Compliance:
OIG Warns About Leasing Space to Other Physicians
Published on Tue Aug 12, 2008
Be mindful of anti-kickback rules when leasing space. You own a cancer center where your patients can get their radiation and chemotherapy in one central location, so why not lease space to a urology group so the patients can easily stop by and accomplish their follow-up visits? Not so fast, says the OIG in an Aug. 26 advisory opinion. The facts: A freestanding cancer clinic offers many services, including intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), a common prostate cancer treatment. Often, urologists refer their patients to the cancer facility for treatment. Therefore, the clinic suggested an arrangement where, pursuant to a series of agreements, the urologists would lease space in their building and provide personnel and equipment, allowing the urologists to treat patients and provide IMRT. In exchange, the urology group would pay the cancer center rent and other expenses. The decision: The Office of Inspector General determined that the arrangement "could potentially generate prohibited remuneration under the anti-kickback statute." Here's why: "The troublesome aspect of the contemplated relationship between the oncologists and the urologists is that the urologists are expanding into a related line of business, which is dependent on referrals from, or other business generated by, the urologist's existing patient basis," says Emily Kretchmer of Pierce and Mandell in Boston. "The contemplated relationship would allow the urologists to capture revenue from referrals that they would not otherwise be entitled to without any real business or financial, capital or human resources commitment." To read the advisory opinion in full, visit
www.oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/advisoryopinions/2008/AdvOpn08-10A.pdf.