Rolling out guidance to help pharma manufacturers provide direct-to-consumer drugs at lower prices, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) clarified ways to eliminate the middlemen while still abiding by the federal anti-kickback statute.
The Office of Inspector General (OIG) said in a new report that the U.S. Medicare program had overpaid a group of providers of durable medical equipment (DME) by nearly $23 million between 2018 and 2024, an amount that is a significant drop from prior years, but which OIG said calls for further reforms for the Medicare DME program.
The U.S. FDA needs to strengthen the guardrails along the accelerated approval pathway to ensure its “appropriate and consistent use,” the Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (OIG) said in a report released Jan. 14.
A proposed rule to implement the five-year-old Medicaid Services Investment and Accountability Act would expand the U.S. Health and Human Services’ (HHS) permissive exclusion authority to biopharma manufacturers that misclassify outpatient drugs supplied under agreements with federal health care programs.
Denver-based Davita Inc. agreed to pay more than $34 million to settle allegations that the company violated the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) by not collecting management fees from physicians to induce referrals to the company’s dialysis clinics.
Companies that buy other companies know perfectly well that they may acquire a few headaches in the process, but recent enforcement trends are making the acquiring companies more careful about acquisitions. Regulatory attorney Jennifer Bragg told an audience at this year’s meeting of the Medical Device Manufacturers Association (MDMA) that the smarter companies are doing their due diligence before approaching the target company, an exercise that could ultimately dissuade the would-be acquirer of the wisdom of the transaction.
Advocates are pressing the U.S. Congress to pass legislation to require more Medicare coverage of telehealth and telemedicine, but the Office of Inspector General (OIG) continues to report instances of fraud in this area. OIG reported July 24 that government attorneys had forced a guilty plea out of a telemedicine provider who has agreed to pay $44 million to deal with charges of fraud perpetrated over a period of three and a half years.
The U.S. Office of Inspector General (OIG) reported June 28 that it had launched a series of enforcement actions against perpetrators of a variety of forms of health care fraud, including in the areas of telemedicine and opioid abuse. The 78 individuals arraigned in this crackdown are said to be responsible for $2.5 billion.
The U.S. Office of Inspector General might not be the source of routine rules of the road for information blocking for electronic health records (EHRs), but the agency is tasked with some of the enforcement load. OIG just announced that $1 million fines for violations of information blocking rules will go into force in late August, a penalty that can accrue astonishingly quickly as it may apply per violation rather than per a series of related violations.
Drug and device makers that offer health care professionals opportunities to earn continuing medical education (CME) points have a fine line to walk when sponsoring those programs, but a new advisory opinion by the Office of Inspector General (OIG) at the Department of Health and Human Services seems to draw a very clear line around those programs.