Key Physician Payment Sunshine Act Updates Published by CMS

Pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers take note: In the recently issued calendar year (CY) 2022 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule (Final Rule), the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized a number of important updates to the federal Physician Payment Sunshine Act (Sunshine Act) regulations and related Open Payments reporting system available on the CMS website. These revisions demonstrate CMS’ ongoing interest in enhancing both the integrity of the Sunshine Act reporting regime and the agency’s ability to engage in vigorous oversight of financial relationships between manufacturers and covered recipients. The stakes have never been higher, as CMS is updating the reporting rules against the backdrop of a new wave of enforcement in this area by the Department of Justice (as discussed here).

The Sunshine Act aims to promote financial transparency with respect to manufacturer-healthcare provider relationships by requiring manufacturers of certain drugs, devices, biologicals, and medical supplies that are reimbursed by CMS programs to report payments and other transfers of value made to certain “covered recipients” unless an exception applies. Covered recipients include physicians, teaching hospitals, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and certain other healthcare providers. With this Final Rule, CMS aims to “increase the usability of the data” and “address concerns [CMS has] heard from stakeholders.” The Final Rule takes effect January 1, 2022, and applies to data collection beginning in CY 2023 and reporting in CY 2024.

The key Final Rule updates are as follows:

The Final Rule also made changes related to a new definition for “physician-owned distributorship,” an update of the definition for “ownership or investment interest,” and the removal of general records with the Nature of Payment category of “ownership” — which will now be reported as ownership records.

Companies subject to the Sunshine Act should consider policy, procedure, and audit plan updates based on the Final Rule updates in advance of the January 1, 2022, effective date. Furthermore, as CMS continues to fine-tune its reporting requirements under the Sunshine Act, regulated entities should also consider taking stock of their overall compliance infrastructure and training program surrounding their aggregate spend tracking and reporting activities and assess whether any strategic enhancements are warranted to mitigate the risk of noncompliance.

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