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|    Many health care fraud investigators bel    |
|    10 Apr 17 00:22:43    |
      From: mjs23x@gmail.com              Many health care fraud investigators believe mental health caregivers, such as       psychiatrists and psychologists, have the worst fraud record of all medical       disciplines.                            September 23, 2014               Kusserow’s Corner: Mental Health Ranks High on Fraud Scale                      Occasionally, I take time to bring attention to enforcement actions in various       health care sectors. Some recent actions drew my attention back to a special       enforcement problem that stretches back decades to my days as Inspector       General—mental health.        Billions of dollars are spent to address the ever-increasing demand to treat       mental stress and illness. The primary purpose of mental health treatment must       be the therapeutic care and treatment of individuals who are suffering       emotional disturbance.        Proper treatment therefore demands the highest level of trustworthiness and       integrity in the practitioner, who treats some of the most vulnerable       patients. Two sources of funding are Medicaid and state general fund dollars,       which on average fund 90        percent of the system. However, about 10 percent is funded by Medicare,       federal mental health services block grant funds, and county or municipal       funds. As with other areas of health care, a significant portion of these       funds are diverted to fraud within        the mental health industry. Many health care fraud investigators believe       mental health caregivers, such as psychiatrists and psychologists, have the       worst fraud record of all medical disciplines. Much of that is attributable to       prescriptions for narcotic        drugs and taking advantage of some of the vulnerable individuals who suffer       from mental illness or Alzheimer’s disease.        Last year the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued a report focusing       on one aspect of the problem: detecting and deferring mental health fraud in       community mental health centers (CMHCs). CMHCs provide partial hospitalization       program services to        approximately 25,000 Medicare beneficiaries. The OIG report cited numerous       arrests by Medicare Fraud Strike Forces evidencing significant levels of CMHC       fraud. The OIG review found that one of nine MACs reviewed performed       activities to detect and deter        CMHC fraud, and most of these were part of a CMS-led special project.       Activities to detect and deter CMHC fraud varied substantially among ZPICs       with many performing minimal activities to detect and deter fraudulent CMHC       billing. The report provided a        number of recommendations to increase control and enforcement in this arena.       However, this is only one area of Medicare that addresses mental health. Other       areas are equally prone to fraud and abuse.        The latest in the Medicare enforcement arena comes from Louisiana where the       owner of three mental health centers was sentenced to pay $43.5 million in       restitution and serve 8-and-one-half years in federal prison for a Medicare       fraud scheme. A        psychiatrist, who served as medical director and co-owner, was sentenced to 86       months in prison for his role in admitting mentally ill patients to the       facilities, some of whom were inappropriate for partial hospitalization, and       then re-certifying the        patients’ appropriateness for the program in an effort to continue to bill       Medicare for services. These were among 17 people who worked at the three       facilities in a variety of roles who also been charged in the fraudulent       operation that stretched seven        years and involved over a quarter-billion dollars in Medicare fraud. They       included therapists, marketers, administrators, owners, and the medical       director. The companies billed Medicare for unnecessary or never provided       partial hospitalization program        services for the mentally ill. The companies, collectively, submitted more       than one-quarter-billion dollars in claims to Medicare during this period. The       scheme also involved falsifying records indicating patients had treatment they       never received and        paying recruiters to, in turn, pay patients to attend hospitalization programs       at the facility in order to make Medicare claims.        The fraud problem is actually larger and more pervasive in the Medicaid       program, which provides significantly more funding to this area. For example,       last year New Mexico was in the midst of a sweeping criminal investigation       into 15 of its largest mental        health providers, suspected of defrauding Medicaid of $36 million over three       years.        Examples of Fraud in the Mental Health Sector        Altering and/or falsifying records to match services billed        Billing for services not actually performed        Errors and falsification of patient charts        Fabricating patient files        Paying kickbacks paid to recruiters to find beneficiaries        Lack of a referral form from an approved provider source        Lack of documentation for service provided        Service notes lack specific treatment goal        Billing for service not covered by Medicaid as a covered service        Billing for a more expensive service than was actually rendered        Prescribing category narcotic drugs to addicts or for selling on the street        Changing the billed date of service to match client dates of eligibility        Deliberately applying for duplicate reimbursement in order to get paid twice        Inappropriate billing that results in a loss to the Medicaid program        Providing services which are not necessary        Billing for services performed by unqualified persons        Richard P. Kusserow served as DHHS Inspector General for 11 years. He       currently is CEO of Strategic Management Services, LLC (SM), a firm that has       assisted more than 3,000 organizations and entities with compliance related       matters. The SM sister company,        CRC, provides a wide range of compliance tools including sanction-screening.        Connect with Richard Kusserow on Google+ or LinkedIn.        Subscribe to the Kusserow’s Corner Newsletter        Copyright © 2014 Strategic Management Services, LLC. Published with       permission.        Related Posts        Kusserow’s Corner: Latest Health Care Solutions Network Senten       ingKusserow’s Corner: Six Individuals in Florida Indicted for Roles in $63       Million FraudKusserow’s Corner: New Fraud Actions, Settlements for 2014        Previous Post        Fraud Conspirators Find A New Home In Prison        Next Post        FDA Would Require More Risk-Focused Verification Of Foreign Food Suppliers                                    http://health.wolterskluwerlb.com/2014/09/kusserows-corner-menta       -health-ranks-high-on-fraud-scale/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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