Genesis Healthcare Inc. Agrees to Pay $53.6 Million Settlement to Resolve False Claims Act Violations
The
government seems even more determined than ever to crack down on illegal
billing and to make those who have done so pay for their alleged misdeeds.
Proof of this came last week when the Department of Justice announced that
Genesis Healthcare Inc. has agreed to pay more than $53 million – including
interest – to settle lawsuits alleging that it and several other companies
violated the False Claims Act. The government alleges that Genesis violated
the False Claims Act by
submitting false claims for medically unnecessary therapy and hospice services
and by providing grossly substandard nursing care. Genesis – which is located
in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania – owns and operates skilled nursing facilities,
assisted/senior living facilities and a rehabilitation therapy business. “We will continue to
hold health care providers accountable if they bill for unnecessary or
substandard services or treatment,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad A. Readler of
the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “Today’s settlement demonstrates our unwavering
commitment to protect federal health care programs against unscrupulous
providers.”
The
settlement resolves four sets of allegations in all.
- In the first allegation, the
government maintains that from April 2010 through March 2013, Skilled
Health Group Inc. (SKG), Skilled Healthcare LLC (Skilled LLC), and
Creekside Hospice II LLC, knowingly submitted false claims to Medicare for
services they provided at Creekside Hospice. Specifically, the facilities are
alleged to have billed hospice services for patients who were not
terminally ill and that they billed inappropriately for physician
evaluation services.
- Secondly, the settlement
resolves allegations that from January 1, 2005 through December 31, 2013, SKG,
Skilled LLC and Hallmark Rehab GP LLC submitted false claims to Medicare,
TRICARE and Medicaid for medically unnecessary services that they billed
for more therapy minutes than their patients received. The facilities are
also alleged to have fraudulently assigned patients a higher Resource
Utilization Group (RUG) level than necessary. RUGs are mutually exclusive
categories that reflect levels of resource need in long-term care
settings. Medicare reimburses SNF’s based on these metrics.
- In the third allegation, the
government maintains that from January 1, 2008 to September 27, 2013, Sun
Healthcare Group, Inc., SunDance Rehabilitation Agency and SunDance
Rehabilitation submitted false claims to Medicare Part B by billing for
medically unnecessary services and for services that were carried out by
unskilled persons.
- In the final allegation, the
Justice Department maintains that between September 1, 2003 and January 3,
2010 Skilled LLC submitted false claims to Medicare and Medi-Cal at its
nursing homes for services that were substandard. Specifically, the
settlement resolves allegations that these facilities failed to provide
sufficient nurse staffing to meet the needs of residents. This in turn
violates the government’s standard requirements for these nursing homes,
SNF, etc.
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