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Improper Medical Personnel

This archive displays posts tagged as relevant to healthcare billings for unlicensed, unsupervised, or otherwise improper personnel. You may also be interested in our pages:

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$2.6 Million Whistleblower Settlement With Bay Sleep Clinic

The clinic will settle whistleblower allegations of using unlicensed technicians and unapproved locations and of doctor kickback referrals. Constantine Cannon LLP is pleased to announce a $2.6 million settlement on behalf of its client for whistleblower allegations against Bay Sleep Clinic. The settlement was announced by the United States government on December 28, 2016, against Bay Sleep Clinic, which currently operates 20 locations throughout northern California; its related Qualium Corporation and Amerimed Corporation businesses; and owners and operators Anooshiravan Mostowfipour and Tara Nader. The “qui tam,” or whistleblower, lawsuit alleged that the defendants fraudulently billed Medicare for sleep studies conducted by unlicensed individuals in unapproved locations; improperly dispensed durable medical equipment from unapproved locations using unlicensed technicians; and paid doctors for referrals in violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute. The defendants neither admitted nor denied liability. The whistleblower, Elma F. Dresser, is a former Bay Sleep Clinic employee who worked as a sleep technician and marketer for eight years. Through her various roles at the company, Ms. Dresser became familiar with the defendants’ alleged scheme to bilk money from Medicare. She filed her suit in 2012, leading the government to investigate the claims and join the case. Ms. Dresser was represented by Eric R. Havian, partner and attorney, Jessica T. Moore, partner and attorney, Anne Hayes Hartman, partner and attorney, Hallie Noecker, attorney, and Sarah Poppy Alexander, attorney of Constantine Cannon’s whistleblower practice in San Francisco, along with co-counsel from the Law Office of William C. Dresser. “It’s rewarding to see the alleged fraudsters held responsible. Because of the close cooperation and work between the whistleblower and the government, we were able to recover significant funds for the government,” said Anne Hayes Hartman, co-lead counsel on the case. “It is gratifying to represent people like Elma Dresser, who bravely stepped forward with knowledge of her employer’s wrongdoing. Many do not appreciate the risks whistleblowers face to hold alleged wrongdoers accountable.” “Sleep studies are a quickly expanding medical field,” said Jessica T. Moore, who served as co- lead counsel on the case. “Ensuring the safety of these procedures should be a top priority of the government for all patients, Medicare and otherwise.” The federal False Claims Act allows whistleblowers to sue companies that are defrauding the government and receive a reward if the government recovers any funds as a result. The government may choose to intervene in the lawsuit, as it has done in this case. The False Claims Act is one of the government’s most effective weapons in combatting fraud, waste, and abuse by those who contract with the government. Healthcare fraud alone is estimated to cost the U.S. billions of dollars. Such fraud can be difficult to discern without access to inside information; well-placed whistleblowers are necessary to provide the information the government might otherwise lack to help stop these practices.

December 28, 2016

Bay Sleep Clinic, its related businesses -- Qualium Corporation and Amerimed Corporation -- and their owners and operators, Anooshiravan Mostowfipour and Tara Nader, agreed to pay $2.6 million to settle allegations they fraudulently charged Medicare for diagnostic sleep tests and medical devices in violation of Medicare payment rules. The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed by Elma F. Dresser under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act. She will receive a whistleblower award of approximately $545,000 from the proceeds of the government's recovery. DOJ (NDCA)

December 9, 2016

Michigan resident Renald Dasine pleaded guilty to fraud charges for his role in a scheme to defraud Medicare out of approximately $6.3 million while he acted as an unlicensed physician at Detroit in-home physician services company B&M Visiting Doctors PLCDOJ

December 20, 2016

Massachusetts announced that a Burlington woman has been sentenced to jail and ordered to pay up to $570,000 in restitution for stealing from public agencies by billing for unlicensed psychological services. Nita Guzman, age 52, pleaded guilty on Friday in Middlesex Superior Court to the charges of Medicaid False Claims (2 counts), False Claims to Public Agency (1 Count), Larceny (4 Counts), and Unlicensed Practice of Psychology (2 Counts). An AG’s investigation revealed that Guzman, through her company New England Psychological Consultants, Inc., billed Medicaid, Medicare, and Lawrence Public Schools more than $550,000 for unlicensed mental health services. MA

Radiology Practice - Healthcare Fraud/Unnecessary Testing ($10.5M)

Constantine Cannon represented two whistleblowers in a False Claims Act case alleging New York-based Zwanger-Pesiri Radiology improperly billed Medicare for testing that was medically unnecessary or never performed.  In November 2016, the company agreed to pay $10.5 million to settle both criminal and civil charges.  Our clients received a whistleblower award of more than $1 million.  Read more -- Newsday, DOJ, PR Newswire, CC.

First Circuit Weighs in on Supreme Court’s Materiality Standard in Escobar Remand

Posted  12/9/16
By Rosie Dawn Griffin The Supreme Court’s opinion in Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar—in which the high court upheld the implied false certification theory of liability but placed a new focus on materiality under the False Claims Act (FCA)—has predictably spawned a number of lower court decisions grappling with materiality in the varied factual landscape of FCA litigation,...

Long Island’s Zwanger-Pesiri Radiology to Pay Over $10 Million Over Allegations of Medicare and Medicaid Fraud

Posted  11/17/16
By the C|C Whistleblower Lawyer Team Long Island Natives Reported Systemic and Abusive Billing Practices, Including: · performing unnecessary and excessive testing; · purposely scheduling tests based on financial gain, not patient need; · falsifying the identity of rendering radiologists while using the services of uncredentialed physicians; and · charging for services not performed. Constantine Cannon...

Bay Sleep Clinic - Healthcare Fraud/Kickbacks ($2.6 million)

Constantine Cannon represented a whistleblower under the False Claims Act case alleging Bay Sleep Clinic billed Medicare for sleep studies by unlicensed technicians and paid kickbacks to doctors for patient referrals.  In December 2016, the company agreed to pay $2.6 million to settle the matter.  Our client received a whistleblower award of roughly 21% of the government’s recovery.  Read more -- SF Gate, DOJ, PR Newswire, CC.

August 17, 2016

Dr. Yasin Khan, Dr. Elizabeth Khan, Dr. Dong Ko, Westfield Hospital and affiliated entities including a related pain clinic, Lehigh Valley Pain Management, agreed to pay $690,441 to resolve allegations they violated the False Claims Act by submitting false health care billings for services performed by non-physicians as “incident to” the services of supervising physicians when, in fact, supervising physicians were away from the office or otherwise incapable of supervising.  The allegations originated in whistleblower lawsuit filed Margaret Reynard under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act.  Ms. Reynard will receive a whistleblower award of roughly $124,000 from the proceeds of the government's recovery.  DOJ (EDPA)
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