Report Uncovers Widespread Medicare Fraud in Hospice Care
Report Uncovers Widespread Medicare Fraud in Hospice Care · The Fiscal Times

For the countless families that have used the service, hospice care of dying loved ones is an indispensable gift. Trained nurses and social workers step in to support patients in their final months, with an eye towards making them comfortable, alert and relatively pain free rather than attempting a cure.

In 2013, Medicare paid $15.1 billion for hospice care for roughly 1.3 million people who were treated by 3,925 for-profit and non-profit programs throughout the country.

Under federal rules, the patient or a guardian must sign an election statement accepting the hospice care, and the attending physician must certify that the patient is terminally ill and beyond a cure.

Doctors and Nurses Charged in Massive $900 Million Medicare Fraud

Now, a disturbing new report by the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services claims some unscrupulous hospice operators, doctors and staff are aggressively recruiting patients for their programs in an effort to maximize profits – even when in some cases the patients shouldn’t be in hospice. The improper and fraudulent activities amount to hundreds of millions of dollars.

In a third of the cases examined, the hospice election statements lacked required information or failed to adequately state the implications of the withdrawal of most medical care. Moreover, in 14 percent of the cases, the physician did not meet requirements when certifying that the beneficiary was terminally ill. Those doctors appeared to have “limited involvement” in determining that the beneficiary was appropriate for hospice care.

And in a number of cases, the patients outlived standard hospice care, which usually assumes a patient won’t live much longer than six months. That suggests that the patients were inappropriate candidates for the program, and as a consequence may have missed out on needed medical care.

With more than $15 billion of Medicare funds spent on the program every year, the temptation for cheating is great. The Washington Post reported last week that the federal government in recent years has sought to recover more than $1 billion from hospices that “illegally billed Medicare patients who were not near death.”

The Inspector General’s office has investigated a number of recent fraud cases that highlight the need for more vigilance in policing the system.

Related: Billions in Medicare Fraud Still Rampant Despite Federal Crackdown

In one case, the owner of a hospice in Mississippi used “patient recruiters and submitted fraudulent claims to Medicare” for patients who were not appropriate candidates for hospice. Investigators discovered that the beneficiaries had no idea they were in hospice care. The owner was subsequently convicted and sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay $1.1 million in restitution to Medicare.