Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XI— - GENERAL PROVISIONS, PEER REVIEW, AND ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION › Part Part A— - General Provisions › § 1320a–7c
The Secretary of Health and Human Services, working with the HHS Inspector General and the Attorney General, must set up a national program by January 1, 1997 to fight fraud, waste, and abuse in health care. The program must work with federal, state, and local law enforcement, run investigations and audits, help enforce health-care fraud laws, and create or change safe harbors and issue advisory opinions and fraud alerts. The Secretary and Attorney General must share data with health plans and issue guidelines (without using the usual notice-and-comment rulemaking) about what information to collect, how to protect patient privacy, and how providers and plans can share data safely. The HHS Inspector General keeps its oversight powers and may use certain authorities needed for the program. The Inspector General can also receive reimbursements for investigation and audit costs when ordered by a court or agreed to, and such funds are returned to the proper appropriation and stay available for obligation for 1 year. The program must include a public-private partnership of health plans, government agencies, law enforcement, anti-fraud groups, and others the Secretary chooses. The Secretary must hire a trusted third party to run the partnership’s work. The partnership must enable secure data sharing, analyze data to find unusual or fraudulent billing and wider fraud schemes, identify weak spots, refer cases to authorities, meet at least yearly, give confidential feedback to plans, set membership rules, and provide training. The trusted third party must meet capability, conflict-of-interest, and other Secretary-set requirements and must, not later than 2 years after December 27, 2020, analyze billing for substance use disorder providers using partnership data. The partnership will have an executive board of federal and private members co-chaired by one federal and one private official. The Secretary must report to Congress and post on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services website by January 1, 2023 and every 2 years after that on the partnership’s activities, any reported savings to plans and to the federal government, other outcomes, and a two-year strategic plan. The partnership is funded from amounts already available to the Secretary, certain prior partnership functions moved over as of December 27, 2020, and the Federal Advisory Committee Act does not apply. Health plan — a program that pays for health care, including: a health insurance policy; a service benefit contract; and a membership in an HMO or other prepaid health plan.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1320a–7c
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73