How to Report Healthcare Fraud Confidentially: Safely Blow The Whistle On Abuse

Blowing The Whistle on Healthcare Fraud

Yes, you can report Medicare fraud anonymously. The fastest route is the HHS Office of Inspector General hotline (1-800-HHS-TIPS) or its online form, where you can leave your name out entirely. But anonymous tips rarely pay a meaningful reward. To qualify for a whistleblower bounty of 15 to 30 percent under the False Claims Act, you file a sealed qui tam case through an attorney, which keeps your identity confidential while the government investigates. Call (888) 713-6653 for a free, confidential review.

The Department of Justice estimates Healthcare Fraud costs the American taxpayers an estimated $100 Billion dollars a year. Medicare, Medicaid and Tricare are massive Federal (public) health programs.

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These massive programs are prime targets for unscrupulous and dishonest Medical Care providers. Waste, fraud and abuse are some of the methods they use to defraud and cheat taxpayers. The result is a major burden on the programs, taxpayers and patients.

Rising healthcare costs and inaccurate medical records are a direct result.

Medicare, Medicaid and Tricare are Federally funded health programs. Public programs fall under the protection of the Federal False Claims Act (FCA).

Knowingly making false claims to these public programs for medical treatments, services or drugs is illegal.

The FCA has a qui tam section allowing individuals to report wrongdoing. Whistleblowers who come forward receive legal protections and may qualify for financial bounties when they uncover abuse which results in financial recovery.

What is Medicare Fraud?

Medicare Fraud is a crime. Those responsible face severe financial penalties and incarceration. Doctors, Insurers, Hospitals, Hospice, Rehabilitation Clinics and Pharmaceutical companies have all been found guilty of Medicare, Medicaid and Tricare fraud.

Healthcare Fraud Fact Patterns: Exposed by whistleblowers, the following
conduct constitutes the most popular ways healthcare professionals are cheating taxpayers:

Phantom billing schemes, Upcoding & Unbundling, Illegal Kickbacks, False Billing for Non-Covered Services, Misrepresenting Information, Providing Unnecessary Care to Inflate Reimbursements, and a variety of Prescription Scams.

 

Who reports Medicare Fraud?

Some people think patient’s are the only people reporting Medicare fraud.

Patients should inform when something is wrong but medical professionals are in the best position to have knowledge of and report Medicare Fraud. Doctors, Specialists, Administrators, Nurses, Pharmacist or any medical employee can report.

Working in the healthcare system provides them an insider’s knowledge of the right and wrong way treat patients and seek reimbursements for care.

Their access and knowledge of fraud puts them in the ideal position to report on an uncovered pattern of abuse. When abuse, fraud or misuse fact patterns emerge they have an ethical responsibility to report it and help stop the illegal conduct from continuing.

knowledge of fraud

How to Report Medicare fraud?

The Government knows it can be risky do the right thing by reporting dishonest, fraudulent Medical behavior. This is why they allow people to report suspicious activity anonymously. There are two ways to privately report conduct to Medicare or the Inspector general.

  • Calling - 1- 800-Medicare or 1-800-HHS-TIPS
  • Online Form submission (Link)

List of information to have ready:

  • Medical Providers name and ID number
  • Service, prescription or treatment and ID Number
  • Date of service, treatment or product that was received of delivered
  • Payment approved and paid for Medicare Date on Medicare
  • Summary Notice (MSN)
  • Your name and Medicare number
  • Reason why Medicare should not have reimbursed medical providers
  • Any other information (evidence) you have about why Medicare should not have paid

What Are The Rewards for Reporting Medicare Fraud?

Reporting Medicare fraud does offer up to a $1000 reward to eligible claims. Five conditions are necessary for a reward to be paid.

FCA Claim Bounties:
The False Claims Act also provides civil remedy to fight fraud. A successful qui tam action may entitle whistleblowers to a percentage of recovered funds as well as the protection of the Federal and/or government.
  1. You must report your personal Medicare fraud. Allegations need to be specific and not generalized.
  2. Suspected Medicare fraud must be confirmed as potential fraud by a Medicare contractor responsible for investigating fraud or abuse. The case must then be formally referred to the Office of the Inspector General for investigation.
  3. You must not be a participant in the fraudulent act or are qualified for another claim reward for the same offenses.
  4. The person or organization must not currently be under investigation for the same offense
  5. Your report must lead to the recovery of at least $100.

The reward is based on a percentage of 10% of the recovered sum up to a maximum of $1,000. Whichever amount is less. If more than one person is eligible for a reward it is split between them.

"There's a real difference between staying anonymous and staying protected. A hotline tip is anonymous and usually goes nowhere. A sealed qui tam case ties your name to it under court protection, gives you a lawyer, and the legal protections afforded by law."

Medicare FCA Claims for Larger Rewards

Another option for individuals is submitting a claim using the False Claims Act. The FCA provides rewards and protection for people who report fraud against any Federal Government program. Civil health care programs are covered under the FCA. Importantly for those making a claim is the FCA’s qui tam provision. This provides rewards and protection for relators of fraudulent acts who bring civil action on behalf of the state or federal government. Also known as qui tam whistleblowers.

Whistleblowers will file an action (lawsuit) against the party responsible for the fraud. This copy of the action needs to be officially submitted to the Office of the Inspector general and the U.S. Attorney.

* There are three major elements of an FCA Claim a whistleblower must have to qualify for a reward:
  1. The Claim must be legitimate and the relator must not be involved in the fraudulent acts.
  2. The Whistleblower needs to be the first to file and file within the Statute of Limitations of an FCA Claim
  3. The Claim needs to be an original action with no other actions and charges against the offending party.
When the necessary conditions are met whistleblowers are eligible for 15% to 30% of the recovered sum.

How Confidential Is a Medicare FCA Claim?

When an FCA Claim is filed it is sealed by the U.S. District Court. The Whistleblower’s identity will remain anonymous as the Government investigates the validity of the claimants accusations. This should only take 60 days but could take longer if the Government needs more time.

"You can discuss the situation with your qui tam attorney confidentially who will help ensure YOU are protected..."

The U.S. Attorney’s Office will complete their review of the case and decide whether or not to assist in the prosecution of the case. If they decide to assist, the whistleblower’s reward will be reduced to 15%-25% of the total recovery - but the weight and resources of the government are brought into the investigation. If the Government decides against further action, plaintiffs can still proceed on their own.

The whistleblower reward from a stand alone action is 25%-30% of the recovered sum.

Remaining an anonymous whistleblower may not be possible once the case is unsealed and made public. However, the False Claims Act provides protection to people who blow the whistle on healthcare fraud via the Department of Labor and the Department of Justice.

At any point in the FCA process legal counsel can be retained. Finding a qui tam lawyer with experience in healthcare fraud and FCA claims is recommended. Lawyers will consult on these type of cases for free and work on a contingency basis pending the strength of the case.

 

Reporting Medicare Fraud Anonymously: FAQ

Q: Can I report Medicare fraud anonymously?

A:    Yes. You can call the HHS Office of Inspector General hotline at 1-800-HHS-TIPS or use its online form without giving your name. For a False Claims Act qui tam case, you are not anonymous to your own attorney or the government, but your identity stays under court seal while the case is investigated.

Q: Where do I report Medicare fraud?

A:    For a straight tip: the HHS-OIG hotline (1-800-HHS-TIPS) or 1-800-MEDICARE. For a reward-eligible case: a sealed qui tam complaint filed in federal court and served on the U.S. Attorney and the OIG. An attorney handles that filing so it is done correctly and your identity is protected.

Q: Will I get a reward for reporting Medicare fraud?

A:    A hotline tip can pay a small CMS reward, capped at $1,000. The real money is in a qui tam case under the False Claims Act, where a successful whistleblower recovers 15 to 30 percent of what the government collects, and recoveries often run into the millions because of per-claim penalties and treble damages.

Q: Does my identity stay secret in a qui tam case?

A:    The complaint is filed under seal, so your identity is confidential while the government investigates, typically at least 60 days and often longer. Once the case is unsealed, your identity may become known, but the False Claims Act's anti-retaliation protections then apply to shield you.

Q: Do I need a lawyer to report Medicare fraud?

A:    Not for an anonymous hotline tip. But to file a qui tam case and qualify for a reward, the law requires an attorney. A whistleblower lawyer also makes sure you file first, within the deadline, and with the evidence that wins. These cases are handled on contingency.

When Reporting Fraud: Final Recommendation

Medical fraud is a $100 billion problem in the United States and should be reported.

  1. Report Medicare or Medicaid Fraud to CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services).
          This can be done anonymously and small rewards are possible.
  2. Gather all the information you have and consult with a qualified Medicare Fraud Attorney before taking any legal action.
          This first consultation should be free. The lawyer will determine the strength of your case and provide direction for next steps you should take.
How to Report Medicare Fraud Anonymously: Step by Step
  1. Document what you know. The provider name and ID, the services or codes, the dates, and why the claim was improper. Keep only records you can access lawfully.
  2. Decide what you want: a tip or a reward. An anonymous hotline tip is simple but rarely pays. A sealed qui tam case protects your identity and can pay a reward.
  3. For an anonymous tip, call HHS-OIG. The HHS Office of Inspector General hotline (1-800-HHS-TIPS) or its online form lets you report without giving your name.
  4. For a reward, file a sealed qui tam case. Filed through an attorney under the False Claims Act, it stays under seal while the government investigates.
  5. Talk to a whistleblower attorney. They protect your identity, make sure you file first and on time, and build the case. It is handled on contingency.

Lawsuit Legal handles healthcare fraud the way it should be handled: quietly, under seal, and built to prove. We protect your identity, we know the per-claim math that turns a routine billing code into a major case, and we work on contingency. You Win or It's Free. Call (888) 713-6653 for a free, confidential review. We help the nurses, billers, coders, pharmacists, and administrators who saw the fraud from the inside.

 

 

 

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What best describes the nature of your case?
Do you have insider knowledge of fraud?
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Please describe briefly the nature of your case...
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