Where There's Money There Are Crooks
There was the scam in which Medicaid and Medicare patients were billed, monthly, for wheelchairs they never got or didn’t need. There was the phony program to provide liquid food, like Ensure, to undernourished elderly – except it turns out most people didn’t get the delivery and many of them were dead. Last summer there was a fraud plot afoot that provided Medicare patients with “arthritis kits.” In reality, the kits were nothing more than a heating pad and joint braces and many patients reported they never even received them. No matter, the criminals billed the government up to 4 thousand dollars for each kit.
Exploiting the Government Maze
You and I paid that fraudulent tab and many more just like it.
How much is this kind of criminal activity costing us? The Associated Press recently described it this way: “Improper payments – in the wrong amounts, to the wrong person or for the wrong reason – totaled an estimated $54 billion in 2009. They range from simple errors such as duplicate billing to elaborate schemes operated by fraudsters peddling everything from wheelchairs to hospice care.”
This makes me cringe. We lost 54 billion dollars last year to criminal schemes?! There must be a special place in hell for those who would prey upon the sick and elderly, especially at a time when our health care system – our whole economy – is in such crisis.
It’s not as though local, state and federal agents aren’t out there diligently trying to right the criminal’s wrongs. Every year well coordinated task force stings are staged in cities across the country – Miami, Houston, Detroit, Los Angeles to name just a few – but still the losses mount.
Bounty Hunters NOT named Dog
President Obama now wants to deploy an army of so-called high-tech “bounty hunter auditors” to root out waste, fraud and abuse within the government’s health insurance programs. Sounds like a great idea to me – if it works.
We’re told the auditor’s weapons will be sophisticated new computer programs to scan Medicare and Medicaid billing records nationwide to check for patterns of bogus claims. And like the early bounty hunters of the old West these modern day crime fighters will get to keep a percentage of what they recoup for taxpayers. It seems like a win-win idea. Pilot programs in California, New York and Texas over the last three years re-captured 900 million dollars that would have otherwise gone into the crook’s pockets.
The White House says these private auditors could recover least $2 billion of our tax dollars over the next three years. That’s a significant savings, to be sure, but it also seems like a drop in our 54 billion dollar bucket of losses.
So how did we get to the place where we allowed annual losses of 54 billion dollars? In part it happened because prosecuting these types of fraud cases can be slippery.
First, the government has to hinge its prosecution on how “appropriate” the medical care was. As we all know expert witnesses are for hire to testify to just about any position needed. Sometimes it’s just easier for prosecutors to plea down the charge and hope the criminal gets scared straight.
Second, there are graduating levels of laws that can be applied. Some of them call for harsh punishment for each
Let's Open Our Eyes to Fraud!
transgression, that is, for each patient who’s been taken advantage of in the commission of the fraud. But many other anti-fraud Medicaid and Medicare laws call for fines as low as 10 thousand dollars and sentences of up to just five years in jail. That’s not much of a deterrent for a seasoned fraudster who rakes in hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars and then quickly pulls up stakes to move on to the next new scam in the next location. The odds are in the crooks favor.
I’m thinking it’s time for the legal penalties to catch up with the severity and breadth of the crimes currently being committed. At the very least it’s time for prosecutors to agree to fewer plea bargains and for judges to dole out the harshest possible sentences for those who prey upon our weakest citizens and our good intentions to help the sick.
If the nation’s security is dependent on a healthy economy then maybe we should start to look at Medicaid and Medicare fraud as a threat to national security – a sort of treasonous act. Treason carries a penalty of life in prison.
Okay, I’ll just settle for a mandatory 20 years, with no possibility of early release, to get these creeps off the street.



{ 12 comments… read them below or add one }
DD web site reader Matt Bruce writes:
“GREAT article! I posted it on my News Sarasota Google Group! Thanks so much for sharing…
Thanks, ‘Matt’
Managing Editor
News Sarasota.com
Facebook Friend Tina Yamashiro
“Medicare and Medi-cal never proformed audits on many companies who happened to pop up all over. These companies focused on the elderly…for ex: Diabetic test machines, electric wheel chairs, physical therapy items and etc. Many doctors are to blame also. I remember (when I worked in a doctor’s office) when I was young how doctors were always giving out to seniors, sleeping pills, pain pills, happy pills,..unnecessary tests to bill medicare and medi-cal. Now, who will take the burden? Seniors and children. Someone’s not doing their job right. Why so many health care fraud…who’s to blame..Government agencies who approve payments in the first place. “
In 90% of time there is no necessary reason to do a monthly med check on a nursing home resident taking psychoactive drugs. But this is routine by psychiatrists and their PAs and ARNPs. Further, the drugs they tend to prescribe (e.g., Seroquel, Risperdal, Cymbalta, Lexapro, are quite expensive and there are much less expensive generics.)
Facebook Friend Tina Yamashiro
“Medicare and Medi-cal never performed audits on many companies who happened to pop up all over. These companies focused on the elderly…for ex: Diabetic test machines, electric wheel chairs, physical therapy items and etc. Many doctors are to blame also. I remember (when I worked in a doctor’s office) when I was young how doctors were always giving out to seniors, sleeping pills, pain pills, happy pills,..unnecessary tests to bill medicare and medi-cal. Now, who will take the burden? Seniors and children. Someone’s not doing their job right. Why so many health care fraud…who’s to blame..Government agencies who approve payments in the first place. “
Facebook Friend Peter Shams-Avari
“Unfortunately many providers who are caught committing fraud just get a slap on the wrist. In a pay to play state like New Mexico providers make contributions to key politicians – some of whom have prosecutorial authority, so not much incentive to go after the rip off artists.
Now here is something citizens can do directly – if any citizen knows about fraud occurring, he or she can file a lawsuit and acquire a piece of the recovery. It is called a Qui Tam suit. “
Long time friend and wife of a doctor Mary Pastoor Mccowin writes:
“Most physicians in our area have stopped seeing medicare patients due to low re-imbursements. If they start targeting physician offices for fraud no one will see patients over 65. Wake up. Big fraud is being committed by honest to god crooks, not practicing docs.”
Nurse and Facebook friend (and cousin!) Laurie Hughes Williams writes:
” If we must have health care reform, we must have tort reform. Congress will never reform the legal profession as attorneys make up the majority of the Senate and the House.”
Facebook friend and former Inspector General Gordon Hamel writes:
” Diane – I’ve been trying to tell you for years why there is so much waste, fraud, and abuse. It is the Inspector Generals who by not doing their jobs properly permit the rape, and pillage of the health care system. Call me!”
Ms. Dimond,
Excellent report!
Experts estimates of total fraud in the Medicare program range from 12% – 25% of expenditures. That translates to about 1/2 % to 1% of the USA’s annual gross domestic product! And the estimates of fraud in Medicaid are similar. This is a drain on our economy that must be stopped.
Thank you for raising the awareness of this issue.
– William Kresse
Associate Professor
Director, Center for the Study of Fraud and Corruption
Saint Xavier University
Chicago, IL
Professor Kresse:
Thanks so much for writing, your kind words are high praise, indeed.
Now, will you please run for Congress and lead the charge for the rest of us?! ~ DD
Huffington Post reader R. Doc writes:
“Isn’t it amazing they know the number and have done nothing about it – one thing to watch for, Diane, is how they will cut 500 billion.
Remember how life was in America 60 years ago? No, I don’t either — but, back then, folks only went to nursing homes when their families were unable to care for them – today, how many of the folks who are residents of nursing homes/assisted living, have families who just don’t want to take care of them – this all plays into this strategy.
Think about this – after this year, inheritance taxes will go from 0% to 50%. If they can force these older folks into the homes of their families, these folks and the families will be able to hold on to more of the older persons’ estates. When they die, the government can take half of what they would be leaving to their caring family members — that’s one to choke on – but, it fits into their formula for balancing the budget they don’t want to share…. Nice? NOT!”
Dear Doc –
Wow! I have to admit I never thought of this…..the gov’t able to take even more as a death penalty? I think this deserves further investigation!
Thanks for writing -~ DD