How to Defend Against Alleged Overpayment

How to Defend Against Alleged Overpayment

Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) audits were first introduced in 2005, peaked around 2010, and experienced a slowdown during COVID-19. In 2006, Congress authorized the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to initiate the RAC program in three states: New York, Florida, and California.

Audits originally focused on detecting incorrect coding, duplicated services, fraud, and more. Arizona, Massachusetts, and South Carolina were added to the project in 2007, and Congress expanded the RAC program nationwide in 2010.

We all know about the problems.

When the RAC program was rolled out nationwide, it presented three key challenges that providers found difficult to overcome:

  1. Overly aggressive RACs: RAC audit fees were (and still are) paid out by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) on a contingency fee basis, meaning the more dollars they denied and “recovered,” the higher the fees they collected. This model essentially incentivizes RACs to be aggressive in their audit approach, especially with regard to hospitals with high-value claims.
  2. More paperwork, less time: Most providers were not prepared for the onslaught of medical record requests and often sustained denials, simply because they were not able to respond and submit records on time.
  3. Overwhelmed appeals process: Over a short period of time, the Medicare appeals process became overwhelmed with provider claims at all levels. Appeals response became extremely slow.

With all these issues causing providers grief in the RAC audit process, change was inevitable, and RAC audits began to slow. There are conflicting anecdotes and explanations as to why, but whatever the case, CMS noticeably backed down in terms of RAC audit frequency and document requests in the mid-2010s. They ramped up again once they deemed themselves fixed. Are they fixed?

When RAC audits were introduced, providers received an unmanageable volume of audit requests from payors. Now, changes have supposedly led to fewer audits and less paperwork, giving hospitals the opportunity to focus more broadly on all types of payor audits. If that’s the truth, don’t ask my clients.

But still, every year, review contractors issue an estimated 2 million requests to healthcare providers for medical documentation and records. All too often, these requests are fulfilled through cumbersome manual processes. The sheer volume of activity reveals workflow gaps and inefficiencies in a process that can be up to 90 percent manual, and at risk for data quality issues.

These inefficiencies are only exacerbated by tightening labor markets and a shortage of team members in hospital finance departments nationwide. With fewer people doing the same amount of work, teams are prone to error.

CMS re-launched the RAC audit program in 2018 with new rules and guidelines for audits. The biggest changes included:

  • Reduction in the number of documents a RAC could request in a certain time frame. This meant fewer audits with fewer document requests per audit.
  • Increase in CMS’s willingness to engage in mass settlements. The backlog in the appeals process became so overwhelming that CMS began to settle appeals more often to save time.

With these key changes in place, RAC audits started back up with a bit less chaos. These audits ran as usual before pausing in March 2020 as a result of the declaration of a national health emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic. After a brief break, RAC audits began again in August 2020 and continue today.

Today, we are where we are. RACs are not as intrusive as in 2006. But they are still intrusive. Being audited is a hassle, to say the least. RACs are not paid 13.5-percent contingency fees until the appeals process is concluded.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Knicole C. Emanuel Esq.

For more than 20 years, Knicole has maintained a health care litigation practice, concentrating on Medicare and Medicaid litigation, health care regulatory compliance, administrative law and regulatory law. Knicole has tried over 2,000 administrative cases in over 30 states and has appeared before multiple states’ medical boards. She has successfully obtained federal injunctions in numerous states, which allowed health care providers to remain in business despite the state or federal laws allegations of health care fraud, abhorrent billings, and data mining. Across the country, Knicole frequently lectures on health care law, the impact of the Affordable Care Act and regulatory compliance for providers, including physicians, home health and hospice, dentists, chiropractors, hospitals and durable medical equipment providers. Knicole is partner at Nelson Mullins and a member of the RACmonitor editorial board and a popular panelist on Monitor Monday.

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

I022426_SQUARE

Fracture Care Coding: Reduce Denials Through Accurate Coding, Sequencing, and Modifier Use

Expert presenters Kathy Pride, RHIT, CPC, CCS-P, CPMA, and Brandi Russell, RHIA, CCS, COC, CPMA, break down complex fracture care coding rules, walk through correct modifier application (-25, -57, 54, 55), and clarify sequencing for initial and subsequent encounters. Attendees will gain the practical knowledge needed to submit clean claims, ensure compliance, and stay one step ahead of payer audits in 2026.

February 24, 2026
Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Accurately determining the principal diagnosis is critical for compliant billing, appropriate reimbursement, and valid quality reporting — yet it remains one of the most subjective and error-prone areas in inpatient coding. In this expert-led session, Cheryl Ericson, RN, MS, CCDS, CDIP, demystifies the complexities of principal diagnosis assignment, bridging the gap between coding rules and clinical reality. Learn how to strengthen your organization’s coding accuracy, reduce denials, and ensure your documentation supports true medical necessity.

December 3, 2025

Proactive Denial Management: Data-Driven Strategies to Prevent Revenue Loss

Denials continue to delay reimbursement, increase administrative burden, and threaten financial stability across healthcare organizations. This essential webcast tackles the root causes—rising payer scrutiny, fragmented workflows, inconsistent documentation, and underused analytics—and offers proven, data-driven strategies to prevent and overturn denials. Attendees will gain practical tools to strengthen documentation and coding accuracy, engage clinicians effectively, and leverage predictive analytics and AI to identify risks before they impact revenue. Through real-world case examples and actionable guidance, this session empowers coding, CDI, and revenue cycle professionals to shift from reactive appeals to proactive denial prevention and revenue protection.

November 25, 2025
Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis remains one of the most frequently denied and contested diagnoses, creating costly revenue loss and compliance risks. In this webcast, Angela Comfort, DBA, MBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, provides practical, real-world strategies to align documentation with coding guidelines, reconcile Sepsis-2 and Sepsis-3 definitions, and apply compliant queries. You’ll learn how to identify and address documentation gaps, strengthen provider engagement, and defend diagnoses against payer scrutiny—equipping you to protect reimbursement, improve SOI/ROM capture, and reduce audit vulnerability in this high-risk area.

September 24, 2025

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue

Stay ahead of the 2026-2027 audit surge with “Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue,” a high-impact webcast led by Michael Calahan, PA, MBA. This concise session gives hospitals and physicians clear insight into the most likely federal audit targets, such as E/M services, split/shared and critical care, observation and admissions, device credits, and Two-Midnight Rule changes, and shows how to tighten documentation, coding, and internal processes to reduce denials, recoupments, and penalties. Attendees walk away with practical best practices to protect revenue, strengthen compliance, and better prepare their teams for inevitable audits.

January 29, 2026

AI in Claims Auditing: Turning Compliance Risks into Defensible Systems

As AI reshapes healthcare compliance, the risk of biased outputs and opaque decision-making grows. This webcast, led by Frank Cohen, delivers a practical Four-Pillar Governance Framework—Transparency, Accountability, Fairness, and Explainability—to help you govern AI-driven claim auditing with confidence. Learn how to identify and mitigate bias, implement robust human oversight, and document defensible AI review processes that regulators and auditors will accept. Discover concrete remedies, from rotation protocols to uncertainty scoring, and actionable steps to evaluate vendors before contracts are signed. In a regulatory landscape that moves faster than ever, gain the tools to stay compliant, defend your processes, and reduce liability while maintaining operational effectiveness.

January 13, 2026
Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Federal auditors are zeroing in on Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF) and hospital rehab unit services, with OIG and CERT audits leading to millions in penalties—often due to documentation and administrative errors, not quality of care. Join compliance expert Michael Calahan, PA, MBA, to learn the five clinical “pillars” of IRF-PPS admissions, key documentation requirements, and real-life case lessons to help protect your revenue.

November 13, 2025

Trending News

Happy National Doctor’s Day! Learn how to get a complimentary webcast on ‘Decoding Social Admissions’ as a token of our heartfelt appreciation! Click here to learn more →

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 1 with code CYBER25

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 2 with code CYBER24