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Date: Wednesday, Aug. 21, 1996 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: HHS Press Office, (202) 690-6343
In other words, if "Mary Jones," one of the employees of "Good Food Cafe," develops a heart condition, the insurance company must renew the Cafe's policy without dropping "Mary" or the Cafe from coverage.
So, if "Mary Jones" leaves her job with the "Good Food Cafe" to take a new job with "Zenith Tool and Die," which does not provide health coverage, Mary will be able to buy private insurance even if she is in poor health.
Finally, "Mary Jones'" new insurance company can only
exclude coverage of her heart condition for a maximum
of 12 months. And, this exclusion will be reduced for
every month of coverage "Mary" previously had at the
"Good Food Cafe."
-- Establishes the Medicare Integrity Program to be funded through appropriations from the HI trust fund;
-- Requires exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid for felony convictions related to health care fraud or controlled substances;
-- Creates a program encouraging Medicare beneficiaries to report fraud and abuse and offer suggestions to improve efficiency of the Medicare program, and provides for payment to beneficiaries in certain cases;
-- Requires issuance of advisory opinions, additional safe harbors, and fraud alerts regarding the anti-kickback statute;
-- Creates a new exception to the anti-kickback statute for certain risk-sharing organizations;
-- Expands conditions under which civil monetary penalties and intermediate sanctions can be imposed on HMOs participating in Medicare;
-- Establishes a data base of final adverse actions taken against health care providers; and
-- Makes knowing and willful transfer of assets to gain Medicaid eligibility subject to criminal penalties.