Sunshine Act Frequently Asked Questions
The Physician Payment Sunshine Act has evolved into the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Open Payments program. While the name has changed, the intent of this program is the same: to increase the transparency of the financial relationships that physicians and teaching hospitals have with pharmaceutical and medical device manufactures and group purchasing organizations (GPOs). As part of the program, manufacturers must report payments and other transfers of value they have made to physicians and teaching hospitals each calendar year. Manufacturers and GPOs must also report certain ownership or investment interests held by physicians or their immediate family members. Reports are made to CMS by March 31 of each year. Physicians and teaching hospitals will have 45 days to review and dispute the data before it is posted publicly around June 30.
ASTRO urges all members to understand the impact of this program and has prepared the following frequently asked questions to help members better understand the program.
Open Payments requires reporting of the following information annually to CMS:
- Applicable manufacturers of covered drugs, devices, biologicals and medical supplies must report payments or other transfers of value they make to physicians and teaching hospitals.
- Applicable manufacturers and applicable group purchasing organizations (GPOs) must report certain ownership or investment interests held by physicians or their immediate family members.
- Applicable GPOs must report payments or other transfers of value made to physician owners or investors if they held ownership or an investment interest at any point during the reporting year.
CMS collects, aggregates and publishes this data on a public website.
Note: medical students, residents, support and office staff, nurses, advance practice nurses, physician assistants and others are excluded from the reporting requirement.
Manufacturers must report payments and transfers of value made directly or indirectly to physicians and teaching hospitals and GPOs must report such payments or transfers to physicians with ownership or investment interests. Manufacturers as well as GPOs are also required to report ownership interests held by physicians and their immediate family members. When a report is made, payments and other transfers of value must be categorized as falling into one of the following possible categories:
- Consulting fee
- Compensation for services other than consulting, including serving as faculty or as a speaker at an event other than a continuing education program
- Honoraria
- Gift
- Entertainment
- Food and beverage
- Travel and lodging (including the destinations)
- Education
- Research
- Charitable contribution
- Royalty or license
- Current or prospective ownership or investment interest
- Compensation for serving as faculty or as a speaker for an unaccredited or non-certified continuing education program
- Compensation for serving as faculty or as a speaker for an accredited or certified continuing education program
- Grant
- Space rental or facility fees (teaching hospital only).
- Payments or transfers of value less than $10, unless the aggregate amount exceeds $100 in a calendar year1
- Product samples that are not intended to be sold and are intended for patient use
- Educational materials or items directly benefiting patients or intended to be used by or with patients. Textbooks and reprints are not excluded under this provision
- Buffet meals, snacks, soft drinks or coffee generally available to physicians at large-scale events
- In-kind items used for the provision of charity care
- Discounts or rebates
- Loan of a medical device for the short-term
- Transfers of value and payments made to a physician in return for non-physician services from the physician (e.g., physician who is also a lawyer providing legal services to an applicable manufacturer or GPO)
- Items or services provided under a contractual warranty
- A dividend or other profit distribution or ownership or investment interest in a publicly traded security and mutual fund
1CMS adjusts these numbers each year based on the consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U). For 2018, the exclusion applies to payments or transfers of value less than $10.49, unless the aggregate exceeds $104.90 in a calendar year.
Manufacturers and GPOs must submit the reports on payments and transfers of value to CMS on an annual basis. Manufacturers and GPOs must report ownership interest held by physicians and their immediate family members1.
1CMS defines immediate family members to include a:
- spouse
- natural or adoptive parent, child or sibling
- stepparent, stepchild, stepbrother or stepsister
- father-, mother-, daughter-, son-, brother- or sister-in-law
- grandparent or grandchild
- spouse of a grandparent or grandchild
Once the manufacturer has submitted data listing the physician’s name to CMS, CMS must give physicians 45 days to review and work with the manufacturer, or applicable GPO, to correct the information. After the 45 days have passed, the manufacturer or applicable GPO will have an additional 15 days to submit corrections based on any disputes identified by physicians and physician owners/investors. The review and correction period starts at least 60 days before the information is made public.
During the review and correction period, physicians and physician owners/investors can dispute information about them they do not think is correct. If data is disputed, CMS will notify the applicable manufacturer or applicable GPO that some of their data has been disputed. However, CMS will not mediate the dispute directly.
In general, the following timeline applies to the collection of data under the Open Payments program.
- Step 1: Applicable Manufacturers and GPOs collect data (January 1 – December 31).
- Step 2: Applicable Manufacturers and GPOs submit data submission to CMS (February 1 - March 31 of the year after the collection year).
- Step 3: Physicians and teaching hospitals review and dispute data that has been submitted about them (45-day period between April and May of the year after the collection year – announced by CMS each year).
- Step 4: Applicable Manufacturers and GPOs review and correct the data (15-day period in May or June of the year after the collection year, after Step 3 is completed).
- Step 5: Publication of data on CMS public website (June 30 of the year after the collection year).