Practice Economics

Supreme Court case could expand false claims liability


 

References

A case before the U.S. Supreme Court could expand physicians’ liability under the False Claims Act (FCA).

The case of Escobar v. Universal Health Services centers on the theory of implied certification and how that legal test should be used to determine whether a claim for payment is fraudulent.

Lawrence M. Kraus

Lawrence M. Kraus

The case “is an opportunity for the Supreme Court to figure out how far the False Claims Act is going to stretch,” said Lawrence M. Kraus, a Boston health law attorney who attended the April 19 oral arguments. “On the practical level, it may have an impact as to whether [such] cases get dismissed at an early stage or whether they go into the discovery phase, which can be quite long, unpleasant, and expensive.”

The Escobar case arises from the death of a patient who was treated at a Lawrence, Mass., mental health clinic operated by Universal Health Services. The patient died from an alleged adverse reaction to medication prescribed for her by clinic staff, according to allegations by her family. The patient’s father, Julio Escobar, later learned counselors and psychologists involved in his daughter’s treatment were not licensed, were not properly supervised by a physician, and had lied about their medical credentials, according to court documents.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health found the clinic had violated 14 distinct regulations, including those relating to staff licensure and supervision. As a result of the investigation, the clinic entered into a correction plan with the agency and paid a civil fine.

Mr. Escobar and his wife then filed suit under the FCA and the Massachusetts False Claims Act, claiming that Universal had presented false claims to Medicaid by seeking payments for services provided by unlicensed, unsupervised health care providers. Although the reimbursement claims submitted to the government accurately described the services provided and cited the correct charges, the plaintiffs alleged that because the clinic’s operations violated state requirements to participate in Medicaid, Universal had also violated the FCA. The federal government intervened in the case on behalf of the Escobars.

Universal countered that the FCA suit was invalid because a reimbursement claim cannot be false unless its details are untrue or inaccurate.

The plaintiffs, however, contend that a claim does not have to include explicit false statements to be fraudulent. Rather, their complaint relies on “implied certification,” a theory holding that any submission for government payment includes an implicit certification that the health provider has complied with all applicable contract requirements, laws, and regulations that could be a condition of payment. Universal falsely claimed entitlement when it submitted reimbursement requests that did not conform to applicable laws, the plaintiffs argued.

The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Escobar, and Universal appealed to the Supreme Court.

Circuit courts across the country have split on the issue, Mr. Kraus noted.

“There have been a number of different approaches from appeals courts in the country,” he said. “This is not a new issue, but one that the Supreme Court found important enough to decide.”

Why should doctors care about this case?

A ruling for the plaintiff could increase the chances that physicians are accused of an FCA violation after submitting a claim for payment, said William W. Horton, a Birmingham, Ala., health law attorney and chair of the American Bar Association Health Law Section.

William W. Horton

William W. Horton

“The problem that this raises for health care providers is: There is an enormous web of laws and regulations out there, many of which don’t have anything to do with whether a particular service was rendered or not,” Mr. Horton said in an interview “If you adopt the implied certification theory and take a broad view, than you significantly enhance the scope of claims that could be pursued under the False Claims Act.”

Mr. Horton provides this example: Take a physician group that has an in-office lab, and assume that for some technical reason, the group doesn’t satisfy the Stark Law exception for in-office ancillary services. If a physician in the group refers a Medicare patient to the lab and the group bills Medicare, that’s a Stark Law violation because the group didn’t meet the Stark exception, even if there’s no dispute over whether the patient needed the test or whether the test was done correctly, or whether the Medicare claim accurately reflected the charges, he said. By broadly applying the implied certification theory to this scenario, a case could be made that the practice violated the FCA in submitting the claim because the group was implicitly certifying that the claim did not result from a referral that violated the Stark Law.

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