This blog presents Metropolitan Engineering Consulting & Forensics (MEC&F) claim management and claim investigation analyses of some of the typical claims we handle
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
A whistleblower lawsuit has accused the Visiting Nurse Service of New York (VNSNY) of defrauding Medicaid and Medicare and receiving millions of dollars for care ordered by doctors, which the patients never received
Visiting Nurse Service of New York Faces Medicaid and Medicare Fraud Lawsuit
October 10, 2016
A
whistleblower lawsuit has accused the Visiting Nurse Service of New
York (VNSNY) of defrauding Medicaid and Medicare and receiving millions
of dollars for care ordered by doctors, which the patients never
received. According to the allegations, VNSNY systematically billed for
the full number of nursing and rehabilitation visits ordered by doctors,
but patients received only a fraction of them.
The lawsuit was initiated by whistleblower Edward Lacey, VNSNY's
former VP of Operations Improvement and Integration, who had been with
the organization for 16 years. Investigations into fraudulent conduct
are, however, nothing new for the healthcare provider Visiting Nurse
Service of New York. In 2014, VNSNY paid the government $35 million to
settle a lawsuit alleging that it had enrolled over 1,700 ineligible
individuals into Medicaid plans.
Under the False Claims Act, whistleblowers such as Edward Lacey who
have information about fraud against the government can file a lawsuit
on the government's behalf and are entitled to a portion of any received
damages and civil penalties. Whistleblower rewards range from 15 to 30%
of the total recovery.
Visiting Nurses Evolve from Charity to Allegations of Massive Fraud
Originally a charitable entity, the Visiting Nurses Service of New
York is now a billion-dollar business. The text of the lawsuit is
categorical in pointing out the gravity of the allegations: “Beyond
this massive financial fraud on the government, the ultimate victims
here are the tens of thousands of elderly, disabled and impoverished New
York residents who because of VNSNY’s misconduct have not been getting
the critical home health care services they require.”
While the agency's spokespeople have dismissed the lawsuit as the
work of a disgruntled former employee, the lawsuit cites several
examples of patients who were shortchanged for care, and whose health
suffered as a result. In one case, a patient who was set to receive 27
rehabilitation visits and 38 nursing visits, received only five nursing
visits. Meanwhile, VNSNY was reimbursed in the amount of $3,537 for the
full care plan.
According to the whistle blower lawsuit, VNSNY patients typically
received one fifth or less of the care prescribed by physicians. The
whistleblower claims that he tried to get senior management to correct
the misconduct, but his attempts were unsuccessful, which led him to
resign and initiate legal action.
When the New York Times reported on the lawsuit, Richard Rothstein,
VNSNY's vice president of enterprise communications, commented, “If The
New York Times considers this self-serving and baseless whistleblower
complaint to be news, this would be a clear departure from the standards
of journalistic integrity to which it holds itself and its reporters,
and nothing more than an intentional effort to smear VNSNY’s name and
reputation.”
Upper Management Service Capacity Concerns Ignored
The lawsuit also describes corporate meetings where senior managers
voiced concerns about the agency's lack of capacity to service an
excessive number of patients. According to the allegations, Mary Ann
Christopher, VNSNY's Chief Executive at the time, dismissed those
concerns and ordered that all referrals be taken, even if the agency was
understaffed to provide the care patients required.
The agency is also being accused of routinely double-billing the
government when patients were eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid.
Originally filed in the Southern District of New York in 2014, the
False Claims suit had hitherto been under seal, but it was unsealed last
week. The U.S. government has not as yet joined the lawsuit as a
plaintiff, but it reserves the right to do so in the future.
If the allegations are substantiated, whistleblower Edward Lacey
could receive millions of dollars in rewards as provided by the qui tam
provision of the False Claims Act.