Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XI— - GENERAL PROVISIONS, PEER REVIEW, AND ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION › Part Part A— - General Provisions › § 1320a–7d
The Secretary must publish a notice in the Federal Register by January 1, 1997 and at least once a year after that asking for proposals for changing or adding safe harbors (rules that say certain payment practices are not criminal), for written advisory opinions, and for special fraud alerts. Proposals are open for 60 days. After getting proposals, the Secretary, with the Attorney General, must publish proposed safe harbor changes with a 60-day comment period and then issue final rules. The Inspector General must tell Congress each year which proposals were sent in, which were published as proposals, and why any were rejected. When making or changing safe harbors, the Secretary may look at effects on access, quality, choice, competition, care in underserved areas, Federal program cost, overuse, and whether financial incentives affect ordering or referrals, plus other anti-fraud concerns. The Inspector General must review within one year after December 29, 2022 whether to create a safe harbor for evidence-based contingency management incentives and consider those factors, and the Secretary and Inspector General must give Congress recommendations within two years after December 29, 2022. The Secretary, with the Attorney General, must issue written advisory opinions on what counts as prohibited payments, whether arrangements meet rules that avoid prohibition, what counts as an inducement to limit services, and whether an activity could trigger sanctions. Advisory opinions cannot decide fair market value or tax-employee status, are binding on the Secretary and the requester, and the Secretary must set rules (within 180 days after August 21, 1996) for how to request and respond, including a 60-day response time and a fee equal to the Secretary’s cost. Anyone can ask the Inspector General to investigate and publish a special fraud alert; the Inspector General may consider the same factors and how common the conduct is.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1320a–7d
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73