Lake County Record-Bee

DID YOUR HEALTH PLAN RIP OFF MEDICARE?

- By Fred Schulte

Today, KHN has released details of 90 previously secret government audits that reveal millions of dollars in overpaymen­ts to Medicare Advantage health plans for seniors.

The audits, which cover billings from 2011 through 2013, are the most recent financial reviews available, even though enrollment in the health plans has exploded over the past decade to over 30 million and is expected to grow further.

KHN has published the audit spreadshee­ts as the industry girds for a final regulation that could order health plans to return hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars or more in overcharge­s to the Treasury Department — payments dating back a decade or more. The decision by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is expected by Feb 1.

KHN obtained the longhidden audit summaries through a three-year Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit against CMS, which was settled in late September.

In November, KHN reported that the audits uncovered about $12 million in net overpaymen­ts for the care of 18,090 patients sampled. In all, 71 of the 90 audits uncovered net overpaymen­ts, which topped $1,000 per patient on average in 23 audits. CMS paid the remaining plans too little on average, anywhere from $8 to $773 per patient.

The audit spreadshee­ts released today identify each health plan and summarize the findings. Medicare Advantage, a fast-growing alternativ­e to original Medicare, is run primarily by major insurance companies. Contract numbers for the plans indicate where the insurers were based at the time.

Since 2018, CMS officials have said they would recoup

an estimated $650 million in overpaymen­ts from the 90 audits, but the final amount is far from certain.

Spencer Perlman, an analyst with Veda Partners in Bethesda, Maryland, said he believes the data released by KHN indicates the government's clawbacks for potential overpaymen­ts could reach as high as $3 billion.

“I don't see government forgoing those dollars,” he said.

For nearly two decades, Medicare has paid the health plans using a billing formula that pays higher monthly rates for sicker patients and less for the healthiest ones.

Yet on the rare occasions that auditors examined medical files, they often could not confirm that patients had the listed diseases, or that the conditions were as serious as the health plans claimed.

Since 2010, CMS has argued that overpaymen­ts found while sampling patient records at each health

plan should be extrapolat­ed across the membership, a practice commonly used in government audits. Doing so can multiply the overpaymen­t demand from a few thousand dollars to hundreds of millions for a large health plan.

But the industry has managed to fend off this regulation despite dozens of audits, investigat­ions, and whistleblo­wer lawsuits alleging widespread billing fraud and abuse in the program that costs taxpayers billions every year.

CMS is expected to clarify what it will do with the upcoming regulation, both for collecting on past audits and those to come. CMS is currently conducting audits for 2014 and 2015.

UnitedHeal­thcare and Humana, the two biggest Medicare Advantage insurers, accounted for 26 of the 90 contract audits over the three years.

Humana, one of the larg

est Medicare Advantage sponsors, had overpaymen­ts exceeding the $1,000 average in 10 of 11 audits, according to the records.

That could spell trouble for the Louisville, Kentucky-based insurer, which relies heavily on Medicare Advantage, according to Perlman. He said Humana's liability could exceed $900 million.

Mark Taylor, Humana's director of corporate and financial communicat­ions, had no comment on the overpaymen­t estimates.

Commenting on the upcoming CMS rule, he said

in an emailed statement: “Our primary focus will remain on our members and the potential impact any changes could have on their benefits. … We hope CMS will join us in protecting the integrity of Medicare Advantage.”

Eight audits of UnitedHeal­thcare plans found overpaymen­ts, while seven others found the government had underpaid.

In a conference call with reporters this week, Tim Noel, who leads UnitedHeal­thcare's Medicare team, said the company wants CMS to make changes in the regulation but remains “very comfortabl­e” with what the 2011-13 audit results will show.

“Like all government

programs, taxpayers and beneficiar­ies need to know that the Medicare Advantage program is well managed,” he said.

He said the company supports annual auditing of Medicare Advantage plans.

But Perlman said the

sheer size of the program makes annual audits “completely impractica­l.”

These audits are “incredibly time-consuming and labor-intensive” to conduct,” he said.

 ?? PAVLO GONCHAR — SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKE­T VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Details of 90 previously secret government audits that reveal millions of dollars in overpaymen­ts to Medicare Advantage health plans for seniors have come to light thanks to a KHN FOIA lawsuit.
PAVLO GONCHAR — SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKE­T VIA GETTY IMAGES Details of 90 previously secret government audits that reveal millions of dollars in overpaymen­ts to Medicare Advantage health plans for seniors have come to light thanks to a KHN FOIA lawsuit.

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