Articles Posted in Healthcare Fraud

Readers of this blog know that scammers are routinely bilking the federal Medicare system out of large sums of money, crimes that add up to billions (yes, with a “b”) in losses every year. Health care fraud is not, however, only a federal matter. From small lies to big ones, criminals are also targeting the California Medi-Cal program. Medi-Cal fraud scams cost the state and every taxpayer money and pose a very real threat to the health and welfare of millions of Californians. Fighting these schemes requires the commitment of honest Californians willing to step up to the plate. The Brod Law Firm is proud to be their partner in this fight, representing the interests of the state and the interests of the individual whistleblower as a Medi-Cal fraud whistleblowers’ law firm.

The Medi-Cal System and Medi-Cal Fraud healthcash.jpgMedi-Cal is California’s Medicaid program, a form of government provided health insurance that covers low-income individuals. Enrollment appears to be growing as coverage expands. While most readers probably know both of those facts, the vastness of the program may still come as a surprise. In November 2014, news site California Healthline reported that approximately 30% of Californians were enrolled in the program, a figure that reflects the addition of more than 2.7 million enrollees in the prior year alone (Note: the site does suggest the figure might fall in the months following the report).

A section of the website for The Office of the Attorney General (“OAG”) for the State of California defines Medi-Cal fraud as “the billing of the Medi-Cal program for services, drugs, or supplies that are unnecessary, not performed, [or] more costly than those actually performed [and] also refers to paying and/or receiving kickbacks for Medi-Cal billing referrals” (formatting changed). The OAG explains that such scams create a financial burden that all Californians feel in the form of increased taxes and rising health insurance premiums while those in need of care may be forced to go without because funds have been stolen from already strained coffers. Per the Office, Medi-Cal fraud also poses a direct threat to public health with scams that involve things like reused syringes, “treatments” carried out by unqualified staff, and unwarranted medical procedures.

Medicare billing is a complex and specialized field. Translating patient care into billing codes takes knowledge and skill. While most providers and coders work hard to make sure billing codes accurately reflect the care provided, others use the system to divert money from government coffers into their own pockets. Fraudulent Medicare coding takes a number of forms. Catching those involved in these scams often takes inside knowledge. Attorney Greg Brod partners with honest insiders who’ve observed modifier fraud and, as a skilled Medicare fraud attorney, he partners with these individuals, protecting their interests while fighting back and working to return taxpayer money to already strained health care programs.

Recent Medicare Coding Settlements computerhealth.jpgIn January, a physician in Georgia agreed to pay more than $305,000 to settle coding-related allegations under the federal False Claims Act. As reported by the Department of Health and Human Services, Dr. Dennis Conrad Harper was accused of using an inappropriate billing code in order to bypass Medicare limitations and receive payment for certain urine drug tests. The Government alleged that he submitted payment claims for high-complexity tests while actually performing less-complex tests. Similar allegations regarding improper coding on urine drugs tests formed the basis of a September 2014 settlement between the federal government and Clinical Lab Partners, a Connecticut firm as well as a May 2014 settlement totaling $4.65 million involving Calloway Laboratories, the federal Medicare program, and the West Virginia Medicaid program. The U.S. Attorney involved in the latter explained “Drug treatment programs are a vital component of our ongoing battle against prescription drug abuse….The cost for [related] testing often falls upon federal health care programs like Medicare and Medicaid. The additional expense of unnecessary review, like that routinely performed by Calloway Labs, increases the burden on an already stressed system.”

The Most Common Forms of Coding and Billing Fraud Beckers ASC, an information source for the healthcare industry with a focus on outpatient surgery, provides a useful page titled “5 Common Fraudulent Coding, Billing Schemes.” The report discusses the following types of fraudulent billing/coding scams: 1) Upcoding – billing for a more complex procedure than was actually preformed (listed as the most common coding fraud); 2) Unbundling – separately billing for items that should be included in a bundled package; 3) Kitchen sink coding – including codes beyond those tied to confirmed diagnoses (notably can hurt patients by making their records include preexisting conditions they don’t actually have); 4) Inconsistent coding – changing a listed diagnosis without actual symptom changes, often done just prior to surgery; 5) Inflated charges – inflating charges, particularly when bills are not first sent to an insurance provider, often in personal injury/accident-related care.

It seems like you can barely turn on the television these days without seeing an advertisement for medications and medical equipment. Equipment ads in particular often target seniors and inevitably include a promise that the company will deal directly with Medicare to get the product supplied with little or no cost to the consumer. While medical equipment helps countless people live fuller and more productive lives, the industry is a prime target for scammers. Power wheelchair scams and other equipment fraud operations allow scammers to profit at the expense of taxpayers and Medicare beneficiaries. Stopping these scams often requires beneficiaries and/or company insiders coming forward and sharing their knowledge. Medicare fraud lawyer Attorney Greg Brod protects the interests of these brave whistleblowers while working to stop equipment fraud and return money to the government.

Wheelchair Scams: “The Poor Man’s Way In” to Medical Fraud wheel2.jpgA 2014 Washington Post report, carried online by The Fiscal Times, paints a picture of one power wheelchair scam based on testimony offered before a California court last summer. According to witness testimony, patient recruiters would call seniors and ask whether they had ever received a power wheelchair through Medicare. If the answer was “no,” the recruiter would attempt to get the person to agree to come to a medical office and get a prescription for a power wheelchair. Whether the patient truly needed the expensive equipment was all but irrelevant. One Medicare beneficiary testified that he told them he did not need a power wheelchair but that the company insisted they were giving away the chairs or free.

Wheelchair schemes date back to at least the mid-’90s. The Post calls the operations “the poor man’s way in, an entry-level fraud that didn’t require a medical degree or a hospital.” Equipment fraud scammers bill Medicare for chairs and other equipment that is not medically indicated and pocket the large price markup. In the scheme underlying the above-mentioned court inquiry, recruiters were paid $800 for each time a (usually bogus) prescription was written and a chair ordered. The California-based scam billed Medicare for some 1,000 power chairs, a medium-sized operation in the world of Medicare equipment fraud. Per The Post, Medicare has spent $8.2 billion on power wheelchairs and motor scooters since 1999. It is impossible to know how many of the 2.7 million people who received chairs paid for by the government had true medical need.

Medicare Advantage (“MA”) plans allow Medicare beneficiaries to have a private company manage their health care benefits. When a beneficiary opts for coverage via an MA plan, Medicare pays the plan a set amount depending on the patient’s health status. As detailed below, this capitated payment system relies upon providers and plans to honestly report information about a beneficiary’s health. Sadly, Medicare Advantage fraud is rampant, including capitated payment fraud. Our Medicare Advantage fraud law firm partners with honest people who come forward to report these scams and protect the Medicare system, ensuring money is available for those who truly need it.

A Brief Introduction to the Capitated Payment System

The Medicare News Group, a website designed for journalists and others looking for Medicare-related information, provides a set of Frequently Asked Questions that helps readers understand a complex health care system. The FAQ explains that capitated payments are per patient rates paid to a physician or other medical provider. Capitated payments are based on a patient’s general health and are paid regardless of whether or not services are actually provided and regardless of how many services are delivered.

lonelysenior.jpgThere has been growing awareness in recent years about the importance of mental health. More people are seeking help and health professionals are becoming more educated on the importance of a well-rounded definition of health. Sadly, there are also scammers out to take advantage of this trend including the perpetrators of Medicare fraud. As a health care fraud law firm based in California, the Brod Firm partners with whistleblowers to fight mental health benefit fraud, working together to return money to government coffers and ensure that the benefits are available for those who truly need them.

Sentencing in $97 Million Fraud Scheme

The government’s commitment to fighting health care fraud has extended into 2015 as demonstrated by the sentencing of two Houston area physicians who used their ownership in a mental health clinic to perpetrate a $97 million Medicare fraud scheme. As a Department of Justice press release details, Dr. Mansour Sanjar, 81, and Dr. Cyrus Sajadi, 67, were found guilty of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and related counts involving kickbacks via a jury trial last March. This month, they were sentenced to 148 months and 120 months in jail respectively and ordered to pay restitution of approximately $8 million. A group home owner, Chandra Nunn, was also sentenced to a 54 month jail term and ordered to pay over $1.8 million restitution. Several other co-defendants are still awaiting sentencing.

Regular visitors to this blog are familiar with the False Claims Act (“FCA” or “the Act”), a piece of federal law aimed at recovering money wrongfully taken from government coffers. The Act contains detailed provisions that allow ordinary private citizens to bring suit on the government’s behalf through a process known as a qui tam suit. These suits are essential to the FCA’s efficacy, permitting individuals with knowledge about fraud to help ensure wrongfully diverted money is returned to the already strained budgets of programs like Medicare and agencies like the Department of Defense. In this post, our California-based government fraud whistleblowers’ law firm takes a look back at recoveries made via the FCA in 2014 and examines the importance of whistleblowers in False Claims Act litigation at both the federal and state level.

Justice Department Announces $5.69 Billion in FCA Recoveries in 2014, Recognizes Role of Whistleblowers

In late 2014, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that recoveries (settlements and judgments) as a result of civil claims against entities and individuals that allegedly filed false claims and engaged in related fraud on the government hit a record-breaking $5.69 billion in the fiscal year ending September 30. This brings the total amount recovered since January 2009 to $22.75 billion. The recoveries for fiscal year 2014 cash2.jpgincluded $3.1 billion obtained from banks and financial institutions accused of making false statements in the process of filing federally insured mortgages and loans. Additionally, the federal government recovered $2.3 billion in health care fraud recoveries, making 2014 the fifth straight year that FCA claims involving Medicare, Medicaid, Tricare, and other federal health care programs exceeded $2 billion. These payments came from hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, managed care entities, and other major players in the health care market. Another significant portion of the total recoveries came from cases against federal contractors including IT service providers and companies that supplied products to the military.

It takes a very special individual to work in the end-of-life care arena. We have the deepest respect for the men and women who support both patients and their loved ones in the hospice care environment. These professionals offer much more than medical care, they offer emotional support to people facing some of life’s hardest moments. It is out of respect for the vast majority of these workers who are honest and good-hearted and a belief in the importance of the services they offer that our San Francisco-based Medicare fraud law firm is committed to uncovering and redressing cases of hospice care fraud.

Hospice Care Generally

The Eldercare Locator, a program operated by the Administration on Aging, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), helps connect older Americans and their loved ones with a range of senior services. The website offers a Hospice Care Factsheet which explains that hospice programs help the terminally ill and their families with 24-hour care aimed at making the patient’s final days as comfortable and dignified as possible. In addition to medical services, hospice care offers psychosocial support to patients and their loved ones.

Choosing a nursing home or other senior care facility is a difficult and emotional decision. There are many factors to consider, many of which can spark intense family debates, including location, price, and available forms of care. There are also more individualized factors like whether the prospective resident has friends at the facility, whether the facility has a religious affiliation, and the input provided by the resident’s current doctors. That last item, the advice of medical professionals, can be extremely persuasive and a good doctor will assess numerous factors before voicing an opinion. Kickbacks from nursing homes should never cloud a doctor’s professional judgment. While that may sound obvious, payments to doctor for referrals our Northern California Medicare fraud law firm knows illegal kickbacks are more common than most of us would like to think and pose both a financial threat to the Medicare program and a threat to patients’ health and well-being.

Whistleblower Alleges Kickbacks Were Key Part of Medicare Fraud by Senior Care Network

According to the Broward Bulldog, the Plaza Health Network has worked to maintain a top-notch reputation since its founding 64 years ago as a home for Jewish seniors and war veterans who could no longer live alone and/or care for themselves. Plaza is now a non-profit with corporate offices in Aventura, Florida, and runs eight care facilities in the Miami region open to seniors of all denominations. The company’s reputation may, however, change dramatically if a lawsuit alleging health care fraud is successful

Earlier this month we wrote about the theft of prescription drugs, focusing on the growing problem of medications being stolen from our nation’s seniors and why drug theft is a form of elder abuse. We urge all readers to ensure their own medications and those of loved ones are kept in a secure location. These robbery-type crimes are not the only form of prescription theft. As a Northern California Medicare fraud law firm, we are closely watching the issue of Medicare drug thefts crimes that sometimes take advantage of quirky rules and can amount to health care fraud.

Study Identifies Problem of Drugs Dispensed to Deceased Medicare Beneficiaries

In October, the inspector general for the Health and Human Services Department (“HHS”) released a report Medicare rule pursuant to which the program covers prescriptions for up to 32 days after the patient’s death. The investigators focused on a small sliver of medications and identified 158 patients whose HIV-related drugs were covered after their deaths in 2012. In one patient’s case, Medicare records show two separate medication purchases involving three pill$.jpgdrugs each that were covered after he died – charges that amounted to $7,610. Another case involved a Michigan man for whom six prescriptions from two different doctors were ordered and paid for after his death to the tune of $5,616 in Medicare costs.

Kickbacks to physicians are one of the most concerning forms of Medicare fraud. Why? Kickbacks to doctors create mixed incentives. Instead of being guided by concerns for their patient’s welfare, the doctors may be tempted to make choices, from seemingly innocuously ones to which lab to use to run a test to more important ones like whether or not to run that test at all, based on money. Certainly, money matters to doctors, like all of us, especially given the enormous financial burden of so many years of education. However, kickbacks make decisions unduly complicated and create unnecessary conflicts between profit motives and patient care. When whistleblowers partner with our Northern California anti-kickback law firm, we can fight back.

The Pending Investigation

Earlier this fall, The Wall Street Journal reported on a medical lab in Virginia that appears to be trying to use a loophole to pay doctors for sending them blood for testing. Health Diagnostic Laboratory Inc. (“HDL”) opened in 2008 and totaled $383 million in revenue for 2013 with 41% coming from Medicare. HDL sells tests that measure biomarkers that may predict heart disease, bundling together up to 28 tests per vial of blood. Medicare pays HDL $1,000 or more for these services and, until June, HDL in turn paid doctors $20 per sample which was much higher than other labs paid for similar services.

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