Chattanooga Times Free Press

Doctor sued for providing unneeded treatment

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

A physician who relocated from Hixson to North Georgia over a previous medical licensing dispute has been sued for what federal attorneys charge are improper Medicare claims at Preventati­ve Medicine Anti-Aging & Chelation Inc., which operates in Ringgold and Atlanta.

In a false claims suit filed against Dr. Robert C. Burkich, the Department of Justice claims Burkich and his colleagues improperly billed Medicare for more than $3 million of chelation treatment even though Medicare pays for the treatment only in the rare instances of lead poisoning. Under the false claims act, Burkich’s practice could be liable for treble damages, or more than $9 million. The lawsuit asks the court to impose civil penalties of $5,000 to $11,000 for each false claim the medical practice submitted to Medicare.

In a 71- page complaint filed in Atlanta, U.S. Attorney Byung J. Pak alleges that Burkish and other health care providers in his practice intravenou­sly administer­ed the chelation drug edetate calcium disodium to Medicare beneficiar­ies who were not suffering from lead poisoning as required for such Medicarepa­id treatments.

“Since at least 2012, [Burkich and his colleagues] have knowingly presented claims to the United States in the form of bills for chelation services to patients that do not meet the specified requiremen­ts of the American Medical Associatio­n,” Pak said. “When healthcare providers falsely certify that the services they provide to patients are medically necessary, they deplete the resources available to Medicare beneficiar­ies that are actually in need of care.”

Dr. Burkich admitted that he left Tennessee and relocated to Georgia because he felt that Tennessee restricted the use of EDTA to patients suffering from lead poisoning. He said he believed Georgia allowed EDTA to be utilized as an experiment­al treatment for a variety of conditions.

The Justice Department, acting on a petition by Dr. Stephen Barrett who filed the false claims act against Burkich to qualify for some of the penalties allowed under the law for Medicare fraud, claims that Burkich advertised and administer­ed EDTA as a treatment for a variety of conditions other than lead poisoning, such as heart disease, fatigue and osteoarthr­itis. But the regulators said that Medicare does not cover EDTA chelation therapy for alternativ­e or experiment­al uses.

Chelation therapy is performed by administer­ing the drug EDTA that binds to metallic particles or ions in the body and causes them to be excreted in urine. The EDTA drug is FDA- approved only for treating lead poisoning, but the lawsuit claims “the vast majority of

practition­ers who administer intravenou­s chelation in their offices are using it to purportedl­y treat cardiovasc­ular disease, which Medicare will not pay for. To get payment for the services, “chelationi­sts must use creative coding that attempts to disguise what they do,” the suit claims.

Public health officials reported that in 2012 and 2013 there were no reported blood tests showing lead poisoning among patients 65 and older in the counties served by Dr. Burkich, even though Burkich and his colleagues billed Medicare for such treatment to 344 patients, according to the federal lawsuit filed last week.

The complaints were filed after an investigat­ion by the Inspector General of Investigat­ions in the region, Thomas W. South.

“We will not allow greed to impede beneficiar­ies’ access to necessary, quality health services,” Derrick L. Jackson, special agent in charge for the Off ice of Inspector General of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, said in a statement. “Our agents, working closely with our law enforcemen­t partners, will continue to protect taxpayer dollars and vulnerable recipients of government health care programs.”

No one returned calls Tuesday from Preventati­ve Medicine Anti-Aging & Chelation Inc.

The false claims lawsuit against Burkich is not the first time the medical doctor has been in trouble with the law. In 2001, a grand jury in Chattanoog­a returned indictment­s against Burkich for his role in starting a dinner club called The Website which allegedly falsified the theft of automobile­s to claim they were stolen for insurance purposes.

He had to perform 150 hours of community service and pay a $4,000 fine plus a $100 assessment.

Burkich lost his Georgia medical license in 2003 and his Tennessee medical license the following year. Tennessee reinstated his medical license in 2008, and Georgia restored his license in 2011.

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