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TN- Parkinson: Nursing home sector pinning hopes on ‘Medicaid adequacy’ rule

 
 

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]: TN nursing home moguls are hoping to use CMS requirements around access to adequate care as a cudgel.

 
 

 
 

NASHVILLE, TN — After characterizing business conditions as “never worse,” the skilled nursing sector’s top advocate said stakeholders need more help from both the federal and state governments to forge a viable path forward. 

The solution could lie in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services universally demanding that states prop up Medicaid payments, said Mark Parkinson, the president and CEO of the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living, during a media briefing Tuesday at the group’s annual meeting.

“CMS has talked about really putting some teeth into its authority to require states to pay an adequate amount of Medicaid — for all healthcare providers, not just skilled nursing facilities. In far too many states right now, the reimbursement for Medicaid is dramatically less than the actual cost of taking care of people in nursing facilities,” he said.

“CMS has the power and we urge them to enforce it. Secondly, we’re going to need some help from the states. A number of states have stepped up during the pandemic and used some of the hundreds of millions of dollars that they’ve received from the federal government for providers, but unfortunately, some have not.”

Parkinson said CMS, as usual, seems to hold the key when it comes to potentially ensuring adequate Medicaid funding, which is “really what it’s all about.”

“Some pretty high level officials at CMS have started to talk about this (Medicaid adequacy rule) as a possibility in some public meetings,” Parkinson said in follow-up questioning. “The law says states have to pay an adequate Medicaid payment rate. The states’ argument has always been, as long as we have vacancies, it proves that our Medicaid rate is enough to provide access, because there are places for people to go.

“What we’re saying and what the CMS folks have been saying, there is a difference between having access to care and having access to quality care. Quality care may be more expensive than just any care, and the statute says ‘access to quality care. And so they’re hinting that they’re thinking about doing something that would require states to not just show that they have empty Medicaid beds but show that people actually have access to quality care. It would be sort of like an administrative Boren Amendment. It was a statute that required states to cover the cost [of quality care]. This would be very significant if it occurred. We encourage CMS to put pressure on states to pay an adequate rate.”

CMS officials acknowledged at several public meetings this year that they were very intrigued with various models where states assume more responsibility for reimbursement.

Congress likely to help?

Parkinson and AHCA/NCAL Vice President of Government Relations Clifton Porter II addressed a wide range of issues at the media briefing, identifying — to no one’s surprise — staffing and census as top concerns. Congressional action has “ground to a halt,” Porter noted, expressing hope that a lame-duck session of Congress could give some indication by mid-December whether any helpful legislation might be in play.

In particular, he is hopeful about S4381 and HR8805, the “Ensuring Seniors’ Access to Quality Care Act,” which would essentially allow nursing centers to expand their own aide training programs. 

“(We) feel good about that,” Porter said.

That sentiment was 180 degrees from his outlook on any kind of “significant” movement on immigration reform to help ease industry staffing shortages. There are “hundreds of thousands” of would-be immigrants who could help offset the loss of at least 200,000 skilled nursing employees since the start of the pandemic, Parkinson said.

But only if they can get safely to the US, and with an approved job track. Don’t count on it any time soon, Porter said Tuesday.

“I’m not optimistic at all that there’s going to be any significant movement at all on immigration in the near term,” he said. “But we’re doing everything we can to try to impact workforce issues and challenges, bit by bit and bite by bite.”

How a minimum staffing rule could play out

Eventually, that will include a grassroots campaign to pressure CMS to issue a reasonable minimum staffing rule, which the administration has said should be expected by April.

Despite some indications of sensitivity to providers’ financial plight and bankruptcy filings with the issuance of a surprisingly generous 2023 pay rule in July, Parkinson said that it is clear the minimum staffing rule will be forthcoming and not be sidetracked by any protestations from operators, Parkinson said.

AHCA has estimated it could cost providers $10 billion annually to comply with a minimum staffing mandate of 4.1 nurse staffing hours per resident day. It also would require the recruitment of at least 100,000 more nurses — beyond the 200,000 employees skilled nursing would first need to resupply to get back up to pre-pandemic levels.

“We are hopeful when they issue the rule it will demonstrate they’ve listened to us and they’ve heard the reality. I don’t think they’re just going to back away from doing a rule. The president can’t come out and back off,” Parkinson told McKnight’s.

However, he also expressed some optimism when pointing out a handful of scenarios that could ease providers and others into new standards.

“They can issue a rule that’s paid for and/or didn’t kick in until the workforce has recovered. Maybe they’d tie it into some (Bureau of Labor Statistics) data,” Parkinson explained. 

CMS also could issue a rule “in a broad way so that the number is more achievable,” Parkinson added. This could mean widening the list of job titles that could count toward accruing direct care hours per day.

Then the final thing that they could do is they could demo this,” he said, referring to the implementation of a demonstration project. “Maybe try a state that does have a good Medicaid rate and see what the effect is.
“They are listening to us. We talk to them frequently,” Parkinson continued. “We will have a grassroots campaign before the rule comes out. Our members are going to help them understand what the realities on the ground are.”

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.mcknights.com/news/parkinson-nursing-home-sector-pinning-hopes-on-medicaid-adequacy-rule/

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Potential Data Disclosure May Have Affected Certain Wisconsin Medicaid Members | Wisconsin Department of Health Services

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]: Who knew you could fit 12,358 pieces of PHI in a PowerPoint deck?

 
 

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) today announced that on August 8, 2022, as part of a cybersecurity incident investigation, DHS was notified that a presentation emailed to the DHS Children’s Long-Term Support Council in April 2021 contained protected health information. This presentation was forwarded to employees working for county government agencies in Rock and other Wisconsin counties and posted to the DHS website as part of the meeting minutes. Information that was potentially exposed includes the first and last name, date of birth, gender, county location, Wisconsin Medicaid member ID number, and social security number of affected members of Wisconsin Medicaid.

After discovering what happened on August 8, 2022, DHS immediately removed the meeting minutes from the website and replaced them with a PDF version, which removed access to the protected health information. Additionally, DHS took steps to confirm that individuals who received the minutes via email deleted the files. DHS will continue to investigate and work to prevent such incidents from occurring in the future.

On October 7, 2022, notifications were mailed to 12,358 Wisconsin Medicaid members whose information may have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. These members have been offered free credit monitoring for one year as well as given access to a dedicated call center to answer questions they might have.

Members who received a notification letter or have questions about this incident can call 833-875-0804 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. CT Monday through Friday.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/news/releases/100722.htm

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Fraud (AR)- Rutledge Announces Record-Breaking Medicaid Year – SWARK Today

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]: AR AG recovers $43M in one year, over 33 convictions. That’s $1.3M per perp.

 
 

 
 

LITTLE ROCK— Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge announced a record-breaking year for the office’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU). In federal fiscal year 2022, the Unit secured 33 convictions and 51 arrests. The MFCU set an additional record when it obtained a sum of more than $42.5 million in civil settlements, restitution and fines in FY 2022.

“I have zero tolerance for abusers and thieves,” said Attorney General Leslie Rutledge. “Individuals who seek to take advantage of a system designed to help society’s most vulnerable should face the full weight of the law.” 

 
 

The MFCU investigates and prosecutes Medicaid fraud and the abuse, neglect and exploitation of individuals living in residential care facilities as well as Medicaid recipients. With the 33 convictions secured in FY 2022, the Rutledge Administration has achieved 185 convictions since 2015.

The MFCU’s record sum of more than $42.5 million is comprised of civil false claims settlements of $41 million, court ordered restitution in the amount of $338,662 and collected $622,279 in fines. The MFCU also obtained $159,000 in civil penalties from 8 abuse and neglect settlements. An additional $250,000 in settlements was secured from joint investigations alongside the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units and the U.S. Department of Justice. 

This brings the total collected in settlements, restitution and fines during the Rutledge Administration to nearly $78.5 million. This fiscal year has yielded 1,327% return on investment for the state—or $13.27 of benefit to the state for every dollar spent—setting another record for highest return on investment in a fiscal year.

Attorney General Rutledge credits the record setting year to the hard work of the unit and its collaboration with other law enforcement agencies and increased public awareness efforts through public service announcements and social media campaigns. The announcement comes as the federal fiscal year draws to a close. 

 
 

The Arkansas Office of Attorney General, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit receives 75 percent of its funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a grant award totaling $3,270,540 for Federal FY 2022. The remaining 25 percent, totaling $1,090,175 for FY 2022, is funded by Arkansas State General Revenue and Attorney General Consumer Education and Enforcement fund.

Medicaid fraud occurs when Medicaid providers use the program to obtain money to which they are not entitled. To report Medicaid fraud, abuse or neglect in nursing homes or Social Security disability fraud, call the Attorney General’s Medicaid fraud hotline at (866) 810-0016 or submit a complaint online.

About Attorney General Leslie Rutledge

Leslie Carol Rutledge is the 56th Attorney General of Arkansas. Elected on November 4, 2014, and sworn in on January 13, 2015, she is the first woman and first Republican in Arkansas history to be elected as Attorney General. She was resoundingly re-elected on November 6, 2018. Since taking office, she has significantly increased the number of arrests and convictions against online predators who exploit children and con artists who steal taxpayer money through Social Security Disability and Medicaid fraud. Further, she has held Rutledge Roundtable meetings and Mobile Office hours in every county of the State each year, and launched a Military and Veterans Initiative. She has led efforts to roll back government regulations that hurt job creators, fight the opioid epidemic, teach internet safety, combat domestic violence and make the office the top law firm for Arkansans. Rutledge serves on committees for Consumer Protection, Criminal Law and Veterans Affairs for the National Association of Attorneys General. She also served as the former Chairwoman of the Republican Attorneys General Association.

A native of Batesville, she is a graduate of the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law. Rutledge clerked for the Arkansas Court of Appeals, was Deputy Counsel for former Governor Mike Huckabee, served as a Deputy Prosecuting Attorney in Lonoke County and was an Attorney at the Department of Human Services before serving as Counsel at the Republican National Committee. Rutledge and her husband, Boyce, have one daughter. The family has a home in Pulaski County and a farm in Crittenden County.

Tags

attorney general leslie rutledge
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit

 
 

Clipped from: https://swark.today/rutledge-announces-record-breaking-medicaid-year/

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Fraud- Dentist reaches $750k settlement in Medicaid fraud suit over unnecessary ‘baby root canals’

 
 

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]: Unnecessary root canals on babies. Medicaid fraud is real and obscene folks, and you are paying for it with every paystub.

 
 

An area dentist must fork over $750,000 to settle a massive Medicaid fraud involving unnecessary root canal procedures on children.

Destiny Deffo, Creative Commons

A dentist with practices all over the tri-state area has reached a $750,000 settlement in relation to a Medicaid scam involving unnecessary “baby root canals” performed on children, the New York Attorney General announced Thursday.

Dr. Barry L. Jacobson, a pediatric dentist with 13 practices, including two in Brooklyn, will have to fork over the substantial sum to the feds and the states of New York and New Jersey for defrauding the federal government via systematic overbilling practices, wherein dentists performed medically unnecessary “pulpotomies” on children in order to submit claims to Medicaid, sometimes with bogus provider info.

Jacobson and his management company, HQRC Management Services, owe $432,345.95 to New York State, $313,783.17 to the feds, and $7,328.79 to New Jersey. In total, Jacobson is on the hook for $753,457.91.

“Dr. Jacobson and HQRC allegedly performed unnecessary and invasive dental procedures on children to line their own pockets,” said New York Attorney General Letitia James in a statement. “My office will not tolerate any instance of medically unnecessary procedures performed on vulnerable Medicaid beneficiaries.”

Pediatric Dentistry on Avenue U, one of two Brooklyn locations in Jacobson’s toothy empire.Google Maps

Dentists employed by Jacobson — whose toothy empire includes practices in Borough Park (Pediatric Dentistry of Boro Park) and Sheepshead Bay (Pediatric Dentistry on Ave U) — on several occasions performed pulpotomies on young children despite their medical records not supporting the need for one, James and New Jersey US Attorney Philip Sellinger said.

A pulpotomy, also known as a “baby root canal,” is a procedure done on infected baby teeth. In the procedure, a dentist removes damaged nerve tissue, or “pulp,” from a tooth and caps it with a crown or filling. Although children eventually lose their baby teeth, dentists may perform a pulpotomy instead of extracting the tooth because premature loss can cause the adult tooth to grow crooked.

An undisclosed number of children, however, received pulpotomies at Jacobson’s practices on teeth that did not display any signs of decay, according to dental records obtained by investigators.

The scheme came to the attention of authorities by a former employee, Lauren Simpson, who acted as an informant to investigators. Simpson will receive $135,622 of the settlement proceeds.

HQRC did not respond to a request for comment.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.brooklynpaper.com/dentist-reaches-750k-settlement-in-medicaid-fraud-suit-over-unnecessary-baby-root-canals/

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Fraud- Michigan AG Dana Nessel Charges Detroit Man with Using Stolen Identities to Commit 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]: Dewan stole Medicaid bennie IDs and got 3,000 free guvmt cell phones.

 
 

LANSING – Attorney General Dana Nessel today announced a joint investigation between the Michigan Department of Attorney General and Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) Office of Inspector General has resulted in charges against a Detroit man for using stolen personal information from thousands of identity theft victims to defraud the State.

The Attorney General alleges that Dewan Anton Williams, 47, was able to purchase social security numbers from identity theft victims off the dark web, and then used the information to submit nearly 3,000 fraudulent Medicaid applications to qualify for and receive free government cell phones. After receiving the phones, Williams is accused of activating the stolen phones and selling them.

As a result of the investigation, approximately 150 new and pre-packaged Safelink Wireless phones were recovered from Williams’ home along with personal information stolen from approximately 7,000 identity theft victims. The submission of these fraudulent applications cost the State of Michigan $11 million in unnecessary payments. After the accounts were determined to be fraudulent, they were shut down and the State was able to recoup the money.

Williams was arraigned in 36th District Court in Detroit on September 29 and entered a plea of not guilty.  Williams is charged with the following:

  • One count of Criminal Enterprises – Conducting, a 20-year felony and/or $100,000;

 
 

  • Three counts of Identity Theft, five-year felonies and/or $25,000;
  • Three Counts of Use of a Computer to Commit a Crime, seven-year felonies and/or $5,000;   
  • Three Counts of Welfare Fraud Over $500, four-year felonies and/or $5,000.

“The threat of identity theft is real, and I urge Michigan residents to educate and protect themselves against potential victimization,” said Nessel.  “My Michigan Identity Theft Support team, known as MITS, stands ready to assist victims of identity theft in recovering from the impact of this crime and my team of prosecutors will continue to work to hold perpetrators accountable.”

MITS, part of the Consumer Protection Team, helps victims navigate the challenges of identity theft and provides victims with resources and guidance to minimize damage caused by identity theft. MITS encourages Michigan residents to protect themselves from identity theft by ensuring their sensitive information is secure on paper, online, on a mobile device, or stored in a computer.

“Identity theft is on the rise in Michigan,” said MDHHS Inspector General Alan Kimichik. “The impact of the work of the Office of Inspector General (OIG) sends a clear message to those who intend to steal taxpayer-funded resources that they will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. The OIG is committed to protecting the integrity of public assistance programs and ensuring the appropriate use of available public resources.

Williams was given a $100,000 personal recognizance bond. A probable cause conference was held October 5 and a preliminary examination is scheduled for November 1 at 9am.

###

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.michigan.gov/ag/news/press-releases/2022/10/06/michigan-ag-dana-nessel-charges-detroit-man-with-using-stolen-identities-to-commit-medicaid-fraud

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Fraud- Jacksonville Health Care Provider Physicians Group Services Agrees To Pay $700,000 To Resolve Civil Healthcare Fraud Allegations

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 urine test scam means that $700K in FL Medicaid bucks was just p*ssed away.

 
 

Tampa, Florida – United States Attorney Roger B. Handberg announces today that Physicians Group Services, P.A. (“PGS”) has agreed to pay the United States and the State of Florida $700,000 to resolve allegations that PGS violated the False Claims Act by submitting false or fraudulent claims to the Florida Medicaid Program, which is a state and federal partnership that provides access to health care coverage for low-income families and individuals in Florida.

The United States’ investigation focused on urine drug testing (“UDT”) by PGS. UDT occurs in a variety of health care settings. In a pain management practice, UDT is used to monitor whether a patient is taking prescribed drugs, is taking non-prescribed drugs, or is consuming with prescribed drugs other dangerous substances, such as alcohol. UDT is either “qualitative” or “quantitative.”

The clinical value of quantitative UDT depends in part on whether the qualitative UDT result is expected or unexpected, as well as the patient’s history of drug abuse, history of medication adherence and compliance, clinical presentation, and medical history. The settlement announced today resolves allegations that PGS submitted claims to Florida Medicaid for quantitative urine drug testing, which claims the United States and the State of Florida allege were medically unnecessary because the testing was not individualized to the particular needs of the patient.

“A primary mission of the United States Attorney’s Office is protecting the Medicaid program and other federal health care programs from fraud,” said U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg. “Our Civil Division works tirelessly in the pursuit of providers who overbill federal health care programs through indiscriminate testing.”

“Health care providers that submit fraudulent claims to Medicaid for medically unnecessary services undermine this safety net program for their own personal gain,” said Special Agent in Charge Omar Pérez Aybar with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General. “We continue to work tirelessly with our law enforcement partners to protect the integrity of federal health care programs and to ensure the appropriate use of U.S. taxpayer dollars.”

Attorney General Ashley Moody said, “My Medicaid Fraud Control Unit is committed to stopping fraud that bilks the Medicaid program and takes advantage of our taxpayers. I am proud of my Medicaid Fraud Control Unit for working with our federal partners to secure this action.”

Today’s settlement results from a coordinated effort by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, and the Florida Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. Assistant United States Attorneys Lindsay Saxe Griffin and Sean Keefe led the civil investigation.

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

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/jacksonville-health-care-provider-physicians-group-services-agrees-pay-700000-resolve

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Fraud- Foreign medical student found guilty in home health fraud scheme

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]: Abudul and Maggie ran a bogus home health scheme using people pretending to be doctors.

 
 

HOUSTON – A federal jury in Houston has convicted a 65-year-old Houston resident for conspiracy to commit health care fraud, announced U.S. Attorney Jennifer B. Lowery.

The jury deliberated for approximately three hours before convicting Abudul Audu Azia Ozigi following a three-day trial

At trial, co-conspirator Margaret Arise testified that she owned numerous home health agencies in the Houston Area. She admitted she hired Ozigi to act in the role of a physician to see patients in their homes.

Ozigi did not have a license to practice medicine in the United States and was also not under the supervision of a physician when he treated patients.

Arise further testified Ozigi visited patients and qualified them for home health, when in fact, they did not need services. In addition, recruiters were paid to provide patient information to bill them for home health services regardless of whether they needed care.

Arise, 63, Missouri City, was previously convicted and is currently pending sentencing.

At trial, Ozigi attempted to convince the jury he had no knowledge of fraud and did not have the intent to defraud Medicare. He testified that he was merely seeing patients for Arise, despite not having any medical license in the United States and without being supervised by a physician.

The jury did not believe defense claims and found Ozigi guilty as charged.  

U.S. District Judge David Hittner presided over trial and will set sentenced at a later date. At that time, Ozigi faces up to 10 years in prison and a possible $250,000 fine.

Previously released on bond, Ozigi was taken into custody following the conviction today where he will remain pending that hearing.  

The Department of Health and Human Services – Office of Inspector General, Texas Medicaid Fraud Control Unit and Southwest UPIC Qlarant and the FBI conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Tina Ansari and Grace Murphy prosecuted the case with assistance from paralegal Judith Cardona.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdtx/pr/foreign-medical-student-found-guilty-home-health-fraud-scheme

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Fraud- Jackson Man Sentenced to 30 Months, Ordered to Repay $7.5 million For Health Care Fraud Scheme

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]: Pretty big for a DME scheme- Jamie McCoy ran a sophisticated kickback scheme and got Care, Caid and TriCare to foot the bill.

 
 

CAPE GIRARDEAU – U.S. District Judge Stephen N. Limbaugh on Thursday sentenced a business owner from Jackson, Missouri to 30 months in prison for health care fraud and ordered him to repay $7.5 million. 

Jamie McCoy, 42, pleaded guilty on Nov. 23, 2020 to three felony counts: health care fraud, making false statements related to health care matters and offering and paying illegal kickbacks for referrals. He admitted owning or operating companies that supplied orthotic braces and other durable medical equipment (DME): AE Wellness LLC, Summit Medical Supply, Patriot Medical Supply and DME Device Co. 

McCoy contracted with marketing firms who placed ads on television and online that offered orthotic braces at no cost. The companies sent patient information to a telemedicine doctor who signed an order for medical equipment without evaluating or even communicating with the patient in some cases, McCoy’s plea agreement says. Those leads, consisting of the patient information and the medical equipment order, were then sold to DME companies.

McCoy admitted paying 70% to 80% of his profits to one person who supplied leads to AE Wellness. Another received $35-40 for leads without a doctor’s order and $280-$300 for a “full lead.”

From September 2016 to August 2017, AE Wellness submitted $6 million in reimbursement claims to Medicare for DME and $67,955 to Tricare. Patriot Medical Supplies billed Tricare $23,951. McCoy admitted knowing Medicare, Medcaid and Tricare, which reimburses for health care services provided to current and former members of the military and their families, would not pay for items obtained by paying illegal kickbacks.

After AE Wellness was suspended in 2017 for paying illegal kickbacks, McCoy, AE’s office manager Brandy McKay and Jackson Preston Siples III, who ran day-to-day operations at AE, opened new DME companies. They concealed McCoy’s role, and continued to pay kickbacks for referrals and leads, McCoy’s plea agreement says.

From June 5, 2018 to March 21, 2019, McCoy and McKay submitted $1.8 million in fraudulent reimbursement claims to Medicare and $15,540 to Tricare on behalf of a company known as MC Medical. From March 8, 2018 to March 13, 2019, Siples submitted $6 million in fraudulent reimbursement claims to Medicare and $145,614 to Tricare on behalf of a company known as Integrity Medical Supply. Siples submitted $922,562 in false claims to Medicare from March 5, 2019 to Match 27, 2019 on behalf of Radiance Health Group.

McKay went on to manage a series of companies that continued the scheme.

“Submitting false claims for medically unnecessary equipment diverts funding from the necessary services required to support beneficiaries of federal health care programs,” stated Curt L. Muller, Special Agent in Charge with the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General. “OIG will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to identify and hold accountable individuals who choose to waste vital taxpayer dollars by participating in health care fraud schemes.”

McKay was sentenced Jan. 18, 2022 to three years in prison and ordered to repay $7.5 million. Siples pleaded guilty in May to the same charges as McCoy and is awaiting sentencing.

The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, the FBI, the Defense Criminal Investigation Service and the Missouri Medicaid Fraud Control Unit investigated this case. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Dorothy McMurtry and Derek Wiseman are prosecuting the case.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.justice.gov/usao-edmo/pr/jackson-man-sentenced-30-months-ordered-repay-75-million-health-care-fraud-scheme

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Fraud- Lauderhill Woman Arrested for Nearly $9K Welfare Fraud: Police

 
 

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]: Pretty standard member fraud, for a pretty normal amount.

 
 

Shericka Jacques, 40, accused of fraudulently getting $8,898 in welfare benefits

 
 

NBC 6

File photo of a Lauderhill Police car

A Lauderhill woman is charged with welfare fraud for allegedly falsifying information on an application form.

Shericka Patrice Jacques, 40, failed to report her correct income to the Department of Children and Families while employed between September 2018 and January 2019, and failed to report she was employed through May 2020, according to the arrest report.


Broward Sheriff’s Office

Shericka Patrice Jacques

She got $5,564 worth of food stamps and $3,334 in Medicaid benefits for a total of $8,898 illegally obtained, the report stated.

Stay informed about local news and weather during the hurricane season. Get the NBC 6 South Florida app for iOS or Android and pick your alerts.

She was arrested Tuesday one on charge of welfare fraud and was released from the Broward County Jail on a $1,000 bond, records show.

 
 

Clipped from: https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/lauderhill-woman-arrested-for-nearly-9k-welfare-fraud-police/2875764/

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MCOs- Health care company Amerigroup is at center of D.C. Medicaid saga

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 dumpster fire that is D.C. Medicaid has moved to the one-throat-to-choke/find-a-vendor-to-scapegoat stage. But to be honest, that 30% profit is looking pretty bad.

 
 

Meet Amerigroup. It’s a Fortune 500 company that manages state-run health plans for low-income people. Its subsidiaries also have a history of fines and allegations over the handling of patients in multiple states. Amerigroup is now set to get back part of the District’s $1.5 billion Medicaid contract.

Welcome to D.C.’s Medicaid saga.

Why it matters: There has been a painfully long battle royale over management of the city’s Medicaid services. Since 2017, four companies, including Amerigroup, have engaged in finger-pointing and contract appeals as they compete for the three open contract slots.

  • One in three D.C. residents, including the poorest and most vulnerable patients, receive health insurance through Medicaid. They are caught in the middle of being shuffled between different health care providers over recent years.

Driving the news: The District selects three contractors to run its Medicaid program through a competitive bidding process, and the D.C. Council is now set to act on the contract for Amerigroup and the other awardees, MedStar and AmeriHealth.

  • Amerigroup is at the center of this conflict.
  • Since losing out on the contract, CareFirst, which is one of the current Medicaid contractors, is publicly lobbying to push the D.C. Council to intervene.

State of play: Council member Vincent Gray, who chairs the Health Committee, and other critics are pointing out that Amerigroup and its subsidiaries have a history of paying out fines and facing allegations of bad patient care across the nation.

  • Gray wrote to colleagues last Monday that he was considering disapproving the new contractors, known as managed care organizations (MCO).
  • “We are poised to bring back an MCO with a checkered history in the District and a well-known reputation for denying care to vulnerable Medicaid members,” Gray wrote in the letter, acquired by Axios.

Zoom in: An Amerigroup subsidiary previously served the District over two separate periods, most recently from 2017 to 2020. In their final year, the deputy mayor for health, Wayne Turnage, told a D.C. Council committee that patients left Amerigroup in droves to seek coverage from other providers.

  • At that July 2020 hearing, Turnage was flabbergasted by Amerigroup’s 30% profit margin, compared to 4% for its competitor.
  • “I have never seen a public funded health plan have a margin of 30%,” Turnage testified. “In Virginia, when we had plans make more than 6%, they came back and voluntarily cut us checks.”

Turnage declined to comment to Axios last Friday on the contracts, citing the ongoing process. He referred to his public comments from 2020 about Amerigroup.

The other side: In response, Amerigroup says that patients left its services for other companies because MedStar, the D.C. region health giant, refused to offer its services for Amerigroup patients. (D.C. later began requiring that all Medicaid providers offer their services to each other.)

Amerigroup D.C. president Adrian Jordan wrote his own letter to lawmakers. He dismissed Gray’s criticisms as “the product of a broader campaign of disinformation that is being waged by an unsuccessful offeror,” referring to CareFirst’s lobbying efforts. He echoed similar sentiments in a statement to Axios, adding “Amerigroup D.C. is committed to providing no or low-cost access to healthcare for D.C. residents enrolled in Medicaid.”

One black eye for Amerigroup is a $225 million fine in 2008 to settle accusations of federal and state Medicaid fraud claims. A central allegation was that the company systematically denied pregnancy care in Illinois.

  • More recently, in Texas, Amerigroup told state lawmakers in 2018 that it paid $20 million in fines after allegations of denying medical care to disabled patients. In Iowa, a 2021 audit faulted Amerigroup for denying some patients care.

What’s next: Several council members on Tuesday told me they were still waiting for the contracts to be formally transmitted by Mayor Muriel Bowser, who had promised they would be out last week.

  • The waiting game is fueling last-minute jitters in a bureaucratic process that feels like a comedy of errors, with serious consequences.

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Clipped from: https://www.axios.com/local/washington-dc/2022/10/12/amerigroup-dc-medicaid-saga