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On May
28, 2008, the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services ("CMS") published CMS
Advisory Opinion No. CMS-AO-2008-01 in which it analyzed under the physician
self-referral law, Section 1877(h)(1)(A) of the Social Security Act, the "Stark law", a proposed arrangement whereby a hospital
system would pay for the development of customized software that would allow
the hospital's electronic health records ("EHR") system to communicate with similar
systems owned by staff physicians.
The CMS concluded the proposed arrangement does not constitute a
compensation arrangement under the Stark law and, therefore, does not have to meet a so-called Stark
law exception as long as the software:
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would be used only to order or
communicate the results of tests and procedures furnished by the
hospital system;
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cannot
be modified to perform an alternate function; and
-
cannot
be resold, transferred or assigned by a staff physician or his physician
practice.
Under the proposed arrangement, a third-party vendor would develop, and the
hospital system would pay the development cost of, a software interface
customized to the existing electronic health records software owned by the
hospital system's staff physicians. The hospital system would also purchase
licenses to authorize staff physicians to use the custom software interface
during the term of the hospital's license agreement. Under the arrangement,
the custom software would be used only to order or communicate the results
of tests and procedures furnished by the hospital system and could not be
used for any purpose other than the ordering or communicating of the results
of tests or procedures furnished by the system. In this case, the hospital
system certified that the software cannot be applied or altered by a staff
physician or his practice to perform any alternative functions, nor may a
staff physician resell or otherwise transfer or assign its license to use
the software to access the hospital’s system. The hospital also must certify
that no other items or services would be provided to the staff physicians’
practices in connection with the proposed arrangement.
The arrangement differs from the Stark exceptions regarding EHR found at 42
C.F.R. §§ 411.357(u) and (w), in that the arrangement in CMS-AO-2008-01
involves a software communication interface designed to communicate between,
and to grant broader access to, EHR systems already in existence, rather
than an arrangement to purchase a new operating system. According to the
facts, the hospital has already developed a proprietary health care software
information system that allows staff physicians to view patient data and
order tests, and to communicate lab test results. However, the hospital
wants physicians to have broader access to patient data and the ability to
order lab tests from their practices, which would require integrating the
hospital's inhouse system with individual EHR systems maintained by staff
physicians in their practices.
CMS analyzed the arrangement under Section 1877(h)(1)(C) of the Social
Security Act, which identifies certain types of remuneration that, if
provided, would not create a compensation arrangement subject to the
physician self-referral prohibition. "Remuneration" would not include "[t]he
provision of items, devices, or supplies that are used solely . . . to order
or communicate the results of tests or procedures for such entity."
Therefore, since the proposed arrangement: (1) would be used only to order
or communicate the results of tests and procedures furnished by the
hospital; (2) cannot be modified to perform an alternate function; and (3)
cannot be resold, transferred or assigned by a staff physician or his
practice, CMS concluded the proposal does not constitute a compensation
arrangement under the physician self-referral laws of the Social Security
Act.
Put differently, CMS's analysis of the proposed relationship parallels
the OIG's analysis of whether placing
free fax machines in a physician’s practice for communication purposes
violates the Anti-Kickback statute. In the preamble to the 1991 safe-harbor regulations applicable to
the Anti-Kickback Act, the OIG concluded that such
placement is permissible if the fax machine is used as part of a particular
service, such as printing out results of laboratory tests, as long as the
service does not represent any “independent value apart from the service
being provided and the purpose of the machine is not to induce a financial
relationship.
The vast majority of arrangements concerning EHR systems do involve the
exchange of value, thus requiring those arrangements to meet a Stark
exception and not to violate the Anti-Kickback statute.
However, as with fax machines designed solely for communicating lab results,
the proposed arrangement in CMS-AO-2008-01 concerns little more than the
provision software that would allow communication between existing systems
and, according to the opinion’s reasoning, is intended to have such a
specific and narrow use that it is effectively deemed to have no value at
all.
As the opinion points out, the proposed arrangement would allow physicians
to perform functions they already can perform at the hospital site, but
allows for no other functionality or exchange of value. Thus, the advisory
opinion, while having the effect of allowing parties to identify ways to
integrate their existing EHR systems, does not need to comply with any EHR
exceptions because, in the absence of value (as CMS concluded in this
arrangement), there is no compensation arrangement under the Stark law and,
hence, no need to satisfy an exception.
If you
have questions, please
contact one of the Phelps Dunbar health care attorneys listed below.
Phelps Dunbar specially thanks Will Beasley, summer associate in the Tupelo
office, for serving as the contributing author of
this article. |