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Aetna and Hunterdon HealthCare Partners Forge Accountable Care Partnership

July 17, 2012 Leave a comment

Aetna and Hunterdon HealthCare Partners announced on July 16, 2012 that they had entered into a new accountable care agreement that will improve the quality and cost of patient care, and help members and plan sponsors save money.

Under the new ACO agreement, 2,200 members in the Hunterdon Healthcare employee benefits plan, and approximately 5,700 fully insured Aetna members who live in five New Jersey counties will be served by the ACO. Aetna members served by this new model are ones who primarily received care from Hunterdon Healthcare’s providers in the last 24 months, as well as those who seek care from Hunterdon Healthcare physicians following the start of the agreement.

See on www.aetna.com

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.

OIG’s Most Wanted Fugitives

July 15, 2012 Leave a comment

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General Web page contains information about OIG’s most wanted health care fugitives. In all, the OIG is seeking more than 170 fugitives on charges related to health care fraud and abuse.

See more at oig.hhs.gov

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

Categories: Fraud and Abuse

Two Charged for Medicare Fraud Schemes in Detroit Involving $8.8 Million in False Billings

July 15, 2012 Leave a comment

USDOJ: US Attorney’s Office – Eastern District of Michigan:  A federal indictment was unsealed on July 11 in Detroit charging two individuals for their participation in a series of separate Medicare fraud schemes involving home health services, United States Attorney Barbara L. McQuade announced.  McQuade was joined in the announcement by Acting Special Agent in Charge Edward Hanko of the FBI’s Detroit Field Office and Special Agent in Charge Lamont Pugh, III of the HHS-OIG Office of Investigation.

Charged in the indictment were Usha Shah, 63, and Deepak Shah, 63, both of West Bloomfield, Michigan. According to the indictment, the Shahs were allegedly involved in fraudulent claims submitted to Medicare totaling more than $8.8 million through their company, Miracle Home Health of Southfield, for home health care services that were medically unnecessary and/or never provided.  In addition, the court documents allege that the Shahs engaged in a conspiracy to pay cash kickbacks in return for obtaining Medicare beneficiaries’ whose Medicare identifications were used to bill the Medicare program.

U.S. Attorney Barbara L. McQuade said, “Medicare fraud cheats taxpayers out of money intended to pay for health care. We want providers to know that we are scrutinizing billing records to root out fraud.”  FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge Edward Hanko said, “Those who seek to steal from the medicare system and collect millions of dollars illegally must be brought to justice. These types of crimes motivated by greed will continue to be investigated vigorously by the FBI and our law enforcement partners.”

“The payment of kickbacks in exchange for the referral of Medicare beneficiaries is illegal,” said Lamont Pugh, III Special Agent in Charge of the Chicago Region of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General. “The OIG will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to hold those who participate in this type of illegal activity accountable.”

See more at www.fbi.gov

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

Categories: Fraud and Abuse

New Jersey Doctor Pleads Guilty In Cash-For-Patients Kickback Scheme

July 15, 2012 Leave a comment

USDOJ: US Attorney’s Office – District of New Jersey:  New Jersey doctor practicing in Newark admitted today he took kickbacks in connection with a cash-for-patients scheme with a diagnostic facility in Orange, N.J., U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced on July 11.

Dr. William Lagrada, 52, of Edison, N.J., pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Claire C. Cecchi to an Information charging him with one count of violating the federal healthcare program anti-kickback statute. Lagrada will forfeit $69,880 he received in kickbacks during the years 2010 and 2011.

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

On Dec. 13, 2011, Lagrada was arrested and charged with accepting cash kickback payments from Orange Community MRI (“Orange MRI”), a diagnostic facility, in exchange for patient referrals. Also on Dec. 13, 2011, 12 other New Jersey doctors and a nurse practitioner were arrested and charged in separate complaints with accepting similar cash kickback payments from Orange MRI. As revealed in the Complaints, each of the defendants was recorded taking envelopes of cash in exchange for their patient referrals. On Dec. 8, 2011, an Orange MRI executive was arrested and charged in a separate Complaint in connection with his participation in the scheme.

Starting in at least 2010, Orange MRI began making monthly cash kickback payments in exchange for patient referrals to Orange MRI for diagnostic tests. At the end of each calendar month, individuals at Orange MRI printed Orange MRI patient reports that detailed how many magnetic resonance imagings, ultrasounds, echocardiograms, computed axial tomographies, and dual-emission X-ray absorptiometries were referred. These patient reports were used to calculate the kickback payments.

See more at www.justice.gov

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

Categories: Fraud and Abuse

Dr. Michael Maxwell: Improved health care is law’s overlooked goal | Tulsa World

July 14, 2012 Leave a comment

Since the Supreme Court pronounced the Affordable Care Act constitutional, the local media have presented a balanced account for what this means to all stakeholders. I must admit I delayed my own education on this topic until the Supreme Court acted.

As a physician, my focus is on caring for people, with little energy left over for policy and politics. However, witnessing the public angst over this law compels me to speak out.

So far, most of the media coverage has centered on the payment methods for this law, the individual mandate, the expansion of Medicaid and the implementation of health insurance exchanges. What I hear from patients though are mostly poorly informed opinions and vaguely articulated fears. These concerns are all fueled by political agendas and rhetoric.

While the strategy for insuring those without health insurance may not be perfect, it is a smart, logical place to start. As with everything, we learn as we go, and I have yet to hear of any reasonable alternative. What has gone completely under-reported has been the Affordable Care Act’s strategy for improving the quality of health care in our country.

The opening line of the executive summary of the Report to Congress, March 2011 reads, “The Affordable Care Act seeks to increase access to high-quality, affordable health care for all Americans.” It goes on to outline its three broad aims of focus: better care for the individual, the community, and making it all more affordable. It then sets the specific early priorities and strategies for pulling this off.

Now, how do we argue with those goals? Enthusiasm and momentum for quality improvement in health care in our region has been building for years. The Affordable Care Act as well as the involvement of many local people and organizations are accelerating this agenda.

Read more from this Tulsa World article.

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

Lakeland Ledger: Fight Brews Over Florida’s Opting Out of Medicaid Plan

July 14, 2012 Leave a comment

In the weeks since the Supreme Court ruled that states could opt out of a plan to vastly expand Medicaid under President Barack Obama’s health care law, several Republican governors have vowed to do just that, attacking the expansion as a budget-busting federal power grab.

But it may not be so easy. A battle is brewing here in Florida, where Gov. Rick Scott took to national television soon after the ruling to announce that he would reject the expansion. Advocates for the poor and some players in the health care industry — especially hospitals — intend to push back.

Hospital associations around the country have already signed off on cuts to reimbursement rates under the health care law on the assumption that the new paying customers they would gain, partly through the Medicaid expansion, would more than cover their losses.

See on www.theledger.com

For an aggregation of other articles on Hot Topics in Healthcare Law, go to my magazine on Scoop.it – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law and Regulation and my newspaper on Paper.li – Hot Topics in Healthcare Law.

AllAnalytics – Noreen Seebacher – Stroking the Data for Better Healthcare

July 14, 2012 Leave a comment

Getting healthier could be as easy as turning on the TV… or a computer or smartphone. More and more healthcare providers are turning to telemedicine, a not-so new technology that’s been slowly transforming the way healthcare is delivered.  Data collected from telehealth applications is used by an intelligent system, in real-time, to guide care and determine risk levels for patients.

See on www.allanalytics.com

For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.

Personal Health Records Could Spur Patients To Obtain Preventive Care

July 14, 2012 Leave a comment

A study published in the Annals of Family Medicine finds that patients who use an interactive personal health record tool are more likely to obtain cancer screenings and certain other preventive services than patients without access to the PHR tool.

Researchers found that after 16 months:

* 25% of patients who used the interactive PHRs were up-to-date on their preventive care, up from less than 14% when the study began; and

*  Less than 13% of patients who received standard care were up-to-date on their preventive care, up from 11% when the study began.

See on www.ihealthbeat.org

For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.

HSC Research Brief: Dispelling Myths About Emergency Department Use: Majority of Medicaid Visits Are for Urgent or More Serious Symptoms

July 11, 2012 1 comment

Contrary to conventional wisdom that Medicaid patients often use hospital emergency departments (EDs) for routine care, the majority of ED visits by nonelderly Medicaid patients are for symptoms suggesting urgent or more serious medical problems, according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). About 10 percent of nonelderly Medicaid patient ED visits are for nonurgent symptoms, compared with about 7 percent for privately insured nonelderly people. Nonetheless, there are clearly opportunities to develop less-costly care options than emergency departments for both nonelderly Medicaid and privately insured patients.

To reduce ED use, policy makers might consider how to encourage development of care settings that can quickly handle a high volume of potentially urgent medical problems. Policy makers may want to focus initially on conditions that account for high ED volume that could likely be treated in less resource-intensive settings. For example, diagnoses of acute respiratory and other common infections in children and injuries together account for about 53 percent of ED visits by children aged 0 to 12 covered by Medicaid and almost 60 percent of ED visits by privately insured children aged 0 to 12. While some infections and injuries will be too serious to treat elsewhere, lower-cost settings that can provide a moderate intensity of care and urgent response time likely could reduce emergency department use.

See on www.hschange.org

 

Why ObamaCare is Not Enough: It’s the Health Care Costs, Stupid! — Dr. Mark Hyman

July 8, 2012 Leave a comment

Dr. Hyman asks “how do we stop and turn back the tsunami of chronic disease, in particular, diabesity – the continuum of obesity, pre-diabetes, and diabetes that is the major driver of 21st century suffering and costs?”

He points out that “diabesity is the hidden cause of most heart disease, hypertension, high cholesterol, stroke, dementia, many cancers (breast, colon, prostate, pancreas, liver, and kidney), and even depression. Yet is it almost never treated directly because there is no good drug for it.”

The focus on preventive care is the solution to controlling the rate of increase of healthcare costs.  Like Stephen Covey’s “sharpening the saw” metaphor, preventive care cannot be achieved without making an investment in changing the way healthcare is delivered; the payoff comes later.

See on drhyman.com

For an aggregation of other articles on improving healthcare, go to my internet magazine Scoop.it! Changing Health for the Better.