Failing to report Medicare
billing errors: a very risky business
By John R. Phillips and Mary Louise Cohen
(Reprinted from New Perspectives, Journal of the Association of
Healthcare Internal Auditors, Spring 1997, with permission)
In many hospitals and other institutions there is a tendency to think that nothing
needs to be done when billing mistakes are made in the institution's favor. But that
decision is a risky one these days if it involves Medicare or any other federal health
insurance funds.
Failing to report Medicare billing errors to the federal government can get healthcare
providers - and their employees - in trouble in two ways: They could be prosecuted for
criminal violations, which could result in prison time as well as fines, and they could be
sued for treble damages by whistleblowers and the government.
Criminal liability under the "duty to disclose" provision
Just recently the government has begun to use a little-known provision of the Social
Security Act to discourage healthcare fraud. The "duty to disclose" provision of
the 1977 amendments to the law [42 USC sec. 1320-7b(a)3] makes concealing from the
government or failing to report Medicare overpayments a felony.
Under the "duty to disclose" provision, healthcare providers and others who
conceal or fail to disclose that they have received larger payments than they are entitled
to are guilty of a felony and could be imprisoned for up to five years and fined up to
$25,000. Their employees, including auditors, who conceal these overpayments may be guilty
of a misdemeanor and subject to fines.
In negotiations with healthcare providers to settle False Claims cases during the past
year, government attorneys have been threatening to prosecute the providers for violating
this law. But there have been no reported prosecutions yet.
One area in which this statute might be particularly important to healthcare providers
is cost reporting. For example, hospitals might inaccurately estimate the proportion of
their indirect administrative and general costs attributable to outpatient care rather
than inpatient care. Intermediaries may not catch mistakes like that for a couple of
years, if they ever do, since final settlements or audits usually don't occur until two
years after the cost reports are submitted. By then, the incorrect claims are likely to
have been repeated in later cost reports because hospitals generally use cost reports from
previous years to figure succeeding cost reports. In these cases, it's the hospital's
responsibility to report errors in other cost reports.
Blowing the whistle on Medicare fraud
Healthcare providers that submit fraudulent claims to the government also run the risk
of someone blowing the whistle on the practice. That person could be a doctor, a clerk, a
patient or even a competitor. The whistleblower simply needs to know about specific acts
of fraud to file a lawsuit seeking damages on behalf of the government.
The False Claims Act allows private citizens as well as the government to sue
individuals, companies or institutions that are defrauding the government and recover
three times the government's losses plus $5,000 to $10,000 for each false claim.
Fraudulent practices by a provider often will involve thousands, and sometimes millions,
of individual patient claims, which makes the amount of civil penalties in healthcare
fraud cases almost always staggering.
The government has used the threat of penalties under the False Claims Act to persuade
healthcare providers to reimburse the government for fraudulent claims and pay smaller
penalties. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has established several False
Claims initiatives, including the "Physicians at Teaching Hospitals" (PATH)
project and the "DRG (Diagnostic Related Group) Window" project. The PATH
project involves billing Medicare for treatment by faculty physicians that was actually
done by residents and interns. Under the "DRG Window" project, HHS is looking at
violations of its "72-hour rule," where Medicare was billed separately for
outpatient treatment of patients later admitted.
An increasing number of whistleblowers also are filing lawsuits against healthcare
providers. To encourage people to report fraud, the law stipulates that whistleblowers
will receive 15 percent to 25 percent of whatever money the government recovers as a
result of their lawsuits if the government joins the case and up to 30 percent if it
doesn't. The False Claims Act also provides job protection for whistleblowers.
Insiders are the best source of information
Whistleblowers may file lawsuits even if they participated in the fraud. Congress
figured insiders would be the best source of information about fraud, and employees are
usually forced to participate in fraudulent schemes to keep their jobs. However, judges
may reduce the whistleblowers' rewards if they find that they planned or initiated the
fraud.
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 while the government investigates to decide whether it wants to join the lawsuit,
which is usually a year or longer.
Even the defendant is not notified of the lawsuit until after the seal is lifted. If
the government decides to join the case, it may ask the court for a partial lifting of the
seal after it completes its investigation to inform the defendant of the charges and
negotiate a settlement. In those instances, the seal is sometimes lifted at the same time
a settlement is reached.
If the government joins a case, the Justice Department has primary responsibility for
its prosecution although the whistleblower retains some control. The whistleblower and the
whistleblower's attorney work with the government on its investigation, providing any
documents, names of witnesses or other information that might help the case. And if the
government proposes a settlement, the whistleblower has the right to object in court to
it.
If the government decides not to intervene in a lawsuit, then the whistleblower has the
right to continue on his or her own. But chances of success are better when the government
joins because then its resources and authority are combined with the resources of the
whistleblower and the whistleblower's attorney.
Government attorneys and whistleblowers' attorneys only have to prove that improper
claims were submitted "with reckless disregard of the truth." Whether the fraud
was intentional is irrelevant, unlike in criminal cases where that must be proved.
Liability under the False Claims Act includes: |