January 5, 2016
Nashville Pharmacy Services, LLC, and its majority owner Kevin Hartman, agreed to pay up to $7.8 million to settle charges they violated the False Claims Act by overbilling Medicare and TennCare for pharmacy services. Specifically, the government claimed the Nashville-based pharmacy that specializes in dispensing HIV and AIDS-related medications automatically refilled medications without a request from the beneficiary or their physician; improperly waived TennCare and Medicare co-payments without an individualized assessment of ability to pay; improperly used pharmaceutical manufacturers’ co-payment cards to pay the co-payments of Medicare beneficiaries; billed for medications dispensed after the deaths of certain beneficiaries; and billed for medications that lacked a valid prescription. The allegations originated in a whistleblower lawsuit filed by Marsha McCullough, a former Nashville Pharmacy order entry technician, under the qui tamprovisions of the False Claims Act. She will receive a whistleblower award of 18 percent of the government’s recovery which could amount to $1.4 million. Whistleblower Insider
Tagged in: Drug and DME Pricing, FCA Federal, FCA State, Healthcare Fraud, Medicaid, Medical Billing Fraud, Medicare, Pharma Fraud, Whistleblower Case, Whistleblower Rewards,