Healthcare services have been on the rise for over 10 years now. According to a 2012 consumer alert, the industry provided $2.26 trillion in payments for more than four billion health insurance benefit claims in the year 2011(Fraud in Health Care). The bulk of the claims and the mainstream of fraud and abuse stem from the Medicare system professionals, who are knowledgeable about the process and persuade new clients into handing over their pertinent information in hopes of deception and illegitimate claims. Multiple and double billing, fraudulent prescriptions, are some of the major flaws in this organization that has made the healthcare services industry curdle. (AGHAEGBUNA, 2011) This is a non-violet crime and is often committed by very …show more content…
Employees who have access to ERH modules and billing modules in a provider entity could be able to enter fraudulent encounters, generate billing, and then delete documented encounter data. (Fraud in Health Care) 2010. Forged prescriptions Fraudulent prescriptions are also on the rise. Physicians are writing illegal prescriptions that are billed for a claim for reimbursement, but have yet to see a bill of rendered services that called for the actual prescription. This often ends up happening to a patient who has little or no medical issues and has never been seen before. The provider who receives the forged prescription profits an anticipated amount of 15% to $20% in profits. (AGHAEGBUNA ,2011). There are four types of fraud that healthcare providers’ organization face. Patient fraud, provider employee fraud, provider billing fraud and payer fraud, even though providers need to receive payment for their service they should be more preventative action in place to ensure that these fraudulent activities can be detected. Fighting Fraud According to the new law the OIG’s effectiveness will be detecting fraud and abuse by expanding access to and uses of data for conducting oversight and law enforcement activities, including data-matching agreements between agencies. (Gatty, 2010). The HHA will establish procedures for screening providers and suppliers participating in Medicare, Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurances program to prevent
In the health care business, there are certain standards and laws that have been put in place to protect our patients and their personal health information. When a health care facility fails to protect their patient’s confidential information, the US Government may get involved and facilities may be forced to pay huge sums of money in fines, and risk damaging their reputation.
On November 21, 2013, Theanna Khou pleaded guilty to dispensing and selling OxyContin from his Huntington Pharmacy without medical necessity from fraudulent prescriptions issued by a clinic (" Health care fraud investigations," 2014). Khou billed Medicare for filling prescriptions that patients never received. This story is becoming a norm for the health care industry, because the growing financial prosperity of the health industry. Corruption and crime is changing, turning from drug dealing to a safer haven that has less legal management, organization, and more wherewithal the business of health care fraud.
Health care fraud and abuse is a significant contributor to high health care spending, resulting in the wasteful spending of health care dollars. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association (NHCAA) estimates that 3 to 10 percent of health care dollars are lost to fraud and abuse (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2010). Fraud is the intentional deception or misrepresentation that an individual knows to be false or does not believe to be true and makes, knowing that the deception could result in some unauthorized benefit to themselves or some other person (Ryan, 2006). Bloomberg reports health care expenditures are rising faster than the rate of inflation and spending in the US has nearly doubled in the last decade and one-half of health care
The goal of this deception is to obtain a federal healthcare payment that would not otherwise exist. The provider, practice, or institution may falsely claim to have provided a service or used supplies for a patient when in reality neither the service nor the supplies were used. A secondary way to commit Medicare fraud involves referrals. If one solicits, pays, or accepts money to encourage referrals because the services are reimbursed by Federal healthcare programs, they are participating in Medicare fraud. This type of fraud is addressed in the Anti-Kickback Statute. Lastly, Medicare fraud occurs when the complexity of services are overstated and billed at a higher than necessary rate. This action violates the False Claims Act which protects the government from being excessively charged for goods and services.
As anyone can see, health care fraud is a huge issue in the United States and with the upcoming nationalized health care system finally going into effect this year, more opportunities
It is easy to see how fraudulent medical billing is having a major impact on the Unites States and the citizens of this country who rely on it on a daily basis. We often hear through the various new sources in this country, on the internet or out of the mouths of politicians and experts in the healthcare field about the failing healthcare system in this country. We often hear many different opinions on what needs to be done to fix our healthcare problem within this country and fix what looks to be a very broken system at this point. No matter what the solution to our poor healthcare system is one thing that is very clear is that healthcare fraud and abuse is playing a major role in the depletion of money in this country and the rise in healthcare costs for the citizens of this country.
Health insurance fraud is what drives up health insurance premium costs, wastes taxpayer’s money, but can also endanger beneficiaries or leave them uninsurable. In 2015, Medicare Strike Force reported over $700 million in false billing by doctors, nurses, other licenses medical professionals, laboratories, and individuals (FBI.gov). This is a staggering figure that is only getting worse. In this fictitious federal case I will be describing the criminal offender, the crime that was committed, the charge handed down by law enforcement, and the judicial process from the beginning of the criminal case to the sentencing of Dr. Richard Heartman, an internal medicine physician.
The way that the Medicare system is set up makes it easy for people to commit fraud. The program was originally set up on a honor system. This system
As the Chief Nursing Officer of the state’s largest Obstetric Health Care Center, this author is responsible for complaints regarding fraudulent behavior in the center. The purpose of this report is to (1) evaluate how the Healthcare Qui tam affects health care organizations, (2) provide four examples of Qui Tam cases that exist in a variety of health care organizations, (3) devise a procedure for admission into a health care facility that upholds the law about the required number of Medicare and Medicaid referrals, (4) recommend a corporate integrity program that will
Medical fraud and abuse is a huge contributing factor in the rise of healthcare costs in the United States. Although there are many definitions of fraud and abuse, according to Cigna and HIPPA, Medical fraud is false representation of a substance, device or therapeutic system as being beneficial in treating a medical condition, diagnosing a disease, or maintaining a state of health. Medical Abuse is defined as any action that intentionally harms or injures another person. It also involves actions that are inconsistent with accepted, sound medical, business or fiscal practices. Abuse directly or indirectly results in unnecessary costs to medical programs through improper payments. Insurance fraud occurs when companies
Some of the key types of Medicare fraud are as follows: Incorrect billing, phantom billing, false certification, inappropriate services, bribing patients, charging for equipment and supplies which are never supplied, double billing involves charging for more than once for the same service, code jamming and upcoding.
(Jones and Jing) Though citizens might not see the effects of health care fraud directly, everyone is impacted in one way or another either through increased taxes, high insurance costs, or the inability to afford health care coverage. While we all hear about major frauds in the system, a majority of the frauds are small and usually go through undetected, unreported, or seriously underreported. (Sparrow) These small frauds add up to be a huge problem. There is a large spectrum of frauds in the health-care systems ranging from the theft of a wheelchair, to organized crime groups that steal patient information and bill for phantom services in multimillion-dollar schemes. (Jones and Jing) In many cases, the fraud is minor but all the small scams add up to an enormous loss to the public. For example, the frequent occurrences of forging of a doctor’s signature on a prescription accounts for billions of dollars lost each year. (Jones and Jing) One of the most common crimes involves billing for services that were never performed. This involves a health care provider submitting a false claim to be paid for a patient that was never treated or adding on services to a patient. For example a doctor may obtain names of other people such as a patients spouse or child who are covered by insurance and put in a claim for them as well as the actual patient. (FBI) Another common fraudulent activity involves upcoding of services. This is when a healthcare
We see Medicare claims data; there’s great visibility there, a little less for Medicaid. But we don’t see cash-based transactions and other transactions like that, which the PDNPs would include—we think it’s vital for prescribers and pharmacists to check PDNPs to ensure they are not dispensing to doctor-shopping patients. And we look for ways to share info across the federal government, states, and the private sector. We shared our approach to our analysis as well as underlying data with Private Sector Integrity Partners who we work with through the Health Care Fraud Prevention Partnership and the National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association. They’re empowered to conduct their own analysis, monitor these individuals, and hopefully have a broader
Although Congress has used several anti-fraud measures to protect the federal government health care programs, the False Claims Act of 1986 has become the main weapon that government prosecutors use against perpetrators of health care fraud. Designed to prevent fraud and other abuses in federal government programs, the False Claims Act has been the primary statute the government has used in its fight against health care fraud. However, government prosecutors do not rely on one statute in their prosecution of alleged cases of health care fraud. Instead, they rely on a combination of statutes, but the False Claims Act has emerged as the main statutory weapon.
The crimes that occur in the healthcare setting are; health care identity theft, fraud, falsification of records, misuse and theft of drugs, patient abuse and murder. Healthcare identity theft is when someone or a group of people who hack into medical systems or pay to have someone get private information so that they can then use the information to bill falsely for services not rendered. Fraud according to Pozgar (2014) is: