Showing posts with label Durable Medical Equipment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Durable Medical Equipment. Show all posts

Billings Used Dead Doctors' Names

By Christopher Lee, Washington Post Staff Writer
washingtonpost.com | Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Medicare has paid as much as $92 million since 2000 to medical suppliers who billed the government for wheelchairs and other home equipment purportedly prescribed by physicians who, according to records, were dead at the time, congressional investigators said yesterday.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) honored about 500,000 such claims despite pledging six years ago to correct the problem, which was identified by the Health and Human Services Department's inspector general in 2001.

In more than half the cases studied, the doctor listed as having ordered the equipment had died more than five years earlier, said a report by the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee's permanent subcommittee on investigations.

"We discovered that some medical equipment suppliers have scammed the Medicare system -- and the American taxpayers -- out of massive amounts of money," Sen. Norm Coleman (Minn.), the panel's top Republican, said in a statement. "Using the ID numbers of dead doctors, these scam artists have treated Medicare like an ATM machine, drawing money out of the government's account with little fear of getting caught."

The report is part of the committee's ongoing investigations into waste, fraud and abuse in the fast-growing federal health program, which serves more than 43 million elderly and disabled Americans. Medicare pays annually more than $400 billion in benefits and is a fixture on the Government Accountability Office's "high-risk" list of troubled programs.

Last year, the government established a Medicare Fraud Strike Force to crack down on a problem that officials estimate costs taxpayers tens of billions of dollars annually. The program's durable medical equipment component, in particular, has been a frequent target of companies seeking to bilk the government. The subcommittee has scheduled a hearing on the problem today. When the system works properly, a physician writes a prescription for home medical equipment for a Medicare beneficiary. He takes the order to a supplier, who sells or rents the equipment to him. The supplier, in turn, submits a claim for payment to a Medicare contractor for processing. The claim includes a number issued by Medicare that identifies the prescribing physician.

Senate investigators obtained from the American Medical Association a computer file of physicians who had died between 1992 and 2002. They selected 1,500 at random and asked Medicare officials to turn over medical-equipment claims filed with those doctors' Medicare ID numbers between 2000 and 2007.

During that time, the review said, ID numbers for 734 deceased doctors were used to file 21,458 claims that totaled $3.4 million. Investigators counted the claims only if the equipment was bought more than a year after the doctor's death.

Extrapolating from the sample, investigators estimate that 384,730 to 572,238 such fraudulent claims were submitted during that period, and Medicare paid an estimated $60 million to $92 million. There are still active ID numbers in Medicare's system for as many as 2,895 dead physicians, investigators said.

They examined separate data for Florida, home to many retirees and a perennial leader in Medicare fraud. They found that more than a quarter of deceased Medicare doctors there still have active ID numbers in Medicare's system.

The ID for one doctor, who died in 1999, appeared on 83 claims submitted by Professional Gluco Services Inc., a Miami company, between November 2005 and September 2006. A federal grand jury indicted two of the company's owners last year on charges of defrauding the government of $1.3 million for equipment that had never been ordered or delivered. Both men pleaded guilty.

Medicare officials had promised to do a better job screening claims after the 2001 inspector general's report found that the agency had paid $91 million for medical supply claims with invalid or inactive physician ID numbers in 1999.

Medicare officials said several new steps should help, including a plan to match monthly Social Security Administration data about U.S. deaths against a revamped Medicare provider-identification system. They also pointed to new accreditation requirements for suppliers under a new program, opposed by the industry, that sets some equipment prices through competitive bidding.

"Fraud and abuse in the context of Medicare-covered durable medical equipment has been a focal point of ours in recent years," said CMS spokesman Jeff Nelligan. "Before this program, anyone could become a supplier, but now they must be fully accredited based on strict financial and quality standards."

Medical Fraud a Growing Problem

Medicare Pays Most Claims Without Review

By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 13, 2008; A01

MIAMI -- All it took to bilk the federal government out of $105 million was a laptop computer.

From her Mediterranean-style townhouse, a high school dropout named Rita Campos Ramirez orchestrated what prosecutors call the largest health-care fraud by one person. Over nearly four years, she electronically submitted more than 140,000 Medicare claims for unnecessary equipment and services. She used the proceeds to finance big-ticket purchases, including two condominiums and a Mercedes-Benz.

Health-care experts say the simplicity of Campos Ramirez's scheme underscores the scope of the growing fraud problem and the need to devote more resources to theft prevention. Law enforcement authorities estimate that health-care fraud costs taxpayers more than $60 billion each year.

A critical aspect of the problem is that Medicare, the health program for the elderly and the disabled, automatically pays the vast majority of the bills it receives from companies that possess federally issued supplier numbers. Computer and audit systems now in place to detect problems generally focus on overbilling and unorthodox medical treatment rather than fraud, scholars say.

"You should be able to spot emerging problems quickly and address them before they do much harm," said Malcolm Sparrow, a Harvard professor and author of "License to Steal," a book about health-care fraud that advocates for greater federal vigilance. "It's a miserable pattern, a cycle of neglect followed by a painful and dramatic intervention."

Fallout from the Campos Ramirez case continues. After pleading guilty to filing false claims, she has helped authorities win indictments against more than half a dozen doctors and patients who allegedly accepted kickbacks for pretending to receive costly HIV drug therapy. With cooperation from Campos Ramirez, FBI agents this week arrested three Miami-area men who, the government alleges, financed sham clinics that billed the government more than $100 million.

Daniel R. Levinson, the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services, has warned repeatedly that the Medicare program is "highly vulnerable" to fraud, particularly in South Florida, where schemes center on expensive, infusion-based HIV medications and on equipment such as wheelchairs, walkers, canes and hospital beds.

Officials from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which oversees federally funded health programs, say they have stepped up their efforts to combat fraud over the past year by working closely with investigators, removing the requisite billing numbers of nearly 900 companies and imposing new standards in high-fraud areas that would prevent people convicted of felonies from ever receiving a Medicare number.

"There's always more fraud than we have resources to combat," said Kimberly L. Brandt, director of program integrity at CMS. "We have done a much better job of realigning our resources to attack this problem."

Investigators and prosecutors trained their focus on Miami after noticing two troubling patterns:

· HHS investigators discovered that nearly half of 1,581 medical equipment companies they visited in the Miami area did not comply with basic Medicare requirements to be open during scheduled hours and to have a telephone number. The inspector general and the Government Accountability Office have flagged weak oversight of these kinds of suppliers for a dozen years, according to congressional testimony.

· The South Florida region bills Medicare more than $2 billion each year for injectable HIV medications. That figure is 22 times as high as the amount of similar claims in the rest of the country, and is far out of line with demographic data in a population of 2 million people in Miami-Dade County, HHS statistics show.

Justice Department officials moved to freeze money in suspicious bank accounts controlled by medical equipment company owners and they created a Washington-based strike force to handle the issue. The strike force, in concert with a small group of U.S. attorney's offices, has in the past year opened nearly 900 criminal investigations and convicted 560 defendants in health-care fraud offenses throughout the country.

Authorities say the strategy is working. They point to a $1.75 billion drop in Medicare claims in Miami since the operation began a year ago. But even government officials hope for a more comprehensive solution.

Christopher Dennis, the special agent in charge of the HHS inspector general's office in Miami, said fraudulent medical equipment companies appear to have shifted gears since the strike force arrived. After a crackdown in South Florida, at least some corporate owners moved to the north, he said. Investigators dubbed one initiative "Operation Whack-a-Mole," after the carnival game in which a creature pops up in different places after being hit with a hammer.

"The sheer number of zeroes following the dollar sign is irresistible to crooks and con men," Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey said last month during a Miami visit. "For every crooked company we bust, there is another one to replace it before the ink on the indictment is dry. . . . The money and the temptation are simply too big."

The strike force recently established a base in Los Angeles, another area rife with fraud. Prosecutors announced criminal charges last month against two medical equipment company owners who are accused of falsely billing Medicare more than $2 million. Plans call for a similar rollout this fall in Houston, another potential fraud hot spot.

"You can see how these frauds spread through communities," said Kirk Ogrosky, who is deputy chief in the Justice Department's fraud section and helps lead the strike force. "Family members and friends just get sucked into it. It's really rags to riches on the backs of the American taxpayer."

Officials who oversee the Medicare program say they are vigilant despite time pressure and limited resources. Employees review fewer than 5 percent of the nearly 1 billion claims filed each year. The vast majority of claims shuttle through computer systems that are tweaked when authorities notice fraud patterns. This year, CMS is working to finalize a rule that would prevent convicted felons from obtaining Medicare billing numbers. At present, that regulation applies only in a few high-fraud regions.

"It's a big volume," Brandt said. "No matter how hard we try to get people trained, there's always going to be a margin of error."

Sentenced to 10 years, Campos Ramirez, 60, may yet reduce her prison term by helping authorities unwind "the large web of medical clinics, doctors, nurses, money laundering companies and HIV clinic financiers who participated in this massive fraud," prosecutors wrote earlier this year in court papers. Her lawyer did not return calls seeking comment.

By many accounts, Campos Ramirez was unusually successful. Prosecutors say that corrupt medical clinic owners anticipate that Medicare will cover a quarter of their phony claims. But Campos Ramirez persuaded authorities to cover 60 percent of all the bills she submitted on behalf of 75 HIV clinics in South Florida, according to court filings.

As the owner of R and I Medical Billing, Campos Ramirez advised clinic owners how to justify the costly HIV treatments and manipulated Medicare claims to make sham clinics appear to be legitimate health-care facilities, prosecutors said. She personally collected more than $5 million with which she bought property and luxury items. Over the past year, however, Campos Ramirez has met repeatedly with law enforcement agents to unravel the scheme, which ran from 2002 to 2006.

At the time of her sentencing in March, Campos Ramirez had amassed a net worth of $1.5 million, including one of the condominiums where her son, an employee of her billing company, had lived.

Feds in Indy seek $789K from medical supplier

May 23, 2008. IndyStar.com

A lawsuit filed by the federal government in Indianapolis accuses a medical products supplier based in northeastern Illinois of falsely billing Medicare for $789,579 in medical equipment.

The government claims Criterion Medical Corp. of Braidwood, Ill. submitted 1,427 false claims between May 2002 and October 2007, billing the government for knee and calf replacement liners.

A government investigation determined those liners were not medically necessary and that Criterion acted recklessly.

The government seeks reimbursement and unspecified damages.

Attempts today to reach Criterion were unsuccessful.

Although the company has an active Web site, phone numbers listed for Criterion are disconnected.

The billings were for Medicare patients in Indiana.


Big Sentence for Medicare Fraudster

The Collar by Luke Mullins

April 03, 2008 02:59 PM ET | Luke Mullins

Rita Campos Ramirez, a 60-year-old Miami resident, received a 10-year prison sentence for her role in a multimillion-dollar Medicare fraud scheme. The $170 million scheme is the program's largestindividual case of fraud ever. The sentence was announced Wednesday.

As part of her punishment, Ramirez will also have to hand over her three homes and a car. Plus, she was ordered to pay $105 million in restitution to the federal government.

"The sentence in this case dispels the myth that white-collar-crime defendants get off lightly," FBI Special Agent in Charge Jonathan Solomon said in a press release. "It reinforces the message that healthcare fraud—stealing from U.S. taxpayers—is a serious crime."

Details of the crime:

Campos pleaded guilty on Aug. 28, 2007, to one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud and one count of submitting false claims to Medicare. As part of her plea, Campos admitted that between October 2002 and April 2006 she owned and operated R&I Medical Billing Inc., a medical billing company that specialized in submitting bills to the Medicare program on behalf of HIV infusion clinics. Campos admitted that she knowingly submitted approximately $170 million in fraudulent medical bills to Medicare on behalf of 75 HIV infusion clinics in Miami-Dade County that were part of the scheme. Infusion clinics serve HIV patients by providing prescribed medications intravenously.

The Medicare program paid approximately $105 million of the $170 million in fraudulent bills submitted by Campos, with Campos personally receiving $5 million for her role in the fraud.

Full press release is here.