The Challenge of Health Care Fraud
Consumer Alert: The Impact of Health Care
Fraud on You!
In
2011, $2.27 trillion was spent on health care and more than four billion health
insurance claims were processed in the United States. It is an undisputed
reality that some of these health insurance claims are fraudulent. Although
they constitute only a small fraction, those fraudulent claims carry a very
high price tag.
The
National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association (NHCAA) estimates that the
financial losses due to health care fraud are in the tens of billions of
dollars each year.
Whether
you have employer-sponsored health insurance or you purchase your own insurance
policy, health care fraud inevitably translates into higher premiums and
out-of-pocket expenses for consumers, as well as reduced benefits or coverage.
For employers-private and government alike-health care fraud increases the cost
of providing insurance benefits to employees and, in turn, increases the
overall cost of doing business. For many Americans, the increased expense
resulting from fraud could mean the difference between making health insurance
a reality or not.
However,
financial losses caused by health care fraud are only part of the story. Health
care fraud has a human face too. Individual victims of health care fraud are
sadly easy to find. These are people who are exploited and subjected to unnecessary
or unsafe medical procedures. Or whose medical records are compromised or whose
legitimate insurance information is used to submit falsified claims.
Don't
be fooled into thinking that health care fraud is a victimless crime. There is
no doubt that health care fraud can have devastating effects.
What Does Health Care
Fraud Look Like?
The
majority of health care fraud is committed by a very small minority of
dishonest health care providers. Sadly, the actions of these deceitful few
ultimately serve to sully the reputation of perhaps the most trusted and
respected members of our society-our physicians.
Unfortunately,
the stock in trade of fraud-doers is to take advantage of the confidence that
has been entrusted to them in order to commit ongoing fraud on a very broad
scale. And in conceiving fraud schemes, this group has the luxury of being
creative because it has access to a vast range of variables with which to
conceive all sorts of wrongdoing:
·
The
entire population of our nation's patients;
·
The
entire range of potential medical conditions and treatments on which to base
false claims; and
·
The
ability to spread false billings among many insurers simultaneously, including
public programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, increasing fraud proceeds while
lessening their chances of being detected by any a single insurer.
The
most common types of fraud committed by dishonest providers include:
·
Billing
for services that were never rendered-either by using genuine patient
information, sometimes obtained through identity theft, to fabricate entire
claims or by padding claims with charges for procedures or services that did
not take place.
·
Billing
for more expensive services or procedures than were actually provided or
performed, commonly known as "upcoding"-i.e., falsely billing for a
higher-priced treatment than was actually provided (which often requires the
accompanying "inflation" of the patient's diagnosis code to a more
serious condition consistent with the false procedure code).
·
Performing
medically unnecessary services solely for the purpose of generating insurance
payments-seen very often in nerve-conduction and other diagnostic-testing
schemes.
·
Misrepresenting
non-covered treatments as medically necessary covered treatments for purposes
of obtaining insurance payments-widely seen in cosmetic-surgery schemes, in
which non-covered cosmetic procedures such as "nose jobs" are billed
to patients' insurers as deviated-septum repairs.
·
Falsifying
a patient's diagnosis to justify tests, surgeries or other procedures that
aren't medically necessary.
·
Unbundling
- billing each step of a procedure as if it were a separate procedure.
·
Billing
a patient more than the co-pay amount for services that were prepaid or paid in
full by the benefit plan under the terms of a managed care contract.
·
Accepting
kickbacks for patient referrals.
·
Waiving
patient co-pays or deductibles for medical or dental care and over-billing the
insurance carrier or benefit plan (insurers often set the policy with regard to
the waiver of co-pays through its provider contracting process; while, under
Medicare, routinely waiving co-pays is prohibited and may only be waived due to
"financial hardship").
Consider Some Risks of
Health Care Fraud to You
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