Skip to Content

'Aggressive' office requires HME compliance programs

'Aggressive' office requires HME compliance programs

ALBANY, N.Y. - New York in October became the first state in the country to require that HME providers have compliance programs in place.

The state put providers on notice in July that, if they bill Medicaid for $500,000 or more annually, they had 90 days to comply with the requirement.

"I welcome it to the extent that it helps to root out fraud and abuse," said Greg LoPresti, COO of Upstate HomeCare in Clinton, N.Y., who has had a compliance program in place for years. "Because that gives everyone a black eye."

The state hopes the requirement will not only root out fraud and abuse but also prevent billing and payment mistakes.

The New York Medical Equipment Providers Association (NYMEP) estimates that 20% of its members will have to comply with the requirement. To help them, the association offers a manual and in-person training.

"We've been letting providers know that this was coming, so, hopefully, it wasn't too much of a surprise," said Carol Napierski, NYMEP's executive director.

Upstate HomeCare's compliance program includes training for new hires, self-audits (to identify possible cases of improper billing) and marketing-specific policies and procedures.

"We review these annually," Lopresti said.

The requirement is the brainchild of the state's Office of Medicaid Inspector General. The fairly new office is to Medicaid what the Office of Inspector General (OIG) is to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Comments

To comment on this post, please log in to your account or set up an account now.