Fraud%20and%20Abuse - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Fraud%20and%20Abuse

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Examples of Fraud. A healthcare provider bills for services the patient never received. A medical supply supplier bills for equipment the patient never received. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fraud%20and%20Abuse


1
Fraud and Abuse
Steven M. Verno, CMBS, CMSCS, CEMCS, CPM-MCS
2
Disclaimer
I am NOT a lawyer. This presentation contains NO
legal advice. This presentation is for training
purposes only! Images included were obtained from
free public domain websites
3
News!
  • Broken Arrow Doctor Claiming To Cure Cancer Fined
    2.5 Million For Fraud
  • (Source Oklahoma Channel 6 News)
  • Hospital group fined 3.8M for alleged Medicare,
    Medicaid fraud (Source Fierce healthcare)
  • Indo-American Doctor Fined 43 Million, Jailed
    For Fraud (Source The LINK)
  • Doctor Fined 21 Million For Fraud
  • (Source Daily Press)

4
What is Fraud?
  • Fraud occurs when someone knowingly lies to
    obtain some benefit or advantage to which they
    are not otherwise entitled or someone knowingly
    denies some benefit that is due and to which
    someone is entitled. (Reference California
    Department of Insurance)

Under HIPAA, fraud is defined as knowingly, and
willfully executes or attempts to execute a
schemeto defraud any healthcare benefit program
or to obtain by means of false or fraudulent
pretenses, representations, or promises any of
the money or property owned byany healthcare
benefit program.
5
Examples of Fraud
  • A healthcare provider bills for services the
    patient never received.
  • A medical supply supplier bills for equipment the
    patient never received.
  • Using another persons insurance card to get
    medical care, supplies, or equipment.
  • Unbundling Services (Modifier 59)
  • Upcoding/downcoding a visit.
  • Misrepresenting the diagnosis to justify the
    service
  • Misrepresenting the type or place of service
  • or who rendered the service

6
What is abuse?
  • Abuse occurs when doctors or suppliers dont
    follow good medical practices, resulting in
    improper payment, or services that arent
    medically necessary.

7
Examples of Abuse
  • Excessive charges for services or supplies
  • Claims for services not medically necessary or,
    if medically necessary, not to the extent
    rendered
  • Breeches of assignment agreements
  • Improper billing practices
  • Billing Medicare as Primary when Medicare is
    Secondary
  • Billing Medicare more than other insurance
    companies.
  • Routine waivers of patient copayments and
    deductibles

8
Laws (State and Federal)
  • False Claims Act (FCA), 31 U.S.C., s. 3729
  • Florida False Claims Act, F.S. 817.234
  • Anti-Kickback Statute 42 U.S.C. s. 1320a-7b(b)
  • Physician Self-Referral (Stark) Statute, 42
    U.S.C. 1395nn
  • Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
  • HIPAA, Title 18, Section 1347
  • Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009

9
PENALTIES
  • Up to 5 years in prison
  • Fines of 10,000 for each false claim
  • Recovery of the costs of litigation.
  • Triple damages
  • Mandatory exclusion from the Medicare and
    Medicaid programs for 5 years
  • Loss of Medical License

10
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11
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12
Suspicious Activities
  • Do not collect mandatory copayments or
    coinsurance (Insurance Only)
  • Advertise free consultations to people with
    Medicare.
  • Claim they represent Medicare or a branch of the
    Federal Government.
  • Use pressure or scare tactics to sell you
    high-priced medical services or diagnostic tests.
  • Bill Medicare or another insurer for services or
    items you did not get.
  • Bill Medicare for services or equipment that are
    different from what you received.
  • Bill Medicare for home medical equipment after
    you returned it.

13
Suspicious Activities
  • Use telemarketing and door-to-door selling as
    marketing tools.
  • Use another person's insurance card to get
    medical care, supplies, or equipment.
  • Offer non-medical transportation or housekeeping
    as Medicare-approved services.
  • Put the wrong diagnosis on the claim so the
    insurance company will pay.
  • Bill home health services for patients who are
    not confined to their home or for Medicare
    patients who still drive a car.
  • A friend or stranger asks you to contact your
    doctor and ask for a service or supplies that you
    do not need.
  • Offer you payment or gifts to go to clinics or
    offices.

14
Write Offs
  • Professional Courtesy is discouraged by the AMA.
    (Board of Trustees Report 18-A-98)
  • The provider has exhausted all efforts to
    collect, including debt collection agency
  • The amount to collect is less than what it costs
    to collect
  • The patient has a proven financial hardship.

15
Preventing Fraud as a patient
  • Never give your health insurance policy number to
    anyone, except your doctor or other health care
    provider.
  • Dont allow anyone, except your medical
    providers, to review your medical records or
    recommended services.
  • Dont contact your doctor to request a service
    that you do not need.
  • Dont ask your doctor to make false entries on
    prescriptions, bills, or records in order to get
    your insurance company to pay.
  • Dont accept medical supplies from a door-to-door
    salesman.
  • Do be careful in accepting Medical services that
    are represented as being free and then the
    provider asks you for your insurance card.
  • Do be cautious when you are offered free testing
    or screening in exchange for your health
    insurance card number.

16
Preventing Fraud As A Provider
  • Verify insurance information BEFORE the patient
    is seen. Use Insurance Affidavit form.
  • Ensure that your coders and medical billers have
    the proper training
  • Discourage Percentage Billing
  • Verify all claims as 100 true, accurate and
    complete before sending them for payment.
  • Perform unannounced audits of claims and payment
    postings.
  • Review all EOBs for accuracy.
  • Validate all bank deposits against payment
    postings.
  • Take Patient Complaints Seriously

17
Preventing Fraud as a Provider
  • Maintain appropriate documentation
  • Record start and stop time
  • Understand which services are covered vs.
  • non-covered (i.e. non-billable)
  • No duplicate claims
  • Maintain legible records
  • Comply with State licensure regulations
  • Cooperate with any audits or reviews
  • Avoid up-coding or down-coding

18
Is This Fraud or Abuse?
19
Questions?
steve_verno_at_yahoo.com
20
Thank You
steve_verno_at_yahoo.com
21
About the Author
  • Steve Verno is a certified medical billing
    specialist, an on line certified medical billing
    specialist instructor, a certified multispecialty
    coding specialist, a certified emergency medicine
    coding specialist, and a certified practice
    manager-medical coding specialist. His
    specialties include Emergency Medicine, Family
    Practice, Urgent Care, Pediatrics, Internal
    medicine, ERISA, Compliance, ICD-10-CM, Appeals,
    AR Recovery, Provider Insurance Contracts. He is
    a retired American Red Cross Health and Safety
    Instructor Trainer and a Professor of Coding and
    Billing at Florida Metropolitan University on
    medical leave. Steve attended the American Red
    Cross college. He has more than 40 articles on
    coding and billing published in BC Advantage
    Magazine and Codetrends Newsletters. He is a
    contributing editor for the Insurance Handbook
    for the Medical Office by Marilyn Fordney. Steve
    has created ICD-10-CM and Appeal guidebooks
    available through BC Advantage. He is a member
    of the Medical Economics Committee of the Florida
    College of Emergency Physicians and an editorial
    board member of BC Advantage, The Medical
    Association of Billers and The Coding Institute.
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