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The
Biggest Legal Mistakes Physicians Make and How to Avoid Them
Steven Babitsky, Esq. and James J. Mangraviti,
Esq.
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©
2005 SEAK, Inc.
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Just 3 of the 1,200 Costly Legal Mistakes Explained in this Desk
Reference
Chapter 4.1: The 10 Biggest Legal Mistakes Physicians Make
When Dealing With Practice Support Agreements
Mistake 9: Failing to Understand the Stark
Law’s Effect on Joining a Group Practice
When a practice support agreement
involves the recruited physician joining a group practice, the
Stark law imposes specific requirements as set forth in recently
promulgated regulations (effective July 24, 2004):
• If payments are made by the
hospital directly to the medical practice, the written agreement
regarding recruitment benefits is signed by the group practice
as well as the physician.
• Benefits must be passed directly
through to the physician except for actual costs incurred by the
practice.
• If the hospital provides a
collections guarantee, costs allocated by the medical practice
to the physician are limited to the actual additional incremental
costs attributable to the physician.
• If benefits are paid directly
to the medical practice, the benefits cannot be determined based
on the volume or value of any actual or anticipated referrals
by the practice.
• The medical practice cannot impose any additional
restrictions, such as a covenant not to compete, on the recruited
physician (other than restrictions based on quality of care).
Action Step:
In contemplating working with a group practice, physicians should
consult legal counsel and be aware of the Stark law requirements.
They should inquire as to the practice’s understanding of these
requirements, and insist on compliance.
Chapter 5.3: The 10 Biggest
Legal Mistakes Physicians Make When Handling Overpayments
Mistake 6: Failing to Consider Federal Programs
Other Than Medicare
Consider this scenario:
A physician finds that Medicare has been significantly overcharged
due to improper coding or billing practices employed by the physician’s
office personnel. Steps are immediately taken to ensure that the
underlying problem is resolved, and the physician enters into
settlement negotiations with HHS-OIG to arrive at a settlement
figure. Problem solved, right? Not exactly. Systemic billing problems
rarely affect only a single payer (e.g., Medicare). More typically,
a problem that results in overcharges to one payer also adversely
affects other payers as well. It is easy to overlook the fact
that the HHS-OIG is not the only agency that should concern physicians.
A provider may have also overcharged Medicaid (comanaged by the
state and HHS), the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (covering
federal employees), and Tricare (covering Department of Defense
dependents).
Action Step:
When an overpayment
is identified, a physician should identify the full scope of the
problem. A physician should work closely with legal counsel. In
most cases, it is in the physician’s best interest to seek a global
resolution of overpayments to all federal health benefits programs,
not just Medicare.
Chapter 10.4: The 10 Biggest
Legal Mistakes Physicians Make When Terminating Employees
Mistake 10: Offering a Termination Package
Without Obtaining a Release of Claims
Often, in an attempt
to overcome feelings of guilt for terminating an employee, physicians
offer the employee severance pay without obtaining a release of
all claims. Sometimes the practice has a formal severance policy
set forth in employee manuals or offer letters. In those cases,
the terms of the policy must be followed. In all other cases,
severance is entirely discretionary and, if offered, should be
expressly conditioned on the employee’s agreeing not to file any
employment-related claims against the practice, other than a claim
for unemployment benefits where applicable.
Action Step:
Physicians should consult with experienced employment counsel
before offering severance pay to a terminated employee and obtain
the necessary written severance agreement and release of claims.
Releases for employees who are over age 40, for instance, must
conform to the special requirements of federal law.
Contains 120 Sections With
Over
1,200 Costly - But Avoidable - Mistakes
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