Doctors, hospitals and big pharma are paying billions in federal fraud settlements, and it shows the healthcare industry has a big problem
- Federal fraud settlements from the health care industry totaled $2.5 billion in the 2018 fiscal year alone, according to newly released figures.
- The 2019 fiscal year is off to a fast start, with a few prominent settlements involving allegations of hospitals purposely overpaying for physician practices, orthopedic providers willfully gaming the billing system, and a broadening investigation into Medicare Advantage coding.
Every year since 2010, the Department of Justice has recovered at least $2 billion from hospitals, doctors, pharmaceutical firms and other health care companies for allegedly defrauding the federal government.
The big picture: Federal fraud settlements from the health care industry totaled $2.5 billion in the 2018 fiscal year alone, according to newly released figures. A look at those settlements shows the wide variety of tactics health care companies have allegedly used to steer money to themselves.
The details: A slew of allegations in large cases cropped up this year.
- Exaggerating how sick Medicare Advantage patients are, leading to a $270 million settlement against DaVita.
- Pressuring doctors to admit patients from emergency rooms, leading to a $260 million deal against a hospital system that is now owned by Community Health Systems.
- Using a charitable foundation as a way to fund patients' drug copays, leading to a $24 million settlement against Pfizer.
- Numerous settlements against hospitals and other providers for things like false billing practices or paying kickbacks for physician referrals.
What's next: The 2019 fiscal year is off to a fast start, with a few prominent settlements involving allegations of hospitals purposely overpaying for physician practices, orthopedic providers willfully gaming the billing system, and a broadening investigation into Medicare Advantage coding.
- The health care industry is asking for more wiggle room on the federal law that outlaws kickbacks.
- But government watchdogs will more closely scrutinize overbilling.
The bottom line: Large settlement amounts indicate the government is willing to hunt down bad actors, but also that the industry knows the health care system is still ripe for abuse - or, as the industry argues, overly burdened with regulations.
- That likewise makes it unclear if DOJ penalties deter fraudulent behavior, or if corporate health care just views settlements as the cost of doing business.