CMS May Soon Be Asking: "When Did You Know?" As it Proposes ... - Lexology
At the end of 2022, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (“CMS”) issued a proposed rule that would amend the standard imposed on Medicare providers to report and return overpayments. If finalized, the proposed rule would replace the 60-day overpayment rule’s current “reasonable diligence” standard with the False Claims Act “knowingly” standard.
The Affordable Care Act’s 60-day overpayment rule generally requires healthcare providers to report and return overpayments 60 days after the provider identifies the overpayment. The current law provides that overpayments are identified when a person “has, or should have through the exercise of reasonable diligence, determined that the person has received an overpayment and quantified the amount of the overpayment.” Failure to report and return such overpayments establishes liability under the False Claims Act, which includes treble damages and civil penalties. This current standard has been under fire in recent years. In a 2018 case involving the Medicare Parts C and D overpayment rule, a federal court ruled that the “reasonable diligence” standard creates impermissible False Claims Act liability for mere negligence. The Medicare Advantage Organizations involved in the case argued that the 60-day overpayment rule standard should align with the False Claims Act “knowingly” standard. The CMS proposed rule aims to do just that.
Under the proposed rule, a provider identifies an overpayment “when the person knowingly receives or...
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