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Medicare Drug Abuse: 170,000 Reportedly Scored Large Quantities Of Drugs On Taxpayers' Dime (VIDEO)

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR   10/ 3/11 11:07 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- Drug abusers are exploiting Medicare prescription's benefit to score large quantities of painkillers, and taxpayers have to foot most of the bill, congressional investigators say in a report.

About 170,000 Medicare recipients received prescriptions from multiple doctors for 14 frequently abused medications in 2008, the Government Accountability Office found in an investigation for the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

A Medicare recipient in Georgia got prescriptions for 3,655 oxycodone pills – more than a four-year supply of the painkiller – from 58 different prescribers. Another, in California, got prescriptions for a nearly five-year supply of fentanyl patches and pills from 21 different prescribers. Fentanyl is a powerful narcotic used to treat relentless cancer pain.

The cost of the questionable prescriptions amounted to $148 million in 2008. Overall, taxpayers pay three-fourths of the cost of the Medicare prescription drug program, which covers some 28 million seniors and disabled people for about $55 billion a year.

Prescription drug abuse is a growing problem for all types of insurance plans. Narcotics obtained with a prescription from unwitting doctors can feed a personal addiction, or be resold in a lucrative underground market.

Medicare, however, may be hobbled in its ability to confront the situation. Program officials told investigators that federal law does not allow Medicare to limit the access of beneficiaries who appear to be abusing drugs. Many private insurance plans and state Medicaid programs restrict patients who appear to be abusing drugs so they can only get narcotics from specific doctors and pharmacies.

Sens. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Scott Brown, R-Mass., are seeking ways to tighten Medicare rules. Carper chairs a subcommittee scheduled to hold a hearing Tuesday on the problem.

It's known as "doctor shopping." By visiting different practitioners, an addict can get multiple prescriptions for powerful drugs. Often, the doctors are unaware their patient is going to other physicians as well. To avoid suspicion, drug abusers often get their prescriptions filled at different pharmacies.

Using claim records, investigators illustrated how the strategy works: One unnamed Medicare beneficiary visited four doctors over 10 days to obtain a 150-day stock of oxycodone. The first doctor wrote a prescription for a 15-day supply, the second doctor for 20 days, and so on.

The investigation, first reported by The New York Times, found the worst abuse among 600 Medicare beneficiaries, each getting prescriptions from more than 20 doctors. Painkillers hydrocodone and oxycodone were involved in more than 8 out of 10 cases of doctor shopping identified by investigators.

In the context of the program as a whole, the number of drug abusers is small. The 170,000 whose prescription-use patterns aroused suspicion accounted for less than 2 percent of all the Medicare recipients who received prescriptions for the 14 frequently abused drugs.

Investigators attributed most of the cases of questionable behavior to younger beneficiaries, eligible for Medicare because of a disability and not their age. Nearly three-fourths of them also had low incomes.

In its response to the investigators' findings, Medicare said it recognizes the need to prevent abuse of the prescription program and is looking for ways to best accomplish that.

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WASHINGTON -- Drug abusers are exploiting Medicare prescription's benefit to score large quantities of painkillers, and taxpayers have to foot most of the bill, congressional investigators say in a re...
WASHINGTON -- Drug abusers are exploiting Medicare prescription's benefit to score large quantities of painkillers, and taxpayers have to foot most of the bill, congressional investigators say in a re...
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02:02 PM on 10/04/2011
I wonder how many of these chronic pain folks would choose Medical Cannabis if it were legal...something to think about.
javagirl023
Jesus redistributed wealth
12:08 PM on 10/04/2011
I notice that the article does not attatch a cost to each of these doctor visits--which, at a guess, might work out to more than the cost of the prescriptions themselves--which gives us even more motivation to fix this.
12:02 PM on 10/04/2011
Bet a large percentage of this is taking place in FL - lots of elderly/disabled with pain clinics all over the place and high prices for the drug.
12:00 PM on 10/04/2011
So funny how when I really need pain relief, I can't get anything from the doctor. How do these people do it?
11:32 AM on 10/04/2011
Medicare needs to be on a computer system like we were at the VA. If a vet had a 'script for narcotic written in FL and was "just passing through" another state we could bring up his history and know he already had a narc-so he wouldn't get another one from us.
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jesternhell
10:09 AM on 10/04/2011
why dont they hire more people to track this stuff and save us all some money, then once they track them down kick the out of the program for ever
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patpollard6
10:44 AM on 10/04/2011
When 60 minutes interviewed for medicare employees about the large amount of medicare fraud the response was they didn't have the manpower to check. They had no interest in checking as the system is being bilked for billions so it would be cheaper to hire more employees than continuously pay fraudulent claims in miami.
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jesternhell
04:32 PM on 10/05/2011
plus it would put some people to work
09:45 AM on 10/04/2011
drug stores have a program for when an rx is okay to dispense again. why can't there be a program for drugs like mentioned put in a national database so a person could not get filled elsewhere? i cant believe that someone could go to different drug stores and get approved by medicare for the same drug. even if different dose. sometimes the dose increases or decreases, but it should be an automatic call to the doctor office.
javagirl023
Jesus redistributed wealth
12:12 PM on 10/04/2011
The protections in place come from your HMO/insurance, not from the pharmacy--they are in business to sell you drugs, not police your behavior. They only cut you off when the drugs are't paid for.
09:30 AM on 10/04/2011
People who are truly in need of pain medication are going to be out of luck. The more goverment and state regulations that are needlessely tacked on to perscription pain medications will just make the drugs more expensive and harder to get. These hacks, these goverment idiots that feel they know what's best for your pain, are trying to take over as doctors. A doctor's first obligation to his patients is to relieve their pain. Vote out any politician or wanna be doctor out of office if possible. Keep perscriptions in the hands of doctors.
08:58 AM on 10/04/2011
Censorship is alive and well on AOL!
09:38 AM on 10/04/2011
a lot more since the huff merger.
08:03 AM on 10/04/2011
Most Medicare patients are elderly. Elderly patients tend to have multiple chronic disease conditions (including chronic pain) and usually have multiple doctors treating these conditions. Each doctor orders medication (including pain medication) and frequently do not pay attention to what the other doctors are ordering. Sooooo, is this "doctor shopping" or just a lack of coordination in the health care system?
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patpollard6
10:40 AM on 10/04/2011
The article stated most of the recipients were younger medicare patients on disability who were abusing the system that originally was a safety net for the elderly.
11:40 AM on 10/04/2011
I am 55 and on medicare. I have a pain doctor so u can only get what he gives me. Wow I can't believe all these people are able to get all that. Yes I think there should be in the computer that u already get them and can't get more.
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JoGo3338
07:39 AM on 10/04/2011
The problem is that the government will now look to curtail the use of these drugs, not only for the abusers, but those that truly need it. I see how doctors fear the government and won't prescribe pain killers even when they should..Until researchers come up with pain killers that work and don't get you high, this is going to be a problem..but the government, if they know by the records that they are looking at, that someone is doctor shopping, those should be the targets, not a generalization because for some, RX painkillers allow them to function without horrible pain..
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aliceandthecat
the most curious thing I ever saw
01:40 AM on 10/04/2011
I hope that these rare cases don't make it more difficult for those who truly need palliative care and pain remediation to obtain it. I advocate assuming that if someone says they are in pain and need medication that they are telling the truth. It's better to treat for pain that doesn't exist, than not to treat for pain that does.......
09:46 AM on 10/04/2011
i bet you think the same for pot......lol
10:20 AM on 10/04/2011
uh, yeah...okay. But not on my dime!
01:34 AM on 10/04/2011
Well now that they know where and who!......locked those SOBs up
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manroj1
Gamma Ray Burst
01:34 AM on 10/04/2011
Simple to stop! Just expand the Patriot act to assign a drug number to every person in the U.S. and require that they cannot get prescriptions with out listing this number. Then mandate a new department of the Executive branch called the Drug Security Administration and hire hundreds of thousands of drones to man the giant computers that would monitor all patients when they fill prescriptions. They should have the authority to immediately respond with a tactical squad with ready weapons every time there is the least discrepancy with the pills that any of us ingest. By the way each pill should be implanted with a nanochip which has our drug number on it along with a tracking device responsive to GPS!
02:04 PM on 10/04/2011
REPEAL the so called Patriot Act!
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Counter Sniper
Though I Wander I Am Not Lost...
01:06 AM on 10/04/2011
Gotta tighten up those regulations a bit.