Category Archives: Provider Relief Fund

PRF Audits: If You Did Not Report or Use Properly, You May Have a Recoupment!

Hello, my blog readers. Over the last two weeks, I have joined Nelson Mullins in the Raleigh office, attended Nelson Mullins’ healthcare retreat in Charlotte, and attended the Long Term and Post-Acute Care Law and Compliance conference in New Orleans, LA. It has been quite a whirlwind! I also appeared on RACMonitor, as I do every Monitor Monday.

Joining Nelson Mullins has been fantastic. There is a deep bench of health care attorneys, so now I am able to offer my clients all legal services they may need.

Today I am writing about provider relief funds (“PRF”) audits because, folks, PRF audits are HERE. If providers failed to report their PRF or used the funds for non-allowable items having nothing to do with COVID, HHS and OIG may recoup the funds.

An allowable expense under the PRF must be used to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus. PRF recipients must follow their basis of accounting (e.g., cash, accrual, or modified accrual) to determine expenses. The cited expenses, as well as losses, must not have been reimbursed from other sources and other sources must not be obligated to reimburse them.

Many providers were recipients of provider relief funds or PRF during the COVID pandemic. If providers received these funds there were reporting requirements and use requirements. Now audits are being conducted to ensure the funds’ proper use and reporting. Audits are being rolled out on two different fronts: (1) HHS; and (2) HRSA – or Health Resources Services Administration.

On Feb. 25, 2022, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants’ (AICPA) Government Audit Quality Center (GAQC) provided long-awaited guidance to for-profit healthcare organizations that are subject to the Provider Relief Fund (PRF) audit requirements. The guidance came in the form of a practice aid entitled HHS Audit Requirements for For-Profit Entities with Awards from the Provider Relief Fund Program and Other HHS Programs. Its goal is to provide clarity to for-profit healthcare entities that expend $750,000 or more in federal awards in a given reporting period, which includes the PRF and other federal awards included in the Assistance Listing but excludes Paycheck Protection Program funds. Based on the practice aid, here is a summary of audit options available to for-profit entities to meet the audit compliance requirements of the U.S. DHHS.

  • Uniform Guidance Audits
    • Single Audit – A single audit requires an audit of both the financial statements under Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards (GAGAS) and a compliance audit under Uniform Guidance. The compliance audit requires testing compliance with any major program(s) as defined by Uniform Guidance as well as obtaining an understanding of internal control over compliance and testing the internal control over compliance for each major program identified. The results are two auditor’s reports: one on the financial statements and one on compliance and internal controls over compliance. This option is necessary if federal regulations require a financial statement audit. This option is available to entities with funding from multiple programs from any federal agency.
    • Program-Specific Audit – The program-specific audit is similar to the single audit except that it removes the financial statement audit requirement. Therefore, tests of compliance, an understanding of internal control over compliance, and testing internal control over compliance are required for this engagement. A schedule of a specific element of a financial statement would be prepared. The results are two auditor’s reports: one on the schedule of a specific element of a financial statement (the PRF funding) and one on compliance and internal controls over compliance. This option is only available if the entity has funding under one HHS program, such as the PRF.
  • Financial-Related Audit Under GAGAS – A financial-related audit under GAGAS requires an audit to be conducted on only one schedule of a specific element of the financial statements. This option is only available if all federal funds expended during the period were from HHS programs. The schedule (the HHS Schedule) would include all federal awards from HHS, including the PRF. It does not require an audit of the financial statements or any testing of internal controls over compliance. It does require compliance testing, but no opinion on compliance is issued. The result is an auditor’s report only on the HHS Schedule.

There are 4 reporting periods per year that will be audited. Reporting for the 2023 4th period is going on now. Providers who received a PRF (General or Targeted) exceeding $10,000 in the aggregate, from July 1, 2021, to December 31, 2021, are required to report on their use of funds during RP4. The deadline to submit a report is March 31, 2023.

There is an appeal process if you receive a Final Repayment Notice. Once you receive a Final Repayment Notice, you have 60 days to either pay or appeal.

  1. Providers who do not take one of these actions within 60 days of HRSA’s Final Repayment Notice may be referred by HRSA to the HHS Program Support Center (PSC) for the initiation of debt collection activities.
  2. PSC, in coordination with the U.S. Department of Treasury, will issue formal debt collection letters to all providers that HRSA refers for debt collection. At this point, PSC and Treasury will take over all debt collection communications with referred providers. Debt collection activities may include accrual of interest, penalties, and recovery of funds by offsetting other Federal payments allocated to the entity.

HRSA cannot establish payment plans for outstanding debts. Once the repayment amount has been referred to PSC and becomes official debt, providers can apply for repayment plans directly with PSC.

KNICOLE EMANUEL TO HOST JANUARY WEBCAST ON PRFS AND RAC AUDITS

For healthcare providers looking to avoid any of the traps stemming from PRF (Provider Relief Funds) compliance, RACmonitor is inviting you to sign up for Knicole Emanuel’s upcoming webcast on January 21st, 2021. It is titled: COVID-19 Provider Relief Funds: How to Avoid Audits.  You can visit RACmonitor download the order form for the webcast to save yourself a spot. 

Webcast Description: 

If your facility accepted Provider Relief Funds (PRFs) as a consequence of the coronavirus pandemic, you need to be aware of the myriad of rules and regulations that are associated with this funding or else face penalties and takebacks. A word of caution: expect to be audited. In Medicare and Medicaid, regulatory audits are as certain as death and taxes. That is why your facility needs to arm itself with the knowledge of how to address documentation requests from the government, especially while the Public Health Emergency (PHE) is in effect.

This exclusive RACmonitor webcast, led by healthcare attorney Knicole Emanuel, discusses the PRF rules that providers must follow and how to prove that funds were appropriately used. There are strict regulations dictating why, how, and how much PRFs can be spent due to the catastrophic, financial impact of COVID-19. Register now to learn how to avoid penalties and takebacks related to PRFs.

Learning Objectives:

  • Rules and regulations relative to receiving and spending funds provided by the COVID-19 PRF
  • Exceptions to COVID-19 PRF and relevant effective dates
  • PRF documentation and reporting requirements
  • The importance of the legal dates of PHE
  • How to prove your facility’s use of funds is germane to COVID-19

Who Should Attend:

  • CFOs
  • RAC and appeals specialists
  • RAC coordinators
  • Compliance officers
  • Directors and managers

About Knicole C. Emanuel, Esq.

Healthcare industry expert and Practus partner, Knicole Emanuel, is a regular contributor to the healthcare industry podcast, Monitor Mondays, by RACmonitor. For more than 20 years, Knicole Emanuel has maintained a health care litigation practice, concentrating on Medicare and Medicaid litigation, health care regulatory compliance, administrative law and regulatory law. Knicole has tried over 2,000 administrative cases in over 30 states and has appeared before multiple states’ medical boards. 

She has successfully obtained federal injunctions in numerous states. This allowed health care providers to remain in business despite the state or federal laws allegations of health care fraud, abhorrent billings, and data mining. A wealth of knowledge in her industry, Knicole frequently lectures across the country on health care law. This includes the impact of the Affordable Care Act and regulatory compliance for providers, including physicians, home health and hospice, dentists, chiropractors, hospitals and durable medical equipment providers.

Provider Relief Funds: The Hottest RAC Audit Subject

Reporting the use of PRFs will be an ongoing issue due to the fraud and abuse implications of misusing PRFs.

The federal Provider Relief Fund (PRF) was created under the provisions of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, which was passed to address the economic harm suffered by healthcare providers that have incurred (or will incur) additional expenses and have lost (or will lose) significant revenue as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. PRF payments have been made from either the “general distribution” tranche or via various “targeted distributions.” PRF payment amounts and whether the providers complied with the terms and conditions will be a hotly contested topic in Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) and Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) audits for years to come. If Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) auditors put out a monthly magazine, like Time, PRF would be on the cover. This will be the hot topic of RAC audits, come Jan. 1, 2021.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) will audit Medicare payments made to hospitals for COVID-19 discharges that qualified for the 20-percent add-on payment under the CARES Act, according to a new item on the agency’s work plan.

To use the PRF funding from either the general or targeted distributions, providers must attest to receiving the funds and agree to all terms and conditions. However, what constitutes a “healthcare-related expense” or how to calculate “lost revenue” is not clearly defined. Similarly, how you net healthcare-related expenses toward lost revenue is also vague and undefined. On Nov. 2, HHS issued a clarification to post-payment reporting guidance for PRF funds.

The current guidance, issued Oct. 22, includes a two-step process for providers to report their use of PRF payments. The guidance specifically cites:

  • Healthcare-related expenses attributable to COVID that another source has not reimbursed and is not obligated to reimburse, which may include general and administrative (G&A) or “healthcare-related operating expenses;” and
  • PRF payment amounts not fully expended on healthcare-related expenses attributable to coronavirus are then applied to lost revenues associated with patient care, net of the healthcare-related expenses attributable to coronavirus calculated under the first step. Recipients may apply PRF payments toward lost revenue, up to the amount of the difference between their 2019 and 2020 actual patient care revenue.

HHS’s newest clarification came from its response to a FAQ, in which it said that healthcare-related expenses are no longer netted against the patient care lost revenue amount cited in the second portion. HHS indicated that a revised notice would be posted to remove the “net of the healthcare-related expenses” language in the guidance. Of course, as of now, we have no guidance regarding when this clarification is to be put into place officially. Yet another moving target for auditors.

Anticipate audits of the use of your PRF payments. CMS is choosing a sample of hospitals across the country that have received PRF payments to verify that such expenditures were for healthcare-related expenses. For each audit, OIG will obtain data and interview HHS/PRF program officials to understand how PRF payments were calculated, and then review actual PRF payments for compliance with CARES Act requirements. OIG will also review whether HHS’s controls over PRF payments ensured that payments were calculated correctly and disbursed to eligible providers.

Audits will also focus on how providers initially applied to receive PRFs, including calculations utilized and how COVID-19 patients are defined. When each hospital ceased netting expenses against lost revenue will now be another hot topic.

Balance billing is another area of interest. The terms and conditions require providers that accept the PRFs not to collect out-of-pocket payments from patients for all care for a presumptive or actual case of COVID-19 that exceeded what they would pay an in-network provider.

More havoc may ensue with any purchases or sales transactions that occur in the next year or so. Providers will need to know how to navigate compliance risks associated with any accepted or transferred PRFs. Tracking and reporting use of the PRFs will also be an ongoing issue due to the fraud and abuse implications of misusing PRFs, and there is limited guidance regarding how use will be audited. Many questions remain unanswered. Many terms remain undefined.

Programming Note: Knicole Emanuel, Esq. is a permanent panelist on Monitor Mondays. Listen to her RAC Report every Monday at 10 a.m. EST.