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AP/ January 25, 2011, 10:19 AM

$4 Billion of Medicare Fraud Recovered in 2010

Flickr user Bare Dreamer

MIAMI - Federal health officials announced new security measures Monday to combat Medicare fraud, including tougher screenings for providers and the ability to withhold payments during investigations.

Authorities recovered $4 billion in health care fraud judgments last year - a record high up 50 percent from 2009 - according to a new report.

Authorities have long said the solution to solving the nation's estimated $60 billion to $90 billion a year Medicare fraud problem lies in vigorously screening providers and stopping payment to suspicious ones, ending the antiquated "pay and chase" system authorities say has kept them one step behind criminals.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius touted the Affordable Care Act as one of the toughest anti-fraud laws in history.

"The days when you could just hang out a shingle and start billing the government are over," she said.

Sebelius and Attorney General Eric Holder forged a partnership in 2009 to target fraud hot spots around the country with teams of investigators and prosecutors.

Sebelius said new technology will help authorities view Medicare claims data closer to real time and flag suspicious patterns. More comprehensive background checks, including possibly fingerprinting providers, may also follow. The agency gets roughly 18,000 applications a month to become Medicare providers. Now it can put a moratorium on new applications in certain areas, like physical therapy, if it notices a spike in fraudulent activities.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has come under fire for lax screening as news reports surfaced of criminals with violent records, including a convicted murderer, obtaining Medicare supplier licenses. Applicants with felony records can only be rejected if their convictions are 10 years old or less.

By the time officials catch on to suspicious billing patterns, crooks typically dump that provider ID and open a new one, or flee the country. Violent criminals and mobsters are also getting involved, seeing Medicare fraud as more lucrative than dealing drugs and having less severe criminal penalties, officials said. The Affordable Care Act will increase the penalties for Medicare fraud.

Assistant FBI director Kevin Perkins also acknowledged the mob's involvement in Medicare fraud Monday and said the FBI has ramped up efforts to assist in task forces and undercover investigations. The agency investigated a record 2,600 Medicare fraud cases in 2010 and helped dismantle more than 60 fraudulent companies.

Scams that once bilked $1 million or $2 million from Medicare a decade ago have also morphed into sophisticated multimillion dollar networks involving doctors, patient recruiters and patients.

"Prosecutions are not the solution to the problem of fraud," said Miami U.S. Attorney Willy Ferrer. Miami is ground zero for Medicare fraud, racking up around $3 billion a year.

"The best way to prevent fraud in the first place is to close loopholes that allow the fraud to occur on the front end," he said.

In fiscal 2010, HHS inspector general excluded 3,340 from being health care providers, according to the report.

The Medicare fraud strike force filed charges against nearly 300 defendants who collectively billed the Medicare program more than $590 million in 2010, including the largest takedown in Medicare fraud history in July. The busts, carried out in Miami, New York City, Detroit, Houston and Baton Rouge, La., netted 94 suspects - including several doctors and nurses - charged in scams totaling $251 million.

Authorities expanded the strike force last year to Brooklyn, Baton Rouge, and Tampa, Fla., for a total of seven cities in the U.S.

On Monday, authorities attributed the record number of recovered funds to stepped up initiatives from HHS and Department of Justice and increased number of whistle blowers from the corporate world. Whistle-blowers received about $300 million in 2010.

The bulk of the recovered funds came from pharmaceutical companies.

In August 2010, Allergan, Inc. agreed to pay $600 million for promoting Botox for headaches and other pain that hadn't been approved by the FDA. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation also agreed to a $422.5 million settlement for the illegal marketing.

"Consumers should have treatment that is not tainted by kickbacks, not influenced by misleading marketing schemes and not made more expensive by a fraudster's desires to put profits over patients," Associate Attorney General Tom Perrelli said.
AP
14 Comments Add a Comment
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6591Hou says:
"Authorities recovered $4 billion in health care fraud judgments last year - a record high up 50 percent from 2009 - according to a new report."

So over a two year period they've recovered $6B.....where did that money go?

"Authorities have long said the solution to solving the nation's estimated $60 billion to $90 billion a year Medicare fraud problem lies in vigorously screening providers.....The agency gets roughly 18,000 applications a month to become Medicare providers."

How do you "vigorously" screen 18,000 applications a month? And for how long has this been a "$60-90B" a year fraud problem?

"Assistant FBI director Kevin Perkins also acknowledged the mob's involvement in Medicare fraud Monday and said the FBI has ramped up efforts to assist in task forces and undercover investigations. The agency investigated a record 2,600 Medicare fraud cases in 2010 and helped dismantle more than 60 fraudulent companies."

So 2,600 fraud cases were investigated, 18k new applications every month, $60-90B a year in fraud waste and abuse...... Clean this stuff up and you've paid for universal healthcare.
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6591Hou replies:
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MarineVet64 - You're jumping on the wrong bandwagon, I didn't say anything even remotely politically partisan (which of course you always do) - and TARP has absolutely nothing to do with the government running an efficient program and stopping the fraud.
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tsigili says:
That's just the tip of the iceberg, on Medicare fraud. I guarantee it.
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Mikey_Mo says:
They make billions, get a fine in the millions, and keep being allowed to continue, is the real fraud and scam.
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tallturtle says:
BRING BACK THE LIFE AT HARD LABOR SENTENCE AND A BUNCH OF THIS WILL STOP. WHY DO WE TREAT TERRORIST WITH TORTURE BEFORE TRIAL AND FEED AND SHELTER AMERICANS WHO TERRORIZE THE TAX PAYER?
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brnfream says:
Medicare and Medicaid fraud has bee rampant for years. This is another example of how inept our government is. Now they want to CUT medicare. It is thier fault the the Medicare system APPEARS to be costly. It is not. CRIME is COSTLY. Futhermore, policing the medicare and medicaid should not be part of a healthcare bill. (the healthcare bill should not exist) It should be part of the DOJ. It is criminal. REPEAL the AFORDABLE HEALTHCARE ACT. It is not.
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nasadawg replies:
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It is fun they can defraud this system and I go through hell at the DMV. Let the DMV run it.
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cattiej says:
There is a lot of Medicare fraud here in Illinois. I have been in the medical field for many years, am retired now, but it used to make me made that people drove new cars, had fancy expensive clothes and jewelry, cellphones, the kids were dressed in expensive clothes, shoes. All of these people were on Medicaid. Most we not married to the children's father or mother. Many had never had a job. Well, to me the $1 Buck stops here. Take these people off the medicaid rolls, the food stamp program (aka as free drug money) and any other government program. Let their churches, the family and their neighbors take care of them and then maybe they can get up the guts to Get A Job. People come to Illinois from other states because the rules are so lacks..no wonder our state is bankrupt. I wish I could get out of here but this is where my husband was born and he is ill so here I am and here I will be until I can get out of Illinois.
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retm-w says:
When are they going to go after the rest that are defrauding the government, the defense contrators would be a good start.
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Birdman04 says:
Hell it is a start. Go after the crooks stealing from us.
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babooph says:
Wow,the crooked ins industry,with its overseas "reward" method of paying a % of denied claims must be 100x greater than 4 billion-God save US healthcare...
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Jaylah54 says:
And $4 billion was probably somewhere around 1% of the actual fraud against Medicare in 2010.
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