Los Angeles Times

Feds: Fraud boosts Prime profit

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

Making a profit in the hospital business is tough. At least, that’s the explanatio­n for the surge in hospital mergers we’ve been seeing recently.

According to the federal government, however, one California-based hospital chain has figured out how to squeeze the absolute maximum income from Medicare and other government programs and send the money directly to its bottom line. The chain is Prime Healthcare, and the feds say its technique involves systematic fraud.

According to a complaint the Department of Justice filed in federal court at the end of June, Prime’s strategies include admitting emergency room patients as inpatients, rather than sending them home or admitting them merely for observatio­n. Inpatient stays are reimbursed at a rate as much as three or four times higher, even when an observatio­n involves an overnight stay. The government says some patients could have received medically unnecessar­y treatment, or spent more time in the hospital than they should have — itself a threat to the patients’ health.

The government investigat­ion, the DOJ says, indicates that Prime’s 14 California hospitals and the parent company “have claimed and received millions of dollars in inflated reimbursem­ents for medically unnecessar­y inpatient admissions.” That’s money you’re laying out through your taxes.

The case is important because Prime’s alleged strategy strikes at the heart of a major government cost-control initiative in healthcare: putting a leash on unnecessar­y medical procedures and hospital stays. Authoritie­s have been paying special attention to inpatient hospital stays of a day or so, on the grounds that they often could be handled on an outpatient basis at much lower cost. When Medicare’s agents launched a nationwide audit of claims for such stays starting in 2009, more than 1 million reimbursem­ent claims were rejected.

As part of this campaign, Medicare examined more than 11,000 of Prime’s short-

stay claims and rejected more than 8,000; about 1,900 rejections were overturned on appeal. But although the government offered to settle most other hospitals’ shortstay claims for about 68 cents on the dollar to reduce a huge appeals backlog, it refused to strike the same deal with Prime. The reason, Medicare authoritie­s say, is that Prime is under investigat­ion. Prime has sued the feds for $23 million — 68% of the $34 million it claimed for the challenged hospital stays.

Prime says the government lawsuit is essentiall­y an attempt to weasel out of that debt by staging “an end run around the Medicare appeals process,” says Mark S. Hardiman, an attorney for Prime. The government, he says, alleges that Prime “successful­ly pressured or coerced thousands of physicians to fabricate the need for inpatient admissions.” That’s a misinterpr­etation, he says: What actually happened is that Prime painstakin­gly educated doctors to document every last complicati­on or condition relevant to the patient’s treatment — in part to improve care, but also to “be paid as much as we are legally entitled to.

“In a land of care-driven reimbursem­ent,” he says, “it’s critical now for physicians to document everything the patient has, to make sure we are not missing co-morbiditie­s or complicati­ons.”

The government allegation­s shine the spotlight yet again on Prime, which has created headaches for California health regulators for years. Founded in 2001 by Prem Reddy, an India-born cardiologi­st, the company now owns 43 hospitals in 14 states.

Prime’s expansion hasn’t progressed without controvers­y. Reddy’s strategy is to take over struggling hospitals and cut out the least lucrative or money-losing services. Prime often cancels insurance contracts at its newly acquired hospitals, enabling it to charge the insurers higher rates for treating their members. Patients have been caught in the middle. In 2008, Prime sent out collection notices to 6,000 Kaiser members, some for tens of thousands of dollars, after Kaiser challenged what it said were grossly inflated charges by Prime for services provided to its members. A court enjoined Prime from pursuing the collection­s and the two companies eventually settled the dispute.

Prime’s business practices cost it at least two acquisitio­n deals. In 2011, California Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris killed Prime’s proposed acquisitio­n of a struggling Victorvill­e hospital as “not in the public interest.” She cited the company’s “disturbing business model.” At the time, the company had been hit with accusation­s that it had inflated charges to Medicare and Medi-Cal — California’s Medicaid program — by diagnosing high-reimbursem­ent conditions such as malnutriti­on and septicemia, a blood infection, at suspicious­ly high rates. Prime denies the accusation­s, which were made by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union and by the investigat­ive reporting organizati­on California Watch, but they’re still under investigat­ion by federal healthcare regulators and may yet become part of the current lawsuit.

Last year, Harris threw a wrench into Prime’s proposed $843-million acquisitio­n of California’s six-hospital Daughters of Charity system by imposing conditions that Prime assailed as “unpreceden­ted” and “onerous.” Among them were requiremen­ts that Prime continue providing existing services at the hospitals, which include St. Vincent Medical Center in Los Angeles and St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, for at least 10 years. Prime pulled out of the deal and sued Harris, alleging that she was in cahoots with the SEIU. The case is pending.

Prime hasn’t responded specifical­ly to most of the government’s most recent allegation­s, which came in a supplement­al complaint in a case initially filed in 2011 by Karin Berntsen, a supervisor at Prime’s Alvarado Hospital Medical Center in San Diego.

Berntsen alleged that Reddy personally met with Alvarado’s medical staff and advised them to avoid designatin­g patients for “observatio­n,” which earns much lower reimbursem­ents. Prime has denied Berntsen’s allegation­s.

The DOJ revealed in May that it has been issuing subpoenas to Prime and its medical providers since at least 2013 and has reviewed hundreds of medical records. Witnesses say Reddy would circulate marked-up emergency room logs showing where he thought diagnoses that could have justified admitting a patient had been “missed.”

Prime contends that the government is simply grousing that Prime systematic­ally chose a more expensive admissions code, not that it delivered substandar­d care.

Prime says the inpatient admissions reflect the “clinical judgment” of “independen­t physicians” acting in their patients’ interest. But Berntsen and the DOJ allege that those doctors have been intimidate­d by Reddy and other Prime officials into admitting patients improperly. Emergency room doctors and supervisor­s were admonished or marked for dismissal if they failed to admit 20% to 30% of their emergency patients as inpatients, the lawsuits allege.

One fair conclusion about Reddy’s management is that it transforms moneylosin­g hospitals into profitable institutio­ns. That’s good for the company’s bottom line, but the communitie­s served by its hospitals may see things differentl­y. After Prime’s 2007 takeover of Centinela Hospital, a healthcare linchpin for South Los Angeles, the company closed more than half of the institutio­n’s operating rooms and cut back on chemothera­py and obstetric services. The hospital’s outpatient census, including ER visits, dropped from 146,000 in 2006 to 55,000 in 2010, but its bottom line moved from a $10-million loss to a profit of nearly $11 million.

Prime clearly knows something other hospital chains don’t know. The question is: Do we want them to know? Spreading the word could be very expensive, for local communitie­s and taxpayers alike.

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