Home Health & Hospice Week

Enforcement:

Hospice Industry Increasingly Profiled For Fraud

The OIG’s fraud hotline does sometimes produce results, case shows.

Hospices should brace for more, not less, fraud scrutiny ahead.

HHS Assistant Inspector General Ann Maxwell pointed the finger at home health agencies for fraud in a May 24 hearing before the House Energy & Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and

Investigations (see story, p. 171). But she also called out hospices. Specifically, Maxwell cited General Inpatient care problems.

And in its latest semiannual report to Congress, the HHS Office of Inspector General spent a good deal of time on hospice cases.

For example: The report cites the case of Sandra Livingston, owner of Sandanna Hospice Inc.,

Milestone Hospice Inc., and Carol’s Hospice & Palliative Services of Shelby, Mississippi Inc. Livingston was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay $1.1 million in restitution after admitting to paying recruiters $800 or more for patient referrals and furnishing kickbacks to the hospice medical director to certify ineligible patients. Agency billing clerk Lara Thompson also pled guilty in the case and received a year in prison and more than $1 million in restitution, the OIG notes. “This case was initiated based on fraud tips provided to the HHS OIG Hotline,” the semiannual report emphasizes.

Other recent hospice fraud enforcement actions include:

  • In Pittsburgh, former Horizons Hospice COO Mary Ann Stewart pled guilty to Medicare fraud June 2, according to the Department of Justice. “Stewart admitted orchestrating a scheme whereby she caused her staff to place non-qualifying patients into hospice care that were not appropriate, and then recertified the patients for continued hospice care,” the DOJ says in a release. Stewart is scheduled for sentencing in September, when she could face up to 10 years in prison.
  • A San Juan, Puerto Rico-based hospice will pay $2.5 million to settle Medicare fraud charges, the Department of Justice says in a release. A “False Claims Act investigation” uncovered about $1.5 million in questionable Part A Medicare billings submitted by Hospicio La Paz Inc. from October 2011 through September 2012, the DOJ says. The hospice also agreed to a Corporate Integrity Agreement with the OIG as part of the settlement.

Note: See the OIG semiannual report at http://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/archives/semiannual/2016/SAR_Spring_2016.pdf.

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