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Healthcare Speaker Programs: New OIG Alert

Client Alert

In a rare Special Fraud Alert issued on November 16, 2020 (the “Alert”), the Office of Inspector General (“OIG”) urged companies who host speaker programs to reassess their programs in light of the “inherent risks” associated with these activities. The Alert reports that, in the last three years, drug and device companies have reported paying nearly $2 billion to health care professionals for speaker-related services.

For the purpose of the Alert, speaker programs are defined as “company-sponsored events at which a physician or other health care professional (collectively, “HCP”) makes a speech or presentation to other HCPs about a drug or device product or a disease state on behalf of the company.” The company will typically pay the speaker an honorarium, and often provides some sort of incentive (for example, free meals) to encourage attendance. While honorariums are not illegal per se, because much of the information presented in these programs is available elsewhere, the OIG warns that often, “at least one purpose of remuneration associated with speaker programs is often to induce or reward referrals,” which is in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute (“AKS”).

The AKS is an intent-based statute, so an analysis of a speaker program will depend on the facts and circumstances surrounding the program. The Alert provides a helpful list of suspect characteristics that, if present in a speaker program arrangement, could indicate that the speaker program violates the AKS. These characteristics include:

  • No Substantive Content. Programs where there is little or no substantive information actually presented at the program.
  • Expensive Food, Alcohol Available. Programs that offer alcohol (risk heightened if alcohol is free) or a meal exceeding “modest value” to program attendees.
  • Venue. Programs held in locations that are not conducive to the exchange of educational information (e.g. restaurants, entertainment, and sports venues).
  • Number of Programs. A company sponsors a large number of programs on the same or similar topic or product, especially if there have been no recent substantive changes in relevant information.
  • Program Does Not Follow New Product or Indication. Programs conducted where there has been a “significant period of time” with no new medical or scientific information published about the product nor new-FDA approval of the product to discuss.
  • Repeat Attendance. Programs where the attendees have attended other programs on the same or substantially the same topics more than once (as a repeat attendee or as an attendee after serving as a speaker for the same topic).
  • Attendance by Friends, Family, and Staff. Program attendees or invitees include individuals who do not have a legitimate business reason to attend the program. For example: friends, significant others, and family members of the speaker or HCP attendees; HCP practice employees and other staff; and “other individuals with no use for the information.”
  • Sales Involvement. Programs in which sales representatives or marketing personnel are involved in the selection of speakers, or the company selects HCP speakers or attendees based on past or potential revenue generated by orders of the company’s products (e.g., a return on investment analysis).
  • Payment Exceeds FMV. Payment to HCP speakers exceeds fair market value for the speaking service, or compensation considers the volume or value of business generated by the HCPs for the company.

Speaking programs with one or more of the above characteristics will be considered suspicious by the OIG and subject to further scrutiny. As a result of an investigation into a speaking program, if the OIG finds that requisite intent is present, both the company and the HCPs may be subject to criminal, civil, and administrative enforcement actions.

This Alert was published now to encourage drug and device companies and HCPs to reassess their speaker programs as in-person speaking programs start to resume. The OIG advises companies to scrutinize the need for in-person programs given the risks associated with offering or paying related remuneration and consider alternative, less-risky, means for conveying information to HCPs. HCPs should also evaluate the risks of soliciting or receiving remuneration related to speaker programs given other available means to gather information relevant to providing appropriate treatment for patients.

Please contact BMD Healthcare and Hospital Law Member Jeana Singleton at jmsingleton@bmdllc.com or Attorney Ashley Watson at abwatson@bmdllc.com if you have any questions regarding health care fraud and abuse guidelines and how to ensure your practice can remain compliant.


EEOC’s New “Know Your Rights” Poster to Replace “EEO is the Law” Poster

Under federal law, covered employers are required to post a notice in the workplace describing federal antidiscrimination laws. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) prepares the mandatory posters summarizing antidiscrimination laws and explaining how employees and applicants can file a complaint if they believe they have experienced job discrimination. On October 19, 2022, the EEOC released a new poster: “Know Your Rights: Workplace Discrimination is Illegal,” replacing the “EEO is the Law” poster. Employers must now use the poster captioned as “Know Your Rights: Workplace Discrimination is Illegal – Revised 10/20/22.” Employers may be reprimanded for failure to appropriately and compliantly post the updated poster.

FAQs:  Administrative Fees Under Medicare

Late patients, last-minute cancellations, and difficulty in collecting fees are all common complaints from our healthcare clients.  As such, it is no wonder that a common topic among our healthcare clients revolves around what administrative fees can be charged to patients and related issues.

Community Banks: Collaboration, not isolation, is the key to protecting/ enhancing the cannabis business you pioneered

As we prepare for the plenary session of the informal institutional cannabis lenders community announced in my previous article, I am pleased to advise that participants now include 5 of the best-known dedicated loan funds; a select group of commercial banks ranging in size from single state community banks to mid-size regionals making cannabis loans into the mid-8 figures; and, a syndicator of credit union cannabis loans.

Inflation Reduction Act: Healthcare Provisions

On August 16, 2022, President Joe Biden signed into law the Inflation Reduction Act (the “Act”), a landmark climate, healthcare, and tax bill. Though the Act’s climate provisions have received most of the media attention, the healthcare aspects of the Act present some of the most significant changes to the American healthcare system since the passage of the Affordable Care Act.

The Current State of Assignment of Benefits Litigation in Florida

On May 25, 2022, Florida lawmakers approved property insurance reforms that remove attorney’s fees, with respect to assignment of benefits (“AOB”) property insurance litigation. One-way attorney’s fees are a longstanding problem in Florida and the reforms come at a time when AOB litigation increasingly affects homeowners in a negative way.