Attorney General Eric Holder and Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius have released a new
report showing that the government's health care fraud prevention
and enforcement efforts recovered nearly $4.1 billion in taxpayer
dollars in Fiscal Year (FY) 2011. This is the highest annual
amount ever recovered from individuals and companies who attempted
to defraud seniors and taxpayers or who sought payments to which
they were not entitled. The press release follows:
These findings in the annual Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control
Program (HCFAC) report, are a result of President Obama making the
elimination of fraud, waste and abuse a top priority in his
administration. The success of this joint Department of
Justice and HHS effort would not have been possible without the
Health Care Fraud Prevention & Enforcement Action Team (HEAT),
created in 2009 to prevent fraud, waste and abuse in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs, and to crack down on the fraud perpetrators
who are abusing the system and costing American taxpayers billions
of dollars. These efforts to reduce fraud will continue to
improve with the new tools and resources provided by the Affordable
Care Act.
"This report reflects unprecedented successes by the Departments
of Justice and Health and Human Services in aggressively preventing
and combating health care fraud, safeguarding precious taxpayer
dollars and ensuring the strength of our essential health care
programs," said Attorney General Holder. "We can all be proud
of what's been achieved in the last fiscal year by the Department's
prosecutors, analysts and investigators - and by our partners at
HHS. These efforts reflect a strong, ongoing commitment to
fiscal accountability and to helping the American people at a time
when budgets are tight."
"Fighting fraud is one of our top priorities and we have
recovered an unprecedented number of taxpayer dollars," said
Secretary Sebelius. "Our efforts strengthen the integrity of
our health care programs, and meet the President's call for a
return to American values that ensure everyone gets a fair shot,
everyone does their fair share, and everyone plays by the same
rules."
Approximately $4.1 billion stolen or otherwise improperly
obtained from federal health care programs was recovered and
returned to the Medicare Trust Funds, the Treasury and others in FY
2011. This is an unprecedented achievement for HCFAC, a joint
effort of the two departments to coordinate federal, state and
local law enforcement activities to fight health care fraud and
abuse.
The recently-enacted Affordable Care Act provides additional
tools and resources to help fight fraud that will help boost these
efforts, including an additional $350 million for HCFAC
activities. The administration is already using tools
authorized by the Affordable Care Act, including enhanced
screenings and enrollment requirements, increased data sharing
across government, expanded overpayment recovery efforts and
greater oversight of private insurance abuses.
Since 2009, the Departments of Justice and HHS have enhanced
their coordination through HEAT and have increased the number of
Medicare Fraud Strike Force teams. During FY 2011, HEAT and
the Medicare Fraud Strike Force expanded local partnerships and
helped educate Medicare beneficiaries about how to protect
themselves against fraud. The departments hosted a series of
regional fraud prevention summits around the country, provided free
compliance training for providers and other stakeholders and sent
letters to state attorneys general urging them to work with HHS and
federal, state and local law enforcement officials to mount a
substantial outreach campaign to educate seniors and other Medicare
beneficiaries about how to prevent scams and fraud.
In FY 2011, the total number of cities with strike force
prosecution teams was increased to nine, all of which have teams of
investigators and prosecutors from the Justice Department, the FBI,
and the HHS Office of Inspector General, dedicated to fighting
fraud. The strike force teams use advanced data analysis
techniques to identify high-billing levels in health care fraud hot
spots so that interagency teams can target emerging or migrating
schemes along with chronic fraud by criminals masquerading as
health care providers or suppliers. In FY 2011, strike force
operations charged a record number of 323 defendants, who allegedly
collectively billed the Medicare program more than $1
billion. Strike force teams secured 172 guilty pleas,
convicted 26 defendants at trial and sentenced 175 defendants to
prison. The average prison sentence in strike force cases in
FY 2011 was more than 47 months.
Including strike force matters, federal prosecutors filed
criminal charges against a total of 1,430 defendants for health
care fraud related crimes. This is the highest number of
health care fraud defendants charged in a single year in the
department's history. Including strike force matters, a total
of 743 defendants were convicted for health care fraud-related
crimes during the year.
In criminal matters involving the pharmaceutical and device
manufacturing industry, the department obtained 21 criminal
convictions and $1.3 billion in criminal fines, forfeitures,
restitution and disgorgement under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act. These matters included the illegal marketing of medical
devices and pharmaceutical products for uses not approved by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the distribution of products
that failed to conform to the strength, purity or quality required
by the FDA.
The departments also continued their successes in civil health
care fraud enforcement during FY 2011. Approximately $2.4
billion was recovered through civil health care fraud cases brought
under the False Claims Act (FCA). These matters included
unlawful pricing by pharmaceutical manufacturers, illegal marketing
of medical devices and pharmaceutical products for uses not
approved by the FDA, Medicare fraud by hospitals and other
institutional providers, and violations of laws against
self-referrals and kickbacks. This marked the second year in
a row that more than $2 billion has been recovered in FCA health
care matters and, since January 2009, the department has used the
False Claims Act to recover more than $6.6 billion in federal
health care dollars.
The fraud prevention and enforcement report announced today
coincides with the announcement of a proposed rule from the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services aimed at recollecting
overpayments in the Medicare program. Before the Affordable Care
Act, providers and suppliers did not face a deadline for returning
taxpayers' money. Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, there will be
a specific timeframe by which self-identified overpayments must be
returned. The Obama Administration has made prevention and
recollection of overpayments a government-wide priority. These
announcements today are just the latest in a series of steps that
the administration is taking to protect taxpayer dollars and keep
money in the pockets of Americans.
The HCFAC annual report can be found at oig.hhs.gov/publications/hcfac.asp.
For more information on the joint DOJ-HHS Strike Force
activities, visit: www.StopMedicareFraud.gov/.
For more information on the fraud prevention accomplishments
under the Affordable Care Act visit: http://www.healthcare.gov/news/factsheets/2012/02/medicare-fraud02142012a.html
For more information on the Affordable Care Act, please visit
our Virginia Health Navigator Solution Center,
sponsored by Richmond Memorial Health Foundation. It provides
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Source:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Last Review:02/15/2012