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Date: 06-26-2018
Case Style:
Eastern District of Tennessee - Federal Courthouse - Knoxville, Tennessee
Case Number: 3:14-cv-212
Judge: Thomas A Varlan
Court: United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee (Knox County)
Plaintiff's Attorney: W Michael Hamilton and Birt Reynolds for Margaret B. Fugate and Barbara Hinkle
Diana Cieslak, Jeremy Stephen Dykes, Amy Davis Kossak, Robert C McConkey, III, William J Monahan, Gordon E Shemin, Jessica Sievert and Jeremy Stephen Dykes for the United States of America
Candice M Deisher for the States of Virginia
Timothy Phillip Harlan and Jessica Jo Myers for State of Tennessee
Defendant's Attorney: J. Taylor Chenery, Anna M Grizzle and Matthew M. Curley for Caris Healthcare, L.P.
Description: Knoxville, TN - Caris Agrees To Pay $8.5 Million Court Settle False Claims Act Lawsuit Alleging That it Billed for Ineligible Hospice Patients
Caris Healthcare, L.P. and its wholly-owned subsidiary, Caris Healthcare, LLC (“Caris Healthcare”), have agreed to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act by knowingly submitting false claims, and knowingly retaining overpayments, for the care of patients who were ineligible for the Medicare hospice benefit because they were not terminally ill, the Department of Justice announced today. Under the settlement agreement, Caris Healthcare, a for-profit hospice chain that operates in Tennessee, Virginia, and South Carolina, has agreed to pay $8.5 million.
The settlement resolves allegations that Caris Healthcare admitted and recertified patients for hospice care that were ineligible for the hospice benefit. The government’s complaint alleged that, in an effort to meet the aggressive admissions and census targets set by the company, Caris admitted patients whose medical records did not support a terminal prognosis. The government’s complaint further alleged that when Caris was alerted to the ineligibility of these patients—via internal audits, concerns raised by its Chief Medical Officer, and recommendations of its nurse employees who actually examined the patients—Caris not only continued to submit hospice claims to Medicare for the patients, but also took no meaningful action to determine whether it had previously received improper payments for these and other patients that should have been returned to Medicare.
“Today’s settlement is an important reminder that compliance programs and activities cannot exist in name only. When a healthcare provider is put on notice that a patient is ineligible for a particular Medicare benefit or service, the healthcare provider cannot turn a blind eye to that information but, instead, must take reasonable steps to stop the improper conduct and to determine whether that conduct resulted in prior overpayments,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad A. Readler of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “Moreover, when internal audit results or other information reveals the existence of a compliance issue that is not limited to a particular claim, as was the case here, it is incumbent on providers to exercise due diligence to determine how widespread the problem is and to return any overpayments.”
“It is completely unacceptable for providers to retain overpayments from Medicare after being put on notice of the likelihood of such overpayments. Under the law, providers must go beyond merely conducting audits and providing forums for employee concerns. Rather, when Medicare rule violations have been revealed, the provider must take meaningful action to correct them, including repaying Medicare for funds they improperly received. Such corrective actions are vital to the integrity of the Medicare program, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue to use the resources available to it to ensure the government is properly reimbursed for funds it is owed,” said J. Douglas Overbey, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee.
“We have significant expertise in investigating hospice fraud, as this part of the country unfortunately has seen more than its share of these schemes,” said Special Agent in Charge Derrick L. Jackson for the Office of Inspector General for the region including Tennessee. “When hospices increase their bottom lines by billing taxpayers for unneeded services, they are diverting money from vulnerable, terminally-ill individuals. Worse yet, these patients may not be receiving care for medical needs that would otherwise be covered in a non-hospice setting.”
The settlement resolves allegations filed in a lawsuit by Barbara Hinkle, a registered nurse who formerly worked for Caris Healthcare, under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act, which permit private individuals to sue on behalf of the government for false claims and to share in any recovery. The Act also allows the government to intervene and take over the action, as it did in this case. The whistleblower’s share will be $1,402,500.
This matter was handled on behalf of the government by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Tennessee, the Justice Department’s Civil Division, and the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General.
Outcome: Settled for $8.5 million.
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Defendant's Experts:
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