by zzyzzx follow (9)
Comments 1 - 12 of 12 Search these comments
The fucking wacko's at the Heartland institute are up to their old games. These douche-bags will do anything for attention and funding.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/may/20/heartland-institute-future-staff-cash
Comments at article site are pretty good too:
Does that mean the company is going to have flaccid earnings next quarter?
Its a a war against men! Why are the Dems blocking men's health care?!
It sounds like the work of hardened criminals to me.
This is just erection year politics.
Were these ordered by the GSA for any of their parties by chance?
"Stimulus" I can relate to, Obummer finally getting some idea.
And yet, even with the fraud, Medicare is STILL more cost effective and efficient that most private health insurance plans. Imagine what we could do if we had Medicare-For-All and took some of the savings from what we currently spend on healthcare to enact well funded, near-draconian strict fraud busting programs. America would save a bundle?
Imagine what we could do if we had Medicare-For-All and took some of the savings from what we currently spend on healthcare to .....
We could use it to build billion-dollar fighter planes?
I'm just spitballing here.
Americans aren't good at "let's take our savings in this area and spend it on something sensible". We just aren't. If my brother stopped smoking, the cigarette money would go into booze or lottery tickets.
They need a good penis pump accountant who can rise to the occasion.
And, a penis pump lawyer who's a real dick.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/jun/19/kan-company-suspected-42m-medicare-fraud-penis-pum/
A new report by federal auditors says a Kansas-based company may have paid out as much as $4.2 million in potentially fraudulent Medicare claims for penis pumps, and the auditors are asking the company to refund the government the money.
The Health and Human Services inspector general said it sampled 100 claims made with Pos-T-Vac, the Dodge City-based penis-pump manufacturer, and found improprieties in more than half of payments for what are known as “male vacuum erection systems.”
The errors ranged from the company's failing to maintain proof that it delivered the pumps to customers, to one instance when the physician's approval order wasn't even signed by the doctor.
Together, those claims from the small sample amounted to $18,007 in billings, and when multiplied across Pos-T-Vac's entire set of 28,088 claims, the potential for fraudulent payments came to more than $4.2 million in 2008 and 2009, the auditors said.
“Pos-T-Vac submitted unsupported claims because it lacked adequate internal controls to ensure that it collected and maintained the required documentation,” the investigators said in their report, which was dated June 14.
The vacuum systems are considered durable medical equipment and are therefore eligible to be paid for as claims under Medicare, the federally-funded health coverage program for the country's senior citizens.
In a response to auditors on behalf of Pos-T-Vac, Wayne H. van Halem, president of the van Halem Group, a Medicare compliance consultancy, said the company did try to maintain sufficient documentation to verify that the items were delivered properly. Still, he said, the company is adding a new staffer to do more verification.
“In question here is not if these services were delivered, but the format of the proof of delivery,” he said. “We have provided proof that the packages were delivered with includes the elements requested by Medicare and has been confirmed by the third-party delivery service.”
Mr. van Halem did acknowledge the claim paid out when there was no doctor's signature and two other claims where there was no clinical documentation of a problem were in error.
The Heartland Institute estimated that the federal government spend more than $250 million on penis pumps over the past decade, with claims steadily rising in recent years.
Reports of fraud have accompanied the expanding Medicare market, leading one Republican congressional aide who reviewed the auditor's report to joke that it gave a new meaning to government spending as economic stimulus.
“Now we know what [economist] Paul Krugman and the Keynesians mean by priming the pump,” the aide said. “This is Exhibit A in the case against government-run health care.”
#politics