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Hospital Fraud

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Page 12 of 17

May 20, 2016

Hospicio La Paz, Inc. agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle charges of violating the False Claims Act in connection with approximately $1.5 million in questionable billings it submitted for payment to the Medicare Part A program.  DOJ (D.PR)

April 14, 2016

Boston Medical Center (BMC) and two of its physician practice organizations agreed to pay $1.1 million to resolve allegations they violated the False Claims Act by improperly billing Medicare and Medicaid.  Specifically, the government charged that (1) BMC billed Medicare for more units of Rituxan, an expensive cancer drug, than BMC actually infused in its patients; (2) BMC billed Medicare and Medicaid for services at its pre-surgical treatment center even though the global fee for the subsequent surgeries covered those same treatments; and (3) BMC submitted claims to Medicare for outpatient podiatry services where the clinical documentation did not support the reasonableness and necessity of the services.  The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by BMC’s former Chief Compliance Officer, Kathleen Heffernan.  She will receive a yet-to-be-determined whistleblower award from the proceeds of the government's recovery.  DOJ (DMA)

February 17, 2016

Fifty-one hospitals in 15 states agreed to pay more than $23 million to settle charges of violating the False Claims Act by implanting cardiac devices in Medicare patients in violation of Medicare coverage requirements.  These settlements represent the final stage of a nationwide investigation into the practices of hundreds of hospitals improperly billing Medicare for these devices, which in total have yielded more than $280 million.  The allegations against most of the current settling hospitals originated in a whistleblower lawsuit brought under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Leatrice Ford Richards, a cardiac nurse and Thomas Schuhmann, a health care reimbursement consultant.  They will receive a whistleblower reward of more than $3.5 million from the proceeds of the government's recovery from these current settlements.  The settling hospitals and health care companies included Arkansas Heart Hospital (AK); Aurora Health Care (WI); Cleveland Clinic Foundation (OH); Dignity Health (CA); MGH Wind Down (MI); Monongalia County General Hospital (WV); Mount Sinai Medical Center (FL); Nacogdoches Memorial Hospital (TX); Northwell Health (NY); Sentara Healthcare (VA); and Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth Health System (CO).  DOJ

January 15, 2016

Oceanside, California-based hospital Tri-City Medical Center agreed to pay $3,278,464 to resolve allegations it violated the Stark Law and False Claims Act by maintaining improper financial arrangements with community-based physicians and physician groups.  According to the government, Tri-City maintained 97 improper financial arrangements with physicians and physician groups, including with its former chief of staff.  DOJ

January 8, 2016

Damian Mayol, the president of Miami-based transportation company Transportation Services Providers Inc., was convicted for his role in a health care fraud scheme involving three mental health centers based in Miami that resulted in the submission of approximately $70 million in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare.  According to evidence presented at trial, Mayol used his company to coordinate the payment of illegal health care kickbacks to recruiters, who in return referred patients to three now-defunct clinics in the Miami area:  R&S Community Mental Health Inc., St. Theresa Community Mental Health Center Inc. and New Day Community Mental Health Center LLC.  On behalf of the recruited beneficiaries, the centers billed Medicare for costly partial hospitalization program services that were not medically necessary or not provided to patients.  DOJ

December 23, 2015

Memorial Health, Inc., Memorial Health University Medical Center, Inc., Provident Health Services, Inc., and MPPG, Inc. (d/b/a Memorial Health University Physicians) agreed to pay roughly $10 million to settle charges they violated the False Claims Act by submitting claims to the Government in violation of the Stark Law which prohibits hospitals from entering into improper financial relationships with referring physicians.  The settlement is the largest civil health care fraud recovery in the history of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Georgia.  The allegations first arose in a whistleblower lawsuit filed by former Memorial Health CEO Phillip Schaengold under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act.  The whistleblower will receive a yet-to-be-disclosed whistleblower reward from the proceeds of the government’s recovery. DOJ (SDGA)

November 24, 2015

The former CFO of Long Beach, California-based Pacific Hospital, two orthopedic surgeons and two others have been charged in long-running health care fraud schemes that illegally referred thousands of patients for spinal surgeries and generated nearly $600 million in fraudulent billings.  The wide-ranging kickback scheme, which involved dozens of surgeons, orthopedic specialists, chiropractors, marketers and other medical professionals, involved improper referrals to Pacific Hospital and Hawaiian Hospital.  The most recent targets of the government’s investigation, all of whom have agreed to plead guilty, include: former Pacific Hospital CFO James L. Canedo; orthopedic surgeons Philip Sobol and Mitchell Cohen; chiropractor Alan Ivar; and health care marketer Paul Richard Randall, previously affiliated with Pacific Hospital and Tri-City Regional Medical Center in Hawaiian Gardens.  Under the terms of their plea agreements, Sobol faces a federal prison term of up to 10 years; Canedo, Ivar and Randall face up to five years in prison; and Cohen faces up to three years in prison.  All of them will be required to pay restitution to the victims of the scheme, which in Canedo’s case will be at least $20 million.  Whistleblower Insider

November 16, 2015

HCA Holdings, Inc. (including affiliated entities Hospital Corporation of America; Parallon Business Solutions, LLC; West Florida Regional Medical Center, Inc.; HCA Health Services of Florida, Inc.; Regional Medical Center Bayonet Point; HCA Health Services of Florida, Inc.; New Port Richey Hospital, Inc.; and Medical Center of Trinity) agreed to pay $2 million to resolve charges of violating the False Claims Act through billing Medicare for unnecessary lab tests and double billing for fetal testing.  The allegations first arose in a whistleblower lawsuit by HCA employee Kelly Oxendine under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act.  The whistleblower will receive a whistleblower award of roughly $400,000 from the government’s recovery.  DOJ(SC)

October 30, 2015

The Department of Justice reached 70 settlements involving 457 hospitals in 43 states for more than $250 million related to cardiac devices implanted in Medicare patients in violation of Medicare coverage requirements.  The devices, called implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), are electronic devices implanted near and connected to the heart to detect and treat chaotic, extremely fast, life-threatening heart rhythms, called fibrillations, by delivering a shock to the heart, restoring the heart’s normal rhythm.  Only patients with certain clinical characteristics and risk factors qualify for an ICD covered by Medicare.  According to the government, from 2003 to 2010 each of the settling hospitals implanted ICDs during periods prohibited by the Medicare’s National Coverage Determination.  Most of the settlements originated from allegations first raised in a whistleblower lawsuit brought under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Leatrice Ford Richards, a cardiac nurse, and Thomas Schuhmann, a health care reimbursement consultant.  They have so far received a combined whistleblower award of more than $38 million from the settlements.  The Department of Justice is continuing to investigate additional hospitals and health systems.  DOJ

October 16, 2015

South Carolina-based Tuomey Healthcare System agreed to pay $72.4 million to settle charges of violating the False Claims Act by billing Medicare for services referred by physicians with whom the hospital had improper financial relationships.  Under the settlement, Tuomey also will be sold to Palmetto Health, a multi-hospital healthcare system based in Columbia, South Carolina.  According to the government, Tuomey violated the Stark law by entering into contracts with 19 specialist physicians that required them to refer their outpatient procedures to Tuomey in exchange for compensation that far exceeded fair market value and included part of the money Tuomey received from Medicare for the referred procedures.  The settlement follows a jury trial where the court entered judgement against Tuomey for more than $237 million.  The case arose from a whistleblower lawsuit filed under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act by Dr. Michael K. Drakeford, an orthopedic surgeon who was offered, but refused to sign, one of the illegal contracts.  Dr. Drakeford will receive a whistleblower award of roughly $18.1 million from the settlement.  Whistleblower Insider
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