Saturday, March 25, 2017

Dear Medical Fraudsters

As people die from lack of health care here in the USA - and, that's ought to be a crime - I am especially incensed by health care fraud including bill padding. Please share your experience!

PERSONAL EXPERIENCE:

Ø     After my aunt’s death, my sister received receipts for medical services rendered after her death.
Ø     Some MD’s keep a list of all Medicare patients being seen by PA’s or MSN’s. Then, they look into the room, ask a brief question and bill Medicare for both the PA or the MSN and a physician consultation.
Ø     A clinic advertises a “Headache Clinic.” This consists of a neurologist and a “float nurse” – not even a HA specialist. The float nurse spends about an hour and 45 mins administering a questionnaire that could be filled out by the patient alone. The neurologist spends about 10 ministering administering a very simple neuro check – and, they bill $700.00. No technology involved. I challenged this bill, even though my insurance was paying, and got it reduced.
Ø     Doctors who prescribe antibiotics for viruses and then have patients come back for follow up – for the common cold.
Ø     Clinics have “quotas” – they want their doctors to see a certain number of patients/week.
Ø     Clinics give bonuses for doctors seeing the highest numbers of patients.
Ø     Clinics encouraging doctors to prescribe medication that require follow-up visits – such as narcotics.
Ø     Hip replacement patients were not purchasing the optional personal care items (which were unnecessary or could be bought less expensively at local stores) so the items were added to the room charge.
Ø     Patients are required to be seen by a PA or nurse who is unable to answer basic questions and must then also be seen by an MD. This should be a cost savings, but is used to “double book” or bad bills instead.
Ø     Doctors bill for every second of your time – even the time spent standing in the hall way.
Ø     Patients cannot compare costs between clinics because the billing is so complicated. Even when you are seeing a doctor for a simple reason and there will be no testing or technology involved, clinics claim that they cannot tell you in advance how much you will be charge.



What Does Health Care Fraud Look Like?

The majority of health care fraud is committed by a very small minority of dishonest health care providers. Sadly, the actions of these deceitful few ultimately serve to sully the reputation of perhaps the most trusted and respected members of our society-our physicians.

The most common types of fraud committed by dishonest providers include:

Ø      Billing for services that were never rendered-either by using genuine patient information, sometimes obtained through identity theft, to fabricate entire claims or by padding claims with charges for procedures or services that did not take place.

Ø      Billing for more expensive services or procedures than were actually provided or performed, commonly known as "upcoding"-i.e., falsely billing for a higher-priced treatment than was actually provided (which often requires the accompanying "inflation" of the patient's diagnosis code to a more serious condition consistent with the false procedure code).

Ø      Performing medically unnecessary services solely for the purpose of generating insurance payments-seen very often in nerve-conduction and other diagnostic-testing schemes.

Ø      Misrepresenting non-covered treatments as medically necessary covered treatments for purposes of obtaining insurance payments-widely seen in cosmetic-surgery schemes, in which non-covered cosmetic procedures such as "nose jobs" are billed to patients' insurers as deviated-septum repairs.

Ø      Falsifying a patient's diagnosis to justify tests, surgeries or other procedures that aren't medically necessary.

Ø      Unbundling - billing each step of a procedure as if it were a separate procedure.

Ø      Billing a patient more than the co-pay amount for services that were prepaid or paid in full by the benefit plan under the terms of a managed care contract.

Ø      Accepting kickbacks for patient referrals.

Ø      Waiving patient co-pays or deductibles for medical or dental care and over-billing the insurance carrier or benefit plan (insurers often set the policy with regard to the waiver of co-pays through its provider contracting process; while, under Medicare, routinely waiving co-pays is prohibited and may only be waived due to "financial hardship").

https://www.nhcaa.org/resources/health-care-anti-fraud-resources/the-challenge-of-health-care-fraud.aspx

 

Medicare Funds Totaling $60 Billion Improperly Paid, Report Finds:  http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/medicare-funds-totaling-60-billion-improperly-paid-report/story?id=32604330


What's the Problem?

Health care fraud perpetrators steal billions of dollars each year from Federal and State governments, from American taxpayers, and some of our country’s most vulnerable citizens. Fraud drives up the costs for everyone in the health care system, in addition to hurting the long term solvency of the Federal health care programs, like Medicare and Medicaid, upon which millions of Americans depend.
Health care fraud can occur in many ways. One example is when an insurer (e.g., Medicare or a private health care insurance company) is intentionally billed for services or supplies that were never provided. Other examples of fraud include, but are not limited to the following:
·                     A health care provider bills for services or supplies (e.g., home health services, diabetic supplies, hospital visits, exams) that were never provided
·                     A health care provider bills an insurer for services or treatments that are medically unnecessary and, in some cases, potentially even harmful to the patient (e.g. power wheelchairs, therapy sessions, ambulance transports)
·                     Patients’ insurance numbers are stolen and sold to criminal organizations and then used to bill for health care services, supplies, or equipment that were not necessary or never provided
·                     A health care provider is paid bribes to refer patients for services and treatments which may be medically unnecessary or substandard (e.g. mental health services, physical therapy)
·                     An insured individual sharing their health insurance information with someone else so that the uninsured person can obtain health care services under the insured’s name.



TEN COMMON HEALTH CARE PROVIDER FRAUD SCHEMES  

Ø     Billing for services not rendered.
Ø     Billing for a non-covered service as a covered service.
Ø     Misrepresenting dates of service.
Ø     Misrepresenting locations of service.
Ø     Misrepresenting provider of service.
Ø     Waiving of deductibles and/or co-payments.
Ø     Incorrect reporting of diagnoses or procedures (includes unbundling).
Ø     Overutilization of services.
Ø     Corruption (kickbacks and bribery).
Ø     False or unnecessary issuance of prescription drugs.



HEALTH CARE FRAUD:

When a health care fraud is perpetrated, the health care provider passes the costs along to its customers. Because of the pervasiveness of health care fraud, statistics now show that 10 cents of every dollar spent on health care goes toward paying for fraudulent health care claims.




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