Villages Health DOJ investigation

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  #91  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:25 PM
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Originally Posted by Bill14564 View Post
A provider that will not take traditional medicare is a poor fit for a community populated primarily by medicare-aged patients.
Really???? Seeing as how almost all their providers have a full slate of patients, the facts would tend to disagree with that assumption.
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Old 01-01-2025, 12:26 PM
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You got phished
  #93  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:29 PM
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I hope you didn’t give them any additional information. Confirm what they had only and request an in person meeting so you can make sure who you are talking to
Why would you even do that? "Confirming" anything is literally giving out personal information.

Just hang up.
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Old 01-01-2025, 12:37 PM
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I received the same email...
Over 90% of my business’s incoming email (regular plus via website contact forms) is spam. All kinds.
  #95  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:39 PM
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Originally Posted by golfing eagles View Post
Really???? Seeing as how almost all their providers have a full slate of patients, the facts would tend to disagree with that assumption.
Really. A local provider that doesn't serve the majority of the community is a poor fit.

That doesn't mean they won't have patients:
- a small subset of a very large number of residents can be a significant number of patients
- I have no doubt (though no data) that some number of patients changed their coverage to be accepted by the provider
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  #96  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:55 PM
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Originally Posted by jump4 View Post
The Villages Health won't even accept traditional Medicare Part B. Something's got to be wrong with that!
Go to your local Chevrolet Dealer and tell him you want Warranty Service on your Ford.

Different business model. Their business, they get to choose. If I'm not mistaken, for Medicare, it's essentially opt in/opt out for a provider.
  #97  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:56 PM
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Originally Posted by Kahuna32162 View Post
Just received a call from from 2 people who identified themselves as investigators for the Department of Justice, looking into Medicare billing practices at the village’s health. I first thought it was a scam, but after hearing the personal information they had on our records, I was inclined to cooperate with their inquires.

They mostly wanted to confirm conditions listed in our files and confirm they were correct. Most conditions were not correct, especially type 2 diabetes.

I’ve thought for years that the Village’s Health was a scam. This active investigation might just be the tip of the iceberg.
Got a letter from villages health yesterday. They have been aware of this problem for months per the letter. They have an auditor going through everything and have notified Medicare. They are in the process of repaying Medicare. I worked in medical offices up north and we had this problem also it’s a coding problem. Medicare is complicated and we either owed them money or they owed it to my office. Not a scam. I am surprised they reached out to you.
  #98  
Old 01-01-2025, 12:57 PM
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Originally Posted by golfing eagles View Post
Based on e-mail and research???? NO, not at all. Based on 40 years of medical practice and hospital administration. So, just which "Federal Agency" did you work for?????
Maybe if one would provide one's own past employment information, who, what, where and when... one would get that answer.
  #99  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:04 PM
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Originally Posted by golfing eagles View Post
And yet your posts fail to show any expertise in this area whatsoever.
I'm confused, is this a top-notch physician's statement or one who worked in the accounting department.? Most of the physicians I know had experts in the financial area of their practice. I never saw any Drs. while administrating healthcare or long term disability claims, whether regular insurance or Medicare.
  #100  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:05 PM
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Originally Posted by Bill14564 View Post
Really. A local provider that doesn't serve the majority of the community is a poor fit.

That doesn't mean they won't have patients:
- a small subset of a very large number of residents can be a significant number of patients
- I have no doubt (though no data) that some number of patients changed their coverage to be accepted by the provider
So they found their niche
  #101  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:07 PM
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Originally Posted by BrianL99 View Post
Go to your local Chevrolet Dealer and tell him you want Warranty Service on your Ford.

Different business model. Their business, they get to choose. If I'm not mistaken, for Medicare, it's essentially opt in/opt out for a provider.
Sure there are options, but as stated earlier, this is a poor business model for an aged community which requires the services Medicare covers and provides.
  #102  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:11 PM
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Exclamation a “Suspicious” case at The Villages Health? An investigation for Medicare fraud?

I received the following message via text at 1pm yesterday:
"Dear Valued Patient,
I’m writing to let all The Villages Health (“TVH”) patients know that during a recent review of our billing procedures, we discovered a problem with some of our Medicare billing practices. As part of TVH’s absolute commitment to transparency amongst our patient community, I am sharing this information with you now that we have examined the issue, and have already started to take meaningful action to correct it. But the most important thing we want to impart to all of you is that this billing issue has in no way negatively affected any TVH patients’ medical bills or patient care.
Upon discovering a potential problem with our Medicare billing this past Fall, TVH hired outside consultants to conduct an in-depth review of our coding and billing practices. Based on our investigation, we determined that beginning in 2020, TVH implemented certain billing processes and practices that were not consistent with Medicare payment policies. This resulted in TVH receiving more money from the Medicare program than if billed correctly. With these consultants, we are now working to identify the financial impact of these billing errors and are in the process of repaying the Medicare program for any overpayments that resulted from the billing issue. In addition to starting work with relevant government agencies to return the overbilled Medicare funds, we have also already begun to implement a range of new internal safeguards to assure that an error such as this will not recur. I cannot stress enough to each and every one of our patients that this issue has in no way affected any patient treatment or medical bills. Rather, this was an internal coding issue that unintentionally resulted in inaccurate payments received by TVH for its medical care. The occurrence of these errors has since been self-reported to the proper U.S. government agencies, and we expect a smooth process as we work diligently to make right with the Medicare program itself—all with the goal of continuing to provide you with the best possible care you’ve rightfully come to expect from all of us at TVH. At TVH, our mission to provide the highest quality patient-centered care remains at the very core of all that we do. As always, we will continue to assess ways to improve our processes and services in support of our patients and our community, and we will strive to keep you as informed as possible to maintain our commitment to trust and transparency. On behalf of all of us here at The Villages Health, we wish you a happy and healthy New Year.
Sincerely, Bob Trinh Chief Executive Officer"
Was The Villages Health under some pressure to disclose this, while also attempting to bury it with a pre-holiday release? The timing of this disclosure is noteworthy as the WSJ investigatory article about Medicare Advantage Plans, published just a couple of days ago, cited a “Suspicious” case at The Villages Health. It seems likely to me that The Villages Health is one of several parties under investigation for Medicare Fraud.

Excerpts from the WSJ article:
"Like most doctors, Nicholas Jones prefers to diagnose patients after examining them. When he worked for UnitedHealth Group, though, the company frequently prepared him a checklist of potential diagnoses before he ever laid eyes on them.
UnitedHealth only did that with the Eugene, Ore., family physician’s Medicare Advantage recipients, he said, and its software wouldn’t let him move on to his next patient until he weighed in on each diagnosis.
The diagnoses were often irrelevant or wrong, Jones said. UnitedHealth sometimes suggested a hormonal condition, secondary hyperaldosteronism, that was so obscure Jones had to turn to Google for help. “I needed to look it up,” he said.
The government’s Medicare Advantage system, which uses private insurers to provide health benefits to seniors and disabled people, pays the companies based on how sick patients are, to cover the higher costs of sicker patients. Medicare calculates sickness scores from information supplied by doctors and submitted by the insurers. In the case of UnitedHealth, many of those doctors work directly for UnitedHealth.
More diagnoses make for higher scores—and larger payments. A Wall Street Journal analysis found sickness scores increased when patients moved from traditional Medicare to Medicare Advantage, leading to billions of dollars in extra government payments to insurers.
Patients examined by doctors working for UnitedHealth, an industry pioneer in directly employing large numbers of physicians, had some of the biggest increases in sickness scores after moving from traditional Medicare to the company’s plans, according to the Journal’s analysis of Medicare data between 2019 and 2022.
...
In a series of articles this year, the Journal has examined the practices of Medicare Advantage companies, including UnitedHealth, the largest. Among other things, the articles showed how diagnoses added by insurers increased payments from the government.

...
Suspicious patient
Chris Henretta, a UnitedHealth Medicare Advantage plan member who lives in The Villages, a retirement community in central Florida, was suspicious when his primary-care doctor diagnosed him as morbidly obese during his annual exam in October.
He is a lifelong weightlifter, plays water volleyball five times a week and has an athletic build.
“I told her I didn’t think I was obese,” Henretta said. When she recorded morbid obesity anyway, he said, he began to “suspect my doctor may have a financial incentive to portray people as higher risk.”
The diagnosis can trigger payments of about $2,400 a year to Medicare Advantage insurers.
A widely used measure to diagnose obesity, body-mass index, has been criticized for sometimes mischaracterizing muscular people as overweight. Henretta’s medical record shows that even by that standard, he didn’t qualify as morbidly obese. His BMI was 32.3 at the time of his October visit, nearly three points below the minimum threshold for morbid obesity.
Henretta’s doctor at The Villages Health, a clinic that contracts with UnitedHealth, also diagnosed him with qualitative platelet disorder, a condition that affects blood clotting.
Henretta said his doctor added the diagnosis after he agreed that his blood seemed to clot slightly more slowly after he started taking baby aspirin several years earlier. His doctor had recommended the baby aspirin after he was diagnosed, in 2021, with aortic atherosclerosis—which could trigger Medicare payments of about $2,700 a year at the time.
Dr. Rachel Bercovitz, a hematologist and professor at Northwestern University’s medical school, said aspirin inhibits platelet function, so Henretta’s doctor is “diagnosing the intended effect of the medication” as a separate disease.
A qualitative platelet disorder diagnosis can trigger extra payments of about $2,000 a year to insurers.
The Villages Health, its top executives and Henretta’s doctor didn’t respond to phone calls and emails requesting comment.
...
Like other Medicare Advantage companies, UnitedHealth also contracts with outside doctors in ways that can increase their payments when they diagnose more conditions. That includes arrangements where doctors receive a portion of the Medicare payments insurers get for their patients. Other Medicare Advantage insurers also suggest diagnoses to independent doctors examining their patients.
Full WSJ article at: wsj.com



Quote:
Originally Posted by Rheinl271 View Post
There was an article in 12/31 Wall St Journal about United Health Care Medicare advantage adding diagnoses to patients records. The more diseases they can reference for a patient the more the doctors and UHC get paid monthly by Medicare. The article specifically mentions a case in the Villages Health Care where they listed a body builder as morbidly obese! The Villages HC refused to comment. My wife is quite active and healthy, but her VHC medical record sounds like a train wreck. This is in fact overbilling Medicare and is likely fraud. Wouldn't be surprised DOJ is investigating and VHC is coming clean.

This is happening across UHC to the tune of $4.6 Billion from 2019 to 2022. Not unique to UHC, but they are the worst offenders. Apparently UHC patients are several times sicker than original Medicare. Apparently, the Govt set this system up for Medicare Advantage insurers to be paid more for sicker patients. Any system can be gamed. And it will be.
  #103  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:14 PM
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Default doctors not taking medicare

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Originally Posted by Bill14564 View Post
A provider that will not take traditional medicare is a poor fit for a community populated primarily by medicare-aged patients.
Maybe, they just don't want to spend time listening to entitled old people whining about, well everything. That could be.
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  #104  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:39 PM
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Originally Posted by jump4 View Post
I received the following message via text at 1pm yesterday:
"Dear Valued Patient,
I’m writing to let all The Villages Health (“TVH”) patients know that during a recent review of our billing procedures, we discovered a problem with some of our Medicare billing practices. As part of TVH’s absolute commitment to transparency amongst our patient community, I am sharing this information with you now that we have examined the issue, and have already started to take meaningful action to correct it. But the most important thing we want to impart to all of you is that this billing issue has in no way negatively affected any TVH patients’ medical bills or patient care.
Upon discovering a potential problem with our Medicare billing this past Fall, TVH hired outside consultants to conduct an in-depth review of our coding and billing practices. Based on our investigation, we determined that beginning in 2020, TVH implemented certain billing processes and practices that were not consistent with Medicare payment policies. This resulted in TVH receiving more money from the Medicare program than if billed correctly. With these consultants, we are now working to identify the financial impact of these billing errors and are in the process of repaying the Medicare program for any overpayments that resulted from the billing issue. In addition to starting work with relevant government agencies to return the overbilled Medicare funds, we have also already begun to implement a range of new internal safeguards to assure that an error such as this will not recur. I cannot stress enough to each and every one of our patients that this issue has in no way affected any patient treatment or medical bills. Rather, this was an internal coding issue that unintentionally resulted in inaccurate payments received by TVH for its medical care. The occurrence of these errors has since been self-reported to the proper U.S. government agencies, and we expect a smooth process as we work diligently to make right with the Medicare program itself—all with the goal of continuing to provide you with the best possible care you’ve rightfully come to expect from all of us at TVH. At TVH, our mission to provide the highest quality patient-centered care remains at the very core of all that we do. As always, we will continue to assess ways to improve our processes and services in support of our patients and our community, and we will strive to keep you as informed as possible to maintain our commitment to trust and transparency. On behalf of all of us here at The Villages Health, we wish you a happy and healthy New Year.
Sincerely, Bob Trinh Chief Executive Officer"
Was The Villages Health under some pressure to disclose this, while also attempting to bury it with a pre-holiday release? The timing of this disclosure is noteworthy as the WSJ investigatory article about Medicare Advantage Plans, published just a couple of days ago, cited a “Suspicious” case at The Villages Health. It seems likely to me that The Villages Health is one of several parties under investigation for Medicare Fraud.

Excerpts from the WSJ article:
"Like most doctors, Nicholas Jones prefers to diagnose patients after examining them. When he worked for UnitedHealth Group, though, the company frequently prepared him a checklist of potential diagnoses before he ever laid eyes on them.
UnitedHealth only did that with the Eugene, Ore., family physician’s Medicare Advantage recipients, he said, and its software wouldn’t let him move on to his next patient until he weighed in on each diagnosis.
The diagnoses were often irrelevant or wrong, Jones said. UnitedHealth sometimes suggested a hormonal condition, secondary hyperaldosteronism, that was so obscure Jones had to turn to Google for help. “I needed to look it up,” he said.
The government’s Medicare Advantage system, which uses private insurers to provide health benefits to seniors and disabled people, pays the companies based on how sick patients are, to cover the higher costs of sicker patients. Medicare calculates sickness scores from information supplied by doctors and submitted by the insurers. In the case of UnitedHealth, many of those doctors work directly for UnitedHealth.
More diagnoses make for higher scores—and larger payments. A Wall Street Journal analysis found sickness scores increased when patients moved from traditional Medicare to Medicare Advantage, leading to billions of dollars in extra government payments to insurers.
Patients examined by doctors working for UnitedHealth, an industry pioneer in directly employing large numbers of physicians, had some of the biggest increases in sickness scores after moving from traditional Medicare to the company’s plans, according to the Journal’s analysis of Medicare data between 2019 and 2022.
...
In a series of articles this year, the Journal has examined the practices of Medicare Advantage companies, including UnitedHealth, the largest. Among other things, the articles showed how diagnoses added by insurers increased payments from the government.

...
Suspicious patient
Chris Henretta, a UnitedHealth Medicare Advantage plan member who lives in The Villages, a retirement community in central Florida, was suspicious when his primary-care doctor diagnosed him as morbidly obese during his annual exam in October.
He is a lifelong weightlifter, plays water volleyball five times a week and has an athletic build.
“I told her I didn’t think I was obese,” Henretta said. When she recorded morbid obesity anyway, he said, he began to “suspect my doctor may have a financial incentive to portray people as higher risk.”
The diagnosis can trigger payments of about $2,400 a year to Medicare Advantage insurers.
A widely used measure to diagnose obesity, body-mass index, has been criticized for sometimes mischaracterizing muscular people as overweight. Henretta’s medical record shows that even by that standard, he didn’t qualify as morbidly obese. His BMI was 32.3 at the time of his October visit, nearly three points below the minimum threshold for morbid obesity.
Henretta’s doctor at The Villages Health, a clinic that contracts with UnitedHealth, also diagnosed him with qualitative platelet disorder, a condition that affects blood clotting.
Henretta said his doctor added the diagnosis after he agreed that his blood seemed to clot slightly more slowly after he started taking baby aspirin several years earlier. His doctor had recommended the baby aspirin after he was diagnosed, in 2021, with aortic atherosclerosis—which could trigger Medicare payments of about $2,700 a year at the time.
Dr. Rachel Bercovitz, a hematologist and professor at Northwestern University’s medical school, said aspirin inhibits platelet function, so Henretta’s doctor is “diagnosing the intended effect of the medication” as a separate disease.
A qualitative platelet disorder diagnosis can trigger extra payments of about $2,000 a year to insurers.
The Villages Health, its top executives and Henretta’s doctor didn’t respond to phone calls and emails requesting comment.
...
Like other Medicare Advantage companies, UnitedHealth also contracts with outside doctors in ways that can increase their payments when they diagnose more conditions. That includes arrangements where doctors receive a portion of the Medicare payments insurers get for their patients. Other Medicare Advantage insurers also suggest diagnoses to independent doctors examining their patients.
Full WSJ article at: wsj.com
Very interesting. 32.3 is the definition of "obese" but not "morbidly obese", which requires a BMI of 35+. And platelet dysfunction as a diagnosis for a patient on aspirin is a stretch. That being said, one patient of 1 doctor does not constitute a systemic conspiracy to defraud Medicare.
  #105  
Old 01-01-2025, 01:40 PM
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Originally Posted by GoldenBoy View Post
Maybe, they just don't want to spend time listening to entitled old people whining about, well everything. That could be.
Sorry, but just about every patient of every age whines about everything. It's OK, it comes with the territory
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