Showing posts with label Adventist Health Systems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adventist Health Systems. Show all posts

Thursday, March 1, 2018

The 7th Day Adventists and Their Fraud

The corporate owner of Park Ridge Health has agreed to pay a $115 million fine for filing false or inflated insurance claims and paying kickbacks to physicians for hospital referrals in violation of state and federal law, according to a settlement agreement filed Monday in a whistleblower case originally brought by three Park Ridge employees.

“Companies that financially reward physicians in exchange for patient referrals – as the government contended in this case – undermine the physicians’ impartial medical judgment at the expense of patients and taxpayers,” Derrick L. Jackson, special agent in charge  of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General in Atlanta, said in a news release. “We will continue to investigate such wasteful business arrangements.”Adventist Health System Sunbelt Healthcare Corp., the Orlando-based owner of Park Ridge and 43 other hospitals in 10 states, agreed to the fine in exchange for an agreement by U.S. and state prosecutors to drop further civil actions arising from alleged false claims, inflated bills and kickbacks to referring physicians in four states.
The settlement came in a case first brought in December 2012 by three whistleblowers who were Park Ridge employees with inside knowledge of physician recruitment, billing practices and compliance issues. They were Michael Payne, a risk manager who had worked there for nine years; Melissa Church, executive director of physician services and an employee for 15 years; and Gloria Pryor, a compliance officer who had worked at the Fletcher hospital for 19 years. The three employees filed the complaint under the federal False Claims Act, which protects whistleblowers and rewards those whose complaint results in the recovery of government money. In 2013, Sherry Dorsey, a corporate vice president who joined Adventist in 2012, filed a second whistleblower lawsuit under the federal False Claims Act.

Among the types of whistleblower cases that have produced fines or recovered funds are complaints involving Medicare and Medicaid fraud, defense contractor fraud and other cases of false or inflated claims.
In their original complaint, Payne, Church and Pryor alleged that Adventist knowingly defrauded the U.S. government and the states of North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, Texas and Illinois in connection with Medicare, Medicaid and other federal health insurance programs by engaging in “a scheme to pay improper compensation to physicians to induce them to illegally refer patients” to its hospitals for inpatient and other services.
In a statement, Adventist said that the settlement "fully resolves issues AHS voluntarily disclosed to the United States government in early 2013 involving its implementation of certain physician employment compensation models and highly technical physician billing and coding issues." The hospital chain said it had instituted reforms such as a centralized process to set physician salaries.
"Adventist Health System regrets these oversights," the statement said, "and while some of its hospitals had no violations, the organization has improved monitoring and business practices system-wide as a result of lessons learned from this experience so that it can continue to uphold the highest standards of compliance with regulations."

'Referral driven compensation'

Specifically, the whistleblower complaint said, the hospitals offered pay far above market value and tolerated losses among the physician practices because the losses were more than covered by the referrals. The “referral-driven compensation” included a variety of kickbacks, they said, including “hefty annual salaries” for part-time or nonproductive work, “excessive bonuses” based on hospital revenue and sharing of excess revenue “from known overbilling by employed and contracted physicians.” The arrangements, the lawsuit said, violated the federal Stark Act, which prohibits hospitals from submitting Medicaid or Medicare claims on behalf of doctors who have an improper financial relationship with the hospital; the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and the federal False Claims Act.

According to the complaint, Adventist in the early 1990s “initiated an aggressive strategy” in which it encouraged AHS hospitals to buy as many physician practices as they could in order to control referrals for both inpatient and outpatient services. To sweeten the deal, the employees said, AHS hospitals paid physicians with “excessive compensation, perks and benefits.” Although many of the hospital-owned practices lose money, the loss is made up by referrals to hospital services, then billed by the hospital, often at higher rates than would have been charged had the procedures been done at the doctors’ offices, the whistleblowers said. In summary, their lawsuit added, “Defendants are making excessive and referral-volume-based payments to their employee and contract physicians for the purpose of inducing referrals” to the hospital. Hospital executives turned a blind eye to this “upcoding and overbilling,” the Park Ridge employees said, because to stop the arrangement would strain relations with physicians and reduce the hospital’s revenue. At Park Ridge specifically, the employees said, the hospital’s losses in physician-owned practices totaled $5 million in 2010, $5.2 million in 2011 and $6.6 million in 2012. Church said that her bosses from Adventist Health had told her that other AHS units accepted similar losses because they regarded each practice as a “cost center” that contributed to hospital revenue through referrals.

CFO 'worried about going to jail'


One example of excessive pay, the whistleblowers said, was an arrangement Park Ridge made with Jay Levy, a pediatric urologist. Levy, who maintains a second home here, wanted to work three days a month for $10,000 a day, they said. Though the rate was “admittedly a stretch” based on fair market value, a Park Ridge finance manager calculated that Levy’s “downstream value” would net the hospital revenue. It agreed to a $300,000 a year contract for three days a month, the whistleblowers said.

After orthopedic surgeon Chris Estes tendered his resignation in November 2012, Park Ridge CFO Karsten Randolph — alarmed at the loss of Estes’s $1.2 million “contribution margin” — instructed Church, director of physician services, to find out what it would cost to keep him. Estes asked for an increase of base salary to $300,000, a $3,000 a month stipend for emergency room coverage, $1,500 a month for travel and forgiveness of $190,000 in debt. To keep his referrals, “Park Ridge officials acceded to almost all his demands.”
A similar economic model allowed Park Ridge to accept losses of $2.5 million to $3 million per year by its Southeastern Sports Physician Services because the practice delivered a “contribution margin of $3.6 million.”
Some of the losses by physicians in their practices were so high that they triggered giveback clauses, the complaint said. Those were often ignored because the doctors' referrals more than made up for the large losses.
Another kickback scheme to maximize revenue involved physicians and non-physician practitioners referring patients to Park Ridge for procedures that could have been done in a doctors’ office for a lower reimbursable rate. In exchange, the medical providers received a cut of the higher rate. The lawsuit listed 52 physicians and 10 non-physician practitioners who “are known to have been compensated in this manner.”
Sleazy Criminal Karsten Randolf
The hospital’s practice of channeling Medicare “Part A” payments to doctors concerned CFO Karsten Randolph to the point that he confided in Church that he was “worried about going to jail,” the lawsuit said. “Despite knowing that these payments are improper,” it said, “Randolph has said he has no intention of reporting the issue to CMS (the federal Centers for Medicaid and Medicare) because the amount of money due to the government would be ‘insane.’”
The payments went on despite warnings from within and from the home office that the "part A" payments were improper. Brian Stiltz, a senior vice president of physician enterprise at AHS, told Park Ridge administrators in August 2012 that the Part A payments "had to stop because it was a clear violation of the Stark Act," the whistleblowers said. Even as they began to heed the warnings, Park Ridge executives devised other payment schemes to continue rewarding the highest producing referrers, the complaint said. An oncologist received a $25,000 bonus if he saw at least 900 patients per quarter, $50,000 if he saw 1,350.
Some of the compensation paid to the best revenue producers were less conventional. Park Ridge covered the Mustang and BMW lease payments for Dr. Estes for years, the employees' complaint said. Dermatologist Timothy Highley ran a practice independent of his Park Ridge work while the hospital covered his staff and equipment and paid his medical malpractice premiums. A 2007 contract required Dr. Mikhail Vinogradov to devote "substantially all his professional time" to the practice of oncology at Park Ridge. He managed to do so, the whistleblowers said, while working 20-24 hours a week and taking 50 vacation days per year.
A "bonus structure" for high revenue producers resulted in extra payments to surgeons ranging from $63,000 to $490,000 (for Dr. Michael Stalford, an otalaryngologist, double his base salary of $250,000).
When Pryor, whose job was to monitor adherence to health care regulations, warned Park Ridge's Compliance Committee that "billing issues abound," higher-ups brushed her off her as too "compliance conservative" and urged her to leave the matter alone.
Park Ridge also created a revenue center through its geriatrics practice, the lawsuit said. Made up of 30 physicians who primarily treated the elderly, the practice generated revenue of $250,000 a month, in part with excessive doctor visits. Patients who would typically warrant 10 to 12 doctor checkups a year instead got three to four times that many. In one six-month stretch, four patients were seen more than 20 times and 99 were seen at least 10 times, resulting in a stack of Medicare and Medicaid bills for "unneeded visits," according to the complaint.
By the fall of 2012, the geriatrics unit collapsed under the weight of the fraud, the complaint asserted. In September, Church, in a meeting with Park Ridge CEO Jimm Bunch, CFO Randolph and Vice President Jason Wells, "fully explained numerous issues plaguing the geriatrics practice." Instead of fixing it, the administrators decided to shut down the unit, the whistleblowers said, reasoning that the problems were too great, an audit was too risky and the unit was  generating too little revenue to cover the salaries of the overpaid physicians.

Practices 'undermine patients' care'

“Adventist-owned hospitals, such as Park Ridge, allegedly paid doctors’ bonuses based on the number of tests and procedures they ordered,” Jill Westmoreland Rose, the acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, said in a statement. “This type of financial incentive is not only prohibited by law, but can undermine patients’ medical care.”

The settlement was signed by prosecutors with the U.S. Justice Department and North Carolina and Florida attorney general’s offices, the inspector general offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and state regulators, Adventist attorneys and the whistleblowers and their attorneys.
According to the settlement agreement, a month after the first whistleblower case was filed, Adventist disclosed to the U.S. Justice Department that it had submitted Medicare claims “that were potentially in violation of federal law.” The hospital chain subsequently disclosed that it had submitted claims based on illegal referrals at hospitals in North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee and Texas.

The government also said that Adventist’s compensation arrangements with “certain employed physicians, as well as a space lease with an immediate family member of an employed physician,” violated the federal physician self-referral law. Federal court documents did not disclose whether the illegal arrangements involved Park Ridge physicians. Adventist also admitted that it had submitted falsely coded Medicare claims, according to the settlement agreement. The violations the investigation documented included claims for a higher level of service than was supported by clinical documentation and claims for services by a non-physician practitioner billed under a physician’s provider number, the government said.
The settlement did not amount to “an admission of liability” by the health care corporation nor was it a concession by the government that its “allegations are not well founded,” the agreement said. Both sides agreed that the settlement would enable all parties to avoid the “delay, uncertainty, inconvenience and expense” of protracted litigation.

“Unlawful financial arrangements between heath care providers and their referral sources raise concerns about physician independence and objectivity,” Benjamin Mizer, head of the U.S. Justice Department's Civil Division, said in a news release. “Patients are entitled to be sure that the care they receive is based on their actual medical needs rather than the financial interests of their physician.”

Adventist also agreed to pay $3.7 million to the four states that were party to the agreement. That included $198,454 to North Carolina, the state’s share of Medicaid payments that prosecutors said violated the Physician Self-Referral Law and North Carolina false claims act.
Adventist declared in the agreement that it is currently solvent and would remain solvent after it pays $118.7 million to the U.S. Justice Department and four states where the illegal conduct took place. The settlement bars Park Ridge from deducting the value of pending state Medicaid claims that the state has denied. While the agreement blocks further civil sanctions rising from the whistleblowers' complaint, it also bars Adventist from using a "double jeopardy" defense in the event of any criminal prosecution or administrative action. Nor would could the health care corporation use the payment as a defense against any Internal Revenue Service action.
The settlement agreement is "the largest of a Stark case involving a hospital chain," said Peter Chatfield, the attorney for the Park Ridge whistleblowers. Payne, Church and Pryor, he added, "for years tried to get these things corrected without much success." Park Ridge put all three on leave once it was known they were whistleblowers. After negotiating a severance package they left their hospital employment in November 2013.
"There eventually will be a reward paid to the whistleblowers out of the proceeds" from the $115 million fine, Chatfield said. The defendants also will be required to pay attorney fees, which will be a sum above the $118.7 million Adventist has already agreed to pay. Chatfield said he knows of no criminal investigation and given the breadth of the settlement doubted that one was under way.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Criminal Christian Medical Corporations

Sheeple Christians believe that if something is associated with a church then is must be safe and ethical and that God is someho residing there to protect them from harm. Criminal medical corporations mob up with churches in order to play on the naivety of easily led Christians. The medical industry is the most corrupt industry in the history of mankind. When religion is combined with medicine it creates the perfect storm for corruption.

Currently the most criminally corrupt doctor known to the general public is Dr Ben Carson. Ben Carson is a lifelong member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church.

For quite some time the criminal American medical industry has been mobbed up with the churches. At one time church run hospitals generally had good reputations but so did the American medical industry. That has changed and here's one example.

Adventist Health System’s $118.7 million settlement started with Phillips & Cohen’s whistleblower lawsuit



WASHINGTON, DC, Sept. 21, 2015 -- Three former employees of a North Carolina hospital were the first to expose an alleged scheme by Adventist Health System to pay doctors excessive compensation to lock in their patient referrals to Adventist-owned hospitals, clinics and other outpatient services in Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.
The US Justice Department announced today that Adventist will pay a total of $118.7 million to the federal government and four states to settle a whistleblower (qui tam) lawsuit filed in December 2012 by those former employees, who are represented by whistleblower law firm Phillips & Cohen LLP.The Adventist settlement agreement also covers a separate qui tam lawsuit filed in 2013 that made the same allegations as some of those made earlier in Phillips & Cohen's qui tam lawsuit.

Park Ridge Health
100 Hospital Dr, Hendersonville, NC 28792 (828) 684-8501

The Adventist settlement is the largest healthcare fraud settlement ever made involving physician referrals to hospitals, according to Peter Chatfield, a whistleblower attorney with Phillips & Cohen. It is nearly twice the previous largest settlement involving allegations of hospitals paying doctors for referrals, which was North Broward Hospital District's recent $69.5 million settlement.

"We alleged Adventist's hospitals paid doctors outrageous sums and offered overly generous benefits and lax billing oversight as part of a corporate strategy to capture and control physician referrals for inpatient and outpatient services near its hospitals," Chatfield said. "Federal law prohibits hospitals from paying doctors directly or indirectly for referrals so that doctors make recommendations for care based on what's best for the patient - not what's best for the doctor's bank account."
Phillips & Cohen's whistleblower complaint against Adventist listed a number of ways Adventist allegedly paid doctors for their referrals. For example, the complaint says that Adventist hospitals paid for:
  • The leases of a BMW and a Mustang for a surgeon.
  • A $366,000 base salary for a family practitioner that more than doubled the salary that similar practitioners in that area, due to the extraordinarily high level of his facility fee referrals to Adventist for x-ray and CBC tests.
  • A bonus of nearly $368,000 plus salary for total annual pay of $710,000 for a dermatologist who worked just three days a week. He also received payments to cover his costs for staff, equipment, supplies and medical malpractice insurance for the remainder of his time spent on his private practice.
The settlement agreement, the whistleblowers' complaint and a photo of the three whistleblowers are posted on Phillips & Cohen's Adventist whistleblowers' case page.
Adventist initiated a corporate policy that directed its hospitals to purchase physician practices and group practices or employ physicians in their surrounding areas, Phillips & Cohen's complaint says, in order to control all patient referrals in those locations.
"This tactic was intended to increase the number of Medicare, Medicaid and other patients sent to Adventist hospitals for inpatient and outpatient treatment and boost the hospital's revenues," Chatfield said. As employees of Adventist-owned subsidiaries, doctors were required to refer patients to the Adventist hospitals that employed them or owned their practices with limited exceptions.

To convince doctors to sell their practices to Adventist hospitals or to become hospital employees, Adventist hospitals allegedly provided excessive compensation, perks and benefits to the physicians. The hospitals were willing to pay doctors more compensation than considered fair market value and absorb persistent losses in those deals because of the revenue the doctors' stream of referrals generated for Adventist from government healthcare programs and elsewhere, the whistleblowers' complaint said.

A substantial portion of the settlement amount is based on allegations involving Florida Hospital Medical Group, an Adventist-owned physician practice in Florida whose doctors worked at several Adventist hospitals and dozens of Adventist-owned outpatient clinics. Those hospitals include Florida Hospital Altamonte, Florida Hospital Apopka, Florida Hospital Celebration Health, Florida Hospital Kissimmee, Florida Hospital Orlando, Florida Hospital Waterman (Tavares, Fla.), Florida Hospital for Children (Orlando, Fla.) and Winter Park Memorial Hospital.

The three whistleblowers were longtime employees at Adventist's Park Ridge Health in Hendersonville, NC, where they became aware of the alleged system-wide kickback scheme. Michael Payne was a risk manager and Melissa Church was the executive director of physician services at Park Ridge. Gloria Pryor was a compliance officer for physician offices at Park Ridge.

"My clients went through internal channels at the hospital to get their concerns about deals with doctors and improper billing practices addressed for several years," Chatfield said. "They decided to file a whistleblower lawsuit after they confirmed that the alleged money-for-referrals scheme was system-wide at Adventist and it was clear management wasn't going to stop it."

The financial arrangements Adventist hospitals allegedly had with doctors violated the Stark Statute and the False Claims Act.

The Adventist hospitals kept careful track of the value of the referrals the physician employees made to the hospitals, according to the complaint. Losses suffered by the hospitals were due in large part to overcompensation of physicians, the complaint said. For instance, one doctor at Park Ridge was marked in Adventist financial records as a "recurring issue" because he needed to bring in approximately $70,000 per month in billings for the hospital to break even on the compensation Adventist paid him, but he was bringing in only about $57,000 per month.

In addition to the charges related to the money-for-referrals scheme, Adventist settled a number of Medicare billing fraud allegations made in Phillips & Cohen's whistleblower lawsuit and supported by the government. Adventist hospitals allegedly:
  • "Upcoded" Medicare claims, meaning that they filed for reimbursement for more involved and therefore more expensive treatment than was needed, and filed claims for services that were medically unnecessary for patients in nursing and assisted living facilities;
  • Submitted claims for services provided by doctors who didn't have the proper credentials for working at hospitals where they were filling in for regular doctors;
  • "Unbundled" services and submitted them as separate claims to get larger Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements when the services should have been bundled into a single claim for reimbursement at a lower overall cost.
  • Submitted claims for services that weren't documented in patients' medical records.
The government joined Phillips & Cohen's whistleblower lawsuit - which was not publicly known until today because it was under seal - after investigating the whistleblowers' allegations. Attorney James Wyatt of Wyatt & Blake LLP, in Charlotte, N.C., served as whistleblowers' local counsel on the case.
Out of the total $118 million settlement, Adventist will pay:
  • $115 million to the federal government.
  • $3.48 million to Florida.
  • $198,453 to North Carolina.
  • $66,897 to Tennessee (pending final approval).
  • $4,711 to Texas (pending final approval).
Payne, Church, Pryor and their attorneys expressed their appreciation for the work by the government's lawyers and investigators to stop the alleged schemes and recover millions for the government.

In particular, they thanked David Finkelstein, Trial Lawyer with the Justice Department's Civil Division, and Jonathan Ferry, Assistant US Attorney in the US Attorney's Office for the Western District of North Carolina, for their outstanding work on the case.

Payne, Church and Pryor also thanked their families for their support and encouragement to do the right thing by pursuing their qui tam lawsuit for the past three years.

The False Claims Act allows private citizens to file "qui tam" lawsuits against any entity defrauding the government to recover funds for the government. Whistleblowers are rewarded with 15 percent to 25 percent of the recovery when the government joins the case. The amount of the whistleblowers' rewards in this case hasn't been determined yet.

About Phillips & Cohen LLP
Phillips & Cohen (www.phillipsandcohen.com) is the nation's most successful law firm represent ing whistleblowers, with recoveries for governments totaling more than $11.6 billion in civil settlements and criminal fines. The firm represents whistleblowers in "qui tam" lawsuits as well as cases brought under the whistleblower reward programs of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Internal Revenue Service.

PATIENT COMPLAINTS AGAINST PARK RIDGE HEALTH

3 years ago-
I was treated at Park Ridge Hospital on 6/8/2011. At check-in in the ER, I advised the hospital that I did not have insurance and I only work a part-time job at Little Caesars. After treatment, I started receiving bills from Park Ridge Anesthesiology Services and I called and told them that I can only pay $10 per month. Within 2 months they turned me over to a collection's agency, Northeastern Asset Recovery in New York. Where did caring and compassion??? - Jordan Moss


a year ago
If you got the ER be prepared to PAY$$$$ because they will double down on the charges. Sprained ankle w/ X rays cost $1,118.75 but wait then I received a bill from the MD for another $492.00. I called and was told my ER visit was a Level 3…again for a sprained ankle but wait the MD billed me at a Level 4. So the way it works, Park Ridge will bill you up as many levels as they can but not many to avoid and scrutiny from Managed Care Organizations and then the MD’s bill you one level above what the ER does. PR should be ashamed and on top of the bill “Extending the healing ministry of Christ”…damn that was expensive.

in the last week-
Worst ER visit I have ever had EMS tried to talk me into going to Pardee. Brought in on a back board and got no X-ray Dr basically looks me over and determine I am not perolised and sends me on my way only for me to go days later to pardee to find out I had a More sever injury. If you have anything worse than hang nail go to a different hospital. They are in midst of Government fines and law suits so they are cutting and when hospital cut you suffer.

in the last week-
Denied treatment on suspicion of drug seeking behavior. I have cancer and am in constant moderate to severe pain. Condescending and childish er Doctor. There are good reviews here also, so I guess it's luck of the draw if you go to the ER.

Dustin Brank
3 weeks ago
Don't waste your time with this establishment. The billing department is in complete disarray. They've falsely turned me over to collections twice and I've heard rumor that other people in the community have had issue with similar circumstances. Place is a joke.