In a no holds barred expose, Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz report for the New York Times on the fraudulent activities of the largest health insurers offering Medicare Advantage plans. “The Cash Monster Was Insatiable’: How Insurers Exploited Medicare for Billions” takes a deep dive into how Medicare Advantage plans add diagnosis codes to patients’ medical records in order to receive higher payments from the government and drive up profits. The overpayments the Medicare Advantage plans collect increase Medicare spending to the tune of tens of billions of dollars each year and do nothing to ensure that people in Medicare Advantage plans get the care they need.
The story explains how Medicare Advantage insurers reward physicians with champagne, money and other goodies for adding diagnosis codes to patient records. Each diagnosis code means more money for the Medicare Advantage plans, which receive a fixed amount for each enrollee, adjusted up for enrollees with multiple diagnoses.
Abelson and Sanger-Katz explain how “major health insurers exploited the [Medicare Advantage] program to inflate their profits by billions of dollars. Of the five large Medicare Advantage participants, UnitedHealth, Humana, Elevance (formerly Anthem) and Kaiser Permanente have been charged with fraud for adding inappropriate diagnosis codes to patient files. The Justice Department is currently investigating CVS Health for related conduct.
Instead of saving money, Medicare Advantage costs taxpayers a lot more than traditional Medicare. One former government official projects that overpayments in 2020 alone totaled $25 billion and that overpayments will total $600 billion over the next nine years. Not surprisingly, the Kaiser Family Foundation reported that the companies offering Medicare Advantage plans generate twice as much gross profit from Medicare as from their commercial health insurance businesses.
For reasons unknown, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has done a poor job of keeping the Medicare Advantage plans from overbilling the government and an equally poor job of collecting overpayments that are identified. Instead of reducing Medicare Advantage rates to adjust for the overbilling, CMS has increased them substantially, up eight percent in 2023. And, when CMS audits plans and finds overpayments, it only goes after the plans for the small number of overpayments it finds through its audits.
Where’s the value in Medicare Advantage? “Even when they’re playing the game legally, we are lining the pockets of very wealthy corporations that are not improving patient care,” according to Dr. Donald Berwick, the head of CMS during the Obama administration. Contrary to what some might believe, traditional Medicare offers better value than Medicare Advantage, as good or better care, particularly for people with complex and costly conditions, at lower cost.
Here’s more from Just Care:
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