• This is a political forum that is non-biased/non-partisan and treats every person's position on topics equally. This debate forum is not aligned to any political party. In today's politics, many ideas are split between and even within all the political parties. Often we find ourselves agreeing on one platform but some topics break our mold. We are here to discuss them in a civil political debate. If this is your first visit to our political forums, be sure to check out the RULES. Registering for debate politics is necessary before posting. Register today to participate - it's free!

Texas AGO obtains $1.4 mil settlement against PP for Medicaid fraud

Thanks Sassy.
 
Thanks Sassy.

No problem. I get tired of all of the slanted blog postings when it only takes 5 or 10 minutes to find real information, primary sources and creditable reports. Google is a great tool.
 
FYI, here is what a Medicaid Fraud Investigation report ending in a conviction looks like.

You can find more here.

Also:

What is Medicaid Fraud?

Perpetrators of Medicaid fraud run the gamut from the solo practitioner who submits claims for services never rendered to large institutions that exaggerate the level of care provided to their patients and then alter patient records to conceal the resulting lack of care. Although recipients also commit Medicaid fraud, the jurisdiction of the Medicaid Fraud Control Units (MFCUs) is limited to investigating and prosecuting Medicaid provider fraud. The MFCUs have prosecuted individual providers such as physicians, dentists, and mental health professionals. In addition, the Units have also prosecuted fraud in numerous segments of the health care industry, such as hospitals, nursing homes, home health care agencies, medical transportation companies, pharmacies, durable medical equipment companies, pharmaceutical manufacturers and medical clinics.

The following are typical schemes that providers use to defraud the Medicaid program:

Billing for services not provided - A provider bills for services not performed, such as blood tests or x-rays that were not taken, full denture plates when only partial ones are supplied, or a nursing home or hospital that continues to bill for services rendered to a patient who is no longer at the facility either because of a death or transfer.
Double billing - A provider bills both Medicaid and a private insurance company (or recipient) for treatment, or two providers request payment on the same recipient for the same procedure on the same date.
Billing for Phantom visits - A provider falsely bills the Medicaid program for patient visits that never take place.
Billing for More Hours Than There Are In A Day - Inflating the amount of time a provider spends with patients, for example a psychiatrist that bills for more than 24 hours of psychotherapy treatment on a day.
Falsifying Credentials - Mispresenting the qualifications of a licensed provider in order to defraud Medicaid. For example, a physician who allows a non-physician to impersonate a licensed doctor who medically treats patients and prescribes drugs and then bills the Medicaid program.
Substitution of Generic Drugs - A pharmacy bills Medicaid for the cost of a brand-name prescription when, in fact, a generic substitute was supplied to the recipient at a substantially lower cost to the pharmacy.
Billing for Unnecessary Services or Tests - A provider falsifies the diagnosis and symptoms on recipient records and billings to obtain payments for unnecessary laboratory tests or equipment.
Billing for More Expensive Procedures than were Performed - A provider bills for a comprehensive procedure when only a limited one was administered or billing for expensive equipment and actually furnishing cheap substitutes.
Kickbacks - A nursing home owner or operator requires another provider, such as a laboratory, ambulance company, or pharmacy, to pay owner/operator a certain portion of the money received for rendering services to patients in the nursing home. Examples of this type of payment include vacation trips, personal services and merchandise, leased vehicles, and cost payments. This practice usually results in unnecessary services being performed to generate additional income to pay the kickbacks.
False Cost Reports - A nursing home owner or operator includes personal expenses in its Medicaid claims. These expenses often include the cost of personal items.

From here: What is Medicaid Fraud? — National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units

I also want to note that in the actual conviction documents people are INDICTED by the Attorney General's offices, and sentenced to jail time AND repayment of the monies improperly paid to them. In that specific document, you'll see that Attorney General, Greg Abbott from Texas indicted a few people: a behavioral health firm for a contracting scheme, several nurses for narcotics thefts, an orthopedic supply company for durable medical supplies billed but not provided, another durable medical equipment company for a kickback scheme, a medical supply company for upbilling for power wheelchairs they didn't provide to customers, and more durable medical equipment schemes. In ALL cases, there were fines PLUS jail time and/or probation. Even in cases where the perpetrator plead guilty to charges, they still served time/got probation and fines. That is not what happened in the settlement you've posted in your OP nor in the alleged abuses in the Stearns report.
 
Sassy, the problem is that political agenda takes away the desire to even care about reality.
 
The court documents I linked repeatedly say that the AG's office chose not to intervene on Reynold's filed complaint. There's no evidence of any investigation.

Intervene and investigate are not the same word.
 
Back
Top Bottom