Real Medicare today is not like that at all. Why would they spend time on TV and in mailings advertising supplemental insurance that “helps pay some of the health care costs that Original Medicare doesn't cover, like: Copayments, Coinsurance, Deductibles”? Those extra costs can only be avoided by paying money up front as a premium for the additional insurance.
From recent news, though, it’s clear that this misimpression is not the only problem. Medicare fraud is another big issue. Sometimes this is a critical thinking issue where patients are lured in as unwitting participants. Sometimes it goes deeper.
Late last month, thirty-five individuals associated with dozens of telemedicine companies and laboratories were charged with fraudulently billing Medicare more than $2.1 billion for expensive cancer genetic tests. Nine of the defendants are medical doctors. “In addition, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Center for Program Integrity (CMS/CPI), announced…adverse administrative action against cancer genetic testing companies and medical professionals who submitted more than $1.7 billion in claims to the Medicare program.”
One of the defendants in this case, who cost taxpayers more than $1 billion in illegal Medicare reimbursements, “has been under near-constant federal scrutiny for the past five years and was supposed to have been deported more than a decade ago.” That was billions lost to fraud as a result of only one investigation, due in part to government inaction.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office Inspector General has issued an alert to the public about other genetic testing schemes. Medicare eligible patients are offered a free genetic screening for undetected conditions, but the real motive is to get their Medicare information “for identity theft or fraudulent billing purposes.” The screenings are unnecessary and are usually denied by Medicare. When they are, the individual could be responsible for the entire cost of these useless tests, sometimes thousands of dollars.
They get nothing but the promise of some new information about their health with the selling point that, as Medicare recipients, it may be free to them. This promise of something for nothing – free testing or free devices all paid for by Medicare – is used so often it’s beginning to sound stale, but it must be working.
Advice from the Inspector General is to not volunteer any information to these genetic testers, don’t stop at their booths at health conferences, ignore their ads, and return unopened any testing kits received in the mail.
Medicare fraud is a huge problem. The AARP reported in March of last year “roughly 10 cents of every dollar budgeted for the giant health insurance program is stolen or misdirected before it helps any enrollee. Looked at another way, about $1,000 is lost per Medicare member through theft or waste each year.” That estimate is based on government reports, but a leading expert from Harvard University believes the real number could be much higher, 20% or more.
AARP used the figure of $60 billion in fraud for the 2018 calculations cited above. Other sources show exactly the same estimate for 2015 and 2011. The number hasn’t changed in eight years. Apparently as fast as they can lock people up or put them out of business, more fraudsters spring up to take their place.
Would the general public as a whole be less likely to become victims of Medicare-for-All fraud schemes? That’s doubtful, and it leads to so much waste.
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