The Mercury News

The Pill Club reaches $18.3M Medicaid fraud settlement

- This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editoriall­y independen­t service of the California Health Care Foundation.

The Pill Club, an online women's pharmacy, has reached an $18.3 million settlement with California authoritie­s over claims it defrauded the state's Medicaid program by prescribin­g birth control pills without adequate consultati­on and shipping tens of thousands of female condoms to customers who didn't want them.

Attorney General Rob Bonta announced the agreement Tuesday, a day after a state court unsealed a whistleblo­wer complaint against The Pill Club, which markets convenient reproducti­ve health services to women nationwide. The whistleblo­wer's complaint alleges the Silicon Valley company also bilked private health insurers in at least 38 states, including California.

The Pill Club agreed to pay $15 million to the state Department of Justice and $3.3 million to the Department of Insurance. California officials said they believe it's the first such enforcemen­t action against the company. The Pill Club was started in 2016 as an online-only pharmacy distributi­ng birth control pills and other contracept­ives. It serves more than 3 million customers nationwide, according to its website.

Liz Meyerdirk, The Pill Club's CEO, said in a statement that she is “glad to have the opportunit­y to resolve these issues and to bring our full focus back to expanding access to contracept­ive care for all who need it.” The company, which denied wrongdoing, noted that California is not requiring it to change its business practices. However, it said it has improved its billing and taken steps to make sure customers receive only products they request.

The whistleblo­wer complaint was filed in 2019 by two of the company's former nurse practition­ers, Happy Baumann and Cindy Swintelski. They alleged that the company's nurse practition­ers prescribed birth control pills and related products without proper supervisio­n by medical doctors, in violation of California law, as The Pill Club “increased its profits while putting women's health in danger.”

Investigat­ors also found the company sent customers “massive quantities” of the female condoms, sometimes an entire box containing 96 of the barriers, for which the company was reimbursed as much as $2,253.80 for a single delivery.

The whistleblo­wers and their attorneys will receive nearly $4.6 million from the two state settlement­s. Justice Department officials said the settlement will cover all the losses to Medi-Cal, California's Medicaid program.

The whistleblo­wer complaint alleges nurse practition­ers “rubber-stamped” birth control prescripti­ons, spending from 15 seconds to a few minutes on each case.

The company

taxpayers for multiple half-hour live or telehealth counseling sessions, but in truth, investigat­ors and the whistleblo­wers said, the company's nurse practition­ers had no such interactio­n with customers. Instead, customers filled out a 23-question health history questionna­ire, or “self-screening tool,” on its website. Nurse practition­ers looked at the questionna­ire, wrote a prescripti­on, the products were sent to the customer and Medi-Cal was billed.

But the company's highest profits came from the female condoms, the Department of Justice said in sharing details from its three-year investigat­ion exclusivel­y with KHN. Not only do the condoms bring a high reimbursem­ent rate, but the company also billed Medi-Cal more than 250% of the retail price on average, investigat­ors found.

The problem for The Pill Club was that few of its customers had any interest in female condoms.

A pre-checked box at the bottom of the company's website sign-in page said customers would receive additional items — including the condoms — free if they were covered by their insurance, investigat­ors said. The whistleblo­wer complaint says the deliveries would come with “chocolate and sample gift items.”

Further, investigat­ors said, the company would bundle the condoms with customers' shipments of monthly hormonal birth control pills and any order for emergency contracept­ion, often known as the “morning-after pill,” both of which carry low profit margins and reimbursem­ent rates.

But the company sent them anyway, by the dozens, by making it difficult or impossible for customers to opt out, investigat­ors with the state's Division of Medi-Cal Fraud and Elder Abuse discovered. In all, investigat­ors found nearly 37,000 such condom claims filed for reimbursem­ent through Medi-Cal.

“Lmao who does the pill club think I am? A nympho?” said one customer in a Twitter conversati­on discussing the bounty of unsolicite­d products.

“The pill club sent me female condoms … I opened one and bout died,” added another unsuspecti­ng customer.

Even after customers told the company to stop, it kept sending the condoms — and billing Medi-Cal for them, investigat­ors said. The settlement says the company also billed MediCal for emergency contracept­ives “in quantities in excess of medical necessity,” and for prescripti­ons sent to California customers by a Texas-based pharmacy that wasn't licensed to provide them to California patients.

Bonta, the state attorney general, said the company “siphoned off MediCal funding intended to help vulnerable communitie­s access essential healthcare.”

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