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Medicare bought meds for dead people


               
2014 Oct 31, 2:12am   2,315 views  11 comments

by zzyzzx   follow (9)  

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/c174e3f138024e7ab4241e834e0eed5b/apnewsbreak-medicare-bought-meds-dead-people

WASHINGTON (AP) — Call it drugs for the departed: Medicare's prescription program kept paying for costly medications even after patients were dead.

The problem was traced back to a head-scratching bureaucratic rule that's now getting a second look.

A report coming out Friday from the Health and Human Services Department's inspector general says the Medicare rule allows payment for prescriptions filled up to 32 days after a patient's death — at odds with the program's basic principles, not to mention common sense.

"Drugs for deceased beneficiaries are clearly not medically indicated, which is a requirement for (Medicare) coverage," the IG report said. It urged immediate changes to eliminate or restrict the payment policy.

Medicare said it's working on a fix.

Investigators examined claims from 2012 for a tiny sliver of Medicare drugs — medications to treat HIV, the virus that causes AIDS — and then cross-referenced them with death records. They found that the program paid for drugs for 158 beneficiaries after they were already dead. The cost to taxpayers: $292,381, an average of $1,850 for each beneficiary.

Medicare's "current practices allowed most of these payments to occur," the report said.

Of 348 prescriptions dispensed for the dead beneficiaries, nearly half were filled more than a week after the patient died. Sometimes multiple prescriptions were filled on behalf of a single dead person.

Investigators don't know what happened to the medications obtained on behalf of dead people, but some may have been diverted to the underground market for prescription medicines. The report said HIV drugs can be targets for fraud since they can be very expensive; one common HIV drug costs about $1,700 for a month's supply, it said.

Medicare is the government's premier health insurance program, providing coverage to about 55 million seniors and disabled people. Prescription coverage delivered through private insurance plans began in 2006 as a major expansion of the program. But it's also been a target for scams.

The report did not estimate the potential financial impact across the $85 billion-a-year Medicare prescription program known as Part D. But investigators believe the waste may add up to millions of dollars.

"The exposure for the entire Part D program could be significant," said Miriam Anderson, team leader on the report. "The payment policy is the same for all drugs, whether they are $2,000 drugs to treat HIV or $4 generic drugs."

In a formal response, Medicare agreed with the investigators' recommendations.

"After reviewing this report, (Medicare) has had preliminary discussions with the industry to revisit the need for a 32-day window," wrote Marilyn Tavenner, the Obama administration's Medicare chief.

Medicare had originally maintained that the date of service listed in the billing records could instead reflect when a pharmacy submitted bills for payment. That billing date might have actually occurred after a prescription was filled, since some nursing home and institutional pharmacies submit their bills in monthly bundles.

However, the inspector general's investigators found that about 80 percent of the prescriptions for dead beneficiaries were filled at neighborhood pharmacies, undercutting Medicare's first explanation. As for the remainder, the investigators said they didn't see any reason pharmacies can't report an accurate date of service.

Investigators said they stumbled on the problem during an examination of coverage for AIDS drugs dispensed to Medicare beneficiaries. Sexually transmitted diseases are an increasingly recognized problem among older people.

That earlier investigation raised questions about expensive medications billed on behalf of nearly 1,600 Medicare recipients.

Some had no HIV diagnosis in their records, but they were prescribed the drugs anyway. Others were receiving excessively large supplies of medications. Several were getting prescriptions filled from an unusually large number of pharmacies.

Prescription drug fraud has many angles. When the high price of a drug puts it out of reach for certain patients, it can create an underground market. And some medications, like painkillers and anti-anxiety pills, are constantly sought after by people with substance-abuse issues.

#politics

Comments 1 - 11 of 11        Search these comments

1   zzyzzx   2014 Oct 31, 2:22am  

It's all Obama's fault!!!

2   justme   2014 Oct 31, 2:24am  

Good job by the Inspector General to track down the Medicare fraud.

I wish our government were just as good at prosecuting Wall St, which swindled the whole country for a LOT more than $292,381.

And by the way, the headline is wrong. It should not be

"Medicare bought meds for dead people"

It should be

"Medicare presented with medication benefit claims dated after patients were already dead"

Do you see the the difference between accurate reporting and thinly disguised propaganda, propaganda intended to give Medicare a bad name?

3   zzyzzx   2014 Oct 31, 2:27am  

justme says

Good job by the Inspector General to track down the Medicare fraud.

This is nothing compared to what we waste on penis pumps.
http://patrick.net/?p=1213528

4   elliemae   2014 Nov 4, 12:59am  

If the people who filled the scripts knowingly received them, they should be prosecuted.

I was thinking that it was mail order pharma that just hadn't gotten the message the patient had died. It's also possible that the scripts were part of the monthly auto-fill, but the person who received the meds should not have done so.

If it was a little old lady who filled her meds and they put her deceased husband's in the bag - that's a different story.

The problem with auto-fill or mail order meds is that, once they have left the pharmacy, they can't be returned. The pharmacy should have to eat the costs for meds they fill in these cases.

5   Tenpoundbass   2014 Nov 4, 2:04am  

Why not they can vote can't they?

6   Dan8267   2014 Nov 4, 3:04am  

zzyzzx says

Medicare had originally maintained that the date of service listed in the billing records could instead reflect when a pharmacy submitted bills for payment. That billing date might have actually occurred after a prescription was filled, since some nursing home and institutional pharmacies submit their bills in monthly bundles.

Translation: This whole article may be bullshit because the idiots who are claiming that "Medicare bought meds for dead people" used the incorrect dates as the basis for that statement.

Is it really that hard to keep track of the fulfillment date, separate from the billing date? Hell, that date needs to be recorded to make sure drugs don't go missing from inventory through theft.

This is another example of half-ass, worthless journalism. It tells us nothing about how much, if any, medication is being filled out for dead people. And if there is any such thing -- and that's a big if given the above shenanigans with the dates -- the article does not state why this happens. Is it clerical error, fraud, or just someone buying heart medicine for someone he didn't know died that day? Worthless article.

7   Dan8267   2014 Nov 4, 3:05am  

CaptainShuddup says

Why not they can vote can't they?

Only through absentee ballot. That's where the only appreciable voter fraud occurs.

8   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Nov 4, 3:09am  

Medicare was defrauded by for-profit medical providers.

9   Dan8267   2014 Nov 4, 3:24am  

thunderlips11 says

Medicare was defrauded by for-profit medical providers.

Possibly. You can't tell anything from the article.

10   Ceffer   2014 Nov 4, 3:34am  

A friend of mine told me about a sociopathic health provider who had his girls peruse the obituaries for patients that died. If he ever found a patient who died that he had a file for, he would file numerous claims for that person, especially if they were on the dole.

One guy was in the paper for committing suicide by cop and the provider went in the next day and filed claims for him.

11   elliemae   2014 Nov 5, 4:51pm  

Ceffer says

A friend of mine told me about a sociopathic health provider who had his girls peruse the obituaries for patients that died.

There was this one guy I met once who told me that a friend of his cousin's really had this happen to him.

If fraud such as this occurs, the MAC who processes the bills (such a Blue Cross Blue Shield) should catch it. That is, if the service dates were after the patient died.

For everything, there's a way to fraud it.

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