Thousands of pharmacies bilk Medicare for billions of dollars
A thousand prescription for two patients over one year one of the most egregious
Hundreds of pharmacies - 2,600, fleeced Medicare to the tune of $5.6
billion. In one of the most egregious examples, a Kansas drugstore
submitted one thousand prescriptions - each - for two patients in the
space of a year. According to the inspector general of the Health and
Human Services department, the corner drugstore is especially vulnerable
to fraud, partly because Medicare does not require the private insurers
that deliver prescription benefits to seniors to report suspicious
billing patterns.
In Los Angeles, where 12 percent of pharmacies had questionable billings, one drugstore in a suburban strip mall billed Medicare more than $8.4 million, nine times the national average. That worked out to an average of 116 prescriptions per beneficiary.
The analysis scrutinized every claim submitted by the nation's 59,000 retail pharmacies during 2009, more than one billion prescriptions. Investigators were able to reveal contrasts between normal business practices and potential criminal behavior with statistical analysis.
"The findings call for a strong response to improve (program) oversight," the report said.
In written comments, Medicare administrator Marilyn Tavenner said the agency mostly agrees with the inspector general's call to action. Tavenner suggested that requiring private insurers to monitor and report suspicious activity could place a burden on the companies and may flood government officials with leads that turn out to be useless.
Medicare also said it has anti-fraud contractors that are already keeping close tabs on the program.
"We believe it is important to note that (the inspector general's) report identified what appeared to be questionable billing based on its own data analysis but did not determine any actual fraud committed by the pharmacies," Tavenner wrote.
The issue bespeaks an enormous lack of accountability where the typical citizen's personal health is at stake. "What we are seeing in the data is extremely concerning," Jodi Nudelman, a regional inspector general in New York said.
Her team will turn over the names of the 2,637 pharmacies it identified for follow-up. They are "extreme billers, when you look at their peers and compare them," Nudelman added.
On the positive side, only a small fraction of retail pharmacies, 4.4 percent were found to have telltale patterns of questionable billings. But in some parts of the country, the share was much higher, reaching nearly 20 percent of pharmacies in Miami, an area known as an incubator for Medicare fraud.
In Los Angeles, where 12 percent of pharmacies had questionable billings, one drugstore in a suburban strip mall billed Medicare more than $8.4 million, nine times the national average. That worked out to an average of 116 prescriptions per beneficiary.
© 2012, Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.
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General Intention: The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.
Keywords: Pharmacies, billing, Medicare, fraud, abuse
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It's terrible that people steal. Taking money unjustly and illegally from the government is stealing from us all. It's easier to get angry with businesses that seem to overcharge, steal and do wrong but not taking care of the people's money contributes to stealing, cheating since people think or know they can get a way with it for a while. This affects us all - illegally being in the country, unjustly using services that you don't qualify for, taking from the public since no one will notice or care. Stealing music online, using software you didn't pay for that you should pay for, and other unjust things is easy to think is no big thing since the companies have insurance, they make so much money and I need it or deserve it or deserve more. There are many ways many people steal besides taking something from someone's property or hand - thou shalt not steal - means I have a right to own things and property and you don't have a right to take it without my permission freely given, not coerced, not even if you're poor (not talking about starving on your death bed). Too bad we don't hear more leaders talking about respecting what belongs to the public or others even in the realm of corporations (who are people joined together under a legal entity) that stealing is stealing. Good that they're cleaning this up - we need to hear more about protecting us all individually, our money sent to the government and in groups as corporations, businesses and other types of groups. Go get em!