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Senators introduce bill to make doctor Medicare claims data public

April 08, 2011 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

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WASHINGTON – Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) introduced legislation Thursday to make doctors' Medicare claims data public for the first time. 
 
"Medicare is a $500 billion program with billions of dollars going out in error each year," Grassley said.  "The bad actors are getting bigger and bolder all the time.  They ’re able to stay out of law enforcement’s reach too often.  It’s time to try new things.  More transparency about billing and payments increases public understanding of where tax dollars go.  The bad actors might be dissuaded if they knew their actions were subject to the light of day."
 
Wyden said, "Hiding information on how taxpayer dollars are being spent is not something we do in this country."
 
"Moreover, if taxpayer dollars are being spent responsibly there is no reason to hide," he added. "Shedding light on Medicare claims will be helpful to those making medical decisions, offer insight into how Medicare dollars are being spent and prevent wasteful spending and fraud.  All of which begs the question ‘why isn’t this information already available?"
 
[See also: Anti-fraud efforts save CMS 4B in 2011.]
 
Last month, Grassley introduced legislation requiring the Department of Health and Human Services to make Medicare claims and payment data available to the public in a manner similar to other federal spending, which is disclosed online at www.USAspending.gov. For his part, Wyden was developing an approach to make the data public through the federal Freedom of Information Act, the senators said.
 
The joint bill, called the Medicare Data Access for Transparency and Accountability Act (Medicare DATA Act), contains elements from each senator's approach. The bill would require HHS to issue regulations to make available a searchable Medicare payment database that the public can access at no cost.  The bill also clarifies that data on Medicare payments to physicians and suppliers do not fall under a Freedom of Information Act exemption.
 
Grassley and Wyden said healthcare fraud remains a pervasive problem in federal healthcare programs.  It has been widely agreed that between 5 percent to 8 percent of federal healthcare expenditures is lost to fraud.
 
In a recent series, The Wall Street Journal used limited access to Medicare billing data to identify suspicious billing patterns and potential abuses of the Medicare system. The Wall Street Journal found cases where Medicare paid millions to a physician, sometimes for several years, before those questionable payments stopped.  While volume alone doesn’t automatically mean there’s fraud, waste, or abuse, accountability and transparency are powerful preventive tools, Grassley and Wyden said.
 
Grassley and Wyden serve together on the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over Medicare. Grassley is a senior member and former chairman and ranking member.  Toward the cause of transparency and good government, Grassley and Wyden earlier this year achieved success in their long-time effort to end the Senate practice of placing “secret” holds on legislation.
 
Follow Diana Manos on Twitter @DManos_IT_News.

Diana Manos
Senior Editor for Healthcare IT News
Follow Diana on Twitter @DManos_IT_News
Related Topics:
  • Chuck Grassley
  • Iowa
  • Medicare
  • Oregon
  • Ron Wyden
  • Washington
  • Claims Processing

Reader Comments (2)Login to Post a Comment

MedQuack says: Digital Illiteracy big problem for lawmakers all over
April 08, 2011 | 3:18PM GMT

First of all, have you ever billed for medical claims? This is truly just an honest question being asked to make sure the complexity and what's on file with huge data base is understood. The is the grand daddy of data for medical claims for sure. I am happy that law enforcement is getting access as they should be able to find fraud and they are really our only line of defense for catching most of it. If you read the news, you don't see too many other stories unless a whistle blower comes forward for the most part.

In the Dow Jones lawsuit they contend that any old data base company should be able to do this and put it out in a format for the public to use. Well have the MD ratings sites that do not get their data right and do I think this would be done correctly? Probably not as they will be for hire to make a profit and getting enough out there to make a buck, as that is what companies do would more than likely prevail.

In addition, some doctors with some bad billing, and this could be bad coding, hiring bad billers, etc. would end up looking like crooks even though adjustments have been made as well as corrections. I don't think th executives who have never billed and never worked with code and data bases themselves realize the complexities, not to mention big money involved in getting this done. The secondary concern is what will it accomplish? It will make consumers angry and what if they are angry over flawed data that gets out there? What have we accomplished here, not much more than disruption and getting more folks out of focus. Not a good idea in my book as on the other hand I read about investors over clocking their servers and so on, it just does not sit right.

The Congress folks I don't think have a clue as to how this works either and the unintended consequences it would create and thus I see this Dow Jones Lawsuit basically filed "just because they can". Is this constructive?

Again I'll go back to what I have said about using business intelligence in Congress, the White House and everywhere in government is that somewhere it needs to enter the picture soon as digital illiteracy with law makers is a problem at all levels of government, but of course the federal level is in the direct eye. I have said this many times that using intelligence like the IBM Watson server set up could provide would beneficial as projections and simulations would save a lot of time and perhaps some undue efforts that won't work out anyway.

Right now it looks like the hedge fund guys are being pitched but when it comes to levels where we need this type of technology for better decision, nobody can see the value and what it can offer, and what more can be said at this point other than digital illiteracy at the heart that does not enable those who make laws to see the value and it's just the world we live in.

Dmanos says: Lawmakers and the digital divide
April 11, 2011 | 2:13PM GMT

I agree with you. A lot of times lawmakers call something "fraud," when it is just a case of billing error. I think this situation is going to be even more complex with ICD-10.

Personally, I always am speculative about the motives behind laws that are introduced. Is it really about the issue itself (Medicare billing), or about the politics behind the broader concept (national debt, 2012 election?)

Tke Medicare spending, for example. Now that's a loaded issue.

~Diana Manos

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