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Innovative Surgery Center Arrangements

While surgery centers generally follow the guidelines set forth in the federal Safe Harbor to the Anti Kickback Statute (AKS), not all do. In fact, there are some creative arrangements worth considering.

Some centers do not perform services which are compensated in any way by a state or federal healthcare program. As such, they don’t have to comply with the usual federal laws (e.g. AKS and Stark). That leaves the center to comply only with state regulation, which is usually far less restrictive than the federal laws. This works if the center intends, for instance, only to do work pursuant to Letters of Protection (LOP) or bodily injury suits. Though the pool of patients is very different in this type of center, the lid is nearly off when it comes to how creative the arrangements among the owners and referring physicians can be.

One of the more vexing challenges among all surgery centers is ensuring patient referrals by owner surgeons. While most centers will simply follow the federal Safe Harbor “one third test,” other centers go further and do things like: (1) making loans to owner surgeons, (2) creating “put” or “pull” periods during which time an investing physician can buy back out or be bought back out, and (3) even making exceptions to the restrictive covenants commonly contained in ASC documents.

Complying with the federal Safe Harbor applicable to surgery centers is clearly the most conservative way to go, in terms of regulatory compliance, since compliance means immunity from AKS violations. That said, Safe Harbor compliance is a little like horseshoes: coming close counts. The simple reason is that Safe Harbors are examples of conduct that complies with the AKS, but they are not all encompassing. There may be arrangements that do not violate the AKS which are simply not described in the Safe Harbors. Simply put, there are many other creative arrangements commonly employed in surgery centers. Since surgery center ownership and referral arrangements are hotly regulated, owners must be careful when considering veering off the straight course provided by federal law.