
Fraud In Medicare | |
Defrauding Medicare And Medicaid With Ease |
One estimate states that fraud and abuse cost Medicare and Medicaid
about $33 billion each year. Worse, it's ridiculously easy to
cheat the federal government and taxpayers out of millions of
Medicare and Medicaid dollars, according to three convicted felons
appearing yesterday before a Senate panel.
Anti-fraud language in the Senate Medicare and Medicaid legislation
would make health care fraud a crime, increase fines and make
it easier to kick fraudulent providers out of the system.
Source: Nancy E. Roman and other dispatches, "Medicare Scam
Veterans Tell Panel How Easy It Was to Cheat," Washington Times, November 3, 1995.
|
Hunting For Medicare Dollars Via Computer |
Scam artists are using their computers to find holes in Medicare and
Medicaid payout systems to commit massive fraud, according to reports. Crime technologists say that the health care industry suffers a rapidly
spreading plague of fly-by-night medical businesses that set up in storefronts,
register as providers, bill fast and furiously for a short while -- then
disappear without a trace. System administrators say that electronic processing saves them from
$8 billion to $10 billion annually. But critics say fraud losses may well
dwarf the administrative savings. |
Medicaid Fraud In Florida |
Ripping off the $6.7 billion Medicaid program in Florida is far too easy,
reports a grand jury there after an eight-month investigation of the federal-state
health program for the poor.
The state Agency for Health Care Administration has recently implemented
anti-fraud measures.
Source: Associated Press, "Grand Jury: Florida Must Do More to Stop
Medicaid Fraud," American Medical News, September 23/30, 1996.
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Theft And Fraud In The Home Health Care Industry |
Home health care is now the nation's fastest growing industry. But loose
licensing and lax oversight have made it a magnet for thieves and scam
artists, according to reports.
According to a General Accounting Office report, Medicare home health
care benefit controls are "essentially non-existent." the agency
says that "few home health claims are subject to medical review and
most claims are paid without question." The most common scams are billing for fictitious visits, billing for
care that is unnecessary, over-billing or using low-skilled caregivers for
work that is billed as skilled nursing care.
Among private insurers -- who pay about 13 percent or more than $4 billion
for home care services -- industry officials say no one knows how much the
industry has lost in the scams, but the amounts are growing very fast. Source: Peter Eisler, "Fraud on the Rise: Those Who Get Caught
Say It's Just Too Easy," USA Today, November 12, 1996.
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Fraud And Abuse In Medicare |
When the government is charged with spending hundreds of billions of
taxpayer dollars on massive programs, it would be naive not to expect frauds
to attend the party. So it is with Medicare.
The tone was set by investigations in the early 1990s when several companies
paid more than $100 million apiece in fines and penalties. Large institutions are crying foul in some cases, contending that the
federal government's health-care rules and procedures are so complex that
they invite misunderstandings in billing. Investigators are zeroing in on the fastest growing health programs.
Other targets include academic health care centers, hospices and Medicare
billing for outpatient tests. The biggest club the feds have is expulsion from the Medicare program,
which can be devastating for business. Source: George Anders and Laurie McGinley, "A New Brand of Crime
Now Stirs the Feds: Health-Care Fraud," Wall Street Journal,
May 6, 1997. |
Cut Criminals In Medicare Reform, Too |
By addressing fraud and abuse in the Medicare program, no one takes a
cut except those who deserve it most -- the criminals. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin announced in June 1996 that the Medicare
program will go broke by 2001. According to economic forecasts, the program's
costs are expanding exponentially:
One place to cut costs is fraud control. According to June Gibbs Brown,
Health and Human Services Department Inspector General, up to 10 percent
of Medicare's budget is lost to fraud -- $17 billion annually. A few examples of discovered fraud in the Medicare program:
But the biggest culprits are not the individual rackets, but those who
uniformly scam the system through double billing. An attorney at the Justice
Department estimates about 4,600 hospitals nationwide are engaging in this
fraudulent practice. Lawrence Criner, "Medicare Con Game Lurking Out of View," Washington Times, June 26, 1997. |
Medicare Anti-Fraud Misguided |
The federal government's health care anti-fraud campaigns aren't focused
on the real criminals, charges Malcolm Sparrow of Harvard University. Sparrow
says the government's current anti-fraud measures are ineffective against
sophisticated criminals who bill millions of claims to Medicare and Medicaid
for services never rendered and patients who don't exist. No one knows just how much money such "Medicare mills" are
draining from federal programs, but Sparrow thinks the government's estimate
of 10 percent waste in Medicare spending is far too conservative. He suggests three steps for enforcement officials to control fraud.
The 1996 Kassebaum-Kennedy health reform bill emphasized the third step
but paid little attention to the routine capacity to spot emerging fraud
problems. And that, Sparrow says, is where the most attention is needed. Source: Julie Johnson, "Expert: Feds Are Aiming Anti-Fraud Efforts
At Wrong People," American Medical News, June 9, 1997. |
Improper Medicare Payments Astonishingly High |
Government auditors have found that irregularities in Medicare payments
to providers cost American taxpayers $23 billion in the 1996 fiscal year,
according to an unpublished report. That estimate would encompass payments
made as a result of outright fraud and abuse, as well as from innocent record-keeping
errors. The audit by the Medicare inspector general's office -- expected to be
released in July 1997 -- is based on a detailed bill-by-bill review of about
5,000 Medicare claims involving $5 million in payments. Investigators visited
doctors, hospitals, laboratories and other providers to check whether medical
records corroborated claims filed with the Medicare system.
The audit is being carried out under the Government Management Reform
Act, which demands a rigorous review of federal agency bookkeeping using
generally accepted accounting principles. Historically, Medicare has delegated much of its claims-processing to
private insurance companies, known as "fiscal intermediaries."
Critics, including Harvard University's Malcolm Sparrow, a fraud investigation
expert, have contended that the system focuses mainly on making sure that
claims are submitted in a standard fashion, rather than checking on whether
claims filed are legitimate and appropriate. Source: George Anders, "Improper Medicare Spending Is Frequent,"
Wall Street Journal, June 11, 1997. |
Medicare And Accountability |
The Medicare system has major management problems.
Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) argues in a recent report that
the best way to cut fraud in Medicare is to expose it to the discipline
of the market. CAGW recommends:
CAGW contends that competition would tend to drive up the quality of
medical care while keeping a lid on costs.
Source: Perspective, "Waste, Fraud, Abuse," Investor's Business
Daily, October 17, 1997. |
Regulations Brand Doctors Criminals |
Few Americans probably realize that fines of up to $10,000 can be levied
on physicians who simply order tests from a lab at no personal profit. If
doctors bill Medicare for preventive services that are not recognized by
Medicare, the doctor is deemed to have engaged in a criminal offense and
he is branded a fraud. The absence of intent to cheat Medicare doesn't matter.
Critics say that under the present system patients and doctors are both
in trouble; no one knows what to do and everyone is afraid to ask. The Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), which oversees Medicare,
is being accused of instructing medical labs to "voluntarily"
set up programs to spy on physicians and to report "suspicious"
test-ordering patterns. Labs that cooperate are told they can expect the
HCFA to go easier on them when it is their own turn to be audited. Source: Dr. Philip R. Alper, "Free Doctors From Medicare's Shackles,"
Wall Street Journal, November 5, 1997. |
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