Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T19:49:13.185Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Is that Hospital Food Pantry an Illegal Patient Inducement? Analysis of Health Care Fraud Laws as Barriers to Food and Nutrition Security Interventions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2024

Rachel Landauer
Affiliation:
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL, CAMBRIDGE, MA, USA
Hilary Seligman
Affiliation:
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO, SAN FRANCISCO, CA, USA
Jennifer L. Pomeranz
Affiliation:
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, SCHOOL OF GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH, NEW YORK, NY, USA
Kurt Hager
Affiliation:
UMASS CHAN MEDICAL SCHOOL, DEPARTMENT OF POPULATION AND QUANTITATIVE HEALTH SCIENCES, WORCESTER, MA, USA
Dariush Mozaffarian
Affiliation:
FOOD IS MEDICINE INSTITUTE, FRIEDMAN SCHOOL OF NUTRITION SCIENCE AND POLICY, TUFTS UNIVERSITY, BOSTON, MA, USA.
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The complex regulatory framework governing the U.S. health care system can be an obstacle to programming that address health-related social needs. In particular, health care fraud and abuse law is a pernicious barrier as health care organizations may minimize or forego programming altogether out of real and perceived concern for compliance. And because health care organizations have varying resources to navigate and resolve compliance concerns, as well as different levels of risk tolerance, fears related to the legal landscape may further entrench inequities in access to meaningful programs that improve health outcomes. This article uses food and nutrition programming as a case study to explore the complexities presented by this area of law and to highlight pathways forward.

Type
Independent Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics

On September 3, 2020, during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS OIG) responded to a question from a federally qualified health center (FQHC): would it be a violation of federal health care fraud and abuse law to provide gift cards to certain Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries?1 The FQHC had received a grant designated for emergency assistance and wanted to help patients address acute health-related social needs such as food and nutrition insecurity, housing instability, technology access issues, and barriers to transportation. Recognizing that safety net health care providers like FQHCs are well-positioned to provide such assistance during the pandemic, HHS OIG answered that the proposal — subject to a lengthy list of conditions — could go forward.

The FQHC was seeking clarity on a complex area of health care law concerned with the provision of free or discounted items and services to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. The underlying rationale is that such arrangements might distort beneficiary decision-making. In other words, the opportunity to receive a gift card may influence someone’s choice of health care provider or even cause someone to seek additional health care services that are not medically necessary. This is known as “inducement,” and the consequences for a misstep in this area of law can be significant. As recently as 2021, a mail-order diabetic testing supplier paid $160 million dollars to settle allegations including that the company provided free glucometers to Medicare beneficiaries to induce them to order testing supplies from the company.2

Questions about how the law treats items and services that address unmet health-related social needs are particularly pressing in light of rapidly increasing recognition of the fundamental importance of addressing such needs, including interventions to improve food security (the ready availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods, and assured ability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable ways) and nutrition security (consistent and equitable access to healthy, safe, affordable foods essential to optimal health and well-being).3 Health care organizations are increasingly operating on-site food-related interventions, partnering with community food programs, or providing “prescriptions,” vouchers, or rebates to improve access to produce, groceries, and medically tailored meals at reduced or no cost to patients. This is driven by several related forces: an understanding of the intimate association between food insecurity, poor diet quality, chronic illness, and health care costs — the evidence linking both food security and good nutrition with better health outcomes and reduced health care utilization continues to growReference Micha4; the links between these issues and racial inequities5; and high rates of food insecurity and poor nutrition in the U.S.6

This article uses food and nutrition programming as a case study to explore the complexities presented by this area of law. We begin by contextualizing why health care entities are implementing food and nutrition programs for patients. Then we discuss the evolving policy landscape and the ongoing pressure for the integration of social needs services and supports at the provider level. We analyze the health care fraud and abuse legal framework as it applies to innovative programming. This discussion focuses on identifying specific features of the legal framework that interact with, impact, and ultimately constrain the ability of health care systems to care for patients. Our concluding section addresses implications for policy and practice, highlighting opportunities for regulatory and institutional policy to better reflect the importance and reality of responding to food, nutrition, and other health-related priorities in health care systems.

This article uses food and nutrition programming as a case study to explore the complexities presented by this area of law. We begin by contextualizing why health care entities are implementing food and nutrition programs for patients. Then we discuss the evolving policy landscape and the ongoing pressure for the integration of social needs services and supports at the provider level. We analyze the health care fraud and abuse legal framework as it applies to innovative programming. This discussion focuses on identifying specific features of the legal framework that interact with, impact, and ultimately constrain the ability of health care systems to care for patients. Our concluding section addresses implications for policy and practice, highlighting opportunities for regulatory and institutional policy to better reflect the importance and reality of responding to food, nutrition, and other health-related priorities in health care systems.

Overview of Relevant Law

The complexity of the existing legal framework is a large, pernicious barrier to the integration of health care-related programs providing food, nutrition, transportation, and housing supports. Health care organizations may limit or avoid these health-related programs due to real or perceived concerns about compliance with the federal Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) and the beneficiary inducements prohibition of the Civil Monetary Penalties Law (CMPL) (Box). In the example above, the FQHC proposed carefully and narrowly defining who would be eligible to receive a gift card (people who documented financial need relating to COVID-19), the amount of assistance people would be eligible to receive (a one-time transfer of $100-$200, depending on family size), and various operational parameters (such as a commitment that the FQHC would not advertise the program) in pursuit of approval by HHS OIG.7 Together, the legal concerns and resulting tightly limited parameters of such programs may significantly reduce their implementation, scalability, and impact

The Role of Food and Nutrition Interventions in Clinical Care

Achieving or maintaining optimal well-being requires a focus on drivers of poor health, among which food insecurity and nutrition is at the top.Reference Seligman9 Annually, more than 300,000 American deaths from cardiovascular disease and diabetes are attributable to suboptimal dietReference Micha10 and diet-related illness including diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, chronic kidney disease, cancers, and obesity are leading risks for COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths.Reference Kompaniyets11 In one analysis, diet-related diseases and food insecurity together contributed to more than $1 trillion in annual health care spending.12 Food insecurity is associated with increased hospitalizations and emergency department visits and higher health care spending;Reference Berkowitz13 people who are food insecure are more likely to be among those incurring the top 10%, and even 2%, of health care expenditures.Reference Berkowitz14 National metrics for nutrition insecurity — a complementary concept which additionally highlights the quality of foodReference Mozaffarian15 — remain to be defined, but based on validated dietary scores, 32% and 65% of foods consumed among American adults from grocery stores and restaurants, respectively, are of poor nutritional quality; and 45% and 80% among American children.Reference Liu16

Food insecurity, poor nutrition, and diet-related diseases are each more prevalent among marginalized subgroups, including individuals with less education, lower income, rural residence, and racialized groups. For example, during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with White, non-Hispanic households, household food insecurity was more than 2-fold higher among Hispanic households, and 3-fold higher among Black, non-Hispanic households.Reference Coleman-Jensen17 Similar large disparities exist for good nutrition and rates of diet-related chronic diseases.

Specific “food is medicine” interventions offer promising health care mechanisms to improve food security, nutrition, and health outcomes.Reference Mozaffarian18 These include produce prescriptions, which provide free or discounted produce at retail or farmers markets using vouchers or electronic cards, and medically tailored meals, which provide fully prepared, often home delivered meals for patients with advanced disease. Both interventions are associated with improved health outcomes,Reference Downer19 and medically tailored meals have documented reductions in health care utilization and total costs.Reference Berkowitz20

Box. Overview of Federal Law

  • The Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7(b), generally prohibits knowingly and willfully offering, paying, soliciting, or receiving anything of value with the intent to induce or reward referrals for items/services payable under a federal health care program.

  • The Civil Monetary Penalties Law (CMPL) Prohibition on Beneficiary Inducements, 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7a, generally prohibits offering free or discounted items or services to a federal health care program beneficiary that are likely to influence the beneficiary’s selection of a particular provider, practitioner, or supplier. Items and services of “nominal value” — currently interpreted as something with a retail value of no more than $15 per item or $75 in the aggregate per patient per year — are below the threshold necessary to trigger the CMPL.8

  • Recognizing that some arrangements that might violate the AKS or CMPL are ultimately beneficial for patients and the health care system, the government has created safe harbor regulations that exempt certain arrangements from AKS and CMPL liability and additional exceptions to the CMPL inducements prohibition. For example, there is a safe harbor that protects payments to induce a health care provider to relocate their practice to an underserved area.

  • Programs that fall outside of a safe harbor or exception do not automatically violate the law. Those analyses are case specific, meaning that each arrangement is individually evaluated.

The growing interest in such food programs is evidenced by White House commitments to integrating nutrition and health in the second-ever White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health and the National Strategy released in connection therewith,21 Medicaid pilots in Massachusetts, North Carolina, and (more recently) several additional states that allow payments for produce prescriptions and medically tailored meals,21 and by large private entities such as Kaiser Permanente which have committed to treating patient food insecurity and expanding effective nutrition programs.23 While fraud and abuse laws play an important role in safeguarding federal health care program resources, there is an increasing tension between the urgency to address nutritional and social needs as a health intervention and the classification of certain goods and services as inducements under current law. These tensions may limit the expansion of nutrition programs that could improve patient health outcomes and health equity.

Disparate Coverage of Health-Related Social Need Supports as Insurance Benefits: The Evolving Policy Landscape

Confusion over whether a nutritional or health-related social need support is an illegal inducement effectively disappears if the support is a covered insurance benefit. An item or service lawfully delivered in accordance with an insurance benefit is not considered free or discounted in violation of AKS or CMPL, even if the patient bears no out-of-pocket cost. Increasingly — though unevenly — health-related social need supports are becoming part of covered benefits. With respect to food, regulatory reforms and state-level Medicaid demonstrations are opening pathways to formal coverage of food interventions. (See Table 1.) However, these pathways are still severely limited by geography, managed care enrollment, and experimentation with hyper-targeted populations, and thus most health care organizations serve patients who could benefit from food and/or nutrition supports but are not able to access them as insurance benefits.24

Table 1 Current Opportunities to Include Food and Nutrition Supports in Public Insurance Programs

a Ctrs. for Medicare & Medicaid Servs., Medicare Managed Care Manual Chapter 4 – Benefits and Beneficiary Protections (last issued April 2016), available at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/mc86c04.pdf.

b 42 C.F.R. § 422.102.

c Ctrs. for Medicare & Medicaid Servs., Value-Based Insurance Design Model Request for Applications for CY 2022 (2021), available at https://innovation.cms.gov/media/document/cy-2022-vbid-rfa-final.

d 42 C.F.R. § 438.3(e).

Food and Nutrition Supports Through an Inducements Lens

Where food and nutrition support is not a covered benefit, the legality of it being furnished by a health care organization grows murkier. The standard inducements inquiry proceeds as follows: First, is something being transferred to the patient for free or at a discounted rate? If not, the arrangement may proceed without further concern. Second, if something of value is being transferred for less than its market value, does the arrangement fit within an AKS safe harbor or, for CMPL purposes, an exception? If so, the arrangement may again proceed without further concern. Finally, if there is no safe harbor or exception that obviously applies, attention turns to whether, based on a review of specific facts and circumstances, the arrangement is a violation of the AKS and/or CMPL.

As applied, health care organizations determined to implement food and nutrition supports have three primary options: (1) limit programming to activities that do not involve providing food to patients either directly (e.g., a food box) or indirectly (e.g., a food voucher); (2) invest time and resources into a narrowly-tailored, limited program compliant with the conditions of a safe harbor or exception; or (3) bear the risk of noncompliance with the law.

Each of these options, explored below, pose challenges to meaningfully addressing food and nutrition insecurity. Further, because there is no “one size fits all” approach, organizational investment likely grows when providers want to set up different programs to respond to varied patient needs (e.g., food programs to improve health outcomes for multiple chronic illness patient groups and programs to address multiple health-related social needs for a particular patient population). This outlay creates barriers to entry for health care organizations. It penalizes organizations — and their patients — with fewer financial and human resources to dedicate to innovation, competing priorities, and less flexibility to take on even a specter of legal risk.

1. Organizations can avoid exposure to the law altogether by implementing less integrated programming and maintaining historical siloes between clinical care and social services

Some forms of food-related supports offered by a health care organization do not involve providing something to patients for free or at a discounted rate. Examples including educating patients on community food programs and providing enrollment assistance in government nutrition programs such as the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.25

This approach is sufficient for some patients and in some communities but not all. There are benefits to more integrated programming such as a hospital-based food pantry in which patients can access multiple services in one place.Reference Greenthal26 Government nutrition benefits are relatively modest and may be inadequate to meet a person’s need, warranting supplemental interventions.Reference Carlson27 Moreover, while community-based organizations are valuable partners in addressing health-related social needs, programs limited to screening and referral direct financial and other burdens of service delivery to be borne primarily — or entirely — by the community-based organization.Reference Clark28

2. Organizations can develop a limited program compliant with the conditions of a safe harbor or exception

There is no single, comprehensive safe harbor or exception to enable the deployment of food and nutrition interventions. Instead, health care organizations can develop initiatives to comply with safe harbors or exceptions describing broader, yet related, goals (e.g., helping patients with financial need to access supports that improve health status). Two safe harbors and three exceptions are particularly relevant: the safe harbor for CMS-sponsored models; the patient engagement and support safe harbor; the financial need-based exception; the preventive care exception; and the exception protecting items/services that promote access to care and pose a low risk of harm. A brief overview of each of these provisions is provided in Table 2, which discusses the type of arrangements broadly protected by each exception, some of the key requirements that must be satisfied in order to rely on the provision for immunity, and agency guidance regarding application to food-related supports in particular.

Table 2 Safe Harbors and Exceptions Applicable to Furnishing Food-Related Supports

a Medicare Program; Medicare Shared Savings Program; Accountable Care Organizations-Pathways to Success and Extreme and Uncontrollable Circumstances Policies for Performance Year 2017, 83 Fed. Reg. 67816 (Dec. 31, 2018); 42 C.F.R. § 425.304.

b Medicare Learning Network, Transcript, Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program: Supplier Enrollment Call (2018), available at https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/NPC/Downloads/2018-06- 20-MDPP-Transcript.pdf.

c Medicare Program; Revisions to Payment Policies under the Physician Fee Schedule and Other Revisions to Part B for CY 2018; Medicare Shared Savings Program Requirements; and Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program, 82 Fed. Reg. 53331 (Nov. 15, 2017).

d Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to the Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducements, 81 Fed. Reg. 88368 (Dec. 7, 2016).

e HHS OIG Advisory Opinion No. 17-01 (2017), at https://www.oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/advisoryopinions/2017/AdvOpn17-01.pdf.

The majority of these compliance avenues are relatively new with four of the six created within the past six years. And while their emergence signals that federal regulators are interested in leveraging social supports to improve health outcomes and reduce health care costs, policy reform has been incremental.

In 2020 HHS OIG enacted a new patient engagement and support safe harbor.29 The new rule protects certain supports provided to patients to improve care quality, health outcomes, and efficiency as part of a value-based undertaking. The scope of the safe harbor explicitly includes items, goods, and services to address health-related social needs. Hospital-run food pantries, food vouchers, grocery and meal delivery services, and nutrition education are among the examples of supports envisioned.

While the new rules create opportunity to expand food and nutrition programs, HHS OIG attached an array of administrative burdens and conditions that curtail impact. Most significantly, the aggregate value of tools and supports provided by an organization to any single patient is limited by an annual monetary cap. The initial cap was $500 and is adjusted each calendar year for inflation; for 2023, the cap is $570. This cap meaningfully limits the types and quality of services available. For example, research shows that medically tailored meals can significantly reduce net health care utilization and total health care costs for high-risk patients with chronic disease; however, some analyses (unadjusted for inflation) cost programs at about $350 per patient per month to operate.Reference Berkowitz30 The annual monetary cap may also stand in the way of creating comprehensive wraparound services and instead pits areas of patient support such as nutrition, housing, and medication management against one another. Critically, this tension may lead to care decisions based on gross cost rather than on patient needs, intervention efficacy, and cost-effectiveness.

3. Organizations implement programming that bears legal risk

In addition to time and resources, proceeding to this third option requires greater confidence in an increasingly complex legal argument.

HHS OIG guidance, including preamble commentary to regulations and legal advisory opinions, indicate an openness to appropriately structured programming to address health-related social needs.31 This body of sub-regulatory policy arguably advances several “safeguards” — arrangements that enforcers highlight as helping to lower the risk of fraud and abuse in the absence of a perfect safe harbor or exception fit. (See Table 3.) However, only a small fraction of guidance wrestles with arrangements involving assistance for patient social needs. Of the 20 advisory opinions issued in 2021, for example, there was only one on the topic.32

Table 3 Common AKS/CMPL Safeguards

a HHS OIG, Special Advisory Bulletin: Offering Gifts and Other Inducements to Beneficiaries (2002), available at https://oig.hhs.gov/documents/special-advisory-bulletins/886/SABGiftsandInducements.pdf.

b Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducement, 85 Fed. Reg. 77684 (Dec. 2, 2020).

c Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to the Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducements, 81 Fed. Reg. 88368 (Dec. 7, 2016).

The more innovative the programming the less likely it is that some version of it has been explicitly considered. Rather than “Arrangement A is explicitly permitted, so we shall do A”, the analysis becomes trickier, for example, “Arrangements A, B, and C are permitted, and based on a close reading of their core components and safeguards encouraged in advisory opinions for Arrangements D and E, we are proceeding with Arrangement F.” With each hypothetical food box distribution or medically tailored meal delivery compounding financial and criminal liability, health care organizations are likely to proceed only if they are confident in their own interpretation of government policy — regardless of any actual likelihood of an enforcement action being brought against them.

Conclusions

Interventions that directly address food and nutrition insecurity can be an important part of providing effective health care — especially for those enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid. An overabundance of caution about AKS and CMPL, on the part of policy makers and/or health care administrators, may leave these critical needs unaddressed. Furthermore, because health care organizations have varying resources to navigate and resolve complex compliance concerns, as well as different levels of risk tolerance, nutrition and other health-related social needs programs may be least available among less resourced, smaller, and more rural providers. Thus, fears related to the legal landscape may exacerbate inequities in access to innovative programs that improve health outcomes.

Integrating interventions that address nutrition and unmet health-related social needs as crucial covered benefits would have the largest and most direct positive impact. The federal government can then best leverage its investments and programming to harmonize health care with the centrality, magnitude, and range of patients’ social needs.

In the absence of covered benefits, institutions and policy makers alike have a role to play in advancing food and nutrition security within the constraints of current health care fraud and abuse law.

For example, HHS OIG has several tools at its disposal, such as advisory opinions, policy bulletins, FAQs, and toolkits, to assist various segments of the health care industry navigate and adhere to the law. Additional agency engagement on how to structure compliant programs would help more health care providers to pursue food, nutrition, and other supports for their patients. Especially in the wake of the National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, which calls for a whole-of-society response, HHS OIG has a central role to play propelling interventions forward.

For health care organizations, applying a solutions-oriented, practical examination to legal risk will better enable health care entities to realize the full benefits of innovations that address food and nutrition security. This should include recognition that, to date, HHS OIG has indicated an openness to many forms of support and that the National Strategy calls upon regulators to unlock — not block — programming. Such strategic engagement with fraud and abuse law is a basic next step to advance food and nutrition insecurity interventions in health care, with potential to improve quality of care, well-being, and health equity among millions of Americans living in an era of compounding epidemics. The alternative is to further entrench inequity, surrender cost-effective opportunities to improve patient outcomes, and risk lagging behind peer organizations.

Note

Funding/Support: Research reported in this work was supported by the National Institutes of Health under award number 2R01HL115189-06A1 and funding from Feeding America National Organization. No conflicts of interest were disclosed.

References

Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Application of OIG’s Administrative Enforcement Authorities to Arrangements Directly Connected to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Public Health Emergency,” available at <https://oig.hhs.gov/coronavirus/authorities-faq.asp> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Office of Public Affairs, U.S. Department of Justice, News Release, “Mail-order diabetic testing supplier and parent company agree to pay $160 million to resolve alleged false claims to Medicare,” August 2, 2021, available at <https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/mail-order-diabetic-testing-supplier-and-parent-company-agree-pay-160-million-resolve-alleged> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), “What is nutrition security?,” available at < https://www.usda.gov/nutrition-security> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Micha, R. et al., “Association Between Dietary Factors and Mortality from Heart Disease, Stroke, and Type 2 Diabetes in the United States,” JAMA 317, no. 9 (2017): 912924; S. Bhat et al., “Healthy Food Prescription Programs and their Impact on Dietary Behavior and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” Advances in Nutrition 12, no. 5 (2021): 1944-1956; S. Downer et al., “Food is Medicine: Actions to Integrate Food and Nutrition into Healthcare,” BMJ 369 (2020): m2482; H.K. Seligman et al., “Hunger and Socioeconomic Disparities in Chronic Disease,” NEJM 363, no. 1 (2010): 6-9; C. Gundersen et al., “Food Insecurity and Health Outcomes,” Health Affairs 34, no. 11 (2015): 1830-1839; V. Tarasuk et al., “Association Between Household Food Insecurity and Annual Health Care Costs,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 187, no. 14 (2015): E429-436; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Addressing Unmet Basic Resource Needs as Part of Chronic Cardiometabolic Disease Management,” JAMA Internal Medicine 177, no. 2 (2017): 244-252.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, “Food Accessibility, Insecurity, and Health Outcomes,” available at < https://www.nimhd.nih.gov/resources/understanding-health-disparities/food-accessibility-insecurity-and-health-outcomes.html> (last visited July 12, 2023); A. Coleman-Jensen et al., U.S. Department of Agriculture, Household Food Security in the United States in 2021, available at < https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/104656/err-309.pdf> (last visited July 12, 2023).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023);+A.+Coleman-Jensen+et+al.,+U.S.+Department+of+Agriculture,+Household+Food+Security+in+the+United+States+in+2021,+available+at+<+https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/104656/err-309.pdf>+(last+visited+July+12,+2023).>Google Scholar
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, “Food Accessibility, Insecurity, and Health Outcomes,” available at <https://www.nimhd.nih.gov/resources/understanding-health-disparities/food-accessibility-insecurity-and-health-outcomes.html> (last visited July 12, 2023); A. Coleman-Jensen et al., U.S. Department of Agriculture, Household Food Security in the United States in 2021, available at <https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/104656/err-309.pdf> (last visited July 12, 2023).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023);+A.+Coleman-Jensen+et+al.,+U.S.+Department+of+Agriculture,+Household+Food+Security+in+the+United+States+in+2021,+available+at++(last+visited+July+12,+2023).>Google Scholar
Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Application of OIG’s Administrative Enforcement Authorities to Arrangements Directly Connected to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Public Health Emergency,” available at <https://oig.hhs.gov/coronavirus/authorities-faq.asp> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Policy Statement Regarding Gifts of Nominal Value to Medicare and Medicaid Beneficiaries, available at <https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/2006053221-hi-oigpolicystatementgiftsofnominalvalue.pdf> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Seligman, H.K. et al., “Hunger and Socioeconomic Disparities in Chronic Disease,” NEJM 363, no. 1 (2010): 69; C. Gundersen et al., “Food Insecurity and Health Outcomes,” Health Affairs 34, no. 11 (2015): 1830-1839; V. Tarasuk et al., “Association Between Household Food Insecurity and Annual Health Care Costs,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 187, no. 14 (2015): E429-436; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Addressing Unmet Basic Resource Needs as Part of Chronic Cardiometabolic Disease Management,” JAMA Internal Medicine 177, no. 2 (2017): 244-252; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Food Insecurity and Metabolic Control Among U.S. Adults with Diabetes,” Diabetes Care 36, no. 10 (2013): 3093-3099; H.K. Seligman et al., “Food Insecurity and Glycemic Control Among Low-Income Patients with Type 2 Diabetes,” Diabetes Care 35, no. 2 (2012): 233-238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Micha, R. et al., “Association Between Dietary Factors and Mortality from Heart Disease, Stroke, and Type 2 Diabetes in the United States,” JAMA 317, no. 9 (2017): 912924; S. Bhat et al., “Healthy Food Prescription Programs and their Impact on Dietary Behavior and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” Advances in Nutrition 12, no. 5 (2021): 1944-1956.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kompaniyets, L. et al., “Underlying Medical Conditions and Severe Illness Among 540,667 Adults Hospitalized With COVID-19, March 2020–March 2021,” Preventing Chronic Disease 18, E66 (2021): 113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rockefeller Foundation and Center for Good Food Purchasing, “True Cost of Food: School Meals Case Study,” available at <https://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/report/true-cost-of-food-school-meals-case-study> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Berkowitz, S.A. et al., “Food Insecurity, Healthcare Utilization, and High Cost: A Longitudinal Cohort Study,” American Journal of Managed Care 24, no. 9 (2018): 399404; V. Bhargava and J.S. Lee, “Food Insecurity and Health Care Utilization Among Older Adults in the United States,” Journal of Nutrition in Gerontology and Geriatrics 35, no. 3 (2016): 177-192; S.L. Lim., “Malnutrition and its Impact on Cost of Hospitalization, Length of Stay, Readmission, and 3-Year Mortality,” Clinical Nutrition 31, no. 3 (2012): 345-350; H.K. Seligman et al., “Exhaustion of Food Budgets at Month’s End and Hospital Admissions for Hypoglycemia,” Health Affairs 33, no. 1 (2014): 116-123.Google ScholarPubMed
Berkowitz, S.A. et al., “Food Insecurity, Healthcare Utilization, and High Cost: A Longitudinal Cohort Study,” American Journal of Managed Care 24, no. 9 (2018): 399404.Google ScholarPubMed
Mozaffarian, D. et al., “Prioritizing Nutrition Security in the US,” JAMA 325, no. 16 (2021): 16051606.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, J. et al., “Trends in Food Sources and Diet Quality Among US Children and Adults, 2003–2018,” JAMA Network Open 4, no. 4 (2021): e215262.Google ScholarPubMed
Coleman-Jensen, A. et al., U.S. Department of Agriculture, Household Food Security in the United States in 2020, available at <https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/102076/err-298.pdf> (last visited July 12, 2023).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023).>Google Scholar
Mozaffarian, D. et al., “Food Is Medicine: The Promise and Challenges of Integrating Food and Nutrition into Health Care,” JAMA Internal Medicine 179, no. 6 (2019): 793795; S. Downer et al., “Food is Medicine: Actions to Integrate Food and Nutrition into Healthcare,” BMJ 369 (2020): m2482.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Downer, S. et al., “Food is Medicine: Actions to Integrate Food and Nutrition into Healthcare,” BMJ 369 (2020): m2482; K. Hager et al., “The Promise and Uncertainty of Fruit and Vegetable Prescriptions in Health Care,” Journal of Nutrition 150, no. 11 (2020): 2846-2848; National Produce Prescription Collaborative, available at <https://nationalproduceprescription.org/> (last visited December 6, 2023); M. Little et al., “Promoting Healthy Food Access and Nutrition in Primary Care: A Systematic Scoping Review of Food Prescription Programs,” American Journal of Health Promotion 36, no. 3 (2022): 518-536; K. Palar et al., “Comprehensive and Medically Appropriate Food Support is Associated with Improved HIV and Diabetes Healeth,” Journal of Urban Health 94, no. 1 (2017): 87-99; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Medically Tailored Meal Delivery for Diabetes Patients with Food Insecurity: A Randomized Cross-Over Trial,” Journal of General Internal Medicine 34, no. 3 (2019): 396-404; S.L. Hummel et al., “Home-Delivered Meals Postdischarge from Heart Failure Hospitalization,” Circulation: Heart Failure 11, no. 8 (2018): e004886; E.B. Tapper et al., “Medically Tailored Meals for the Management of Symptomatic Ascites: The SALTYFOOD Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial,” Gastroenterology Report 8, no. 6 (2020): 453-456; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “‘I was able to eat what I am supposed to eat’-- Patient Reflections on a Medically-Tailored Meal Intervention: A Qualitative Analysis,” BMC Endocrine Disorders 20, no. 10 (2020): 1-11.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Berkowitz, S.A. et al., “Medically Tailored Meal Delivery for Diabetes Patients with Food Insecurity: A Randomized Cross-Over Trial,” Journal of General Internal Medicine 34, no. 3 (2019): 396404; S.L. Hummel et al., “Home-Delivered Meals Postdischarge from Heart Failure Hospitalization,” Circulation: Heart Failure 11, no. 8 (2018): e004886; E.B. Tapper et al., “Medically Tailored Meals for the Management of Symptomatic Ascites: The SALTYFOOD Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial,” Gastroenterology Report 8, no. 6 (2020): 453-456; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Meal Delivery Programs Reduce the Use of Costly Health Care in Dually Eligible Medicare and Medicaid Beneficiaries,” Health Affairs 37, no. 4 (2018): 535-542; S.A. Berkowitz et al., “Association Between Receipt of a Medically Tailored Meal Program and Health Care Use,” JAMA Internal Medicine 179, no. 6 (2019): 786-793; J. Gurvey, “Examining Health Care Costs Among MANNA Clients and a Comparison Group,” Journal of Primary Care & Community Health 4, no. 4 (2013): 311-317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
White House, Biden-Harris Administration National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, 2023, available at <https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/White-House-National-Strategy-on-Hunger-Nutrition-and-Health-FINAL.pdf> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Kaiser Family Foundation, “Medicaid Waiver Tracker: Approved and Pending Section 1115 Waivers by State,” available at <https://www.kff.org/medicaid/issue-brief/medicaid-waiver-tracker-approved-and-pending-section-1115-waivers-by-state/> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Kaiser Permanente, Press Release, “Boosting Food Security to Improve Nation’s Total Health,” October 28, 2019, available at <https://about.kaiserpermanente.org/community-health/news/boosting-food-security-to-improve-nation-s-total-health> (last visited July 12, 2023).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023).>Google Scholar
ATI Advisory, New, Non-Medical Supplemental Benefits in Medicare Advantage in 2022 (last updated January 19, 2022), available at <https://atiadvisory.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Plan-Year-2022-Medicare-Advantage-New-Non-Medical-Supplemental-Benefits.pdf> (last visited July 12, 2023).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023).>Google Scholar
Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to the Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducements, 81 Fed. Reg. 88368 (Dec. 7, 2016).Google Scholar
Greenthal, E. et al., “Patient Experiences and Provider Perspectives on a Hospital-Based Food Pantry: A Mixed Methods Evaluation Study,” Public Health Nutrition 22, no. 17 (2019): 32613269.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carlson, S. et al., Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, “More Adequate SNAP Benefits Would Help Millions of Participants Better Afford Food,” available at <https://www.cbpp.org/research/food-assistance/more-adequate-snap-benefits-would-help-millions-of-participants-better> (last visited July 11, 2023).+(last+visited+July+11,+2023).>Google Scholar
Clark, A. et al., “Addressing Food Insecurity in Clinical Care: Lessons from the Mid-Ohio Farmacy Experience,” Health Affairs Blog, January 3, 2020, available at <https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20191220.448706/full/> (last visited July 11, 2023).Google Scholar
Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducement, 85 Fed. Reg. 77684 (Dec. 2, 2020).Google Scholar
Berkowitz, S.A. et al., “Association Between Receipt of a Medically Tailored Meal Program and Health Care Use,” JAMA Internal Medicine 179, no. 6 (2019): 786793; J. Gurvey, “Examining Health Care Costs Among MANNA Clients and a Comparison Group,” Journal of Primary Care & Community Health 4, no. 4 (2013): 311-317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Medicare and State Health Care Programs: Fraud and Abuse; Revisions to Safe Harbors Under the Anti-Kickback Statute, and Civil Monetary Penalty Rules Regarding Beneficiary Inducement, 85 Fed. Reg. 77684 (Dec. 2, 2020); Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Advisory Opinion No. 17-01 (2017); Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Advisory Opinion No. 20-08 (2020); Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Advisory Opinion No. 15-01 (2015); Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Advisory Opinion No. 12-21 (2012).Google Scholar
Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Advisory Opinions,” available at <https://oig.hhs.gov/compliance/advisory-opinions/> (last visited July 12, 2023); Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Advisory Opinion No. 21-08 (2021).+(last+visited+July+12,+2023);+Office+of+Inspector+General,+U.S.+Department+of+Health+and+Human+Services,+Advisory+Opinion+No.+21-08+(2021).>Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Current Opportunities to Include Food and Nutrition Supports in Public Insurance Programs

Figure 1

Table 2 Safe Harbors and Exceptions Applicable to Furnishing Food-Related Supports

Figure 2

Table 3 Common AKS/CMPL Safeguards