Doctor-owned businesses that act as middlemen between medical device makers and hospitals are inherently suspect and some of their practices may violate U.S. anti-kickback laws, a government inspector general said.
Daniel Levinson, the inspector general for the Health and Human Services Department, today issued an unusual special fraud alert about so-called physician-owned distributorships, or PODs. The companies sell medical devices that the doctor owners then use in surgical procedures on their own patients.
The greatest concern is about implantable medical devices, an area in which doctors have wide latitude in selecting the type and brand of device that will be used in patients. When the doctor performing the surgery also has an ownership interest in the distributor of the device, the risk of fraud and abuse is substantial, Levinsons office said in its notice.
Anytime a few bad actors determine the treatment and care of patients, as this warning makes clear, patient safety is put at risk and millions of dollars are lost to fraud, Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee who has been tracking the use of PODs, said in an e- mail. I will continue to scrutinize these high-risk structures and demand answers from HHS.
Doctor-owned suppliers can help reduce health-care costs when operated ethically and legally, said John Steinmann, an orthopedic surgeon who is an owner of the distributor Inland Spine & Orthopedics in Redlands, California.
Reuters elaborates:
In a report on Tuesday, the Office of Inspector General said its longstanding guidance makes clear that the opportunity for a referring physician to earn a profit, including through an investment in an entity for which he or she generates business, could constitute illegal remuneration under the anti-kickback statute.
The regulator was addressing physician owned distributors, or PODs, which are most commonly used in orthopedics.
The anti-kickback statute is violated if even one purpose of the remuneration is to induce such referrals by healthcare professionals in PODs, the report said.
The language in the report cant get any more damning, said Cowen & Co analyst Dr. Josh Jennings.