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Medicare Fraud: Problems Persist With Contractors Paid Millions To Ferret Out Bogus Bills

KELLI KENNEDY   11/14/11 04:08 PM ET   AP

MIAMI — Contractors paid tens of millions of taxpayer dollars to detect fraudulent Medicare claims are using inaccurate and inconsistent data that makes it extremely difficult to catch bogus bills submitted by crooks, according to an inspector general's report released Monday.

Medicare's contractor system has morphed into a complicated labyrinth, with one set of contractors paying claims and another combing through those claims in an effort to stop an estimated $60 billion a year in fraud. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services inspector general's report – obtained by The Associated Press before its official release – found repeated problems among the fraud contractors over a decade and systemic failures by federal health officials to adequately supervise them.

Health officials are supposed to look at key criteria to find out whether contractors are effectively doing their job – for instance, how many investigations the contractors initiate. But investigators found that health officials sometimes ignored whether contractors were opening any investigations at all.

The contractors are supposed to detect fraud by checking for spikes in basic data, such as what type of service was given, how much of it was given and how much it cost. But contractors were reporting their progress in different ways, and some of the information they turned over to federal health officials about their performance was inaccurate.

The same issues were identified 10 years ago by inspector general investigators, and dozens of reports in the past decade also have found problems. In 2001, acting Inspector General Michael Mangano testified that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services wasn't doing a good job of holding contractors accountable.

"The issues we identified have been problematic for some time and present a serious obstacle" to overseeing the contractors, Inspector General Daniel R. Levinson wrote in Monday's report.

Medicare officials have repeatedly said the latest system of fraud contractors was designed to fix the problems with earlier contractors and allow the agency to better monitor them.

Critics say fraud contractors have been revamped over the years, but nagging problems persist.

Investigators found that one contractor referred only two cases of potential fraud to Medicare officials between 2005 and 2008; another did not refer any. But they may have no incentive to refer cases because they are not paid contingency fees for doing so, investigators said. Many experts agree.

"Very few private contractors have financial incentives which are genuinely linked to protection of public funds," said Malcolm Sparrow, a health care fraud expert at Harvard University.

In 2010, inspector general officials testified on Capitol Hill that contractors reviewing fraud in Medicare's prescription drug program also faced serious problems. One contractor didn't receive certain data until nearly one year after being awarded the contract. Once it received the data, key parts were missing or incorrect. Another contractor didn't have access to certain data before its contract ended.

In Monday's report, contractors also said they had difficulty obtaining data they needed and said that daily access to real-time Medicare claims data is critical. One contractor said it eventually had to buy the data from another contractor, which caused a 30-day delay.

The contractors generated only about 100 cases each of potential fraud using the limited data during a nine-month period. Critics say those figures are anemic compared to the billions of dollars of fraud occurring annually.

U.S. Sens. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., have introduced legislation that would require Medicare officials to share fraud data with law enforcement and contractors, as well as put accuracy requirements into the payment administration contracts.

Medicare officials said they are working diligently to give contractors access to data. They also said the investigation was conducted during early stages of the transition, so many issues have since been addressed. They agreed contractors should have access to data, but the agency has not indicated that improved access has been put in place.

Historically, Medicare has paid claims first and reviewed them later, which worked when most providers were hospitals. But the "pay and chase" method gives criminals weeks of lag time to get paid for fraudulent claims and skip town before authorities catch on.

Critics say separating contractors who pay claims from fraud contractors has created a system where the two are essentially working against each other. Fraud detection must be built into the payment system so contractors can track fraudulent claims as soon as crooks send them in, not days or weeks later, said Kirk Ogrosky, former head of the Justice Department's division that investigates health care fraud.

"By divorcing the job of paying claims from detecting fraud, CMS encourages an ineffective `pay-and-chase' system," he said.

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01:36 PM on 12/13/2011
It doesn't seem like it would be that hard to match the claims against the Medicare patients and their numbers.

The right Medicare computer software could find a lot of fraud. Medicare could monitor and check for the charges that were more than the usual charges.

Medicare sends us a summary of what the doctor or tests cost or hospital charged and how much of it Medicare approved of. That should catch a lot of fraud.

The doctors charge a lot more than Medicare approves of. The saving grace for patients is the doctors can't charge the patient over 15% of what Medicare approves of. 15% extra adds up over time though.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
03:07 PM on 12/13/2011
Hummm. Medicare and Medicaide fraud. Who does it?
http://medicare-medicaid.com/medicare/government-wins-medicaid-fraud-case-against-walgreens/
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WorkInCanada
Life is hard; it's harder if you're stupid. John W
11:04 AM on 11/15/2011
What kind of fraud? I don't understand how anyone can make money fraudulently from Medicare. Is this the patients or the doctors? Call me niave, but I don't understand the manner of fraud that's being referred to in this article - it's like HP assumes that everyone knows how Medicare fraud works. Their audience is not just American.
01:47 PM on 12/13/2011
Assuming that all states work the same way.

The patient never sees the bill until Medicare sends a summary showing the charges and the approved amount Medicare approves of. I.don't see how a patient could commit fraud. The only way they could is if they were working with a doctor. You have to give your Medicare Numbers and ID when you go in the Doctor's waiting room. Your charges are sent to Medicare.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
08:57 AM on 11/15/2011
That's what happens when you outsource. A company's only concern is making money......not serving the public.
01:47 PM on 12/13/2011
I would fire them so quick their head would swim.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
05:57 AM on 11/15/2011
Until the punishment fits the crime, fines for Medicare fraud are just the price of doing business. When Florida Governor Rick Scott was convicted of $1.7 billion in tax payer fraud, the fine was a fraction of that amount.
06:10 PM on 11/14/2011
Stop paying these investigators upfront. Pay them a percentage of the discovered fraud and conviction of the criminals behind the fraud.

This is like paying a house painter by the hour - they will never finish...it will look like chance of rain everyday around lunchtime. How stupid can our government be?
01:48 PM on 12/13/2011
Bush said he was going to fill every office before he left. I bet he has people that hate Medicare in a lot of positions, but I can't say that for sure.
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Scott EngageAmerica
04:18 PM on 11/14/2011
An estimated $60 billion of Medicare payments is wasted due to fraud every year?

This is only one of the reasons that our entitlement programs need reform, Medicare especially. Medicare's trust fund will run dry in 2024, and would only pay 90% of benefits starting in 2024, then dropping to 75% in 2045 (http://usat.ly/m1jBSl).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sensimilla
Lead with your heart, and your mind will follow...
05:14 PM on 11/14/2011
Our Military entitlement programs (MIC) need reform to the tune of 1 TRILLION/year. If we cut funding of the DOD by 50%, and dropped the taxbreaks for the wealthy, we'd have plenty of $$ for social programs for our citizens.
01:50 PM on 12/13/2011
Why they let the costs go so high is very suspicious.

They can start taking bids etc., but they seem to want to watch Medicare go under.
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perturbedintexas
Support our wounded warriors
02:06 PM on 11/14/2011
Case in point: A local supplier who sold me diabetic shoes and charged medicare $400 for the shoes and cheap inserts. I found the same shoes on the internet for $75 and locally at the Mall for $90.
01:57 PM on 12/13/2011
It hasn't been 4 or 5 years since my brother in law needed some diabetic shoes and Medicare wouldn't pay anything on them. I don't know why unless he bought some they didn't approve of.
02:27 PM on 12/13/2011
SSSSSSo these people are being paid Millions to find out who is being paid millions for services that were not performed.and in the mean time your brother in-law cannot get a pair of diabtic shoes.(DRATS ME THINKS SOMETHING IS ROTTEN in DENMARK),OOH NO THAT SMELL IS COMING FROM WASHINGTON!!!
02:03 PM on 11/14/2011
"U.S. Sens. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., have introduced legislation that would require Medicare officials to share fraud data with law enforcement and contractors, as well as put accuracy requirements into the payment administration contracts."

So if the government is incompetent and can't do its job, the answer is for Congress to pass a law requiring it to be competentt? I suppose the next step will be for the government to fine itself for failing to meet these requirements.
12:59 PM on 11/14/2011
Once again another failed HP headline, and the lib sheeple are jumping all over it for their taking point- private market= bad government= good.

If you read the article, the two underlying factors causing the problem are lack of data being given in a timely manner and lack of accountability. Wow that is shocking coming from the federal government. Wake up people!
01:56 PM on 11/14/2011
Since your still a conservative after the Bush years you lack creditability to tell others to wake up!
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ssnt
670 Economists(6 w/ Nobel Prize) like Mitt's plan
02:21 PM on 11/14/2011
Bush was no conservative.
02:33 PM on 11/14/2011
Agree with ssnt, Bush was no conservative. Your screen name validates my point and shows your lack of credibility. What you couldn't put some thought into an original name?
12:52 PM on 11/14/2011
Fraud against this country should carrier the same penalties as
treason which in my view fraud is. Fraud investigation contractor
should be paid based on each case which is brought to trial. This
will require them to deliver to prosecutors sufficient evident to
to go to trial thus setting the bench mark for their compensation
while eliminating delivering cases just to reach a quota.

If the government would apply the pay for performance principles
as the private sector applies them we would move away from the
grossly efficient practices we sucker taxpayers are stuck with. You
know it is not rocket science.
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12:46 PM on 11/14/2011
An easier way to suss out medicare fraud is to give people a Federal Health comments statement where they can comment about their most recent hospital or doctors visit and get coupons on medical things like alcohol, blood pressure regulators. etc. Let people print the coupons they want and need. This would cause zero to the government as the coupons would come from companies.For example. Blood drawn: on 11/14 /11 @8:30 am, blood technician left 2 bruises on arm. Filed complaint. Doctor X prescribed Augmentin for flu. Follow up visit on 11/21/11. If there's a discrepancy, patients can be called by lower wage federal workers who get platinium healthcare and shop at he PX.
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ssnt
670 Economists(6 w/ Nobel Prize) like Mitt's plan
02:22 PM on 11/14/2011
What in the world are you talking about?
12:41 PM on 11/14/2011
Contractors are vacuum cleaners that suck money out of the Treasury. Bureaucrats, at least, are cheaper. If the job's going to be done wrong, at least let it be done wrong cheaper.
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doublels
say it out loud...I'm a Lib & I'm proud
12:27 PM on 11/14/2011
''They have no incentive to report cases of fraud''.

How about they do it because that's what they are hired to do? How about they do it simply because it's THE RIGHT THING TO DO? What a concept!!

I work in this field and finding only 2 cases in 3 years is beyond absurd. That company should be immediately ''fired'' and then investigated for fraud itself.
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ssnt
670 Economists(6 w/ Nobel Prize) like Mitt's plan
02:23 PM on 11/14/2011
But they aren't because there is no incentive for the govt to be efficient.
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doublels
say it out loud...I'm a Lib & I'm proud
12:10 AM on 11/15/2011
Your comment is a bit puzzling to me. Wouldn't they want to be sure they weren't being fleeced, like anyone else who pays out money? I think the problem is more that Congress won't approve money to police the fleecing. Of course, Congress is part of the government. Can you share why you think there is no incentive. I'm interested in having a good discussion, not in just disagreeing with you.
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RedneckDem
The top 1% stole my made in china bootstraps
12:19 PM on 11/14/2011
Fraud is so widespread, it is estimated that $30-$90 billion a year is bogus. We could hire a billion dollars worth of investigators and create jobs while saving hundreds of billions over ten years.
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BigLeftbowski
Eat, Pray, Love, Vote
12:19 PM on 11/14/2011
This is what you get in an "every man for himself" society.