MEDICARE PLAGUED BY WASTE, FRAUD, ABUSE: "Cost savings through reduction of waste, fraud, and abuse in the Medicare system being offered as a key funding source for health care reform currently under consideration on Capitol Hill. Eliminating this corruption could require Medicare to adopt private-sector reforms, says the Heartland Institute.
The proposal authored by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), currently pending in the Senate, relies on such reductions for more than $400 billion in funding over the coming decade.
'Officials estimate that Medicare is annually cheated out of some $60 billion in improper claims payments -- an eighth of its entire budget,' says Kevin Wrege, regional state affairs director for the Council for Affordable Health Insurance in Alexandria, Virginia:
* Fraud is rampant and unchecked throughout the Medicare system, while private carriers do a much better job of preventing it.
* Private carriers spend a lot on efforts [to prevent fraud], raising their administrative expenses in the process.
* By contrast, the Medicare program does not regularly review bills for accuracy and to prevent fraud.
Medicare typically pays claims in full, and the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Inspector General (OIG) operates as a post-claim payment cop, flagging and investigating only those that appear suspicious, Wrege notes.
'Recovered funds, if any, are often only a fraction of the often millions of dollars taken,' Wrege added.
Many Medicare abuses happen in the market for durable medical equipment (DME), such as wheelchairs and oxygen equipment. A draft OIG audit released in August 2008 flagged almost a third of the 2006 DME claims sampled as having been improperly reimbursed.
According to a July report by the Government Accountability Office:"
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