His hands trembled at first. Then his vision blurred. Finally, unable
to control a malignant blood pressure condition, Tinley Park cardiac
surgeon Banio Koroma lost his malpractice insurance, then his operating
room privileges and finally his professional standing.
Fortunately,
he lived in Illinois, where medical regulation has been so lax even the
most desperate of doctors can find financial reward.
Koroma took
refuge in home health care, a lucrative and growing industry rife with
fraud and tainted by unscrupulous physicians who travel to patients'
homes in search of profit, then bleed money from taxpayer-financed
programs.
The down-on-his-luck doctor took advantage of this
loosely regulated world to exploit his patients and command a central
role in a multimillion-dollar taxpayer swindle that breached the homes
of 15,600 older adults getting services from a Chicago company called
Mobile Doctors.
For adults hobbled by disability or disease who
want to stay out of nursing homes or hospitals, home health care
services can be a godsend.
For criminals who want to tap into federal Medicare dollars, it can represent a loosely guarded bank vault.
A
Tribune investigation reveals that Illinois public health regulators
proved unprepared for a surge in new home health care companies, doling
out too many home health licenses too fast and failing to provide
meaningful oversight.
Even today, most anyone can own a home health care business for a $25 license fee — no criminal background check required.
Consequently,
the Chicago metropolitan area is a hot spot for fraud, deemed among the
most corrupt regions nationally. In the last five years, federal
investigators estimate, area home-health agencies have improperly
collected at least $104 million of public dollars.
Many home health companies operate lawfully and in the best interests
of their customers. But fraud is so pervasive throughout the industry,
federal officials say, that for every conviction like Koroma's, there
are many other participants who are able to skate away.
As a result, already-vulnerable patients are put at risk.
Corrupt
home health companies and complicit physicians as well as nurses
secretly laced medical files with false diagnoses involving tens of
thousands of Chicago-area patients, the Tribune found.
An analysis
of federal court and enforcement files since 2012 shows that thousands
of patients have been subjected to unwarranted procedures, therapies and
tests; some were prescribed unneeded and powerful drugs.
Most
victims were unaware that their medical histories were hijacked by
swindlers — there is no legal requirement to notify or warn patients
when fraud is uncovered, or when providers are convicted of crimes.
Case files show that a disabled man in his 80s was denied a
wheelchair by a government insurance program because a Chicago-area
business had falsely purchased one in the man's name and then illegally
pocketed the reimbursement check, according to AgeOptions in Oak Park, a
federally funded advocacy group.
In another case, a hospitalized
man was denied a transfer to a Chicago rehabilitation center because a
home health company had fraudulently billed the government for
nonexistent convalescent care.
"These scammers are really smart,"
said Jason Echols, statewide director for a senior Medicare program at
AgeOptions. "Anybody could be a victim." (Click to Continue)
Full Article & Source:
Illinois' home health care industry rife with fraud, tainted by unscrupulous physicians
The state needs to fix this and fix it now. The elderly are at risk.
ReplyDeleteDisgraceful, and yet these stories are common. It's heartbreaking that elder have become cash cows for unscrupulous scammers.
ReplyDelete