Blogs
HCP Benchmarking Debunked
John Moose, MBA, ABV - Principal at IQVIA
Samantha Sutherland, Engagement Manager
Jun 12, 2019

Pharmaceutical companies often rely upon valuation professionals to provide accurate and defensible Fair Market Value (“FMV”) assessments of activities provided by healthcare professionals (“HCPs”) and non-HCPs— but that doesn’t mean outsourcing responsibility. Compliance-focused risk management demands rigorous evaluation of the underlying valuation methodology employed by the rate provider. And when it comes to the FMV of HCP and non-HCP services, benchmarking payments made by pharmaceutical manufacturers and healthcare providers (as consulting payments) as a basis to determine FMV rates has inherent limitations, ones that manufacturers might not realize until they are enmeshed in an investigation. Consider the following:

  1. A benchmarking methodology may create a “Black Box” where the methodology is wholly unclear and may change from year to year without your knowledge. Questions inevitably arise with many benchmarking methodologies including:
    • From which pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device and diagnostics companies did the rate provider draw the raw data?  Is this sample representative of my payments?  Does the mix of source data change every year?
    • Does the underlying methodology change substantively from one year to the next? 
    • How was the source data manipulated before presentation to the client?
    • What was the tiering structure relative to the observed rates?
    • What was the time frame involved in the benchmarked rates of an activity?  Could it be that multiple years of rates are included in the FMV analysis to overcome problems arising from the employed methodology?
  2. Benchmarked rates for HCP and non-HCP compensation lack transparency surrounding the transaction. One must take a leap of faith that none of the observed payments are in violation of the anti-kickback statute.
  3. A benchmarking methodology lacks flexibility in that the rate provider may not have the valuation expertise or the data to support requests for ad hoc FMV rates outside of the surveyed data. Supporting these needs by purchasing rates from a separate rate provider creates multiple, and possibly inconsistent, valuation methodologies within your organization.
  4. Benchmarking HCP and non-HCP rates may create inconsistency in rates from year to year. If you find your valuation rate provider averaging or incorporating data from prior years, it may be to “normalize” variations in rates that arise solely from inconsistent sampling and calculation methodologies.
  5. If your rate provider uses only a benchmarking methodology, and for only one area of compliance (without knowledge of third-party or clinical), this may be an indication that your rate provider lacks a robust and analytical infrastructure. Absent an inclusive scope of offerings and valuation expertise, your rate provider might not possess the requisite insight into the pharmaceutical industry, compliance matters and valuation.
  6. Application of only a simplistic benchmarking methodology ignores valuable insights that arise from screening and tiering of HCPs. Lacking these key services may indicate a lack of depth in understanding the market and context for actual implementation of the rates being provided.
  7. Providing only a benchmarking methodology may cause the rate provider to be myopic and ignore equally relevant aspects of the service offering. For example, change management is not an “everyday” need, but, as change is inevitable, it is imperative to partner with a rate provider that has the expertise to assist with change management.

No manufacturer seeks the dubious distinction of becoming the first to be investigated for violating anti-kickback and bribery laws and regulations based on a benchmarking payment methodology. The mere lack of a complaint is insufficient evidence that an FMV rate-setting process is “approved” or “safe”. Just because an FMV rate-setting process has not been flagged by regulators does not mean that a manufacturer would have legal cover in the event of a future investigation into HCP payments. 

An alternative methodology to benchmarking pharmaceutical payments, and one that is supported by most valuation professionals, is the survey method in which FMV assessments are based on the compensation paid between willing market participants in the deep and robust labor market as observed by independent associations in their compensation surveys (e.g., Medical Group Management Association (MGMA). None of the critiques noted above apply to such a methodology.  

Carefully consider the valuation methodology, valuation expertise, size, and breadth of service offering of your rate provider. A best-practice FMV methodology should be consistent from year to year, transparent, defensible, and easily support unique or uncommon questions, appeals, and related HCP tiering and screening that might result during the ordinary course of business. 

For more information about IQVIA Commercial Compliance, please e-mail commercialcompliance@iqvia.com or visit our webpage. Our experts leverage the industry’s leading technologies to deliver streamlined processes and improved efficiencies that solve your toughest engagement and transparency challenges. From automating and managing the entire HCP/O contracting lifecycle, to capturing, collecting, and reporting global spend; to planning efficient and compliant HCP meetings and engagements—discover how our solutions can make compliance easier for you.

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