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View Full Version : Hundreds of medical professionals arrested for scamming millions from Medicare



Serpo
25th February 2011, 02:20 AM
:ROFL: This takes the cake......

(NaturalNews) Representing the largest medical fraud case in history, federal authorities have arrested more than 100 doctors, nurses, physical therapists, and other medical professionals for allegedly swindling hundreds of millions of dollars from the federal Medicare program. The violators, who were busted in nine different U.S. cities, are said to have fraudulently billed Medicare for sometimes millions of dollars for simple procedures, and even for procedures they never even performed.

In Brooklyn, N.Y., for instance, federal agents targeted three physical therapy clinics for scamming at least $50 million from Medicare over the past two years. The clinics were paying phony patients to go along with being falsely diagnosed for conditions they did not have, and come to fake appointments via costly ambulance services.

In Detroit, Mich., a podiatrist was apprehended for billing Medicare roughly $700,000 for a procedure that was the equivalent of a toenail clipping. Another incident in Brooklyn, N.Y., involved a proctologist who billed Medicare $6.5 million for hemorrhoid removals, most of which he allegedly never even performed. And in Miami, Fla., two doctors and a handful of nurses were indicted for bilking $25 million from Medicare for phony prescriptions.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Medicare fraud cost U.S. taxpayers more than $24 billion in 2009 alone. Daniel Levinson, HHS inspector General, told the U.S. Congress recently that more than 1,300 investigations in the past year alone have led to 500 Medicare fraud convictions that totaled more than $3 billion.

"Health care fraud schemes commonly include billing for services that were not provided or were not medically necessary, purposely billing for a higher level of service than what was provided, misreporting costs or other data to increase payments, paying kickbacks, and/or stealing providers' or beneficiaries' identities," Levinson said to Congress.
http://www.naturalnews.com/031488_doctors_medical_fraud.html

Glass
25th February 2011, 04:19 AM
It's either a diversion or its a shame. Ambulance services used for fake appointments. I wonder what the true cost of this is.

Ponce
25th February 2011, 06:10 AM
If this was for only one hundred people then what about the ones that are still doing it?

kregener
25th February 2011, 06:17 AM
The true cost is this:

$8,000.00 for a cast on a broken arm.

Carry on.

po boy
25th February 2011, 06:25 AM
It's about time they start locking up those drug dealing crooks. :o

mightymanx
25th February 2011, 08:21 AM
I am shocked I tell you...shocked.

:sarc:

kregener
25th February 2011, 08:23 AM
I am shocked I tell you...shocked.

:sarc:


Careful! Electric shock can cost THOUSANDS at the hands of..."professionals".

mick silver
25th February 2011, 08:50 AM
i wonder how many are family members to the gov leader we have

Neuro
25th February 2011, 08:56 AM
I am shocked I tell you...shocked.

:sarc:


Careful! Electric shock can cost THOUSANDS at the hands of..."professionals".
Cheaper, easier and quicker to get tased for a misdemeanor...

Cobalt
25th February 2011, 09:21 AM
That industry has been full of fraud since it was created.

I remember years ago a news camera team went into NY city and followed several vans around, they would pick up street people and drive them to a clinic, take them in and a few minutes later they would all come out with a 10 dollar bill in their hand.

The clinic had 2 doctors listed as owners and on average the clinic billed the govt for over 200 patient visits per day over the several months they were in business.

Book
25th February 2011, 10:19 AM
http://www.pixelsandpills.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Rich-Doctor.jpg

Ponce
25th February 2011, 12:05 PM
Remember that about four of five months ago I had to go to the emergency room for treatment?.... because I was admitted as "under observation" and not admitted on a regular basis that meant the most payments would come from me and not from the insurance company.......but........because I wrote in the one page admittance paper, above my signature, "NO OUT OF POCKET MONEY" I haven't as of yet recieved a bill from them.....not even for the one night $250.00 room, which is part of my insurance deal.

They did tried to get the money from my inusurance company and then from the VA.

Ares
25th February 2011, 12:53 PM
Medicaid and Medicare representing the largest medical fraud case in history

There fixed it for him

Neuro
25th February 2011, 01:28 PM
I sincerely believe that third party payers is the main reason for all the rotten medical treatments people are getting nowadays... For instance in my profession Chiropractic, 40 years ago, their was no insurance coverage whatsoever for chiropractic treatment. A program of care was reasonably prized, the chiropractor was competent in chiropractic, he didn't have a crushing student loan. Today insurance will pay for whatever physical therapy modality the chiropractor is using, thus he/she is using many, and they are all bloody useless, chiropractic college teaches more of physical therapy, than chiropractic adjustments, and it is very expensive... A session can go up to $2-300, and the adjustment is crap, cause that is not where the focus is any longer, the co-pay is usually more than the inflation adjusted fee the chiropractor was charging 40 years ago. Insurance limits the number of sessions they will pay for, usually 5-10 sessions, and the average modern chiropractors will not be able to render a patient significantly better at those, and when the insurance stops paying the patient goes away disappointed.

In short: Inclusion of Chiropractic in the medical insurance fraud scheme, has effectively killed Chiropractic way better than during the previous 60-70 years of AMA conspiring to eliminate the chiropractic profession.

Advice: If you want a quality chiropractic adjustment, go to a chiropractor who don't accept insurance or Medicare, and avoid those who gives a ridiculous long treatment plan. Those have usually been brainwashed by a practice consultant...