How to Eliminate Fraud From the Health-Care System

Published: 2009-07-07 11:23:06
Author: Joanna Ossinger | FOXBusiness | June 22, 2009

If the U.S. can cut out fraud from the health-insurance system, we can all save a lot of money and get better care.

That’s something just about everyone can agree on. What’s tougher, of course, is actually trying to root out the fraud, or even defining what exactly “fraud” is.

“There is a lot of fraud, waste and abuse in the system,” said Greg D’Angelo of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative-leaning think tank. “It’s sort of marbled into the meat, and identifying it is hard.”

President Obama threw out a number of $1 billion in savings that could be achieved "by rooting out abuse, waste [and] fraud throughout our health-care system" when he spoke to the American Medical Association recently, but many estimates have the actual amount of fraud in the tens of billions of dollars or more.

“Whatever changes you make” in the health-care system, “you have to look at it through the lens of, does this open up opportunities for fraud, or does it hopefully close some?” said Dennis Jay, executive director of the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud. “There are more ways to commit this crime than any other white-collar crime.”

Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance all are susceptible to fraud, but the government-run plans seem to be the main places it occurs.

“Fraud is rampant” in Medicare and Medicaid, D’Angelo said. “They don’t do the things private insurers do” to try to clamp down on fraud, “they just cut the checks.”

He added that if reform efforts create a public health-insurance option, “you might have administrative savings, but you get that savings at a cost -- increased fraud.”

In addition, many states lack the resources to go after fraud on their own, even in areas such as simple business practices that in theory might show fraud relatively quickly.

Jay of CAIF offered just a few major examples of fraud in the system:

Some people think the Obama Administration’s health-care reform proposals could truly cut down on fraudulent and otherwise unnecessary expenditures.

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