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Vulnerabilities in CMS's and Contractors' Activities To Detect and Deter Fraud in Community Mental Health Centers

Spotlight Article

Fighting Fraud at Community Mental Health Centers

Podcast

Contractors' Fraud Prevention Activities in Community Mental Health Centers

Evan GodfreyEvan Godfrey, a program analyst for the Office of Evaluation and Inspections in Atlanta, is interviewed by Jaime Durley, Deputy Regional Inspector General for the Office of Evaluation and Inspections.

WHY WE DID THIS STUDY

During 2010, 206 community mental health centers (CMHC) received an estimated $218.6 million for providing partial hospitalization program services to approximately 25,000 Medicare beneficiaries. Arrests by Medicare Fraud Strike Forces indicate that some parts of the country have a higher prevalence of CMHC fraud, including areas in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. A recent OIG study found that approximately half of CMHCs exhibited questionable billing in 2010, most of which were in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. Other OIG studies have found problems with CMS's oversight of contractors.

HOW WE DID THIS STUDY

We collected information and documentation from CMS, Medicare Administrative Contractors (MAC), and Zone Program Integrity Contractors (ZPIC) regarding activities to detect and deter fraudulent CMHC billing in 2010. We also analyzed Medicare claims data from the National Claims History Outpatient File to determine the extent to which Medicare paid CMHCs subject to payment suspensions, revocations, or selected autodeny edits in 2010.

WHAT WE FOUND

Fraud-Prone Areas

Fraud-Prone Areas

Source: OIG analysis of HEAT Strike Force Cities, DOJ press releases, and CMHCs with questionable billing

One of nine MACs we reviewed performed activities to detect and deter CMHC fraud in 2010, and most of these were part of a CMS-led special project. Activities to detect and deter CMHC fraud varied substantially among ZPICs in 2010, with one ZPIC performing almost all such activities. Most of these activities were part of the same CMS-led special project. Other MACs and ZPICs performed minimal activities to detect and deter fraudulent CMHC billing, despite having jurisdiction over fraud-prone areas. Additionally, Medicare paid CMHCs that did not comply with its requirements after their revocations were effective and while their revocations were being approved. Medicare also could have prevented payments to potentially fraudulent CMHCs by consistently applying an autodeny edit across Florida CMHCs.

WHAT WE RECOMMEND

We recommend that CMS (1) implement additional CMHC fraud mitigation activities in all fraud-prone areas, (2) develop a system to track revocation recommendations and improve revocation communication with contractors, (3) coordinate activities to deter CMHC fraud in Florida, and (4) follow up on payments made to CMHCs after the effective dates of their billing privilege revocations. CMS concurred with all four recommendations.