HB 24-1146
signedMedicaid Provider Suspension for Organized Fraud
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHouse Bill 24-1146 allows the Colorado Department of Health Care Policy and Financing to temporarily suspend Medicaid and Children's Basic Health Plan providers if they are involved in organized fraud or crime that affects these programs. To do this, the department must document at least three specific factors related to the provider’s involvement in such schemes. If a suspension is necessary, the provider will be notified in writing with reasons for it. The initial suspension lasts six months while the department investigates; if no wrongdoing is found, the provider's enrollment is reinstated. This bill was signed into law on February 20, 2024 and took effect immediately on that date.
Official Summary
The act authorizes the department of health care policy and financing (state department) to suspend the enrollment of a medicaid and children's basic health plan (programs) provider only if the state department identifies that the provider is participating in an alleged and ongoing organized crime or organized fraud scheme (scheme) that impacts the programs and if the state department documents in writing that at least 3 of the following factors are met: The provider has been enrolled in the programs for less than 3 years; At least 3 providers are involved in the scheme; The collective billing amount identified in the scheme exceeds $1 million; The provider's billing indicates a pattern of abuse or noncompliance; The volume of claims or billing amount has increased at a significant rate and there is no other reasonable explanation for the increase; The federal centers for medicare and medicaid services has approved a provider enrollment moratorium for the provider type involved in the scheme; or The state department has notified law enforcement of the scheme. The state department is required to notify the provider of the suspension in writing, including the reasons for the suspension. The state department may suspend a provider's enrollment for an initial period of 6 months while the state department conducts a review of the scheme. After the state department's review is complete, the state department must reinstate the provider's enrollment if the department determines the provider did not engage in a scheme. If the state department's review cannot be completed during the initial 6-month period, the state department may extend the review period in additional 6-month increments if the state department documents in writing the necessity for extending the review. APPROVED by Governor February 20, 2024 EFFECTIVE February 20, 2024(Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2024-02-20
- Latest action
- 2024-01-29
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Appropriations
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Rick Taggart (primary) · Republican
- Jeff Bridges (primary) · Democratic