Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Feds crack Medicare genetic testing fraud case

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Federal agents took down an alleged Medicare scam Friday that exploited seniors’ curiosity about genetic medicine by enticing them to get their cheeks swabbed for unneeded DNA tests. Medicare was billed $2.1 billion.

Dubbed “Operation Double Helix,” the crackdown targeted telemedici­ne companies, doctors and labs, in a joint effort by the Justice Department , the FBI, U.S. attorneys’ offices, and the Health and Human Services inspector general. Thirtyfive people were charged around the country.

The alleged fraud flourished at a time when many people are getting DNA tests to trace back their family heritage.

Fraudsters preyed on people’s fears of harboring genetic markers for cancer. However, genetic testing is not routinely used to screen for cancer.

“A decade ago, it would have given Medicare beneficiar­ies pause if someone wanted to get a swab from their cheek of their saliva,” said Shimon Richmond, who heads the inspector general’s investigat­ive division . “Today people know and recognize what (genetic testing) is, and they think ‘I can get that done, and I can get it done for free and find out if I have health issues that I need to address.’ ”

It’s a bad decision, said Richmond. Not only does it put the patient’s Medicare ID in the hands of fraudsters who can then keep reselling it for illicit purposes, but it can potentiall­y compromise unique details of an individual’s makeup.

Another downside: Medicare might deny future coverage for genetic testing when it’s really needed, since the patient’s record would show such an analysis was already done. Patients should only have genetic testing if their own doctor orders it, officials said.

The alleged scheme worked like this: Officials said a telemarket­ing or inperson “recruiter” would convince a Medicare enrollee to take a genetic test, assuring them that the program would pay the full cost. The patient would provide their Medicare informatio­n. A doctor in league with the fraudsters would approve the test, and collect a kickback from the recruiter company. A lab participat­ing in the scheme would run the test, bill Medicare, and share payments collected from the government with the recruiter.

Bills to Medicare connected with the scam typically ranged from $7,000 to $12,000, Richmond said, with some much higher. In many cases the patient never got a report back, or the results provided were incomprehe­nsible. Medicare paid out hundreds of millions of dollars before authoritie­s detected the fraud and moved in.

There was no single organizati­on behind the fraud. Friday’s operation targeted defendants in Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas, the Justice Department said. Nine doctors were among those charged. Others included owners of telemedici­ne companies and testing labs.

Medicare enrollee Linda Morris of Parker City, Indiana, said she was roped in at a conference on aging well. The retired high school math and journalism teacher got her cheek swabbed by one of the many health vendors at the event.

“Their ploy was, ‘Get a mouth swab and we can analyze how well your system synthesize­s the drugs you are taking,’” she said. “It never crossed my mind there was anything wrong with this.”

Then her Medicare statements started coming in, showing charges as high as $33,000. The program paid almost $10,000.

Morris said she was never billed, and was never sent results. When she looked up the address for the test vendor it was “a house on a back road.”

“I feel stupid, and in the meantime, I’m furious,” Morris said. Health fairs, church events, and senior centers are like magnets for the fraudsters, officials said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Federal agents from the Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General prepare for operations targeting individual­s allegedly involved in genetic testing fraud in the Atlanta region on Friday morning.
Associated Press Federal agents from the Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General prepare for operations targeting individual­s allegedly involved in genetic testing fraud in the Atlanta region on Friday morning.

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