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FWA (MO)- Moberly doctor pleads guilty to defrauding Medicare, Medicaid

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Justin LaMonda and his dad worked together to steal from Medicare and Medicaid. After Justin had already been kicked out of the Medicare program.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.komu.com/news/midmissourinews/moberly-doctor-pleads-guilty-to-defrauding-medicare-medicaid/article_bd28d834-c2b5-11ed-8e12-7fc73c512666.html

A doctor from Moberly plead guilty Tuesday to federal charges of making false statements related to health care matters, according to a release from the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri.

Dr. Justin G. LaMonda, 41, admitted to using his father’s name to bill Medicare and Medicaid for medical services, according to the release.

In his plea, LaMonda said he and his father mutually agreed to falsely bill Medicare and Missouri Medicaid for services performed by LaMonda as if they were performed by his father, who is also a doctor. 

LaMonda’s medical license was previously suspended for 30 days in 2017 after he was accused of engaging in sexual activity with his office manager. He then prescribed her controlled substances “without sufficient examination,” the plea says.

In 2018, a Medicare administrative contractor revoked his Medicare privileges after determining he submitted reimbursement claims for services performed when he was suspended. In 2019, his Medicare provider number was terminated.

When payments were received for services performed by LaMonda, his father would transfer the funds back to him, the plea agreement said. LaMonda admitted to causing total losses of $537,322 to Medicare and Missouri Medicaid.

LaMonda’s sentencing is set for July 26. He faces up to five years in prison, a fine of $250,000 or both.

To report an error or typo, email news@komu.com.

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FWA (MA) -Lab charged with Medicaid fraud

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Rita Ausiejus stole $400k from your W-2 using Medicaid claims for un-allowable urine tests for drug treatment.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.bostonherald.com/2023/03/12/ticker-mass-jobs-back-to-pre-pandemic-levels-lab-charged-with-medicaid-fraud/

 
 

Lab charged with Medicaid fraud

A clinical laboratory and its owner have been accused of submitting over $400,000 in Medicaid claims for unauthorized urine drug tests, the attorney general’s office in Massachusetts said Friday.

The residential sobriety tests were medically unnecessary, the office said in a news release. Laboratories may not bill Medicaid for them.

The Burlington-based Solid Diagnostics, Inc. and its owner were indicted last month by a statewide grand jury on two counts each of Medicaid false claims, false claims and larceny over $1,200.

The lab and owner are scheduled to be arraigned in Middlesex Superior Court on March 21. It wasn’t immediately known if they had attorneys.

The attorney general’s office said last year, one of its Medicaid Fraud Division investigations resulted in charges against several clinical laboratories, their owners, marketing companies, and a doctor in connection with Medicaid fraud, money laundering and kickbacks involving over $2 million in urine drug tests.

 
 

https://www.lowellsun.com/2023/03/13/burlington-lab-and-acton-owner-accused-of-drug-test-fraud/

 
 

 
 

BOSTON — A clinical laboratory in Burlington and its Acton owner were recently indicted following allegations of Medicaid fraud involving urine drug tests that led to the submission of more than $400,000 in false claims, according to Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell.

Campbell announced in a press release on Friday that Solid Diagnostics Inc. and owner Rita Ausiejus were indicted by a grand jury in February on two counts each of Medicaid false claims, Medicaid reverse false claims and larceny over $1,200.

Campbell’s office alleges that Solid Diagnostics and Ausiejus submitted claims to MassHealth for urine drug tests that “were not appropriately ordered by physicians or other authorized prescribers.”

The AG added the urine drug tests were also for residential sobriety monitoring purposes. According to the release, laboratories are not allowed to bill MassHealth for tests performed at sober homes for residential monitoring purposes because such tests are not medically necessary.

By billing MassHealth and its managed care entities for these tests, the defendants allegedly caused over $400,000 in false claims.

Solid Diagnostics and Ausiejus are set to be arraigned in Middlesex Superior Court on March 21.

Attempts by The Sun to reach Solid Diagnostics were unsuccessful.

Campbell stated these charges “are the latest development in the work of the AG’s Office to address kickbacks and false claims among Medicaid providers, particularly independent clinical laboratories.”

According to the AG’s office, in December, an independent clinical laboratory agreed to pay $1.5 million to the MassHealth program to resolve allegations by the AG’s Office that it engaged in an illegal kickback relationship with a New Bedford-based clinical laboratory.

 
 

From <https://www.lowellsun.com/2023/03/13/burlington-lab-and-acton-owner-accused-of-drug-test-fraud/>

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FWA (FL) – Jelly Bean Communications Design and its Manager Settle False Claims Act Liability for Cybersecurity Failures on Florida Medicaid Enrollment Website

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: I don’t know that I have seen this before- a tech provider has been convicted of not making a website secure enough to meet HIPAA requirements, and will pay $293k.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/jelly-bean-communications-design-and-its-manager-settle-false-claims-act-liability

Jelly Bean Communications Design LLC (Jelly Bean) and Jeremy Spinks have agreed to pay $293,771 to resolve False Claims Act allegations that they failed to secure personal information on a federally funded Florida children’s health insurance website, which Jelly Bean created, hosted, and maintained.

“Government contractors responsible for handling personal information must ensure that such information is appropriately protected,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “We will use the False Claims Act to hold accountable companies and their management when they knowingly fail to comply with their cybersecurity obligations and put sensitive information at risk.”

The Florida Healthy Kids Corporation (FHKC) is a state-created entity that offers health and dental insurance for Florida children ages five through 18. FHKC receives federal Medicaid funds as well as state funds to provide children’s health insurance programs. On Oct. 31, 2013, FHKC contracted with Jelly Bean for “website design, programming and hosting services.” The agreement required that Jelly Bean provide a fully functional hosting environment that complied with the protections for personal information imposed by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, and Jelly Bean agreed to adapt, modify, and create the necessary code on the webserver to support the secure communication of data. Jeremy Spinks, the company’s manager, 50% owner, and sole employee, signed the agreement. Under its contracts with FHKC, between 2013 and 2020, Jelly Bean created, hosted, and maintained the website HealthyKids.org for FHKC, including the online application into which parents and others entered data to apply for state Medicaid insurance coverage for children.

The settlement announced today resolves allegations that from January 1, 2014, through Dec. 14, 2020, contrary to its representations in agreements and invoices, Jelly Bean did not provide secure hosting of applicants’ personal information and instead knowingly failed to properly maintain, patch, and update the software systems underlying HealthyKids.org and its related websites, leaving the site and the data Jelly Bean collected from applicants vulnerable to attack. In or around early December 2020, more than 500,000 applications submitted on HealthyKids.org were revealed to have been hacked, potentially exposing the applicants’ personal identifying information and other data. The United States alleged that Jelly Bean was running multiple outdated and vulnerable applications, including some software that Jelly Bean had not updated or patched since November 2013. In response to this data breach and Jelly Bean’s cybersecurity failures, FHKC shut down the website’s application portal in December 2020.  

“Safeguarding patients’ medical and other personal information is paramount,” said U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg for the Middle District of Florida. “This settlement demonstrates the commitment by my office and our partners to use every available tool to protect Americans’ health care data.”

“Companies have a fundamental responsibility to protect the personal information of their website users. It is unacceptable for an organization to fail to do the due diligence to keep software applications updated and secure and thereby compromise the data of thousands of children,” said Special Agent in Charge Omar Pérez Aybar of the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “HHS-OIG will continue to work with our federal and state partners to ensure that enrollees can rely on their health care providers to safeguard their personal information.”

On Oct. 6, 2021, the Deputy Attorney General announced the Department’s Civil Cyber-Fraud Initiative, which aims to hold accountable entities or individuals that put U.S information or systems at risk by knowingly providing deficient cybersecurity products or services, knowingly misrepresenting their cybersecurity practices or protocols, or knowingly violating obligations to monitor and report cybersecurity incidents and breaches. Information on how to report cyber fraud can be found here.

The resolution obtained in this matter was the result of a coordinated effort between the Justice Department’s Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section, and the U.S Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, with assistance from HHS-OIG.

The matter was handled by Trial Attorney Michael Hoffman and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeremy Bloor.

The claims resolved by the settlement are allegations only. There has been no determination of liability.

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FWA (IL)- Hoffman Estates doctor charged with faking Medicaid, insurance claims

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Mona Ghosh stole $1M of your tax dollars using a plain ole’ services not delivered scam. She did not say thank you.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.dailyherald.com/news/20230314/hoffman-estates-doctor-charged-with-faking-medicaid-insurance-claims

A Hoffman Estates doctor is facing federal fraud charges after prosecutors accused her of bilking Medicaid and private insurers out of nearly $1 million by submitting claims for services that were never provided to patients.

Mona Ghosh, 50, of Inverness, was indicted on more than a dozen charges of health care fraud, prosecutors announced today.

In court papers, Ghosh is accused of knowingly submitting false reimbursement claims for treatment that was never delivered between February 2018 and April 2022 totaling about $796,000.

Ghosh owned and operated Progressive Women’s Healthcare in Hoffman Estates during the time the false claims were submitted, according to court records.

If convicted, she faces up to 10 years in prison.

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FWA- How Medicare and Medicaid fraud became a $100B problem for the U.S.

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: The size and absurdity of the fraud used to take from your W-2 is profiled in this story. I would say it’s a great read, but it really does just go to show how little you, the taxpayer, are appreciated for funding all this wonderful fraud.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.cnbc.com/2023/03/09/how-medicare-and-medicaid-fraud-became-a-100b-problem-for-the-us.html

 
 

watch now

VIDEO9:1409:14

Fraud Inc: How to steal $100 billion from Medicare and Medicaid

CNBC Investigations

A nondescript suite of offices in a bland building tucked in a quiet Miami suburb seemed as good a place as any for a medical supply company to rent some office space.

But this company rented space two floors above a regional office of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ criminal investigative unit. It also tried billing Medicare more than $500,000 for various medical equipment — such as braces, orthotics and wheelchairs — for patients who didn’t exist.

During a routine check by HHS’ Office of Inspector General, which investigates Medicare and Medicaid fraud, special agents in Florida noticed that a local company had recently changed owners and had another address in their building. But that location didn’t have any actual employees. It was no more than a mail drop, a physical location of a shell corporation designed to make it look legitimate on paper, said Omar Pérez Aybar, special agent in charge for Florida.

A deeper look at the company’s billing practices revealed what appeared to be Medicare fraud, Pérez Aybar said.

When agents grilled the new owner, he admitted his name was used on corporate business records to conceal the identity of the real owners. Because the investigation is still ongoing and no arrests have been made, agents provided few details identifying the operation. But Pérez Aybar said it was shuttered last year before Medicare lost any money.

Fraud flourishes

That’s just one of thousands of examples of how Medicare fraud is flourishing — not only in south Florida, but across the country.

Taxpayers are losing more than $100 billion a year to Medicare and Medicaid fraud, according to estimates from the National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association.

“That’s probably a conservative number,” Pérez Aybar said. “When we think about all lines of business in Medicare and Medicaid, that’s probably a drop in the bucket.”

Omar Pérez Aybar, Special Agent In Charge / Office of Inspector General

CNBC

The fraud runs the gamut: billing for unapproved Covid tests, phony billing for wheelchairs, braces and other medical equipment, genetic testing fraud, home health-care billing and a host of other schemes. Investigators say fraudsters have gotten more brazen in recent years — as Washington swiftly doled out trillions of dollars in Covid-19 relief funds and other aid in response to the pandemic.

The proliferation of crime has taxed the inspector general, which has just 450 agents around the country. The amount at stake is staggering: Medicare spends about $901 billion a year on its 65 million beneficiaries, while Medicaid spends $734 billion providing medical coverage to more than 85 million poor and disabled Americans every year, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which falls under HHS. The inspector general describes the fraud as prevalent and inventive, routinely ensnaring full-time criminals as well as legitimate doctors and health-care professionals gone bad, according to its annual reports.

Ripping off Medicare is ‘easy’

“It’s just so easy. It’s unbelievable,” said one Miami man, who admitted that he used to make a living by stealing from Medicare.

This convicted felon says Medicare and Medicaid fraud is “very easy” to get away with.

CNBC

“You’ll be surprised. For money, they’ll do anything,” he said, asking not to be identified for fear of retribution by people he worked with in the criminal underworld. “It’s always been like that. And people keep on — they get caught, they get out, and they’ll do it all over again.”

He was arrested and charged with running an illegal pill business, according to agents who worked his case. The scheme involved multiple players who were all on the take and got a cut of the windfall from defrauding Medicare, the special agents said.

Describing the scheme, the fraudster said he recruited patients to get a prescription from a doctor that was then filled at a pharmacy and paid for by Medicare. He would then remove the label and “wash” the bottle to make it look new before reselling the pills to a wholesaler, which would sell them back to that pharmacy or another one that was in on the deal, he said. The same pills could be sold and resold multiple times with different phony patients, billing Medicare each time.

It was a lucrative scheme.

‘I had houses, I had cars’

“I was low-profile, nobody knew about me. I had everything. I had houses, I had cars, I had watches,” he said, adding that he routinely raked in millions from health-care fraud for more than a decade.

Eventually, though, someone who knew him was caught and turned him over to law enforcement in exchange for more lenient treatment, he said. He ended up pleading guilty to health care-related fraud and served three years in prison.

Even when the fraudsters get caught — the reward may outweigh the risk.

“I don’t think the government can keep up,” he said. “People keep on. They’re not gonna stop.”

Pérez Aybar said the inspector general is understaffed to handle the never-ending volume of cases. In fiscal year 2021, about 2 cents of every $100 spent by HHS went to oversight and enforcement, according to figures compiled by the inspector general’s office.

Fraud is something Medicare and Medicaid take very seriously, Dara Corrigan, deputy administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in a statement to CNBC.

“We continuously work to safeguard taxpayer dollars and strengthen program integrity in our operations by identifying vulnerabilities in the system,” she said. “CMS uses every tool we have to lower the risk of fraud and abuse in the Medicare and Medicaid programs, and collaboratively works with law enforcement to identify and investigate fraud and abuse.”

Buried treasure

In another scheme, inspector general agents in 2021 found $2.5 million in cash wrapped in plastic tucked inside PVC pipes under the home of Jesus Garces. He is serving a 12½-year sentence after he pleaded guilty that year to one count of conspiracy to commit health-care fraud and wire fraud. Garces was operating a fraudulent Medicare company out of a strip mall, Pérez Aybar said. A government informant recorded Garces on a hidden camera smiling as he counted cash he stole from Medicare, according to investigators and a copy of the video obtained by CNBC.

Federal Agents found millions of dollars stuffed in PVC pipes under the home of a man now in prison for Medicare fraud.

OIG | FBI

“We were shocked to know that there was this amount of cash,” Pérez Aybar said. “I think a lot of us hadn’t necessarily seen that much, but it was how it had been packaged, vacuum sealed in bricks, again, stuffed into PVC pipes. And it really was, for us, an indication of how brazen this [durable medical equipment] fraud is.”

Garces “thought he was a CEO, when in fact he was just a crook,” Pérez Aybar said.

Ricardo Carcas, the special agent who oversaw the Garces case, explained how these schemes typically work.

“When I show up, I see that it is the shell that we typically see in this durable medical equipment fraud scheme,” Carcas said, pointing to the storefront in a Miami strip mall where Garces set up his fraudulent medical device company. “It was empty pretty much — it just had a desk (and) a shelf with maybe three orthotic braces in there. And it was closed during operating hours.”

To prove it was fraudulent, Carcas said he identified the referring doctors who supposedly signed off on patients who were billing their medical equipment to Medicare. None of the patients saw those doctors.

Whack-a-mole

“They purchased a list of patient information,” Pérez Aybar said. “They have doctors that they either are using as part of the scheme, they’re paying kickbacks, or they may purchase a list of doctors’ information as well, and then you start submitting the claims. Once the money gets into the bank account, they have money launderers and mules that they paid to go out and just pull the money out of those accounts.”

Pérez Aybar described battling the fraudsters as “almost like the game of whack-a-mole, where we hit one and another pops up.”

On the ground, agents fighting health-care fraud see a never-ending scenario.

Take the Miami Merchandise Mart, for instance.

The sprawling, aging indoor mall houses low-cost, wholesale retailers along with numerous medical supply businesses set up to bilk the government, according to investigators.

When CNBC visited the mall in December, there were numerous storefronts that were largely empty, but for the names of the medical supply companies that adorned the entrances.

Pérez Aybar described what agents have found at the mall and elsewhere during previous investigations.

“It is Medicare regulations that you have to have a business, especially in this case for durable medical equipment. And so usually what — when we go out, what I will see is just a bit of a shell. It’s an office that’s maybe 12 by 15 feet wide,” he said.

“There’s a desk, perhaps, there’s a bit of a curio with one or two different types of braces. They’ll have the manuals that Medicare requires that — that they’re familiar with. And usually there’s some type of partition if let’s say we’re talking about orthotics because the patient is supposed to come in and actually get fitted.”

Medicare storefronts

Along a corridor in the mall, CNBC found a young woman sitting alone at a desk in a small glass-enclosed store called United Med Supply Market Inc. She said it was a medical supply business and gave us the business card with a phone number for the owner. When a reporter called the number a few minutes later, it rang at the woman’s desk.

Company President Antonio Lantigua was reached by phone several weeks later. When asked why equipment wasn’t visible on site, he said they keep it in other locations.

“We have equipment in other places. We send papers to the company; the company sends equipment to the patients,” Lantigua said.

When pressed for more information, he said, “I don’t know why you are calling me” and hung up.

Government records show United Med Supply Market billed Medicare for more than $2 million, mostly for wound care.

Following an investigation by the inspector general, the business was suspended from billing for Medicare payments.

Ali Ghraoui, general manager of the Miami Merchandise Mart, told CNBC in a February interview that United Medical vacated that space and that he was working to improve the image of the mall.

Still, as Pérez Aybar points out, there’s always another fraudulent operation ready to bilk the system.

“South Florida, without question, is the ground zero for health-care fraud, but it’s only one state. There are 49 others and territories where these types of schemes are occurring,” he said.

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EXPANSION- Medicaid Expansion Fails to Deliver on Promises

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Some findings you won’t like. Move along and don’t read this.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.bhpioneer.com/medicaid-expansion-fails-to-deliver-on-promises/article_ae83199d-8811-51b9-974e-65f9c1b02cc4.html

 
 

 
 

Medicaid expansion is failing states across the nation according to a recent Foundation for Government Accountability (FGA) report. The report found states that have expanded Medicaid have faced more hospital closures than states that haven’t expanded the program. Of course, for years, advocates have claimed that expansion would be a necessary provision for financial health and job security for hospitals. Though, as suspected, data reveals the opposite. More accurately, non-expansion states have seen improved profitability, a larger bed capacity, and increased job growth. 

For quite some time, expansion advocates have made the promise that Medicaid expansion would lead to economic booms for states, creating jobs and improving hospital finances, but the program’s launch clearly tells a different story.

By expanding Medicaid through the Affordable Care Act (ACA), colloquially known as “Obamacare,” the federal government hoped to provide care for a larger share of low-income Americans. Under the ACA, states now have the option to expand their Medicaid programs to cover adults 65 and under with incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level and an enhanced federal matching rate (FMAP) for their expansion populations. FMAP varies by state but allows the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to reimburse each state for a percentage of its total Medicaid expenditures. As of now, 38 states have adopted Medicaid expansion.

States that have enacted the expansion are consequently awaiting success but face unrealized promises. Moreover, in the first year of the program, nearly 40% of expansion states lost hospital jobs.

Here are the grim statistics from FGA’s report:

  • 1 in 5 expansion states saw hospital job losses.
  • From 2013 to 2016, Medicaid shortfalls at hospitals in expansion states grew by nearly 50%.
  • Nearly 50 hospitals, many of which were rural facilities, shut their doors after expansion was implemented.
  • Only 5% of hospitals directly cited a lack of Medicaid expansion in their list of reasons for closure; however, half of these hospitals were involved in alleged fraud or severe financial malpractice.
  • 1 in 4 rural hospitals in expansion states are at risk for closure.

The report also highlights the flaws in the health systems of Appalachian states, many of which have expanded Medicaid. The report states that the Ohio Valley Medical Center in Wheeling, West Virginia and East Ohio Regional Hospital in Martins Ferry, Ohio closed in 2019 resulting in the release of roughly 1,200 hospital workers. According to the report, hospitals partly accredited the closures, creating $37 million in losses, due to the “lower-reimbursing Medicaid program.”

Likewise, in the month prior to expansion, West Virginia had 40,100 hospital jobs. A year later, that number fell to 39,728 – the opposite of what has been seen in non-expansion states. States that have maintained non-expansion Medicaid, over a period of five years, enjoyed 14% faster hospital job growth than expansion states. 

Many states across the nation are still facing the same health care issues from before implementation of Medicaid expansion. Despite haughty claims that Medicaid expansion would be the elixir to cure hospital pains, the evidence is clear that the expansion “tool” is just not enough. Hospitals continue to close.

Jessica Dobrinsky Harris is a Policy Analyst at the Cardinal Institute for WV Policy.

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EXPANSION- Medicaid expansion recognized as significant missed opportunity

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Wyoming expansioners will have to try again next year.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.wyomingnews.com/wyomingbusinessreport/industry_news/government_and_politics/medicaid-expansion-recognized-as-significant-missed-opportunity/article_c9572924-c1ae-11ed-ae2f-f3cbae49974d.html

 
 

Bob Mathia, right, frowns in response to testimony opposing House Bill 80 during a meeting of the House Revenue Committee at the Wyoming State Capitol in Cheyenne on Jan. 19. The committee passed HB 80, titled “Medical treatment opportunity act-Medicaid reform,” to expand Medicaid eligibility, with a 6-3 vote, but it was never considered on the House floor.

Alyte Katilius/Wyoming Tribune Eagle

CHEYENNE — One-hundred and ninety-six bills passed out of the Wyoming Legislature during the general session, but that doesn’t mean nothing was left on the table.

Lawmakers recognized there were missed opportunities, while still applauding steps toward saving hundreds of millions of dollars, providing property tax relief, improving maternal health care access or securing elections. They had 500 pieces of legislation to process in a two-month period filled with chamber deadlines, and every bill couldn’t receive the attention required to move forward.

However, there was one bill that legislators on both sides of the aisle emphasized they were disappointed was left to die.

House Bill 80 would have expanded Medicaid in Wyoming, providing coverage to an anticipated 19,000 new enrollees by the end of the first biennium. The legislation was developed and sponsored by the Joint Revenue Interim Committee, as well as passed out of the House Revenue Committee in the first two weeks of the session.

Six of the nine committee members recommended it pass and be placed on general file, but the chamber was never given the chance to debate its perceived merits or downfalls. House Majority Floor Leader Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, said he wouldn’t let it onto the floor before the first Committee of the Whole deadline out of concern for the state.

House support

House Revenue Committee Chairman Steve Harshman, R-Casper, has been voting against expanding Medicaid for nearly a decade, but he became an advocate for the bill this year. He told the Wyoming Tribune Eagle it was one of the most significant losses during the session.

“When we look at experiences around the United States, and when we look at our neighboring sister states, it’s getting more and more obvious that’s part of the solution to provide health care and health insurance to people in Wyoming,” he said. “There’s no doubt.”

He said legislators need to understand it is health insurance for the poor, and that health care providers, business owners and residents want it. Harshman also pushed back against the belief that the federal government can’t be trusted.

“We just asked the federal government to come help save our cattle stranded in a blizzard,” he said.

“We’re part of the United States and part of the federal government.”

Despite the bill not making it through the legislative process, the central Wyoming representative has hope it will come back next session for consideration.

Rep. Karlee Provenza, D-Laramie, was another lawmaker hoping to vote in favor of HB 80 in the House, and she said it was the biggest issue not addressed. She noted there are more residents who are going to lose their Medicaid benefits in the next few months because of the change in federal designation for the COVID-19 emergency, and they won’t qualify.

The House Minority Whip said there will be even more uninsured people in Wyoming that can’t afford health insurance in any other way and won’t have affordable access to services. They will continue to have health issues that cost the state millions in uncompensated care, however, meaning all residents will have to pay for it in some capacity.

“And people will die. That is certain,” she told the WTE. “We’ve been beating the drum for a long time, but every year it just gets worse and worse. There’s more people impacted by it.”

Senate disappointment

While the House nearly got the chance to vote on the bill, the Senate was in no way close.

Sen. Stephan Pappas, R-Cheyenne, said it was a missed opportunity in a productive session, but that’s what it always ends up happening every year he has been in the Legislature. He has always been a supporter of expanding Medicaid, and he doesn’t share the same fears as some of his Republican colleagues about taking federal dollars.

He said leaving the money on the table will not reduce the deficit, as many of them believe, because it gets spent by other states.

Pappas was backed by a fellow Republican on his side of the Wyoming Capitol. Sen. Cale Case, R-Lander, attempted to bring an amendment to the supplemental budget bill after HB 80 gained no traction in the House, and expressed his disappointment.

He said Wyoming is losing the ability to have a healthier and more vibrant population, as well as the chance to keep rural hospitals from losing millions of dollars.

“It affects so many people; it’s so far reaching,” added Sen. Mike Gierau, D-Jackson, who said it was the top missed opportunity. “Even the most anti-government people will tell you that, in some form or fashion, health care for the citizenry isn’t something that the government should be too far away from.”

Other priorities

Expanding the federal program was on the minds of many who left their desks at the end of the session on March 3, but it wasn’t the only legislation or issue weighing on lawmakers.

Some were frustrated with a lack of focus on Wyoming solutions, time that escaped the House chamber or failing to find multiple ways to provide immediate tax relief for residents. Even those who focused on the significance of Medicaid expansion failing pointed out a need for sustainable transportation funding, investments in capital construction or placing more funding in the Wyoming Outdoor Trust Fund.

Sen. Brian Boner, R-Douglas, said he was disappointed that a bill addressing severance taxes for oil and gas companies was voted down in the House Appropriations Committee. He said it was a direct response to President Joe Biden’s administration increasing the royalty rate on federal lands for oil and gas development.

“The proposal was to make a proportional reduction to what they pay on severance taxes in a way that would be net-neutral to state and local government,” he told the WTE. “I look forward to bringing that back next year.”

Another missed opportunity was creating a film incentive program in the state, according to House Majority Whip Cyrus Western, R-Big Horn. He said it died on general file due to an extensive amount of debate taking up time in the weeks preceding the deadline.

It was a program he believed would have been impactful, as shows such as “Yellowstone” and “Joe Pickett” aren’t being filmed in the state.

“That series is filmed in Alberta. And while Alberta is certainly a beautiful place, great mountains, it’s set in Wyoming,” Western said of the series based on C.J. Box’s Pickett character. “And so, those are a couple of pretty glaring examples where we want that money to be invested here in our community.”

Although the session has come to an end, lawmakers are still preparing for work throughout the interim. Any missed opportunities or legislation they felt needed deeper dives will spend months under the microscope in interim committees or can be developed privately by stakeholders and individual sponsors.

The Legislature’s Management Council will meet March 23 to assign interim topics, and the first round of committee meetings begins in April. This will spur a year-long effort to get organized before the 2024 budget session next February.

Posted on

PHE- Google search update aims to ease Medicaid redeterminations

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Google is building out its Medicaid operations suite.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.modernhealthcare.com/digital-health/google-search-update-medicaid-redeterminations-ai-check-up-event

Google is helping people navigate Medicaid redeterminations with the latest update to its search product, the tech giant said Tuesday morning. 

Google announced several new healthcare initiatives at its annual Check Up event on Tuesday. The updates were related to search, artificial intelligence and interoperability. 

Related: Health industry groups to assist Medicaid enrollees losing coverage

The company is adding a feature to search to provide specific information for users seeking to re-enroll in Medicaid by the end of March. Google said it plans to include state specific information in these searches.

During the public health emergency, people were not required to re-enroll in Medicaid. At the end of March up to 14 million people will no longer be eligible for Medicaid once states start re-checking individual eligibility, according to HHS. States will begin the process of clearing their rolls April 1.

Google has applied its conversational artificial intelligence technology Duplex to verify healthcare providers’ information and whether they accept certain Medicaid plans. Duplex is a voice-enabled technology tool that has called hundreds of thousands of physicians to get this information, Google said.

The search tools will also provide information to users on community health centers near them that offer free or low-cost care. 

Updates to AI projects 

During the event, Google also provided an update on its AI cancer research projects with Mayo Clinic and other health system partners. With Mayo, the company tested whether it was possible to use AI to automatically contour organs by reading CT scans. The process is typically completed manually. 

Results from this research will be published soon but Google said it is extending the research efforts with Mayo. While each individual project can vary, Google said it is broadly looking for partners to co-develop and test solutions.

“What we want to do is look for opportunities where there’s clear space to demonstrate the value-add of artificial intelligence in that particular application space,” said Greg Corrado, lead of the health AI group at Google.  “A partner who’s keen and is capable to realize those benefits in a co-development setting, or in a technology transfer setting [are also important].” 

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The company is also developing AI tools on its own that demonstrate capabilities in language understanding and generation. Google said the tools need more work as the AI displayed “significant gaps” when it came to answering medical questions. These developments come as ChatGPT and conversational AI tools have become more popular for potential medical uses.

At the event, Google also rolled out a series of components called Open Health Stack that allows developers to build digital health apps on an interoperable data standard.

In August 2021, Google unwound its Google Health division and opted instead to redistribute its health efforts across its research, search and device divisions.

This story first appeared in Digital Health Business & Technology.

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STATE NEWS (MT) – Amendment to fund Medicaid provider rates to benchmark fails

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: Turns out they didn’t just do what the consultants said. Still increased the provider payments by $88M (but of course providers say that’s still not enough).

 
 

Clipped from: https://billingsgazette.com/lifestyles/health-med-fit/amendment-to-fund-medicaid-provider-rates-to-benchmark-fails/article_b08add74-c289-11ed-8ea0-bba0b8bc9b2a.html

An amendment to further increase Medicaid provider reimbursement rates failed in a 13 to 10 vote Tuesday before the House Appropriations Committee.

Carried by Rep. John Fitzpatrick, R-Anaconda, the amendment would have brought provider rates in line with the benchmarks suggested by Guidehouse, the team commissioned by the state to assess reimbursement falls short in four essential human services departments.

The amendment also added a 3% inflationary increase for each year between 2021 and 2024. An additional 3% increase would have covered 2025.

“The concern I have with this issue is that we’re making a big bet. And the bet is this: we’ve either provided them with enough money so that they can continue on and go through the next biennium and survive. Or two, we’ve short changed them and we’re going to lose service providers,” Fitzpatrick said.

Over the last two years, providers serving a large population of Medicaid recipients reported a 14% increase to their expenditures, much greater than the typical 2% inflation seen in a typical biennium, Fitzpatrick said.

Inflation, provider shortages and wage pressures have pushed services to the brink of closure in the years since the pandemic.

Perhaps the most significant being the 11 nursing homes that closed in 2022. The sudden decrease in skilled nursing beds has created a bottleneck in Montana’s hospital systems, creating a significant financial burden.

Rep. Bob Keenan, R-Bigfork, defended the work done in the Human Services Subcommittee where legislators voted to increase provider rates from the governor’s proposed budget, but did not opt to fully fund rates to the benchmarks.

“We had an opportunity this session to help (with the traditionally low reimbursement rates) and I was pretty excited about it because it’s been fairly lonely trying to advocate for these providers across the state,” Keenan said. “…I resist this amendment just for the simple fact that I’m really proud of what our subcommittee has done at this point in time,” Keenan said.

With the subcommittee’s budget vote, $87.5 million is directed to provider rates. With the Medicaid match, that amounts to $305 million directed into the Medicaid system.

Benchmark rates ‘foundational’

While the infusion of cash marks a historic budgetary increase for these Medicaid providers, dozens of leaders representing organizations for SUD treatment, children and adult behavioral health, nursing homes, in-home care providers, aging services, developmental disabilities, and more encouraged lawmakers to bring reimbursement in line with the benchmark rates.

“Funding these rates is not a fix for everything but it really is foundational. It’s what needs to happen first before we can begin to make a lot of those other fixes within the system,” said Erin McGowan, who spoke in support of fully funding the benchmark rates at an appropriations committee meeting last Thursday. McGowan is a lobbyist for various provider groups across the state including Homecare Montana and Confluence Public Health.

What’s missing from the subcommittee’s budget, said McGowan, is a regular cost of living adjustment that would prevent future underfunding of these services.

Many of the services included in the rate study are highly sensitive to inflation. Group home providers, for example, provide food and transportation to residents. When grocery and gas prices go up, so do the group home’s expenses.

Joshua Kendrick, CEO of Opportunity Montana, said that the rate increase would equate to a wage increase for staff.

Many who spoke during public comment explained that the staffing shortages are, in part, due to the inability to offer a competitive wage to current and future employees who could make better money working in food service.

Over the course of the pandemic, Youth Dynamics, which provides mental and behavioral health services for kids, lost 56 full-time employees and 83 part-time employees, said Dennis Sulser who represented the organization at the hearing.

Since July 1, 2022, 43% of the employees who provided a reason for their departure from Youth Dynamics said it was due to low wage or better job opportunities elsewhere, according to Sulser.

Countless providers expressed to lawmakers that the benchmark rate would just barely bring reimbursement rates up to their current costs.

Nonetheless, health department director Charlie Brereton, again pushed for the governor’s initial budget proposal in the Thursday meeting. The proposal mostly consists of one-time-only funding that would close 58% of the gap between current rates and the benchmark in 2024. In 2025, the rates would decrease, covering only 36% of the gap in 2025.

Brereton said the proposal centered on being responsive.

In an effort to address questions about not fully funding the benchmark rate, Brereton read a statement.

“The benchmark is average costs and reflects a wide array of provider practices. The average costs are important in identifying the accuracy of a rate but ultimately reflect an average of the costs. It’s a compass that shows where we should be headed, but not necessarily a minimum of what is needed to stabilize any provider type,” Brereton said.

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PHE; STATE NEWS; FWA- Auditors find hundreds of ineligible RI state workers on Medicaid rolls

 
 

MM Curator summary

The article below has been highlighted and summarized by our research team. It is provided here for member convenience as part of our Curator service.

 
 

[MM Curator Summary]: A minor SNAFU points to a much bigger risk.

 
 

From <https://www.providencejournal.com/story/news/politics/2023/03/01/ri-medicaid-rolls-had-hundreds-of-ineligible-state-workers/69958231007/>

 
 

 
 

Katherine Gregg

The Providence Journal

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0:57

PROVIDENCE − At least 369 state employees who make too much money to qualify were nonetheless being carried on the state’s Medicaid health-insurance rolls until January, when a routine data analysis by the auditor general’s office found their state pay exceeded federal income limits.

The discovery of ineligible state workers came to light Wednesday when a Jan. 23 letter from the state’s interim auditor general, David Bergantino, to top state officials was made public for the first time at a legislative hearing.

While a case-by-case analysis “would be time consuming,” Bergantino noted the state pays a monthly fee “ranging from approximately $300 to $900-per-month-per-covered-individual (or more if family coverageis applicable)” even if “their current state employment income makes them ineligible to still qualify for Medicaid.”

The back-and-forth with state Health & Human Services Secretary Ana Novasi and Department of Administration Director James Thorsen did not put blame on the state workers the state was still carrying on its Medicaid rolls.

In fact, the auditor’s letter said: “Many of these individuals are not actively using their Medicaid coverage because they also have health insurance as a state employee.”

But the finding − along with a warning about “operational issues with the critical income validation controls” − led worried lawmakers to question whether Rhode Island was on the brink of another “UHIP debacle.”

“UHIP all over again,” said House Oversight Committee Chairwoman Patricia Serpa, citing the botched 2016 rollout by the Raimondo administration of a new computerized eligibility-verification system that left scores of struggling Rhode Islanders without benefits and others with double payments or letters telling them their very-much-alive children were dead.

Echoed Rep. Michael Chippendale, the House minority leader: “My concern is the bottleneck. You clearly don’t have the staff to handle it…. You guys are going to get buried, 2016-level buried.”

Issue may hint at deeper troubles as COVID public emergency ends

The auditor general’s letter provided the first public look at the kinds of undetected problems state officials may face, starting April 1, when they resume the recertification of Medicaid recipients, a routine process suspended for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.

During the suspension, states were barred from removing people who were ineligible.

Big picture: the state’s numbers-crunchers predicted last November that the number of Medicaid recipients would shrink from 360,000 down to 338,000 when recertification resumed.

Testimony on Wednesday indicated the number of state employees on the original “ineligible” list had been whittled down to 156.

But Bergantino said the deep dive by state auditors found even more basic − and serious − problems that merit “immediate investigation.”

How did these workers end up on the Medicaid rolls?

A Jan. 30 letter put the state on notice: “We identified operational issues with the critical income validation controls and supporting data that are designed within the State’s RIBridges system to prevent individuals that exceed the program income guidelines from being enrolled in Medicaid.”

(RIBridges is the name the state is currently using for the much-criticized UHIP computer eligibility-verification system.)

“Our audit work in this area … identified some serious concerns in relation to income validation procedures within the RIBridges system that require immediate investigation,” Bergantino wrote.

The problems came to light during a House Oversight Committee meeting on the impact of the wind down of the federal public health emergency on people enrolled in state administered public assistance programs.

In every state, participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps, faced the loss of the extra pandemic-related benefits Wednesday. In Rhode Island, more than 300,000 people receive SNAP benefits.

Heading into the hearing, the lawmakers sought answers from the head of health and human services arm of the McKee administration on how the state plans to deal with a deluge of potential questions and concerns from people facing the immediate or imminent loss of benefits, when the call center is closed on Wednesdays to give staff time to catch up on the backlog.

Acting Department of Human Services Director Kim Merolla-Brito tried to assure the lawmakers her agency is ready for the April resumption of Medicaid certifications and has the capacity to hire up to 48 contract employees if necessary.

And Novais attributed some of the problems the auditor general’s office uncovered to a mismatch between the data the state reviews monthly, and the quarterly employment reports from the state’s Department of Labor & Training.

According to Department of Administration spokeswoman Laura Hart, the administration has convened a work group to go through the case files of state employees who “may have unnecessarily remained enrolled in Medicaid during FY 21 and FY 22” when the state was barred from removing people.

“Additionally, this month, DOA and EOHHS plan to reach out proactively to these employees, and when appropriate, request that they unenroll from the program themselves before they are automatically dropped from Medicaid. The ‘continuous coverage’ requirement for all states ends on March 31, 2023.”