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MCOS- Connecticut Bucks the Medicaid Managed Care Trend

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: According to this piece, docs like the approach more, it keeps administrative costs lower than MCOs, and it keeps per member cost increases lower than national norms. AND it does the dishes, too.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.managedhealthcareexecutive.com/view/connecticut-bucks-the-medicaid-managed-care-trend

Most states have contracted with insurers to manage their Medicaid programs. Connecticut uses administrative services only contracts and a variety of means to manage the care.

This is the second installment in our occasional series on Medicaid programs. We profiled North Carolina’s program in the September 2022 issue.

 
 

For more than four decades, state Medicaid directors have paid private health insurers to manage the care of their Medicaid beneficiaries under comprehensive risk-based contracts. Today, Medicaid managed care, as it is called, is the rule, not the exception — with 40 states and the District of Columbia running their Medicaid programs this way.

But since 2012, Connecticut has gone against the grain of this trend. Late in 2011, the state ended the $800 million contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). It assumed the full financial risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that
included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP)
. Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members. The three ASOs are Beacon Health Options Connecticut for behavioral health, Bene-Care for dental care and CHNCT for medical claims.

Related: North Carolina: Medicaid Leader, Medicaid Laggard

An ‘over-the-top yes’

The healthcare of people covered by Connecticut’s Medicaid program is still managed. But instead of depending on insurers with Medicaid managed care contracts, state officials introduced what they call a managed fee-for-service program in which physicians in primary care medical homes handle some management of patient care, explains Sheldon Toubman, an attorney with the New Haven Legal Assistance Association and patient advocate with Disability Rights Connecticut, a nonprofit agency for the disabled. Primary care medical home practices are tasked with — and paid for — this management, he says.

In addition to the medical homes, two of the ASOs, CHNCT and Beacon, took on intensive care management programs for patients with medical and behavioral health needs.

Are Connecticut and Husky members better off now? Ellen Andrews, Ph.D., executive director of the Connecticut Health Policy Project, answers, “Yes, and that’s an unqualified, over-the-top yes. We are better off, and I don’t think you’ll find too many people in Connecticut who disagree.” Andrews’ nonprofit organization is focused on the state’s health policies.

Soon after adopting the managed fee-for-service program, access to primary care, specialist physicians and other providers increased, Toubman says. Andrews agrees, saying, “In the first year after the state fired the MCOs (managed care organizations), the number of participating physicians went up 33%. That’s pretty clear evidence that it was managed care holding physicians back from participating in Medicaid.”

Another factor in the success of Connecticut’s move away from conventional Medicaid managed care contracts is that the Affordable Care Act required state Medicaid programs to match what Medicare was paying for primary care services in 2013 and 2014. The increased payment provided an incentive for more physicians to take care of people with Medicaid coverage, Toubman explains.

Under the new arrangement of ASO contracts and managed fee for service, the average per member, per month cost of Connecticut’s Medicaid dropped from $718 in 2012 to $646 in 2013 and then dropped again during the next two years to a low of $605 in 2015 before rising to $648 in 2020, according to a report issued last year by the state’s Department of Social Services. The administrative costs of running the state’s Medicaid program also declined so that by fiscal 2019 those costs totaled 2.8%, whereas the national average was 8.2%, the report showed.

The state report also noted that data from the federal Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission that used different criteria to measure costs showed the Husky program’s administrative costs for 2019 were 4.2%, which was lower than the national average of 4.7% and 17th lowest among the states.

In 2019, Connecticut’s annual spending per Medicaid and CHIP enrollee was $8,405, a sliver below the median annual Medicaid spending level of $8,436 for all states and territories, according to data from Medicaid.gov. That level of spending is impressive because Connecticut’s cost of living is among the highest in the U.S. States with a more expensive cost of living tend to have higher healthcare costs because labor and other expenses are greater.

However, the early declines in spending have reversed and Connecticut’s Medicaid costs have been rising since 2020. In 2019, state officials settled a lawsuit that the Connecticut Hospital Association and other hospitals filed in 2015, challenging the hospital fees that the state had established in 2012 to help pay for the Medicaid program, explains Andrews. As in most states, Connecticut’s Medicaid program spends more on hospital care than on home care, physician services and drugs; hospital costs in 2019 accounted for almost 30% of all Connecticut Medicaid spending.

Some of the hospitals had sought refunds from the state totaling more than $1.7 billion. Others appealed the Medicaid rates the state was paying, and some sought retroactive increases for multiple rate periods in effect since 2012. If the hospitals prevailed on all claims, state officials estimated the total liability would have been about $4 billion.

Under the settlement, the state agreed to reduce hospital user fees and increase payments to over seven years (2020 through 2026) totaling $871.5 million.

“Under the lawsuit settlement, the hospitals got a lot more money than they were getting and that means Medicaid costs have started going back up almost to where we were in 2012,” Andrews explains. “But Medicaid costs have gone up in every other state over the past 10 years.” The net result is that Connecticut’s Medicaid spending is lower than what it might have been without the changes made in 2012, she says.

Keys to success

In Toubman’s view, Connecticut’s switch from conventional Medicaid managed care to Husky Health’s unique combination of ASO contracts and other ways of managing care has meant improved care coordination and additional transparency. The Husky program improved care coordination by expanding a small pilot program that the state had used before 2012 to deliver primary care case management, he says. Patient advocates were successful in persuading state officials to add primary care medical homes to the Husky program from the start, according to Toubman. The medical homes attracted physicians, increasing access to care and improving care coordination.

Toubman says the Husky program also has meant that advocates and others have a clearer picture of state Medicaid spending and patient care. State officials disclose the program’s results in monthly and annual reports. Andrews says that insurers with Medicaid managed care contracts were slow to publish reports and when they did, each would report results in a different format: “It was like going into an orchard of fruit trees every time, because we knew we’d be getting apples and oranges.”

Toubman says increasing Medicaid payment to physicians has also been instrumental in the Husky program’s success. Higher payment for primary care has reduced the number of adults and children seeking expensive emergency department care, he says.

Joseph Burns
is an independent journalist in Brewster, Massachusetts, who writes about health policy and health insurance.

 
 

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MCOS- Illinois Medicaid contractor Centene Corp. under federal scrutiny after report Illinois YouthCare program failed foster kids with ‘unacceptable’ medical care

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: The current data point to watch is the % of high needs foster care kids that actually got an individualized care plan- it was a staggeringly low 2% of Q1 2022, and has grown to an underwhelming 8% (though that is being touted as good). Translation- 92% of the foster kids with the most intense needs are NOT getting an individualized care plan.

 
 

Clipped from: https://chicago.suntimes.com/2023/1/13/23551832/centene-medicaid-youthcare-illinois-foster-care-marc-smith-theresa-eagleson

An Illinois Answers Project investigation found that the insurance giant fell short in providing basic care. Now, federal officials want answers from state agencies overseeing the program.

 
 

The two state officials who oversee the Illinois’ YouthCare program: Marc Smith, director of the state Department of Children and Family Services, and Theresa Eagleson, director of the state Department of Healthcare and Family Services. They defend the program and their oversight of it.

Sun-Times file, provided

Federal authorities are probing a massive Illinois contract that provides health care to 36,700 foster children in response to an investigation by the Illinois Answers Project published by the Chicago Sun-Times in November.

Insurance powerhouse Centene Corp. often failed to deliver basic medical care from dental visits to immunizations, the investigation found, with some foster parents having to wait months for critical medical appointments for the abused and neglected children in their care.

The scope of the federal inquiry is not clear, but it was confirmed by state officials and a spokesperson for the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services agency that administers the Medicaid program. 

“CMS has engaged with the state to discuss the serious issues raised in the November report,” the spokesperson said.

Officials with the two Illinois state agencies that oversee Centene’s YouthCare contract — the Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Children and Family Services — said they were questioned by authorities with HHS but provided few details and sought to minimize the inquiries.

CMS recently requested information from HFS, according to spokeswoman Jamie Munks: “The department did receive an inquiry from CMS after the article was published. HFS asked to have a meeting to discuss and . . . [we have] not heard back.”

On Monday, Aysha Schomburg, associate commissioner of HHS, met for an hour with Marc Smith, director of DCFS, to discuss YouthCare, DCFS spokesman Bill McCaffrey said.

Schomburg heads HHS’s U.S. Children’s Bureau, which funds state programs, monitors performance and imposes improvement plans.

“The discussion was centered on YouthCare,” McCaffrey said. “DCFS regularly meets with officials from the Children’s Bureau, including more than 25 times in 2022, on a number of issues.”

A Children’s Bureau spokesperson said DCFS officials are “aware of the issue but … still in the process of investigating and developing a response.” 

To obtain Centene’s basic performance records, the Better Government Association — which publishes the Illinois Answers Project — waged a year-long Freedom of Information Act court fight in downstate Sangamon County that forced HFS to release records that had been withheld because Centene said its performance metrics should be considered “trade secrets.” 

The state eventually provided heavily redacted documents that showed Centene produced an individualized plan of care for fewer than 2% of the Illinois foster children who had the greatest need during the first quarter of last year. The state said Centene later corrected that figure to 8%.

The failures forced foster parents — who take in abused or neglected children frequently in need of urgent medical care — to grapple with a health care program that often was underperforming and in disarray. 

Foster parents Eva Green (left) and Melissa Thomforde say they were forced to scramble to find health care for the abused and neglected children they took in.

Victor Hilitski / Illinois Answers Project

Munks said her agency already was taking steps to address contract shortfalls prior to the November story.

“The department had already identified issues with YouthCare’s performance and swiftly took steps to impel the plan to make improvements, including but not limited to ongoing meetings to discuss the concerns with YouthCare’s leadership at the time, and initiating an audit performed by HFS’ external quality review organization to assess YouthCare’s compliance with the contract requirements,” Munks said.

Munks said those and other measures were proceeding “long before” reporters contacted HFS with questions for the November story. 

“The department’s top priority has always been to ensure that the youth enrolled in YouthCare have access to the highest-quality care possible, and HFS will continue to hold YouthCare and all of the [managed care organizations] accountable for meeting the requirements in their contracts,” Munks said.

A Centene spokesman previously has said the multinational insurance giant is improving its performance metrics.

Centene has been paid $370 million under Illinois’ YouthCare contract since 2020, government records show.

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MEDICARE- CMS data: Medicare Advantage tops 30M

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Up 2M from last year’s number.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payers/cms-data-medicare-advantage-tops-30m

 
 

Enrollment in Medicare Advantage (MA) has topped 30 million, according to new data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

This represents coverage across 776 contracts, according to the data, as of Jan. 1 payments, which reflect enrollments accepted through Dec. 2. Enrollment in standalone prescription drug plans was also about 22.7 million, bringing total enrollment across all types of private Medicare plans to nearly 50.3 million.

This represents growth of about 2 million from 2022. An analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that enrollment in MA plans was about 28 million last year

Enrollment in the program has surged over the past decade and now encompasses nearly half of all Medicare beneficiaries.

In a statement, America’s Health Insurance Plans President Matt Eyles lauded the landmark.

“This milestone shows that people are choosing MA for better affordability and health outcomes. The continued growth of the program is a testament to the tremendous value MA offers to all enrollees, and especially those with chronic illnesses who require care coordination and management, as well as those with low incomes who rely on MA’s access to additional benefits at little or no cost,” Eyles said.

MA enrollment numbers were a key topic at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference last week, with some insurers, like Humana, posting significant increases, while others, like CVS Health, called their performance during the annual enrollment period “disappointing.”

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STATE NEWS- Key Roles Filled for WDH Healthcare Financing Division – Wyoming Department of Health

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: New leadership at the Cowboy State (aka the Equality State and Big Wyoming for all you demonym nerds) has been announced. Welcome Lee Grossman and Paul Johnson!

 
 

Clipped from: https://health.wyo.gov/key-roles-filled-for-wdh-healthcare-financing-division/

January 18, 2023

 
 

The Wyoming Department of Health (WDH) is announcing the selection of candidates to fill two key leadership positions with the department’s Medicaid and related programs.

Lee Grossman will be the new state Medicaid agent and senior administrator of the Division of Healthcare Financing. Longtime employee Jan Stall has been serving in these roles on an interim basis since last January and intends to retire in March. Dr. Paul Johnson has been chosen as the new Wyoming Medicaid medical director to replace Dr. James Bush, who retired from the role earlier this month after many years.

Grossman was chosen after a hiring process that directly involved Governor Mark Gordon and WDH Director Stefan Johansson.

“Jan’s comprehensive experience in Medicaid and with our department truly helped ensure a seamless transition and interim period,” Johansson said. “Jan has my gratitude for her dedication to this agency and her stellar work over so many years.”

“The governor and I agree Wyoming Medicaid and the division’s other programs will be in very capable hands with Lee agreeing to fill this critical role,” Johansson said. “It’s great to know we have people such as Lee within our staff who are ready, willing and able to step up and support our ongoing efforts to move our agency in positive directions.”

Grossman currently serves as administrator of the Home and Community Based Services Section of the Division of Healthcare Financing within WDH and will transition into his new role next month. He’s been working for the department since 2011 in various relevant positions. In addition he’s participated in a national program for emerging Medicaid leaders and is a current member of the National Association of State Directors of Developmental Disabilities Services. Grossman holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Nebraska and a master’s degree in public administration from the University of Wyoming.

Johnson will begin with the department as Medicaid medical director April 1. He’s currently part of the Ivinson Medical Group in Laramie specializing in otolaryngology (head and neck surgery). Johnson grew up in Laramie, earned his bachelor’s degree from Baylor University and his medical degree from the University of Washington. Johnson completed his residency in otolaryngology at Columbia University. He recently completed his master of public health degree at Johns Hopkins University with an emphasis on health finance and management.
“While we will miss the work and enthusiasm of Dr. Bush, we are fortunate to have someone with Dr. Johnson’s experience and expertise ready to join us in improving lives for the residents we serve,” Johansson said.

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STATE NEWS- Texas Medicaid: Pediatric formula prior authorizations

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: A blast from the past. Remember the COVID formula shortage?

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.uhcprovider.com/en/resource-library/news/2023/tx-medicaid-pediatric-formula-waiver-ending.html

January 13, 2023

Texas Medicaid: Pediatric formula prior authorizations

On Feb. 28, 2023, our temporary waiver of prior authorizations for pediatric formula will end. Starting March 1, 2023, you must submit prior authorization requests for UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Texas members. The waiver was in place to help support you and our members during the nationwide formula shortage. 

Visit the Prior Authorization and Notification page for information on how to submit prior authorization requests in the UnitedHealthcare Provider Portal.

Questions?

Please reach out to your provider advocate or call Customer Service at 888-887-9003, 8 a.m.–6 p.m. CT, Monday–Friday.

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FWA- Ob-gyn can keep $205,000 in Medicaid pay that state tried to recoup

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: A an OB that decided to pivot and focus on primary care (when ACA incentivized it) to meet the needs in their area can keep the payments for delivering said care.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.ama-assn.org/practice-management/medicare-medicaid/ob-gyn-can-keep-205000-medicaid-pay-state-tried-recoup

A Hawaii ob-gyn who also provided primary care services to patients in an underserved area is entitled to retain the $205,000 in enhanced Medicaid payments the government was trying to recoup from him, the state supreme court has ruled.

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Hilo physician Frederick Nitta, MD, spent more than 60% of his time providing primary care to patients in the medically underserved area in which he practices medicine. But state officials claimed that he couldn’t collect higher Medicaid payments created under a 2010 law designed to encourage physicians to provide this care.

The Hawaii Department of Human Services (DHS) also had demanded that he pay back the $205,000 he had already been paid for the care he provided Medicaid patents and billed for at the higher rate.

After years of litigation, Hawaii’s highest court ruled in the physician’s favor.

Congress clearly intended the enhanced payments as incentives for the provision of primary care services, regardless of a physician’s other practice areas,” the Hawaii Supreme Court said in its  November ruling (PDF).

The court quoted extensively from the amicus brief (PDF) that the Litigation Center of the American Medical Association and State Medical Societies and the Hawaii Medical Association (HMA) filed when Nitta v. Department of Human Services, State of Hawaii was at the appellate court level.

Related Coverage

4 ways the AMA has battled in court to preserve access to care

“Amici highlighted the critical and worsening physician shortage in Hawai’i, noting that primary care has the greatest shortage, especially for Medicaid patients in East Hawai’i,” the Hawaii Supreme Court said, noting that DHS’ “continued recoupment efforts against physicians providing primary care services to Medicaid beneficiaries only worsens the shortage.”

The court referenced the AMA Litigation Center and HMA brief (PDF) cited articles and other reports that showed “‘on neighbor islands, in particular, patients often wait four to five months for a doctor’s appointment. On Hawai’i Island, it is sometimes two to three times more difficult to find a PCP [primary care physician]. Consequently, many residents seek care at the nearest hospital emergency room, costing them ‘upward of $600–$800 for an emergency room visit, as opposed to the average co-ay of $15–$50 for a visit to a primary care physician.'”

Who qualifies as “primary care?”

The Hawaii DHS had argued to the state supreme court that medical directory listings were the deciding factor of a physician’s practice characteristics. In refuting that argument, justices again referred to the AMA Litigation Center and HMA brief, noting that it “urged that the payments to Dr. Nitta were consistent with the ACA’s purpose to ‘benefit physicians that provide primary care services to the Medicaid population.'”

The AMA-HMA brief also pointed to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published questions and answers regarding how states can review a physician’s eligibility for the enhanced payment program.

“There, the CMS provided a nonexhaustive list of ways a state could verify a physician’s practice characteristics (i.e., how the physician represented himself in the community, medical directory listings, billings to other insurers, advertisements, etc.),” the court’s opinion said.

The AMA-HMA brief also “contended other evidence demonstrated Dr. Nitta’s PCP status,” the court noted. That includes “recognition by other doctors and medical providers in the East Hawaii community as a PCP,” and “acceptance and payment by medical insurers and a PCP” and “hundreds of written and oral testimony by people in support of a finding that he is a PCP.”

Related Coverage

“Arbitrary” action has doctor on hook for $205,000 in bonus pay

And finally, the court cited the amicus brief’s argument that the DHS ” ‘formula to determine the sixty-percent-threshold requirement [was] in complete disregard for actual medical practice'” because paid billing codes don’t take into account the “‘percentage of total services provided in a managed care environment by that physician.’ “

Dr. Nitta reflected on the case in an interview with the Hawaii Tribune-Herald.

“I could have just paid them back. Instead, it’s probably costing me more to fight them in court over and over and over. But that doesn’t matter, because it’s not right what they’re doing.”

Find out more about the cases in which the AMA Litigation Center is providing assistance and learn about the Litigation Center’s case-selection criteria.

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FWA- Birmingham company to pay $153,300 on false Medicaid claim allegations

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: A software design error caused Connecticut to overbill for ABA services.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.al.com/business/2023/01/birmingham-company-to-pay-153300-on-false-medicaid-claim-allegations.html

Birmingham-based Amvik Solutions is paying $153,300 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims for payment to Connecticut’s Medicaid program, federal officials announced today.

Federal officials announced the civil settlement with the government, which resolves allegations under the federal False Claims Act. The case involved the Justice Department, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Amvik Solutions offers billing, claims and collection services for healthcare providers throughout the U.S., using its proprietary WebABA software.

According to the DOJ, Amvik was hired to handle billing and claims for Helping Hands Academy, a Bridgeport, Conn. services provider working with children with autism.

The government alleges that when submitting claims for payment to Connecticut Medicaid on behalf of Helping Hands, Amvik falsely identified the incorrect Board Certified Behavior Analyst (“BCBA”) as the rendering provider on the claims.

This caused Connecticut Medicaid to pay claims that it would not have otherwise paid, investigators said. The action took place from Oct. 3, 2019 to Oct. 1, 2020.

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FWA- Healthcare billing fraud: 13 recent cases

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: A nice little round-up of Medicaid fraud.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/legal-regulatory-issues/healthcare-billing-fraud-13-recent-cases.html

From a Florida physician getting 20 years in prison for the “largest ever” case of its kind, to a New York gastroenterologist getting 30 months in prison for a Medicare fraud scheme, here are 13 healthcare billing fraud cases Becker’s has reported since Dec. 29. 

1. Medical billing company settles false claims allegations

Birmingham, Ala.-based medical billing company Amvik has agreed to pay $153,300 to settle allegations that it submitted false claims to the Connecticut Medicaid program for applied behavior analysis services. 

2. North Carolina lab owner convicted in $11M Medicaid fraud scheme

North Carolina lab owner Donald Booker was convicted for his role in a scheme to defraud the state’s Medicaid program with medically unnecessary urine tests. 

3. Mississippi provider pays $1.8M to settle overbilling allegations

A Mississippi orthopedic clinic and its owner, Hanna “Johnny” Mitias, MD, agreed to pay $1.8 million to settle allegations he overbilled Medicare and Medicaid for viscosupplementation agents.

4. 3 companies settle for $745K for misbranded migraine devices

Medical device distributor Jet Medical and two related companies agreed to pay $745,000 for allegedly instructing, coaching and encouraging medical providers to submit improper billing codes to Medicare for services involving migraine headache devices not approved by the FDA. 

5. Lab owner wanted for alleged Medicare cancer testing scam

Khalid Satary, the owner of several labs in Georgia, Oklahoma and Louisiana, is a wanted fugitive for alleged fraud involving unnecessary cancer genetic testing that resulted in billing Medicare for more than $547 million. After failing to appear at a Dec. 12 court date, Mr. Satary was declared a fugitive of justice and is believed to be in Dubai.

6. Georgia physician to pay $1.85M to settle false claim allegations

Conyers, Ga., physician Aarti Pandya, MD, has agreed to pay $1.85 million to resolve allegations that she knowingly submitted false claims to Medicare, including for cataract surgeries and diagnostic tests that were not medically necessary, tests that were incomplete or of worthless value, and office visits that did not provide the level of service claimed.

7. Former Florida physician gets 20 years prison in ‘largest-ever’ case of its kind

Former Florida physician Michael Ligotti, DO, was sentenced to 20 years in prison and ordered to surrender his medical license after pleading guilty to an addiction fraud treatment scheme that accounted for more than $746 million in billings to federal and private insurers and about $127 million in reimbursements. 

8. Texas lab owners charged in $107M Medicare fraud scheme

The owners of the Lewisville, Texas-based Trinity Clinic are accused of allegedly acquiring thousands of Medicare beneficiaries DNA specimens and corresponding prescriptions that the laboratory used to fraudulently bill the Medicare and Medicare Advantage for genetic testing. The men allegedly concealed the kickbacks through sham contracts for marketing and other services.

9. South Carolina man sentenced to 7 years in prison for stealing providers’ identities, Medicaid fraud

Jonathan Sumter, owner of PHC Supportive Services — a company that purported to provide behavioral healthcare to disabled, low-income individuals — was sentenced to more than seven years in federal prison for stealing the identities of providers and Medicaid recipients and billing South Carolina Medicaid for more than $1 million in false claims.

10. Arkansas cardiologist pays $900K to settle Medicare fraud allegations

Hot Springs, Ark.-based cardiologist Jeffrey Tauth, MD, agreed to pay more than $900,000 to settle allegations he submitted claims to Medicare for medically unnecessary placement of cardiac stents. 

11. New York physician gets 30 months in prison for Medicare fraud

New York gastroenterologist Morris Barnard, MD, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for billing Medicare more than $3 million for colonoscopies and other procedures that were not performed. 

12. Cardiologist pays $931K to settle lab test kickback allegations

Kentucky cardiologist Dr. Kishor Vora paid $931,500 to settle allegations he took kickbacks from a testing lab. 

13. Louisiana physician pleads guilty to Medicare fraud scheme

East Baton Rouge, La.-based physician Robert Dean, MD, pleaded guilty to his role in a $1.3 million Medicare fraud scheme in which he allegedly falsified medical orders for knee braces, claiming he examined and performed tests on patients he never met face to face. 

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FWA- $6.2 million in benefit overpayments recovered during first quarter of fiscal year

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Don’t let anyone tell you member fraud is not real. This article is about $6.2M in recoveries (so probably 10x that in losses) for just one quarter.

 
 

Clipped from: https://oig.hhs.texas.gov/about-us/news/62-million-benefit-overpayments-recovered-during-first-quarter-fiscal-year

The OIG’s Benefits Program Integrity (BPI) unit completed 3,205 investigations involving some form of benefit recipient overpayment or fraud allegation in the first quarter of fiscal year 2023. These efforts led to $6,255,879 in recoveries, 5 cases referred for prosecution and 187 cases referred for administrative disqualification.

Most completed investigations involved applicants misrepresenting the number of income-earning household members. Programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Medicaid and others use household composition and income to determine a client’s eligibility for assistance and the proper benefit amount. Below is a selection of SNAP fraud cases involving program clients.

Dallas SNAP client pleads guilty to fraud

In September, a Dallas woman pleaded guilty in Texas District Court on charges of illegal possession of Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. The charges stemmed from an investigation by the OIG.

The 1996 Federal Welfare Reform Act requires states to permanently disqualify individuals from the SNAP program if they have a felony drug conviction for conduct occurring after August 22, 1996. Applicants must provide truthful information to the state and notify the State of any past felony drug convictions during the application process.

The individual in question applied for SNAP benefits on January 31, 2011, and claimed under penalty of perjury that she had no such felony drug convictions. However, OIG investigators uncovered evidence that she was convicted of Unlawful Possession of a Controlled Substance, a state jail felony, on April 15, 2004.

The investigation showed that from January 2011 through November 2012, the defendant failed to disclose the conviction on five separate applications for SNAP benefits, receiving $9,252 in excess benefits. As a result, she was sentenced to three days in county jail and permanently disqualified from the SNAP program.

Olney woman convicted for SNAP fraud

A woman in Olney was found guilty in an administrative hearing of committing an Intentional Program Violation. The verdict is the result of an investigation by the OIG.

The individual applied to receive SNAP benefits on October 20, 2017. Because eligibility is tied to household resources, applicants must provide truthful information to the state and notify the state if their household’s composition or income changes.

In her application, the defendant claimed under penalty of perjury that the household consisted of only herself and two children. However, OIG investigators uncovered evidence that the children’s father was, in fact, living in the home and receiving income from a full-time job.

The investigation revealed that over more than four years, the perpetrator received $21,148 in excess benefits because of the fraudulent, unreported information. As a result, she was disqualified from the SNAP program for 12 months and ordered to pay full restitution.

Hidalgo County SNAP and Medicaid client pleads guilty to theft

A Hidalgo County resident pleaded guilty to felony theft after an investigation by the OIG.

The individual applied to receive SNAP benefits on August 19, 2015. In her application, the defendant claimed that the household’s income was from her employment. However, OIG investigators found that the defendant had consistent U.S. currency deposits into her and her husband’s joint bank account that she did not report during the application process. Had she truthfully disclosed the household income, her benefits would have been drastically reduced since household resources determine eligibility.

The defendant continued to falsely report the household income for almost four years, from August 2015 through May 2019. In total, the defendant obtained $20,397 in SNAP benefits and $11,514 in Medicaid benefits she was not entitled to receive.

In September 2022, she was sentenced to 10 years of probation and ordered to pay $31,911 in restitution to Texas Health and Human Services.

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FWA- Buffalo man sentenced to one-year probation, defrauded Medicaid of thousands

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Saleh Mozeb and friends nabbed $12k in a rides not delivered scam.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.wkbw.com/news/local-news/buffalo-man-sentenced-to-one-year-probation-defrauded-medicaid-of-thousands

 
 

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross announced Tuesday that a Buffalo man was sentenced to serve one-year probation and ordered to pay over $12,000 in restitution after being convicted of healthcare fraud.

The defendant, 67-year-old Saleh Mozeb, served as part owner and driver for Great Lake Transportation, a company that offered transportation services for Medicaid recipients.

Between September 2010 and Dec. 31, 2020, drivers for Great Lake Transportation, including Mozeb, submitted false records to Medical Answering Service – a Medicaid transportation management company that schedules transportation services for Medicaid recipients.

Mozeb claimed that transportation services had been provided to Medicaid recipients when in actuality, no transportation services were provided.

As a result of the conviction, Mozeb was sentenced to one-year probation and ordered to pay $12,619 in restitution payment.