Friday, July 11, 2014
Washington, D.C. (July 11, 2014)—The American Association for Homecare (AAHomecare) announced the introduction of a new piece of legislation to fix the broken Medicare audit system. The Audit Improvement and Reform Act (AIR Act), sponsored by Reps. Renee Ellmers (R-N.C.) and John Barrow (D-Ga.), will increase transparency, education and outreach, and reward suppliers that have low error rates on audited claims. The AIR Act would apply to all MACs, RACs, and all other contractors performing audits on durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS) providers. Visit fixmedicareaudits.org to download a copy of the legislation, issue brief and learn how you can support the legislation.
Key provisions in the legislation include:
- Restoration of clinical inference and clinical judgment when evaluating audits. This provision will significantly reduce error rates.
- Requiring the reporting of error rates on audited claims after adjustment for those audited claims that have been overturned on appeal.
- Requiring each audit contractor to establish an education and outreach program that would help providers better understand the regulations and how to document medical necessity for Medicare patients. Funding for these programs will come from 25% of recoupments.
- Allowing HHS to ensure that all suppliers are audited at least once every two years and those with low error rates can be excused from some or all audits during that two year period. DMEPOS suppliers with a 15% or below audited clams error rate will be subject to only 1 claim audit a year.
- Require Medicare Contractor transparency and reporting.
- Limit documentation review periods to 3 years for all Medicare audits.
- For reoccurring claims, the Secretary shall toll the timely claim filing limits so DMEPOS supplier are not prohibited from taking an appeal from the determination of a claim in a pre or post payment audit, or the submission or resubmission for payment of any claims that follow sequentially from the audited claim on the basis that the timely claim filing limits have expired.
- The Secretary shall not implement policy changes or clarifications for DMEPOS audit requirements sooner than 6 months after publishing the changes in the Federal Register.