Modifications to Stark Physician Self-Referral Prohibition Proposed
September 1, 1999
After months of attempting to reach an agreement on a bipartisan proposal to
modify the laws governing self-referrals by physicians, more commonly known as
Stark II, the leading proponents of competing viewpoints, Rep. Bill Thomas (R-Calif.)
and Rep. Fortney (Pete) Stark (D-Calif.) have finally agreed to disagree and
have introduced separate bills in Congress to modify the existing prohibitions.
While different in scope and approach, the good news for physicians is that both
proposals loosen, to varying degrees, the restrictions on physician referrals to
an entity with which the physician has a financial relationship as a result of a
compensation arrangement with the entity.
In its current form, Stark II prohibits referrals by physicians for the
provision of certain Medicare or Medicaid reimbursable "designated health
services" (1) to entities with which the physician (or members of the
physician's immediate family) has a financial relationship. "Financial
relationship" is defined as an ownership or investment interest in the
entity, or a compensation arrangement with the entity. "Compensation
arrangement," in turn, is defined to include any arrangement that involves
remuneration between a physician (or a member of the physician's immediate
family) and the entity to which the physician refers a patient. The statute does
carve out a specific list of exceptions to the broad coverage of
"compensation arrangements," but the compensation arrangement
component has nonetheless received great criticism over the years, particularly
by physician organizations, for being confusing, difficult to comply with, and
ambiguous. Opponents have long argued that the overly broad definition
effectively eliminates from consideration many business transactions deemed
essential to today's system of integrated health care. Such criticism has grown
steadily with HCFA's continuing failure to issue final Stark II regulations.
In his bill (H.R. 2651), Rep. Thomas, Chairman of the House Ways and Means
Health Subcommittee, proposes eliminating the ban on referrals to entities with
which a physician has merely a compensation arrangement, but would preserve the
ban on referrals to entities in which the physician has an ownership or
investment interest. Thomas noted that the compensation arrangement section of
Stark II is overly burdensome on providers, effectively unenforceable, and has
done little to eliminate waste in the nation's health care delivery system. He
characterized his proposal as a "very modest, small step" toward
making physician self-referral prohibitions functional.
In contrast, Rep. Stark proposes to modify the compensation arrangement
component of his namesake legislation in a more modest way, rather than
eliminate it in its entirety. The Stark proposal (H.R. 2650), calls for a series
of specifically targeted modifications to a variety of financial relationship
components including a clarification of the direct supervision requirement under
the in-office ancillary services exception, an expansion of the prepaid plan
exception, and the creation of exceptions for capitated payments, ambulatory
surgical centers, hospices and services furnished in communities with no
alternative providers. The Stark package further proposes to revise the
exceptions unique to compensation arrangements by creating a single, unified set
of "Requirements and Exceptions for Permissible Compensation
Arrangements."
Both bills were introduced on July 29, 1999, and if the past failure to reach
a compromise acceptable to legislators on both sides of the aisle is any
indication, debate over the final form of a Stark Amendment may take some time.
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1. Such "designated health services" include: clinical laboratory
services; physical therapy services; occupational therapy services; radiology
services, including magnetic resonance imaging, computerized axial tomography
scans, and ultrasound services; radiation therapy services and supplies; durable
medical equipment and supplies; parenteral and enteral nutrients, equipment, and
supplies; prosthetics, orthotics, and prosthetic devices and supplies; home
health services; outpatient prescription drugs; and inpatient and outpatient
hospital services.