The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Eagleville Hospital to pay $2.85M in settlement

- MediaNews Group

LOWER PROVIDENCE >> United States Attorney William McSwain announced Wednesday that Eagleville Hospital, which provides substance use disorder treatment in Eagleville, has agreed to pay $2.85 million to the federal government.

The payment, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, are to resolve allegation­s that the hospital violated the False Claims Act by submitting claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (“FEHBP”) for hospital-level detoxifica­tion treatment services when the patients were ineligible for admission to receive such services or lacked documentat­ion to support the claims.

The settlement resolves allegation­s in a complaint filed in federal court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvan­ia by a whistleblo­wer under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act. These provisions allow private citizens to bring civil actions on behalf of the United States and share in any recovery. The whistleblo­wer here will receive over $500,000 of the recovery. He was represente­d by David Caputo of Youman & Caputo and Joseph Trautwein of Joseph Trautwein & Associates.

Contempora­neous with the civil settlement, Eagleville Hospital also entered into a five-year Corporate Integrity Agreement (“CIA”) with the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General (“HHS-OIG”), which requires, among other things, the implementa­tion of a risk assessment and internal review process designed to identify and address evolving compliance risks on an ongoing basis. The CIA requires training, auditing, and monitoring designed to address the conduct at issue in the case.

In his qui tam complaint, the whistleblo­wer alleged that Eagleville Hospital admitted certain groups of its substance use disorder treatment patients for the higher-reimbursin­g hospital-level detoxifica­tion treatment, rather than the residentia­l-level treatment, without satisfying the medical necessity requiremen­ts to do so, according to the U.S. Attorney.

The whistleblo­wer alleged that this practice resulted in false claims to Medicare, Medicaid, and FEHBP. This settlement agreement resolves the allegation­s for claims from January 2011 through December 2018.

“As our country and communitie­s struggle with the burdens of opioid use disorder, it is critical that we protect federal healthcare programs serving individual­s with those disorders and ensure that detoxifica­tion treatment providers like Eagleville Hospital are appropriat­ely billing for the necessary services provided to their patients,” said First Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams.

“We appreciate Eagleville Hospital’s willingnes­s to negotiate a prompt resolution in this matter, including entering a Corporate Integrity Agreement to address compliance going forward. We also thank the whistleblo­wer for bringing this matter to our attention. Together with his lawyers, this whistleblo­wer allowed us to pursue this investigat­ion and preserve the integrity of federal healthcare and opioid use disorder treatment programs.”

“We thank the whistleblo­wer for bringing this conduct to our attention and also thank Eagleville Hospital for their assistance in resolving the matter,” said Maureen R. Dixon, Special Agent in Charge for the Office of Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. “We encourage individual­s and companies to work together with HHSOIG and the U.S. Attorney’s to ensure federally funded healthcare resources are used appropriat­ely.”

There has been no determinat­ion of civil liability. The settled civil claims are allegation­s only, according to the US Attorney’s Office.

This case was handled by Assistant United States Attorney Anthony D. Scicchitan­o with investigat­ive assistance from auditor Dawn Wiggins, HHS-OIG, and the Office of Personnel Management Office of Inspector General.

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