Title: VIEW ON FRAUD AND ABUSE
1VIEW ON FRAUD AND ABUSE
- David E. Matyas
- Epstein Becker Green
- Washington, DC
2What Does The Future Hold?
3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5Whos Responsible for Fighting Fraud?
- Federal Government (DOJFBI DHHS US Postal
Service) - State Agencies
- Congress
- Private Third Party Payors
- Private Citizens
6A Climate of Enforcement
- 1992 1999
- Criminal health fraud matters 343 1,994
- Criminal convictions 90 396
- Pending Civil matters 270
2,278pending - FBI resources devoted 112 420(agent
work years) - Source HHS DOJ Health Care Fraud Abuse
Control Program Annual Report for FY 1999
7FBI Health Care Fraud Resources
8Increased Criminal Civil Monetary Penalties
- In FY 1997 alone, 1.087 billion was collected
and in FY 1998, over 480 million was won or
negotiated in criminal fines, and civil
judgments and settlements. - In FY 1999, the OIG and DOJ collected over 490
million.
9Increased Program Exclusions and Criminal
Convictions
- In 1999, federal prosecutors convicted over 300
individuals (including physicians and hospital
executives) in health care fraud cases, an
increase of 16 percent from the prior year. - Since 1997, more than 8,600 individuals and
entities have been excluded from participation in
federal and state health care programs.
10Significant Factors
11The Fraud And Abuse Control Program
- Enacted as part of HIPAA, the Program gives DHHS
and DOJ responsibility for coordinating public
and private enforcement activities. - Congress created a new expenditure account (named
the Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control
Account) in which DHHS and DOJ jointly certify
moneys needed each year to finance anti-fraud
initiatives
12Program Goals
- coordinating law enforcement program
- conducting audits, evaluations and
investigations - helping facilitate enforcement of laws
- providing guidance to the industry on fraudulent
practices - establishing a national data bank to receive and
report adverse actions
13The Federal False Claims Act
- The Ultimate Legal Weapon In Prosecuting Health
Care Cases
14Whistleblower Actions
Over half of the 480 million the DOJ was awarded
in health care fraud cases in FY 1998, involved
judgements or settlements related partially or
completely to allegations in qui tam cases.
DOJ Health Care Fraud Report (FY99)
15Govt Fraud Hotline and the Establishment Of
Monetary Reward Program
- Individuals who provide info. that leads to
recovery of at least 100 may be eligible for a
reward equaling the lesser of 1000 or 10 of the
overpayments recovered - In 1997, over 32,000 complaints that warranted
follow-up action were received on this hotline - Now with the additional incentive of a monetary
reward, more people will consider reporting
possible wrongdoing
16THE FUTUREThe Question Should Not Be
- Will the governments fraud enforcement
activities against health care providers continue
into the future?
17Rather the Question Should Be
- What will the governments fraud enforcement
activities focus on in the future?
18Predictions
- Continued Emphasis on Billing
- More Emphasis on Kickbacks
- Managed Care Activities
- E-Health
- Research
- Private Payor Fraud Actions
- Scrutiny of CIA Compliance
19View on Fraud and Abuse
- David E. Matyas
- Epstein Becker Green
- Washington, DC