Independent laboratories have paid more than $300 million to settle charges that they
billed Medicare and other federally funded insurance programs for unnecessary blood tests.
Kickbacks also at issue
Individual physicians also have been hit hard by False Claims Act lawsuits. Charges
have included upcoding, routinely billing for unnecessary services, substandard services,
false diagnoses to justify claims and kickbacks for referrals.
Whether a violation of the federal anti-kickback law constitutes a False Claims Act
violation is currently one of the most hotly disputed issues in fraud litigation. If it
does, then the physician found liable is subject to treble damages and penalties as high
as $10,000 per patient billed.
Although the federal courts are split on this issue, doctors should be wary of
accepting any benefit (research grant, free rent, free products, etc.) from hospitals,
labs or other providers of medical services.
Congress passed the original False Claims Act in 1863 to prosecute manufacturers that
sold the Union army defective supplies. But when Congress amended the statute in 1986, it
hoped that the law would be used to uncover fraud in all areas where the government
provides funding, either directly or indirectly. The revised law stipulated harsher
penalties for wrongdoers and greater rewards for whistleblowers.
The number of False Claims Act lawsuits then jumped from 33 in fiscal 1987 to more than
300 in fiscal 1996.
In the early years of the amended law, most cases involved defense contractors. But in
the past year, only one-fourth have been related to the defense industry. About 40 percent
of the lawsuits were against health-care providers.
Part of the reason for the False Claims Act's growing success is the reward provision.
Whistleblowers get 15 percent to 25 percent of the total amount the government recovers if
the government intervenes in the case and up to 30 percent if the government declines to
intervene.
These rewards are meant to encourage whistleblowers to take the personal and
professional risks that exposing wrongdoing usually entails. Anyone with knowledge of an
individual or organization submitting false claims to the government can file a lawsuit.
This could be an employee or even a competitor.
Lawsuits initiated by whistleblowers are called qui tam cases. (Qui tam
is short for a longer Latin phrase meaning "he who brings the action for the King as
well as for himself") The lawsuits are filed under seal and are not available to the
public for 60 days or longer while the government investigates to decide whether it wants
to join the lawsuit.
Whistleblowers may file lawsuits even if they participated in the fraud. However, if
the courts find that the whistleblowers planned or initiated the fraud, then judges may
reduce their rewards. And if the whistleblowers are convicted of criminal actions in
connection with the fraud, then they will not be awarded any money.
Protect yourself
To avoid or minimize liability under the False Claims Act, physicians should: