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Health Care Fraud and False Claims
I hosted 2 False Claims Act legal experts on this week’s MAG edition of Top Docs Radio. You’re going to want to check out what they have to say, as it could mean the difference between practicing medicine or not, in the end.
Scott Grubman is a partner with the law firm of Chilivis Cochran Larkins & Bever in Atlanta. He represents health care providers of all types and sizes with government investigations and audits, False Claims Act, and other complex litigation and various regulatory and compliance matters. Prior to joining private practice, Scott served as a trial attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., and as an assistant U.S. attorney in Savannah – where he served on a district health care fraud taskforce. Scott also serves as an adjunct professor at Georgia State University’s College of Law, where he teaches a course in health care fraud and abuse.
Jason Marcus is among a select group of lawyers who devote their practice to qui tam and related retaliation claims under federal and state False Claims Acts. He has practiced FCA law exclusively since 2008, and he formed the firm of Bracker & Marcus in January of 2015 with partner Julie Bracker, who is dedicated to representing whistleblowers nationwide. Jason is a 2006 graduate of the University of Georgia School of Law, a former clerk to the honorable Magistrate Judge G.R. Smith of the Southern District of Georgia, and a member of Taxpayers Against Fraud Education Fund and the Georgia affiliate of the National Employment Lawyers Association.
Health care is one of the fastest growing and most heavily-regulated industries in the United States. Given that government payers (Medicare, Medicaid, etc.) finance a significant portion of the system, regulators and law enforcement have dedicated tremendous resources to rooting out and punishing fraud and abuse in health care. In fiscal year 2015 alone, the federal government recovered nearly $2 billion in settlements and judgments from health care providers under the federal False Claims Act, which does not include recoveries through audits and other administrative avenues.
Moreover, not only are the actions of healthcare providers constantly scrutinized by federal and state auditors
and law enforcement, but also by competitors, commercial insurance companies, private whistle blowers, and the public. Big hospitals and health care entities with “deep pockets” have historically carried the bulk of the liability in government enforcement actions. But beginning in 2015, the federal government announced a new policy which focuses on holding individuals – particularly individual health care providers – responsible and liable for unlawful conduct. A lot of the laws governing health care fraud and abuse do not require a specific intent to defraud or even actual knowledge of the unlawful nature of the conduct. In fact, one of the major laws governing health care fraud and abuse (the physician self-referral law or “Stark law”) requires no culpable mindset whatsoever. Accordingly, it is crucial for health care professionals of all types to be aware of the various statutory and regulatory schemes that govern health care billing and to act accordingly.
MORE INFO SOON!
Special Guests:
Scott Grubman
Jason Marcus