Medicare Advantage aggressive coding or fraud

https://www.balloon-juice.com/category/mayhew-on-insurance/

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The New York Times has a good story from the 15th on a False Claims Act lawsuit filed by a former United Healthcare employee.  It alleges UHC systemically defrauded the US government of billions from up-coding its Medicare Advantage claims to get bigger risk adjustment payments.  This is a big deal.  Medicare knows that the incentive in Medicare Advantage is to make the patients look as sick as possible to maximize upcoding. A recent estimate has coding differentials leading to a $20 billion dollar a year payment differential between Medicare Advantage and Fee for Service Medicare for intrinsically similar patients.

At the heart of the dispute: The government pays insurers extra to enroll people with more serious medical problems, to discourage them from cherry-picking healthy people for their Medicare Advantage plans. The higher payments are determined by a complicated risk scoring system, which has nothing to do with the treatments people get from their doctors; rather, it is all about diagnoses.

Diabetes, for example, can raise risk scores by varying amounts, depending on a patient’s complications. So UnitedHealth gave people with diabetes intensive scrutiny, to see if they had any other conditions that the diabetes might have caused.

As Mr. Poehling’s lawyer, Mary Inman, described it, the government would pay UnitedHealth $9,580 a year for enrolling a 76-year-old woman with diabetes and kidney failure, for instance, but if the company claimed that her diabetes had actually caused her kidney failure, the payment rose to $12,902 — an additional $3,322. Ms. Inman is with the law firm of Constantine Cannon in San Francisco.

We need to differentiate between aggressive coding and fraud.  The key question in this example is not whether or not UHC got a doctor to say that the kidney failure was caused by diabetes but whether or not the evidence in the chart supports that assertion.

If it is medically supported from the chart, history and corroborating results, this is not fraud.  It is aggressive coding designed to maximize revenue.  If it is not supportable, then it is either fraud or abuse.  That will be the key area of argument.  Does the evidence show that the diagnosis codes that UHC is chasing are supportable by medical evidence?

Betsy Nicoletti is a coding specialist who shared her coding book with me.  I want to highlight a legitimate example of what happens at every health plan that has risk adjusted plans.  The example is about diabetes:

Healthcare frauds and settlements in 2017: Running list

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/slideshow/biggest-healthcare-frauds-2017-running-list?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWXpVMk16RXlNV00zTm1OayIsInQiOiIzS3NXdllRRU1HNHZlb0Q1aVBYV0hFazRSbGk4dWc3S0FvZERGbHJDeW53Z2ZTb0xCdFhhWEVPcHBBUlVcLytBR1dkTTF0cElHTDRxU0NMSXJ0bWhQUUNvSzl1TVFtaVh2SUhiYkxNTVozNW54SmJCRXhCWDhZT2VGcGNGNlZSdXYifQ%3D%3D

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TeamHealth to pay $60 million to settle ‘upcoding’ claims as acquisition by Blackstone wraps up

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/teamhealth-pay-60-million-settle-upcoding-claims-acquisition-blackstone-wraps?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWmpKaE5ETXhZVGc0TkdJNSIsInQiOiJjWXBGUGRYOWwySVVDRnRsdjhpOTJEK09yNSt1dzcyN1d0TmNucCtzN1A4cWlVcGl2NmM3M1wvR0lYQjRUa3ZQdzd2b2g4ZnFQWFRlYVhBMFwvY3I2VFlJaEVkdXhlODhNSGk4VUpVempaVUloZVBmRjRtekZXQ1ZGYVdjNFRJdkZRIn0%3D

DOJ alleged that subsidiary IPC pressured physicians to bill for higher levels of service than what was provided.

TeamHealth Holdings, nationwide hospital staffing provider and owner of group practice IPC Healthcare, has agreed to pay $60 million plus interest to settle allegations that IPC engaged in a prolonged scheme of billing Medicare, Medicaid, the Defense Health Agency and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program for more expensive medical services that were actually provided, the Department of Justice announced.

TeamHealth is comprised of more than 20,000 affiliated physicians and advanced practice clinicians, and offers outsourced emergency medicine, hospital medicine, critical care, anesthesiology, orthopedic hospitalist, acute care surgery, obstetrics and gynecology hospitalist, and other services to approximately 3,300 acute and post-acute facilities and physician groups across the country.

According to the DOJ, the government alleged that IPC put corporate pressure on physicians to “upcode” claims to maximize billing, especially pressuring physicians with lower billing levels.

TeamHealth also agreed to increase accountability and transparency in order to avoid any future fraud, according to the settlement.

The allegations stem from a whistleblower lawsuit filed in a Chicago federal court by Bijan Oughatiyan, a physician formerly employed by IPC as a hospitalist. Under the False Claims Act, the government was allowed to intervene and take over the suit, as it did in this case. Oughatiyan will receive about $11.4 million, which is his share of the recovery as allowed under the False Claims Act.

The acquisition of TeamHealth by funds affiliated with global asset manager Blackstone and certain other investors, wrapped up Monday, making TeamHealth a privately held company.

9 latest healthcare industry lawsuits, settlements

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/9-latest-healthcare-industry-lawsuits-settlements-december12.html

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From a Florida hospital settling a whistle-blower lawsuit for $12 million to six pharmaceutical executives being charged in an alleged fentanyl racketeering scheme, here are the latest healthcare industry lawsuits and settlements making headlines.

Feds Allege Mass Forest Park Medical Center Kickback Scheme; 21 Indicted

http://healthcare.dmagazine.com/2016/12/01/doj-indicts-21-alleges-forest-park-officials-paid-40-million-in-kickbacks-for-patient-referrals/?utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=38578013&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9nq-_xFj_5ZsB5A4GXxtR4dmyVTHWn9cNkB_MTg2hapXhZT97fHccuUvHO0Xt0TZ00pj_4tk5lsYhA5hKfDHAVK1sDrw&_hsmi=38578013

(Credit: Justin Clemons)

A federal grand jury has returned indictments on 21 individuals allegedly involved in a massive kickback scheme through the defunct Forest Park Medical Center chain of luxury hospitals, which resulted in “well over half a billion dollars” in billed claims due to illegal bribes.

The 44-page indictment, unsealed Thursday, describes a vast, four-year conspiracy, fueled by $40 million in kickbacks funneled through a number of shell companies—consulting firms, commercial real estate firms, business services organizations—into the pockets of high-powered surgeons, some of whom have their faces on billboards throughout Dallas-Fort Worth.

The 21 suspects include two of the four physician founders of the hospital chain, including Dr. Richard Toussaint, the anesthesiologist who is awaiting sentencing on a separate fraud conviction; and Wade Barker, the bariatric surgeon who helped develop the idea for Forest Park. Other early adopters indicted in the scheme include Wilton ‘Mac’ Burt, a consultant who helped run the chain’s affiliated management company until he and his colleague, Alan Beauchamp, were bought out in 2015. Beauchamp was also indicted.

But the bribery scheme sailed far outside the doors of Forest Park’s grey and blue flagship at the corner of U.S. 75 and Interstate 635. Also indicted were prominent bariatric surgeons Drs. David Kim and William Nicholson as well as the minimally invasive spine surgeons Drs. Michael Rimlawi, Douglas Won, and Shawn Henry. Won, the DOJ alleges, was paid $7 million for his referrals. Rimlawi is accused of accepting $3.8 million. The feds argue that Kim and Nicholson, both of whom were investors in Forest Park, were paid $4.595 million and $3.8 million respectively. Reads the indictment: “The surgeons spent the vast majority of the bribe payments marketing their personal medical practices—which benefitted them financially—or on personal expenses such as cars, diamonds, and payments to family members.”

In all, the feds say Forest Park collected “in excess of two hundred million dollars in tainted and unlawful claims.” None of those named in the indictment have returned requests for comment. Sheryl Zapata, the chief development officer for the Texas Back Institute where Nicholson currently practices, said “TBI is not a part of this and we will not be commenting.”

“Medical providers who enrich themselves through bribes and kickbacks are not only perverting our critical health care system, but they are committing a serious crime,” read a statement from U.S. Attorney John Parker. “Massive, multi-faceted schemes such as this one, built on illegal financial relationships, drive up the cost of healthcare for everyone and must be stopped.”

Forest Park Medical Center was a chain of luxury hospitals that sprouted in Dallas, Fort Worth, Southlake, Frisco, and San Antonio. One in Austin was built but never opened, kneecapped due to nearly two dozen construction liens.

The model collapsed in on itself due to its reliance on high out-of-network charges that it would bill to insurance companies. The payers eventually balked, and the patient volumes dried up. The hospitals died one by one, each eventually entering bankruptcy and sold off to a health system. Because they were physician owned, they were barred by the Affordable Care Act from billing any public health insurance plan, such as Medicare, for fear of conflicts of interest regarding referrals. And despite this, it twice had to settle claims with the DOJ for paying kickbacks for Tricare patients and Department of Labor employees. The indictment alleges that this is exactly what happened: Beauchamp, Barker, and Kim, among others, “also attempted to refer patients with lower-reimbursing insurance coverage, namely Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, to other facilities in exchange for cash.”

Editor’s Corner: A fraud scheme in a league of its own

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/antifraud/editor-s-corner-a-fraud-scheme-a-league-its-own?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiT1RWa01EQmxZV1l6WkdGbSIsInQiOiJnVitHTEdcL0c4M1JSOENxdGk2V0Q5U0ZQc3V6TFFDdEg4Y1VUWllWbVE3aVNwU2Y3QUpZdmE5aEE3ZEVRWGMyVk14V0YyUHR5MEZvMDByck9wVmFqXC9ib3pRZnNyb0lmM05sZXl1eVZJRjhBPSJ9

opioid

Earlier this month, authorities arrested Christopher Bathum, the self-described “rehab mogul” and founder of more than two dozen sober homes and outpatient drug treatment facilities in California and Colorado. Bathum was charged with fraudulently billing four different insurance companies more than $176 million.

According to a release by California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones, Bathum, the CEO of Community Recovery of Los Angeles (CRLA), and Kirsten Wallace, the company’s CFO, lured drug addicts to CRLA facilities, stole patient information in order to purchase health insurance policies without their consent, and then billed insurers for drug treatment services beyond what was provided.

Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Health Net and Humana paid the company $44 million before discovering the scheme. Bathum profited handsomely.

But the 50-count fraud complaint (PDF) against Bathum paled in comparison to the allegations contained in a separate lawsuit filed by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office. In that suit, Bathum was charged with sexually assaulting and raping female patients between 2013 and 2016, even going as far as to coerce recovering addicts with drugs.

The allegations against Bathum—who has pleaded not guilty to all charges—are a culmination of nearly a year’s worth of negative press for the rehab mogul. In December, LA Weekly wrote a lengthy feature on Bathum that included allegations from one former patient claiming Bathum sexually assaulted her. At that point, Bathum was also being investigated by city and state law enforcement agencies, along with “nearly every large insurance company in California,” according to LA Weekly.

Three more women have come forward since then, filing civil lawsuits accusing Bathum of sexual assault. In June, Bathum was the target of an hourlong 20/20 investigation that focused primarily on his relationship with several female patients. One woman described how Bathum sexually assaulted her in a cramped sweat lodge at a Malibu sober home. Another said Bathum took her to a seedy Malibu hotel where he overdosed on meth and heroin.

In both the LA Weekly story and the 20/20 special, Bathum repeatedly and categorically denied all of the allegations against him, including any insinuation that he had sexually assaulted female patients or used drugs. He blamed identity theft for the ambulance records linking him to an overdose. At one point he filed a libel lawsuit against LA Weekly’s parent company, which he later withdrew.

Victims Seek Payments As ‘Dr. Death’ Declares Innocence

http://khn.org/news/victims-seek-payments-as-dr-death-declares-innocence/

Farid Fata

Victims of “Dr. Death” had until this week to submit receipts for unnecessary chemotherapy, medical bills for liver damage and funeral expenses for their loved ones. By an initial count on Tuesday, 517 former patients and their families had filed claims against Farid Fata, the Detroit-area cancer doctor convicted of raking in over $17 million by poisoning patients with chemotherapy and other drugs they did not need.

Fata was branded by prosecutors as “the most egregious fraudster” in U.S. history for scamming Medicare and private insurers by giving at least 553 patients, some of whom did not have cancer, thousands of doses of unnecessary and expensive drugs. Now he insists he did nothing wrong. Breaking his silence in a jailhouse interview, Fata said victims claiming he killed loved ones or ruined their lives are misguided and that those who died were “going to die anyhow because of the nature of the diseases.”

Fata, nicknamed “Dr. Death” by his victims, is serving a 45-year sentence in a federal prison in South Carolina after pleading guilty to 13 counts of health care fraud, one count of conspiracy to pay or receive kickbacks and two counts of money laundering. He ran one of Michigan’s largest private cancer practices, with a network of clinics outside of Detroit, from 2005 to 2013.

The 51-year-old prisoner told Kaiser Health News he plans to speak in court at a Jan. 17 restitution hearing and declare his innocence. Fata said his guilty plea in 2014 came under duress, and he is preparing to seek freedom through a habeas corpus petition, by which a judge would determine if his detention is lawful.

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/physician-claims-innocence-after-admitting-he-administered-unnecessary-chemotherapy-to-patients.html

 

California Reforms Target Workers’ Compensation Fraud

California Reforms Target Workers’ Compensation Fraud

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California is cracking down on graft in the state’s system of medical care for injured workers with two bills recently signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The reforms will prohibit medical providers who are felons from billing for workers’ compensation care and rein in a court-governed payment system that gave rise to hundreds of millions of dollars in unsanctioned treatment.

Lawmakers who introduced the bills cited an investigation by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting that examined more than $1 billion in alleged fraud in the medical system for injured workers.

Reviewing more than a dozen prosecutions and analyzing state data, the investigation found that alleged scams affected more than 100,000 injured workers. Many were monolingual Latinos who were targeted in aggressive marketing efforts in Southern California. They encountered everything from kickback-fueled spinal surgeries to fraudulent providers to $1,600 tubes of pain cream.

Alleged scammers included felons and doctors banned from billing Medicare for malfeasance. Many fraud defendants exploited a feature of California’s workers’ compensations system that let them file a “lien,” or a demand for payment, for services after insurers refused to pay. They included therapies like shock wave pain treatments or unwanted drugs, such as the pricey pain creams.

The new laws would ban certain medical providers with troubled pasts from treating injured workers and also aim to limit the avalanche of liens that clog the docket in two dozen workers’ compensation courts throughout the state.

Christine Baker, director of the Department of Industrial Relations, which administers workers’ compensation, said she hopes the laws improve care for people who seek help for an on-the-job injury.

“I think both abuses and fraudulent activities prey on the most vulnerable populations and we’re hopeful that appropriate treatment will be provided to workers when needed,” Baker said. The laws “should reduce costs, because a lot of costs are tied to fraudulent activity, and that frees up dollars for the injured workers.”

Biggest healthcare frauds in 2016: Running list

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/slideshow/biggest-healthcare-frauds-2016-running-list?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWVRrMVl6UmtNek5qTURkaSIsInQiOiJ0Q2t5WUwzMm1TMDZaM0NrVU53eWtLWXIrb2tNUDBRZWhpNHRBb3VqWWh0blIzNUR2S1BlSVwveGFCTG9EYStDTFNTWjIrXC9LMmR4YU1DYXU3NVY1QUNoNUxDOW5zWVJVcjdvcFU2TW9vOU04PSJ9

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Brooklyn surgeon in Medicare billing scheme convicted of fraud, faces 40 years in prison

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/brooklyn-surgeon-convicted-medicare-fraud-faces-40-years-article-1.2731355

Dr. Syed Ahmed faces over 40 years in prison.

A Brooklyn surgeon is facing more than 40 years in prison after a federal jury convicted him of a massive Medicare fraud that included claims he’d performed 600 procedures on one person.

Dr. Syed Ahmed was found guilty of all six counts late Thursday night in Brooklyn Federal Court. The jury had deliberated about four hours.

Prosecutors alleged that Ahmed, a specialist in weight loss surgery and wound treatment, billed Medicare for over $7 million in procedures, many of which were not performed on patients, prosecutors alleged.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Patricia Notopoulos told the jury that Ahmed billed Medicare for 5,000 surgeries over a three-year period, including 600 alleged procedures on an elderly woman.