That’s where the money is
MEDICAL science is hazy about many things, but
doctors agree that if a patient is losing pints of blood all over the carpet,
it is a good idea to stanch his wounds. The same is true of a health-care
system. If crooks are bleeding it of vast quantities of cash, it is time to
tighten the safeguards.
In America the scale of medical embezzlement is
extraordinary. According to Donald Berwick, the ex-boss of Medicare and
Medicaid (the public health schemes for the old and poor), America lost between
$82 billion and $272 billion in 2011 to medical fraud and abuse (see article).
The higher figure is 10% of medical spending and a whopping 1.7% of GDP—as if
robbers had made off with the entire output of Tennessee or nearly twice the
budget of Britain’s National Health Service (NHS).
Crooks love American health care for two reasons.
First, as Willie Sutton said of banks, it’s where the money is—no other country
spends nearly as much on pills and procedures. Second, unlike a bank, it is
barely guarded.
Some scams are simple. Patients claim benefits to
which they are not entitled; suppliers charge Medicaid for non-existent
services. One doctor was recently accused of fraudulently billing for 1,000
powered wheelchairs, for example. Fancier schemes involve syndicates of health
workers and patients. Scammers scour nursing homes for old people willing, for
a few hundred dollars, to let pharmacists supply their pills but bill Medicare
for much costlier ones. Criminal gangs are switching from cocaine to
prescription drugs—the rewards are as juicy, but with less risk of being shot
or arrested. One clinic in New York allegedly wrote bogus prescriptions for
more than 5m painkillers, which were then sold on the street for $30-90 each.
Identity thieves have realised that medical records are more valuable than
credit-card numbers. Steal a credit card and the victim quickly notices;
photocopy a Medicare card and you can bill Uncle Sam for ages, undetected.
It is hard to make such a vast system secure:
Medicare’s contractors process 4.5m claims a day. But pointless complexity
makes it even harder. Does Medicare really need 140,000 billing codes, as it
will have next year, including ten for injuries that take place in mobile homes
and nine for attacks by turtles? A toxic mix of incompetence and political
gridlock has made matters worse. Medicare does not check new suppliers for links
to firms that have previously been caught embezzling (though a new bill aims to
fix this). Fraud experts have long begged the government to remove Social
Security numbers from Medicare cards to deter identity thieves—to no avail.
Start
by closing the safe door
One piece of the solution is obvious: crack down
on the criminals. Obamacare, for all its flaws, includes some useful measures.
Suppliers are better screened. And when Medicaid blackballs a dodgy provider,
it now shares that information with Medicare—which previously it did not. For
every dollar spent on probing health-care fraud, taxpayers recover eight. So
the sleuths’ budgets should be boosted, not squeezed, as now.
But the broader point is that American health
care needs to be simplified. Whatever its defects, Britain’s single-payer
National Health Service is much simpler, much cheaper and relatively difficult
to defraud. Doctors are paid to keep people well, not for every extra thing
they do, so they don’t make more money by recommending unnecessary tests and
operations—let alone billing for non-existent ones.
Too socialist for America? Then simplify what is
left, scale back the health tax-perks for the rich and give people health
accounts so they watch the dollars that are spent on their treatment. After
all, Dr Berwick’s study found that administrative complexity and unnecessary
treatment waste even more health dollars than fraud does. Perhaps that is the
real crime.
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