One of the most destructive types of audits that a Medicare provider can suffer from a Medicare contractor is a UPIC audit. A UPIC (Unified Program Integrity Contractor) is a type of Medicare contractor that combines several program integrity functions that were previously handled by different entities. The primary goal…
Articles Posted in Medicare
A Primer on Opting-Out of Medicare
With low rates of Medicare reimbursement, complex and unclear regulations, tremendous administrative burden, and the often arbitrary actions of Medicare contractors, a growing number of physicians and healthcare providers may wonder if there is an alternative to participation in Medicare. There is. Some providers have the option to “opt-out” of…
OIG Updates Work Plan for August 2022
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) announced several new changes in its Work Plan update in August 2022. The OIG Work Plan forecasts the projects that OIG plans to implement over the foreseeable future. These projects usually include OIG audits and evaluations. Below…
Appealing Medicare Audits: What to Know
When a Medicare contractor denies a claim, the provider generally has a right to a lengthy appeal process, which is both complex and contains many strict deadlines. In some circumstances, claims can take years to fully progress through the appeals process. However, some limited cases may be eligible for settlement…
A Guide to SMRC Audits
SMRC audits can be a difficult and baffling ordeal for a provider. They can last for months or years with very little information provided to the healthcare provider but can have devasting impacts. The Supplemental Medical Review Contractor, or SMRC, is a contractor with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid…
Are Your Efforts to Collect Co-pays and Deductibles “Reasonable”?
Healthcare providers are often required to collect co-pays, deductibles, or coinsurance payments from patients. These requirements may be imposed by participation agreements with commercial insurers or, in the case of Medicare and Medicaid, federal and state laws or regulations. It can be tempting to waive copays and other amounts due…
CMS Releases New Comparative Billing Report: What Does it Mean?
CMS uses a tool known as Comparative Billing Reports, or CBR, to analyze a provider’s billing or prescribing patterns. After collecting each provider’s patterns in a certain Medicare Fee-for-Service area, these patterns are then compared to those of peers in the same state, in the same specialty, and across the…
Why It’s Important to Appeal that Medicare Audit
There are many types of Medicare audits, conducted by many types of Medicare contractors: Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs), Unified Program Integrity Contractors (UPICs), the Supplemental Medical Review Contractor (SMRC), and others. Sometimes, where a Medicare audit results in a relatively small overpayment demand, a healthcare provider…
OIG Questions Medicare Advantage Denials
Healthcare providers have long struggled under the administrative burden of prior authorization requirements imposed by Medicare Advantage (MA, also known as Medicare Part C) plans, as well as arbitrary prior authorization denials, utilization controls, and coverage denials by MA plans. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of…
An Introduction to Targeted Probe and Educate (TPE) Audits
Following a temporary suspension in pre-payment reviews under the Targeted Probe and Educate (TPE) audit program in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced in August 2021 that it would be resuming TPE reviews. Review under the TPE program is intended to be…