Los Angeles Times

New bills target abuses in state’s hospice industry

Times inquiry spurs calls for a halt to new licenses and action on recruiting schemes.

- By Kim Christense­n

Widespread fraud, kickbacks and other abuses in an industry meant to provide comforting care for the dying are the focus of reform proposals that call for a temporary halt to new licenses and a crackdown on patient-recruiting schemes in California’s booming hospice business.

A bill working its way through the state Senate would impose a one-year moratorium on new hospice licenses. A related measure in the Assembly would prohibit hospices from paying recruiters or other “referral sources” for new patients, an area that has been ripe for fraud.

Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) said his Senate Bill 664 is aimed at “the proliferat­ion of shysters who are making tons of money off both public and private sources” at the expense of vulnerable patients.

The bill, which he said was largely spurred by a Los Angeles Times investigat­ion published in December, is contingent on the state auditor taking up his request to examine the industry and report its findings.

“We support and want to see high-quality, good hospice care in our state and want to see it continue to grow,” Allen told the Senate Health Committee this week. “We also want to shut down bad actors.”

The Times’ investigat­ion found that an exponentia­l boom in hospice providers has transforme­d end-of-life care that was once the realm of charities and religious groups into a multibilli­ondollar business dominated by profit-driven operators.

Over the last 20 years, the number of U.S. providers has roughly doubled, while Medicare spending on hospice has grown by a factor of six, to $19.2 billion a year. More than 1.5 million Medicare beneficiar­ies now receive care from some 5,000 hospices, the vast majority of them for-profit operators.

Los Angeles County’s hospices have multiplied sixfold in the last decade and now account for more than half of the state’s roughly 1,200 Medicare-certified providers, The Times’ analysis of federal healthcare data showed.

of hospices have sprung up along a corridor stretching west from the San Gabriel Valley through the San Fernando Valley, which now has the highest concentrat­ion of providers in the nation.

The Times found that Glendale had 60 hospices, while Burbank had 61 and Van Nuys 63.

By comparison, New York state and Florida each had fewer than 50.

Many California hospices are small operations, some purchased as investment­s by people with little or no healthcare experience. There are few qualificat­ions for starting or operating a hospice beyond having a clean felony record, getting licensed by the state and being certified by Medicare, a process that costs only a few thousand dollars.

Allen’s bill has been enment dorsed by California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, which cited The Times’ reporting in a letter to lawmakers that said “it is time to hit the pause button on hospice expansion” in California.

“SB 664’s moratorium will prevent more bad actors from entering the hospice business while giving the state time to create a system that screens operators to ensure they are qualified and that their services are needed,” wrote Executive Director Patricia McGinnis.

“California­ns who are dying deserve far better than to be exploited by corrupt hospice providers,” she said.

The bill so far has faced no formal opposition. Peter Kellison, speaking for the California Hospice and Palliative Care Assn., told Allen’s committee that his organizati­on has concerns about the effectiven­ess of a moratorium but is neutral on the legislatio­n.

“Inarguably,” he said, there has been “an appalling abuse of the public by those unscrupulo­us hospice providers that have been highlighte­d in media stories, coverage and government reports.”

A second bill in the works addresses another of The Times’ key findings, namely that heated competitio­n for new patients has spawned a cottage industry of kickbacks to crooked doctors and recruiters who zero in on prospectiv­e patients at retirement homes and other venues.

To qualify for hospice, patients must be certified as terminally ill by their attending physicians, if they have them, and by a hospice doctor.

But many of those signed up by recruiters with promises of medical care, equipScore­s or housekeepi­ng services were not dying, The Times found. Some later learned they had signed away their rights to lifesaving emergency medical treatment.

Sponsored by Assemblywo­man Jacqui Irwin (DThousand Oaks), Assembly Bill 1280 would prohibit hospice providers or their agents from paying recruiters or others for patient referrals. It also prohibits hospice employees, salespeopl­e or others who receive any form of compensati­on for referrals from providing consultati­on on eligibilit­y or services.

“Preying upon the sick and dying is despicable, and it’s unacceptab­le that California leads the nation in hospice fraud,” Irwin said, calling her bill “a first step” toward addressing monetary incentives that can lead to fraud.

“We need checks and balances to help people and caretakers, who are often under duress when making these difficult decisions,” she said. “We have a responsibi­lity to ensure that patients who are at the end of life receive the right care that addresses the patients’ and family needs.”

‘California­ns who are dying deserve far better than to be exploited by corrupt hospice providers.’ — Patricia McGinnis, executive director of California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform

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