Massive Nationwide Medicare Bust: 111 Charged For Scams Worth $225 Million

The article "Massive Nationwide Medicare Bust: 111 Charged For Scams Worth $225 Million" in the HuffPo reports that:

MIAMI — Federal authorities charged more than 100 doctors, nurses and physical therapists in nine cities with Medicare fraud Thursday, part of a massive nationwide bust that snared more suspects than any other in history.

More than 700 law enforcement agents fanned out to arrest dozens of people accused of illegally billing Medicare more than $225 million. The arrests are the latest in a string of major busts in the past two years as authorities have struggled to pare the fraud that's believed to cost the government between $60 billion and $90 billion each year. Stopping Medicare's budget from hemorrhaging that money will be key to paying for President Barack Obama's health care overhaul ...


Read the entire story at the link above.

As I wrote at my Feb. 15, 2010 post "Does Possible EMR-Facilitated Upcoding (Also Known as "Fraud") Need Investigation by CMS, And Could it Explain HIT Irrational Exuberance?", those "Federal authorities" need to look into how EHR's facilitate upcoding, which is a form of fraud that is likely worth far, far more than a mere $225 million:

(Click to enlarge. $225 million might be mere chicken feed. See here.)


Worse, without careful scrutiny, EHR-mediated fraud might not be as easily detected as the "conventional" Medicare fraud mills, where, for example, it can get highly obvious something's amiss:

... A Brooklyn, N.Y., proctologist was charged with billing $6.5 million for hemorrhoid removals, most of which he never performed.

Finally, one might wonder if any of those caught in this recent sting operation were using EHR's...

-- SS

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