April 08, 2010 Louisiana Crackdown on Medicaid Fraud Paying OffPartnership between DHH Secretary and Attorney General Results in Major Increases in Prosecutions, Recoveries and Prevention Measures

-

BATON ROUGE—Louisiana Department of Health Secretary Alan Levine and Attorney General Buddy Caldwell announced today that Louisiana’s crackdown on Medicaid fraud is showing results for taxpayers.   

 

“When the Attorney General and I took office two years ago, we agreed on a partnership to fight fraud and abuse, and we wanted to see results,” said LDH Sec. Levine. “Medicaid fraud is theft – from taxpayers and from those who rely on the program for their health care. I’m proud of the results so far, and I commend the Attorney General, his staff and the LDH staff who have answered our call to make this a priority.” 

 

The results of the combined efforts of the Attorney General’s office and LDH include:

“It should be clear that the Attorney General and LDH, together, are focused on finding people who try to steal from the taxpayers, and are aggressively pursuing them,” said Attorney General Caldwell. “I applaud this progress, and I join Secretary Levine in stepping up our challenge to our agencies to continue working even harder to root out fraud and abuse.”

 

Medicaid fraud is a major problem facing the nation’s health care system. The Obama administration acknowledged earlier this year that more than $55 billion of improper payments was made in Medicaid and Medicare last year alone. Estimates of several organizations, including Attorneys Generals, the  Government Accountability Office and the FBI have estimated that 10 percent of all Medicaid expenses are diverted through fraud. 

 

Secretary Levine pointed out that one of the key contributors to fraud is the very design of the program itself.  Referring to the Medicaid fee-for-service program as a “pay and chase system,” Levine highlighted that, functionally, providers bill Medicaid and the state simply pays the bill. As bills are received from providers, a payment is processed, usually within a week. In the current fiscal year, the total of paid claims for Medicaid services is $6.8 billion, spanning more than 18,982 participating agencies and generating more than 60 million claims.

 

“We must change the design of this system to get taxpayers off the hook,” said LDH Sec. Levine. “Right now, the taxpayers shoulder all the risk for fraud. The bad guys can move faster than the government bureaucracy can, and if all we are doing is paying claims and asking questions later, than this effort simply becomes an exercise in measuring how fast we can chase dollars that we may never recover.”

 

LDH has proposed a transformation of the Medicaid system, moving from the fragmented, fraud-laden fee-for-service system toward a coordinated care model where every enrollee chooses a Medicaid provider network that is accountable for the funding, clinical care and clinical outcomes for their consumers. Among the provisions of this new model include mandatory fraud detection and reporting mechanism that, for the first time, will engage provider partners in the fight against fraud.

 

Anyone suspecting any fraudulent activity by a Medicaid provider or recipient is urged to call DHH’s Fraud Hotline at 1-800-488-2917.

 

The Louisiana Department of Health strives to protect and promote health statewide and to ensure access to medical, preventive and rehabilitative services for all state citizens. To learn more about LDH, visit http://www.dhh.louisiana.gov.

 

-end-

Surgeon General Ralph L. Abraham, M.D.

Secretary Bruce D. Greenstein

Powered by Cicero Government