WASHINGTON, June 26 /PRNewswire/ -- A new report from The George Washington UniversitySchool of Public Health and Health Services, Department of Health
Policy challenges the notion that fraud is a problem only in public
health insurance markets and finds that fraud is a system-wide problem
affecting private and public health insurance alike. The report finds
that some of the most striking examples of fraud come from fraud
committed directly by the private insurance industry itself. In 2007,
when the U.S. spent nearly $2.3 trillion on health care
and public and private insurers processed more than 4 billion health
insurance claims, fraud was estimated to reach as much as 10 percent of
annual health care spending. At this rate, the losses in 2007 alone
-over $220 billion - would have been enough to cover
the uninsured. The National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association (NHCAA)
has estimated conservatively that 3 percent of all health care
spending--or $68 billion--is lost to health care fraud.
The
report finds that no segment of the health care industry or
geographical area is immune from fraud. It is estimated that 80 percent
of healthcare fraud is committed by medical providers, 10 percent by
consumers, and the balance by others, such as insurers themselves and
their employees. Fraudulent billing, kickbacks, up-coding services and
bundling are common examples of fraud. Avoidance of sick and high need
members, along with the systematic misrepresentation of the cost of
care to group plan sponsors, represent major examples of fraud in the
private insurance industry.
The report also notes the
distinction between fraud and improper payments. Fraud is a
misrepresentation of the truth or concealment of material facts.
Improper payments, on the other hand, tend to involve technical
questions associated with verification of claims or related matters.
The report also describes recent efforts to improve fraud detection and
recovery across the public and private insurers, including Medicare and
Medicaid.
"The evidence presented in this analysis should
put to rest the notion that the problem of fraud is limited to public
programs. Because fraud can arise in any sector of the health industry,
comprehensive efforts to both detect and deter fraud system-wide are
essential to national health reform," said Sara Rosenbaum, Professor and Chair, Department of Health Policy.
"Health Insurance Fraud: An Overview" is available at http://www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/departments/healthpolicy/dhp_publications/pub_uploads/dhpPublication_EFDAD1BC-5056-9D20-3D3D36632A4F2163.pdf%20ht
About The George Washington University Medical Center
The George Washington UniversityMedical Center is an internationally recognized interdisciplinary
academic health center that has consistently provided high-quality
medical care in the Washington, DC metropolitan
area, since 1824. The Medical Center comprises the School of Medicine
and Health Sciences, the 11th oldest medical school in the country; the
School of Public Health and Health Services, the only such school in
the nation's capital; GW Hospital, jointly owned and operated by a
partnership between The George Washington University and a
subsidiary of Universal Health Services, Inc.; and the GW Medical
Faculty Associates, an independent faculty practice plan. For more
information on GWUMC, visit www.gwumc.edu.
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