Aug. 8, 2008

Whistle Blown On Medicare Scam

Taxpayers Get Refund From A Big Provider Accused Of Padding The Bill

  • Play CBS Video Video Medicare Fraud Whistleblowers

    Health company Kyphon has been accused of overcharging Medicare by forcing osteoporosis patients to stay overnight in hospitals for a simple one-hour procedure. Sharyl Attkisson investigates.

  • Video Eye To Eye: Medicare Fraud

    Sharyl Attkisson speaks with two former employees of Kyphon Inc., a company accused of overcharging Medicare by forcing osteoporosis patients to stay overnight in a hospital for a simple procedure.

    • Though the two men never met, Chuck Bates and Craig Patrick ended up taking their stories to the Justice Department, which began a fraud investigation.

      Though the two men never met, Chuck Bates and Craig Patrick ended up taking their stories to the Justice Department, which began a fraud investigation.  (CBS)

    • Kyphoplasty can be done in about an hour without putting the patient to sleep.

      Kyphoplasty can be done in about an hour without putting the patient to sleep.  (CBS)

    Previous slide Next slide
(CBS)  For people with osteoporosis, a painful bone disease, a simple medical device can help. Doctors use it to inject bone filler and repair tiny fractures.

The procedure, called kyphoplasty, can be done in about an hour without putting the patient to sleep.

But Kyphon, the company that made the device, stood to make a lot more money if patients were admitted to the hospital for expensive overnight stays, reports CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson.

"Were you aware that patients could get up sometimes an hour later and walk out?" Attkisson asks Chuck Bates, who was a top sales manager for Kyphon.

"I was aware of that," Bates says. " … the sales people were going out to hospitals and to surgeons saying, 'You need to do this as inpatient.'"

"Which was unnecessary?" Attkisson asks.

"Which was unnecessary," Bates says.

As an outpatient procedure, Medicare would pay about $1,000 for kyphoplasty. But as an inpatient procedure, Medicare paid up to $10,000 -- your tax dollars.

Kyphon's net sales skyrocketed. The sales force was rolling in dough.

"As a salesman, you were making a lot of money," Attkisson says.

"The average sales rep made $220,000 a year," Bates says.

But the good times came crashing down when Bates found out through a hospital consultant that it's improper under Medicare to admit patients for what should be outpatient surgery. He felt he had to act.

"I mean, as a sales person, you love to make money, but you want to make money ethically," Bates says.

Around the same time, in an entirely different division of Kyphon, Craig Patrick was also raising red flags internally. One day, while briefing his superiors, Patrick says a top Kyphon official cut him off.

"In the middle of the presentation, the general counsel stopped and says, 'It's not your job to police the sales force,'" Patrick says.

"So the head lawyer of the company was telling you this?" Attkisson asks.

"Absolutely. I told him I understood what my job was, but we were breaking the law every day, and we needed to fix it," Patrick says.

Though the two men never met, they both ended up taking their stories to the Justice Department, which began a fraud investigation.

Kyphon recently settled the case, admitting no wrongdoing, but paying taxpayers back $75 million. Under whistleblower law, Bates and Patrick get to split $14 million.

A company called Metronic bought Kyphon last fall for nearly $4 billion and told us the whistleblower concerns were investigated thoroughly and appropriate action was taken.

When Kyphon was sold, the executives got major payouts. That top lawyer who Patrick says told him to keep quiet reportedly received $14 million cash, which goes to show that kyphoplasty was good for patients and corporate executives, but it was taxpayers left feeling the pain.


©MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by metamorph2_0 August 11, 2008 5:58 PM EDT
Show me one patient that thinks they should not have had an inpatient stay with a collapsed spine. Perhpas the whistleblower also saw a fast path to some money as he was tired of working in sales. The truth and what is ethical get''s lost. WOuld it be ethical to not allow a peron to rest after having a procedure to correct a collapsed spine and have them have to drive themselves home from an outpatient clinic?
Reply to this comment
by babycake6440 August 11, 2008 2:50 AM EDT
you wanna talk about medicare fraud, go to some little small towns in louisiana and you will see medicade fraud, the docters are making a killing off of just colds, pain . they go to the er and say i hurt my toe its bruised they get put in the hospital and get their fix they mybe in there a week. go for their weekly check-up right back in the hospital .direct admited. thats what you call medicade fraud. louisiana hospitals and doctors need to be invesgated.
Reply to this comment
by phlashlite August 11, 2008 2:28 AM EDT
Great question someone asked... Why isn''t the general counsel going to jail instead of collecting 14 mil?!?

Let''s see, you can steal millions in taxpayer dollars and prosecutors will cut you a deal where not only do you not go to jail, you get to enjoy the fruits of your criminal activity and you don''t have to admit any wrongdoing... while the taxpayers get fleeced.

Contrast this with the jail time someone would get for possession of a couple of grams of marijuana (which is not nearly as harmful as alcohol). Is our justice system out of whack or what?
Reply to this comment
by phlashlite August 11, 2008 2:27 AM EDT
Great question someone asked... Why isn''t the general counsel going to jail instead of collecting 14 mil?!?

Let''s see, you can steal millions in taxpayer dollars and prosecutors will cut you a deal where not only do you not go to jail, you get to enjoy the fruits of your criminal activity and you don''t have to admit any wrongdoing... while the taxpayers get fleeced.

Contrast this with the jail time someone would get for possession of a couple of grams of marijuana (which is not nearly as harmful as alcohol). Is our justice system out of whack or what?
Reply to this comment
by terrorislamw August 10, 2008 4:39 AM EDT
CHINA STINKS,,,

ALWAYS HAS,,, ALWAYS WILL,,,

the U.S. government has warned Americans against muggings, beatings and even carjackings, especially in the nightlife and shopping districts of large cities.
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage August 9, 2008 11:47 PM EDT
Posted by terrorislamv at 07:12 PM : Aug 09, 2008
---------------------
It''s nice to see that CBS doesn''t discriminate against mentally insane rightwing nutjobs! But, maybe they SHOULD!

terrorislamv, you moron, stop posting your B.S. non-topical comments on every story on this site!

We''re tired of your B.S.! Go conduct your jihad against Americans and freedom somewhere else!
Reply to this comment
by element51 August 9, 2008 8:31 PM EDT
So here we have a company that got caught. That''s good. But what will happen? Nothing. Maybe a little fine but that''s about it. Lawyers will make a small fortune getting these people off but there won''t be any real recovery of taxpayer money. And this is only one of thousands of rip-offs that are going on every day. In an earlier post someone spoke of the need for regulation. They are right. This all goes back to Ronald Reagan when he came into office and began to de-regulate everything. Once the regulations were gone it opened the floodgates and look where it has gotten us. We have released the wolves and allowed ourselves to become the prey. We must demand that congress bring some sanity back into government but the chances of that are slim and none.
Reply to this comment
by demwatcher August 9, 2008 7:52 PM EDT
"Kyphon, a Republican company said......

Posted by nextGenMan at 10:30 AM : Aug 09, 2008"

Records show a lot of Libs in there.
Reply to this comment
by legacyabq August 9, 2008 4:22 PM EDT
oops, my apologies. I thought you were nuts. You mean the Barbary Wars, I wasn''t reading closely enuff. Still, what does that have to do with Medicaid scams?
Kind of ranting a little, aren''t you?

Still, since the wars you refer to actually exist, I retract my opinion of your schizo-affective disorder, in leiu of new evidence! LOL, sorry, just kidding around
: )
Reply to this comment
by legacyabq August 9, 2008 4:17 PM EDT
terorislamv:

I think you should start taking your medication again. You are hyper-manic, and possibly schizoid.
And by the way, Jefferson and Madison lived and died 150 years before the world wars, to which you seem to refer, though it''s hard to tell. perhaps you mean the war of 1812? Either way: *** ?!?
Reply to this comment
by wogerwabbit August 9, 2008 3:33 PM EDT
Posted by terrorislamv at 08:44 AM : Aug 09, 2008

Hey man, go post your useless drivel in a more appropriate article... give us a break from your incessant jabbering.
Reply to this comment
by stevenga777 August 9, 2008 3:27 PM EDT
NBC blacksout Olympic ceremony in America - American fans angered
Aug 8, 4:32 pm EDT

Buzz Up Print
NEW YORK (AFP) - The rest of the world might have been dazzled by the Beijing Olympic opening ceremony but angry US viewers clamoring for a glimpse of the spectacle on Friday were made to wait after a media blackout.

US network NBC, which owns exclusive rights to Olympics coverage in the United States, refrained from showing the opening ceremony live, preferring instead to delay coverage by 12 hours for a prime-time evening slot.

A spokesman for NBC, which paid nearly 900 million dollars for Olympic broadcast rights, said the decision was taken to maximize viewing figures.

"It''''s a business decision," the spokesman told AFP. "It protects our affiliates, our advertisers, and shows it to the largest number of viewers possible," he added.

Bizarrely, the co-hosts of NBC''''s breakfast television show barely mentioned the ongoing ceremony during their broadcast, which was reportedly pre-taped.
Reply to this comment
by mcdonaj3 August 9, 2008 2:50 PM EDT
Just another example of a huge Federal program with poor oversight. One can only imagine how much fraud there will be with the sub-prime mortgage bailout.
Reply to this comment
by dannbetty August 9, 2008 2:48 PM EDT
The whistleblowers split 14 million and the crooked attorney gets 14 million, These scams against the people of this country need to tried as treason with severe penalty.
Reply to this comment
by nextgenman August 9, 2008 1:30 PM EDT
Kyphon, a Republican company said......
Reply to this comment
by tootall10142 August 9, 2008 1:13 PM EDT
GREED IS HAVING ITS LUNCH. THE DESERT IS BITTER SWEET!
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 August 9, 2008 11:07 AM EDT

To quote an old saying, ''''the business of business is business''''. In other words, they''''re in it to make money. We all know that, and there is nothing wrong with that, per se.

But the opportunity to make even MORE money, especially when you think that no one is looking over your shoulder, can often lead to simple GREED, as exemplified by this story and so many others like it.

Business, in and of itself is NOT a bad thing. However, business without a watchdog can easily become a thief.

It is for this very reason that history has shown that regulation is an absolute necessity in order to keep corporations honest.

Complete deregulation is a fraud and I would be suspicious of any business that fights any form of regulation.

Posted by ofbyfor1
----------------------

Best post of the day.

Reply to this comment
by omnibus66 August 9, 2008 10:54 AM EDT
Fraud and overcharging are rampant in the medical industry, and this Congress and administration have shown little or no inclination to do anything about it.

Witness the massive, highly obscene ripoff of tax dollars provided to the drug companies under the Medicare Prescription Drug Plan passed by Congress and signed by Bush. Bought and paid for by the drug lobby.

Let''s hope that a new president an new Congress will actually turn a deaf ear to the lobbyists and do what is right for a change. But don''t hold your breath.

Also a note to the Obama haters posting here. This is an article about Medicare fraud, not presidential politics. TAKE YOUR HATE-MONGERING SOMEPLACE ELSE!
Reply to this comment
by imprisonkarl August 9, 2008 10:41 AM EDT
The media acts like this is a secret -- Big Pharma et. al ripping off Medicare.

Hellllooooo! Medicare was designed to fail, from its inception.

The Rethuglicans never wanted it, and set up all kinds of obstacles to ensure that it would fail. The inability to negotiate for lower drug prices and little to no oversight were just two of the many, many loopholes designed to weaken and eventually destroy the program. Duhhhhh.

But of course, the gutless wonders in the MSM rarely mention that.
Reply to this comment
by ofbyfor1 August 9, 2008 10:20 AM EDT
Corporations have no heart or soul, and they simply can''''t be trusted. They HAVE to be regulated and watched constantly.

Posted by DaShortRound at 01:56 AM : Aug 09, 2008

To quote an old saying, ''the business of business is business''. In other words, they''re in it to make money. We all know that, and there is nothing wrong with that, per se.

But the opportunity to make even MORE money, especially when you think that no one is looking over your shoulder, can often lead to simple GREED, as exemplified by this story and so many others like it.

Business, in and of itself is NOT a bad thing. However, business without a watchdog can easily become a thief.

It is for this very reason that history has shown that regulation is an absolute necessity in order to keep corporations honest.

Complete deregulation is a fraud and I would be suspicious of any business that fights any form of regulation.
Reply to this comment
See all 38 Comments
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