(3); but excluding emergency 
    services covered in nonparticipating hospitals under the conditions 
    described in section 1835(b) and 42 CFR part 424, subpart G.
    2. Direct Supervision
        Section 1877(b)(2) provides an exception for in-office ancillary 
    services. To qualify as in-office ancillary services, the services 
    must, among other things, be furnished personally by a referring 
    physician or another physician in the same group practice, or be 
    furnished by individuals who are ``directly supervised'' by one of 
    these physicians.
        In the August 1995 final rule, we defined ``direct supervision'' as 
    supervision by a physician who is present in the office suite and 
    immediately available to provide assistance and direction throughout 
    the time that clinical laboratory services are being performed. We are 
    proposing to apply this definition to referrals for any of the other 
    designated health services that can be excepted under section 
    1877(b)(2). We also propose to revise this definition to make it clear 
    that ``present in the office suite'' means the physician must be 
    present in the office suite in which the services are being furnished, 
    at the time they are being furnished. We believe this clarification is 
    necessary for situations in which a physician might be working in more 
    than one suite in a building, such as when he or she provides services 
    other than designated health services in one suite, while the 
    designated health services are furnished in a separate suite in the 
    same building.
        We also wish to clarify that we believe the supervision requirement 
    is meant to establish the services as those that are integral to the 
    physician's own practice, and that are conducted within his or her own 
    sphere of activity: hence the title in-office ancillary services. It is 
    our view that Congress did not intend to except referrals made by a 
    physician to a separate, profit-making enterprise in which the 
    physician has invested or from which he or she receives payments. 
    Hence, we do not believe the in-office ancillary exception applies to 
    services that are performed in a location that is separate and distinct 
    from one in which the physician conducts his or her own everyday 
    activities.
        Consistent with our interpretation that Congress intended this 
    exception to apply to services that are closely attached to the 
    activities of the referring physician, we used the definition of 
    ``direct supervision'' that appears in section 2050 of the Medicare 
    Carriers Manual, Part 3--Claims Processing, which describes services 
    that are ``incident to'' a physician's professional services under 
    section 1861(s)(2)(A). This provision requires that the physician be 
    present in the office suite and immediately available to provide 
    assistance and direction throughout the time the aide or technician is 
    performing services. The very same definition appears in the 
    regulations at Sec. 410.32(a), which states, in general, that 
    diagnostic x-ray tests are covered only if performed under the ``direct 
    supervision'' of certain physicians or by certain radiology 
    departments. As we stated in the preamble to the August 1995 final 
    rule, we believe Congress was adopting and ratifying the Secretary's 
    longstanding definition of this term.
        Nonetheless, since the publication of the August 1995 final rule, 
    we have become aware that many of the ancillary services that 
    physicians and physician groups provide are subject to a range of 
    supervision requirements for coverage purposes, some of which are more 
    stringent than the current ``incident to'' supervision requirements, 
    and some of which are less stringent. (The requirements for diagnostic 
    services, for example, currently appear in Sec. 410.32 of the 
    regulations, in various places in the Medicare Carriers Manual, and as 
    part of certain CPT codes. The requirements for physician supervision 
    of diagnostic tests in all settings in which the technical component is 
    payable under the physician fee schedule have been consolidated in a 
    proposed regulation that was published on June 18, 1997 at 62 FR 
    33158.)
        We recognize, in examining supervision requirements that include a 
    physician's presence, that they each have some of the same and some 
    separate purposes. The ``incident to'' rule is intended to ensure that 
    the physician is at hand when the services are furnished because the 
    law only covers them when they are ``incident to a physician's 
    professional services,'' making the physician's presence essential, for 
    both quality control and billing purposes, as a condition of coverage. 
    In the case of the diagnostic services, the service is explicitly 
    related to a medical need for the personal supervision or involvement 
    of a physician in performing or monitoring the tests. These two sets of 
    coverage-based ``supervision'' tests have their particular purposes and 
    both remain a condition of coverage and payment for Medicare, in 
    addition to any supervision requirements that appear in the section 
    1877 referral provisions.
        The ``direct supervision'' requirement in the in-office ancillary 
    services exception appears to us to share with the ``incident to'' test 
    the need to tie the services directly to the activities of the 
    physician, to ensure that they are part of his or her own medical 
    practice. We continue to believe that Congress intended in including 
    ``direct supervision'' in the law the concept of ``direct supervision'' 
    that appears as part of the ``incident to'' requirements. However, in 
    the context of physician referrals, we believe the physician's presence 
    is necessary for ``management'' purposes (that is, to demonstrate that 
    the physician is there, actively running the practice), rather than for 
    coverage purposes. Thus, the requirement that the physician be on the 
    premises the entire time that a designated health service is being 
    furnished can have absurd and impractical results, preventing a 
    physician from leaving the office suite for even brief periods when 
    there may be no health and safety standards requiring his presence.
        Accordingly, we propose to depart from our interpretation that the 
    definition of ``direct supervision'' for purposes of the referral 
    prohibition is identical to the definition in the ``incident to'' 
    context. That is, we
    
    [[Page 1685]]
    
    propose to continue to require that the services in general be 
    performed by aides or technicians only when the physician is present in 
    the office suite so that they are tied to his or her activities, but 
    allow very limited absences from the office. We propose to amend the 
    definition as follows:
    
        Direct supervision  means supervision by a physician who is 
    present in the office suite in which the services are being 
    furnished, throughout the time they are being furnished, and 
    immediately available to provide assistance and direction. ``Present 
    in the office suite'' means that the physician is actually 
    physically present. However, the physician is still considered 
    ``present'' during brief unexpected absences as well as during 
    routine absences of a short duration (such as during a lunch break), 
    provided the absences occur during time periods in which the 
    physician is otherwise scheduled and ordinarily expected to be 
    present and the absences do not conflict with any other requirements 
    in the Medicare program for a particular level of physician 
    supervision.
    
        Under this definition, a physician must actually be physically 
    present in the office suite at the time designated health services are 
    being furnished, or be absent only under the limited conditions 
    described in the definition. We anticipate that the question of when an 
    absence qualifies as ``brief and unexpected'' or as a ``routine absence 
    of a short duration'' will be a determination that only the local 
    carrier can make, based on individual circumstances.
        A service will not qualify as an in-office ancillary service during 
    any time period in which the physician is scheduled to be in the 
    office, but in reality is specifically or routinely expected to be 
    somewhere else or during any time period in which the physician is 
    scheduled to be somewhere else. Therefore, laboratory services or other 
    designated health services performed by technicians or aides would not 
    qualify as in-office ancillary services if they are performed during 
    time periods that occur before or after the physician's regularly 
    scheduled office hours. (Aides or technicians can perform other tasks 
    in the absence of the physician, such as setting up equipment or 
    cleaning up, as long as the tasks are not components of designated 
    health services provided to Medicare or Medicaid patients.) Also, a 
    physician's absences to perform medical services outside the office 
    would not be permissible under ``direct supervision,'' such as absences 
    to do hospital rounds or provide care in an outpatient clinic. However, 
    we would allow absences for unexpected medical emergencies.
        While this definition for referral purposes would allow a physician 
    to occasionally be absent for short periods, specific coverage 
    requirements for services furnished and billed as ``incident to'' a 
    physician's services, for diagnostic services, or for any other 
    services with separate supervision requirements would continue to 
    operate to determine whether a specific service is covered. We 
    recognize that this approach will require a physician to pay close 
    attention to the specific coverage requirements that apply to 
    individual services, as well as the supervision requirement in section 
    1877(b). Nonetheless, most of the coverage rules have been in effect 
    for many years, so physicians have had experience in complying with 
    them. In coordinating the separate supervision requirements with the 
    requirement in section 1877, physicians must only comply with the 
    separate coverage requirement if it is more stringent than the 
    requirement in section 1877, as interpreted in this proposed rule.
        We believe that our proposed amendment to the definition of 
    ``direct supervision'' addresses the concerns of physicians who feel 
    that, as a practical matter, they cannot be in the office every single 
    minute of every day. The amendment will allow physicians who must be 
    called away briefly to avoid the sanctions that could arise from 
    section 1877 if they are not present at the moment when a medical 
    service is furnished, provided there are no health and safety reasons 
    for them to be on the premises.
        In line with the ``incident to'' manual provision, we are also 
    proposing that a physician is directly supervising an individual 
    outside the office suite (such as in an SNF) if the physician is in the 
    room with the technician when the technician is performing services. 
    (We derive this rule from section 2050, which states that direct 
    supervision does not exist if a physician is only available by phone or 
    is only physically present somewhere in the building.) Section 45-15 of 
    the Coverage Issues Manual discusses situations in which a physician 
    establishes an office within an SNF or other institution. Under this 
    provision, a physician's office within an institution must be confined 
    to a separately identified part of the facility that is used solely as 
    the physician's office and cannot be construed to extend throughout the 
    entire institution. (However, to qualify for the in-office ancillary 
    exception in either of these ``out of office'' situations, the services 
    must meet the additional statutory requirements for location and 
    billing described in section 1877(b)(2).)
        We are not proposing that there must be any particular 
    configuration of rooms for an office to qualify as one office 
    ``suite.'' However, direct supervision means that a physician must be 
    in the office suite and immediately available to provide assistance and 
    direction. Thus, a group of contiguous rooms should in most cases 
    satisfy this requirement. We have been asked whether it would be 
    possible for a physician to directly supervise a service furnished on a 
    different floor. We think the answer would depend upon individual 
    circumstances that demonstrate that the physician is close at hand. The 
    question of physician proximity for physician referral purposes, as 
    well as for incident to purposes, is a decision that only the local 
    carrier could make based on the layout of each group of offices. For 
    example, a carrier might decide that in certain circumstances it is 
    appropriate for one room of an office suite to be located on a 
    different floor, such as when a physician practices on two floors of a 
    townhouse.
     3. Entity
        In-office referrals are referrals to an ``entity.'' Section 
    1877(a)(1) prohibits a physician from referring Medicare patients for 
    the furnishing of designated health services to an entity with which 
    the physician (or an immediate family member) has a financial 
    relationship, unless an exception applies. The statute encompasses any 
    entity that provides designated health services, without qualifications 
    or limits. We attempted to reflect the breadth of the concept in the 
    August 1995 final rule at Sec. 411.351, where we defined an ``entity'' 
    as a sole proprietorship, trust, corporation, partnership, foundation, 
    not-for-profit corporation, or unincorporated association.
        We wish to clarify that we regard an individual physician or group 
    of physicians as referring to an ``entity'' when they refer to 
    themselves, or among themselves. The concept of a ``referral'' under 
    section 1877(h)(5)(A) and (B) covers the request by a physician for an 
    item or service under Part B, or the request or establishment of a plan 
    of care by a physician that includes the provision of a designated 
    health service. This statutory definition does not exclude in-office 
    referrals, nor does it specify that a referral occurs only when a 
    physician refers to an outside entity.
        In addition, the in-office ancillary services exception in section 
    1877(b)(2) would not be necessary if in-office referrals were free from 
    the prohibition. Section 1877(b)(2) makes it clear that designated 
    health services that are furnished personally by the referring 
    physician who is a solo practitioner or, in the case of a group 
    practice, by
    
    [[Page 1686]]
    
    another member of the physician's group practice, or by other 
    individuals who are directly supervised by these physicians, are 
    subject to the referral prohibition. Physicians who refer to or among 
    themselves are excepted from the prohibition only if they meet the 
    criteria specified in section 1877(b)(2). Similarly, physician services 
    provided personally by (or under the personal supervision of) another 
    physician in the same group practice as the referring physician are 
    specifically excepted under section 1877(b)(1). To clarify our position 
    on in-office referrals, we propose revising the definition of an 
    ``entity'' in Sec. 411.351 to include any physician's solo practice or 
    any practice of multiple physicians that provides for the furnishing of 
    a designated health service.
    4. Fair Market Value
        The term ``fair market value'' appears in most of the compensation 
    related exceptions. These exceptions, among other things, require that 
    compensation between physicians (or family members) and entities be 
    based on the fair market value of the particular items or services that 
    these parties are exchanging. We defined this term in the August 1995 
    final rule by using the definition in section 1877(h)(3). This 
    provision defines fair market value as the value in arm's-length 
    transactions, consistent with the general market value, with other 
    specific terms for rentals or leases.
        We have previously defined the term fair market value in our 
    regulations in part 413, in the context of reasonable cost 
    reimbursement in payments for end stage renal disease services. Section 
    413.134(b)(2) explains the circumstances under which an appropriate 
    allowance for depreciation on buildings and equipment used in 
    furnishing patient care can be an allowable cost. This provision 
    defines ``fair market value'' for purposes of determining the costs 
    incurred by a present owner in acquiring an asset. ``Fair market 
    value'' is defined as ``the price that the asset would bring by bona 
    fide bargaining between well-informed buyers and sellers at the date of 
    acquisition. Usually the fair market price is the price that bona fide 
    sales have been consummated for assets of like type, quality, and 
    quantity in a particular market at the time of acquisition.''
        To be consistent, we are incorporating this definition of what 
    constitutes ``fair market value'' into this proposed rule to explain, 
    for purposes of those exceptions that involve compensation paid for 
    assets, what we believe constitutes a value that is ``consistent with 
    the general market value.'' However, we are modifying the definition as 
    follows so that it also applies to any arrangements involving items or 
    services, including employment relationships, personal services 
    arrangements, and rental agreements:
    
        General market value is the price that an asset would bring, as 
    the result of bona fide bargaining between well-informed buyers and 
    sellers, or the compensation that would be included in a service 
    agreement, as the result of bona fide bargaining between well-
    informed parties to the agreement, on the date of acquisition of the 
    asset or at the time of the service agreement. Usually the fair 
    market price is the price at which bona fide sales have been 
    consummated for assets of like type, quality, and quantity in a 
    particular market at the time of acquisition, or the compensation 
    that has been included in bona fide service agreements with 
    comparable terms at the time of the agreement.
    
        The definition of ``fair market value'' will continue to include 
    the additional requirements in section 1877(h)(3) for rentals or 
    leases. Among other things, the statute defines the fair market value 
    of rental property as its value for general commercial purposes, not 
    taking into account its intended use.
    5. Financial Relationship
        A referral alone is not a financial relationship. We wish to 
    clarify that when a physician simply refers patients to an outside 
    entity, he or she does not have a financial relationship with that 
    entity. A financial relationship consists of an ownership or investment 
    interest in the entity or a compensation arrangement with the entity. 
    If the physician does not own any portion of the entity, and does not 
    pay the entity or receive any kind of payment from the entity for the 
    referral or for anything else, there is no financial relationship.
        A financial relationship can involve more than the Medicare or 
    Medicaid programs. In Sec. 411.351 we defined a financial relationship 
    as a direct or indirect relationship in which a physician or immediate 
    family member has an ownership or investment interest in an entity or a 
    compensation arrangement with the entity. We would like to emphasize 
    that a financial relationship can exist between a physician and an 
    entity even if that relationship does not involve designated health 
    services or the Medicare or Medicaid programs. For example, a 
    compensation arrangement is defined in Sec. 411.351 as, in general, any 
    arrangement involving any remuneration between a physician (or family 
    member) and an entity. This remuneration can involve payments for 
    anything, such as payments for rent, payments for nonmedical types of 
    items or services, or for housing or travel expenses.
        Ownership interests can be indirect. The statute and the August 
    1995 final regulation specify that an ownership or investment interest 
    in an entity can exist through equity, debt, or other means and 
    includes an interest in an entity that holds an ownership or investment 
    interest in any entity providing designated health services. We do not 
    regard the last part of this provision as a limiting factor, but rather 
    as an indication that Congress wished to include, in the concept of 
    ``ownership,'' an interest that is at least one level removed from 
    direct ownership. We propose to interpret this provision to apply to 
    interests that are removed by an unlimited number of levels.
        This interpretation would cover situations involving multiple 
    levels, such as when a physician has an interest in an entity that has 
    an interest in another entity that in turn holds the ownership interest 
    in the entity that provides designated health services. We believe that 
    this interpretation fulfills the intent of the statute, which was meant 
    to prevent physicians from evading the prohibition by establishing 
    their ownership interests indirectly in ``holding companies'' rather 
    than in the entities that furnish designated health services. It is our 
    view that the number of layers of ownership is irrelevant, as long as a 
    physician or family member has established an indirect interest. To 
    reflect this interpretation, we would revise the description of 
    ownership in Sec. 411.351 (as part of the definition of ``financial 
    relationship'') as follows: ``An ownership or investment interest in an 
    entity that exists in the entity through equity, debt, or other means 
    and includes any indirect ownership or investment interest, no matter 
    how many levels removed from a direct interest; for example, ownership 
    includes situations in which a physician or immediate family member has 
    an interest in any entity that holds an ownership or investment 
    interest in any entity providing designated health services.''
        Payments that result from an ownership or investment interest are 
    not compensation. We would like to emphasize a point that we discussed 
    at length in the preamble to the August 1995 final regulation. We 
    explained there that when a physician or family member has an ownership 
    or investment interest in an entity, we will not count as compensation 
    any returns on that investment. For example, if a physician has an 
    investment interest in an entity in the form of stock or
    
    [[Page 1687]]
    
    securities, we will not count any of the dividends or other payments 
    that derive from that ownership or investment interest as a 
    compensation arrangement between the physician and the entity. 
    (However, a physician or family member can receive an ownership 
    interest from an entity in a manner than could constitute a 
    compensation arrangement, such as when a physician receives stock as 
    part of a salary payment or in exchange for the sale of his or her 
    practice.)
    6. Group Practice
        The value of group practice status under the law. When a group of 
    physicians qualifies as a ``group practice'' as defined under section 
    1877(h)(4), the group may qualify for several exceptions in the law 
    that are specifically designed to accommodate groups. For example, 
    section 1877(b)(1) excepts from the referral prohibition physician 
    services provided personally by (or under the personal supervision of) 
    another physician in the same group practice as the referring 
    physician. Similarly, section 1877(b)(2) excepts in-office ancillary 
    services that are furnished personally by or are directly supervised by 
    either the referring physician or by another physician who is a member 
    of the same group practice as the referring physician. However, a group 
    of physicians does not have to meet the definition of a group practice 
    in order to qualify for other exceptions under the law that are based 
    on characteristics other than the referring physician's group practice 
    status.
        We wish to also point out that the definition of a group practice 
    in section 1877(h)(4) is particular to the referral rules. That is, it 
    was designed to allow physicians in specific kinds of groups to 
    continue to refer patients for designated health services under certain 
    circumstances. Therefore, the definition may have little or no bearing 
    on which physicians qualify as a group practice for purposes of other 
    Medicare or Medicaid provisions.
        Who can organize and control a group practice. The statute defines 
    a ``group practice'' as a group of two or more physicians legally 
    organized into a partnership, professional corporation, foundation, 
    not-for-profit corporation, faculty practice plan, or similar 
    association. The statute requires that a group practice consist of a 
    legal entity. Thus, a group that is not legally organized, but is 
    instead only holding itself out as a group, would not qualify as a 
    group practice under the statutory definition. Moreover, we believe 
    that the statute specifically requires that a partnership consist of 
    two or more physicians who are partners and that a professional 
    corporation consist of two or more physicians who are incorporated 
    together.
        We believe that more complex business configurations may be 
    involved when two or more physicians are ``legally organized'' into a 
    foundation, not-for-profit corporation, or a faculty practice plan. As 
    we pointed out in the preamble to the August 1995 final rule, the 
    statute is silent about who must actually legally organize these kinds 
    of associations. As a result, we interpreted this provision in the 
    final rule to allow any individuals or entities to set up legal 
    structures for these kinds of associations, provided two or more 
    physicians have a role in providing services and the physicians meet 
    all of the other specific requirements in section 1877(h)(4). In 
    addition, the statute is silent about who must operate any of the group 
    practice associations. We have interpreted the statute, in the August 
    1995 final rule, to allow any individuals or entities to do this. For 
    example, a hospital could own and operate a group practice, provided 
    there are no State laws to prevent this.
        A group practice as one legal entity. In the August 1995 final rule 
    we took the position that the statute contemplates a group practice 
    that is composed of one single group of physicians who are organized 
    into one legal entity. We stated that a group practice could not 
    consist of two or more groups of physicians, each organized as separate 
    legal entities, although we believed that a single group practice (that 
    is, one single group of physicians) could own other legal entities 
    (such as a billing entity) for the purpose of providing services to the 
    group practice. We based this conclusion on the fact that section 
    1877(h)(4)(A) defines a group practice as a group of two or more 
    physicians who are legally organized as a partnership, professional 
    corporation, etc. However, we continue to receive numerous inquiries 
    about whether a group can consist of several legal entities that are, 
    in turn, legally organized into the one group.
        We believe that Congress meant that a group must be one legal 
    entity, and that it regarded this characteristic as a mark of a true 
    group practice. It is our view that any other interpretation could pose 
    the risk of multiple groups of physicians remaining in many ways 
    separate, but joining together for the sole purpose of taking advantage 
    of the exceptions in section 1877 that apply to group practices. 
    Therefore, we propose to continue to require that a group consist of 
    just one legal entity. Nonetheless, we would like to clarify that we 
    believe that a group practice is still ``one legal entity'' even if it 
    is composed of owners who are actually individual professional 
    corporations or is owned by physicians who are individually 
    incorporated. It is our understanding that a group can contain 
    physicians who are individually incorporated as professional 
    corporations, and who provide services to group patients. This kind of 
    configuration is apparently common in group situations and generally 
    results when an individual physician wishes to qualify for certain tax 
    and pension advantages. The physician is employed by the professional 
    corporation, which in turn contracts with the group. We believe that 
    such a group is not a conglomeration of multiple physician groups, but 
    may instead be a true group practice, provided all the other criteria 
    in section 1877(h)(4) are met.
        We have also considered the issue of whether individuals who are 
    separately incorporated as individual professional corporations and who 
    contract with the group practice qualify as ``members'' of the group. 
    We are proposing (in this section under the heading ``The requirement 
    for physician-patient encounters'') to, in general, eliminate 
    contractors from qualifying as ``members'' of a group practice, a 
    proposal that a major group practice association asserted would be 
    highly important to its membership. The association believes that many 
    group practices would have difficulty meeting the ``substantially all'' 
    requirement in the group practice definition if the groups have to 
    consider as members the many specialists with whom they contract to 
    furnish services through the group practice on a part-time basis. Thus, 
    we are proposing to include only owner and employee physicians as 
    ``members'' of a group practice. However, we are also proposing to 
    consider as owner ``members'' physicians who belong to individual 
    professional corporations that, in turn, own the group practice.
        The ``full range of services'' test. A ``group practice'' is 
    defined in some detail in section 1877(h)(4) of the statute. One of the 
    criteria in the statutory definition is that each physician who is a 
    member of the group must furnish substantially the full range of 
    services that the physician routinely furnishes, including medical 
    care, consultation, diagnosis, and treatment through the joint use of 
    shared office space, facilities, equipment, and personnel. We defined 
    the term ``group practice'' in Sec. 411.351 of the August 1995 final 
    rule by using the statutory
    
    [[Page 1688]]
    
    definition and by adding certain interpretations. In one of these, we 
    required physician members to furnish the full range of ``patient care 
    services'' that they routinely furnish, rather than just ``services.'' 
    Elsewhere in Sec. 411.351, we defined ``patient care services'' as any 
    tasks performed by a member that address the medical needs of specific 
    patients, regardless of whether they involve direct patient encounters.
        On considering this issue further, we propose revising the 
    definition of ``patient care services'' to apply to any of a 
    physician's tasks that address the medical needs of specific patients 
    or patients in general, or that benefit the practice.
        We believe that the ``full range of services'' provision, along 
    with most of the other criteria in the group practice definition, was 
    designed to ensure that, as part of the group, a physician is actually 
    practicing medicine as he or she ordinarily would and has not simply 
    joined the group in name only. We realize, however, that a physician 
    member can legitimately furnish other kinds of services to the group, 
    beyond services that benefit only specific patients. For example, a 
    physician member might spend time training staff members, arranging for 
    equipment, or performing administrative or management tasks. As long as 
    these tasks actually benefit the operation of the group practice, we 
    believe they should be counted as part of the test for gauging 
    ``substantially the full range of'' a physician's services.
        The ``substantially all'' test and the group billing number 
    requirement. The ``Substantially All'' Test--Effective January 1, 1995, 
    substantially all of the services of the group members must be 
    furnished through the group and be billed under a billing number 
    assigned to the group (the ``substantially all'' test). We discussed 
    the substantially all test, as it was effective on January 1, 1992, at 
    great length in the August 1995 final rule. We wish to clarify certain 
    aspects of the test, which appears as part of the definition of a group 
    practice in Sec. 411.351.
        Section 411.351 requires that substantially all of the ``patient 
    care services'' of the physicians who are group members (at least 75 
    percent of the total patient care services of the members) be furnished 
    through the group. The change we have described above in the section on 
    the ``full range of services'' test, concerning our definition of 
    ``patient care services,'' would affect this test as well. As a result, 
    a group would count any of a physician's tasks that address the medical 
    needs of specific group patients or group patients in general or that 
    benefit the group practice. The group would not consider in the 
    calculation any time during a physician's week that he or she spent on 
    nonpatient care services, such as teaching in a medical school or doing 
    outside research. For example, if a physician spends 3 days a week 
    furnishing patient care services as part of a group practice and 2 days 
    a week doing research outside the practice, the physician is providing 
    100 percent of his or her patient care services through the group 
    practice.
        The definition in Sec. 411.351 also requires that patient care 
    services be measured in terms of total patient care time that each 
    member spends on patient care services. We wish to clarify that we 
    expect a group practice to look at a physician's total patient care 
    time during a week, furnished both inside and outside of the group 
    practice, to determine what percentage of this time is furnished 
    through the one group. For example, if a physician provides patient 
    care services to a group practice 4 days a week and patient care 
    services in an unrelated clinic 1 day a week, the physician is 
    providing 80 percent of his or her patient care services through the 
    group practice.
        Some group practices have informed us that patient care time is not 
    a common measurement of how groups keep track of a physician's 
    contributions to the group. The time standard in the regulation, they 
    claim, will create a whole separate, burdensome administrative process. 
    In light of these comments, we explored alternative options that were 
    suggested to us. These included counting a percentage of the 
    physician's personal income, counting physician-patient encounters, or 
    counting resource-based Relative Value Units (RVUs), a method of 
    assigning resources to CPT codes ([Physicians'] Current Procedural 
    Terminology, 4th edition, 1993 (copyrighted by the American Medical 
    Association)). We found that there is no perfect measure; each of these 
    methods has advantages and disadvantages.
        The income option would require that a group determine what 
    percentage of the physician's overall practice income is derived from 
    the group practice. While this would be perhaps the easiest calculation 
    to make, many physicians might consider the data involved to be 
    intensely private. In addition, to the extent that a physician's 
    billing practices differ among settings, an equivalent amount of income 
    derived from within the practice may not account for the same amount of 
    patient care activity that occurs outside the practice. For example, a 
    physician who works at a clinic for low income patients while outside 
    the group could receive considerably less income for patient care than 
    he or she would receive for equivalent services furnished through the 
    group practice.
        We also explored the possibility of counting the number of a 
    physician's patient encounters. However, encounters do not capture the 
    level of intensity involved in any task. For example, a physician might 
    complete one encounter in an entire day, if it involves complex 
    surgery. Another physician could have 30 encounters in the same day, 
    each of which took 15 minutes to complete. In addition, a group would 
    need to gather information about the number of a physician's encounters 
    outside of the group practice to determine the percentage of encounters 
    furnished through the group. One problem with counting the number of 
    patient care encounters and also with counting RVUs, which is discussed 
    immediately below, is that neither method can take into account work 
    that benefits the group in general but is not a service furnished to a 
    patient, for example, time a physician spends training technical 
    personnel.
        We next explored the possibility of counting RVUs to determine the 
    share of a physician's efforts furnished through a group practice, 
    since RVUs capture the intensity level of different services. For 
    Medicare purposes, a physician is paid based on the CPT code that is 
    billed for a particular service. Each CPT code has assigned to it a 
    certain intensity level (based on the content of the service and the 
    time the physician has spent), and each intensity level translates into 
    a specified number of RVUs. It is this associated RVU amount that 
    determines a physician's payment for a service. The Medicare billing 
    system can reveal all of the procedures for which a physician has 
    billed, based on the CPT codes, and the value of all of the associated 
    RVUs. There are thousands of CPT codes, many of which can be modified 
    (for instance, to state that a physician acted as an assistant at 
    surgery or co-surgeon, rather than as the surgeon). There is software 
    available that can assign RVUs based on the CPT code and modifiers.
        To use this method, it would be necessary for a group to collect 
    all CPT and modifier billing data for the physician both inside and 
    outside the practice, assign RVUs, and compare the totals. There is no 
    ``full-time'' equivalent RVU amount that a group could use as a proxy 
    to measure the inside RVUs against; therefore, the group would have to 
    collect detailed data about outside practice time. We believe that the 
    RVU method could
    
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    impose a burden on groups because of the high volume of codes that 
    physicians are likely to submit, especially in large group practices. 
    This method is further complicated by the fact that it is not clear 
    that all insurers use CPT codes in all cases. For example, some HMOs 
    provide a given payment for a particular kind of service and may not 
    collect data on individual office visits or tests.
        As a result of our assessment, we believe that measuring a 
    physician's activities by using time spent doing work for the group, as 
    required in the August 1995 final rule, may be the most straightforward 
    and least burdensome method for measuring a physician's efforts, 
    especially because we do not intend to require that physicians keep 
    detailed time sheets to verify their time. Practices should already be 
    able to track the amount of time spent by each member in activities 
    related to the practice. While this data may not be present in billing 
    records, it should be present in appointment databases, personal 
    schedules, and other easily accessible sources. To simplify matters, a 
    group can assume a physician works a standard 40 hour week unless he or 
    she can present evidence of a shorter or longer work week. A practice 
    should be able to maintain records in the form of general schedules 
    that are sufficient to demonstrate its calculations in the event of an 
    audit. Finally, we consulted several group practice associations about 
    their preference for measuring the standard. They informed us that they 
    favor using time in calculating the standard.
        As a result of our investigation, we are therefore proposing to use 
    the measure of physician time as the ``default'' standard. We believe 
    that our carriers can evaluate the ``substantially all'' test only if 
    we have one, or perhaps a few, standards. Therefore, we are soliciting 
    comments on other possible methods that groups might use, provided 
    these methods will provide verifiable data that demonstrates that a 
    group meets the ``substantially all'' criteria. We will review all 
    alternative methods, but only include those in the final rule that we 
    believe are both verifiable and administratively feasible.
        The Billing Number Requirement--We are interpreting the new billing 
    number requirement in the ``substantially all'' test to mean that a 
    single group can have more than one billing number, as long as the 
    group bills under a billing number that has been assigned to the group. 
    We do not believe there is anything in the statute to preclude a group 
    practice from having more than one number. This interpretation will 
    accommodate situations in which one group practice has multiple numbers 
    because it has many locations or operates in more than one State.
        It has also come to our attention that there are an increasing 
    number of situations in which a group has another entity (not a wholly-
    owned entity) bill for it, such as a management services organization 
    (MSO) or billing agent. We propose to allow a group to meet the 
    requirement that services have been ``billed under a billing number 
    assigned to the group'' if an agent bills for the group, under the 
    group's name, using the group's billing number, provided the 
    arrangement meets the requirements in Sec. 424.80(b)(6). However, 
    because of the specific terms of the statute, we do not believe a group 
    can receive payments for its services through a separate entity (one 
    that is not wholly owned) that bills in its own right, under its own 
    billing number, even if the payments ultimately constitute group 
    revenues.
        The requirement for physician-patient encounters and the definition 
    of group ``members''. Effective January 1, 1995, the group practice 
    definition in section 1877(h)(4)(A)(v) requires that members of the 
    group must personally conduct no less than 75 percent of the physician-
    patient encounters of the group practice. We believe this provision may 
    have been designed to differentiate between legitimate group practices 
    and those with ``member'' owners or investors who are members in name, 
    but who treat few, if any, patients. In such a scenario, nonmember 
    physician contractors could be hired to treat most of the group's 
    patients. This arrangement would allow the nonpracticing ``outside'' 
    physician owners to refer to the ``group'' for the furnishing of 
    laboratory services or other ancillary types of services that are 
    designated health services.
        In Sec. 411.351 of the August 1995 final rule, we defined 
    ``members'' of a group practice broadly as physician partners and full-
    time and part-time physician contractors and employees during the time 
    they furnish services to patients of the group practice that are 
    furnished through the group and are billed in the name of the group. 
    This definition would cover all of the physicians who are involved, in 
    some capacity, in a group practice arrangement, while they are 
    furnishing services to group patients. As a result, all group practice 
    patients who have an encounter in the group setting with a physician 
    would be treated by a member of the group practice. Our interpretation 
    would thus render the encounter requirement in section 1877(h)(4)(A)(v) 
    superfluous.
        It has come to our attention that group practices generally do not 
    regard independent contractors as members of the group. In addition, 
    when a group practice contracts with a number of independent 
    contractors, the group can experience difficulties in meeting the 
    ``substantially all'' requirement, especially if the contractors work 
    for the group only on a part-time basis. In order to remedy this 
    problem, and to give meaning to the encounter requirement in section 
    1877(h)(4)(A)(v), we propose a change in the definition of a member of 
    a group practice. We propose to exclude independent contractors from 
    the definition. In addition, we propose to redefine ``members of the 
    group'' to include not just physician partners, but physicians with any 
    other form of ownership in the practice (including physicians whose 
    ownership is held by their individual professional corporations). We 
    also propose to count any of the physicians listed under the definition 
    as ``members'' during the time they furnish ``patient care services'' 
    to the group rather than just during the time they furnish services to 
    patients of the group that are furnished through the group and are 
    billed in the name of the group. This change reflects our belief that a 
    physician can legitimately be participating as a group member while 
    providing services to the group for which the practice cannot directly 
    bill, such as certain administrative services. We are also proposing to 
    extend this definition to group practices in the context of the 
    additional designated health services.
        Group practices should note that under the revised definition of a 
    group ``member,'' independent contractors cannot supervise the 
    provision of designated health services under the in-office ancillary 
    services exception. Under section 1877(b)(2), services must be 
    furnished personally by the referring physician, personally by a 
    physician who is a member of the same group practice, or by individuals 
    who are directly supervised by the referring physician or another 
    physician in the group practice. We will no longer consider independent 
    contractors as physicians who are ``in the group practice.'' An 
    independent contractor may be able to refer to the group practice for 
    the provision of designated health services, provided the physician 
    qualifies for the personal services exception in section 1877(e)(3) of 
    the Act, or the new general compensation exception in Sec. 411.357. We 
    would also like to point out that the definition of who qualifies as a 
    ``member of a group practice'' in Sec. 411.351 applies only in
    
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    the context of the referral provisions in section 1877 of the Act. The 
    concept of group membership may be different for purposes of other 
    provisions of the Medicare or Medicaid statutes.
        As a result of our change in who constitutes a group practice 
    member, at least 75 percent of all physician-patient encounters must 
    occur between owner or employee physicians and patients. We regard an 
    ``encounter'' as any appointment during which a group practice patient 
    is actually examined or treated by a physician.
        Methods for distributing group costs and revenues. The statute 
    requires that a group distribute its income and overhead in accordance 
    with methods that are ``previously determined.'' We regard this 
    provision as ambiguous, since it is not clear prior to what event these 
    methods must be in place. A method will always be in place just prior 
    to a distribution, since a distribution can occur only if there is some 
    method in place to carry it out.
        It is our view that this provision was meant to require that a 
    group have an established plan for its distributions, rather than 
    making ad hoc decisions about distributions just before making them. 
    Congress may have feared that ad hoc disbursements would be more likely 
    to reflect a physician's referrals. To give meaning to this provision, 
    we propose to interpret it so that a group must have in place methods 
    for distribution determined prior to the time period the group has 
    earned the income or incurred the costs. We believe these methods can 
    be determined by any party, and not just members of the group practice. 
    For example, if a hospital has established a group practice to run a 
    hospital affiliated clinic, the hospital might be the party that 
    determines how clinic income will be distributed.
        We are also proposing that the overhead expenses of and the income 
    from the practice be distributed according to methods that indicate 
    that the practice is a unified business. That is, the methods must 
    reflect centralized decision making, a pooling of expenses and 
    revenues, and a distribution system that is not based on each satellite 
    office operating as if it were a separate enterprise. We would impose 
    this additional standard under our authority under section 
    1877(h)(4)(A)(vi) to add standards by regulation to the definition of a 
    group practice.
        Volume or value of referrals cannot be reflected in a physician 
    member's compensation. Beginning on January 1, 1995, physicians who are 
    group practice members cannot directly or indirectly receive 
    compensation based on the volume or value of their own referrals. 
    However, the statute qualifies this rule by allowing physicians to be 
    paid a share of over-all profits of the group, or a productivity bonus, 
    as described under the next two subheadings. (Groups should take note 
    that the following discussion only describes what is appropriate under 
    section 1877. You should be aware of and comply with other applicable 
    statutes, including the anti-kickback statute, when entering into 
    arrangements.)
        We believe that the ``volume or value'' standard precludes a group 
    practice from paying physician members for each referral they 
    personally make or based on the value of the referred services. This 
    standard applies to any of a physician's actions that constitute 
    ``referrals,'' as these are defined in section 1877(h)(5)(A) and (B) of 
    the Act. We include here a brief discussion of what constitutes a 
    ``referral'' for purposes of the ``volume or value'' standard:
        Section 1877(h)(5)(A) states that referrals include, subject to an 
    exception for certain specialized services, the request by a physician 
    for an item or service for which payment may be made under Part B, 
    including the request for a consultation with another physician (and 
    any test or procedure ordered by, or to be performed by (or under the 
    supervision of) that other physician). We are interpreting this 
    provision to apply not to a physician's requests for any Part B items 
    or services, but only to a physician's requests for designated health 
    services covered under Part B. We explain our rationale for this 
    position in the next section, which discusses the definition of a 
    ``referral.''
        The second part of the statutory definition of ``referral'' in 
    section 1877(h)(5)(B) covers (subject to an exception for certain 
    specific services) the request or establishment of a plan of care by a 
    physician that includes the provision of a designated health service. 
    Although this second part is not drafted in Medicare-specific terms and 
    could be interpreted to cover situations involving any designated 
    health service, we are interpreting it as applying only to those 
    designated health services covered under Medicare. We discuss this 
    position, and our interpretation of referrals for Medicaid covered 
    services, in more detail in the section dealing with what constitutes a 
    ``referral.''
        Because of our interpretation of what constitutes a ``referral,'' 
    an entity wishing to be considered a group practice in order to use the 
    in-office ancillary services exception cannot compensate its members 
    based on the volume or value of referrals for designated health 
    services for Medicare or Medicaid patients but could do so in the case 
    of other patients. However, the most straightforward way for a group to 
    demonstrate that it is meeting the requirements for the exception would 
    be for the group to avoid a link between physician compensation and the 
    volume or value of any referrals, regardless of whether the referrals 
    involve Medicare or Medicaid patients. Alternatively, a group that 
    wants to compensate its members on the basis of non-Medicare and non-
    Medicaid referrals would be required to separately account for revenues 
    and distributions relating to referrals for designated health services 
    for Medicare and Medicaid patients. If a group purports to be making 
    payments to its physicians for nonprogram referrals, but these appear 
    to us to be inordinately high or otherwise inconsistent with the fair 
    market value of those referrals, we could determine that the 
    physicians' compensation does not meet the fair market value standard, 
    and thus may actually reflect additional compensation for Medicare or 
    Medicaid referrals.
        A physician member's compensation can reflect over-all profits. 
    Although physician members cannot be compensated directly or indirectly 
    based on their own referrals, under section 1877(h)(4)(A)(iv) and 
    (B)(i), a physician can be paid a share of over-all profits of the 
    group, as long as the share is not determined in a manner that is 
    directly related to the volume or value of that physician's own 
    referrals.
        In the case of over-all profits, we are interpreting the statute as 
    follows: First, we are taking the position that the statute does not 
    affect a physician's compensation for services other than designated 
    health services. Thus, for purposes of section 1877, a group practice 
    can distribute profits from services other than designated health 
    services in any way it sees fit. For example, a group can distribute 
    profits from the physicians' own nondesignated health services under an 
    even split, based on referrals, or according to the amount of a 
    physician's investment in the group, seniority, hours spent devoted to 
    the practice, or the number or difficulty of services the physician has 
    furnished. The practice can also offer different types of sharing of 
    profits or other kinds of compensation arrangements, or combinations of 
    arrangements, to different physicians or groups of physicians. (Groups 
    should be careful to comply with other statutes, including the anti-
    kickback statute, when creating compensation arrangements.)
        However, when a physician makes a referral for a designated health 
    service
    
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    for a Medicare or Medicaid patient (for example, orders a laboratory 
    test or occupational therapy), we believe the statute requires a 
    different scheme. That is, the referring physician can receive a 
    portion of the group's overall pooled revenues from these services as 
    long as the group does not share these profits in a manner that relates 
    directly to who made the referrals for them. We believe, for example, 
    that these profits can be shared according to most of the principles 
    described above, such as an even split, a physician's investment in the 
    group, the number of hours a physician in general devotes to the group, 
    or the difficulty of a physician's work. However, each physician's 
    personal compensation cannot include payments based directly on the 
    number or value of the referrals he or she has made.
        Since self-referrals are referrals under section 1877, profits 
    should not be pooled and divided between group members so that they 
    relate directly to the number of designated health services for 
    Medicare or Medicaid patients physicians referred to themselves or the 
    value of those self-referrals (such as a value based on the complexity 
    of the service). Thus, a physician should not receive extra, specific 
    compensation from the pooled profits for performing a designated health 
    service he or she has self-referred. We believe that rewarding a 
    physician each time he or she self-refers for a designated health 
    service can constitute an incentive to overutilize services. Nor should 
    a physician's compensation relate directly to the number of referrals 
    for designated health services he or she has made to other group 
    physicians, to the group's nonphysician staff, or to any other entity 
    or individual.
        We regard ``over-all profits of the group'' to mean all of the 
    profits or revenues a group can distribute in any form to group 
    members, even if the group is located in two different States or has 
    many different locations within one State. We would not interpret the 
    concept of ``overall profits'' as the profits that belong only to a 
    particular specialty or subspecialty group. We believe that the 
    narrower the pooling, the more likely it will be that a physician will 
    receive compensation for his or her own referrals (for example, a 
    subspecialty group or location could contain only one or two 
    physicians).
        A physician member's compensation can reflect productivity bonuses. 
    Under section 1877(h)(4)(A)(iv) and (B)(i), a physician's compensation 
    cannot directly or indirectly reflect the volume or value of his or her 
    referrals, except that the physician can receive a productivity bonus, 
    as long as the bonus is not determined in a manner that is directly 
    related to the volume or value of that physician's own referrals. A 
    productivity bonus must be based on services that are personally 
    performed by a physician or incident to personally performed services.
        As we have noted above for sharing of profits, we have interpreted 
    section 1877 as imposing no restrictions on productivity bonuses based 
    on revenues that have nothing to do with a physician's referrals for 
    designated health services under Medicare or Medicaid. Thus, for all 
    nondesignated health services, a physician can be compensated under any 
    productivity scheme that a group derives. We understand that group 
    practices use many different measures of a physician's productivity, 
    such as counting patient encounters, charges or collections 
    attributable to the physician, or hours of patient care services, or 
    factoring in the degree of difficulty of a physician's procedures, ways 
    in which the physician has improved his or her professional 
    qualifications, or the amount of time the physician is willing to be 
    on-call. In addition, a group can pay physicians based on a percentage 
    of profits, straight salary, or any combination of base and incentive 
    payments.
        In terms of designated health services that a physician refers for 
    Medicare or Medicaid patients, a physician's productivity bonus can 
    only indirectly reflect those services that he or she personally 
    performed or that are incident to those personally performed services. 
    We regard services as ``personally performed'' by a physician when he 
    or she participates directly in the delivery of the service. As we have 
    noted elsewhere, we believe that a physician has made a ``referral'' if 
    the physician refers a patient for a designated health service to him 
    or herself, to other physicians in the group, or to the physician's own 
    or the group practice's employees or contractors or to any other entity 
    or individual. Unlike the over-all profit situation, in which amounts 
    can be aggregated, the productivity bonus by its very nature will be 
    based on a physician's individual referrals and performance, and will 
    fluctuate accordingly. However, the statute precludes a productivity 
    bonus for a physician that directly reflects the volume or value of 
    that physician's own referrals.
        Thus, we believe a physician's compensation can reflect a bonus for 
    designated health services the physician personally performs or 
    ``incident to'' services the physician directly supervises, provided 
    the services result from the referral of a physician other than the one 
    performing or supervising the service. A physician in this situation is 
    not being compensated based on the volume or value of his or her own 
    referrals. A physician can receive compensation for his or her own 
    referrals for designated health services only through the aggregation 
    that occurs as part of over-all sharing of profits.
        We regard the reference in section 1877(h)(4)(B)(i) to services 
    performed ``incident to a physician's personally performed services'' 
    as a reference to the services defined in section 1861(s)(2)(A) of the 
    Act. Here they are listed under ``Medical and Other Health Services'' 
    as services and supplies (including drugs and biologicals that cannot, 
    as determined in accordance with regulations, be self-administered) 
    furnished as an incident to a physician's professional service, of 
    kinds that are commonly furnished in physicians' offices and are 
    commonly either furnished without charge or included in the physicians' 
    bills.
        Our longstanding interpretation of this provision appears in 
    section 2050 of the Medicare Carriers Manual, Part 3--Claims 
    Processing. This provision states that ``incident to'' services are 
    those that are furnished as an integral, although incidental part, of 
    the physician's personal professional services in the course of 
    diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury. The services of 
    nonphysicians must be furnished under the physician's direct 
    supervision by employees of the physician.
        Because the provision in section 1877(h)(4)(B)(i) on productivity 
    bonuses is a difficult one, and because physicians are now compensated 
    in many ways, we directly solicit comments on our interpretation of 
    this provision.
    7. Referral
        We have received a number of inquiries about what constitutes a 
    ``referral'' for purposes of section 1877. The concept of a referral 
    appears in several places: physicians are prohibited from making 
    certain referrals and a number of the compensation-related exceptions 
    require that any payment passing between a physician and an entity not 
    reflect the volume or value of the physician's referrals. We believe 
    that the concept of a ``referral'' in the statute is a broad one, and 
    that prohibited referrals are a subset of these. Below we discuss our 
    interpretation of what constitutes a ``referral.''
        Under section 1877(h)(5)(A), referrals include, subject to an 
    exception for
    
    [[Page 1692]]
    
    certain specialized services, the request by a physician for an item or 
    service for which payment may be made under Part B, including the 
    request for a consultation with another physician (and any test or 
    procedure ordered by, or to be performed by (or under the supervision 
    of) that other physician).
        We believe that ``an item or service for which payment may be made 
    under Part B'' means a Part B item or service that ordinarily ``may 
    be'' covered under Medicare (that is, that could be a covered service 
    under Medicare at the present time in the community in which the 
    service has been furnished) for a Medicare-eligible individual, 
    regardless of whether Medicare would actually pay for this particular 
    service, at the time, for the particular eligible individual who has 
    been referred. (For example, Medicare might not pay for a service if 
    the individual has not yet met his or her deductible.)
        The second part of the statutory definition of ``referral'' in 
    section 1877(h)(5)(B) covers (subject to an exception for certain 
    specialized services) the request or establishment of a plan of care by 
    a physician that includes the provision of a designated health service. 
    Although this second part is not drafted in Medicare-specific terms and 
    could be interpreted to cover situations involving any designated 
    health service, we are interpreting it as applying only to those 
    designated health services that ``may be'' covered under Medicare. We 
    base this position on the fact that the referral prohibition in section 
    1877(a)(1) applies only to designated health services covered under 
    Medicare.
        We are not aware of any rationale for the distinction between the 
    definition for Part B services, in which a physician's request for any 
    Part B item or service constitutes a referral, and the definition for 
    other items or services, in which a referral consists of a physician's 
    request for, or a plan of care providing for, only a designated health 
    service. The broader definition for Part B services has no 
    ramifications in terms of the actual referral prohibition, which 
    encompasses only referrals for designated health services. However, it 
    is significant in terms of the standard that appears in the ``group 
    practice'' definition and in a number of the compensation-related 
    exceptions that precludes compensation between parties that reflects 
    the volume or value of a physician's referrals.
        It is our understanding that section 1877 was designed to prevent 
    physicians from overutilizing the specific health care services 
    designated in the statute, a list Congress derived based on its sense 
    of which services tend to be subject to abuse. We do not believe the 
    statute was meant to preclude physicians from being compensated for 
    their referrals for totally different Part B services. Thus, we are 
    taking the position that, since the prohibition relates only to 
    referrals for designated health services, the concept of a referral for 
    a Part B service under section 1877(h)(5)(A) should be limited to just 
    referrals for designated health services.
        As we explained in the discussion on the definition of an 
    ``entity,'' we believe that the concept of a ``referral'' covers 
    situations in which physicians refer to themselves or among themselves. 
    (As we noted in that discussion, a physician could be prohibited from 
    referring to him or herself or to other group practice members if the 
    services do not meet the in-office ancillary services exception in 
    section 1877(b)(2) or the physician services exception in section 
    1877(b)(1) of the Act or some other exception.) We believe that a 
    physician has made a referral under section 1877(h)(5) when he or she 
    requests any designated health service covered under Part A or Part B 
    or establishes a plan of care that includes a designated health service 
    covered under Part A or B, even if the physician furnishes the service 
    personally. We interpret this language to cover a physician's 
    certifying or recertifying a patient's need for a designated health 
    service. For Part B services, a referral can also include a 
    consultation with another physician.
        We are interpreting a physician's ``request'' for an item or 
    service, or the establishment of a plan of care, as a step that occurs 
    after a physician has initially examined a patient or furnished 
    physician services that are not designated health services, or 
    otherwise concluded that the patient needs a designated health service. 
    (We describe our rationale for this interpretation in more detail in 
    section III.C.2 of this preamble, where we discuss the in-office 
    ancillary services exception.)
        We are interpreting a ``request'' as occurring whenever a physician 
    asks for a service in any way or indicates that he or she believes the 
    service is necessary (for example, by verbally stating that the service 
    is necessary, by entering description of the service into the patient's 
    records or onto a medical chart or by writing a prescription).
        What constitutes a ``referral'' for a Medicaid service. Section 
    1903(s) of the Act applies aspects of the referral prohibition to the 
    Medicaid program for referrals that would result in a denial of payment 
    for the service under Medicare, if Medicare covered the service to the 
    same extent and under the same terms and conditions as under the State 
    plan. We interpret this provision to mean that a State should apply the 
    Medicare rules in section 1877 to a referral for a Medicaid service, 
    even if the service is not covered under Medicare.
        However, the definition of a referral in section 1877(h)(5)(A) and 
    (B) is cast specifically in terms of a request for certain Part B 
    Medicare services and for ``other items,'' which in the Medicare 
    context we have interpreted to mean Part A services. Since Medicaid 
    services are not categorized this way, we propose to interpret this 
    provision by establishing an analogous definition. That is, (subject to 
    an exception for certain specialized services, which we describe below) 
    a physician has made a referral if he or she has requested a Medicaid 
    covered designated health service that is comparable to a service 
    covered under Part B of Medicare (including a request for a 
    consultation with another physician). A physician has also made a 
    referral for any other Medicaid covered item or service if the service 
    is a designated health service and the physician has requested it or 
    has established a plan of care that includes it.
        We are also translating a ``referral'' from the Medicare context to 
    mean a physician's requests for, or plan of care including, a 
    designated health service that ordinarily ``may be'' covered under the 
    particular State Medicaid program for an individual in the patient's 
    eligibility category, regardless of whether the State Medicaid agency 
    would actually pay for this particular service, at the time, for the 
    particular Medicaid-eligible individual who has been referred.
        Prohibited referrals only involve designated health services. It is 
    important to keep in mind that the only referrals that are prohibited 
    under section 1877 of the Act are those that involve the furnishing of 
    a designated health service listed in section 1877(h)(6). As we note in 
    section IV.A.5 of this preamble in our discussion on referrals to 
    immediate family members, a physician is free to make a referral for a 
    service that is not a designated health service (or a service that does 
    not include a designated health service), such as certain physician 
    services. For example, a physician can refer a patient to an 
    obstetrician for general prenatal care. If the obstetrician prescribes 
    ultrasound as part of this prenatal care, it is the obstetrician who 
    has made a referral for a designated health service, and not the 
    original physician.
        The statutory exception to the definition of a ``referral.'' Before 
    OBRA
    
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    '93, the definition of a ``referral'' under section 1877(h)(5)(A) was 
    qualified by an exception in section 1877(h)(5)(C) for a request by a 
    pathologist for certain clinical diagnostic laboratory tests and 
    pathological examination services. These services had to be furnished 
    by (or under the supervision of) the pathologist, as the result of a 
    consultation requested by another physician. We incorporated this 
    provision into the August 1995 final rule in Sec. 411.351.
        We are also proposing to interpret the level of supervision that a 
    pathologist must provide if another individual, such as a technician, 
    actually furnishes the services. The statute requires ``supervision,'' 
    rather than the ``direct supervision'' that appears as part of the in-
    office ancillary services exception. We are interpreting 
    ``supervision'' to mean the level of supervision ordinarily required 
    under Medicare coverage and payment rules or, when they apply, the 
    health and safety standards, for the particular services at issue in 
    the particular locations in which the services will be furnished.
        As the result of OBRA '93, beginning on January 1, 1995, the 
    exception to what constitutes a ``referral'' in section 1877(h)(5)(C) 
    was expanded to include a request by a radiologist for diagnostic 
    radiology services and a request by a radiation oncologist for 
    radiation therapy, if the services are furnished by (or under the 
    supervision of) the radiologist or radiation oncologist as the result 
    of a consultation requested by another physician. We are incorporating 
    this amendment into the definition of a ``referral'' in Sec. 411.351. 
    Diagnostic radiology services and radiation therapy are also defined in 
    Sec. 411.351, where we have presented our proposed definitions of the 
    different designated health services.
        When a physician has requested a ``consultation.'' The services 
    that are excepted from the ``referral definition'' under section 
    1877(h)(5)(C) must result from a consultation requested by a physician 
    other than the pathologist, radiologist, or radiation oncologist who 
    actually performs or supervises the performance of the services listed 
    above. We discussed the concept of a consultation briefly in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule covering referrals for clinical 
    laboratory services at 57 FR 8595. We said that, for purposes of 
    Medicare coverage, a ``consultation'' is--
    
    a professional service furnished to a patient by a physician (the 
    consultant) at the request of the patient's attending physician. A 
    consultation includes the history and examination of the patient as 
    well as a written report that is transmitted to the attending 
    physician for inclusion in the patient's permanent record ***. Other 
    referrals, such as sending a patient to a specialist who assumes 
    responsibility for furnishing the appropriate treatment, or 
    providing a list of referrals for a second opinion, are not 
    ``consultations'' or ``referrals'' that would trigger the laboratory 
    services use prohibition.
    
        We would like to clarify that a consultation occurs whenever a 
    physician requests that a patient see another physician, such as a 
    particular specialist, but the original physician retains control over 
    the care of the patient, including any care related to the condition 
    that prompted the consultation. Section 1877(h)(5)(A) implies that a 
    ``consultation'' is still a consultation even if the consultant 
    physician takes the initiative to order, perform, or supervise the 
    performance of, tests for the patient. The consultant physician, as we 
    noted in the preamble of the August 1995 rule, must provide the 
    original physician with a report. Nonetheless, we regard this as a 
    consultation as long as it is the original physician who gathers 
    information from the consultant physician about his or her examination 
    of the patient and any test results and then makes a decision about how 
    to proceed with the patient's care.
        Conversely, the original physician has not arranged for a 
    consultation, but instead has made a referral, in situations in which 
    the specialist takes over the patient's care for purposes of the 
    condition that prompted the referral. For example, a physician might 
    send a patient to a specific cardiologist, who examines the patient 
    thoroughly, sends a report to the attending physician but is the only 
    one who sees the patient thereafter for the purpose of treating a heart 
    problem.
    8. Remuneration
        Remuneration that does not result in a compensation arrangement. A 
    compensation arrangement is defined in section 1877(h)(1) as any 
    arrangement involving any remuneration between a physician (or family 
    member) and an entity, other than an arrangement involving only 
    remuneration described in section 1877(h)(1)(C). Section 1877(h)(1)(C) 
    lists certain specific kinds of remuneration that do not result in a 
    compensation arrangement, such as the forgiveness of amounts owed for 
    inaccurate tests, mistakenly performed tests, or for the correction of 
    minor billing errors.
        We believe there is some ambiguity in section 1877(h)(1) concerning 
    the requirement that excepted remuneration must result from an 
    arrangement involving only the remuneration described in section 
    1877(h)(1)(C). This provision could be read to mean that the items in 
    section 1877(h)(1)(C) are excepted when the arrangement that exists 
    between the physician and entity involves nothing but the excepted 
    forms of payment. As a practical matter, we realize that the kinds of 
    remuneration listed in section 1877(h)(1)(C) seldom occur as isolated 
    transactions, but are often subsets or components of other 
    arrangements. For example, the forgiveness of minor billing errors 
    suggests that the parties transact and exchange services or items for 
    payment when there are no billing errors; those transactions that 
    contain billing errors may be only a small fraction of the parties' 
    overall business dealings.
        To clarify this provision, we are interpreting it to mean that the 
    portion of a business arrangement that consists of the remuneration 
    listed in section 1877(h)(1)(C) alone does not constitute a 
    compensation arrangement. Any other forms of remuneration that might 
    accompany these payments are not excepted and could constitute a 
    compensation arrangement, provided they do not otherwise meet one of 
    the other exceptions in this proposed regulation.
        Section 1877(h)(1)(C)(ii) excepts from the definition of 
    ``remuneration'' the provision of items, devices, or supplies that are 
    used solely to collect, transport, process, or store specimens for the 
    entity providing the item, device, or supply, or order or communicate 
    the results of tests or procedures for the entity. We believe that some 
    pathology laboratories have been furnishing physicians with materials 
    ranging from basic collection items and storage items (for example, 
    jars for urine samples and vials for blood samples) to more specialized 
    or sophisticated items, devices, or equipment (snares used to remove 
    gastrointestinal polyps, needles used for biopsies or to draw bone 
    marrow or samples of amniotic fluid for amniocentesis, and computers or 
    fax machines used to transmit results).
        In order for these items and devices to meet the statutory 
    requirement, they must be used solely to collect, transport, process, 
    or store specimens for the laboratory or other entity that provided the 
    items and devices. We interpret ``solely'' in this context to mean that 
    these items are used solely for the purposes listed in the statute, 
    such as cups used for urine collection or vials used to hold and 
    transport blood to the entity that supplied the items or devices.
    
    [[Page 1694]]
    
        We do not believe that an item or device meets this requirement if 
    it is used for any purposes besides these. For example, we do not 
    regard specialized equipment such as disposable or reusable aspiration 
    and injection needles and snares as solely collection or storage 
    devices. Instead, these items are also surgical tools that are 
    routinely used as part of a surgical or medical procedure. For example, 
    the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations in 21 CFR 
    878.4800(a) define a ``manual surgical instrument for general use'' as 
    a ``non-powered, hand-held, or hand-manipulated device, either reusable 
    or disposable, intended to be used in various general surgical 
    procedures.'' Surgical instruments listed in the regulation include 
    disposable or reusable aspiration and injection needles, snares, and 
    other similar devices. Snares are also listed in these regulations as 
    components of various specialized surgical devices, such as ear, nose, 
    and throat manual surgical instruments, endoscopic electrosurgical 
    units, and manual gastroenterology-urology surgical instruments and 
    accessories.
        In addition, to ensure that items or devices that could qualify for 
    this exception are used solely for the entity that supplied them, the 
    number or amount of these items should be consistent with the number or 
    amount that is used for specimens that are actually sent to this entity 
    for processing. That is, if a physician tends to annually perform 400 
    blood tests that are sent to a particular laboratory for analysis, we 
    would not expect the physician to accept from that laboratory items, 
    devices, or supplies in excess of an amount that is reasonable for the 
    projected tests. In determining the amount of goods that are 
    reasonable, we would consider not just quantity, but such facts as 
    whether the laboratory packages together a set of items to be used for 
    just one tissue collection or one use, or whether an item can be used 
    multiple times, for multiple entities.
        If, on the other hand, a physician keeps a particular item or 
    device and uses it repeatedly or could use it repeatedly for any 
    patients or for other uses, we would presume that the item or device is 
    not one that meets the requirement, unless the physician can 
    demonstrate otherwise. For example, if computer equipment or fax 
    machines can be used for a number of purposes in addition to ordering 
    or receiving results from an entity, we would presume that the 
    ``solely'' requirement is not met, unless the physician can demonstrate 
    that the equipment is integral to, and used exclusively for, performing 
    the outside entity's work. Detailed records concerning the use of the 
    machine would be necessary to overcome this presumption.
        Section 1877(h)(1)(C)(iii) ``excepts'' from a compensation 
    arrangement situations involving certain payments made by an insurer or 
    a self-insured plan to a physician. The payments must be those that 
    satisfy a claim, submitted on a fee-for-service basis, for the 
    furnishing of health services by that physician to an individual who is 
    covered by a policy with the insurer or by the self-insured plan. The 
    payments must meet certain specified conditions.
        We believe that this provision was designed for situations in which 
    an insurer is involved in the delivery of health care services. If the 
    insurer owns a health care facility, a physician might otherwise be 
    precluded from referring to that facility just because the physician 
    receives compensation from the insurer in the form of payments that 
    satisfy claims the physician has submitted. If the physician is seeking 
    fee-for-service payments from an insurer, he or she may not have an 
    arrangement with the insurer that could qualify as a personal services 
    arrangement, or otherwise qualify under any of the other statutory 
    exceptions.
        Discounts can be a form of remuneration for some of the designated 
    health services. In the August 1995 final rule, we defined remuneration 
    to include discounts. In the preamble to that rule, we explained that 
    we believe that, for most items or services that a physician might 
    purchase, the statute dictates this result. Section 1877(e)(8)(B) 
    excepts from a compensation arrangement payments made by a physician to 
    an entity as compensation for items or services (other than clinical 
    laboratory services) if the items or services are furnished at fair 
    market value. As a result, any amounts that a physician pays for items 
    or services that do not reflect fair market value, such as certain 
    discounted items or services, would not meet the exception.
        We may have implied in the August 1995 final rule that all 
    discounts would fail to meet the fair market value standard. We wish to 
    clarify here that we believe a discount does meet the fair market value 
    standard if it is an arm's-length transaction; an entity offers it to 
    all similarly situated individuals, regardless of whether they make 
    referrals to the entity; the discount does not reflect the volume or 
    value of any referrals the physician has made or will make to the 
    entity; and the discount is passed on to Medicare or other insurers. We 
    are aware of situations in which discounts enure to the benefit of 
    referring physicians. For example, physicians will sometimes purchase 
    oncology drugs from manufacturers at a discount, yet mark the drugs up 
    to eliminate the discount when billing Medicare. Such arrangements 
    would not meet the standard.
        We are also creating a new exception under our authority in section 
    1877(b)(4), which allows us to except any other financial relationship 
    that we determine does not pose a risk of program or patient abuse. The 
    new exception would allow physicians to receive a discount based on the 
    volume of their referrals to an entity, provided the discount is passed 
    on in full to the patients or their insurers (including Medicare), and 
    does not enure to the benefit of the physicians in any way.
        The statute provides a different exception for laboratory services. 
    Section 1877(e)(8)(A) states that there is no compensation arrangement 
    when a physician makes payments to a laboratory in exchange for the 
    laboratory providing clinical laboratory services. This exception does 
    not include a fair market value standard. Congress may not have 
    included this standard based on its belief that, under the Medicare 
    program, physicians cannot purchase laboratory services at a discount, 
    and then bill the Medicare program for them at a marked up rate.
        We agree that physicians are precluded from purchasing and marking 
    up laboratory services covered under Medicare under section 
    1833(h)(5)(A) of the Act. This provision states that, in general, 
    Medicare payment for a clinical diagnostic laboratory test may be made 
    only to the person or entity that performed or supervised the 
    performance of the test. In addition, payment for laboratory tests is 
    made on the basis of a fee schedule.
    
    B. General Prohibition on Referrals
    
        Which designated health services are covered by the prohibition. 
    Section 1877(a)(1)(A) prohibits referrals to an entity for the 
    furnishing of designated health services ``for which payment otherwise 
    may be made under [Medicare], * * *.'' We believe that this means any 
    designated health service that ordinarily ``may be'' covered under 
    Medicare (that is, that could be a covered service under Medicare in 
    the community in which the service has been provided) for a Medicare-
    eligible individual, regardless of whether Medicare would actually pay 
    for this particular service, at the time, for that particular 
    individual (for example, the individual may not have met his or her 
    deductible).
    
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        We believe that the same principles apply for designated health 
    services under the Medicaid program. Section 1903(s) says that the 
    Secretary cannot make Federal financial participation payments to a 
    State for designated health services, as they are defined under section 
    1877(h)(6), furnished to an individual on the basis of a referral that 
    would result in a denial of payment under Medicare, if Medicare covered 
    the services to the same extent and under the same terms and conditions 
    as under the State plan. We interpret this provision to mean that the 
    Medicare rules in section 1877 apply to Medicaid services, as if 
    Medicare covered the same items and services as a State's Medicaid 
    program.
        As a result, a referral could affect a State's FFP if the 
    designated health service is one ``for which payment otherwise may be 
    made'' under a State's Medicaid program, regardless of whether a State 
    agency would actually pay for this particular service, at the time, for 
    that particular individual. Therefore, if a State plan could cover the 
    service for a Medicaid eligible individual in the individual's 
    eligibility group, we believe it is a service that is covered by the 
    referral prohibition.
        Limitations on billing and refunds on a timely basis. As part of 
    the prohibition on referrals in section 1877(a), the statute also 
    provides that an entity may not present or cause to be presented a 
    Medicare claim or a bill to any individual, third party payor, or other 
    entity for designated health services furnished under a prohibited 
    referral. In the August 1995 final rule, we included in Sec. 411.353(d) 
    the requirement that an entity that collects payment for a laboratory 
    service that was performed under a prohibited referral must refund all 
    collected amounts on a timely basis. We are proposing to apply this 
    provision to such amounts collected for any of the designated health 
    services. We are also proposing to define ``timely basis'' by cross 
    referring to Sec. 1003.101 in the OIG civil money penalty regulations. 
    While Sec. 1003.101 currently defines this term as ``the 60-day period 
    from the time the prohibited amounts are collected by the individual or 
    entity,'' the OIG is planning to issue shortly revised final 
    regulations that will amend this term. Under the amended version, the 
    60-day timeframe for a refund will begin when the individual or entity 
    knew or should have known that the amount collected was related to a 
    prohibited referral. We plan to adopt this revised definition as well.
    
    C. General Exceptions That Apply to Ownership or Investment Interests 
    and to Compensation Arrangements
    
    1. Exception for Physician Services
        The statute provides that the referral prohibition does not apply 
    in cases involving physician services (as defined in section 1861(q)) 
    provided personally by (or under the personal supervision of) another 
    physician in the same group practice as the referring physician. 
    Physician services are generally defined in section 1861(q) as 
    professional services performed by physicians, including surgery, 
    consultation, and home, office, and institutional calls. The Medicare 
    regulations have interpreted this provision in Sec. 410.20(a) to 
    include diagnosis, therapy, surgery, consultations, and home, office, 
    and institutional calls, provided the services are furnished by one of 
    the types of doctors listed in Sec. 410.20(b).
        Note that this exception applies to physician services that 
    constitute designated health services, as we would define designated 
    health services in Sec. 411.351. The exception in the Medicare context 
    does not cover services that are performed by nonphysicians but are 
    furnished under a physician's supervision, such as ancillary or 
    ``incident-to'' services. Under Medicare, physician services can only 
    be performed by a physician. Thus, we believe the exception applies 
    only to services that are provided personally by a physician who is a 
    member of the same group practice as the referring physician or that 
    are provided by a nonmember physician who is personally supervised by a 
    group practice physician. We would interpret ``personal supervision'' 
    to mean that the group practice physician is legally responsible for 
    monitoring the results of any test or other designated health service 
    and is available to assist the individual who is furnishing the 
    service, even though the member physician need not be present while the 
    service is being furnished.
    2. Exception for In-office Ancillary Services
        This exception applies to services other than parenteral and 
    enteral nutrients, equipment and supplies and durable medical equipment 
    (although it does apply to infusion pumps) that are referred by a solo 
    practitioner or group practice member within his or her own practice. 
    The exception requires that the services be performed by the referring 
    physician or group practice member, or by another member of the same 
    group practice as the referring physician, or be directly supervised by 
    one of these physicians (we discussed the direct supervision 
    requirement in section III.A.2 of this preamble), that the services be 
    furnished in certain locations, and that the services be billed in a 
    particular way. We discuss these last two requirements below.
    
    a. The site requirement
    
        Where a service is actually ``furnished.'' Section 
    1877(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I) requires, for a solo or group practice, that the 
    services be furnished in a building in which the referring physician or 
    another member of the group practice furnishes physician services 
    unrelated to the furnishing of designated health services. It is our 
    view that a service is furnished wherever a procedure is actually 
    performed upon a patient or in the location in which a patient receives 
    and begins using an item.
        For example, if a patient receives an MRI (magnetic resonance 
    image) in a physician's office, the service has been furnished there. 
    If a patient is fitted for and receives a brace in the physician's 
    office, the brace has been furnished there. The same rule would apply 
    to a prosthetic device that is implanted in a physician's office. 
    However, any item that is given to a patient but is meant to be used at 
    home or outside the physician's office, or any item that is delivered 
    to the patient's home, has not been ``furnished'' in the physician's 
    office.
        What constitutes the ``same building'' in which the physician is 
    practicing. We are interpreting ``the same building'' to mean one 
    physical structure, with one address, and not multiple structures that 
    are connected by tunnels or walkways. In addition, we believe ``the 
    building'' consists of parts of the physical structure that are used as 
    office or other commercial space. For example, a mobile X-ray van that 
    is pulled into the garage of a building would not be part of that 
    building.
        When a physician is furnishing physician services ``unrelated to 
    the furnishing of designated health services.'' To meet this criterion, 
    we believe that a physician must be providing in the same building any 
    amount of physician services (as defined in Sec. 410.20(a)) other than 
    those listed as designated health services as we have defined them in 
    Sec. 411.351. Thus, we would regard as ``unrelated to designated health 
    services'' a physician's examination of a patient and diagnosis, even 
    if these lead to the physician requesting a designated health service, 
    such as an X-ray or laboratory test.
    
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        The location test for group practices. In the case of a group 
    practice, the group has the option of meeting a location test other 
    than the one requiring that the designated health services be provided 
    in the same building in which a group member provides physician 
    services. The group can provide clinical laboratory services in any 
    other building that is used by the group for the provision of some or 
    all of the group's clinical laboratory services.
        A group can furnish the other designated health services in another 
    building that is used by the group for the centralized provision of the 
    group's designated health services. We believe that a location meets 
    this ``centralized'' requirement if it services more than one of a 
    group's offices, and if it furnishes one or any combination of 
    designated health services. It is also our view that a group can have 
    more than one of these centralized locations. To meet the in-office 
    ancillary exception, a group would be required to have a physician 
    member present in the ``centralized'' location to perform or directly 
    supervise the performance of designated health services, but the 
    physician would not be required to perform physician services that are 
    unrelated to the designated health services in this location.
    
    b. The billing requirement
    
        Section 1877(b)(2)(B) requires that in-office ancillary services be 
    billed by the physician performing or supervising the services, by the 
    referring or supervising physician's group practice under a billing 
    number assigned to the group, or by an entity that is wholly owned by 
    the physician or group practice. For a group practice that bills, we 
    discussed a similar requirement for a group billing number in section 
    III.A.6 of this preamble, where we covered the definition of a group 
    practice. There, as here, we are interpreting this provision to allow a 
    single group to bill under any billing number that has been assigned to 
    the group in situations in which a group has more than one number, and 
    to allow an agent to bill for the group in the group's name, using the 
    group's number, provided the arrangement meets the requirements in 
    Sec. 424.80(b)(6).
        In situations in which a ``wholly-owned'' entity bills for a group, 
    we do not believe the statute requires that the service be billed under 
    the group number, if the wholly owned entity can bill under its own 
    provider number. Also, we are interpreting ``a wholly-owned'' entity 
    that bills to cover an entity that provides billing or administrative 
    services to a physician or group practice. Alternatively, this entity 
    can be a wholly-owned provider of designated health services, such as a 
    laboratory or radiology facility that is wholly owned by a physician or 
    group, but bills for its own services. However, because the provision 
    refers to an entity that is ``wholly owned,'' we do not believe that it 
    covers billing entities that are owned jointly by a physician or group 
    practice with any other individuals or entities.
        We also believe that a group practice member cannot use the in-
    office ancillary services exception to refer to other group practice 
    members for services he or she intends to bill independently. Section 
    1877(b)(2)(B) states that the services must be billed by the physician 
    performing or supervising the services or by a group practice of which 
    the physician is a member, or by entities wholly owned by the physician 
    or the group. Nonetheless, under the definition of who qualifies as a 
    ``member'' of a group practice in Sec. 411.351, a group practice 
    physician billing under his or her own provider status would be 
    considered a solo practicing physician for purposes of the in-office 
    ancillary exception.
        In Sec. 411.351, we defined who can qualify as a ``member'' of a 
    group practice broadly in order to accommodate the many part-time and 
    contract physicians who often participate in one or more group 
    practices. The definition of a ``member'' covered physician partners 
    and full and part-time physician contractors and employees. Physicians 
    under the definition qualify as ``members'' only during the time they 
    furnish services to patients of the group practice that are furnished 
    through the group and are billed in the name of the group. Therefore, 
    whenever a physician bills separately for a lab service the physician 
    has personally performed or supervised, he or she is functioning as a 
    solo practitioner and not as a group member. (We are currently 
    proposing to amend the definition of a ``member'' to exclude 
    independent contractors and to regard a physician as a member during 
    the time he or she furnishes ``patient care services'' to the group. 
    These changes would not affect our interpretation.)
        If a physician bills for a service independently, other group 
    members cannot directly supervise those services for the referring 
    physician. In addition, if a group member bills for too many services 
    independently, the group practice may fail to meet the ``substantially 
    all'' test under the definition of a group practice in section 
    1877(h)(4)(A)(ii). That provision requires that substantially all of 
    the services provided by group members be billed under a billing number 
    assigned to the group.
    
    c. Designated health services that do not trigger the in-office 
    exception
    
        The location requirements for this exception specify that 
    designated health services must be provided in a building in which a 
    solo practitioner or a group practice physician also provides physician 
    services unrelated to the furnishing of designated health services or, 
    for group practices, in a building that serves as a centralized 
    location in which a group provides designated health services. Thus, 
    this exception would not cover services provided elsewhere, such as 
    home health services.
        If services are furnished in a hospital or skilled nursing 
    facility, we believe they can be covered under this exception if these 
    locations serve as a centralized location in which a group provides 
    designated health services or if the referring physician or a member of 
    the same group practice furnishes unrelated physician services in the 
    building, and the physicians can meet the requirement for direct 
    supervision and billing.
    3. Exception for Services Provided Under Prepaid Health Plans
        We are aware that the health care world is evolving rapidly, 
    consisting of a broad spectrum that ranges from traditional practices 
    using fee-for-service billing all the way to fully capitated managed 
    care systems, many of which are excepted under the ``prepaid'' 
    provision in the statute. In between these extremes exist a host of 
    ``hybrid'' systems that display a mixture of fee-for-service and 
    managed care characteristics. Section 1877 addresses some of these 
    systems directly; most others we believe can continue to function by 
    meeting the exceptions in the statute and in this proposed regulation. 
    We specifically solicit comments on whether our assessment is accurate.
        In this section we describe how we propose to interpret the law in 
    a manner that we believe will help to safeguard the Medicare and 
    Medicaid programs from abuse, while facilitating the evolution of 
    integrated delivery and other health care delivery systems. We also 
    discuss how we believe the law affects referrals for designated health 
    services provided under demonstration projects and waivers.
    
    a. Physicians, suppliers, and providers that contract with prepaid 
    organizations
    
        The ``prepaid plan'' exception covers services furnished by certain 
    specified organizations to their enrollees. Under
    
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    section 1877(b)(3), these include health maintenance organizations and 
    competitive medical plans that have a contract with Medicare, certain 
    prepaid organizations functioning under a demonstration project, and 
    Federally qualified health maintenance organizations. We have 
    incorporated this exception into the regulations at Sec. 411.355(c). We 
    are aware that a number of these organizations do not furnish services 
    directly but often contract with outside physicians, providers, or 
    suppliers to furnish items or services to their enrollees, for which 
    the organizations bill. The outside physicians, providers, or suppliers 
    may, in turn, contract with other physicians or entities for certain 
    supplies or services. In order to accommodate these situations, we are 
    interpreting this exception broadly to cover not only services 
    furnished by the organizations themselves, but also those furnished to 
    the organization's enrollees by outside physicians, providers, or 
    suppliers under contract with these organizations. The exception would 
    also cover services furnished to enrollees by those with whom the 
    outside physicians, providers, or suppliers have contracted.
    
    b. Managed care organizations under the Medicaid program
    
        We propose to add to the regulation a new exception in 
    Sec. 435.1012(b) for designated health services provided by managed 
    care entities analogous to those listed in section 1877(b)(3) that 
    provide services to Medicaid eligible enrollees under contracts with 
    State Medicaid agencies. We are basing this addition on our analysis of 
    section 1903(s) of the Act. Under section 1903(s), a State can receive 
    no FFP for expenditures for medical assistance under the State plan 
    consisting of a designated health service furnished to an individual on 
    the basis of a referral that would result in a denial of payment for 
    the service under Medicare if Medicare covered the service to the same 
    extent and under the same terms and conditions as under the State plan. 
    We read this provision to mean that the Medicare-based rules in section 
    1877 must be applied to services furnished under a State's Medicaid 
    program to determine when a referral is a ``prohibited'' one.
        Section 1877(b)(3) excepts from the referral prohibition services 
    furnished to enrollees of certain ``prepaid'' plans; however, all of 
    the entities listed in that exception provide services to Medicare 
    patients. As a result, the exception for prepaid arrangements has no 
    meaning for physicians who wish to refer in the context of the Medicaid 
    program. In order to give some meaning to this provision in the 
    Medicaid context, when it is read in conjunction with section 1903(s), 
    we are adding an exception for services furnished by the Medicaid 
    counterparts of the Medicare managed care contracts expressly 
    referenced in section 1877(b).
        In section 1877(b)(3), Congress exempted all types of Medicare 
    contracts with prepaid managed care health plans. We propose to extend 
    this exemption to the categories of Medicaid-contracting managed care 
    plans analogous to those exempted for Medicare in section 1877(b)(3). 
    Like the section 1876 Medicare contracts exempted under section 
    1877(b)(3)(A), section 1903(m) governs Medicaid HMO contracts 
    (specifically, comprehensive risk contracts), and requires that 
    contracting HMOs comply with the physician incentive plan requirements 
    in section 1876(i)(8).
        The type of Medicare prepaid health plan exempted under section 
    1877(b)(3)(B) is an entity with a less than comprehensive contract 
    (involving only Part B, or outpatient, services) under section 
    1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act and regulations at 42 CFR Part 417, Subpart U. 
    These entities are known as ``health care prepayment plans'' (HCPPs). 
    The Medicaid equivalent of a Medicare HCPP is a ``prepaid health 
    plan,'' or PHP. Like an HCPP, PHPs generally contract for less than a 
    comprehensive range of services (a PHP can also be a nonrisk 
    comprehensive contract, since section 1903(m) only governs 
    comprehensive risk contracts). Like HCPPs, PHPs are not subject to the 
    full range of requirements that HMOs must satisfy under section 1876 or 
    section 1903(m).
        Section 1877(b)(3)(C) exempts entities receiving payment on a 
    prepaid basis under a demonstration project under section 402(a) of the 
    Social Security Amendments of 1967 or section 222(a) of the Social 
    Security Amendments of 1972. The Medicaid counterpart of section 402(a) 
    is section 1115(a) of the Social Security Act. Indeed, several 
    demonstration projects under section 402(a) involving Medicaid-eligible 
    Medicare beneficiaries also involve Medicaid capitation payments under 
    the authority in section 1115(a). We accordingly are proposing to 
    exempt entities receiving payments on a prepaid capitation basis under 
    a demonstration project under section 1115(a) of the Act.
        Finally, in order to cover the full range of Medicaid managed care 
    contractors paid on a prepaid basis, as Congress did for Medicare, it 
    is also necessary to exempt ``Health Insuring Organizations'' (HIOs) if 
    they furnish or arrange for services as a managed care contractor. We 
    are accordingly proposing to exempt these entities as well.
    
    c. Evolving structures of integrated delivery and other health care 
    delivery systems
    
        As described above, the statute directly excepts from the referral 
    prohibition all of the services provided by ``prepaid'' entities 
    described in section 1877(b)(3) to the entities' enrollees. We realize 
    that a host of organizations and integrated systems are not 
    specifically excepted under the statute, so the services they provide 
    to Medicare and Medicaid patients may be subject to the referral 
    prohibition. For example, Medicare may provide secondary coverage to 
    patients who participate in employer group health plans and are treated 
    by HMOs that do not have contracts with Medicare or are not Federally 
    qualified. Also, there are nontraditional systems that use both fee-
    for-service and capitated billing and are not specifically excepted 
    under the law. We can find no grounds to create a blanket exception for 
    these arrangements; we see no guarantee that these ``hybrid'' 
    structures will all be free from any risk of patient or program abuse.
        It is our view that a large percentage of the new and evolving 
    structures will continue to thrive by meeting the exceptions in the 
    statute and in this proposed regulation. For example, entities such as 
    preferred provider organizations (PPOs) and physician hospital 
    organizations (PHOs) that are not excepted under section 1877(b)(3) 
    normally contract with physicians to provide services to the 
    organization's patients, including Medicare or Medicaid patients. These 
    physicians can continue to refer Medicare and Medicaid patients to the 
    organization for designated health services, provided the physicians' 
    arrangements with the organization qualify for the personal services 
    exception in section 1877(e)(3) (and in Sec. 411.357(d) of this 
    proposed regulation).
        This exception provides, among other things, that the arrangement 
    must be for at least 1 year, the physician's compensation must be based 
    on fair market value and cannot reflect the volume or value of the 
    physician's referrals, except as allowed under certain physician 
    incentive plans. We have defined ``fair market value'' in Sec. 411.351 
    to allow payment that is consistent with the general market value of 
    the services; that is, the compensation that would be included in a 
    comparable service agreement, as the result of bona
    
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    fide bargaining between well-informed parties, at the time the 
    agreement takes place.
        If a physician has contracted with an organization for less than 1 
    year, the arrangement could meet the new general exception for 
    compensation arrangements that we have added in Sec. 411.357(l). We 
    have added this new exception to accommodate the many complex 
    arrangements that we believe exist between physicians and entities, as 
    described below in section II.E.1. Also, as described in section 
    II.E.3, we have interpreted the ``volume or value of referrals'' 
    standard (one of the standards in the personal services exception and 
    in many of the compensation-related exceptions) in a manner that we 
    believe will not obstruct physicians who are required to refer for 
    certain services within a network when the entity furnishing the 
    services is at substantial financial risk for their cost. In section 
    IV, in which we answer questions about the law, we present a discussion 
    about physicians who have contracted with HMOs or other prepaid 
    organizations, but who wish to refer fee-for-service patients to the 
    HMO or to other physicians or providers who are affiliated with the 
    HMO.
    
    d. Designated health services furnished under a demonstration project 
    or waiver
    
        We propose to interpret section 1877 in a manner that we believe 
    will allow most Medicare or Medicaid patients to continue to receive 
    designated health services under demonstration projects or waivers. Our 
    analysis of this issue depends upon whether the organization is paid on 
    a prepaid basis under section 1115(a) of the Social Security Act or 
    under one of the demonstration authorities specified in section 
    1877(b)(3)(C).
        Prepaid demonstration contracts. Entities receiving payment on a 
    prepaid basis under section 402(a) of the Social Security Amendments of 
    1967 or section 222 of the Social Security Amendments of 1972, have 
    been exempted from the referral prohibition by section 1877(b)(3)(C). 
    Entities receiving payment on a prepaid basis under a Medicaid 
    demonstration project under section 1115(a) of the Social Security Act 
    would be exempt under the proposed Medicaid analogue, as discussed 
    earlier in this section.
        We would note that the exemption for Medicare prepaid demonstration 
    contractors extends not only to demonstration projects initiated by the 
    Secretary under her discretionary authority in sections 402(a) and 222, 
    but to all demonstrations that incorporate or rely upon section 402 
    authority, including such congressionally-mandated demonstrations as 
    the PACE (``Program for All-inclusive Care for the Elderly'') 
    demonstration projects, under which a public or non-profit entity 
    contracts to provide comprehensive care to frail elderly Medicare 
    beneficiaries, including dual eligibles who have been certified for 
    skilled nursing facility level care, and the ``Social HMO'' (SHMO) 
    demonstration projects, including the ESRD SHMO demonstration.
        Demonstration projects that are not prepaid. If a demonstration 
    project does not involve an organization receiving payments on a 
    prepaid basis, the Medicare ``prepaid'' exception in section 
    1877(b)(3)(C) and the Medicaid analogue we are proposing in this rule 
    would not apply.
        We believe that the referral prohibition applies to services 
    furnished under a demonstration project or waiver that does not qualify 
    under section 1877(b)(3)(C) or the Medicaid prepaid demonstration 
    exception proposed in this rule; however, the Secretary can exercise 
    authority to waive or otherwise alter the requirements in sections 1877 
    or 1903(s). For example, section 402(a) of the Social Security 
    Amendments of 1967 permits the Secretary to conduct demonstrations for 
    a variety of purposes specified in section 402(a)(1)(A) through (K) 
    (for example, to test whether changes in methods of reimbursement and 
    payment for services, or covering additional services, would have the 
    effect of increasing efficiency and economy without adversely affecting 
    quality). Section 402(b) of these amendments permits the Secretary to 
    waive compliance with the requirements of the Medicare statute for such 
    research, insofar as these requirements are related to reimbursement or 
    payment. We have determined that the requirements in section 1877 
    constitute requirements related to reimbursement and payment and thus 
    may be waived for the kind of demonstration project described above, 
    when there are no prepaid payments.
        In the Medicaid context, where a demonstration project does not 
    fall within the general exception proposed in this rule, the Secretary 
    has the authority under section 1115(a)(2) to consider as expenditures 
    under the State plan costs of the demonstration project that would not 
    otherwise be included as expenditures under section 1903, to the extent 
    and for the period prescribed by the Secretary. Hence, section 1115 
    could allow the Secretary to provide to a State the FFP that would 
    otherwise be precluded under section 1903(s).
    
    D. Exceptions That Apply Only to Ownership or Investment Interests
    
    1. Exception for Ownership in Publicly Traded Securities
        To qualify for the securities exception under section 1877(c)(1), 
    the statute originally required that a physician's or family member's 
    investment had to be in securities ``which were purchased on terms 
    generally available to the public * * *.'' (Emphasis added.) OBRA '93 
    amended this provision to require that the securities be those ``which 
    may be purchased on terms generally available to the public.'' 
    (Emphasis added.) This amendment went into effect retroactively to 
    January 1, 1992, and is reflected in the August 1995 final rule. We did 
    not, however, interpret this change in the final rule.
        We believe the purpose of this exception is to allow physicians or 
    family members to acquire stock in large companies if the transaction 
    does not particularly favor the physicians over other purchasers. In 
    keeping with this purpose, we propose to interpret ``may be purchased'' 
    to mean that, at the time the physician or family member obtained the 
    securities, they could be purchased on the open market, even if the 
    physician or family member did not actually purchase the securities on 
    those terms. For example, the physician or family member may have 
    inherited the securities or otherwise acquired them without actually 
    purchasing them. We have reflected this interpretation in 
    Sec. 411.356(a).
        Section 1877(c)(1) also requires that the securities be in a 
    corporation that had, at the end of the corporation's most recent 
    fiscal year, or on average during the previous 3 fiscal years, 
    stockholder equity exceeding $75,000,000. In proposed 411.356(a)(2), we 
    define stockholder equity as the difference in value between a 
    corporation's total assets and total liabilities.
    2. Exception for Hospital Ownership
        Section 1877(d)(3) excepts designated health services ``provided by 
    a hospital'' (other than a hospital located in Puerto Rico) if the 
    referring physician is authorized to perform services at the hospital, 
    and the ownership or investment interest is in the hospital itself (and 
    not merely in a subdivision of the hospital). We believe that this 
    exception applies only to designated health services that are furnished 
    by a hospital, and not to services furnished by any other health care 
    providers the hospital owns, such as a hospital-owned home health 
    agency or SNF. It is our view that services ``provided by a hospital'' 
    corresponds only to those
    
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    services provided by an entity that qualifies as a ``hospital'' under 
    the Medicare conditions of participation. We further believe that 
    section 1877(d)(3) covers any ``designated health services'' provided 
    by a hospital, rather than just ``inpatient or outpatient hospital 
    services,'' because hospitals can provide services to individuals who 
    are neither inpatients nor outpatients (for example, they provide 
    laboratory services to outside patients).
    
    E. Exceptions That Apply Only to Compensation Arrangements
    
    1. A new exception for all compensation arrangements that meet certain 
    standards
        Section 1877 of the Act contains a number of exceptions to the 
    referral prohibition that apply only to compensation arrangements. 
    Section 1877(e) contains eight exceptions to the referral prohibition 
    based specifically on various kinds of compensation arrangements, and 
    these are reflected in Sec. 411.357 of the August 1995 final rule. If a 
    physician's (or family member's) arrangement with an entity falls 
    within one of the categories covered by these exceptions, and the 
    arrangement meets the specific criteria listed for that category, the 
    physician is not prohibited from making referrals to the entity.
        It has come to our attention that the statutory categories, because 
    of their specificity, do not encompass some compensation arrangements 
    even though they may be common in the provider community, are based on 
    fair market value or are otherwise commercially reasonable, and do not 
    reflect the volume or value of a physician's referrals. For example, a 
    physician can continue to make referrals to an entity under section 
    1877(e)(8)(B) even if the physician purchases items from the entity, 
    provided the items are furnished at fair market value. On the other 
    hand, the law does not exempt from the referral prohibition situations 
    in which entities purchase items from a physician, even if the purchase 
    price is comparably fair.
        In light of the increase in recent years of integrated delivery 
    systems, and the complex nature of financial arrangements between 
    physicians and entities, it is our view that any compensation 
    arrangements that are based on fair value, and that meet certain other 
    criteria, should be excepted. Therefore, we are proposing to establish 
    a new paragraph (l) in Sec. 431.357 to provide an additional exception 
    for compensation arrangements under the authority of section 
    1877(b)(4). This provision allows the Secretary to establish exceptions 
    for any other financial relationship that she determines, and specifies 
    in regulations, does not pose a risk of program or patient abuse. To 
    meet this requirement, we are proposing an exception for any 
    compensation arrangement between a physician (or immediate family 
    member), or any group of physicians (even if the group does not qualify 
    as a group practice) and an entity, provided the arrangement meets the 
    following criteria, which we believe by their terms will prevent 
    program or patient abuse. The arrangement must--
         Be in writing, be signed by the parties, and cover only 
    identifiable items or services, all of which are specified in the 
    agreement;
         Cover all of the items and services to be provided by the 
    physician or immediate family member to the entity or, alternatively, 
    cross refer to any other agreements for items or services between any 
    of these parties.
         Specify the timeframe for the arrangement, which can be 
    for any period of time and contain a termination clause, provided the 
    parties enter into only one arrangement covering the same items or 
    services during the course of a year. An arrangement made for less than 
    1 year may be renewed any number of times if the terms of the 
    arrangement and the compensation for the same items or services do not 
    change;
         Specify the compensation that will be provided under the 
    arrangement, which has been set in advance. The compensation must be 
    consistent with fair market value and not be determined in a manner 
    that takes into account the volume or value of any referrals (as 
    defined in Sec. 411.351), payments for referrals for medical services 
    that are not covered under Medicare or Medicaid, or other business 
    generated between the parties;
         Involve a transaction that is commercially reasonable and 
    furthers the legitimate business purposes of the parties; and
         Meet a safe harbor under the anti-kickback statute or 
    otherwise be in compliance with the anti-kickback provisions in section 
    1128B(b) of the Act.
        We would advise the parties involved in a compensation arrangement 
    to use this exception if they have any doubts about whether they meet 
    the requirements in the other exceptions listed in Sec. 411.357.
    2. A new exception for certain forms of ``de minimis'' compensation
        We are aware that there are a number of situations in which 
    physicians or their immediate family members receive compensation in 
    the form of incidental benefits that are not part of a formal, written 
    agreement. For example, a physician might receive free samples of 
    certain drugs or chemicals from a laboratory, training sessions for his 
    or her staff before entering into an agreement with a facility that 
    furnishes a designated health service, or training sessions that are 
    not considered part of the agreement. Also, a provider might furnish a 
    physician with free coffee mugs or note pads. We are exercising our 
    authority under section 1877(b)(4) to create a new exception that we 
    believe will allow physicians or their family members to receive de 
    minimis amounts of compensation, without a risk that the compensation 
    will result in any Medicare program or patient abuse.
        We have drafted the exception, which would appear at 
    Sec. 411.357(k), to apply to noncash items or services. Items cannot 
    include cash equivalents, such as gift certificates, stocks or bonds, 
    or airline frequent flier miles. We propose to limit the exception to a 
    value of $50 per gift, with a $300 per year aggregate. This exception 
    would apply only in situations in which the entity providing the 
    compensation makes it available to all similarly situated individuals, 
    regardless of whether these individuals refer patients to the entity 
    for services. In addition, any compensation a physician or family 
    member receives from an entity cannot be based in any way on the volume 
    or value of the physician's referrals. We believe the criteria for this 
    exception, by their terms, will prevent patient or program abuse.
    3. The ``volume or value of referrals'' standard
        Most of the exceptions in the law covering specific kinds of 
    compensation arrangements state that the compensation involved cannot 
    reflect the volume or value of any referrals. (We have included a 
    similar standard in the two new compensation exceptions described 
    above.) We are applying our interpretation of that standard as it 
    appears in section III.A.6 under our discussion of the criteria a group 
    of physicians must meet to qualify as a ``group practice.'' In that 
    section, we describe what constitutes a ``referral'' for purposes of 
    the ``volume or value'' standard.
        The volume or value of referrals standard appears in the exceptions 
    for the rental of space or equipment, bona fide employment 
    relationships, personal services arrangements, physician recruitment, 
    isolated transactions, and group practice arrangements with a
    
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    hospital. It also appears in the definition of ``remuneration,'' which 
    excepts certain payments made by an insurer or self-insured plan to a 
    physician to satisfy a claim, and in the definition of a group 
    practice. The exceptions for the rental of office space, rental of 
    equipment, personal service arrangements, and group practice 
    arrangements with a hospital also state that the compensation cannot 
    reflect, directly or indirectly, the volume or value of referrals or 
    any other business generated between the parties.
        It is our view that Congress intended to except arrangements in 
    which a physician or family member receives fair market compensation 
    for providing a particular item or service. We believe Congress may not 
    have wished to except arrangements that include additional compensation 
    for other business dealings. We also believe that it would be 
    administratively difficult for us to sort out, from a particular 
    business arrangement, different strands of payment that are meant to 
    compensate an individual for things other than the items or services 
    that qualify for the exception. In sum, we believe that the ``or other 
    business generated between the parties'' merely clarifies this concept.
        As a result of this analysis, we are proposing to interpret the 
    ``volume or value'' standard that appears in the compensation 
    exceptions and elsewhere as a standard that uniformly is meant to cover 
    (and thus exclude from an exception) other business generated between 
    the parties. We are doing so under our authority, in each of the 
    compensation exceptions and under the definitions, to add other 
    requirements that we may impose by regulation as needed to protect 
    against patient and program abuse. If a party's compensation contains 
    payment for other business generated between the parties, we would 
    expect the parties to separately determine if this extra payment falls 
    within one of the exceptions.
        The volume or value standard also varies from exception to 
    exception in terms of simply precluding compensation that takes into 
    account the volume or value of referrals, as opposed to not taking into 
    account, directly or indirectly, the volume or value of referrals. We 
    regard these provisions as essentially equivalent, since we believe not 
    accounting for referrals can be interpreted as not accounting for them 
    in any way.
        We have been asked whether an arrangement fails to meet the 
    ``volume or value'' of referrals standard only in situations in which a 
    physician's payments from an entity fluctuate in a manner that reflects 
    referrals. It is our view that an arrangement can also fail to meet 
    this standard in some cases when a physician's payments from an entity 
    are stable, but predicated, either expressly or otherwise, on the 
    physician making referrals to a particular provider. For example, a 
    hospital might include as a condition of a physician's employment the 
    requirement that the physician refer only within the hospital's own 
    network of ancillary service providers, such as to the hospital's own 
    home health agency. We believe that in these situations, a physician's 
    compensation reflects the volume or value of his or her referrals in 
    the sense that the physician will receive no future compensation if he 
    or she fails to refer as required.
        However, we do not intend to include, in this interpretation, 
    situations in which physicians are not required to refer within the 
    entity's network, but choose to on their own. Nor do we believe the 
    volume or value standard is violated in those situations in which 
    physicians refer patients within a network at the patients' own 
    request, rather than under an entity's mandate, even if the entity has 
    encouraged patients to remain within the network through various 
    incentives.
        In addition, we do not believe that an arrangement affects the 
    volume or value standard for any designated health services a physician 
    is required to refer within a network, provided the entity itself is, 
    through a risk sharing arrangement, at substantial financial risk for 
    the cost or utilization of items or services that the entity is 
    obligated to provide. In these situations, we believe the requirement 
    that a physician refer within the network addresses the issue of where 
    a physician must refer, rather than whether the physician is encouraged 
    or discouraged from making a referral (resulting in under or 
    overutilization).
    4. The commercial reasonableness standard
        A number of the compensation-related exceptions in section 1877(e) 
    include the requirement that remuneration provided under an agreement 
    ``would be commercially reasonable'' even if no referrals were made 
    between the parties. We are interpreting ``commercially reasonable'' to 
    mean that an arrangement appears to be a sensible, prudent business 
    agreement, from the perspective of the particular parties involved, 
    even in the absence of any potential referrals.
    5. The Secretary's authority to create additional requirements
        Several of the statutory exceptions (particularly the compensation-
    related exceptions) permit the Secretary to impose additional 
    conditions if the conditions are needed to protect against program or 
    patient abuse. In promulgating these regulations, the Secretary has 
    taken into account the fact that many of the excepted arrangements are 
    also subject to the Medicare and Medicaid anti-kickback statute. The 
    Secretary believes that the proposed regulatory exceptions, in 
    conjunction with the independent requirements of the anti-kickback 
    statute, are such that in most cases no additional conditions are 
    necessary at this time to protect against program or patient abuse (we 
    have included in this proposed regulation several specific new 
    requirements that we believe are necessary). However, with respect to 
    those exceptions for which the Secretary has authority to impose 
    additional requirements, the Secretary invites comments from interested 
    parties on whether additional conditions are necessary and if so, what 
    conditions would be appropriate.
    6. Exception for bona fide employment relationships
        Section 1877(e)(2) excepts from a ``compensation arrangement'' any 
    amount paid by an employer to a physician (or immediate family member) 
    who has a bona fide employment relationship for the provision of 
    services if the employment arrangement meets certain standards (these 
    appear in Sec. 411.357(c)). One standard specifies that remuneration 
    under the employment cannot be determined in a manner that takes into 
    account (directly or indirectly) the volume or value of referrals by 
    the referring physician. Nonetheless, this exception specifically 
    allows remuneration in the form of a productivity bonus based on 
    services performed personally by the physician or an immediate family 
    member. Thus, under the terms of the statute, physician or family 
    member employees can receive payments based on any work they actually 
    personally perform, including designated health services that a 
    physician refers to him or herself. Under such a scheme, the more a 
    physician self-refers, the more profit he or she will make.
        Because we regard this provision as an open-ended invitation for 
    physicians to generate self-referrals for designated health services, 
    we are proposing to equalize this provision with the one
    
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    allowing productivity bonuses under the definition of a group practice 
    in section 1877(h)(4)(B)(i). This provision allows group practices to 
    pay members a productivity bonus only if the bonus is not directly 
    related to the volume or value of a physician's own referrals. We are 
    equalizing the provisions in this regard under the authority in section 
    1877(e)(2)(D), which allows the Secretary to impose by regulation other 
    requirements as are needed to protect against patient or program abuse. 
    Without this change, we believe that physicians have an incentive to 
    overutilize designated health services, since they can be compensated 
    directly for every self referral they make.
        We would like to point out that because we have interpreted the 
    concept of a ``referral'' to involve only a physician's requests for 
    designated health services covered under Medicare or Medicaid, the new 
    requirement will in no way affect a physician's ability to receive a 
    productivity bonus for any nondesignated health services or noncovered 
    services he or she refers or performs, or designated health services 
    referred by another physician.
        The bona fide employment exception does not, by its terms, allow 
    for indirect compensation based on profit sharing and productivity 
    bonuses for a physician's ``incident to'' services. The group practice 
    definition does allow for such compensation. We do not believe that we 
    can equalize the provisions in this regard, since it is our view that 
    there are situations in which compensating a physician even indirectly 
    for his or her self referrals could encourage overutilization and 
    abuse.
    7. Exception for personal services arrangements
        Section 1877(e)(3) excepts from the referral prohibition situations 
    involving remuneration from an entity under a personal services 
    arrangement if certain criteria are met. The statute does not specify 
    to whom the remuneration must be paid or for what kinds of services, 
    although we believe the services must be ``personal services.''
        One of the criteria for this exception requires that the 
    arrangement cover all of the services to be furnished to the entity by 
    the referring physician or an immediate family member of the physician. 
    Therefore, we are interpreting this exception as covering services 
    furnished by these individuals. We believe there is nothing in the 
    statute to preclude a physician or family member from having personal 
    services arrangements with several entities. (For example, a physician 
    might have a contract to serve as a hospital's medical director and 
    another contract with an unrelated group practice to perform surgery.) 
    However, the statute does appear to require, in section 
    1877(e)(3)(A)(ii), that an excepted arrangement with one entity cover 
    all of the services to be provided by the physician (or family member) 
    to that entity.
        We are aware that at times it will not be logical for all of a 
    physician's or family member's contracts for personal services to be in 
    one agreement. However, we are also aware that entities have used 
    multiple contracts, at times, in devising schemes to reward physicians 
    for their referrals. In order to provide physicians and entities with 
    more flexibility than the statutory requirement that all services 
    appear in one agreement, we propose to allow multiple agreements, 
    provided that the agreements each meet all of the requirements 
    described in section 1877(e)(3) and all separate agreements between the 
    entity and the physician and the entity and any family members 
    incorporate each other by reference. We base our proposal on section 
    1877(b)(4), which allows the Secretary to specify, in regulations, an 
    exception for any other financial relationship that she determines does 
    not pose a risk of patient or program abuse. In this case, because all 
    excepted agreements will be subject to the fair market value and other 
    standards, and because each agreement will make us aware of all other 
    agreements, we see no potential risk for abuse.
        It is our view that ``personal services'' are not simply the 
    generic Medicare services (which are defined in Sec. 400.202 to include 
    ``items'') but are services of any kind performed personally by an 
    individual for an entity (but not including any items or equipment). We 
    are using the broader, more common notion of what constitutes a 
    ``service'' based on the fact that all kinds of business relationships 
    can trigger the referral prohibition; hence, the exception should be 
    read to apply to business-oriented services in general.
        We are also interpreting the exception to mean that the physician 
    or family member can actually perform the services, or that these 
    individuals can enter into an agreement to provide the services through 
    technicians or others whom they employ. A physician or family member 
    cannot, though, include equipment or other items as part of an excepted 
    personal services arrangement. For example, if a hospital contracts 
    with a nephrologist to provide dialysis services to its patients, the 
    physician could have a personal services arrangement with the hospital 
    even if the dialysis services are actually furnished by technicians 
    whom the physician employs. However, if the physician also provides 
    dialysis equipment to the hospital, this arrangement would have to 
    separately meet the exception for the rental of equipment in section 
    1877(e)(1), since we do not regard items or equipment as ``personal 
    services.''
        The personal services exception specifies that compensation under 
    an arrangement cannot be determined in a manner that takes into account 
    the volume or value of any referrals or other business generated 
    between the parties. However, this requirement is qualified to allow 
    compensation to reflect these under certain situations in which there 
    is a physician incentive plan between a physician and an entity. We 
    would like to emphasize that the physician incentive plan aspect of 
    section 1877(e)(3) applies only in the context of personal services 
    arrangements, and not to any other compensation arrangements.
        ``Physician incentive plans'' are defined in section 
    1877(e)(3)(B)(ii) as certain compensation arrangements between an 
    entity and a physician or physician group. We have defined a physician 
    group for purposes of the physician incentive rules more broadly than a 
    group practice under section 1877, so that a group practice is a subset 
    of physician groups. (A final rule with comment period governing 
    physician incentive plans was published on March 27, 1996, at 61 FR 
    13430. This rule was amended on December 31, 1996, at 61 FR 69034.)
        A physician incentive plan is any compensation arrangement between 
    an entity and a physician or physician group that may directly or 
    indirectly have the effect of reducing or limiting services provided 
    with respect to individuals enrolled with the entity. We believe that 
    the incentive plan qualification applies only when the entity paying 
    the physician or physician group is the kind of entity that enrolls its 
    patients, such as a health maintenance organization. Section 
    1877(b)(3), the exception for prepaid plans, does exempt from the 
    referral prohibition almost all designated health services provided by 
    these entities to Medicare patients who are enrollees. In addition, 
    this regulation proposes to exempt services provided to Medicaid 
    patients by analogous kinds of entities (see our discussion of this 
    issue earlier in this preamble). Nonetheless, the personal services 
    exception, with its physician incentive aspect, is still a viable 
    exception. This exception could
    
    [[Page 1702]]
    
    apply, for example, to situations in which a physician refers a fee for 
    service patient covered under Medicare to an HMO when he or she also 
    has a contract to provide services to the HMO's enrollees. The 
    physician's contract with the HMO is an underlying financial 
    relationship and, in order for the physician to refer fee-for-service 
    patients to the HMO, the financial relationship must meet an exception. 
    In order to qualify for the personal services exception, the 
    physician's payments from the HMO for treating HMO enrollees cannot 
    vary with the volume or value of his or her referrals, except under a 
    physician incentive plan, as described in section 1877(e)(3)(B).
        The personal services exception in section 1877(e)(3) as a whole is 
    silent about to whom an entity must be paying remuneration or with whom 
    it must have an arrangement. As a result, we are interpreting the 
    personal services exception to apply to situations in which an entity 
    has an arrangement with either an individual physician (or family 
    member) or a group practice to provide personal services. For example, 
    a hospital could use the exception if it contracts with a group 
    practice for purposes of having group members serve as the hospital's 
    staff.
    8. Exception for remuneration unrelated to the provision of designated 
    health services
        Section 1877(e)(4) provides for an exception for remuneration that 
    is provided by a hospital to a physician if the remuneration does not 
    relate to the provision of designated health services. (As we have 
    noted earlier in this preamble, this exception does not apply to 
    remuneration from entities other than hospitals, nor does it apply to 
    payments to a physician's family members.) We are interpreting this 
    provision to except any remuneration that is completely unrelated to 
    the furnishing of designated health services. By this we mean that the 
    parties must be able to demonstrate that the remuneration does not in 
    any direct or indirect way involve these services, and that the 
    remuneration in no way reflects the volume or value of a physician's 
    referrals for designated health services. If a physician is receiving 
    payments from a hospital that appear to be inordinately high for an 
    ``unrelated'' item or service and is also making referrals to the 
    hospital for designated health services, we will presume that the 
    overpayments relate to the designated health services because they 
    reflect the volume or value of the physician's referrals.
        On the other hand, we realize there can be situations in which a 
    hospital's payments are completely unrelated to the provision of 
    designated health services. For example, a teaching hospital might pay 
    a physician rental payments for his or her house in order to use the 
    house as a residence for a visiting faculty member. If the parties 
    involved can demonstrate that the rental payments are based on fair 
    market value and in no way reflect the physician owner's referrals to 
    the hospital, we believe this exception would apply. Similarly a 
    physician might receive compensation for teaching or for providing an 
    entity with general utilization review or administrative services.
        We do not intend to apply this exception in any situation involving 
    remuneration that might have a nexus with the provision of, or 
    referrals for, a designated health service. For example, if a hospital 
    pays a physician to supply a heart valve that the physician has 
    perfected, we believe that the exception does not apply. It is our 
    position that the physician is receiving payment for an item that will 
    likely be used by the hospital in furnishing inpatient hospital 
    services, which are a designated health service. Similarly, if a 
    hospital pays for a physician's malpractice insurance or other general 
    costs to enable the physician to provide a designated health service, 
    such as radiology, the payments are related to furnishing a designated 
    health service. Nonetheless, these financial relationships could still 
    be excepted under one of the statutory exceptions or under the new 
    exception we would include in Sec. 431.357(l), which covers any 
    compensation arrangement that meets certain criteria.
    9. Exception for a hospital's payments for physician recruitment
        Section 1877(e)(5) includes an exception for remuneration provided 
    by a hospital to an individual physician to induce the physician to 
    relocate to the geographic area served by the hospital in order to be a 
    member of the medical staff of the hospital. We believe that the terms 
    of the statute dictate that this exception applies just to those 
    situations in which a physician resides outside the geographic area and 
    must actually relocate in order to join the hospital's staff.
        We considered a number of ways to define the concept of a 
    hospital's ``geographic area,'' including mileage requirements or the 
    likelihood that the physician would be able to bring patients along 
    when he or she relocates. Because we believe that what constitutes a 
    hospital's ``geographic area'' may depend on a variety of 
    circumstances, we are specifically soliciting comments on how to define 
    this term.
        If a hospital makes recruitment payments to physicians who are 
    living in the hospital's geographic area (for example, to retain 
    residents) or to a group practice that intends to employ the physician 
    and contracts with the hospital, these payments might be excepted under 
    the new compensation-related exception that we have included in 
    Sec. 431.357(l).
    10. Exception for certain group practice arrangements with a hospital
        Under section 1877(e)(7), this exception applies to only a limited 
    number of arrangements; that is, arrangements that began before 
    December 19, 1989, and have continued in effect without interruption 
    since that date. We are interpreting this provision to mean that the 
    arrangement between the hospital and the specific group practice must 
    have been in effect within the timeframe specified in the statute. 
    However, we realize that most agreements do not remain static over 
    time. As a result, it is our view that this criterion may still be met, 
    even if the agreement between the parties has changed over time so that 
    it covers different services or so that the services are provided by 
    different individuals within the same group practice.
        We also intend in this provision to make an editorial change that 
    we believe removes an ambiguity in the statutory language. Existing 
    Sec. 411.357(h)(2) states ``[t]he arrangement began before December 19, 
    1989, and has continued in effect without interruption since then.'' 
    Upon closer consideration, we believe that ``since then'' is ambiguous. 
    (Does it mean since the actual date before December 19, 1989 on which 
    the arrangement began, or does it mean since December 19, 1989?) We 
    believe that by revising this provision to read ``[t]he arrangement 
    began before, and has continued in effect without interruption since, 
    December 19, 1989,'' we have provided a reasonable interpretation that 
    removes this ambiguity.
        Section 1877(e)(7)(A)(ii) requires that, with respect to the 
    designated health services covered under the arrangement, substantially 
    all of the services furnished to patients of the hospital are furnished 
    by the group under the arrangement. We believe this standard means that 
    whatever portion of a particular designated health service the 
    agreement covers, the group must actually provide ``substantially all'' 
    of that portion. For example, if the group
    
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    has agreed to provide 35 percent of a hospital's laboratory services, 
    the group must actually provide a substantial part of this percentage.
        In keeping with our interpretation of the term ``substantially 
    all'' in other parts of section 1877, we are interpreting that term 
    here as being 75 percent of all the services at issue.
    11. Exception for payments by a physician for items and services
        Section 1877(e)(8) excepts payments that a physician makes to a 
    laboratory in exchange for clinical laboratory services (we have 
    discussed this provision in some detail in section III.A.8 of this 
    preamble). In addition, the statute excepts payments that a physician 
    makes to any entity for other items or services if these are furnished 
    at fair market value. We are proposing to interpret ``other items or 
    services'' to mean any kinds of items or services that a physician 
    might purchase, but not including clinical laboratory services or those 
    specifically listed under the other compensation exceptions. For 
    example, we do not believe that Congress meant for the ``items or 
    services'' exception to cover a rental agreement as a service that a 
    physician might purchase, when it has already included in the statute a 
    specific rental exception, with specific standards, in section 
    1877(e)(1).
    
    F. The Reporting Requirements
    
    1. Which financial relationships must be reported
        Under section 1877(f), each entity providing Medicare-covered 
    services must provide the Secretary with information concerning the 
    entity's ownership, investment, and compensation arrangements, 
    including the names and UPINs (unique physician identification numbers) 
    of all physicians with an ownership or investment interest (as 
    described in section 1877(a)(2)(A)) in the entity or with a 
    compensation arrangement (as described in section 1877(a)(2)(B)) with 
    the entity, or whose immediate relatives have such a relationship. The 
    information must be provided in such form, manner, and at such times as 
    the Secretary specifies.
        Section 411.361 currently states that entities must submit the 
    required information on a HCFA-prescribed form within the time period 
    specified by the servicing carrier or intermediary. Entities are given 
    at least 30 days from the date of the request to provide the 
    information. Thereafter, entities must provide updated information 
    within 60 days from the date of any change in the submitted 
    information.
        At this time, we are still developing a procedure for implementing 
    the reporting requirements and plan to notify affected parties about 
    the procedure at a later date. Until that time, physicians and entities 
    are not required to report to us. In addition, we are aware that the 60 
    day timeframe for updated information could be onerous, especially for 
    large entities that must collect information about their employees, 
    owners, and contractors and who would then have to update that 
    information approximately every two months. As a result, we are 
    proposing to modify Sec. 411.361 to require that entities report to us 
    once a year on all of the changes that have occurred in the previous 12 
    months.
        Under the reporting regulation in Sec. 411.361(d), a ``reportable 
    financial relationship'' is any ownership or investment interest or any 
    compensation arrangement, as described in section 1877 of the Act. 
    Under section 1877(a)(2), a financial relationship of a physician (or 
    family member) with an entity is defined as an ownership or investment 
    interest in the entity, except as provided in subsections (c) and (d), 
    or a compensation arrangement between the physician (or family member) 
    and the entity, except as provided in subsection (e). Subsections (c) 
    and (d) contain lists of ownership interests that ``shall not be 
    considered to be an ownership or investment interest described in 
    subsection (a)(2)(A).'' Subsection (e) contains a list of arrangements 
    that are not to be considered as ``compensation arrangements described 
    in (a)(2)(B).'' Thus, entities must only report their ownership or 
    investment interests, or compensation arrangements, if these 
    relationships do not meet the exceptions in subsections (c), (d), or 
    (e) of section 1877. However, if an entity's financial relationship is 
    excepted under subsection (b) of section 1877 (which contains 
    exceptions for physician services, in-office ancillary services, 
    services furnished under certain prepaid plans, or other new exceptions 
    included by the Secretary) the entity must still report.
        As the rule reads now, an entity can decide that it is excepted 
    under (c), (d), or (e) and not report any data. As a result, we will 
    have no opportunity to scrutinize the entity's arrangements to see if 
    its assessment is correct. We believe that the statute allows us to 
    gather a broader scope of data. We base this interpretation on the 
    opening paragraph in section 1877(f), which states that each entity 
    providing any covered items or services for which payment may be made 
    under Medicare shall provide the Secretary ``with the information'' 
    concerning the entity's ownership, investment, and compensation 
    arrangements, including the names and UPINs of all physicians with an 
    ownership interest (as described in (a)(2)(A)), or with a compensation 
    arrangement (as described in (a)(2)(B)). Thus, we believe the statute 
    allows us to gather any data on financial relationships, including,  
    but not necessarily limited to, relationships for which there are no 
    exceptions under (a)(2)(A) or (B). Therefore, we are proposing to amend 
    the rule, at Sec. 411.361(d), to reflect our authority to ask for a 
    broader scope of information than the regulation currently allows.
        A number of entities have pointed out to us that the amounts of 
    data they are required to report under the statute will, in some 
    circumstances, be overwhelming and perhaps almost impossible to 
    acquire. In addition, if we require every entity that is subject to the 
    referral rules to report on every financial relationship, excepted or 
    not, the administrative burden could be enormous. For example, a large 
    publicly-held enterprise would be required to report (and hence retain 
    records documenting) all of its owners who are physicians, all owners 
    who are relatives of physicians, all physicians with whom it has 
    compensation arrangements of any kind, and all relatives of physicians 
    with whom it has compensation arrangements.
        A publicly traded corporation with thousands of stockholders may 
    find it extremely difficult to identify all of its owners and their 
    relatives, and to identify which of these owners and relatives are 
    physicians. In addition, such a corporation could be owned by mutual 
    funds which in turn have hundreds of thousands of additional owners, 
    some of whom may be physicians or have relatives who are physicians. In 
    order to make the reporting requirements more manageable, we intend to 
    develop a streamlined ``reporting'' system that does not require 
    entities to retain and submit large quantities of data. However, we 
    believe that entities should retain enough records to demonstrate, in 
    the event of an audit, that they have correctly determined that 
    particular relationships are excepted under the law.
        We are proposing to limit the information that an entity must 
    acquire, retain and, at some later point, possibly submit to us. We 
    would include only those records covering information that the entity 
    knows or should know about, in the course of prudently conducting 
    business, including records that the
    
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    entity is already required to retain to meet Internal Revenue Service 
    and Securities and Exchange Commission rules, and other rules under the 
    Medicare or Medicaid programs. We are circumscribing these records 
    under the Secretary's discretion in section 1877(f) to ask entities to 
    provide information in such form, manner, and at such times as the 
    Secretary specifies. When we develop a form for reporting information 
    to us, we plan to first publish it as a proposed notice in order to 
    receive public comment. If we later find that this plan is inadequate 
    and elect to change the scope of the requirement, we will provide 
    entities with adequate notice to comply. We specifically solicit 
    comments on this proposal.
    2. What entities outside the United States must report
        Section 1877(f) states that the reporting requirements do not apply 
    to designated health services furnished outside the United States. The 
    reporting requirements in general apply to each entity furnishing 
    services covered under Medicare, and not just to those furnishing 
    designated health services. Arguably, then, the statute relieves an 
    entity from the reporting requirements involved when it furnishes 
    designated health services, but not when it furnishes other covered 
    services. Because we believe that referrals for designated health 
    services are the focus of section 1877, and because Medicare covers 
    only a limited number of services when they are furnished outside of 
    the United States, we are interpreting section 1877(f) to relieve an 
    entity from reporting any Medicare services it has furnished outside of 
    the United States.
    
    G. How the Referral Prohibition Applies to the Medicaid Program
    
    1. Who qualifies as a ``physician'' for purposes of section 1903(s)
        Under the Medicare definition of ``physician'' in section 1861(r), 
    paragraphs (r)(1) through (r)(5) cover a doctor of medicine or 
    osteopathy, a doctor of dental surgery or of dental medicine, a doctor 
    of podiatric medicine, a doctor of optometry, and a chiropractor. Under 
    the Medicaid statute in section 1905(a)(5)(A), physician services are 
    those furnished by a physician as defined in section 1861(r)(1), which 
    covers only a doctor of medicine or osteopathy.
        In determining whether an individual is a ``physician'' for 
    purposes of section 1903(s), we believe that it is the Medicare 
    definition that would apply. That is because this provision prohibits 
    the Secretary from paying FFP to a State for services that result from 
    a referral for a designated health service that would be prohibited 
    under Medicare if Medicare covered the service in the same way (to the 
    same extent and under the same terms and conditions) as under the State 
    plan. A referral by any of the ``physicians'' listed in section 1861(r) 
    could result in a prohibited referral under Medicare.
        We believe that a physician is still a physician for purposes of 
    section 1903(s), even if he or she does not participate in the Medicaid 
    program. For example, a provider of designated health services may 
    participate in and bill Medicaid when the referring physician, who has 
    an interest in the entity, does not participate. The rules in section 
    1877 apply to services furnished under Medicaid in the same manner as 
    they would apply if furnished under Medicare. As a general rule under 
    section 1877(a)(1), if a physician (or immediate family member) has a 
    financial relationship with an entity, then the physician may not make 
    a referral to the entity to furnish designated health services for 
    which payment may otherwise be made under Medicare. This provision 
    appears to apply to all physicians, regardless of whether they 
    participate in either the Medicare or Medicaid programs, as long as the 
    services involved are covered services under Medicare or Medicaid.
    2. How the referral prohibition and sanctions affect Medicaid providers
        Absent an exception, section 1877(a)(1) in general prohibits a 
    physician from making a referral to an entity with which he or she has 
    a financial relationship for the furnishing of a designated health 
    service covered under Medicare. The entity, in turn, may not present a 
    claim to Medicare or bill any other individual or entity for the 
    service furnished as the result of a prohibited referral. If physicians 
    or entities violate these rules, they are subject to certain sanctions 
    under section 1877(g). However, we do not believe these rules and 
    sanctions apply to physicians and providers when the referral involves 
    Medicaid services. The first part of section 1903(s) prohibits the 
    Secretary from paying FFP to a State for designated health services 
    furnished on the basis of a referral that would result in a denial of 
    payment under Medicare if Medicare covered the services in the same way 
    as the State plan. This part of the provision is strictly an FFP 
    provision. It imposes a requirement on the Secretary to review a 
    Medicaid claim, as if it were under Medicare, and deny FFP if a 
    referral would result in the denial of payment under Medicare. Section 
    1903(s) does not, for the most part, make the provisions in section 
    1877 that govern the actions of Medicare physicians and providers of 
    designated health services apply directly to Medicaid physicians and 
    providers. As such, these individuals and entities are not precluded 
    from referring Medicaid patients or from billing for designated health 
    services. A State may pay for these services, but cannot receive FFP 
    for them. However, States are free to establish their own sanctions for 
    situations in which physicians refer to related entities.
    3. How the referral rules apply when Medicaid-covered designated health 
    services differ from the services covered under Medicare
        The statute specifically provides that a State cannot receive FFP 
    for a designated health service if it is furnished to an individual on 
    the basis of a referral that would result in a denial of payment for 
    the service under Medicare if Medicare covered the services to the same 
    extent and under the same terms and conditions as under the State plan. 
    We believe this means that Congress was aware of differences in the two 
    programs and specifically intended to cover under section 1877 
    designated health services as they are covered under a State's Medicaid 
    plan whenever this coverage differs from coverage under Medicare.
    4. How the reporting requirements apply under the Medicaid program
        Section 1903(s) states that subsections (f) and (g)(5) of section 
    1877 shall apply to a provider of Medicaid-covered designated health 
    services in the same manner as these subsections apply to a provider of 
    Medicare-covered designated health services. Section 1877(f) requires 
    that each entity providing Medicare-covered items or services must 
    provide the Secretary with certain information about the entity's 
    ownership, investment, and compensation arrangements. The information 
    must include the covered items and services the entity provides, and 
    the names and UPINs of all physicians who have (or whose immediate 
    relatives have) an ownership or investment interest in or compensation 
    arrangement with the entity. These requirements do not apply to 
    designated health services furnished outside of the United States, or 
    to entities the Secretary determines furnish Medicare-covered services 
    infrequently.
        Section 1903(s) could be read to mean that section 1877(f) must 
    apply identically to Medicare and Medicaid providers, so that Medicaid 
    entities
    
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    must furnish information to the Secretary (that is, to HCFA). However, 
    we are taking the position that the provision allows us to require that 
    entities report directly to the States. Section 1903(s) provides that 
    section 1877(f) applies ``in the same manner'' in the Medicaid program 
    as it does in Medicare. In Medicare, the reports are made to the 
    Secretary, the official who is responsible for making payment under 
    Medicare. ``In the same manner,'' in the context of the Medicaid 
    program, would mean that the reports would be made to the entity that 
    makes payment; that is, the State, thus maintaining a symmetry between 
    reporting in the two programs.
        We have taken this position because, under section 1903(s), it is 
    the States that are at risk of losing FFP for paying improper claims 
    for designated health services submitted by entities that have 
    financial relationships with physicians. Therefore, in order to ensure 
    that FFP will be available, States must determine whether a physician 
    has a financial relationship with an entity that would prohibit 
    referrals under Medicare. Our interpretation will allow States to 
    protect themselves and to avoid any duplication of effort with HCFA.
        We are amending the regulations to create a new Subpart C, 
    ``Disclosure of Information by Providers for Purposes of the 
    Prohibition on Certain Physician Referrals.'' In Sec. 455.108, 
    ``Basis,'' we state that, based on section 1903(s), we are applying the 
    reporting requirements of section 1877(f) and (g) to Medicaid providers 
    of designated health services. Section 455.109(a) would state that the 
    Medicaid agency must require that each entity that furnishes designated 
    health services submit information to the Medicaid agency concerning 
    its financial relationships, in such form, manner, and at such times as 
    the agency specifies. Although the statute requires that entities 
    submit information to the Secretary, we believe that the State should 
    receive this information in the Medicaid context, in order to help 
    States ensure that they will receive FFP.
        Section 455.109(b) would specify that the requirements of 
    Sec. 455.109(a) do not apply to entities that provide 20 or fewer 
    designated health services under the State plan during a calendar year, 
    or to any entity for items or services provided outside the United 
    States. We have derived the limit of 20 or fewer designated health 
    services from the Medicare regulation interpreting section 1877(f) 
    (Sec. 411.361).
        Section 455.109(c) would specify that the information submitted to 
    the Medicaid agency under Sec. 455.109(a) must include at least the 
    following:
         The name and Medicaid State Specific Identifier (MSSI) of 
    each physician who has a financial relationship with the entity that 
    provides services.
         The name and MSSI of each physician who has an immediate 
    relative (as defined in Sec. 411.351) who has a financial relationship 
    with the entity.
         The covered items and services furnished by the entity.
         With respect to each physician identified above, the 
    nature of the financial relationship (including the extent and/or value 
    of the ownership or investment interest or the compensation 
    arrangement), if requested by the Medicaid agency.
        Section 455.109(d) would define a reportable financial relationship 
    as an ownership or investment interest or any compensation arrangement, 
    as defined in Sec. 411.351, including relationships that qualify for an 
    exception described in Secs. 411.355 through 411.357.
        Section 455.109(e) would specify that--
         Entities that are subject to the reporting requirements 
    must submit the required information on a prescribed form within the 
    time period specified by the Medicaid agency. Similarly, entities must 
    report to the Medicaid agency all changes in the submitted information 
    within a timeframe specified by the State. We believe that States have 
    the discretion to determine these deadlines in line with 
    Sec. 455.109(a), which requires that the Medicaid agency gather 
    information on financial relationships in such form, manner, and at 
    such times as the agency specifies.
         Entities must retain documentation sufficient to verify 
    the information provided on the forms and, upon request, must make that 
    documentation available to the Medicaid State agency, HCFA, or the OIG.
        Section 455.109(f) would reflect section 1877(g)(5), specifying 
    that any entity that is required, but has failed, to meet the reporting 
    requirements of Sec. 455.109(a), is subject to a civil money penalty of 
    not more than $10,000 for each day of the period beginning on the day 
    following the applicable deadline until the information is submitted. 
    It would further specify that assessment of the penalty will comply 
    with the applicable provisions of 42 CFR part 1003.
    
    IV. Our Responses to Questions About the Law
    
        In this section of the preamble, we have included some of the most 
    common questions concerning physician referrals that we have received 
    from physicians, providers, and others in the health care community. 
    (Note that, in this section, we are using the term ``provider'' in the 
    generic sense to include all providers of health care services. That 
    is, we are not using the term with the special meaning given in our 
    regulations at Sec. 400.202.) We summarize these questions below and 
    present our interpretation of how we believe the law applies in the 
    situations that have been described to us. We have organized this 
    section so that the issues raised by the questions appear in the order 
    in which they appear in the regulation.
    
    A. Definitions
    
    1. Compensation Arrangement
        What is an ``indirect'' compensation arrangement? We defined a 
    ``compensation arrangement'' in the August 1995 final rule, in line 
    with the statute, as any arrangement involving any remuneration, direct 
    or indirect, between a physician (or family member) and an entity. This 
    means that a compensation arrangement can result when remuneration 
    flows from an entity to a physician or family member, or from a 
    physician or family member to an entity. We have received a number of 
    inquiries on what constitutes an ``indirect'' compensation arrangement. 
    We believe that a physician or family member can receive compensation 
    from an entity, even if the payment is ``funneled through'' a business 
    or other entity or association and even if the payment changes form 
    before the physician actually receives it.
        For example, suppose that a hospital has contracted with a group 
    practice for the group to furnish physician services and to otherwise 
    staff the hospital. The hospital pays the group practice, which might 
    be a professional corporation or a similar association or entity, for 
    the physician services under a personal services arrangement, rather 
    than directly compensating the individual physicians. The group 
    practice, in turn, pays the individual physicians a salary that in some 
    way reflects the hospital's payments.
        It is our position that, in such a scenario, each physician has 
    been indirectly compensated by the hospital for his or her own 
    services. As a result, the physicians have a compensation arrangement 
    with the hospital. In the absence of an exception, the physicians would 
    be prohibited from referring to the hospital for the furnishing of 
    designated health services.
        We believe that a physician has received indirect compensation 
    whether the ``intervening'' professional
    
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    association, corporation, or other entity directly receiving payment is 
    a group practice or any other type of physician or nonphysician owned 
    entity. We also believe a physician can receive indirect compensation 
    through a nonprofit enterprise if that enterprise is controlled by an 
    individual who is in a position to influence the physician's referrals. 
    For example, the owner of a clinical laboratory who also serves as the 
    director of a nonprofit research facility could provide a physician 
    with research grants in exchange for referrals to the laboratory. We 
    are considering regarding as indirect compensation any payment to a 
    physician that passes from an entity that provides for the furnishing 
    of designated health services, no matter how many intervening 
    ``levels'' the payment passes through or how often it changes form. We 
    directly solicit comments on this approach.
        We would also like to reiterate a point that we made in the 
    preamble to the August 1995 final rule. Just because a hospital or 
    similar entity is affiliated with a physician or group of physicians 
    does not automatically mean that the hospital or similar entity is 
    compensating the physicians. Physicians and entities can have joint 
    ventures and similar relationships in which the hospital or similar 
    entity and the physicians share profits, but do not compensate each 
    other.
        Which exceptions apply in indirect situations? We have also 
    received questions about which exception applies when an indirect 
    payment changes form. For example, in the situation described above, a 
    hospital makes payments to a group practice under a personal services 
    arrangement. The group practice, in turn, passes the payments on in the 
    form of salary payments to its physician employees. We believe that the 
    compensation at issue involves a personal services arrangement between 
    the hospital and the group practice (see the discussion in III.E.6 of 
    this preamble about personal services arrangements between entities and 
    group practices, rather than between entities and individual 
    physicians).
        We are interpreting the statute to focus on the payment the entity 
    furnishing designated health services initially makes to determine the 
    appropriate exception. In this case, the hospital is making a payment 
    under a personal services arrangement, and is not in any way making a 
    salary payment to its own employees. Thus, we believe the physicians 
    could make referrals to the hospital if the group practice's personal 
    services arrangement with the hospital meets the criteria under the 
    personal services exception.
        It is our view that the salary payment from the group practice to 
    its physician employees is a payment separate from the remuneration 
    flowing indirectly from the hospital to the physicians. As a result, 
    this payment, as a payment from the group practice, should itself have 
    no additional effect on a physician's ability to refer to the hospital. 
    (The nature of the payment might, however, affect whether the 
    physicians qualify as a group practice. See the discussion in section 
    III.A.6 of this preamble covering the characteristics of a group 
    practice.)
    2. Entity
        What are the characteristics of an ``entity'' that provides for the 
    furnishing of designated health services? We have received a number of 
    questions about what constitutes an ``entity'' involved in the 
    furnishing of designated health services and who owns that entity. For 
    example, a group of individuals asked us whether they own a hospital 
    based solely on the fact that they own the building that houses the 
    hospital. We believe that an ``entity'' for purposes of section 1877 is 
    the business, organization, or other association that actually 
    furnishes, or provides for the furnishing of, a service to a Medicare 
    or Medicaid patient and bills for that service (or receives payment for 
    the service from the billing entity as part of an ``under 
    arrangements'' or similar agreement).
        An ``entity,'' therefore, does not include any person, business, or 
    other organization or association that owns the components of the 
    operation--such as owning the building that houses the entity or the 
    equipment the entity uses--without owning the operation itself. For 
    example, a physician might own and operate an MRI machine in his or her 
    office. If this physician enters into a lease arrangement for the use 
    of the MRI machine every Tuesday by the physician down the hall, who 
    bills for the services, we believe that the physician down the hall is 
    the entity providing MRI services to his or her patients on Tuesday. 
    This physician could refer patients for MRI services if he or she 
    qualifies for an exception, such as the in-office ancillary services 
    exception.
        When is an entity furnishing, or providing for the furnishing of, 
    designated health services? Section 1877(a)(1)(A) prohibits a physician 
    from making a referral to an entity ``for the furnishing of designated 
    health services'' if the physician or a family member has a financial 
    relationship with that entity. The health care community has expressed 
    some confusion about when an entity is one involved in the ``furnishing 
    of'' designated health services.
        We have, for example, received questions about which entities are 
    the relevant ones when some entities only bill for services, while 
    others actually directly ``furnish'' the services. For example in an 
    ``under arrangements'' situation, a hospital, rural primary care 
    hospital, skilled nursing facility (SNF), home health agency, or 
    hospice program contracts with a separate provider to furnish services 
    to the hospital's, SNF's, or other contracting entity's patients, for 
    which the hospital, SNF or other contracting entity ultimately bills.
        The statutory provisions that mention ``under arrangements'' draw a 
    distinction between services that are actually furnished by the 
    hospital or SNF and those that are actually furnished by the separate, 
    outside entity. (Under section 1861(w)(1), HCFA's payment to the 
    hospital, SNF, or other contracting entity discharges the beneficiary's 
    liability. ``Under arrangements'' situations are further referenced in 
    sections 1861(b)(3) and 1862(a)(14).) We are aware that there are 
    comparable agreements in the community between entities other than 
    hospitals, SNFs, and the other contracting entities listed above, such 
    as agreements between group practices that furnish services to HMO 
    patients, with the HMO billing for the services.
        We believe that, absent an exception, the referral prohibition 
    applies to a physician's referrals to any entity that directly 
    furnishes designated health services to Medicare or Medicaid patients. 
    We believe the prohibition also applies to referrals to any entities 
    that arrange ``for the furnishing of'' these services to Medicare or 
    Medicaid patients by contracting with other providers, whenever it is 
    the arranging entity that bills for the services.
        This interpretation is consistent with the intent of the statute. 
    Congress intended, in enacting section 1877, to prohibit referrals in 
    situations in which a physician has a financial incentive to 
    overutilize the various designated health services and to steer 
    patients toward certain providers of these services. For example, a 
    physician might routinely refer patients to a SNF in which he has a 
    financial interest and prescribe occupational therapy (OT) services. 
    The SNF, in turn, might contract with a separate, unrelated entity to 
    furnish SNF patients with the OT, for which the SNF bills. Even if the 
    physician has no relationship with the separate OT provider, he does 
    have a
    
    [[Page 1707]]
    
    financial relationship with the SNF that is providing for ``the 
    furnishing of'' OT to referred patients. As a result, the physician can 
    potentially profit from each referral he or she makes for OT, even if 
    the SNF must first purchase those services from an outside source 
    before passing on the cost to its patients.
        If, however, the unrelated OT entity itself bills for the services 
    under Part B, so that the SNF only helps to make these services 
    available to its patients, our conclusion would be different. In this 
    situation, we do not believe that the physician has a financial 
    incentive to overutilize OT services. As a result, we would not regard 
    the SNF as an entity involved in ``the furnishing of'' a designated 
    health service.
        We also believe that a physician can have an incentive to 
    overutilize services if he or she has a financial relationship with the 
    entity that directly furnishes designated health services, even if this 
    is not the entity ultimately billing for the services. In these 
    situations, the physician can potentially recognize a profit from each 
    referral based on the fact that the designated health services will, in 
    essence, be sold to the entity that bills.
        For example, a physician who is a member of a group practice might 
    work in a hospital as a staff physician and refer patients to the 
    group's own outside laboratory in which the physician has an ownership 
    interest. The laboratory, in turn, furnishes services to hospital 
    patients under arrangements. The hospital will therefore be billing 
    Medicare for laboratory services furnished by the physician's own 
    laboratory. In this case, the physician is in a position to influence 
    how many services the laboratory will be able to ``sell'' to the 
    hospital. Thus, the physician should be prohibited from making these 
    referrals, unless one of the exceptions applies.
        We believe our policy of including entities that contract for 
    services as those that provide for ``the furnishing of'' designated 
    health services is consistent with the structure of section 1877 and 
    the way the exceptions are drafted. For example, under section 
    1877(b)(3), services are excepted if furnished by an organization that 
    functions under a prepaid plan, such as an HMO. It is our understanding 
    that such services are very often made available in a manner that is 
    comparable to ``under arrangements'' situations; that is, the prepaid 
    organization contracts with a broad range of independent suppliers and 
    providers to furnish services to its enrollees. This exception makes no 
    distinction between services that are furnished directly by the HMO and 
    those that are furnished under contract by outside providers: all such 
    services appear to be considered as furnished by the HMO, and would be 
    excepted.
        Similarly, section 1877(d)(3) excepts certain ``designated health 
    services provided by a hospital,'' but makes no distinctions between 
    services the hospital itself furnishes and those furnished by the 
    hospital under arrangements.
    3. Financial Relationship
        How do equity and debt qualify as ownership? The statute states 
    that an ownership interest can be through equity or debt. We have 
    received a number of inquiries about what this provision means and what 
    kinds of debt situations constitute a form of ownership. We believe 
    that ``ownership through equity'' refers to a direct ownership interest 
    that does not involve debt; for example, one in which the physician or 
    family member has actually purchased assets of a business entity with 
    cash or other property. This interest could be in the form of stock in 
    a publicly-held entity or an investment (such as a capital 
    contribution) in a partnership.
        We believe that a physician or family member holds an ownership 
    interest in an entity ``through debt'' anytime the physician or family 
    member has lent money or given other valuable consideration to the 
    entity and the debt is secured (in whole or in part) by the entity or 
    by the entity's assets or property. For example, the physician could 
    hold such an interest by providing the entity with a note, a mortgage 
    or by purchasing bonds. This interpretation is consistent with the 
    definition of an ownership or control interest in section 1124(a)(3) of 
    the Act, which governs which suppliers and providers must disclose 
    these interests to us for purposes other than the referral prohibition. 
    Section 1124(a)(3)(A)(ii) defines a person with an ownership or control 
    interest as a person who is the owner of a whole or part interest in 
    any mortgage, deed of trust, note, or other obligation secured (in 
    whole or in part) by the entity or any of the entity's property or 
    assets, if the interest is worth a certain amount.
        We also believe that ownership through debt can exist in any other 
    debtor-creditor relationships that have some indicia of ownership. For 
    example, such indicia could include the creditor's participation in 
    revenue or profits, subordinated payment terms, low or no interest 
    terms, or ownership of convertible debentures (bonds that a physician 
    or family member can convert into the common stock of the issuer or an 
    affiliate until the convertible feature expires).
        However, if a physician or family member has made an unsecured or 
    nonconvertible loan to an entity, or a loan with no other indicia of 
    ownership, we do not believe the loan is an ownership interest. The 
    loan would likely qualify as a compensation arrangement, to which an 
    exception might apply.
        We do not believe that a physician or family member has ``ownership 
    through debt'' when either of them has received a loan from an entity. 
    In ordinary business transactions, when a debtor receives a loan, this 
    transaction in no way establishes for the debtor an ownership interest 
    in the creditor. We also assume that in providing the loan, the 
    creditor entity has provided remuneration to the physician or family 
    member, resulting in a compensation arrangement. This kind of 
    compensation arrangement could meet one of the exceptions to the 
    prohibition. For example, the loan might be one form of payment an 
    entity makes to a physician to recruit the physician or as part of the 
    physician's employment contract. The loan would be an excepted 
    arrangement if it met the fair market value and other standards in 
    these exceptions.
        Is membership in a nonprofit corporation an ownership or investment 
    interest? We have received a number of inquiries concerning whether 
    membership in a nonprofit corporation constitutes an ownership or 
    investment interest in that corporation. (We are assuming that a 
    ``member'' is someone who establishes, sponsors, directs, or controls a 
    nonprofit corporation.) Most nonprofit health care corporations that 
    are exempt from Federal income taxation are exempt under section 
    501(c)(3) or (4) of the Internal Revenue Code. These provisions state 
    that the net earnings of such a corporation cannot inure to the benefit 
    of any private shareholder or individual. Therefore, while members of 
    such a nonprofit corporation may exercise control over the activities 
    of the corporation, they do not have the pecuniary incentive that for-
    profit investors have to enhance their investment interests. As such, 
    we do not regard being a member of these kinds of nonprofit 
    corporations as an ownership or investment interest analogous to being 
    a shareholder in a for-profit corporation. However, any remuneration 
    that the physician or family member receives from the corporation, such 
    as a salary, would be compensation and must meet an exception.
    
    [[Page 1708]]
    
        Do stock options and nonvested interests constitute ownership? We 
    have been asked whether a physician or family member has an ownership 
    interest in an entity if he or she receives an option to purchase the 
    stock of the entity or an affiliate, such as when an employee has a 
    stock option that constitutes part of his or her pay. We have also 
    received questions about retirement funds or similar options that do 
    not vest until a future date. For example, a physician might hold an 
    option to purchase stock at a particular price, but not be able to 
    exercise that option until he or she retires. Similarly, a physician 
    might be entitled to certain retirement funds only after he or she has 
    retired after having worked a specified number of years.
        The statute defines an ownership interest in section 1877(a)(2) as 
    an interest held through equity, debt, or other means. It is our view 
    that options and nonvested interests are inchoate or partial ownership 
    interests that qualify as ``ownership'' for purposes of this law. We 
    base our interpretation on the fact that a physician has a tremendous 
    incentive to refer to an entity in which he or she is invested, whether 
    the interest is a present or future one. For example, if a physician 
    has an option to buy stock at a certain price in a clinical laboratory, 
    the physician will have an interest in generating business for the 
    entity in order to enhance the value of that stock.
    4. Group practice
        What is the ``full range of services'' test? One of the criteria in 
    the statutory definition of a group practice is that each member must 
    furnish substantially the full range of services that the physician 
    routinely furnishes, including medical care, consultation, diagnosis, 
    and treatment through the joint use of shared office space, facilities, 
    equipment, and personnel. We have been asked about the meaning and 
    purpose of this provision, and how it will affect a physician's normal 
    practice patterns. only token tasks, for the group. It is our view that 
    this standard should not alter a physician's ordinary schedule or 
    practice habits. For example, one physician described himself as having 
    two specialty areas, which resulted in his providing dermatology 
    services to one group one day a week, and another kind of service to 
    another group on a different day. We believe that different kinds of 
    services such as these on different days can reflect a physician's 
    normal ``routine of services.'' That is, a physician can furnish one 
    type of service that is that physician's ``full range of services'' on 
    a particular day, as long as the physician is legitimately practicing 
    medicine for the group practice on that day.
    5. Immediate family member or member of a physician's immediate family
        How does the prohibition affect a physician's referrals to 
    immediate family members? The referral prohibition in section 1877(a) 
    states that if a physician, or immediate family member, has a financial 
    relationship with an entity, the physician cannot refer a Medicare 
    patient to that entity for the furnishing of designated health 
    services, unless an exception applies. In Sec. 411.351 of the August 
    1995 final rule, we listed the individuals who qualify as a physician's 
    ``immediate'' family members. These individuals include, among others, 
    spouses and children of a referring physician.
        We have received a number of inquiries from physicians about 
    whether the statute precludes a physician from referring patients to a 
    family member to receive designated health services, if the referring 
    physician has no financial relationship with the entity furnishing the 
    services. We believe the answer to this question depends upon the 
    nature of the family member's financial relationship with the 
    furnishing entity.
        If a family member has a compensation arrangement with the entity 
    furnishing the designated health services, the physician cannot refer 
    to the entity, unless the arrangement meets one of the exceptions under 
    the statute. For example, a physician might wish to refer a patient to 
    her husband for occupational therapy services. The husband furnishes OT 
    services as an employee of an occupational therapy facility. The 
    husband, who is an immediate family member of the referring physician, 
    has a compensation arrangement with an entity that furnishes a 
    designated health service (the OT facility pays him a salary). However, 
    the referral would be acceptable if the arrangement meets the 
    requirements in section 1877(e)(2), which excepts bona fide employment 
    relationships between employers and physicians or immediate family 
    members if the relationship meets fair market value and other 
    standards.
        The situation is similar if a physician refers a patient to an 
    immediate family member who has an ownership or investment interest in 
    the facility that furnishes the designated health services. For 
    example, the physician may wish to refer a patient to his wife, who is 
    a solo practicing physician who herself furnishes OT. If the wife owns 
    the practice, she would have a financial relationship with the entity 
    that furnishes the designated health services. The husband's referral 
    would not be prohibited if the wife's relationship qualifies for one of 
    the exceptions under the statute. For example, the wife's practice 
    might qualify as a rural entity, the ownership of which is excepted 
    under section 1877(d)(2) of the Act. However, if an exception does not 
    apply, the referring physician would be precluded from referring to his 
    spouse.
        Physicians have also asked us whether the in-office ancillary 
    services exception in section 1877(b)(2) applies to those situations in 
    which a physician refers a patient to an immediate family member who 
    furnishes designated health services outside of the referring 
    physician's practice. The ancillary services exception applies when a 
    physician refers a patient for a service that the referring physician 
    either will personally perform or directly supervise, or that will be 
    personally performed or directly supervised by another member of the 
    referring physician's group practice. As a result, referring physicians 
    can refer patients to and among themselves, within their own practices, 
    if they meet the section 1877(b)(2) requirements. However, the 
    exception does not apply when physicians refer to their spouses or to 
    other close relatives who furnish services outside of the practice.
        In creating the in-office ancillary services exception, we believe 
    that Congress made a policy decision not to restrict certain referrals 
    that occur within the confines of one practice. We are not aware of any 
    rationale for extending this ``single practice'' exception to any 
    outside entities, whether or not those entities have a financial 
    relationship with an immediate family member.
        We would also like to point out that a physician may send a patient 
    to an immediate relative without actually ``referring'' that patient 
    for a designated health service. A referral is defined in section 1877 
    for purposes of Part B services as, with an exception for certain 
    specialized services, the request by a physician for an item or 
    service, including the request for a consultation with another 
    physician (including any test or procedure ordered by, or to be 
    performed by (or under the supervision of) that other physician). We 
    have interpreted this provision in section III.A.7 of this preamble to 
    apply to just requests by the physician for designated health services 
    covered under Part B, rather than any Part B item or service. For other 
    kinds of items and services, a referral is, with an exception for 
    certain specialized services, the request or establishment of a plan of 
    care by a
    
    [[Page 1709]]
    
    physician, which includes the provision of a designated health service.
        We believe a referral would be acceptable where the referral is not 
    for a designated health service. For example, a physician who is a 
    general practitioner might believe that a patient has a neurological 
    problem, but be unsure of a diagnosis. This physician could refer the 
    patient to his or her neurologist spouse, if the referral is not a 
    ``consultation'' (see our discussion of ``consultations'' in section 
    III.A.7 of this preamble). That is because the referring physician has 
    not requested a designated health service or established a plan of care 
    including one, nor has he or she requested a consultation. We believe 
    the referral, in this case, is for physician services, which are 
    generally not designated health services. If the spouse, in turn, 
    determines that the patient requires an MRI, the spouse would be the 
    one making the referral for this designated health service.
        If one member of a group practice cannot make a referral to an 
    entity, are all other group practice physicians also precluded? Group 
    practices have informed us that they are concerned about the definition 
    of a ``referring physician'' in Sec. 411.351, and how it affects a 
    group when one member is precluded from referring to a particular 
    entity that furnishes designated health services. In particular, 
    several groups wondered whether having a physician member whose 
    immediate relative has an unexcepted ownership interest in an entity 
    would preclude all group practice members from referring to that 
    entity. Groups believe that the preamble to the final rule covering 
    referrals to clinical laboratories implied that the referral 
    prohibition would be imputed to all physician members.
        Section 411.351 defines a ``referring physician'' as a physician 
    (or group practice) who makes a referral (as defined elsewhere in the 
    regulations). We interpreted this definition to mean that when an 
    individual group member refers, the entire group has referred. As a 
    result, any member of a group who has an unexcepted financial 
    relationship (or whose relative has such a relationship) with an entity 
    could ``taint'' the referrals of the entire group.
        We have reconsidered this issue and now propose to amend the 
    definition to exclude any reference to the entire group practice. We 
    believe that the statute was drafted to cover the referral behavior of 
    individual physicians and to regulate the entities to which they refer. 
    There does not appear to us to be any clear reason to extend the 
    effects of one physician's relationships and behaviors to other 
    physicians, just because they are all members of the same group 
    practice. As several practices have pointed out to us, being members of 
    the same group practice does not mean that physicians automatically 
    have the opportunity, power, or incentive to exert pressure on each 
    other to refer to their related entities.
        However, in any instance in which a group member is in a position 
    to exert influence or control over the referrals of other group 
    physicians, the prohibition could still apply. For example, group 
    members could be subject to sanctions if their referral patterns reveal 
    a circumvention scheme between them. Similarly, if a group practice 
    owner conditions payment to his or her employee members on referrals to 
    the owner's laboratory, the employment could be a compensation 
    arrangement that triggers the prohibition.
    6. Remuneration
        Do payments qualify as remuneration only if they result in a net 
    benefit? Certain members of the provider community have requested that 
    we interpret a payment as remuneration only if it is made in exchange 
    for identifiable property or services. Under this theory, if the 
    physician or entity making the payment has no expectation of or 
    entitlement to something of value in return for the payment, there 
    would be no compensation arrangement, even if other physicians or 
    entities might benefit from the exchange.
        In the August 1995 final regulation, we defined remuneration as 
    ``any payment, discount, forgiveness of debt, or other benefit made 
    directly or indirectly, overtly or covertly, in cash or in kind,'' 
    except for a narrow list of remuneration excluded from the definition 
    by section 1877(h)(1)(C). We believe that remuneration generally 
    involves any payment of cash, property, or services, whether or not 
    either or both parties receive a net benefit. For example, we would 
    regard as remuneration the repayment of a loan, even if there are no 
    accompanying interest payments.
        We base this interpretation on the statute, which excepts from 
    compensation arrangements under section 1877(h)(1)(C) only very limited 
    and specific types of remuneration. Among the list is the forgiveness 
    of amounts for the correction of minor billing errors; that is, small 
    amounts that are excused by one party in order to even out the parties' 
    accounts. However, the statute does not except amounts that are 
    forgiven to even out larger billing errors, nor does it contain a 
    general exception for remuneration that does not result in a net 
    benefit for one or both of the parties. (The correction of a large 
    billing error might, however, qualify as an ``isolated transaction'' or 
    qualify for the new exception in Sec. 411.357(l) as part of a fair 
    market value exchange.)
        We believe that the statute is designed to prohibit referrals 
    whenever a physician makes a payment to an entity or an entity makes a 
    payment to a physician, regardless of who profits or gains. The 
    statute, in our view, contains a presumption that if there has been a 
    payment of any kind, a physician should not refer. As a result, the 
    agency need not ``look behind'' each transaction to ascertain whether 
    the physician has gained some benefit as a result of the transaction, 
    has realized little or no net benefit, or has benefitted too much. The 
    law does, however, designate certain very specific compensation 
    arrangements that require that the Secretary ``look behind'' them and 
    except them if the exchanges of payment meet fair market value and 
    certain other standards.
        It is our view that the one-way payments described by the providers 
    are remuneration. If a payment does not reflect an actual fair market 
    value exchange, it could easily serve as the vehicle for referral 
    payments. We believe the law was meant to prevent a physician from 
    referring to an entity if that physician (or a family member) is 
    receiving payments of any kind that cannot be accounted for as part of 
    a fair exchange.
    
    B. General Prohibition--What Constitutes a Prohibited Referral
    
        Does the prohibition apply only if a physician refers directly to a 
    particular related entity? As we mentioned in the section above 
    covering the definition of ``entity,'' section 1877(a)(1) prohibits a 
    physician from making a referral to an entity for the furnishing of 
    designated health services if the physician or immediate family member 
    of the physician has a financial relationship with that entity. Section 
    1877(h)(5) defines a referral very broadly: A referral is the request 
    by a physician for a Part B item or service (including certain 
    consultations). In addition, ``the request or establishment of a plan 
    of care by a physician that includes the provision of [a] designated 
    health service'' constitutes a ``referral'' by a ``referring 
    physician.'' We have interpreted this provision in Sec. 411.351 of the 
    August 1995 final clinical laboratory rule to mean that a physician has 
    made a referral if he or she has made a request for a Part B item or 
    service or a request for other items or services that includes the 
    provision of laboratory services or if he or she has
    
    [[Page 1710]]
    
    established a plan of care that includes the provision of laboratory 
    services.
        The ``referral'' provision requires that a physician only request 
    an item or service or include it in a plan of care; it does not require 
    that the physician directly send a patient to a particular entity or 
    specifically indicate in a plan of care that the service must be 
    provided by a particular entity. However, section 1877(h)(5) must be 
    read in conjunction with the prohibition in section 1877(a)(1). The 
    general prohibition applies only when a physician makes a referral to 
    an entity for the furnishing of a designated health service if the 
    physician or a family member has a financial relationship with that 
    entity.
        For example, a physician might have a small noncontrolling 
    ownership interest in a provider of a designated health service, such 
    as a physical therapy (PT) facility. The physician does not directly 
    refer patients to this provider. However, the physician does establish 
    plans of care for patients in a hospital setting, which include PT 
    services. When a particular patient leaves the hospital, the physician 
    may refer the patient to an unrelated skilled nursing facility (SNF) 
    that, in turn, refers the patient to the related PT provider. The PT 
    facility bills the patient separately. As a result, the patient may 
    receive services prescribed by the physician from an entity with which 
    the physician has a financial relationship.
        In situations such as this one, the physician has prescribed a plan 
    of care that includes designated health services, an action that 
    constitutes a referral. However, the physician has not made the 
    referral to an entity with which he or she has a financial 
    relationship. Instead, the physician has made the referral to an SNF 
    with which he or she has no financial relationship. As such, the 
    referral prohibition would generally not apply. Nonetheless, if there 
    was any evidence that the physician has an agreement with the SNF that 
    involves the SNF systematically referring the physician's Medicare 
    patients to the physician's PT facility, we would likely investigate 
    the situation as a possible circumvention scheme.
        When is the owner of a designated health services provider 
    considered as equivalent to that provider? We have received several 
    comments about when a physician who has an ownership interest in an 
    entity that furnishes designated health services should be equated with 
    that entity. For example, suppose that a physician regularly refers 
    patients to an SNF in which the physician has no investment interest. 
    The SNF, in turn, buys PT services from a PT facility that also 
    provides other noncovered items and services to the SNF and is owned 
    solely by the physician. Arguably the referring physician, as sole 
    proprietor of the PT facility, is related to the SNF because the 
    physician's PT facility sells PT and other, noncovered services to the 
    SNF. We believe that it is likely, in this situation, that the 
    physician is in a position to negotiate or influence the terms of the 
    arrangement, as well as to initiate patient referrals to the SNF.
        We believe that there is a potential for abuse in such situations. 
    For example, the physician may be referring as many patients as 
    possible to the SNF in exchange for inflated rates from the SNF for the 
    variety of noncovered items and services that the PT facility 
    furnishes, or for any covered services that are not subject to a fee 
    schedule. Although the SNF may be negotiating with the PT facility as a 
    corporate or other business entity, we would equate the referring 
    physician and the PT facility with each other when the referring 
    physician (or a family member) has a significant ownership or 
    controlling interest that allows him or her to determine how the PT 
    facility conducts its business and with whom. We will consider a number 
    of factors in these situations, such as whether the physician or the 
    physician in combination with his or her immediate family members owns 
    all or a controlling amount of the stock of an entity, and whether the 
    physician and/or the family members are making decisions for the 
    entity, particularly on a day-to-day basis. Our analysis will depend 
    upon the entire record of the interrelationship between the physician 
    and/or immediate family members and the entity, whether the 
    relationships are direct or indirect, and the totality of the 
    circumstances.
        We believe the analysis is similar when a referring physician 
    receives compensation from an entity that is owned or controlled by a 
    party that also owns a designated health services provider. For 
    example, suppose that a physician owns a controlling interest in a 
    general practice clinic, and also independently owns a controlling 
    interest in an outside laboratory in which the clinic itself has no 
    interest. The clinic also employs a number of physicians who receive 
    salaries from the clinic corporation.
        Arguably, the employee physicians in this situation have no 
    financial relationship with the outside laboratory. That is, they do 
    not themselves own any part of the laboratory, nor do they receive 
    compensation from or pay compensation to the laboratory entity. 
    However, if we were to take the position that there is no financial 
    relationship, and hence no referral prohibition, the physician owner of 
    the laboratory, by controlling the clinic, could arrange to compensate 
    the employee physicians with inflated salaries based directly on the 
    number of referrals they make to the outside laboratory.
        In order to avoid this result, we propose to equate the owner 
    physician with the outside laboratory and with the clinic when he or 
    she owns or controls them. Under this interpretation, we would regard 
    the employee physicians as receiving compensation from the laboratory. 
    Although this compensation is indirect, we believe it is covered by the 
    statute. Section 1877(h)(1) defines a ``compensation arrangement'' as 
    any arrangement involving any remuneration (with certain narrow 
    exceptions). ``Remuneration,'' in turn, is defined as any remuneration 
    paid directly or indirectly.
        If the physician, on the other hand, has a noncontrolling interest 
    in the outside laboratory, we would not equate the owner physician with 
    the laboratory. However, we would regard this situation as a potential 
    circumvention scheme. That is, we would regard the physician owner in 
    this situation as referring indirectly, through the employee 
    physicians, to a designated health services provider to which the owner 
    physician cannot personally refer. The inflated salaries of the 
    employee physicians, in fact, could serve as evidence of the existence 
    of such a circumvention scheme.
        The analysis would vary somewhat if the referring physicians are 
    compensated by an entity, rather than an individual physician. Suppose, 
    for example, that a hospital hires physicians to serve on its staff. 
    The hospital compensates the physicians for their services, but 
    inflates their salaries to reflect all the referrals they make to a 
    separate MRI subsidiary that is not part of the hospital but is owned 
    by it. If the hospital owns a controlling share of the MRI entity, we 
    would regard the hospital and the entity as equivalent.
        The analysis would be different if the hospital owns less than a 
    controlling interest in the MRI facility. Arguably, the physicians are 
    compensated by an entity (the hospital) that is technically separate 
    from the one providing the referred MRI services. The physicians do not 
    own the MRI facility, nor do they receive payment from it. Nonetheless, 
    if the physicians receive payments from the hospital that exceed fair 
    market value for the services they are otherwise providing, we propose 
    to presume that they are being indirectly compensated by the MRI 
    facility, through the hospital, for their referrals.
    
    [[Page 1711]]
    
        Has a physician made a referral to a particular entity if another 
    individual directs the patient there?
        We have received inquiries about situations in which a physician 
    requests a designated health service, but it is another individual, 
    such as a discharge planner, who follows the physician's plan of care 
    and refers the patient directly to a specific provider. We discussed 
    this issue in the August 1995 final rule. In the preamble to that rule 
    at 60 FR 41941, we stated that a physician who establishes a plan of 
    care or requests an item or service is responsible for the referral, 
    even if it is another individual or an institutional entity that 
    carries out that plan of care for the physician. For example, we stated 
    that we would not allow a hospital physician to avoid the referral 
    prohibition by claiming that it is the hospital that actually makes the 
    referral or selects the provider in his or her place. We took this 
    position in order to prevent a physician from disavowing all referrals 
    by having personnel or employers carry them out.
        In light of our analysis in the responses to the last two 
    questions, we would like to refine our position on this issue. That is, 
    we want to qualify our position to ``impute'' a physician's referrals 
    to others only in those situations in which the physician has the 
    ability to control or influence the individuals who select an entity. 
    We would also ``impute'' referrals if a physician is him or herself in 
    a position to be compensated for the referrals by those who can control 
    or influence the actions of the person who actually selects the entity.
        For example, suppose that a physician works for a hospital and 
    refers a patient to the hospital's discharge planner for laboratory 
    tests. The discharge planner in turn refers the patient to the 
    hospital's laboratory. We would regard the physician's request and 
    referral to the discharge planner as a referral to an agent of the 
    entity that owns the laboratory; that is, to an agent of the entity 
    that furnishes designated health services. We believe that such a 
    referral would be governed by the rules in section 1877. Suppose, on 
    the other hand, that the discharge planner refers the patient to an 
    outside laboratory that happens to be owned by the hospital. The 
    physician in this situation may not be able to compensate the discharge 
    planner or otherwise in any way influence that individual's actions. 
    Nonetheless, if the hospital pays the physician to order as many 
    laboratory tests as possible, and in turn pays the discharge planner to 
    refer patients directly to a hospital-owned provider, we would impute 
    the referral to the physician.
        We can translate these rules into a group practice setting. For 
    example, a group practice member might request a designated health 
    service, but allow a nonphysician employee to direct the patient to a 
    particular provider. If the nonphysician refers the patient to the 
    group's own provider, we would regard the referral as the physician's 
    own referral to an agent of a provider of designated health services. 
    This arrangement, we believe, would be subject to the referral rules. 
    For outside referrals, we would gauge whether the physician member is 
    in any position to control the actions of the nonphysician. In order to 
    gauge whether a physician is in a position to affect a nonphysician's 
    actions, we propose to use the same ownership and control rules that we 
    mentioned above. We would also impute the referral to the physician if 
    the entity compensating the physician is in a position to both 
    compensate the physician for his or her referrals and to control the 
    actions of the individual who selects the provider.
        How will HCFA interpret situations in which it is not clear whether 
    a physician has referred to a particular entity?
        A physician might request or order a designated health service for 
    a patient without establishing a record of whether he or she referred 
    the patient to a specific provider. If the patient receives the 
    designated health service from an entity with which the physician (or a 
    family member) has a financial relationship, as the result of the 
    referral, we will presume that the service results from the physician 
    referring to that specific entity. We will allow physicians to rebut 
    that presumption by establishing that they mentioned no specific 
    provider or supplier or that the patient was directly referred by some 
    other independent individual or through an unrelated entity.
    
    C. General Exceptions That Apply to Ownership or Investment Interests 
    and to Compensation Arrangements
    
    1. The in-office ancillary services exception
        Can a physician supply crutches as in-office ancillary services? 
    The in-office ancillary services exception in section 1877(b)(2) 
    applies to services that meet the requirements for supervision, 
    location, and billing, but not to any parenteral and enteral nutrients, 
    equipment and supplies or to durable medical equipment (DME) (although 
    the exception does apply to infusion pumps). Many physicians have 
    brought to our attention the problems with excluding crutches from the 
    exception. That is, an orthopaedist might diagnose a patient with a 
    broken leg, set the leg, personally furnish the patient in his or her 
    own office with crutches, and then bill for those crutches. If the 
    patient will use the crutches at home, they qualify as DME. Physicians 
    have pointed out that this exclusion will cause great inconvenience to 
    such patients, who will have to obtain crutches or similar equipment 
    elsewhere.
        We agree that excluding crutches from the section 1877(b)(2) 
    exception could cause great inconvenience to patients, and disrupt the 
    efficient delivery of health care services. We regard crutches as 
    different from other DME in that a patient very often needs them 
    immediately after treatment for an injury that has resulted from an 
    unexpected traumatic event. Thus, patients may often be precluded from 
    arranging to receive crutches in advance from other, unrelated 
    entities. Nonetheless, the Secretary does not have the authority to 
    simply create a blanket exception for crutches. The Secretary only has 
    the authority, under section 1877(b)(4), to create new exceptions in 
    the case of any other financial relationship that the Secretary 
    determines, and specifies in regulations, does not pose a risk of 
    program or patient abuse. We have no evidence that allowing physicians 
    a blanket exception to self-refer for crutches will be free from abuse. 
    In the ownership context, for example, each referral will inherently 
    increase a physician's or group practices' profits.
        We are thus proposing to create an exception, at Sec. 411.355(e), 
    that we believe will remedy this problem, while meeting the statutory 
    condition. That is, the exception would apply only to situations in 
    which a physician furnishes crutches in a manner that meets the in-
    office ancillary services requirements in section 1877(b)(2) (and in 
    Sec. 411.355(b)), provided the physician realizes no direct or indirect 
    profit from furnishing the crutches. In other words, Medicare will pay 
    for the crutches if the physician bills only for the cost he or she 
    incurred to acquire and supply the crutches or to create or manufacture 
    the crutches. We believe that there is no threat of abuse in these 
    situations, since physicians will have no incentive to overutilize 
    crutches.
    2. Exception for services furnished by organizations operating under 
    prepaid plans
        Can a physician refer non-enrollees to a related prepaid 
    organization or to its physicians and providers?
    
    [[Page 1712]]
    
        We have been asked about situations in which a physician furnishes 
    services to managed care patients under a personal services contract, 
    but wishes to refer his or her own outside, fee-for-service Medicare 
    patients for designated health services to the managed care entity, or 
    to physicians, suppliers, or providers that are affiliated with the 
    managed care entity. If the physician refers to an otherwise unrelated 
    physician, provider, or supplier that is affiliated with the managed 
    care entity, but is not part of it and accepts the fee-for-service 
    patient independently, the referral prohibition should not apply. That 
    is, the physician would not be referring to the managed care entity 
    with which he or she has a financial relationship.
        The analysis would be different, however, if the other physician, 
    provider, or supplier is functioning as part of the managed care 
    entity. For example, a physician might provide services to enrollees of 
    a Federally qualified HMO under a contract arrangement. These services 
    are excepted from the referral prohibition by section 1877(b)(3). 
    However, when the physician wishes to refer a fee-for-service Medicare 
    patient to the HMO's laboratory, the physician is making a referral to 
    an entity with which the physician has a financial relationship. That 
    is, the physician's personal services contract constitutes a 
    compensation arrangement with the HMO.
        In order for the physician in this situation to refer, the 
    financial relationship must meet one of the compensation-related 
    exceptions in section 1877 or in this proposed rule. For example, the 
    physician could continue to refer if his or her arrangement meets the 
    criteria in the personal services exception in section 1877(e)(3) and 
    in Sec. 411.357(d) of this proposed rule. The compensation the 
    physician receives from the HMO would have to be, among other things, 
    consistent with fair market value, and could not reflect the volume or 
    value of the physician's referrals (except as allowed under a physician 
    incentive plan). We have proposed to define the concept of a 
    ``referral,'' for purposes of section 1877, as limited to a referral 
    for a designated health service that may be covered under Medicare or 
    Medicaid (see our discussion of the definition in section III.A.7 of 
    this preamble). Thus, the ``volume or value'' standard would 
    automatically be met if (in the context of the physician's HMO 
    practice) the physician treated and referred only non-Medicare or non-
    Medicaid HMO enrollees (that is, the physician's HMO compensation would 
    never reflect the volume or value of Medicare or Medicaid referrals).
        If, on the other hand, the physician is compensated by the HMO for 
    treating HMO enrollees who are covered by Medicare or Medicaid, the 
    compensation would be subject to the ``volume or value'' standard. 
    Hence, the arrangement could still meet the personal services exception 
    if the physician's compensation does not reflect Medicare or Medicaid 
    covered referrals or reflects them only as part of a physician 
    incentive plan, as these plans are described in section 1877(e)(3)(B), 
    and in Sec. 411.351 of this proposed rule.
        As noted earlier in this preamble, we believe that, for the most 
    part, physicians working for managed care organizations or as part of 
    an integrated delivery system will be able to refer Medicare and 
    Medicaid patients within these systems, provided their arrangements 
    with these entities meet certain standards. However, we anticipate that 
    there may be some unusual situations in which an exception does not 
    apply. One example of providers in a delivery system who may be 
    adversely affected by the referral prohibition involves providers under 
    Medicaid primary care case management (PCCM) programs.
        We are aware that, under certain circumstances, some providers 
    contracting under these managed fee-for-service programs may not be 
    eligible for any of the existing exceptions written into the law or 
    proposed in this rule. Because the Secretary can only create new 
    exceptions for financial relationships which she determines pose no 
    risk of program or patient abuse, we have not created a blanket 
    exception for Medicaid PCCM programs. However, we do not wish, as an 
    unintended consequence of this decision, to discourage the 
    participation of Medicaid providers in PCCM programs, thereby 
    threatening Medicaid beneficiaries' access to care. Therefore, we are 
    soliciting comments from States and others on the potential impact of 
    the referral prohibition on Medicaid PCCM programs and the providers 
    who contract under them.
        One example of a situation in which a PCCM provider might be 
    prohibited from making a referral involves HMOs that contract as 
    primary care case managers. While HMO participation in PCCM programs is 
    relatively rare, HMOs in some States have contracted to serve as case 
    managers to the disabled population. Such contracts allow the HMO to 
    gain experience in serving the disabled without having to accept the 
    financial risk that an HMO would normally accept under a capitation 
    contract. As States move to enroll more of their disabled populations 
    into capitated programs, involving HMOs in PCCM programs could serve as 
    a transitionary method of developing a managed care provider network 
    that is experienced in caring for the disabled.
        If an HMO physician who is required by contract to refer within the 
    HMO's network wishes to refer a PCCM patient within that network, his 
    or her financial relationship with the HMO would have to meet one of 
    the existing exceptions in the law or in this proposed rule. Because 
    the HMO in the above example is paid on a fee-for-service basis under 
    the PCCM program, none of the exceptions for services furnished by pre-
    paid risk plans would be appropriate.
        The manner in which we have interpreted the volume or value of 
    referrals standard in this proposed rule could prevent the financial 
    relationship from qualifying for one of the compensation-related 
    exceptions. Most of these exceptions can be satisfied only if a 
    physician's compensation does not reflect the volume or value of his or 
    her referrals. Certain provider contracts that require a physician to 
    refer within a defined network of providers could violate that 
    standard. (We discuss our interpretation of this standard in section 
    III.E.3.) That is, regardless of whether the physician's income 
    actually varies based on the volume or value of referrals, the 
    physician's income reflects the referrals because it could be lost 
    entirely if the physician repeatedly refers patients out-of-network. If 
    the financial relationship does not qualify for an exception, there may 
    be no Federal matching funds for any in-network referral of PCCM 
    patients made by this physician.
    3. Other permissible exceptions for financial relationships that do not 
    pose a risk of program or patient abuse
        Should situations that meet a safe harbor under the anti-kickback 
    statute be automatically excepted? We have received inquiries about the 
    Secretary's authority under section 1877(b)(4) to create additional 
    exceptions for financial relationships which the Secretary determines, 
    and specifies in regulations, do not pose a risk of program or patient 
    abuse. We have had some requests that the Secretary create an exception 
    for any financial relationship that meets a safe harbor under the anti-
    kickback statute. As we have stated elsewhere in this preamble, the 
    anti-kickback statute in section 1128B(b) and section 1877 are totally 
    independent laws, with separate
    
    [[Page 1713]]
    
    requirements. In order for a physician who has a financial relationship 
    with an entity to refer to that entity, the arrangement must meet the 
    requirements in both laws. However, we are willing to consider this 
    option and specifically solicit comments on whether meeting a safe 
    harbor would qualify an arrangement as one that involves no risk of 
    program or patient abuse.
    
    D. Exceptions That Apply Only to Ownership or Investment Interests
    
    1. Exception for ownership in publicly traded securities or mutual 
    funds
        Does the exception for publicly traded securities apply to stock 
    options? We have been asked whether ownership of an option to purchase 
    stock in an entity that furnishes a designated health service 
    constitutes an excepted ownership interest in the entity. As we stated 
    in section IV.A.3 above, we regard the option to purchase stock in an 
    entity as an inchoate ownership interest that could subject a physician 
    to the referral prohibition. As such, all of the exceptions that 
    ordinarily apply to ownership interests would apply. However, the 
    exception for publicly traded securities would not apply if the stock 
    option involves investment securities that may not be purchased on 
    terms generally available to the public, as required by section 
    1877(c)(1).
    2. Exception for services provided by a hospital in which a physician 
    or family member has an interest
        Can a physician or family member own an interest in a chain of 
    hospitals? Section 1877(d)(3) contains an exception for designated 
    health services provided by a hospital (other than a hospital in Puerto 
    Rico) if the referring physician is authorized to perform services 
    there, and the ownership or investment interest is in the hospital 
    itself (and not merely in a subdivision of the hospital). We discussed 
    at some length in the August 1995 final rule how we believe an 
    individual can hold an interest in a subdivision of a hospital.
        We have received inquiries about whether this exception applies if 
    a physician or family member holds an interest in a company or network 
    that owns a chain of hospitals, rather than an interest in the one 
    hospital to which the physician makes referrals. It is our view that a 
    physician can have an ownership or investment interest in a hospital 
    that is part of a chain by virtue of holding an interest in the 
    organization that owns the chain. We base our position on the language 
    of the exception, which does not require that the physician have a 
    direct interest in the hospital. In addition, we believe that the 
    exception in section 1877(d)(3) must be read in conjunction with 
    section 1877(a)(2), which states that a physician's or family member's 
    ownership or investment interest in an entity that provides a 
    designated health service constitutes a financial relationship with 
    that entity. This provision further defines an ownership or investment 
    interest in an entity to include an interest in an entity that holds an 
    ownership or investment interest in any entity providing the designated 
    health services. Thus, by definition, a physician who has an ownership 
    interest in a health system that owns a hospital that provides 
    designated health services has an ownership interest in that individual 
    hospital. If that indirect interest is in the hospital as a whole, and 
    not in a subdivision, then the exception should apply. In fact, we 
    believe that it would be illogical to specifically apply the referral 
    prohibition in section 1877(a)(1) to any indirect ownership interest, 
    yet deny an exception in section 1877(d) that is based on ownership 
    just because the interest is indirect, especially when the exception 
    itself does not require a direct interest.
        Nonetheless, in order to meet the hospital ownership exception, we 
    believe the law requires that the physician be authorized to perform 
    services at the hospital to which he or she wishes to refer. We do not 
    believe that this last requirement is met if the physician has these 
    privileges with any one of the other hospitals in the chain, but not 
    with the referral hospital.
        We also wish to make the point that any ownership interest a 
    physician or family member has in a hospital could involve a separate 
    compensation arrangement. For example, if a physician acquires an 
    interest in a hospital from a health care network, this acquisition 
    could constitute remuneration from an entity that provides designated 
    health services. Consequently, for the physician to refer to the 
    entity, the arrangement would have to meet a compensation-related 
    exception.
    
    E. Exceptions That Apply Only to Compensation Arrangements
    
    1. Compensation arrangements in general
        Can a lease or arrangement for items or services have a termination 
    clause? The lease exceptions for space and equipment and a number of 
    the other compensation exceptions require that, among other things, the 
    arrangement be in writing and provide for a term of at least 1 year. We 
    believe that this requirement has been met as long as the arrangement 
    clearly establishes a business relationship that will last for at least 
    1 year. Nonetheless, it is our view that the arrangement can still 
    qualify for the exception even if it also includes a clause allowing 
    the parties to terminate sooner for good cause, provided the parties do 
    not enter into a new arrangement within the originally established 1 
    year time period.
        We believe that Congress included the 1 year requirement with the 
    intention of excepting stable arrangements that cannot be renegotiated 
    frequently to reflect the current volume or value of a physician's 
    referrals. Nonetheless, we do not believe that Congress intended, in 
    creating this requirement, to bind parties to an arrangement once that 
    arrangement has become unsatisfactory to some or all of the parties. 
    Therefore, we are interpreting all of the exceptions with the 1 year 
    requirement to allow terminations for good cause, provided the parties 
    do not, within the 1 year period, enter into a new arrangement. We also 
    believe that a lease or arrangement must be renewed in at least 1 year 
    increments, so that it is always an agreement that provides for a term 
    of at least 1 year. That is, once the first year of an agreement 
    expires, it cannot be converted into, for example, a month-by-month 
    arrangement that could fluctuate with a physician's referrals.
        Will a physician's referrals be prohibited if an entity pays for 
    certain incidental benefits? Entities, such as hospitals, often provide 
    physicians with certain incidental benefits, such as their malpractice 
    insurance, or with reduced or free parking, meals, or other incidental 
    benefits. We believe the answer to this question hinges on the nature 
    of any other financial relationship the physician has with the entity. 
    For example, if a physician receives free ``extras'' such as 
    malpractice insurance, parking, or meals while he or she serves as the 
    entity's employee, then these extras might qualify as part of the 
    compensation that the physician receives under a bona fide employment 
    relationship, provided they are specified in the employment agreement. 
    If the physician or entity can demonstrate that the extras constitute 
    part of the payment that such entities typically provide to physicians, 
    regardless of whether they make referrals to the entity, the extras 
    might constitute payment that is consistent with fair market value and 
    that furthers the entity's legitimate business purposes. If an 
    incidental benefit cannot meet the requirements under a statutory 
    exception or the new general exception
    
    [[Page 1714]]
    
    for compensation arrangements we have included in Sec. 411.357(l), it 
    might still meet the de minimis exception we have added in 
    Sec. 411.357(k) if it has limited value. We have also been asked about 
    parking spaces that a hospital provides to physicians who have 
    privileges to treat their patients in the hospital. It is our view 
    that, while a physician is making rounds, the parking benefits both the 
    hospital and its patients, rather than providing the physician with any 
    personal benefit. Thus, we do not intend to regard parking for this 
    purpose as remuneration furnished by the hospital to the physician, but 
    instead as part of the physician's privileges. However, if a hospital 
    provides parking to a physician for periods of time that do not 
    coincide with his or her rounds, that parking could constitute 
    remuneration.
    2. Exception for agreements involving the rental of office space or 
    equipment
        Can a lessee sublet office space or equipment? Section 1877(c)(1) 
    and (2) excepts from compensation arrangements that trigger the 
    referral prohibition, payments made by a lessee to a lessor for the use 
    of premises or equipment if certain criteria are met. We have listed 
    these requirements in the regulation at Sec. 411.357(a) and (b). Among 
    these is the requirement that the office space or equipment be ``used 
    exclusively by the lessee when being used by the lessee.'' We believe 
    Congress included this requirement to ensure that excepted rental 
    agreements are valid ones, rather than ``paper'' leases that might 
    involve payments passing between the lessor and lessee, when the lessee 
    is not actually using or intending to use the space or the equipment. 
    As a result, we believe that this requirement precludes the lessee from 
    subletting the space or equipment during any portion of a lease during 
    which the lessee is expected to be using them.
        A sublease arrangement might nonetheless qualify under the new 
    compensation exception that we are proposing under Sec. 411.357(l). 
    That exception requires, among other things, that the rental payments 
    be consistent with fair market value and not take into account the 
    volume or value of any referrals between the parties. In addition, the 
    lease arrangement must be commercially reasonable and further the 
    legitimate business purposes of the parties. We envision that there 
    could be arrangements in which both the lease arrangement and the 
    sublease would meet all of these criteria.
        Does the lease exception apply to any kind of lease covering space 
    or equipment? As we understand general accounting principles, there are 
    differences between operational leases and capital leases that may be 
    relevant to our application of section 1877. Operational leases are 
    basic, simple leases in which the lessee makes rental payments to the 
    lessor in order to use the lessor's property or space. These kinds of 
    leases, we believe, could fall within the exceptions in section 
    1877(e)(1)(A) and (B) because they constitute payments made by the 
    lessee for the use of space or equipment.
        Capital leases, on the other hand, are very much like installment 
    sales purchases. Upon entering into such a lease, the lessee receives 
    all of the benefits and obligations of ownership of the property. That 
    is, the lessee (and not the lessor) can depreciate the property and 
    record it on its books as a capital asset and the long-term capital 
    lease payments as a liability (very much like the way the lessee would 
    record a loan). In most cases, the title to the property at issue will 
    pass to the lessee at the end of the term of the lease. In other words, 
    the property that is covered by capital leases is treated by 
    accountants as property that a lessee has purchased or is in the 
    process of purchasing. We believe that such leases go beyond the 
    section 1877(e)(1) exceptions, which except only payments for the use 
    of equipment or space.
        Can a lease provide for payment based on how often the equipment is 
    used? We have been asked about situations in which a physician rents 
    equipment to an entity that furnishes a designated health service, such 
    as a hospital that rents an MRI machine, with the physician receiving 
    rental payments on a ``per click'' basis (that is, rental payments go 
    up each time the machine is used). We believe that this arrangement 
    will not prohibit the physician from otherwise referring to the entity, 
    provided that these kinds of arrangements are typical and comply with 
    the fair market value and other standards that are included under the 
    rental exception. However, because a physician's compensation under 
    this exception cannot reflect the volume or value of the physician's 
    own referrals, the rental payments cannot reflect ``per click'' 
    payments for patients who are referred for the service by the lessor 
    physician.
    3. Exception for personal services arrangements
        How does the physician incentive plan exception apply when an 
    enrolling entity contracts with a group practice? The exception for 
    personal services arrangements includes the criteria that any 
    compensation paid by an entity under the arrangement cannot reflect the 
    volume or value of a physician's referrals, unless the compensation is 
    paid under a physician incentive plan, as that term is defined in 
    section 1877(e)(3)(B). A physician incentive plan is defined by this 
    provision as any compensation arrangement between an entity and a 
    physician or physician group that may directly or indirectly have the 
    effect of reducing or limiting services furnished with respect to 
    individuals enrolled with the entity. We have defined ``physician 
    group'' broadly in our March 27, 1996, final rule (61 FR 13430) 
    interpreting physician incentive plans under section 1876(i)(8), of 
    which group practices as defined under section 1877(h) are a subset.
        Although an entity can compensate a physician group to reflect the 
    volume or value of referrals under a physician incentive plan, the 
    definition of a group practice under section 1877(h)(4)(A)(iv) 
    precludes the group, with certain exceptions, from compensating its 
    members based directly or indirectly on the volume or value of their 
    referrals (it does not contain the exception for physician incentive 
    plans). As we have described earlier in this preamble, we believe the 
    volume or value standard applies only to a physician's own referrals 
    for designated health services covered under Medicare or Medicaid.
        Several interested parties have asked us whether these provisions 
    contain contradictory standards, which could make it difficult for 
    entities that enroll patients to continue their common practice of 
    contracting with group practices to provide services to the entities' 
    enrollees. We believe that the two provisions need not be read as 
    contradictory. While the group practice definition in general precludes 
    a group from compensating its physician members based on their 
    referrals, it does allow groups to pay physicians a share of the 
    overall profits of the group, or a productivity bonus based on services 
    personally performed or services incident to such personally performed 
    services, so long as the share or bonus is not determined in a manner 
    that is directly related to the volume or value of a physician's own 
    referrals. We have discussed our interpretation of these principles 
    elsewhere in this preamble. In the context of a physician incentive 
    plan, a physician group as a whole could be compensated more by an 
    entity based on providing or referring for fewer services. We believe 
    that the group practice could then pass any additional compensation it 
    receives from a physician incentive plan on to the individual physician 
    members via overall profit sharing, which would only
    
    [[Page 1715]]
    
    indirectly compensate them for the volume of their referrals. Also, the 
    physicians could receive a productivity bonus for their decreased 
    utilization of any services that are not designated health services 
    covered under Medicare or Medicaid.
    
    V. Regulatory Impact Statement
    
    A. Background
    
        We have examined the impacts of this proposed rule as required by 
    Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (Public 
    Law 96-354). Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all costs 
    and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when regulation 
    is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net 
    benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health 
    and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). The RFA requires 
    agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief of small businesses. 
    For purposes of the RFA, most hospitals, and most other providers, 
    physicians, and health care suppliers are small entities, either by 
    nonprofit status or by having revenues of $5 million or less annually.
        Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act provides for 
    ``Regulatory Accountability and Reform.'' It requires the agency to 
    engage in certain procedures, including a cost benefit analysis and 
    consultation with affected State and local governments, for proposed 
    and certain final rules that include ``Federal mandates'' that may 
    result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more 
    annually. Section 201 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act requires this 
    assessment only to the extent that a regulation incorporates 
    requirements other than those specifically set forth in the law.
        Section 1102(b) of the Social Security Act requires us to prepare a 
    regulatory impact analysis for any proposed rule that may have a 
    significant impact on the operations of a substantial number of small 
    rural hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of 
    section 603 of the RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act, we 
    define a small rural hospital as a hospital that is located outside a 
    Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than 50 beds.
        Sections 1877 and 1903(s) of the Act were enacted in order to 
    correct an abuse highlighted by a number of studies: The ordering by 
    some physicians of unnecessary services because they have a financial 
    incentive do so. (See section I.A. of this preamble for citations to 
    the studies.) The legislation identified those types of services 
    (referred to as ``designated health services'') where the existence of, 
    or potential for, abuse appeared to be the greatest. The approach taken 
    in the legislation was to assume that, in general, if a financial 
    relationship exists between a physician or a physician's immediate 
    family member and an entity that provides designated health services, 
    an incentive to overutilize those services also exists. The statute 
    defined a financial relationship as an ownership or investment interest 
    in, or compensation arrangement with, an entity. Congress created a 
    number of exceptions to the prohibition in recognition of certain 
    existing business practices. In addition, the legislation provides the 
    Secretary with authority to create new exceptions. However, we must 
    first determine, and specify in regulations, that any new exception 
    will not pose a risk of program or patient abuse.
        Because of its exceptions, the current law is complicated. However, 
    the essence of the prohibition in section 1877 is clear: If a physician 
    or a physician's immediate family member has a financial relationship 
    with an entity, the physician cannot refer patients to that entity for 
    the furnishing of a designated health service for which payment 
    otherwise may be made under Medicare. Unlike the anti-kickback statute 
    discussed in the preamble, the law is triggered by the mere fact that a 
    financial relationship exists; the intention of the referring physician 
    is not taken into consideration.
        Section 1903(s) denies Federal financial participation payment 
    under the Medicaid program to a State for designated health services 
    furnished to an individual on the basis of a physician referral that 
    would result in a denial of payment under the Medicare program if 
    Medicare covered the services to the same extent and under the same 
    terms and conditions as under the State Medicaid plan.
        The goal of this proposed rule is to integrate section 1877 (as 
    amended by OBRA '93 and SSA '94) into the Medicare regulations and 
    section 1903(s) into the Medicaid regulations, and to interpret the 
    statute in accordance with its language and intent.
    
    B. Anticipated Effects and Alternatives Considered
    
        For the reasons described below, we believe any estimate of the 
    individual or aggregate economic impact of the provisions of this 
    proposed rule would be purely speculative. Although the provisions 
    proposed in this rule do not lend themselves to a quantitative impact 
    estimate, for reasons discussed below and elsewhere in the preamble, we 
    do not anticipate that they would have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities. However, to the extent that our 
    proposals may have significant effects on some health care 
    practitioners or be viewed as controversial, we believe it is desirable 
    to inform the public of what we view as the possible effects of the 
    proposals. This analysis, together with the other sections of the 
    preamble, constitutes a regulatory flexibility analysis and analysis 
    for purposes of section 1102(b) of the Act.
        We expect that some kinds of entities could be affected to varying 
    degrees by this proposed rule. Following are the groups we believe are 
    most likely to experience some economic impact:
    1. Physicians
        A physician can be financially related to an entity either through 
    an ownership or investment interest in the entity, or through a 
    compensation arrangement with the entity. We begin by first discussing 
    ownership/investment interests.
        Ownership or investment interests. A physician who has (or whose 
    immediate family member has) an ownership or investment interest in an 
    entity and does not qualify for an exception is prohibited from 
    referring Medicare patients to that entity for the provision of 
    designated health services. Also, when a physician with such an 
    ownership or investment interest makes a prohibited referral, there is 
    a risk that the entity will receive no Medicare payment for those 
    designated health services. Under Medicaid, a State may receive no FFP 
    for services that result from a referral that would be prohibited under 
    Medicare, if Medicare covered the same designated health services as 
    are covered under the State plan. The State may, in turn, choose not to 
    pay the furnishing entity.
        The American Medical Association's (AMA) Center for Health Policy 
    Research (hereafter, the Center) reviewed three studies that analyze 
    self-referral: (1) ``Financial Arrangements Between Physicians and 
    Health Care Businesses: Report to Congress,'' Office of Inspector 
    General, DHHS, pages 18 and 21 (May 1989); (2) ``Joint Ventures Among 
    Health Care Providers in Florida,'' State of Florida Health Care Cost 
    Containment Board (Sept. 1991); and (3) ``Frequency and Costs of 
    Diagnostic Imagining in Office Practice--A Comparison of Self-Referring 
    and Radiologist-Referring
    
    [[Page 1716]]
    
    Physicians,'' Bruce J. Hillman and others, The New England Journal of 
    Medicine (December 1990; pp. 1604-1608). As reported in the Journal of 
    the American Medical Association (JAMA, May 6, 1992, Vol 267. No. 17), 
    the Center found that approximately 10 percent of physicians nationwide 
    have ownership interests in health care entities that have been 
    associated with potential self-referral issues. It pointed out, 
    however, that not all of these physicians engage in self-referral. The 
    Center also reported that there was no evidence in the studies they 
    reviewed on the extent to which physicians may profit from self-
    referrals. Therefore, it concluded that the degree of conflict of 
    interest presented by a physician's investment in entities to which he 
    or she refers patients is unknown.
        If we were to assume that the 10 percent figure cited above is 
    currently true, this would mean, based on the number of active 
    physicians in 1995, that approximately 79,000 physicians have an 
    ownership interest in health care entities that furnish designated 
    health services. Note, however, that others cite higher percentages. 
    For example, the 1991 study issued by the Florida Health Care Cost 
    Containment Board found that at least 40 percent of Florida physicians 
    involved in direct patient care had an investment in a health care 
    business to which they could--in the absence of prohibiting 
    legislation--refer patients for services. We would also like to point 
    out that ownership information or information on the investments of 
    physicians and all of their immediate family members in the entities 
    that furnish any of eleven designated health services constitutes an 
    enormous amount of data that is continually subject to change.
        In 1991, the AMA's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs had 
    concluded that physicians should not refer patients to a health care 
    facility outside their office at which they do not directly provide 
    services if they have an investment interest in the facility. The 
    Council stated that physicians have a special fiduciary responsibility 
    to their patients and that there are some activities involving their 
    patients that physicians should avoid whether or not there is evidence 
    of abuse. In December 1992, the AMA voted to declare self-referral 
    unethical, with a few exceptions. Exceptions are allowed if there is a 
    demonstrated need in the community and alternative financing is not 
    available.
        As of October 1994, 27 States had enacted legislation that 
    restricts or qualifies self-referral. There is great variation among 
    the States. Some only require disclosure of the financial relationship 
    to the patient, while others prohibit such referrals.
        We believe that this increased examination of self-referral 
    arrangements and enactment of both Federal and State laws prohibiting 
    such arrangements has led to a decline in self-referral activity and 
    financial relationships between physicians and entities. However, we 
    lack the data necessary to either confirm or refute this supposition. 
    We also lack data that would tell us how many of the financial 
    relationships that physicians have with an entity that furnishes a 
    designated health service would be exempted under the statute. We would 
    welcome receiving current relevant data.
        One exception that may have broad application is the in-office 
    ancillary services exception. With regard to this exception, which 
    applies to both ownership/investment interests and compensation 
    arrangements, we offer the following discussion.
        To qualify as in-office ancillary services, the services must, 
    among other things, be furnished personally by the referring physician 
    or another physician in the same group practice as the referring 
    physician, or be furnished by individuals who are directly supervised 
    by one of these physicians. How we interpret a number of elements in 
    this provision would affect whether certain referrals qualify for the 
    in-office ancillary services exception. These include how we define 
    ``group practice,'' ``members of the group,'' and ``direct 
    supervision.'' We discuss these definitions below.
        The in-office ancillary services exception allows physicians who 
    are members of a group practice to supervise designated health services 
    referred by any group member. Paragraph (h)(4)(A) of section 1877 
    provides a definition of a ``group practice.'' That definition, 
    however, consists of elements that require interpretation--for example, 
    what qualifies a group of physicians as ``a legal entity,'' what is 
    meant by the ``full range of a physician's services,'' which must be 
    furnished through group arrangements, and what constitutes 
    ``substantially all'' of a physician's services, which must also be 
    furnished through the group. We discuss these elements in section 
    III.A.6 of this preamble. As noted in that discussion, we propose to 
    modify some of the interpretations that we made in the August 1995 
    final rule. We believe that these modifications, which recognize 
    established business practices that do not pose the risk of program or 
    patient abuse, will enable more physicians to meet the definition of a 
    group practice than would the interpretations in the August 1995 rule. 
    If a group of physicians qualifies as a group practice, services can be 
    furnished by certain individuals other than the referring physician and 
    still qualify for the in-office ancillary services exception. We are 
    unable, however, to make an estimate of the economic impact of these 
    modifications.
        Also affecting the in-office ancillary services exception is how we 
    would define ``members of the group.'' Again, this proposed rule would 
    modify the definition we established in the August 1995 final rule. 
    This modification, discussed in detail in section III.A.6 of this 
    preamble, would not regard independent contractors as members of the 
    group. This interpretation may make it easier for a group of physicians 
    to meet the ``substantially all'' test to qualify as a group practice 
    than would the interpretation in the August 1995 rule. On the other 
    hand, independent contractors could not supervise the provision of 
    designated health services. We are unable to estimate the impact of 
    these opposing effects.
        The in-office ancillary services exception provides both solo 
    practitioners as well as group practice physicians with the ability to 
    refer within their own practices. As we discussed in detail in the 
    August 1995 final rule, this provision can except solo practitioners 
    with certain shared arrangements who do not wish to become a group 
    practice. For example, two solo practitioners who share one office and 
    jointly own a laboratory can continue to refer to that laboratory, as 
    long as each physician furnishes physician services unrelated to the 
    designated health services in the office, directly supervises the 
    laboratory services for his or her own Medicare and Medicaid patients 
    while they are being furnished, and bills for the services. If only one 
    of the solo practitioners owns the laboratory in a shared office, the 
    non-owning physician can refer to the laboratory as long as he or she 
    is not receiving compensation from the owner in exchange for referrals. 
    We are aware, however, that this exception may not accommodate the 
    variety of different arrangements physicians have entered into to share 
    facilities or otherwise group together without losing their status as 
    solo practitioners. We directly solicit comments on the effects of the 
    referral prohibition on these arrangements.
        The proposed regulation defines the statutory requirement for a 
    physician's ``direct supervision'' of individuals furnishing designated 
    health services
    
    [[Page 1717]]
    
    under the in-office ancillary services exception. Under the definition, 
    ``direct supervision'' requires that a physician be present in the 
    office suite and immediately available to provide assistance and 
    direction during the time services are being performed.
        One option for defining ``direct supervision'' would be to say that 
    it means that the service is furnished under the physician's overall 
    supervision and control but that the physician need not be physically 
    present in the office suite in which the services are performed while 
    they are being performed. This rule would not adopt such a definition, 
    however. We believe that the supervision requirement is meant to 
    establish as ``in-office ancillary'' services those services that are 
    integral to the physician's own practice and that are conducted within 
    his or her own sphere of activity. We believe Congress intended this 
    exception to apply to services that are closely attached to the 
    activities of the referring physician.
        If we were to allow physicians to supervise the furnishing of 
    designated health services from a distance, we believe that we would be 
    creating an opportunity for physicians to refer to entities outside 
    their own practices, for services which are not actually ``in-office 
    ancillary'' in nature. Although our proposed definition may result in 
    fewer referrals qualifying for the ``in-office'' exception than a more 
    liberal definition, we believe our definition is necessary to achieve 
    the purposes of the statute. We are not, however, proposing that there 
    must be a particular configuration of rooms for an office to qualify as 
    a ``suite,'' for example, that the rooms be contiguous. As stated in 
    section III.A.2 of this preamble, the question of physician proximity 
    for purposes of meeting the direct supervision requirement is a 
    decision that would be made by the local carrier based on the 
    circumstances. We have also proposed to liberalize the concept of 
    ``present in the office suite,'' as we interpreted it in the August 
    1995 final rule, to allow brief absences from the office under certain 
    conditions.
        Because we do not have data on how many physicians have financial 
    relationships that already qualify for the in-office exception, and how 
    many would have to alter their practices, even given the modifications 
    discussed immediately above, we cannot judge the economic impact of our 
    definition. We specifically solicit information on this issue.
        As already stated, we do not have current data on the number of 
    physicians with ownership/investment interests in entities that furnish 
    designated health services. Nor do we know how many of these physicians 
    would qualify for an exception to the referral prohibition. However, 
    even if we were to assume that a substantial number of physicians have 
    nonexcepted ownership interests in entities that furnish a designated 
    health service, we do not believe that, in general, the economic impact 
    on these physicians necessarily has to be substantial, for the 
    following reasons:
        If a physician's ownership interest in an entity would lead to a 
    prohibition on his or her referrals to that entity, the physician has 
    three options: First, he or she can stop making referrals to that 
    entity and make referrals to another unrelated entity. Second, the 
    physician can divest him or herself of the interest. Third, the 
    physician can, if possible, position him or herself to qualify for an 
    exception. Below we discuss the economic impact of each of these 
    options.
        While the impact on an individual physician may be significant, we 
    do not believe that physicians, in general, will be significantly 
    affected if they have to stop making referrals to an entity in which 
    they have an ownership interest. We come to this conclusion because we 
    assume that the majority of physicians receive most of their income 
    from the services they personally furnish, not from those they refer. 
    In addition, we assume that unless the physician established the entity 
    to serve only his or her own patients, the entity receives referrals 
    from other sources. Thus, the physician may still receive a return on 
    the investment. Further, it is possible that, if physician ownership of 
    entities providing the particular designated health services is 
    prevalent in the area, what may occur is a ``shifting'' of referrals; 
    that is, the loss of a physician's own referrals to the entity might be 
    offset by other physicians shifting referrals to unrelated entities. 
    These shifts would be acceptable under section 1877, provided they do 
    not result from circumvention schemes.
        We do not believe the second option, divesting of the ownership 
    interest, would necessarily have a significant economic effect. 
    However, we assume, that, at least from an economic standpoint, most 
    physicians invest in entities because they are income-producing. If an 
    investment is successful, a physician may not have difficulty finding 
    new investors willing to take over the physician's investment. The 
    physician, in turn, can then invest the monies received in some other 
    investment. We believe the cost of divesting will vary from situation 
    to situation. (A search of the literature on this issue resulted in 
    only anecdotal information that indicated that some physicians 
    sustained a loss in divesting, while others did not.) We do see the 
    possibility of a significant effect in the case of a physician who has, 
    at considerable expense, established an entity to serve only his or her 
    own patients, with the expectation of future return on that investment. 
    We believe, however, that the exceptions in the statute and regulation 
    allowing physicians to refer within their own practices (primarily the 
    in-office ancillary services exception) will greatly reduce the number 
    of physicians otherwise subject to the prohibition.
        It is difficult to estimate how many physicians would select the 
    third option of changing the circumstances of their practices in order 
    to meet an exception to the referral prohibition. It is also difficult 
    to estimate the extent of the changes that would be necessary or the 
    potential economic impact of any modifications. As an example of one 
    modification, a physician maintains with other independently-practicing 
    physicians a nonrural facility for furnishing X-rays. The physicians 
    share premises, equipment, employees, and overhead costs. If an 
    individual physician does not meet the requirements for the in-office 
    ancillary exception found in section 1877(b)(2), the physician's 
    Medicare referrals to that entity would be prohibited. In such a 
    situation, as an alternative to options 1 and 2 above (stopping 
    referrals or divesting), the physician could choose to form a group 
    practice with the other physicians in order to qualify for the in-
    office ancillary services exception. By forming a group practice, the 
    referrals would not be prohibited if the services were furnished 
    personally by the referring physician, personally by another physician 
    who is a member of the same group practice as the referring physician, 
    or if they are furnished personally by individuals who are directly 
    supervised by any of these physicians and the billing and location 
    requirements specified in the in-office ancillary exception are met.
        Although we realize that a physician reorganizing his or her 
    practice in this way may be subject to various economic and noneconomic 
    effects, we believe those effects will differ widely from case to case. 
    Some physicians may need to make major alterations in their practices, 
    while others may need only minor changes, with minimal or no help from 
    legal or financial advisors. It is possible that some physicians would 
    profit from reorganizing, while others might suffer losses. Thus, we 
    cannot
    
    [[Page 1718]]
    
    judge whether any particular physician, or physicians in general, will 
    sustain a significant economic impact because they have reconfigured 
    their practices.
        Compensation arrangements: The statute defines a compensation 
    arrangement very broadly as any arrangement involving any remuneration 
    between a physician (or an immediate family member) and an entity, with 
    certain narrowly defined exceptions. We believe that this definition 
    involves almost every situation in which a physician or relative 
    receives payment from an entity or makes payments to an entity, 
    including payments under personal services contracts, employment 
    agreements, sales contracts, and rentals or leases. The amount of data 
    we would need to account for every compensation arrangement that might 
    be affected by the law would likely be overwhelming, as well as subject 
    to the constant changes inherent in the business world. As a result, it 
    is difficult for us to assess how many physicians (or their relatives) 
    are currently involved in compensation arrangements.
        We believe that most physicians who have compensation, rather than 
    ownership, arrangements with an entity and are receiving fair payments 
    will qualify for one of the many compensation-related exceptions set 
    forth in this proposed rule, especially since we propose to exercise 
    our authority to create several additional exceptions related to 
    compensation. We expect that those who do not will be few in number, 
    and, thus, this rule would not have an impact on a substantial number 
    of physicians whose financial relationships are based on compensation.
    2. Entities, Including Hospitals
        We lack the data to determine the number of entities that would be 
    affected by this proposed rule. However, even if we were to assume that 
    a substantial number of entities would be affected, we do not believe 
    that, in general, the impact would be significant. In order for the 
    effect on a substantial number of entities to be significant, this rule 
    would have to result in a very significant decline in utilization of 
    the designated health services. The statute was enacted to curb an 
    abusive practice: the ordering by some physicians of unnecessary 
    services because they have a financial incentive to do so. We do not 
    believe, however, that the abuse is so prevalent that the survival of 
    entities would be threatened because a physician's financial incentive 
    to make referrals is removed. It is our view that most health care 
    entities exist because they provide medically necessary services and 
    that these services will continue to be furnished.
        In addition, the statute contains a number of exceptions to the 
    referral prohibition that will allow physicians to continue to refer to 
    any entity furnishing designated health services if certain criteria 
    are met. These exceptions are set forth in this proposed rule. For 
    example, Sec. 411.356(c) includes exceptions for ownership or 
    investment interests in certain hospitals or in certain rural entities. 
    Sections 411.357(c) and (d) include relevant exceptions related to 
    compensation arrangements: Paragraph (c) provides an exception for bona 
    fide employment relationships that meet certain conditions, and 
    paragraph (d) provides an exception for remuneration for personal 
    service arrangements that meet certain conditions. Also, this proposed 
    rule would provide an additional exception for any compensation that 
    is, among other things, based on fair market value. We believe many, if 
    not most, of the financial relationships between physicians and 
    entities, including hospitals, are covered by these exceptions.
    
    C. Conclusion
    
        For the reasons stated above, we have determined, and the Secretary 
    certifies, that, based on the limited data currently available to us, 
    this proposed rule would not result in a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities or on the operations of a 
    substantial number of small rural hospitals. In addition, for purposes 
    of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, we believe that any significant 
    economic results of this proposed rule originate from the general 
    referral prohibition in the statute and not from an agency mandate. We 
    have, in fact, liberalized the requirements in the law by adding new 
    exceptions. In the relatively few instances in which we have added 
    additional requirements, as authorized by the statute, our data is too 
    limited for us to ascertain whether these new provisions alone may 
    result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in any 
    one year. In terms of requirements on State governments, it is the 
    statute that applies aspects of the referral prohibition to State 
    Medicaid agencies. This proposed rule does interpret the statute to 
    apply the reporting requirements in section 1877(f) of the Act to 
    States, but does not mandate any action. The proposed rule allows 
    States to collect financial information from Medicaid providers in any 
    form, manner, and at whatever times they choose.
        In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this 
    regulation was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
    
    VI. Collection of Information Requirements
    
        Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to 
    provide 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public 
    comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to 
    the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval. In 
    order to fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be 
    approved by OMB, section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act 
    of 1995 requires that we solicit comment on the following issues:
         The need for the information collection and its usefulness 
    in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
         The accuracy of our estimate of the information collection 
    burden.
         The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be 
    collected.
         Recommendations to minimize the information collection 
    burden on the affected public, including automated collection 
    techniques.
        Sections 411.360 and 411.361 of this proposed rule contain 
    information collection requirements that are subject to the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995. However, we are not requiring the public to 
    comply with these reporting requirements at this time. Instead we are 
    seeking public comment to determine possible methods of implementing 
    these information collection and recordkeeping requirements. Once we 
    have determined how to impose these requirements in the least 
    burdensome method, while meeting program requirements, we will publish 
    a separate 60-day notice in the Federal Register seeking comments on 
    the proposed information collection before it is submitted to OMB for 
    review.
        Below is a discussion of the information collection requirements 
    referenced in Secs. 411.360 and 411.361.
        As stated earlier in this preamble, a number of entities have 
    pointed out to us that the amounts of data they are required to report 
    under the statute as reflected in our current regulations will, in some 
    circumstances, be overwhelming and perhaps almost impossible to 
    acquire. Therefore, in order to make the reporting requirements more 
    manageable, we intend to develop a streamlined ``reporting'' system 
    that does not require entities to retain and submit large
    
    [[Page 1719]]
    
    quantities of data. We believe, however, that entities should retain 
    enough records to demonstrate, in the event of an audit, that they have 
    correctly determined that particular relationships are excepted under 
    the law.
        We are proposing to limit the information that an entity must 
    acquire, retain and, at some later point, possibly submit to us. We 
    would include only those records covering information that the entity 
    knows or should know about, in the course of prudently conducting 
    business, including records that the entity is already required to 
    retain to meet Internal Revenue Service and Security Exchange 
    Commission rules, and other rules under the Medicare or Medicaid 
    programs. We are circumscribing these records under the Secretary's 
    discretion in section 1877(f) to ask entities to provide information in 
    such form, manner, and at such times as the Secretary specifies. As 
    stated above, when we develop a form for reporting information to us, 
    we plan to first publish it as a proposed notice in order to receive 
    public comment. If we later find that this plan is inadequate and elect 
    to change the scope of the requirement, we will provide entities with 
    adequate notice to comply.
        While we are not at this time proposing to impose reporting 
    requirements, we do propose to make modifications to the existing 
    information collection requirements referenced in this proposed rule. 
    Existing Sec. 411.361 reflects the reporting requirements in section 
    1877(f) of the Act. Specifically, Sec. 411.361 requires, with certain 
    exceptions, that all entities furnishing services for which payment may 
    be made under Medicare submit information to us concerning their 
    financial relationships (as described in Sec. 411.361(d)). The 
    requirement does not apply to entities that furnish 20 or fewer Part A 
    and Part B services during a calendar year, or to designated health 
    services furnished outside the United States. Paragraph (a) of 
    Sec. 411.361 requires that all entities furnishing services for which 
    payment may be made under Medicare submit information to us concerning 
    their financial relationships in the form, manner, and at the times we 
    specify. We would revise this to add that this information must be 
    submitted on a HCFA-prescribed form. As stated above, this form would 
    first be published as a proposed notice in order to receive public 
    comment.
        Paragraph (c) of Sec. 411.361 requires that the entity submit 
    information that includes at least the following with regard to each 
    physician who has, or whose immediate family member has, a financial 
    relationship with the entity: The name and unique physician 
    identification number (UPIN) of the physician, the covered services 
    furnished by the entity, and the nature of the financial relationship. 
    We now propose to specify that the entity submit information that may 
    include the information described above depending upon the process we 
    select.
        Existing Sec. 411.361(d) provides that a reportable financial 
    relationship is any ownership or investment interest or any 
    compensation arrangement, as described in section 1877 of the Act. This 
    proposed, would revise this section to specify that a financial 
    relationship is any ownership or investment interest or any 
    compensation arrangement, as defined in Sec. 411.351, including those 
    relationships excepted under Secs. 411.355 through 411.357.
        We would also revise existing Sec. 411.361(e) as follows. Currently 
    that paragraph requires that an entity provide updated information 
    within 60 days from the date of any change in the submitted 
    information. We propose to require instead that an entity report to 
    HCFA once a year all changes in the submitted information that occurred 
    in the previous 12 months.
        OBRA '93 amended section 1903 of the Act by adding a new 
    paragraph(s) that, among other things, applied the reporting 
    requirements of 1877(f) to a provider of a designated health service 
    for which payment may be made under Medicaid in the same manner as 
    those requirements apply to a Medicare provider. Therefore, at 
    Sec. 455.109(a) of this proposed rule, we would specify that the 
    Medicaid agency must require that each provider of services that 
    furnishes designated health services that are covered by Medicaid 
    submit information to the Medicaid agency concerning its financial 
    relationships in such form, manner, and at such times as the agency 
    specifies. Paragraph (c) of Sec. 445.109 would specify that the entity 
    submit the same information identified with regard to Medicare 
    providers/suppliers except that, instead of the UPIN, the entity would 
    report the Medicaid State Specific Identifier of each physician who 
    has, or whose immediate relative has, a financial relationship with the 
    entity. Paragraph (d) of Sec. 445.109 would establish the same 
    definition of what constitutes a reportable financial relationship as 
    under Medicare, and paragraph (e) would give States the discretion to 
    establish the timeframes within which providers must submit and update 
    information. We solicit comments on these proposed changes to the 
    existing reporting requirements.
        This proposed rule would also retain existing Sec. 411.360, which 
    requires that a group practice that wants to be identified as such 
    submit a written statement to its carrier annually to attest that it 
    meets the ``substantially all'' test, one of the criteria that 
    qualifies a group of physicians as a group practice (the criteria are 
    set forth under the definition of a group practice in Sec. 411.351). 
    This provision would now apply to any group of physicians who refer for 
    or furnish designated health services and who wish to qualify as a 
    group practice. We believe that, since this requirement has already 
    been established by the August 1995 final rule, a significant number of 
    physician groups may already be subject to the reporting requirements. 
    We base this conclusion on the fact that many groups have their own 
    clinical laboratories and will already be prepared to attest for 
    purposes of complying with the final regulation covering referrals for 
    clinical laboratory services. Once a group is identified as a group 
    practice for purposes of laboratory services, it is identified as a 
    group practice for all services. Thus it was the August 1995 final rule 
    that established the burden for those groups. However, we have no way 
    of estimating how many other groups of physicians will want to try to 
    qualify as group practices exclusively for purposes of referring for 
    some or all of the other designated health services. We specifically 
    solicit information on this issue. A group of physicians must submit 
    the attestation required by Sec. 411.360 within 60 days after receiving 
    attestation instructions from its carrier.
        If you comment on these information collection and recordkeeping 
    requirements, please mail copies directly to the following:
    
    Health Care Financing Administration, Office of Financial and Human 
    Resources, Management Planning and Analysis Staff, Attention: HCFA-
    1809-P, Room C2-26-17, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-
    1850.
    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and 
    Budget, Room 10235, New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 
    20503, Attn: Allison Herron Eydt, HCFA Desk Officer.
    
    VII. Response to Comments
    
        Because of the large number of items of correspondence we normally 
    receive on a proposed rule, we are not able to acknowledge or respond 
    to them individually. We will, however, consider all comments that we 
    receive by the date specified in the DATES section of this preamble 
    and, if we
    
    [[Page 1720]]
    
    proceed with a final rule, we will respond to the comments in the 
    preamble of the final rule. We will also respond, in that final rule, 
    to comments that we received on the August 1995 final rule with comment 
    covering referrals for clinical laboratory services.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    42 CFR Part 411
    
        Kidney diseases, Medicare, Physician referral, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    42 CFR Part 424
    
        Emergency medical services, Health facilities, Health professions, 
    Medicare.
    
    42 CFR Part 435
    
        Aid to Families with Dependent Children, Grant programs-health, 
    Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Supplemental 
    Security Income (SSI), Wages.
    
    42 CFR Part 455
    
        Fraud, Grant programs-health, Health facilities, Health 
    professions, Investigations, Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
        42 CFR chapter IV would be amended as set forth below:
    
    PART 411--EXCLUSIONS FROM MEDICARE AND LIMITATIONS ON MEDICARE 
    PAYMENT
    
        A. Part 411 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 411 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 
    U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
    
        2. In Sec. 411.1, paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.1  Basis and scope.
    
        (a) Statutory basis. Sections 1814(a) and 1835(a) of the Act 
    require that a physician certify or recertify a patient's need for home 
    health services, but in general, prohibit a physician from certifying 
    or recertifying the need for services if the services will be furnished 
    by a home health agency in which the physician has a significant 
    ownership interest, or with which the physician has a significant 
    financial or contractual relationship. Sections 1814(c), 1835(d), and 
    1862 of the Act exclude from Medicare payment certain specified 
    services. The Act provides special rules for payment of services 
    furnished by Federal providers or agencies (sections 1814(c) and 
    1835(d)), by hospitals and physicians outside the United States 
    (sections 1814(f) and 1862(a)(4)), and by hospitals and SNFs of the 
    Indian Health Service (section 1880). Section 1877 sets forth 
    limitations on referrals and payment for designated health services 
    furnished by entities with which the referring physician (or an 
    immediate family member of the referring physician) has a financial 
    relationship.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 411.350, paragraphs (a) and (c) are revised, and 
    paragraph (b) is republished, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.350  Scope of subpart.
    
        (a) This subpart implements section 1877 of the Act, which 
    generally prohibits a physician from making a referral under Medicare 
    for designated health services to an entity with which the physician or 
    a member of the physician's immediate family has a financial 
    relationship.
        (b) This subpart does not provide for exceptions or immunity from 
    civil or criminal prosecution or other sanctions applicable under any 
    State laws or under Federal law other than section 1877 of the Act. For 
    example, although a particular arrangement involving a physician's 
    financial relationship with an entity may not prohibit the physician 
    from making referrals to the entity under this subpart, the arrangement 
    may nevertheless violate another provision of the Act or other laws 
    administered by HHS, the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and 
    Exchange Commission, the Internal Revenue Service, or any other Federal 
    or State agency.
        (c) This subpart requires, with some exceptions, that certain 
    entities furnishing covered services under Part A or Part B report 
    information concerning their ownership, investment, or compensation 
    arrangements in the form, manner, and at the times specified by HCFA.
        4. Section 411.351 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.351  Definitions.
    
        As used in this subpart, unless the context indicates otherwise:
        Clinical laboratory services means the biological, microbiological, 
    serological, chemical, immunohematological, hematological, biophysical, 
    cytological, pathological, or other examination of materials derived 
    from the human body for the purpose of providing information for the 
    diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or 
    the assessment of the health of, human beings. These examinations also 
    include procedures to determine, measure, or otherwise describe the 
    presence or absence of various substances or organisms in the body.
        Compensation arrangement means any arrangement involving any 
    remuneration, direct or indirect, between a physician (or a member of a 
    physician's immediate family) and an entity.
        Designated health services means any of the following services 
    (other than those provided as emergency physician services furnished 
    outside of the United States), as they are defined in this section:
        (1) Clinical laboratory services.
        (2) Physical therapy services.
        (3) Occupational therapy services.
        (4) Radiology services and radiation therapy services and supplies.
        (5) Durable medical equipment and supplies.
        (6) Parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies.
        (7) Prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices and supplies.
        (8) Home health services.
        (9) Outpatient prescription drugs.
        (10) Inpatient and outpatient hospital services.
        Direct supervision means supervision by a physician who is present 
    in the office suite in which the services are being furnished, 
    throughout the time they are being furnished, and immediately available 
    to provide assistance and direction. ``Present in the office suite'' 
    means that the physician is actually physically present. However, the 
    physician is still considered ``present'' during brief unexpected 
    absences as well as during routine absences of a short duration (such 
    as during a lunch break), provided the absences occur during time 
    periods in which the physician is otherwise scheduled and ordinarily 
    expected to be present and the absences do not conflict with any other 
    requirements in the Medicare program for a particular level of 
    physician supervision.
        Durable medical equipment has the meaning given in section 1861(n) 
    of the Act and Sec. 414.202 of this chapter.
        Employee means any individual who, under the usual common law rules 
    that apply in determining the employer-employee relationship (as 
    applied for purposes of section 3121(d)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code 
    of 1986), is considered to be employed by, or an employee of, an 
    entity. (Application of these common law rules is discussed at 20 CFR 
    404.1007 and 26 CFR 31.3121(d)-1(c).)
        Enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies means items and supplies 
    needed to provide enteral nutrition to a patient with a functioning 
    gastrointestinal tract who, due to pathology to or nonfunction of the 
    structures that normally permit food to reach the digestive tract, 
    cannot maintain weight and strength
    
    [[Page 1721]]
    
    commensurate with his or her general condition, as described in section 
    65-10 of the Medicare Coverage Issues Manual (HCFA Pub. 6).
        Entity means a physician's sole practice or a practice of multiple 
    physicians that provides for the furnishing of designated health 
    services, or any other sole proprietorship, trust, corporation, 
    partnership, foundation, not-for-profit corporation, or unincorporated 
    association.
        Fair market value means the value in arm's-length transactions, 
    consistent with the general market value. ``General market value'' 
    means the price that an asset would bring, as the result of bona fide 
    bargaining between well-informed buyers and sellers, or the 
    compensation that would be included in a service agreement, as the 
    result of bona fide bargaining between well-informed parties to the 
    agreement, on the date of acquisition of the asset or at the time of 
    the service agreement. Usually the fair market price is the price at 
    which bona fide sales have been consummated for assets of like type, 
    quality, and quantity in a particular market at the time of 
    acquisition, or the compensation that has been included in bona fide 
    service agreements with comparable terms at the time of the agreement. 
    With respect to the rentals and leases described in Sec. 411.357(a) and 
    (b), fair market value means the value of rental property for general 
    commercial purposes (not taking into account its intended use). In the 
    case of a lease of space, this value may not be adjusted to reflect the 
    additional value the prospective lessee or lessor would attribute to 
    the proximity or convenience to the lessor when the lessor is a 
    potential source of patient referrals to the lessee.
        Financial relationship means a direct or indirect ownership or 
    investment interest (including an option or nonvested interest) in any 
    entity that exists through equity, debt, or other means and includes 
    any indirect ownership or investment interest no matter how many levels 
    removed from a direct interest (for example, a financial relationship 
    in an entity furnishing designated health services exists if the 
    individual has an ownership or investment interest in an entity that 
    holds an ownership or investment interest in an entity that furnishes 
    designated health services), or a compensation arrangement with an 
    entity.
        Group practice means a group of two or more physicians, legally 
    organized as a single partnership, professional corporation, 
    foundation, not-for-profit corporation, faculty practice plan, or 
    similar association, with the exception that a group can consist of 
    physicians who are also individually incorporated as professional 
    corporations. To qualify as a group practice, a group must meet the 
    following conditions:
        (1) Each physician who is a member of the group, as defined in this 
    section, furnishes substantially the full range of patient care 
    services that the physician routinely furnishes, including medical 
    care, consultation, diagnosis, and treatment, through the joint use of 
    shared office space, facilities, equipment, and personnel.
        (2) Except as provided in paragraphs (2)(i) and (2)(ii) of this 
    definition, substantially all of the patient care services of the 
    physicians who are members of the group (that is, at least 75 percent 
    of the total patient care services of the group practice members) are 
    furnished through the group and billed under a billing number assigned 
    to the group and the amounts received are treated as receipts of the 
    group. ``Patient care services'' are measured by the total patient care 
    time each member spends on these services (for example, if a physician 
    practices 40 hours a week and spends 30 hours on patient care services 
    for a group practice, the physician has spent 75 percent of his or her 
    time providing countable patient care services).
        (i) The ``substantially all'' test does not apply to any group 
    practice that is located solely in an HPSA, as defined in this section.
        (ii) For group practices located outside of an HPSA (as defined in 
    this section) any time spent by group practice members providing 
    services in an HPSA should not be used to calculate whether the group 
    practice located outside the HPSA has met the ``substantially all'' 
    test, regardless of whether the members' time in the HPSA is spent in a 
    group practice, clinic, or office setting.
        (3) The overhead expenses of and income from the practice are 
    distributed according to methods that are determined prior to the time 
    period during which the group has earned the income or incurred the 
    costs.
        (4) The overhead expenses of and the income from the practice are 
    distributed according to methods that indicate that the practice is a 
    unified business. That is, the methods must reflect centralized 
    decision making, a pooling of expenses and revenues, and a distribution 
    system that is not based on each satellite office operating as if it 
    were a separate enterprise.
        (5) No physician who is a member of the group directly or 
    indirectly receives compensation based on the volume or value of 
    referrals by the physician, except that a physician in a group practice 
    may be paid a share of overall profits of the group or a productivity 
    bonus based on services he or she has personally performed or services 
    incident to these personally performed services, as long as the share 
    or bonus is not determined in any manner that is directly related to 
    the volume or value of referrals by the physician.
        (6) Members of the group personally conduct no less that 75 percent 
    of the physician-patient encounters of the group practice.
        (7) In the case of faculty practice plans associated with a 
    hospital, institution of higher education, or medical school that has 
    an approved medical residency training program in which faculty 
    practice plan physicians perform specialty and professional services, 
    both within and outside the faculty practice, as well as perform other 
    tasks such as research, this definition applies only to those services 
    that are furnished within the faculty practice plan.
        Home health services means the services described in section 
    1861(m) of the Act and part 409, subpart E of this chapter.
        Hospital means any entity that qualifies as a ``hospital'' under 
    section 1861(e) of the Act, as a ``psychiatric hospital'' under section 
    1861(f) of the Act, or as a ``rural primary care hospital'' under 
    section 1861(mm)(1) of the Act, and refers to any separate legally-
    organized operating entity plus any subsidiary, related entity, or 
    other entities that perform services for the hospital's patients and 
    for which the hospital bills. However, a ``hospital'' does not include 
    entities that perform services for hospital patients ``under 
    arrangements'' with the hospital.
        HPSA means, for purposes of this subpart, an area designated as a 
    health professional shortage area under section 332(a)(1)(A) of the 
    Public Health Service Act for primary medical care professionals (in 
    accordance with the criteria specified in 42 CFR part 5, appendix A, 
    Part I-Geographic Areas). In addition, with respect to dental, mental 
    health, vision care, podiatric, and pharmacy services, an HPSA means an 
    area designated as a health professional shortage area under section 
    332(a)(1)(A) of the Public Health Service Act for dental professionals, 
    mental health professionals, vision care professionals, podiatric 
    professionals, and pharmacy professionals, respectively.
        Immediate family member or member of a physician's immediate family 
    means husband or wife; natural or adoptive parent, child, or sibling; 
    stepparent, stepchild, stepbrother, or
    
    [[Page 1722]]
    
    stepsister; father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, 
    brother-in-law, or sister-in-law; grandparent or grandchild; and spouse 
    of a grandparent or grandchild.
        Inpatient hospital services are those services defined in section 
    1861(b) of the Act and Sec. 409.10(a) and (b) of this chapter, and 
    include inpatient psychiatric hospital services listed in section 
    1861(c) of the Act and inpatient rural primary care hospital services, 
    as defined in section 1861(mm)(2) of the Act. ``Inpatient hospital 
    services'' do not include emergency inpatient services provided by a 
    hospital located outside the United States and covered under the 
    authority in section 1814(f)(2) of the Act and part 424, subpart H of 
    this chapter and emergency inpatient services provided by a 
    nonparticipating hospital within the United States, as authorized by 
    section 1814(d) of the Act and described in part 424, subpart G of this 
    chapter. These services also do not include dialysis furnished by a 
    hospital that is not certified to provide end stage renal dialysis 
    (ESRD) services under subpart U of 42 CFR 405.
        Inpatient hospital services include services that a hospital 
    provides for its patients that are furnished either by the hospital or 
    by others under arrangements with the hospital. They do not encompass 
    the services of other physicians, physician assistants, nurse 
    practitioners, clinical nurse specialists, certified nurse midwives, 
    and certified registered nurse anesthetists and qualified psychologists 
    who bill independently.
        Laboratory means an entity furnishing biological, microbiological, 
    serological, chemical, immunohematological, hematological, biophysical, 
    cytological, pathological, or other examination of materials derived 
    from the human body for the purpose of providing information for the 
    diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or 
    the assessment of the health of, human beings. These examinations also 
    include procedures to determine, measure, or otherwise describe the 
    presence or absence of various substances or organisms in the body. 
    Entities only collecting or preparing specimens (or both) or only 
    serving as a mailing service and not performing testing are not 
    considered laboratories.
        Members of the group means physician partners and other physician 
    owners (including physicians whose interest is held by an individual 
    professional corporation), and full-time and part-time physician 
    employees. These physicians are ``members'' during the time they 
    furnish ``patient care services'' to the group.
        Occupational therapy services means those services described at 
    section 1861(g) of the Act and Sec. 410.100(c) of this chapter. 
    Occupational therapy services also include any other services with the 
    characteristics described in Sec. 410.100(c) that are covered under 
    Medicare Part A or B, regardless of who furnishes them, the location in 
    which they are furnished, or how they are billed.
        Orthotics means leg, arm, back, and neck braces, as listed in 
    section 1861(s)(9) of the Act.
        Outpatient hospital services means the therapeutic, diagnostic, and 
    partial hospitalization services listed under section 1861(s)(2)(B) and 
    (C) of the Act; outpatient services furnished by a psychiatric 
    hospital, as defined in section 1861(f); and outpatient rural primary 
    care hospital services, as defined in section 1861(mm)(3); but 
    excluding emergency services covered in nonparticipating hospitals 
    under the conditions described in section 1835(b) of the Act and 
    subpart G of part 424 of this chapter.
        Outpatient prescription drugs means those drugs (including 
    biologicals) defined or listed under section 1861(t) and (s) of the Act 
    and part 410 of this chapter, that a patient can obtain from a pharmacy 
    with a prescription (even if the patient can only receive the drug 
    under medical supervision), and that are furnished to an individual 
    under Medicare Part B, but excluding erythropoietin and other drugs 
    furnished as part of a dialysis treatment for an individual who 
    dialyzes at home or in a facility.
        Parenteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies means those items and 
    supplies needed to provide nutriment to a patient with permanent, 
    severe pathology of the alimentary tract that does not allow absorption 
    of sufficient nutrients to maintain strength commensurate with the 
    patient's general condition, as described in section 65-10 of the 
    Medicare Coverage Issues Manual (HCFA Pub. 6).
        Patient care services means any tasks performed by a group practice 
    member that address the medical needs of specific patients or patients 
    in general, regardless of whether they involve direct patient 
    encounters, or tasks that generally benefit a particular practice. They 
    can include, for example, the services of physicians who do not 
    directly treat patients, such as time spent by a physician consulting 
    with other physicians or reviewing laboratory tests, or time spent 
    training staff members, arranging for equipment, or performing 
    administrative or management tasks.
        Physical therapy services means those outpatient physical therapy 
    services (including speech-language pathology services) described at 
    section 1861(p) of the Act and at Sec. 410.100(b) and (d) of this 
    chapter. Physical therapy services also include any other services with 
    the characteristics described in Sec. 400.100(b) and (d) that are 
    covered under Medicare Part A or B, regardless of who provides them, 
    the location in which they are provided, or how they are billed.
        Physician incentive plan means any compensation arrangement between 
    an entity and a physician or physician group that may directly or 
    indirectly have the effect of reducing or limiting services furnished 
    with respect to individuals enrolled with the entity.
        Plan of care means the establishment by a physician of a course of 
    diagnosis or treatment (or both) for a particular patient, including 
    the ordering of services.
        Prosthetic device and supplies: Prosthetic device means a device 
    (other than a dental device) listed in section 1861(s)(8) that replaces 
    all or part of an internal body organ, including colostomy bags and 
    including one pair of conventional eyeglasses or contact lenses 
    furnished subsequent to each cataract surgery with insertion of an 
    intraocular lens. Prosthetic supplies are supplies that are necessary 
    for the effective use of a prosthetic device (including supplies 
    directly related to colostomy care).
        Prosthetics means artificial legs, arms, and eyes, as described in 
    section 1861(s)(9) of the Act.
        Radiology services and radiation therapy and supplies means any 
    diagnostic test or therapeutic procedure using X-rays, ultrasound or 
    other imaging services, computerized axial tomography, magnetic 
    resonance imaging, radiation, or nuclear medicine, and diagnostic 
    mammography services, as covered under section 1861(s)(3) and (4) of 
    the Act and Secs. 410.32(a), 410.34, and 410.35 of this chapter, 
    including the professional component of these services, but excluding 
    any invasive radiology procedure in which the imagingmodality is used 
    to guide a needle, probe, or a catheter accurately.
        Referral--
        (1) Means either of the following:
        (i) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this definition, the 
    request by a physician for, or ordering of, or the certifying or 
    recertifying of the need for, any designated health service for which 
    payment may be made under Medicare Part B (or, for purposes of the 
    Medicaid program, a comparable service covered under the Medicaid State 
    plan), including a request for a consultation
    
    [[Page 1723]]
    
    with another physician and any test or procedure ordered by or to be 
    performed by (or under the supervision of) that other physician.
        (ii) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this definition, a 
    request by a physician that includes the provision of any other 
    designated health service for which payment may be made under Medicare 
    (or, for purposes of the Medicaid program, a comparable service covered 
    under the Medicaid State plan) the establishment of a plan of care by a 
    physician that includes the provision of such a designated health 
    service, or the certifying or recertifying of the need for such a 
    designated health service.
        (2) Does not include a request by a pathologist for clinical 
    diagnostic laboratory tests and pathological examination services, by a 
    radiologist for diagnostic radiology services, and by a radiation 
    oncologist for radiation therapy, if--
        (i) The request results from a consultation initiated by another 
    physician; and
        (ii) The tests or services are furnished by or under the 
    supervision of the pathologist, radiologist, or radiation oncologist.
        Referring physician means a physician who makes a referral as 
    defined in this section.
        Remuneration means any payment, discount, forgiveness of debt, or 
    other benefit made directly or indirectly, overtly or covertly, in cash 
    or in kind, except that the following are not considered remuneration:
        (1) The forgiveness of amounts owed for inaccurate tests or 
    procedures, mistakenly performed tests or procedures, or the correction 
    of minor billing errors.
        (2) The furnishing of items, devices, or supplies that are used 
    solely to collect, transport, process, or store specimens for the 
    entity furnishing the items, devices, or supplies or are used solely to 
    order or communicate the results of tests or procedures for the entity.
        (3) A payment made by an insurer or a self-insured plan to a 
    physician to satisfy a claim, submitted on a fee-for-service basis, for 
    the furnishing of health services by that physician to an individual 
    who is covered by a policy with the insurer or by the self-insured 
    plan, if--
        (i) The health services are not furnished, and the payment is not 
    made, under a contract or other arrangement between the insurer or the 
    plan and the physician;
        (ii) The payment is made to the physician on behalf of the covered 
    individual and would otherwise be made directly to the individual; and
        (iii) The amount of the payment is set in advance, does not exceed 
    fair market value, and is not determined in a manner that takes into 
    account directly or indirectly the volume or value of any referrals or 
    other business generated between the parties.
        Transaction: A transaction is an instance or process of two or more 
    persons or entities doing business. An isolated transaction is one 
    involving a single payment between two or more persons or entities. A 
    transaction that involves long-term or installment payments is not 
    considered an isolated transaction.
        5. Section 411.353 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.353  Prohibition on certain referrals by physicians and 
    limitations on billing.
    
        (a) Prohibition on referrals. Except as provided in this subpart, a 
    physician who has a financial relationship with an entity, or who has 
    an immediate family member who has a financial relationship with the 
    entity, may not make a referral to that entity for the furnishing of 
    designated health services for which payment otherwise may be made 
    under Medicare.
        (b) Limitations on billing. An entity that furnishes designated 
    health services under a referral that is prohibited by paragraph (a) of 
    this section may not present or cause to be presented a claim or bill 
    to the Medicare program or to any individual, third party payer, or 
    other entity for the designated health services performed under that 
    referral.
        (c) Denial of payment. No Medicare payment may be made for a 
    designated health service that is furnished under a prohibited 
    referral.
        (d) Refunds. An entity that collects payment for a designated 
    health service that was performed under a prohibited referral must 
    refund all collected amounts on a timely basis, as defined in 
    Sec. 1003.101 of Chapter V.
        6. Section 411.355 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.355  General exceptions to the referral prohibition related to 
    both ownership/investment and compensation.
    
        The prohibition on referrals set forth in Sec. 411.353 does not 
    apply to the following types of services:
        (a) Physician services, as defined in Sec. 410.20(a), that are 
    furnished personally by (or under the personal supervision of) another 
    physician in the same group practice as the referring physician.
        (b) In-office ancillary services. Services (including infusion 
    pumps and crutches, but excluding all other durable medical equipment 
    and parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and supplies), that 
    meet the following conditions:
        (1) They are furnished personally by one of the following 
    individuals:
        (i) The referring physician.
        (ii) A physician who is a member of the same group practice as the 
    referring physician.
        (iii) Individuals who are directly supervised by the referring 
    physician or, in the case of group practices, by another physician 
    member of the same group practice as the referring physician.
        (2) They are furnished in one of the following locations:
        (i) The same building in which the referring physician (or another 
    physician who is a member of the same group practice) furnishes 
    physician services unrelated to the furnishing of designated health 
    services. The ``same building'' means the same physical structure, with 
    one address, and not multiple structures connected by tunnels or 
    walkways.
        (ii) A building that is used by the group practice for the 
    provision of some or all of the group's clinical laboratory services.
        (iii) A building that is used by the group practice for the 
    centralized provision of the group's designated health services (other 
    than clinical laboratory services).
        (3) They are billed by one of the following:
        (i) The physician performing or supervising the service.
        (ii) The group practice of which the performing or supervising 
    physician is a member under a billing number assigned to the group 
    practice.
        (iii) An entity that is wholly owned by the physician or the 
    physician's group practice.
        (4) In the case of crutches, the physician realizes no direct or 
    indirect profit from furnishing the crutches.
        (c) Services furnished to prepaid health plan enrollees by one of 
    the following organizations:
        (1) An HMO or a CMP in accordance with a contract with HCFA under 
    section 1876 of the Act and part 417, subparts J through M of this 
    chapter.
        (2) A health care prepayment plan in accordance with an agreement 
    with HCFA under section 1833(a)(1)(A) of the Act and part 417, subpart 
    U of this chapter.
        (3) An organization that is receiving payments on a prepaid basis 
    for Medicare enrollees through a demonstration project under section 
    402(a) of the Social Security
    
    [[Page 1724]]
    
    Amendments of 1967 (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1) or under section 222(a) of the 
    Social Security Amendments of 1972 (42 U.S.C. 1395b-1 note).
        (4) A qualified health maintenance organization (within the meaning 
    of section 1310(d) of the Public Health Service Act).
        (d) Services furnished under certain payment rates. (1) Services 
    furnished in an ambulatory surgical center (ASC) or ESRD facility or by 
    a hospice if payment for those services is included in the ASC payment 
    rate, the ESRD composite payment rate, or as part of the hospice 
    payment rate, respectively; and
        (2) Services furnished under other payment rates that the Secretary 
    determines provide no financial incentive for under or overutilization, 
    or any other risk of program or patient abuse.
        7. Section 411.356 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.356  Exceptions to the referral prohibition related to 
    ownership or investment interests.
    
        For purposes of Sec. 411.353, the following ownership or investment 
    interests do not constitute a financial relationship:
        (a) Publicly-traded securities. Ownership of investment securities 
    (including shares or bonds, debentures, notes, or other debt 
    instruments) that at the time they were obtained could be purchased on 
    the open market and that meet the requirements of paragraphs (a)(1) and 
    (a)(2) of this section.
        (1) They are either--
        (i) Listed for trading on the New York Stock Exchange, the American 
    Stock Exchange, or any regional exchange in which quotations are 
    published on a daily basis, or foreign securities listed on a 
    recognized foreign, national, or regional exchange in which quotations 
    are published on a daily basis, or
        (ii) Traded under an automated interdealer quotation system 
    operated by the National Association of Securities Dealers.
        (2) They are in a corporation that had stockholder equity exceeding 
    $75 million at the end of the corporation's most recent fiscal year or 
    on average during the previous 3 fiscal years. ``Stockholder equity'' 
    is the difference in value between a corporation's total assets and 
    total liabilities.
        (b) Mutual funds. Ownership of shares in a regulated investment 
    company as defined in section 851(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 
    1986, if the company had, at the end of its most recent fiscal year, or 
    on average during the previous 3 fiscal years, total assets exceeding 
    $75 million.
        (c) Specific providers. Ownership or investment interest in the 
    following entities, for purposes of the services specified:
        (1) A rural provider, in the case of designated health services 
    furnished in a rural area by the provider. A ``rural provider'' is an 
    entity that furnishes substantially all (not less than 75 percent) of 
    the designated health services that it furnishes to residents of a 
    rural area (that is, an area that is not an urban area as defined in 
    Sec. 412.62(f)(1)(ii) of this chapter).
        (2) A hospital that is located in Puerto Rico, in the case of 
    designated health services furnished by such a hospital.
        (3) A hospital that is located outside of Puerto Rico, in the case 
    of designated health services furnished by such a hospital, if the 
    referring physician is authorized to perform services at the hospital, 
    and the physician's ownership or investment interest is in the entire 
    hospital and not merely in a distinct part or department of the 
    hospital.
        8. Section 411.357 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 411.357  Exceptions to the referral prohibition related to 
    compensation arrangements.
    
        For purposes of Sec. 411.353, the following compensation 
    arrangements do not constitute a financial relationship:
        (a) Rental of office space. Payments for the use of office space 
    made by a lessee to a lessor if there is a rental or lease agreement 
    that meets the following requirements:
        (1) The agreement is set out in writing, is signed by the parties, 
    and specifies the premises it covers.
        (2) The term of the agreement is at least 1 year.
        (3) The space rented or leased does not exceed that which is 
    reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes of the 
    lease or rental and is used exclusively by the lessee when being used 
    by the lessee, except that the lessee may make payments for the use of 
    space consisting of common areas if the payments do not exceed the 
    lessee's pro rata share of expenses for the space based upon the ratio 
    of the space used exclusively by the lessee to the total amount of 
    space (other than common areas) occupied by all persons using the 
    common areas.
        (4) The rental charges over the term of the agreement are set in 
    advance and are consistent with fair market value.
        (5) The charges are not determined in a manner that takes into 
    account the volume or value of any referrals or other business 
    generated between the parties.
        (6) The agreement would be commercially reasonable even if no 
    referrals were made between the lessee and the lessor.
        (b) Rental of equipment. Payments made by a lessee to a lessor for 
    the use of equipment under the following conditions:
        (1) A rental or lease agreement is set out in writing, is signed by 
    the parties, and specifies the equipment it covers.
        (2) The equipment rented or leased does not exceed that which is 
    reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes of the 
    lease or rental and is used exclusively by the lessee when being used 
    by the lessee.
        (3) The agreement provides for a term of rental or lease of at 
    least 1 year.
        (4) The rental charges over the term of the agreement are set in 
    advance, are consistent with fair market value, and are not determined 
    in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of any 
    referrals or other business generated between the parties.
        (5) The agreement would be commercially reasonable even if no 
    referrals were made between the parties.
        (c) Bona fide employment relationships. Any amount paid by an 
    employer to a physician (or immediate family member) who has a bona 
    fide employment relationship with the employer for the provision of 
    services if the following conditions are met:
        (1) The employment is for identifiable services.
        (2) The amount of the remuneration under the employment is--
        (i) Consistent with the fair market value of the services; and
        (ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(4) of this section, is not 
    determined in a manner that takes into account (directly or indirectly) 
    the volume or value of any referrals by the referring physician or 
    other business generated between the parties.
        (3) The remuneration is provided under an agreement that would be 
    commercially reasonable even if no referrals were made to the employer.
        (4) Paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section does not prohibit payment 
    of remuneration in the form of a productivity bonus based on services 
    performed personally by the physician (or immediate family member of 
    the physician) if the bonus is not directly related to the volume or 
    value of a physician's own referrals.
        (d) Personal service arrangements--(1) General. Remuneration from 
    an entity under an arrangement or multiple arrangements to a physician, 
    an immediate family member of the physician, or to a group practice, 
    including remuneration for specific physician services furnished to a
    
    [[Page 1725]]
    
    nonprofit blood center, if the following conditions are met:
        (i) Each arrangement is set out in writing, is signed by the 
    parties, and specifies the services covered by the arrangement.
        (ii) The arrangement(s) covers all of the services to be furnished 
    by the physician (or an immediate family member of the physician) to 
    the entity, and all separate arrangements between the entity and the 
    physician and the entity and any family members incorporate each other 
    by reference. A physician or family member can ``furnish'' services 
    through employees whom they have hired for the purpose of performing 
    the services.
        (iii) The aggregate services contracted for do not exceed those 
    that are reasonable and necessary for the legitimate business purposes 
    of the arrangement(s).
        (iv) The term of each arrangement is for at least 1 year.
        (v) The compensation to be paid over the term of each arrangement 
    is set in advance, does not exceed fair market value, and, except in 
    the case of a physician incentive plan, is not determined in a manner 
    that takes into account the volume or value of any referrals or other 
    business generated between the parties.
        (vi) The services to be furnished under each arrangement do not 
    involve the counseling or promotion of a business arrangement or other 
    activity that violates any State or Federal law.
        (2) Physician incentive plan exception. In the case of a physician 
    incentive plan between a physician and an entity, the compensation may 
    be determined in a manner (through a withhold, capitation, bonus, or 
    otherwise) that takes into account directly or indirectly the volume or 
    value of any referrals or other business generated between the parties, 
    if the plan meets the following requirements:
        (i) No specific payment is made directly or indirectly under the 
    plan to a physician or a physician group as an inducement to reduce or 
    limit medically necessary services furnished with respect to a specific 
    individual enrolled with the entity.
        (ii) Upon request by the Secretary, the entity provides the 
    Secretary with access to the information about the plan specified in 
    417.479(h) of this chapter.
        (iii) In the case of a plan that places a physician or a physician 
    group at substantial financial risk as determined by the Secretary 
    under Sec. 417.479(e) and (f) of this chapter, the entity complies with 
    the requirements concerning physician incentive plans set forth at 
    Sec. 417.479(g) and (i).
        (e) Physician recruitment. Remuneration provided by a hospital to 
    recruit a physician that is intended to induce the physician to 
    relocate to the geographic area served by the hospital in order to 
    become a member of the hospital's medical staff, if all of the 
    following conditions are met:
        (1) The arrangement is set out in writing and signed by both 
    parties.
        (2) The arrangement is not conditioned on the physician's referral 
    of patients to the hospital.
        (3) The hospital does not determine (directly or indirectly) the 
    amount of the remuneration to the physician based on the volume or 
    value of any referrals by the physician or other business generated 
    between the parties.
        (4) The physician is not precluded from establishing staff 
    privileges at another hospital or referring business to another entity.
        (f) Isolated transactions. Isolated financial transactions, such as 
    a one-time sale of property or a practice, if all of the following 
    conditions are met:
        (1) The amount of remuneration under the transaction is--
        (i) Consistent with the fair market value of the transaction; and
        (ii) Not determined in a manner that takes into account (directly 
    or indirectly) the volume or value of any referrals by the referring 
    physician or other business generated between the parties.
        (2) The remuneration is provided under an agreement that would be 
    commercially reasonable even if the physician made no referrals.
        (3) There are no additional transactions between the parties for 6 
    months after the isolated transaction, except for transactions that are 
    specifically excepted under the other provisions in Secs. 411.355 
    through 411.357.
        (g) Arrangements with hospitals. Remuneration provided by a 
    hospital to a physician if the remuneration does not relate, directly 
    or indirectly, to the furnishing of designated health services. To 
    qualify as ``unrelated,'' remuneration must not in any way reflect the 
    volume or value of a physician's referrals.
        (h) Group practice arrangements with a hospital. An arrangement 
    between a hospital and a group practice under which designated health 
    services are furnished by the group but are billed by the hospital if 
    the following conditions are met:
        (1) With respect to services furnished to an inpatient of the 
    hospital, the arrangement is pursuant to the provision of inpatient 
    hospital services under section 1861(b)(3) of the Act.
        (2) The arrangement began before, and has continued in effect 
    without interruption since, December 19, 1989.
        (3) With respect to the designated health services covered under 
    the arrangement, at least 75 percent of these services furnished to 
    patients of the hospital are furnished by the group under the 
    arrangement.
        (4) The arrangement is in accordance with a written agreement that 
    specifies the services to be furnished by the parties and the 
    compensation for services furnished under the agreement.
        (5) The compensation paid over the term of the agreement is 
    consistent with fair market value, and the compensation per unit of 
    services is fixed in advance and is not determined in a manner that 
    takes into account the volume or value of any referrals or other 
    business generated between the parties.
        (6) The compensation is provided in accordance with an agreement 
    that would be commercially reasonable even if no referrals were made to 
    the entity.
        (i) Payments by a physician. Payments made by a physician--
        (1) To a laboratory in exchange for the provision of clinical 
    laboratory services, or
        (2) To an entity as compensation for any other items or services 
    that are furnished at a price that is consistent with fair market 
    value, and that are not specifically excepted under another provision 
    in Secs. 411.355 through 411.357. ``Services'' in this context means 
    services of any kind (not just those defined as ``services'' for 
    purposes of the Medicare program in Sec. 400.202).
        (j) Discounts. Any discount made to a physician that is passed on 
    in full to either the patient or the patient's insurers (including 
    Medicare) and that does not enure to the benefit of the referring 
    physician.
        (k) De minimis compensation. Compensation from an entity in the 
    form of items or services (not including cash or cash equivalents) that 
    does not exceed $50 per gift and an aggregate of $300 per year if--
        (1) The entity providing the compensation makes it available to all 
    similarly situated individuals, regardless of whether these individuals 
    refer patients to the entity for services; and
        (2) The compensation is not determined in any way that takes into 
    account the volume or value of the physician's referrals to the entity.
        (l) Fair market value compensation. Compensation resulting from an 
    arrangement between an entity and a physician (or immediate family 
    member) or any group of physicians (regardless of whether the group 
    meets
    
    [[Page 1726]]
    
    the definition of a group practice set forth at Sec. 411.351) if the 
    arrangement is set forth in an agreement that meets the following 
    conditions:
        (1) It is in writing, signed by the parties, and covers only 
    identifiable items or services, all of which are specified in the 
    agreement. The agreement covers all of the items and services to be 
    provided by the physician and any immediate family member to the entity 
    or, alternatively, cross refers to any other agreements for items or 
    services between these parties.
        (2) It specifies the timeframe for the arrangement, which can be 
    for any period of time and contain a termination clause, provided the 
    parties enter into only one arrangement for the same items or services 
    during the course of a year. An arrangement made for less than 1 year 
    may be renewed any number of times if the terms of the arrangement and 
    the compensation for the same items or services do not change.
        (3) It specifies the compensation that will be provided under the 
    arrangement. The compensation, or the method for determining the 
    compensation, must be set in advance, be consistent with fair market 
    value, and not be determined in a manner that takes into account the 
    volume or value of any referrals (as defined in Sec. 411.351), payment 
    for referrals for medical services that are not covered under Medicare 
    or Medicaid, or any other business generated between the parties.
        (4) It involves a transaction that is commercially reasonable and 
    furthers the legitimate business purposes of the parties.
        (5) It meets a safe harbor under the anti-kickback statute or 
    otherwise is in compliance with the anti-kickback provisions in section 
    1128B(b) of the Act.
        9. In Sec. 411.360, paragraphs (a), (b), and (d) are revised to 
    read as set forth below, and paragraphs (c) and (e) are republished.
    
    
    Sec. 411.360  Group practice attestation.
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, a group of 
    physicians that wishes to qualify as a group practice (as defined in 
    Sec. 411.351) must submit a written statement to its carrier annually 
    to attest that, during the most recent 12-month period (calendar year, 
    fiscal year, or immediately preceding 12-month period) 75 percent of 
    the total patient care services of group practice members was furnished 
    through the group, was billed under a billing number assigned to the 
    group, and the amounts so received were treated as receipts of the 
    group.
        (b) A newly-formed group (one in which physicians have recently 
    begun to practice together) or any group practice that has been unable 
    in the past to meet the requirements of section 1877(h)(4) of the Act 
    or Sec. 411.351, that wishes to qualify as a group practice, must--
        (1) Submit a written statement to attest that, during the next 12-
    month period (calendar year, fiscal year, or next 12 months), it 
    expects to meet the 75 percent standard and will take measures to 
    ensure that the standard is met; and
        (2) At the end of the 12-month period, submit a written statement 
    to attest that it met the 75 percent standard during that period, 
    billed for those services under a billing number assigned to the group, 
    and treated amounts received for those services as receipts of the 
    group. If the group did not meet the standard, any Medicare payments 
    made for designated health services furnished by the group during the 
    12-month period that were conditioned upon the standard being met are 
    overpayments.
        (c) Once any group has chosen whether to use its fiscal year, the 
    calendar year, or some other 12-month period, the group practice must 
    adhere to this choice.
        (d) The attestation must be signed by an authorized representative 
    of the group practice who is knowledgeable about the group, and must 
    contain a statement that the information furnished in the attestation 
    is true and accurate to the best of the representative's knowledge and 
    belief. Any person filing a false statement will be subject to 
    applicable criminal and/or civil penalties.
        (e) A group that intends to meet the definition of a group practice 
    in order to qualify for an exception described in Secs. 411.355 through 
    411.357, must submit the attestation required by paragraph (a) or 
    (b)(1) of this section, as applicable, to its carrier no later than 60 
    days after receipt of the attestation instructions from its carrier.
        10. In Sec. 411.361, paragraphs (a) through (e) are revised to read 
    as set forth below, and paragraphs (f) and (g) are republished.
    
    
    Sec. 411.361  Reporting requirements.
    
        (a) Basic rule. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this 
    section, all entities furnishing services for which payment may be made 
    under Medicare must submit information to HCFA concerning their 
    financial relationships (as defined in paragraph (d) of this section), 
    in the form, manner, and at the times that HCFA specifies using an 
    HCFA-prescribed form.
        (b) Exception. The requirements of paragraph (a) of this section do 
    not apply to entities that furnish 20 or fewer Part A and Part B 
    services during a calendar year, or to any Medicare covered services 
    furnished outside the United States.
        (c) Required information. The information requested by HCFA can 
    include the following:
        (1) The name and unique physician identification number (UPIN) of 
    each physician who has a financial relationship with the entity.
        (2) The name and UPIN of each physician who has an immediate 
    relative (as defined in Sec. 411.351) who has a financial relationship 
    with the entity.
        (3) The covered services furnished by the entity.
        (4) With respect to each physician identified under paragraphs 
    (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section, the nature of the financial 
    relationship (including the extent and/or value of the ownership or 
    investment interest or the compensation arrangement, if requested by 
    HCFA).
        (d) Reportable financial relationships. For purposes of this 
    section, a financial relationship is any ownership or investment 
    interest or any compensation arrangement, as defined in Sec. 411.351, 
    including those relationships excepted under Secs. 411.355 through 
    411.357.
        (e) Form and timing of reports. Entities that are subject to the 
    requirements of this section must submit the required information on a 
    HCFA-prescribed form within the time period specified by the servicing 
    carrier or intermediary. Entities are given at least 30 days from the 
    date of the carrier's or intermediary's request to provide the initial 
    information. Thereafter, an entity must report to HCFA once a year all 
    changes in the submitted information that occurred in the previous 12 
    months. Entities must retain documentation sufficient to verify the 
    information provided on the forms and, upon request, must make that 
    documentation available to HCFA or the OIG.
        (f) Consequences of failure to report. Any person who is required, 
    but fails, to submit information concerning his or her financial 
    relationships in accordance with this section is subject to a civil 
    money penalty of up to $10,000 for each day of the period beginning on 
    the day following the applicable deadline established under paragraph 
    (e) of this section until the information is submitted. Assessment of 
    these penalties will comply with the applicable provisions of part 1003 
    of this title.
    
    [[Page 1727]]
    
        (g) Public disclosure. Information furnished to HCFA under this 
    section is subject to public disclosure in accordance with the 
    provisions of part 401 of this chapter.
    
    PART 424--CONDITIONS FOR MEDICARE PAYMENT
    
        B. Part 424 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 424 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42 
    U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
    
        2. In Sec. 424.22, paragraph (d) is revised to read as set forth 
    below, and paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) are removed.
    
    
    Sec. 424.22  Requirements for home health services.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Limitation on the performance of certification and plan of 
    treatment functions. The need for home health services to be provided 
    by an HHA may not be certified or recertified, and a plan of treatment 
    may not be established and reviewed, by any physician who has a 
    financial relationship, as defined in Sec. 411.351 of this chapter, 
    with that HHA, unless the physician's relationship meets one of the 
    exceptions in Secs. 411.355 through 411.357 of this chapter.
    
    PART 435--ELIGIBILITY IN THE STATES, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, THE 
    NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS, AND AMERICAN SAMOA
    
        C. Part 435 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 435 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. In Sec. 435.1002, paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 435.1002  FFP for services.
    
        (a) Except for the limitations and conditions specified in 
    Secs. 435.1007, 435.1008, and 435.1012, FFP is available in 
    expenditures for Medicaid services for all recipients whose coverage is 
    required or allowed under this part.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 435.1012 is added to subpart K, under an undesignated 
    centered heading, to read as follows:
    
    Limitation on FFP Related to Prohibited Referrals
    
    
    Sec. 435.1012  Limitation on FFP related to prohibited referrals.
    
        (a) Basic rule. Except as specified in paragraph (b) of this 
    section, no FFP in the State's expenditures for services is available 
    for expenditures for designated health services (as defined in 
    Sec. 411.351 of this chapter) furnished under the State plan to an 
    individual on the basis of a physician referral that would, if Medicare 
    provided for coverage of the services to the same extent and under the 
    same terms and conditions as under the State plan, result in the denial 
    of Medicare payment for the services under Secs. 411.351 through 
    411.360 of this chapter. (Section 411.353 provides that if a physician 
    (or an immediate family member) has a financial relationship with an 
    entity, the physician may not make a referral to that entity for the 
    furnishing of designated health services for which payment otherwise 
    may be made under Medicare and denies payment for any service furnished 
    under a prohibited referral. Section 411.351 contains definitions, and 
    Secs. 411.355 through 411.357 provide exceptions to the prohibition on 
    referrals.) The provisions of this section are based on section 1903(s) 
    of the Act, which applies to Medicaid aspects of the Medicare rules 
    limiting physician referrals.
        (b) Exception for services furnished to enrollees on a 
    predetermined, capitated basis. The limitation on FFP in paragraph (a) 
    does not apply to services furnished to, or arranged for, an enrollee 
    by an entity with an HMO contract with a State under section 1903(m); a 
    prepaid health plan (PHP) contract with a State under part 434, subpart 
    C; or a health insuring organization (HIO) contract under part 434, 
    subpart D.
        (c) Advisory opinions relating to physician referrals. Sections 
    411.370 through 411.389 cover the procedures for obtaining an advisory 
    opinion from HCFA on whether a physician's referrals relating to 
    designated health services (other than clinical laboratory services) 
    are prohibited under section 1877.
    
    PART 455--PROGRAM INTEGRITY: MEDICAID
    
        D. Part 455 is amended as follows:
        1. The authority citation for part 455 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
    1302).
    
        2. Section 455.100 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 455.100  Basis and Purpose.
    
        (a) Basis. This subpart implements sections 1124, 1126, 
    1902(a)(38), 1903(i)(2), 1903(n), and 1903(s) of the Act.
        (b) Purpose. This subpart does the following:
        (1) Sets forth State plan requirements regarding--
        (i) Disclosure by providers and fiscal agents of information 
    concerning ownership and control, investment arrangements, and 
    compensation arrangements; and
        (ii) Disclosure of information on a provider's owners and other 
    persons convicted of criminal offenses against Medicare, Medicaid, or 
    the title XX services program.
        (2) Specifies conditions under which the Administrator will deny 
    Federal financial participation for services furnished by providers or 
    fiscal agents that fail to comply with the disclosure requirements.
        (3) Provides for a civil money penalty for failure to meet certain 
    reporting requirements.
        3. Section 455.103 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 455.103  State plan requirement.
    
        A State plan must provide that the requirements of Secs. 445.104 
    through 455.109 are met.
        4. A new subpart C, consisting of section Secs. 455.108 and 
    455.109, is added to read as follows:
    
    Subpart C--Disclosure of Information by Providers for Purposes of 
    the Prohibition on Certain Physician Referrals
    
    
    Sec. 455.108  Basis.
    
        This subpart is based on section 1903(s) of the Act, which, in 
    part, applies the reporting requirements of section 1877(f) and (g) of 
    the Act to Medicaid providers of designated health services (as these 
    services are defined in Sec. 411.351).
    
    
    Sec. 455.109  Disclosure of ownership, investment, and compensation 
    arrangements.
    
        (a) The Medicaid agency must require that each provider of services 
    that furnishes designated health services covered by the State plan 
    submit information to the Medicaid agency concerning its financial 
    relationships (as defined in paragraph (d) of this section), in the 
    form, manner, and at the times the agency specifies. The term 
    ``designated health services,'' for purposes of this section, refers to 
    the services listed in Sec. 411.351 of this chapter, as they are 
    defined in that section, or as those services are otherwise defined 
    under the State plan.
        (b) Exception. The requirements of paragraph (a) of this section do 
    not apply to providers of services that provide 20 or fewer designated 
    health services covered under the State plan during a calendar year, or 
    to designated
    
    [[Page 1728]]
    
    health services furnished outside the United States.
        (c) Required information. The information requested by the Medicaid 
    agency can include the following:
        (1) The name and Medicaid State Specific Identifier (MSSI) of each 
    physician who has a financial relationship with the provider of 
    services.
        (2) The name and MSSI of each physician who has an immediate 
    relative (as defined in Sec. 411.351 of this chapter) who has a 
    financial relationship with the provider of services.
        (3) The covered items and services furnished by the provider of 
    services.
        (4) With respect to each physician identified under paragraphs 
    (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section, the nature of the financial 
    relationship (including the extent and/or value of the ownership or 
    investment interest or the compensation arrangement, if requested by 
    the Medicaid agency).
        (d) Reportable financial relationships. For purposes of this 
    section, a financial relationship is any ownership or investment 
    interest or any compensation arrangement, as defined in Sec. 411.351, 
    including those relationships excepted under Secs. 411.355 through 
    411.357.
        (e) Form and timing of reports. Providers of services that are 
    subject to the requirements of this section must submit the required 
    information on a prescribed form within the time period specified by 
    the Medicaid agency. Thereafter, a provider must report to the Medicaid 
    agency all changes in the submitted information within a timeframe 
    specified by the Medicaid agency. Providers of services must retain 
    documentation sufficient to verify the information provided on the 
    forms and, upon request, must make that documentation available to the 
    Medicaid State agency, HCFA, or the OIG.
        (f) Consequences of failure to report. Any provider of services 
    that is required, but failed, to meet the reporting requirements of 
    paragraph (a) of this section is subject to a civil money penalty of 
    not more than $10,000 for each day of the period beginning on the day 
    following the applicable deadline until the information is submitted. 
    Assessment of the penalty will comply with the applicable provisions of 
    part 1003 of this title.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.773, 
    Medicare--Hospital Insurance; Program No. 93.774, Medicare--
    Supplementary Medical Insurance Program; and Federal Domestic 
    Assistance Program No. 93.778, Medical Assistance Program)
    
        Dated: November 10, 1997.
    Nancy-Ann Min DeParle,
    Administrator, Health Care Financing Administration.
    
        Dated: December 17, 1997.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 98-282 Filed 1-5-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4120-03-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/09/1998
Department:
Health Care Finance Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
98-282
Dates:
Comments will be considered if we receive them at the
Pages:
1659-1728 (70 pages)
Docket Numbers:
HCFA-1809-P
RINs:
0938-AG80: Physicians' Referrals to Health Care Entities With Which They Have Financial Relationships--Expanded to Designated Health Services (HCFA-1809-F)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0938-AG80/physicians-referrals-to-health-care-entities-with-which-they-have-financial-relationships-expanded-t
PDF File:
98-282.pdf
CFR: (36)
42 CFR 411.351)
42 CFR 410.36(a)(2)
42 CFR 409.10(a)
42 CFR 411.356(a)
42 CFR 455.109(a)
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