[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 42, Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 42CFR1001.952]



[Page 1132-1157]

 

                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH

 

      GENERAL--HEALTH CARE, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 1001_PROGRAM INTEGRITY_MEDICARE AND STATE HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS--

 

                     Subpart C_Permissive Exclusions

 

Sec.  1001.952  Exceptions.



    The following payment practices shall not be treated as a criminal 

offense under section 1128B of the Act and shall not serve as the basis 

for an exclusion:

    (a) Investment interests. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment that is a return on an 

investment interest, such as a dividend or interest income, made to an 

investor as long as all of the applicable standards are met within one 

of the following three categories of entities:

    (1) If, within the previous fiscal year or previous 12 month period, 

the entity possesses more than $50,000,000 in undepreciated net tangible 

assets (based on the net acquisition cost of purchasing such assets from 

an unrelated entity) related to the furnishing of health care items and 

services, all of the following five standards must be met--

    (i) With respect to an investment interest that is an equity 

security, the equity security must be registered with the Securities and 

Exchange Commission under 15 U.S.C. 781 (b) or (g).

    (ii) The investment interest of an investor in a position to make or 

influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or otherwise 

generate business for the entity must be obtained on terms (including 

any direct or indirect transferability restrictions) and at a price 

equally available to the public when trading on a registered securities 

exchange, such as the New York Stock



[[Page 1133]]



Exchange or the American Stock Exchange, or in accordance with the 

National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System.

    (iii) The entity or any investor must not market or furnish the 

entity's items or services (or those of another entity as part of a 

cross referral agreement) to passive investors differently than to non-

investors.

    (iv) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor in the entity) must not 

loan funds to or guarantee a loan for an investor who is in a position 

to make or influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or 

otherwise generate business for the entity if the investor uses any part 

of such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (v) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment interest must be directly proportional to the amount of the 

capital investment of that investor.

    (2) If the entity possesses investment interests that are held by 

either active or passive investors, all of the following eight 

applicable standards must be met--

    (i) No more than 40 percent of the value of the investment interests 

of each class of investment interests may be held in the previous fiscal 

year or previous 12 month period by investors who are in a position to 

make or influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or 

otherwise generate business for the entity. (For purposes of paragraph 

(a)(2)(i) of this section, equivalent classes of equity investments may 

be combined, and equivalent classes of debt instruments may be 

combined.)

    (ii) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to a 

passive investor, if any, who is in a position to make or influence 

referrals to, furnish items or services to, or otherwise generate 

business for the entity must be no different from the terms offered to 

other passive investors.

    (iii) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor who is in a position to make or influence referrals to, furnish 

items or services to, or otherwise generate business for the entity must 

not be related to the previous or expected volume of referrals, items or 

services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise generated from 

that investor to the entity.

    (iv) There is no requirement that a passive investor, if any, make 

referrals to, be in a position to make or influence referrals to, 

furnish items or services to, or otherwise generate business for the 

entity as a condition for remaining as an investor.

    (v) The entity or any investor must not market or furnish the 

entity's items or services (or those of another entity as part of a 

cross referral agreement) to passive investors differently than to non-

investors.

    (vi) No more than 40 percent of the entity's gross revenue related 

to the furnishing of health care items and services in the previous 

fiscal year or previous 12-month period may come from referrals or 

business otherwise generated from investors.

    (vii) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor in the entity) must not 

loan funds to or guarantee a loan for an investor who is in a position 

to make or influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or 

otherwise generate business for the entity if the investor uses any part 

of such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (viii) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment interest must be directly proportional to the amount of the 

capital investment (including the fair market value of any pre-

operational services rendered) of that investor.

    (3)(i) If the entity possesses investment interests that are held by 

either active or passive investors and is located in an underserved 

area, all of the following eight standards must be met--

    (A) No more than 50 percent of the value of the investment interests 

of each class of investments may be held in the previous fiscal year or 

previous 12-month period by investors who are in a position to make or 

influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or otherwise 

generate business for, the entity. (For purposes of paragraph 

(a)(3)(i)(A) of this section, equivalent classes of equity investments 

may be combined, and equivalent classes of debt instruments may be 

combined.)



[[Page 1134]]



    (B) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to a 

passive investor, if any, who is in a position to make or influence 

referrals to, furnish items or services to, or otherwise generate 

business for the entity must be no different from the terms offered to 

other passive investors.

    (C) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor who is in a position to make or influence referrals to, furnish 

items or services to, or otherwise generate business for the entity must 

not be related to the previous or expected volume of referrals, items or 

services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise generated from 

that investor to the entity.

    (D) There is no requirement that a passive investor, if any, make 

referrals to, be in a position to make or influence referrals to, 

furnish items or services to, or otherwise generate business for the 

entity as a condition for remaining as an investor.

    (E) The entity or any investor must not market or furnish the 

entity's items or services (or those of another entity as part of a 

cross-referral agreement) to passive investors differently than to non-

investors.

    (F) At least 75 percent of the dollar volume of the entity's 

business in the previous fiscal year or previous 12-month period must be 

derived from the service of persons who reside in an underserved area or 

are members of medically underserved populations.

    (G) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity acting 

on behalf of the entity or any investor in the entity) must not loan 

funds to or guarantee a loan for an investor who is in a position to 

make or influence referrals to, furnish items or services to, or 

otherwise generate business for the entity if the investor uses any part 

of such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (H) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment interest must be directly proportional to the amount of the 

capital investment (including the fair market value of any pre-

operational services rendered) of that investor.

    (ii) If an entity that otherwise meets all of the above standards is 

located in an area that was an underserved area at the time of the 

initial investment, but subsequently ceases to be an underserved area, 

the entity will be deemed to comply with paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 

section for a period equal to the lesser of:

    (A) The current term of the investment remaining after the date upon 

which the area ceased to be an underserved area or

    (B) Three years from the date the area ceased to be an underserved 

area.

    (4) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, the following 

terms apply. Active investor means an investor either who is responsible 

for the day-to-day management of the entity and is a bona fide general 

partner in a partnership under the Uniform Partnership Act or who agrees 

in writing to undertake liability for the actions of the entity's agents 

acting within the scope of their agency. Investment interest means a 

security issued by an entity, and may include the following classes of 

investments: shares in a corporation, interests or units in a 

partnership or limited liability company, bonds, debentures, notes, or 

other debt instruments. Investor means an individual or entity either 

who directly holds an investment interest in an entity, or who holds 

such investment interest indirectly by, including but not limited to, 

such means as having a family member hold such investment interest or 

holding a legal or beneficial interest in another entity (such as a 

trust or holding company) that holds such investment interest. Passive 

investor means an investor who is not an active investor, such as a 

limited partner in a partnership under the Uniform Partnership Act, a 

shareholder in a corporation, or a holder of a debt security. 

Underserved area means any defined geographic area that is designated as 

a Medically Underserved Area (MUA) in accordance with regulations issued 

by the Department. Medically underserved population means a Medically 

Underserved Population (MUP) in accordance with regulations issued by 

the Department.

    (b) Space rental. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment made by a lessee to a 

lessor for the use of premises, as long as all of the following six 

standards are met--



[[Page 1135]]



    (1) The lease agreement is set out in writing and signed by the 

parties.

    (2) The lease covers all of the premises leased between the parties 

for the term of the lease and specifies the premises covered by the 

lease.

    (3) If the lease is intended to provide the lessee with access to 

the premises for periodic intervals of time, rather than on a full-time 

basis for the term of the lease, the lease specifies exactly the 

schedule of such intervals, their precise length, and the exact rent for 

such intervals.

    (4) The term of the lease is for not less than one year.

    (5) The aggregate rental charge is set in advance, is consistent 

with fair market value in arms-length transactions and is not determined 

in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of any referrals 

or business otherwise generated between the parties for which payment 

may be made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other 

Federal health care programs.

    (6) The aggregate space rented does not exceed that which is 

reasonably necessary to accomplish the commercially reasonable business 

purpose of the rental. Note that for purposes of paragraph (b) of this 

section, the term fair market value means the value of the rental 

property for general commercial purposes, but shall not be adjusted to 

reflect the additional value that one party (either the prospective 

lessee or lessor) would attribute to the property as a result of its 

proximity or convenience to sources of referrals or business otherwise 

generated for which payment may be made in whole or in part under 

Medicare, Medicaid and all other Federal health care programs.

    (c) Equipment rental. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment made by a lessee of 

equipment to the lessor of the equipment for the use of the equipment, 

as long as all of the following six standards are met--

    (1) The lease agreement is set out in writing and signed by the 

parties.

    (2) The lease covers all of the equipment leased between the parties 

for the term of the lease and specifies the equipment covered by the 

lease.

    (3) If the lease is intended to provide the lessee with use of the 

equipment for periodic intervals of time, rather than on a full-time 

basis for the term of the lease, the lease specifies exactly the 

schedule of such intervals, their precise length, and the exact rent for 

such interval.

    (4) The term of the lease is for not less than one year.

    (5) The aggregate rental charge is set in advance, is consistent 

with fair market value in arms-length transactions and is not determined 

in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of any referrals 

or business otherwise generated between the parties for which payment 

may be made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or all other 

Federal health care programs.

    (6) The aggregate equipment rental does not exceed that which is 

reasonably necessary to accomplish the commercially reasonable business 

purpose of the rental. Note that for purposes of paragraph (c) of this 

section, the term fair market value means that the value of the 

equipment when obtained from a manufacturer or professional distributor, 

but shall not be adjusted to reflect the additional value one party 

(either the prospective lessee or lessor) would attribute to the 

equipment as a result of its proximity or convenience to sources of 

referrals or business otherwise generated for which payment may be made 

in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health 

care programs.

    (d) Personal services and management contracts. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment made by 

a principal to an agent as compensation for the services of the agent, 

as long as all of the following seven standards are met--

    (1) The agency agreement is set out in writing and signed by the 

parties.

    (2) The agency agreement covers all of the services the agent 

provides to the principal for the term of the agreement and specifies 

the services to be provided by the agent.

    (3) If the agency agreement is intended to provide for the services 

of the agent on a periodic, sporadic or part-time basis, rather than on 

a full-time basis for the term of the agreement, the agreement specifies 

exactly the schedule of such intervals, their



[[Page 1136]]



precise length, and the exact charge for such intervals.

    (4) The term of the agreement is for not less than one year.

    (5) The aggregate compensation paid to the agent over the term of 

the agreement is set in advance, is consistent with fair market value in 

arms-length transactions and is not determined in a manner that takes 

into account the volume or value of any referrals or business otherwise 

generated between the parties for which payment may be made in whole or 

in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs.

    (6) The services performed under the agreement do not involve the 

counselling or promotion of a business arrangement or other activity 

that violates any State or Federal law.

    (7) The aggregate services contracted for do not exceed those which 

are reasonably necessary to accomplish the commercially reasonable 

business purpose of the services.

    For purposes of paragraph (d) of this section, an agent of a 

principal is any person, other than a bona fide employee of the 

principal, who has an agreement to perform services for, or on behalf 

of, the principal.

    (e) Sale of practice. (1) As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment made to a practitioner by 

another practitioner where the former practitioner is selling his or her 

practice to the latter practitioner, as long as both of the following 

two standards are met--

    (i) The period from the date of the first agreement pertaining to 

the sale to the completion of the sale is not more than one year.

    (ii) The practitioner who is selling his or her practice will not be 

in a professional position to make referrals to, or otherwise generate 

business for, the purchasing practitioner for which payment may be made 

in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health 

care programs after 1 year from the date of the first agreement 

pertaining to the sale.

    (2) As used in section 1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not 

include any payment made to a practitioner by a hospital or other entity 

where the practitioner is selling his or her practice to the hospital or 

other entity, so long as the following four standards are met:

    (i) The period from the date of the first agreement pertaining to 

the sale to the completion date of the sale is not more than three 

years.

    (ii) The practitioner who is selling his or her practice will not be 

in a professional position after completion of the sale to make or 

influence referrals to, or otherwise generate business for, the 

purchasing hospital or entity for which payment may be made under 

Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs.

    (iii) The practice being acquired must be located in a Health 

Professional Shortage Area (HPSA), as defined in Departmental 

regulations, for the practitioner's specialty area.

    (iv) Commencing at the time of the first agreement pertaining to the 

sale, the purchasing hospital or entity must diligently and in good 

faith engage in commercially reasonable recruitment activities that:

    (A) May reasonably be expected to result in the recruitment of a new 

practitioner to take over the acquired practice within a one year period 

and

    (B) Will satisfy the conditions of the practitioner recruitment safe 

harbor in accordance with paragraph (n) of this section.

    (f) Referral services. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment or exchange of anything of 

value between an individual or entity (``participant'') and another 

entity serving as a referral service (``referral service''), as long as 

all of the following four standards are met--

    (1) The referral service does not exclude as a participant in the 

referral service any individual or entity who meets the qualifications 

for participation.

    (2) Any payment the participant makes to the referral service is 

assessed equally against and collected equally from all participants, 

and is only based on the cost of operating the referral service, and not 

on the volume or value of any referrals to or business otherwise 

generated by either party for the referral service for which payment may 

be made in whole or in part under



[[Page 1137]]



Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs.

    (3) The referral service imposes no requirements on the manner in 

which the participant provides services to a referred person, except 

that the referral service may require that the participant charge the 

person referred at the same rate as it charges other persons not 

referred by the referral service, or that these services be furnished 

free of charge or at reduced charge.

    (4) The referral service makes the following five disclosures to 

each person seeking a referral, with each such disclosure maintained by 

the referral service in a written record certifying such disclosure and 

signed by either such person seeking a referral or by the individual 

making the disclosure on behalf of the referral service--

    (i) The manner in which it selects the group of participants in the 

referral service to which it could make a referral;

    (ii) Whether the participant has paid a fee to the referral service;

    (iii) The manner in which it selects a particular participant from 

this group for that person;

    (iv) The nature of the relationship between the referral service and 

the group of participants to whom it could make the referral; and

    (v) The nature of any restrictions that would exclude such an 

individual or entity from continuing as a participant.

    (g) Warranties. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment or exchange of anything of 

value under a warranty provided by a manufacturer or supplier of an item 

to the buyer (such as a health care provider or beneficiary) of the 

item, as long as the buyer complies with all of the following standards 

in paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of this section and the manufacturer or 

supplier complies with all of the following standards in paragraphs 

(g)(3) and (g)(4) of this section--

    (1) The buyer must fully and accurately report any price reduction 

of the item (including a free item), which was obtained as part of the 

warranty, in the applicable cost reporting mechanism or claim for 

payment filed with the Department or a State agency.

    (2) The buyer must provide, upon request by the Secretary or a State 

agency, information provided by the manufacturer or supplier as 

specified in paragraph (g)(3) of this section.

    (3) The manufacturer or supplier must comply with either of the 

following two standards--

    (i) The manufacturer or supplier must fully and accurately report 

the price reduction of the item (including a free item), which was 

obtained as part of the warranty, on the invoice or statement submitted 

to the buyer, and inform the buyer of its obligations under paragraphs 

(a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section.

    (ii) Where the amount of the price reduction is not known at the 

time of sale, the manufacturer or supplier must fully and accurately 

report the existence of a warranty on the invoice or statement, inform 

the buyer of its obligations under paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of this 

section, and, when the price reduction becomes known, provide the buyer 

with documentation of the calculation of the price reduction resulting 

from the warranty.

    (4) The manufacturer or supplier must not pay any remuneration to 

any individual (other than a beneficiary) or entity for any medical, 

surgical, or hospital expense incurred by a beneficiary other than for 

the cost of the item itself.

    For purposes of paragraph (g) of this section, the term warranty 

means either an agreement made in accordance with the provisions of 15 

U.S.C. 2301(6), or a manufacturer's or supplier's agreement to replace 

another manufacturer's or supplier's defective item (which is covered by 

an agreement made in accordance with this statutory provision), on terms 

equal to the agreement that it replaces.

    (h) Discounts. As used in section 1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' 

does not include a discount, as defined in paragraph (h)(5) of this 

section, on an item or service for which payment may be made in whole or 

in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs 

for a buyer as long as the buyer complies with the applicable standards 

of paragraph (h)(1) of this section; a seller as long as the seller 

complies with the applicable standards



[[Page 1138]]



of paragraph (h)(2) of this section; and an offeror of a discount who is 

not a seller under paragraph (h)(2) of this section so long as such 

offeror complies with the applicable standards of paragraph (h)(3) of 

this section.

    (1) With respect to the following three categories of buyers, the 

buyer must comply with all of the applicable standards within one of the 

three following categories--

    (i) If the buyer is an entity which is a health maintenance 

organization (HMO) or a competitive medical plan (CMP) acting in 

accordance with a risk contract under section 1876(g) or 1903(m) of the 

Act, or under another State health care program, it need not report the 

discount except as otherwise may be required under the risk contract.

    (ii) If the buyer is an entity which reports its costs on a cost 

report required by the Department or a State health care program, it 

must comply with all of the following four standards--

    (A) The discount must be earned based on purchases of that same good 

or service bought within a single fiscal year of the buyer;

    (B) The buyer must claim the benefit of the discount in the fiscal 

year in which the discount is earned or the following year;

    (C) The buyer must fully and accurately report the discount in the 

applicable cost report; and

    (D) the buyer must provide, upon request by the Secretary or a State 

agency, information provided by the seller as specified in paragraph 

(h)(2)(ii) of this section, or information provided by the offeror as 

specified in paragraph (h)(3)(ii) of this section.

    (iii) If the buyer is an individual or entity in whose name a claim 

or request for payment is submitted for the discounted item or service 

and payment may be made, in whole or in part, under Medicare, Medicaid 

or other Federal health care programs (not including individuals or 

entities defined as buyers in paragraph (h)(1)(i) or (h)(1)(ii) of this 

section), the buyer must comply with both of the following standards--

    (A) The discount must be made at the time of the sale of the good or 

service or the terms of the rebate must be fixed and disclosed in 

writing to the buyer at the time of the initial sale of the good or 

service; and

    (B) the buyer (if submitting the claim) must provide, upon request 

by the Secretary or a State agency, information provided by the seller 

as specified in paragraph (h)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, or information 

provided by the offeror as specified in paragraph (h)(3)(iii)(A) of this 

section.

    (2) The seller is an individual or entity that supplies an item or 

service for which payment may be made, in whole or in part, under 

Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs to the buyer 

and who permits a discount to be taken off the buyer's purchase price. 

The seller must comply with all of the applicable standards within one 

of the following three categories--

    (i) If the buyer is an entity which is an HMO a CMP acting in 

accordance with a risk contract under section 1876(g) or 1903(m) of the 

Act, or under another State health care program, the seller need not 

report the discount to the buyer for purposes of this provision.

    (ii) If the buyer is an entity that reports its costs on a cost 

report required by the Department or a State agency, the seller must 

comply with either of the following two standards--

    (A) Where a discount is required to be reported to Medicare or a 

State health care program under paragraph (h)(1) of this section, the 

seller must fully and accurately report such discount on the invoice, 

coupon or statement submitted to the buyer; inform the buyer in a manner 

that is reasonably calculated to give notice to the buyer of its 

obligations to report such discount and to provide information upon 

request under paragraph (h)(1) of this section; and refrain from doing 

anything that would impede the buyer from meeting its obligations under 

this paragraph; or

    (B) Where the value of the discount is not known at the time of 

sale, the seller must fully and accurately report the existence of a 

discount program on the invoice, coupon or statement submitted to the 

buyer; inform the buyer in a manner reasonably calculated to give notice 

to the buyer of its obligations to report such discount and to provide 

information upon request



[[Page 1139]]



under paragraph (h)(1) of this section; when the value of the discount 

becomes known, provide the buyer with documentation of the calculation 

of the discount identifying the specific goods or services purchased to 

which the discount will be applied; and refrain from doing anything 

which would impede the buyer from meeting its obligations under this 

paragraph.

    (iii) If the buyer is an individual or entity not included in 

paragraph (h)(2)(i) or (h)(2)(ii) of this section, the seller must 

comply with either of the following two standards--

    (A) Where the seller submits a claim or request for payment on 

behalf of the buyer and the item or service is separately claimed, the 

seller must provide, upon request by the Secretary or a State agency, 

information provided by the offeror as specified in paragraph 

(h)(3)(iii)(A) of this section; or

    (B) Where the buyer submits a claim, the seller must fully and 

accurately report such discount on the invoice, coupon or statement 

submitted to the buyer; inform the buyer in a manner reasonably 

calculated to give notice to the buyer of its obligations to report such 

discount and to provide information upon request under paragraph (h)(1) 

of this section; and refrain from doing anything that would impede the 

buyer from meeting its obligations under this paragraph.

    (3) The offeror of a discount is an individual or entity who is not 

a seller under paragraph (h)(2) of this section, but promotes the 

purchase of an item or service by a buyer under paragraph (h)(1) of this 

section at a reduced price for which payment may be made, in whole or in 

part, under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs. 

The offeror must comply with all of the applicable standards within the 

following three categories--

    (i) If the buyer is an entity which is an HMO or a CMP acting in 

accordance with a risk contract under section 1876(g) or 1903(m) of the 

Act, or under another State health care program, the offeror need not 

report the discount to the buyer for purposes of this provision.

    (ii) If the buyer is an entity that reports its costs on a cost 

report required by the Department or a State agency, the offeror must 

comply with the following two standards--

    (A) The offeror must inform the buyer in a manner reasonably 

calculated to give notice to the buyer of its obligations to report such 

a discount and to provide information upon request under paragraph 

(h)(1) of this section; and

    (B) The offeror of the discount must refrain from doing anything 

that would impede the buyer's ability to meet its obligations under this 

paragraph.

    (iii) If the buyer is an individual or entity in whose name a 

request for payment is submitted for the discounted item or service and 

payment may be made, in whole or in part, under Medicare, Medicaid or 

other Federal health care programs (not including individuals or 

entities defined as buyers in paragraph (h)(1)(i) or (h)(1)(ii) of this 

section), the offeror must comply with the following two standards--

    (A) The offeror must inform the individual or entity submitting the 

claim or request for payment in a manner reasonably calculated to give 

notice to the individual or entity of its obligations to report such a 

discount and to provide information upon request under paragraphs (h)(1) 

and (h)(2) of this section; and

    (B) The offeror of the discount must refrain from doing anything 

that would impede the buyer's or seller's ability to meet its 

obligations under this paragraph.

    (4) For purposes of this paragraph, a rebate is any discount the 

terms of which are fixed and disclosed in writing to the buyer at the 

time of the initial purchase to which the discount applies, but which is 

not given at the time of sale.

    (5) For purposes of this paragraph, the term discount means a 

reduction in the amount a buyer (who buys either directly or through a 

wholesaler or a group purchasing organization) is charged for an item or 

service based on an arms-length transaction. The term discount does not 

include--

    (i) Cash payment or cash equivalents (except that rebates as defined 

in paragraph (h)(4) of this section may be in the form of a check);

    (ii) Supplying one good or service without charge or at a reduced 

charge



[[Page 1140]]



to induce the purchase of a different good or service, unless the goods 

and services are reimbursed by the same Federal health care program 

using the same methodology and the reduced charge is fully disclosed to 

the Federal health care program and accurately reflected where 

appropriate, and as appropriate, to the reimbursement methodology;

    (iii) A reduction in price applicable to one payer but not to 

Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care programs;

    (iv) A routine reduction or waiver of any coinsurance or deductible 

amount owed by a program beneficiary;

    (v) Warranties;

    (vi) Services provided in accordance with a personal or management 

services contract; or

    (vii) Other remuneration, in cash or in kind, not explicitly 

described in paragraph (h)(5) of this section.

    (i) Employees. As used in section 1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' 

does not include any amount paid by an employer to an employee, who has 

a bona fide employment relationship with the employer, for employment in 

the furnishing of any item or service for which payment may be made in 

whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other Federal health care 

programs. For purposes of paragraph (i) of this section, the term 

employee has the same meaning as it does for purposes of 26 U.S.C. 

3121(d)(2).

    (j) Group purchasing organizations. As used in section 1128B of the 

Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment by a vendor of goods 

or services to a group purchasing organization (GPO), as part of an 

agreement to furnish such goods or services to an individual or entity 

as long as both of the following two standards are met--

    (1) The GPO must have a written agreement with each individual or 

entity, for which items or services are furnished, that provides for 

either of the following--

    (i) The agreement states that participating vendors from which the 

individual or entity will purchase goods or services will pay a fee to 

the GPO of 3 percent or less of the purchase price of the goods or 

services provided by that vendor.

    (ii) In the event the fee paid to the GPO is not fixed at 3 percent 

or less of the purchase price of the goods or services, the agreement 

specifies the amount (or if not known, the maximum amount) the GPO will 

be paid by each vendor (where such amount may be a fixed sum or a fixed 

percentage of the value of purchases made from the vendor by the members 

of the group under the contract between the vendor and the GPO).

    (2) Where the entity which receives the goods or service from the 

vendor is a health care provider of services, the GPO must disclose in 

writing to the entity at least annually, and to the Secretary upon 

request, the amount received from each vendor with respect to purchases 

made by or on behalf of the entity. Note that for purposes of paragraph 

(j) of this section, the term group purchasing organization (GPO) means 

an entity authorized to act as a purchasing agent for a group of 

individuals or entities who are furnishing services for which payment 

may be made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or other 

Federal health care programs, and who are neither wholly-owned by the 

GPO nor subsidiaries of a parent corporation that wholly owns the GPO 

(either directly or through another wholly-owned entity).

    (k) Waiver of beneficiary coinsurance and deductible amounts. As 

used in section 1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any 

reduction or waiver of a Medicare or a State health care program 

beneficiary's obligation to pay coinsurance or deductible amounts as 

long as all of the standards are met within either of the following two 

categories of health care providers:

    (1) If the coinsurance or deductible amounts are owed to a hospital 

for inpatient hospital services for which Medicare pays under the 

prospective payment system, the hospital must comply with all of the 

following three standards--

    (i) The hospital must not later claim the amount reduced or waived 

as a bad debt for payment purposes under Medicare or otherwise shift the 

burden of the reduction or waiver onto Medicare, a State health care 

program, other payers, or individuals.



[[Page 1141]]



    (ii) The hospital must offer to reduce or waive the coinsurance or 

deductible amounts without regard to the reason for admission, the 

length of stay of the beneficiary, or the diagnostic related group for 

which the claim for Medicare reimbursement is filed.

    (iii) The hospital's offer to reduce or waive the coinsurance or 

deductible amounts must not be made as part of a price reduction 

agreement between a hospital and a third-party payer (including a health 

plan as defined in paragraph (l)(2) of this section), unless the 

agreement is part of a contract for the furnishing of items or services 

to a beneficiary of a Medicare supplemental policy issued under the 

terms of section 1882(t)(1) of the Act.

    (2) If the coinsurance or deductible amounts are owed by an 

individual who qualifies for subsidized services under a provision of 

the Public Health Services Act or under titles V or XIX of the Act to a 

federally qualified health care center or other health care facility 

under any Public Health Services Act grant program or under title V of 

the Act, the health care center or facility may reduce or waive the 

coinsurance or deductible amounts for items or services for which 

payment may be made in whole or in part under part B of Medicare or a 

State health care program.

    (l) Increased coverage, reduced cost-sharing amounts, or reduced 

premium amounts offered by health plans. (1) As used in section 1128B of 

the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include the additional coverage of 

any item or service offered by a health plan to an enrollee or the 

reduction of some or all of the enrollee's obligation to pay the health 

plan or a contract health care provider for cost-sharing amounts (such 

as coinsurance, deductible, or copayment amounts) or for premium amounts 

attributable to items or services covered by the health plan, the 

Medicare program, or a State health care program, as long as the health 

plan complies with all of the standards within one of the following two 

categories of health plans:

    (i) If the health plan is a risk-based health maintenance 

organization, competitive medical plan, prepaid health plan, or other 

health plan under contract with CMS or a State health care program and 

operating in accordance with section 1876(g) or 1903(m) of the Act, 

under a Federal statutory demonstration authority, or under other 

Federal statutory or regulatory authority, it must offer the same 

increased coverage or reduced cost-sharing or premium amounts to all 

Medicare or State health care program enrollees covered by the contract 

unless otherwise approved by CMS or by a State health care program.

    (ii) If the health plan is a health maintenance organization, 

competitive medical plan, health care prepayment plan, prepaid health 

plan or other health plan that has executed a contract or agreement with 

CMS or with a State health care program to receive payment for enrollees 

on a reasonable cost or similar basis, it must comply with both of the 

following two standards--

    (A) The health plan must offer the same increased coverage or 

reduced cost-sharing or premium amounts to all Medicare or State health 

care program enrollees covered by the contract or agreement unless 

otherwise approved by CMS or by a State health care program; and

    (B) The health plan must not claim the costs of the increased 

coverage or the reduced cost-sharing or premium amounts as a bad debt 

for payment purposes under Medicare or a State health care program or 

otherwise shift the burden of the increased coverage or reduced cost-

sharing or premium amounts to the extent that increased payments are 

claimed from Medicare or a State health care program.

    (2) For purposes of paragraph (l) of this section, the terms--

    Contract health care provider means an individual or entity under 

contract with a health plan to furnish items or services to enrollees 

who are covered by the health plan, Medicare, or a State health care 

program.

    Enrollee means an individual who has entered into a contractual 

relationship with a health plan (or on whose behalf an employer, or 

other private or governmental entity has entered into such a 

relationship) under which the individual is entitled to receive 

specified health care items and services, or insurance coverage for such 

items and



[[Page 1142]]



services, in return for payment of a premium or a fee.

    Health plan means an entity that furnishes or arranges under 

agreement with contract health care providers for the furnishing of 

items or services to enrollees, or furnishes insurance coverage for the 

provision of such items and services, in exchange for a premium or a 

fee, where such entity:

    (i) Operates in accordance with a contract, agreement or statutory 

demonstration authority approved by CMS or a State health care program;

    (ii) Charges a premium and its premium structure is regulated under 

a State insurance statute or a State enabling statute governing health 

maintenance organizations or preferred provider organizations;

    (iii) Is an employer, if the enrollees of the plan are current or 

retired employees, or is a union welfare fund, if the enrollees of the 

plan are union members; or

    (iv) Is licensed in the State, is under contract with an employer, 

union welfare fund, or a company furnishing health insurance coverage as 

described in conditions (ii) and (iii) of this definition, and is paid a 

fee for the administration of the plan which reflects the fair market 

value of those services.

    (m) Price reductions offered to health plans. (1) As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include a reduction in price 

a contract health care provider offers to a health plan in accordance 

with the terms of a written agreement between the contract health care 

provider and the health plan for the sole purpose of furnishing to 

enrollees items or services that are covered by the health plan, 

Medicare, or a State health care program, as long as both the health 

plan and contract health care provider comply with all of the applicable 

standards within one of the following four categories of health plans:

    (i) If the health plan is a risk-based health maintenance 

organization, competitive medical plan, or prepaid health plan under 

contract with CMS or a State agency and operating in accordance with 

section 1876(g) or 1903(m) of the Act, under a Federal statutory 

demonstration authority, or under other Federal statutory or regulatory 

authority, the contract health care provider must not claim payment in 

any form from the Department or the State agency for items or services 

furnished in accordance with the agreement except as approved by CMS or 

the State health care program, or otherwise shift the burden of such an 

agreement to the extent that increased payments are claimed from 

Medicare or a State health care program.

    (ii) If the health plan is a health maintenance organization, 

competitive medical plan, health care prepayment plan, prepaid health 

plan, or other health plan that has executed a contract or agreement 

with CMS or a State health care program to receive payment for enrollees 

on a reasonable cost or similar basis, the health plan and contract 

health care provider must comply with all of the following four 

standards--

    (A) The term of the agreement between the health plan and the 

contract health care provider must be for not less than one year;

    (B) The agreement between the health plan and the contract health 

care provider must specify in advance the covered items and services to 

be furnished to enrollees, and the methodology for computing the payment 

to the contract health care provider;

    (C) The health plan must fully and accurately report, on the 

applicable cost report or other claim form filed with the Department or 

the State health care program, the amount it has paid the contract 

health care provider under the agreement for the covered items and 

services furnished to enrollees; and

    (D) The contract health care provider must not claim payment in any 

form from the Department or the State health care program for items or 

services furnished in accordance with the agreement except as approved 

by CMS or the State health care program, or otherwise shift the burden 

of such an agreement to the extent that increased payments are claimed 

from Medicare or a State health care program.

    (iii) If the health plan is not described in paragraphs (m)(1)(i) or 

(m)(1)(ii) of this section and the contract health care provider is not 

paid on an at-risk, capitated basis, both the



[[Page 1143]]



health plan and contract health care provider must comply with all of 

the following six standards--

    (A) The term of the agreement between the health plan and the 

contract health care provider must be for not less than one year;

    (B) The agreement between the health plan and the contract health 

care provider must specify in advance the covered items and services to 

be furnished to enrollees, which party is to file claims or requests for 

payment with Medicare or the State health care program for such items 

and services, and the schedule of fees the contract health care provider 

will charge for furnishing such items and services to enrollees;

    (C) The fee schedule contained in the agreement between the health 

plan and the contract health care provider must remain in effect 

throughout the term of the agreement, unless a fee increase results 

directly from a payment update authorized by Medicare or the State 

health care program;

    (D) The party submitting claims or requests for payment from 

Medicare or the State health care program for items and services 

furnished in accordance with the agreement must not claim or request 

payment for amounts in excess of the fee schedule;

    (E) The contract health care provider and the health plan must fully 

and accurately report on any cost report filed with Medicare or a State 

health care program the fee schedule amounts charged in accordance with 

the agreement and, upon request, will report to the Medicare or a State 

health care program the terms of the agreement and the amounts paid in 

accordance with the agreement; and

    (F) The party to the agreement, which does not have the 

responsibility under the agreement for filing claims or requests for 

payment, must not claim or request payment in any form from the 

Department or the State health care program for items or services 

furnished in accordance with the agreement, or otherwise shift the 

burden of such an agreement to the extent that increased payments are 

claimed from Medicare or a State health care program.

    (iv) If the health plan is not described in paragraphs (m)(1)(i) or 

(m)(1)(ii) of this section, and the contract health care provider is 

paid on an at-risk, capitated basis, both the health plan and contract 

health care provider must comply with all of the following five 

standards--

    (A) The term of the agreement between the health plan and the 

contract health provider must be for not less than one year;

    (B) The agreement between the health plan and the contract health 

provider must specify in advance the covered items and services to be 

furnished to enrollees and the total amount per enrollee (which may be 

expressed in a per month or other time period basis) the contract health 

care provider will be paid by the health plan for furnishing such items 

and services to enrollees and must set forth any copayments, if any, to 

be paid by enrollees to the contract health care provider for covered 

services;

    (C) The payment amount contained in the agreement between the health 

care plan and the contract health care provider must remain in effect 

throughout the term of the agreement;

    (D) The contract health care provider and the health plan must fully 

and accurately report to the Medicare and State health care program upon 

request, the terms of the agreement and the amounts paid in accordance 

with the agreement; and

    (E) The contract health care provider must not claim or request 

payment in any form from the Department, a State health care program or 

an enrollee (other than copayment amounts described in paragraph 

(m)(2)(iv)(B) of this section) and the health plan must not pay the 

contract care provider in excess of the amounts described in paragraph 

(m)(2)(iv)(B) of this section for items and services covered by the 

agreement.

    (2) For purposes of this paragraph, the terms contract health care 

provider, enrollee, and health plan have the same meaning as in 

paragraph (l)(2) of this section.

    (n) Practitioner recruitment. As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any payment or exchange of anything of 

value by an



[[Page 1144]]



entity in order to induce a practitioner who has been practicing within 

his or her current specialty for less than one year to locate, or to 

induce any other practitioner to relocate, his or her primary place of 

practice into a HPSA for his or her specialty area, as defined in 

Departmental regulations, that is served by the entity, as long as all 

of the following nine standards are met--

    (1) The arrangement is set forth in a written agreement signed by 

the parties that specifies the benefits provided by the entity, the 

terms under which the benefits are to be provided, and the obligations 

of each party.

    (2) If a practitioner is leaving an established practice, at least 

75 percent of the revenues of the new practice must be generated from 

new patients not previously seen by the practitioner at his or her 

former practice.

    (3) The benefits are provided by the entity for a period not in 

excess of 3 years, and the terms of the agreement are not renegotiated 

during this 3-year period in any substantial aspect; provided, however, 

that if the HPSA to which the practitioner was recruited ceases to be a 

HPSA during the term of the written agreement, the payments made under 

the written agreement will continue to satisfy this paragraph for the 

duration of the written agreement (not to exceed 3 years).

    (4) There is no requirement that the practitioner make referrals to, 

be in a position to make or influence referrals to, or otherwise 

generate business for the entity as a condition for receiving the 

benefits; provided, however, that for purposes of this paragraph, the 

entity may require as a condition for receiving benefits that the 

practitioner maintain staff privileges at the entity.

    (5) The practitioner is not restricted from establishing staff 

privileges at, referring any service to, or otherwise generating any 

business for any other entity of his or her choosing.

    (6) The amount or value of the benefits provided by the entity may 

not vary (or be adjusted or renegotiated) in any manner based on the 

volume or value of any expected referrals to or business otherwise 

generated for the entity by the practitioner for which payment may be 

made in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or any other Federal 

health care programs.

    (7) The practitioner agrees to treat patients receiving medical 

benefits or assistance under any Federal health care program in a 

nondiscriminatory manner.

    (8) At least 75 percent of the revenues of the new practice must be 

generated from patients residing in a HPSA or a Medically Underserved 

Area (MUA) or who are part of a Medically Underserved Population (MUP), 

all as defined in paragraph (a) of this section.

    (9) The payment or exchange of anything of value may not directly or 

indirectly benefit any person (other than the practitioner being 

recruited) or entity in a position to make or influence referrals to the 

entity providing the recruitment payments or benefits of items or 

services payable by a Federal health care program.

    (o) Obstetrical malpractice insurance subsidies. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment made by 

a hospital or other entity to another entity that is providing 

malpractice insurance (including a self-funded entity), where such 

payment is used to pay for some or all of the costs of malpractice 

insurance premiums for a practitioner (including a certified nurse-

midwife as defined in section 1861(gg) of the Act) who engages in 

obstetrical practice as a routine part of his or her medical practice in 

a primary care HPSA, as long as all of the following seven standards are 

met--

    (1) The payment is made in accordance with a written agreement 

between the entity paying the premiums and the practitioner, which sets 

out the payments to be made by the entity, and the terms under which the 

payments are to be provided.

    (2)(i) The practitioner must certify that for the initial coverage 

period (not to exceed one year) the practitioner has a reasonable basis 

for believing that at least 75 percent of the practitioner's obstetrical 

patients treated under the coverage of the malpractice insurance will 

either--

    (A) Reside in a HPSA or MUA, as defined in paragraph (a) of this 

section; or



[[Page 1145]]



    (B) Be part of a MUP, as defined in paragraph (a) of this section.

    (ii) Thereafter, for each additional coverage period (not to exceed 

one year), at least 75 percent of the practitioner's obstetrical 

patients treated under the prior coverage period (not to exceed one 

year) must have--

    (A) Resided in a HPSA or MUA, as defined in paragraph (a) of this 

section; or

    (B) Been part of a MUP, as defined in paragraph (a) of this section.

    (3) There is no requirement that the practitioner make referrals to, 

or otherwise generate business for, the entity as a condition for 

receiving the benefits.

    (4) The practitioner is not restricted from establishing staff 

privileges at, referring any service to, or otherwise generating any 

business for any other entity of his or her choosing.

    (5) The amount of payment may not vary based on the volume or value 

of any previous or expected referrals to or business otherwise generated 

for the entity by the practitioner for which payment may be made in 

whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or any other Federal health 

care programs.

    (6) The practitioner must treat obstetrical patients who receive 

medical benefits or assistance under any Federal health care program in 

a nondiscriminatory manner.

    (7) The insurance is a bona fide malpractice insurance policy or 

program, and the premium, if any, is calculated based on a bona fide 

assessment of the liability risk covered under the insurance. For 

purposes of paragraph (o) of this section, costs of malpractice 

insurance premiums means:

    (i) For practitioners who engage in obstetrical practice full-time, 

any costs attributable to malpractice insurance; or

    (ii) For practitioners who engage in obstetrical practice on a part-

time or sporadic basis, the costs:

    (A) Attributable exclusively to the obstetrical portion of the 

practitioner's malpractice insurance and

    (B) Related exclusively to obstetrical services provided in a 

primary care HPSA.

    (p) Investments in group practices. As used in section 1128B of the 

Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment that is a return on 

an investment interest, such as a dividend or interest income, made to a 

solo or group practitioner investing in his or her own practice or group 

practice if the following four standards are met--

    (1) The equity interests in the practice or group must be held by 

licensed health care professionals who practice in the practice or 

group.

    (2) The equity interests must be in the practice or group itself, 

and not some subdivision of the practice or group.

    (3) In the case of group practices, the practice must:

    (i) Meet the definition of ``group practice'' in section 1877(h)(4) 

of the Social Security Act and implementing regulations; and

    (ii) Be a unified business with centralized decision-making, pooling 

of expenses and revenues, and a compensation/profit distribution system 

that is not based on satellite offices operating substantially as if 

they were separate enterprises or profit centers.

    (4) Revenues from ancillary services, if any, must be derived from 

``in-office ancillary services'' that meet the definition of such term 

in section 1877(b)(2) of the Act and implementing regulations.

    (q) Cooperative hospital service organizations. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment made 

between a cooperative hospital service organization (CHSO) and its 

patron-hospital, both of which are described in section 501(e) of the 

Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and are tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) 

of the Internal Revenue Code, where the CHSO is wholly owned by two or 

more patron-hospitals, as long as the following standards are met--

    (1) If the patron-hospital makes a payment to the CHSO, the payment 

must be for the purpose of paying for the bona fide operating expenses 

of the CHSO, or

    (2) If the CHSO makes a payment to the patron-hospital, the payment 

must be for the purpose of paying a distribution of net earnings 

required to be made under section 501(e)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code 

of 1986.



[[Page 1146]]



    (r) Ambulatory surgical centers. As used in section 1128B of the 

Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment that is a return on 

an investment interest, such as a dividend or interest income, made to 

an investor, as long as the investment entity is a certified ambulatory 

surgical center (ASC) under part 416 of this title, whose operating and 

recovery room space is dedicated exclusively to the ASC, patients 

referred to the investment entity by an investor are fully informed of 

the investor's investment interest, and all of the applicable standards 

are met within one of the following four categories--

    (1) Surgeon-owned ASCs--If all of the investors are general surgeons 

or surgeons engaged in the same surgical specialty, who are in a 

position to refer patients directly to the entity and perform surgery on 

such referred patients; surgical group practices (as defined in this 

paragraph) composed exclusively of such surgeons; or investors who are 

not employed by the entity or by any investor, are not in a position to 

provide items or services to the entity or any of its investors, and are 

not in a position to make or influence referrals directly or indirectly 

to the entity or any of its investors, all of the following six 

standards must be met--

    (i) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor must not be related to the previous or expected volume of 

referrals, services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise 

generated from that investor to the entity.

    (ii) At least one-third of each surgeon investor's medical practice 

income from all sources for the previous fiscal year or previous 12-

month period must be derived from the surgeon's performance of 

procedures (as defined in this paragraph).

    (iii) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor) must not loan funds to 

or guarantee a loan for an investor if the investor uses any part of 

such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (iv) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment must be directly proportional to the amount of the capital 

investment (including the fair market value of any pre-operational 

services rendered) of that investor.

    (v) All ancillary services for Federal health care program 

beneficiaries performed at the entity must be directly and integrally 

related to primary procedures performed at the entity, and none may be 

separately billed to Medicare or other Federal health care programs.

    (vi) The entity and any surgeon investors must treat patients 

receiving medical benefits or assistance under any Federal health care 

program in a nondiscriminatory manner.

    (2) Single-Specialty ASCs--If all of the investors are physicians 

engaged in the same medical practice specialty who are in a position to 

refer patients directly to the entity and perform procedures on such 

referred patients; group practices (as defined in this paragraph) 

composed exclusively of such physicians; or investors who are not 

employed by the entity or by any investor, are not in a position to 

provide items or services to the entity or any of its investors, and are 

not in a position to make or influence referrals directly or indirectly 

to the entity or any of its investors, all of the following six 

standards must be met--

    (i) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor must not be related to the previous or expected volume of 

referrals, services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise 

generated from that investor to the entity.

    (ii) At least one-third of each physician investor's medical 

practice income from all sources for the previous fiscal year or 

previous 12-month period must be derived from the surgeon's performance 

of procedures (as defined in this paragraph).

    (iii) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor) must not loan funds to 

or guarantee a loan for an investor if the investor uses any part of 

such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (iv) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment must be directly proportional to the amount of the capital 

investment (including the fair market value of any



[[Page 1147]]



pre-operational services rendered) of that investor.

    (v) All ancillary services for Federal health care program 

beneficiaries performed at the entity must be directly and integrally 

related to primary procedures performed at the entity, and none may be 

separately billed to Medicare or other Federal health care programs.

    (vi) The entity and any physician investors must treat patients 

receiving medical benefits or assistance under any Federal health care 

program in a nondiscriminatory manner.

    (3) Multi-Specialty ASCs--If all of the investors are physicians who 

are in a position to refer patients directly to the entity and perform 

procedures on such referred patients; group practices, as defined in 

this paragraph, composed exclusively of such physicians; or investors 

who are not employed by the entity or by any investor, are not in a 

position to provide items or services to the entity or any of its 

investors, and are not in a position to make or influence referrals 

directly or indirectly to the entity or any of its investors, all of the 

following seven standards must be met--

    (i) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor must not be related to the previous or expected volume of 

referrals, services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise 

generated from that investor to the entity.

    (ii) At least one-third of each physician investor's medical 

practice income from all sources for the previous fiscal year or 

previous 12-month period must be derived from the physician's 

performance of procedures (as defined in this paragraph).

    (iii) At least one-third of the procedures (as defined in this 

paragraph) performed by each physician investor for the previous fiscal 

year or previous 12-month period must be performed at the investment 

entity.

    (iv) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor) must not loan funds to 

or guarantee a loan for an investor if the investor uses any part of 

such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (v) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment must be directly proportional to the amount of the capital 

investment (including the fair market value of any pre-operational 

services rendered) of that investor.

    (vi) All ancillary services for Federal health care program 

beneficiaries performed at the entity must be directly and integrally 

related to primary procedures performed at the entity, and none may be 

separately billed to Medicare or other Federal health care programs.

    (vii) The entity and any physician investors must treat patients 

receiving medical benefits or assistance under any Federal health care 

program in a nondiscriminatory manner.

    (4) Hospital/Physician ASCs--If at least one investor is a hospital, 

and all of the remaining investors are physicians who meet the 

requirements of paragraphs (r)(1), (r)(2) or (r)(3) of this section; 

group practices (as defined in this paragraph) composed of such 

physicians; surgical group practices (as defined in this paragraph); or 

investors who are not employed by the entity or by any investor, are not 

in a position to provide items or services to the entity or any of its 

investors, and are not in a position to refer patients directly or 

indirectly to the entity or any of its investors, all of the following 

eight standards must be met--

    (i) The terms on which an investment interest is offered to an 

investor must not be related to the previous or expected volume of 

referrals, services furnished, or the amount of business otherwise 

generated from that investor to the entity.

    (ii) The entity or any investor (or other individual or entity 

acting on behalf of the entity or any investor) must not loan funds to 

or guarantee a loan for an investor if the investor uses any part of 

such loan to obtain the investment interest.

    (iii) The amount of payment to an investor in return for the 

investment must be directly proportional to the amount of the capital 

investment (including the fair market value of any pre-operational 

services rendered) of that investor.



[[Page 1148]]



    (iv) The entity and any hospital or physician investor must treat 

patients receiving medical benefits or assistance under any Federal 

health care program in a nondiscriminatory manner.

    (v) The entity may not use space, including, but not limited to, 

operating and recovery room space, located in or owned by any hospital 

investor, unless such space is leased from the hospital in accordance 

with a lease that complies with all the standards of the space rental 

safe harbor set forth in paragraph (b) of this section; nor may it use 

equipment owned by or services provided by the hospital unless such 

equipment is leased in accordance with a lease that complies with the 

equipment rental safe harbor set forth in paragraph (c) of this section, 

and such services are provided in accordance with a contract that 

complies with the personal services and management contracts safe harbor 

set forth in paragraph (d) of this section.

    (vi) All ancillary services for Federal health care program 

beneficiaries performed at the entity must be directly and integrally 

related to primary procedures performed at the entity, and none may be 

separately billed to Medicare or other Federal health care programs.

    (vii) The hospital may not include on its cost report or any claim 

for payment from a Federal health care program any costs associated with 

the ASC (unless such costs are required to be included by a Federal 

health care program).

    (viii) The hospital may not be in a position to make or influence 

referrals directly or indirectly to any investor or the entity.

    (5) For purposes of paragraph (r) of this section, procedures means 

any procedure or procedures on the list of Medicare-covered procedures 

for ambulatory surgical centers in accordance with regulations issued by 

the Department and group practice means a group practice that meets all 

of the standards of paragraph (p) of this section. Surgical group 

practice means a group practice that meets all of the standards of 

paragraph (p) of this section and is composed exclusively of surgeons 

who meet the requirements of paragraph (r)(1) of this section.

    (s) Referral arrangements for specialty services. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any exchange of 

value among individuals and entities where one party agrees to refer a 

patient to the other party for the provision of a specialty service 

payable in whole or in part under Medicare, Medicaid or any other 

Federal health care programs in return for an agreement on the part of 

the other party to refer that patient back at a mutually agreed upon 

time or circumstance as long as the following four standards are met--

    (1) The mutually agreed upon time or circumstance for referring the 

patient back to the originating individual or entity is clinically 

appropriate.

    (2) The service for which the referral is made is not within the 

medical expertise of the referring individual or entity, but is within 

the special expertise of the other party receiving the referral.

    (3) The parties receive no payment from each other for the referral 

and do not share or split a global fee from any Federal health care 

program in connection with the referred patient.

    (4) Unless both parties belong to the same group practice as defined 

in paragraph (p) of this section, the only exchange of value between the 

parties is the remuneration the parties receive directly from third-

party payors or the patient compensating the parties for the services 

they each have furnished to the patient.

    (t) Price reductions offered to eligible managed care organizations. 

(1) As used in section 1128(B) of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not 

include any payment between:

    (i) An eligible managed care organization and any first tier 

contractor for providing or arranging for items or services, as long as 

the following three standards are met--

    (A) The eligible managed care organization and the first tier 

contractor have an agreement that:

    (1) Is set out in writing and signed by both parties;

    (2) Specifies the items and services covered by the agreement;



[[Page 1149]]



    (3) Is for a period of at least one year; and

    (4) Specifies that the first tier contractor cannot claim payment in 

any form directly or indirectly from a Federal health care program for 

items or services covered under the agreement, except for:

    (i) HMOs and competitive medical plans with cost-based contracts 

under section 1876 of the Act where the agreement with the eligible 

managed care organization sets out the arrangements in accordance with 

which the first tier contractor is billing the Federal health care 

program;

    (ii) Federally qualified HMOs without a contract under sections 1854 

or 1876 of the Act, where the agreement with the eligible managed care 

organization sets out the arrangements in accordance with which the 

first tier contractor is billing the Federal health care program; or

    (iii) First tier contractors that are Federally qualified health 

centers that claim supplemental payments from a Federal health care 

program.

    (B) In establishing the terms of the agreement, neither party gives 

or receives remuneration in return for or to induce the provision or 

acceptance of business (other than business covered by the agreement) 

for which payment may be made in whole or in part by a Federal health 

care program on a fee-for-service or cost basis.

    (C) Neither party to the agreement shifts the financial burden of 

the agreement to the extent that increased payments are claimed from a 

Federal health care program.

    (ii) A first tier contractor and a downstream contractor or between 

two downstream contractors to provide or arrange for items or services, 

as long as the following four standards are met--

    (A) The parties have an agreement that:

    (1) Is set out in writing and signed by both parties;

    (2) Specifies the items and services covered by the agreement;

    (3) Is for a period of at least one year; and

    (4) Specifies that the party providing the items or services cannot 

claim payment in any form from a Federal health care program for items 

or services covered under the agreement.

    (B) In establishing the terms of the agreement, neither party gives 

or receives remuneration in return for or to induce the provision or 

acceptance of business (other than business covered by the agreement) 

for which payment may be made in whole or in part by a Federal health 

care program on a fee-for-service or cost basis.

    (C) Neither party shifts the financial burden of the agreement to 

the extent that increased payments are claimed from a Federal health 

care program.

    (D) The agreement between the eligible managed care organization and 

first tier contractor covering the items or services that are covered by 

the agreement between the parties does not involve:

    (1) A Federally qualified health center receiving supplemental 

payments;

    (2) A HMO or CMP with a cost-based contract under section 1876 of 

the Act; or

    (3) A Federally qualified HMO, unless the items or services are 

covered by a risk based contract under sections 1854 or 1876 of the Act.

    (2) For purposes of this paragraph, the following terms are defined 

as follows:

    (i) Downstream contractor means an individual or entity that has a 

subcontract directly or indirectly with a first tier contractor for the 

provision or arrangement of items or services that are covered by an 

agreement between an eligible managed care organization and the first 

tier contractor.

    (ii) Eligible managed care organization \1\ means--

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \1\ The eligible managed care organizations in paragraphs 

(u)(2)(ii)(A)-(F) of this section are only eligible with respect to 

items or services covered by the contracts specified in those 

paragraphs.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    (A) A HMO or CMP with a risk or cost based contract in accordance 

with section 1876 of the Act;

    (B) Any Medicare Part C health plan that receives a capitated 

payment from Medicare and which must have its total Medicare beneficiary 

cost sharing approved by CMS under section 1854 of the Act;

    (C) Medicaid managed care organizations as defined in section 

1903(m)(1)(A)



[[Page 1150]]



that provide or arrange for items or services for Medicaid enrollees 

under a contract in accordance with section 1903(m) of the Act (except 

for fee-for-service plans or medical savings accounts);

    (D) Any other health plans that provide or arrange for items and 

services for Medicaid enrollees in accordance with a risk-based contract 

with a State agency subject to the upper payment limits in Sec.  447.361 

of this title or an equivalent payment cap approved by the Secretary;

    (E) Programs For All Inclusive Care For The Elderly (PACE) under 

sections 1894 and 1934 of the Act, except for for-profit demonstrations 

under sections 4801(h) and 4802(h) of Pub. L. 105-33; or

    (F) A Federally qualified HMO.

    (iii) First tier contractor means an individual or entity that has a 

contract directly with an eligible managed care organization to provide 

or arrange for items or services.

    (iv) Items and services means health care items, devices, supplies 

or services or those services reasonably related to the provision of 

health care items, devices, supplies or services including, but not 

limited to, non-emergency transportation, patient education, attendant 

services, social services (e.g., case management), utilization review 

and quality assurance. Marketing and other pre-enrollment activities are 

not ``items or services'' for purposes of this section.

    (u) Price reductions offered by contractors with substantial 

financial risk to managed care organizations. (1) As used in section 

1128(B) of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include any payment 

between:

    (i) A qualified managed care plan and a first tier contractor for 

providing or arranging for items or services, where the following five 

standards are met--

    (A) The agreement between the qualified managed care plan and first 

tier contractor must:

    (1) Be in writing and signed by the parties;

    (2) Specify the items and services covered by the agreement;

    (3) Be for a period of a least one year;

    (4) Require participation in a quality assurance program that 

promotes the coordination of care, protects against underutilization and 

specifies patient goals, including measurable outcomes where 

appropriate; and

    (5) Specify a methodology for determining payment that is 

commercially reasonable and consistent with fair market value 

established in an arms-length transaction and includes the intervals at 

which payments will be made and the formula for calculating incentives 

and penalties, if any.

    (B) If a first tier contractor has an investment interest in a 

qualified managed care plan, the investment interest must meet the 

criteria of paragraph (a)(1) of this section.

    (C) The first tier contractor must have substantial financial risk 

for the cost or utilization of services it is obligated to provide 

through one of the following four payment methodologies:

    (1) A periodic fixed payment per patient that does not take into 

account the dates services are provided, the frequency of services, or 

the extent or kind of services provided;

    (2) Percentage of premium;

    (3) Inpatient Federal health care program diagnosis-related groups 

(DRGs) (other than those for psychiatric services);

    (4) Bonus and withhold arrangements, provided--

    (i) The target payment for first tier contractors that are 

individuals or non-institutional providers is at least 20 percent 

greater than the minimum payment, and for first tier contractors that 

are institutional providers, i.e., hospitals and nursing homes, is at 

least 10 percent greater than the minimum payment;

    (ii) The amount at risk, i.e., the bonus or withhold, is earned by a 

first tier contractor in direct proportion to the ratio of the 

contractor's actual utilization to its target utilization;

    (iii) In calculating the percentage in accordance with paragraph 

(u)(1)(i)(C)(4)(i) of this section, both the target payment amount and 

the minimum payment amount include any performance bonus, e.g., payments 

for timely submission of paperwork, continuing medical education, 

meeting attendance, etc., at a level achieved by 75 percent of the first 

tier contractors who are eligible for such payments;



[[Page 1151]]



    (iv) Payment amounts, including any bonus or withhold amounts, are 

reasonable given the historical utilization patterns and costs for the 

same or comparable populations in similar managed care arrangements; and

    (v) Alternatively, for a first tier contractor that is a physician, 

the qualified managed care plan has placed the physician at risk for 

referral services in an amount that exceeds the substantial financial 

risk threshold set forth in 42 CFR 417.479(f) and the arrangement is in 

compliance with the stop-loss and beneficiary survey requirements of 42 

CFR 417.479(g).

    (D) Payments for items and services reimbursable by Federal health 

care program must comply with the following two standards--

    (1) The qualified managed care plan (or in the case of a self-funded 

employer plan that contracts with a qualified managed care plan to 

provide administrative services, the self-funded employer plan) must 

submit the claims directly to the Federal health care program, in 

accordance with a valid reassignment agreement, for items or services 

reimbursed by the Federal health care program. (Notwithstanding the 

foregoing, inpatient hospital services, other than psychiatric services, 

will be deemed to comply if the hospital is reimbursed by a Federal 

health care program under a DRG methodology.)

    (2) Payments to first tier contractors and any downstream 

contractors for providing or arranging for items or services reimbursed 

by a Federal health care program must be identical to payment 

arrangements to or between such parties for the same items or services 

provided to other beneficiaries with similar health status, provided 

that such payments may be adjusted where the adjustments are related to 

utilization patterns or costs of providing items or services to the 

relevant population.

    (E) In establishing the terms of an arrangement--

    (1) Neither party gives or receives remuneration in return for or to 

induce the provision or acceptance of business (other than business 

covered by the arrangement) for which payment may be made in whole or in 

part by a Federal health care program on a fee-for-service or cost 

basis; and

    (2) Neither party to the arrangement shifts the financial burden of 

such arrangement to the extent that increased payments are claimed from 

a Federal health care program.

    (ii) A first tier contractor and a downstream contractor, or between 

downstream contractors, to provide or arrange for items or services, as 

long as the following three standards are met--

    (A) Both parties are being paid for the provision or arrangement of 

items or services in accordance with one of the payment methodologies 

set out in paragraph (u)(1)(i)(C) of this section;

    (B) Payment arrangements for items and services reimbursable by a 

Federal health care program comply with paragraph (u)(1)(i)(D) of this 

section; and

    (C) In establishing the terms of an arrangement--

    (1) Neither party gives or receives remuneration in return for or to 

induce the provision or acceptance of business (other than business 

covered by the arrangement) for which payment may be made in whole or in 

part by a Federal health care program on a fee-for-service or cost 

basis; and

    (2) Neither party to the arrangement shifts the financial burden of 

the arrangement to the extent that increased payments are claimed from a 

Federal health care program.

    (2) For purposes of this paragraph, the following terms are defined 

as follows:

    (i) Downstream contractor means an individual or entity that has a 

subcontract directly or indirectly with a first tier contractor for the 

provision or arrangement of items or services that are covered by an 

agreement between a qualified managed care plan and the first tier 

contractor.

    (ii) First tier contractor means an individual or entity that has a 

contract directly with a qualified managed care plan to provide or 

arrange for items or services.

    (iii) Is obligated to provide for a contractor refers to items or 

services:

    (A) Provided directly by an individual or entity and its employees;

    (B) For which an individual or entity is financially responsible, 

but which



[[Page 1152]]



are provided by downstream contractors;

    (C) For which an individual or entity makes referrals or 

arrangements; or

    (D) For which an individual or entity receives financial incentives 

based on its own, its provider group's, or its qualified managed care 

plan's performance (or combination thereof).

    (iv) Items and services means health care items, devices, supplies 

or services or those services reasonably related to the provision of 

health care items, devices, supplies or services including, but not 

limited to, non-emergency transportation, patient education, attendant 

services, social services (e.g., case management), utilization review 

and quality assurance. Marketing or other pre-enrollment activities are 

not ``items or services'' for purposes of this definition in this 

paragraph.

    (v) Minimum payment is the guaranteed amount that a provider is 

entitled to receive under an agreement with a first tier or downstream 

contractor or a qualified managed care plan.

    (vi) Qualified managed care plan means a health plan as defined in 

paragraph (l)(2) of this section that:

    (A) Provides a comprehensive range of health services;

    (B) Provides or arranges for--

    (1) Reasonable utilization goals to avoid inappropriate utilization;

    (2) An operational utilization review program;

    (3) A quality assurance program that promotes the coordination of 

care, protects against underutilization, and specifies patient goals, 

including measurable outcomes where appropriate;

    (4) Grievance and hearing procedures;

    (5) Protection of enrollees from incurring financial liability other 

than copayments and deductibles; and

    (6) Treatment for Federal health care program beneficiaries that is 

not different than treatment for other enrollees because of their status 

as Federal health care program beneficiaries; and

    (C) Covers a beneficiary population of which either--

    (1) No more than 10 percent are Medicare beneficiaries, not 

including persons for whom a Federal health care program is the 

secondary payer; or

    (2) No more than 50 percent are Medicare beneficiaries (not 

including persons for whom a Federal health care program is the 

secondary payer), provided that payment of premiums is on a periodic 

basis that does not take into account the dates services are rendered, 

the frequency of services, or the extent or kind of services rendered, 

and provided further that such periodic payments for the non-Federal 

health care program beneficiaries do not take into account the number of 

Federal health care program fee-for-service beneficiaries covered by the 

agreement or the amount of services generated by such beneficiaries.

    (vii) Target payment means the fair market value payment established 

through arms length negotiations that will be earned by an individual or 

entity that:

    (A) Is dependent on the individual or entity's meeting a utilization 

target or range of utilization targets that are set consistent with 

historical utilization rates for the same or comparable populations in 

similar managed care arrangements, whether based on its own, its 

provider group's or the qualified managed care plan's utilization (or a 

combination thereof); and

    (B) Does not include any bonus or fees that the individual or entity 

may earn from exceeding the utilization target.

    (v) Ambulance replenishing. (1) As used in section 1128B of the Act, 

``remuneration'' does not include any gift or transfer of drugs or 

medical supplies (including linens) by a hospital or other receiving 

facility to an ambulance provider for the purpose of replenishing 

comparable drugs or medical supplies (including linens) used by the 

ambulance provider (or a first responder) in connection with the 

transport of a patient by ambulance to the hospital or other receiving 

facility if all of the standards in paragraph (v)(2) of this section are 

satisfied and all of the applicable standards in either paragraph 

(v)(3)(i), (v)(3)(ii) or (v)(3)(iii) of this section are satisfied. 

However, to qualify under paragraph (v), the ambulance that is 

replenished must be used to provide emergency ambulance services an 

average of three times per week, as measured over a reasonable period of 

time. Drugs and medical supplies (including linens) initially used



[[Page 1153]]



by a first responder and replenished at the scene of the illness or 

injury by the ambulance provider that transports the patient to the 

hospital or other receiving facility will be deemed to have been used by 

the ambulance provider.

    (2) To qualify under paragraph (v) of this section, the ambulance 

replenishing arrangement must satisfy all of the following four 

conditions--

    (i)(A) Under no circumstances may the ambulance provider (or first 

responder) and the receiving facility both bill for the same replenished 

drug or supply. Replenished drugs or supplies may only be billed 

(including claiming bad debt) to a Federal health care program by either 

the ambulance provider (or first responder) or the receiving facility.

    (B) All billing or claims submission by the receiving facility, 

ambulance provider or first responder for replenished drugs and medical 

supplies used in connection with the transport of a Federal health care 

program beneficiary must comply with all applicable Federal health care 

program payment and coverage rules and regulations.

    (C) Compliance with paragraph (v)(2)(i)(B) of this section will be 

determined separately for the receiving facility and the ambulance 

provider (and first responder, if any), so long as the receiving 

facility, ambulance provider (or first responder) refrains from doing 

anything that would impede the other party or parties from meeting their 

obligations under paragraph (v)(2)(i)(B).

    (ii)(A) The receiving facility or ambulance provider, or both, must

    (1) Maintain records of the replenished drugs and medical supplies 

and the patient transport to which the replenished drugs and medical 

supplies related;

    (2) Provide a copy of such records to the other party within a 

reasonable time (unless the other party is separately maintaining 

records of the replenished drugs and medical supplies); and

    (3) Make those records available to the Secretary promptly upon 

request.

    (B) A pre-hospital care report (including, but not limited to, a 

trip sheet, patient care report or patient encounter report) prepared by 

the ambulance provider and filed with the receiving facility will meet 

the requirements of paragraph (v)(2)(ii)(A) of this section, provided 

that it documents the specific type and amount of medical supplies and 

drugs used on the patient and subsequently replenished.

    (C) For purposes of paragraph (v)(2)(ii) of this section, 

documentation may be maintained and, if required, filed with the other 

party in hard copy or electronically. If a replenishing arrangement 

includes linens, documentation need not be maintained for their 

exchange. If documentation is not maintained for the exchange of linens, 

the receiving facility will be presumed to have provided an exchange of 

comparable clean linens for soiled linens for each ambulance transport 

of a patient to the receiving facility. Records required under paragraph 

(v)(2)(ii)(A) of this section must be maintained for 5 years.

    (iii) The replenishing arrangement must not take into account the 

volume or value of any referrals or business otherwise generated between 

the parties for which payment may be made in whole or in part under any 

Federal health care program (other than the referral of the particular 

patient to whom the replenished drugs and medical supplies were 

furnished).

    (iv) The receiving facility and the ambulance provider otherwise 

comply with all Federal, State, and local laws regulating ambulance 

services, including, but not limited to, emergency services, and the 

provision of drugs and medical supplies, including, but not limited to, 

laws relating to the handling of controlled substances.

    (3) To qualify under paragraph (v) of this section, the arrangement 

must satisfy all of the standards in one of the following three 

categories:

    (i) General replenishing. (A) The receiving facility must replenish 

medical supplies or drugs on an equal basis for all ambulance providers 

that bring patients to the receiving facility in any one of the 

categories described in paragraph (v)(3)(i)(A)(1), (2), or (3) of this 

section. A receiving facility may offer replenishing to one or more of 

the categories and may offer different replenishing arrangements to 

different categories, so long as the replenishing is



[[Page 1154]]



conducted uniformly within each category. For example, a receiving 

facility may offer to replenish a broader array of drugs or supplies for 

ambulance providers that do no not charge for their services than for 

ambulance providers that charge for their services. Within each 

category, the receiving facility may limit its replenishing arrangements 

to the replenishing of emergency ambulance transports only. A receiving 

facility may offer replenishing to one or more of the categories--

    (1) All ambulance providers that do not bill any patient or insurer 

(including Federal health care programs) for ambulance services, 

regardless of the payor or the patient's ability to pay (i.e., ambulance 

providers, such as volunteer companies, that provide ambulance services 

without charge to any person or entity);

    (2) All not-for-profit and State or local government ambulance 

service providers (including, but not limited to, municipal and 

volunteer ambulance services providers); or

    (3) All ambulance service providers.

    (B)(1) The replenishing arrangement must be conducted in an open and 

public manner. A replenishing arrangement will be considered to be 

conducted in an open and public manner if one of the following two 

conditions are satisfied:

    (i) A written disclosure of the replenishing program is posted 

conspicuously in the receiving facility's emergency room or other 

location where the ambulance providers deliver patients and copies are 

made available upon request to ambulance providers, Government 

representatives, and members of the public (subject to reasonable 

photocopying charges). The written disclosure can take any reasonable 

form and should include the category of ambulance service providers that 

qualifies for replenishment; the drugs or medical supplies included in 

the replenishment program; and the procedures for documenting the 

replenishment. A sample disclosure form is included in Appendix A to 

subpart C of this part for illustrative purposes only. No written 

contracts between the parties are required for purposes of paragraph 

(v)(3)(i)(B)(1)(i) of this section; or

    (ii) The replenishment arrangement operates in accordance with a 

plan or protocol of general application promulgated by an Emergency 

Medical Services (EMS) Council or comparable entity, agency or 

organization, provided a copy of the plan or protocol is available upon 

request to ambulance providers, Government representatives and members 

of the public (subject to reasonable photocopying charges). While 

parties are encouraged to participate in collaborative, comprehensive, 

community-wide EMS systems to improve the delivery of EMS in their local 

communities, nothing in this paragraph shall be construed as requiring 

the involvement of such organizations or the development or 

implementation of ambulance replenishment plans or protocols by such 

organizations.

    (2) Nothing in this paragraph (v)(3)(i) shall be construed as 

requiring disclosure of confidential proprietary or financial 

information related to the replenishing arrangement (including, but not 

limited to, information about cost, pricing or the volume of replenished 

drugs or supplies) to ambulance providers or members of the general 

public.

    (ii) Fair market value replenishing. (A) Except as otherwise 

provided in paragraph (v)(3)(ii)(B) of this section, the ambulance 

provider must pay the receiving facility fair market value, based on an 

arms-length transaction, for replenished medical supplies; and

    (B) If payment is not made at the same time as the replenishing of 

the medical supplies, the receiving facility and the ambulance provider 

must make commercially reasonable payment arrangements in advance.

    (iii) Government mandated replenishing. The replenishing arrangement 

is undertaken in accordance with a State or local statute, ordinance, 

regulation or binding protocol that requires hospitals or receiving 

facilities in the area subject to such requirement to replenish 

ambulances that deliver patients to the hospital with drugs or medical 

supplies (including linens) that are used during the transport of that 

patient.

    (4) For purposes of paragraph (v) of this section--



[[Page 1155]]



    (i) A receiving facility is a hospital or other facility that 

provides emergency medical services.

    (ii) An ambulance provider is a provider or supplier of ambulance 

transport services that provides emergency ambulance services. The term 

does not include a provider of ambulance transport services that 

provides only non-emergency transport services.

    (iii) A first responder includes, but is not limited to, a fire 

department, paramedic service or search and rescue squad that responds 

to an emergency call (through 9-1-1 or other emergency access number) 

and treats the patient, but does not transport the patient to the 

hospital or other receiving facility.

    (iv) An emergency ambulance service is a transport by ambulance 

initiated as a result of a call through 9-1-1 or other emergency access 

number or a call from another acute care facility unable to provide the 

higher level care required by the patient and available at the receiving 

facility.

    (v) Medical supplies includes linens, unless otherwise provided.



[57 FR 3330, Jan. 29, 1992, as amended at 57 FR 52729, Nov. 5, 1992; 61 

FR 2135, Jan. 25, 1996; 64 FR 63513, Nov. 19, 1999; 64 FR 63551, Nov. 

19, 1999; 64 FR 71317, Dec. 21, 1999; 66 FR 62989, Dec. 4, 2001; 66 FR 

63749, Dec. 10, 2001; 67 FR 11933, Mar. 18, 2002]



    Effective Date Note: At 71 FR 45136, Aug. 8, 2006, Sec.  1001.952 

was amended by republishing the introductory text, by adding and 

reserving paragraph (w), and by adding new paragraphs (x) and (y), 

effective Oct. 10, 2006. For the convenience of the user, the added text 

is set forth as follows:



Sec.  1001.952  Exceptions.



    The following payment practices shall not be treated as a criminal 

offense under section 1128B of the Act and shall not serve as the basis 

for an exclusion:



                                * * * * *



    (x) Electronic prescribing items and services. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include nonmonetary 

remuneration (consisting of items and services in the form of hardware, 

software, or information technology and training services) necessary and 

used solely to receive and transmit electronic prescription information, 

if all of the following conditions are met:

    (1) The items and services are provided by a--

    (i) Hospital to a physician who is a member of its medical staff;

    (ii) Group practice to a prescribing health care professional who is 

a member of the group practice; and

    (iii) A PDP sponsor or MA organization to pharmacists and pharmacies 

participating in the network of such sponsor or organization and to 

prescribing health care professionals.

    (2) The items and services are provided as part of, or are used to 

access, an electronic prescription drug program that meets the 

applicable standards under Medicare Part D at the time the items and 

services are provided.

    (3) The donor (or any person on the donor's behalf) does not take 

any action to limit or restrict the use or compatibility of the items or 

services with other electronic prescribing or electronic health records 

systems.

    (4) For items or services that are of the type that can be used for 

any patient without regard to payor status, the donor does not restrict, 

or take any action to limit, the recipient's right or ability to use the 

items or services for any patient.

    (5) Neither the recipient nor the recipient's practice (or any 

affiliated individual or entity) makes the receipt of items or services, 

or the amount or nature of the items or services, a condition of doing 

business with the donor.

    (6) Neither the eligibility of a recipient for the items or 

services, nor the amount or nature of the items or services, is 

determined in a manner that takes into account the volume or value of 

referrals or other business generated between the parties.

    (7) The arrangement is set forth in a written agreement that--

    (i) Is signed by the parties;

    (ii) Specifies the items and services being provided and the donor's 

cost of the items and services; and

    (iii) Covers all of the electronic prescribing items and services to 

be provided by the donor (or affiliated parties). This requirement will 

be met if all separate agreements between the donor (and affiliated 

parties) and the recipient incorporate each other by reference or if 

they cross-reference a master list of agreements that is maintained and 

updated centrally and is available for review by the Secretary upon 

request. The master list should be maintained in a manner that preserves 

the historical record of agreements.

    (8) The donor does not have actual knowledge of, and does not act in 

reckless disregard or deliberate ignorance of, the fact that the 

recipient possesses or has obtained items or services equivalent to 

those provided by the donor.



    Note to paragraph (x): For purposes of paragraph (x) of this 

section, group practice shall have the meaning set forth at 42 CFR 

411.352; member of the group practice shall mean all persons covered by 

the definition of



[[Page 1156]]



``member of the group or member of a group practice'' at 42 CFR 411.351, 

as well as other prescribing health care professionals who are owners or 

employees of the group practice; prescribing health care professional 

shall mean a physician or other health care professional licensed to 

prescribe drugs in the State in which the drugs are dispensed; PDP 

sponsor or MA organization shall have the meanings set forth at 42 CFR 

423.4 and 422.2, respectively; prescription information shall mean 

information about prescriptions for drugs or for any other item or 

service normally accomplished through a written prescription; and 

electronic health record shall mean a repository of consumer health 

status information in computer processable form used for clinical 

diagnosis and treatment for a broad array of clinical conditions.



    (y) Electronic health records items and services. As used in section 

1128B of the Act, ``remuneration'' does not include nonmonetary 

remuneration (consisting of items and services in the form of software 

or information technology and training services) necessary and used 

predominantly to create, maintain, transmit, or receive electronic 

health records, if all of the following conditions are met:

    (1) The items and services are provided to an individual or entity 

engaged in the delivery of health care by--

    (i) An individual or entity that provides services covered by a 

Federal health care program and submits claims or requests for payment, 

either directly or through reassignment, to the Federal health care 

program; or

    (ii) A health plan.

    (2) The software is interoperable at the time it is provided to the 

recipient. For purposes of this subparagraph, software is deemed to be 

interoperable if a certifying body recognized by the Secretary has 

certified the software within no more than 12 months prior to the date 

it is provided to the recipient.

    (3) The donor (or any person on the donor's behalf) does not take 

any action to limit or restrict the use, compatibility, or 

interoperability of the items or services with other electronic 

prescribing or electronic health records systems.

    (4) Neither the recipient nor the recipient's practice (or any 

affiliated individual or entity) makes the receipt of items or services, 

or the amount or nature of the items or services, a condition of doing 

business with the donor.

    (5) Neither the eligibility of a recipient for the items or 

services, nor the amount or nature of the items or services, is 

determined in a manner that directly takes into account the volume or 

value of referrals or other business generated between the parties. For 

the purposes of this paragraph (y)(5), the determination is deemed not 

to directly take into account the volume or value of referrals or other 

business generated between the parties if any one of the following 

conditions is met:

    (i) The determination is based on the total number of prescriptions 

written by the recipient (but not the volume or value of prescriptions 

dispensed or paid by the donor or billed to a Federal health care 

program);

    (ii) The determination is based on the size of the recipient's 

medical practice (for example, total patients, total patient encounters, 

or total relative value units);

    (iii) The determination is based on the total number of hours that 

the recipient practices medicine;

    (iv) The determination is based on the recipient's overall use of 

automated technology in his or her medical practice (without specific 

reference to the use of technology in connection with referrals made to 

the donor);

    (v) The determination is based on whether the recipient is a member 

of the donor's medical staff, if the donor has a formal medical staff;

    (vi) The determination is based on the level of uncompensated care 

provided by the recipient; or

    (vii) The determination is made in any reasonable and verifiable 

manner that does not directly take into account the volume or value of 

referrals or other business generated between the parties.

    (6) The arrangement is set forth in a written agreement that --

    (i) Is signed by the parties;

    (ii) Specifies the items and services being provided, the donor's 

cost of those items and services, and the amount of the recipient's 

contribution; and

    (iii) Covers all of the electronic health records items and services 

to be provided by the donor (or any affiliate). This requirement will be 

met if all separate agreements between the donor (and affiliated 

parties) and the recipient incorporate each other by reference or if 

they cross-reference a master list of agreements that is maintained and 

updated centrally and is available for review by the Secretary upon 

request. The master list should be maintained in a manner that preserves 

the historical record of agreements.

    (7) The donor does not have actual knowledge of, and does not act in 

reckless disregard or deliberate ignorance of, the fact that the 

recipient possesses or has obtained items or services equivalent to 

those provided by the donor.

    (8) For items or services that are of the type that can be used for 

any patient without regard to payor status, the donor does not restrict, 

or take any action to limit, the recipient's right or ability to use the 

items or services for any patient.



[[Page 1157]]



    (9) The items and services do not include staffing of the 

recipient's office and are not used primarily to conduct personal 

business or business unrelated to the recipient's clinical practice or 

clinical operations.

    (10) The electronic health records software contains electronic 

prescribing capability, either through an electronic prescribing 

component or the ability to interface with the recipient's existing 

electronic prescribing system, that meets the applicable standards under 

Medicare Part D at the time the items and services are provided.

    (11) Before receipt of the items and services, the recipient pays 15 

percent of the donor's cost for the items and services. The donor (or 

any affiliated individual or entity) does not finance the recipient's 

payment or loan funds to be used by the recipient to pay for the items 

and services.

    (12) The donor does not shift the costs of the items or services to 

any Federal health care program.

    (13) The transfer of the items and services occurs, and all 

conditions in this paragraph (y) have been satisfied, on or before 

December 31, 2013.



    Note to paragraph (y): For purposes of paragraph (y) of this 

section, health plan shall have the meaning set forth at Sec.  

1001.952(l)(2); interoperable shall mean able to communicate and 

exchange data accurately, effectively, securely, and consistently with 

different information technology systems, software applications, and 

networks, in various settings, and exchange data such that the clinical 

or operational purpose and meaning of the data are preserved and 

unaltered; and electronic health record shall mean a repository of 

consumer health status information in computer processable form used for 

clinical diagnosis and treatment for a broad array of clinical 

conditions.