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Tricare Fraud in Compounding Pharmacies Attorney Andrew S Feldman Quoted

Tricare fraud related to compounding pharmacies is on the rise. Attorney Andrew S. Feldman was recently quoted in Florida Record discussing the uptick in Tricare fraud and compounding pharmacies:

ORLANDO — A Florida compound pharmacy owner is the latest proprietor in an ongoing probe to agree to reimburse the federal government millions of dollars in fines over alleged billing violations of the Department of Defense’s TRICARE program.

QMedRx co-owner Mark Gilmore’s sworn arrangement to pay back $4.25 million in fines over abuses to the military health care program makes him at least the fourth partial owner of the Maitland-based operation to agree to a multimillion-dollar settlement and brings to $20 million the overall amount that government officials have negotiated to collect from company owners.

In all, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida has recovered nearly $70 million in fines and penalties from owners across the region accused of such overbilling practices during the past 18 months.

Compounded medicines are typically used for patients requiring liquid formulations because of difficulty in swallowing pills.

Nationally, TRICARE paid $1.75 billion for these medicines during fiscal year 2015, an increase reported to be at least 18 times the amount paid in 2012. Overall, the cost for the medicines accounted for nearly 20 percent of Tricare’s estimated $9.14 billion prescription drug budget in 2015.

In the case of QMedRx, company officials are alleged to have systematically charged federal health care programs fees that are not covered under any plan for a yearlong period commencing in January 2013.

Other QmedRx owners who have also reached settlement agreements with the government include Andy Miller and Tracy Miller who, along with the Hallmark Investment Trust, have arranged to pay back $7.75 million.

“The government has been investigating TRICARE fraud for some time and how they were being reimbursed at astronomical rates for nonsterile compounds,” Andrew S. Feldman, managing member of the Feldman Firm that represents individuals and criminals in white collar crimes, told the Florida Record.

Doing business under the name Home Care Solution, QMedRx operates as a compounding pharmacy that serves doctors and patients alike. The company specializes in the kind of therapy that offers relief for pain, scar and wound care through the primary use of transdermal creams and gels that range in price from $600 to $1,500 per unit.

The announced settlement was brokered by the Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), which was launched by the government in 2009 to root out such corruption. Since then the U.S. Justice Department has recovered nearly $31 billion through False Claims Act cases, well more than half that amount stemming from fraud against federal health care programs.

“The government targets industries where it sees large change in terms of where the money is going,” added Feldman alluding to all the increased scrutiny in the compounds’ industry. “All of a sudden there was a large change in reimbursements for TRICARE.”

With prescription drug costs at an all-time high, the government estimates federal agencies have recently paid out as much as $2 billion for tainted and unnecessary compound prescriptions.

Thus far, U.S. Air Force reserve member Randy John Papanek is the only person in the QMedRx case charged in a criminal indictment, which seeks a judgement against him of $87,500.

Papanek, who has already pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to accept and pay bribes, is scheduled to go before U.S. District Judge Roy B. Dalton Jr. for sentencing Dec. 12 in Orlando.

In exchange for various forms of kickbacks over a two-year period starting in 2013, Papanek is said to have recruited people covered by TRICARE and steered them into seeking prescriptions only from QMedRx doctors.

As a Tricare beneficiary, he is also accused of receiving payments for receiving his own prescriptions from those same doctors.

“It’s going to continue,” Feldman predicted of the TRICARE government crackdown. “Those who are serious about being in the non-sterile compounds industry will find a way to make the necessary changes to be compliant.”

The Government has continued to aggressively investigate TriCare fraud. Tricare is one of the government programs which reimburses compounding pharmacies for dispensing compounded medications. From 2013- 2015, TriCare reimbursements for expensive medications made by compounding pharmacies, typically pain and scar creams, rose drastically. Certain medications made by compounding pharmacies were reimbursed  by Tricare at a rate of $25,000.00 per medication or prescription.

Beginning in May of 2015, Tricare, through their pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scrips, attempted to clamp down on unscrupulous providers seeking to obtain reimbursements for medications from compounding pharmacies and implemented a more rigorous process for submitting claims to TriCare for compounded medications. Similarly, since 2015, the Department of Justice has launched investigations relating to Tricare fraud and abuse and violations of the Anti Kickback Statute in the compounding pharmacy industry. Many of these investigations and prosecutions relate to the dispensing of compounded medications without a valid patient-doctor relationship, manipulation of the average wholesale price, claims for medically unnecessary active ingredients in compounded medications, and/or compensation arrangements involving the marketing of compounded medications.

It is anticipated the Department of Justice in coordination with the OIG-HHS, Department of Defense, and the FBI, will continue to crackdown on compounding pharmacies if the Government discovers evidence of fraud and abuse or violations of the Anti Kickback statute.

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Attorney Andrew Feldman Presents on Health Care Fraud on Annual ABA Webinar

Health care fraud attorney Andrew S. Feldman presented with Assistant U.S. Attorney Jessica Sievert (Eastern District of Tennessee) on health care fraud on a webinar sponsored by the ABA Health Law Section.

The program was the second health care fraud and abuse webinar presented by Mr. Feldman, a health care fraud attorney in Miami, Florida, and focused on  enforcement initiatives of the Department of Justice in 2016 and the impact of some of those initiatives, including the emphasis on individuals (Yates Memo) and prosecutions of physicians in “medical necessity” cases. The program further highlighted

  • The enhanced use of parallel civil and criminal proceedings in False Claims Act and Health Care Fraud prosecutions;
  • Major victories for the government and the defense in high profile trials and the practical takeaways from those cases;
  • The uptick in prosecutions and investigations related to compounding pharmacies and pharmacists including the increase in Department of Defense and Tricare investigations; and
  • Recent trends and developments in enforcement and prosecution of corporate entities for violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute and False Claims Act relating to sales and marketing entities.
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Attorney Andrew S. Feldman Discusses Anti Kickback Statute as Panelist at Annual Health Care Fraud Institute

Attorney Andrew S. Feldman Discusses Anti Kickback Statute as Panelist at Annual Health Care Fraud Institute 

Anti Kickback Statute attorney, Andrew S Feldman, discussed the Anti Kickback Statute while serving as a panelist at the Annual Health Care Fraud Institute in Palm Springs, California. Other panelists include defense attorneys and federal prosecutors from Cleveland and San Diego. The panelists discussed the health care fraud and abuse topics which are trending, including but not limited to, the uptick in prosecutions related to medical necessity, the proliferation of investigations related to compounding especially in relation to TriCare, pain and scar creams, and the speaker fee programs — the use of the Anti-Kickback Statute, in general, as a tool to combat health care fraud and abuse, and other significant trends.

Of significance, during the program, federal prosecutor, Michael Collyer, one of the panelists from the government who successfully prosecuted Harold Persaud for improperly implanting cardiac stents in patients and conducting useless, but expensive, nuclear stress tests described methodically the prosecution of Dr. Persaud and why his case was, for example, distinct from other physicians such as Dr. Amir Bajoghlu, a dermatologist in Northern Virginia who was acquitted after trial after having been accused of health care fraud and abuse related to the improper performance of Mohs surgeries.

Mr. Feldman is an Anti Kickback Statute attorney and frequent speaker on health care fraud and abuse issues and the Anti-Kickback Statute.  Mr. Feldman also represents compounding pharmacies in issues ranging from diversion to sterile compounding compliance with USP 797 and has represented compounding pharmacies in administrative proceedings before the Department of Health, grand jury investigations, and in investigations related to fraud and abuse within the Tricare program. As an Anti-Kickback Statute attorney Mr. Feldman has also represented sales and marketing professionals under investigation or charged with health care fraud and abuse.

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Attorney Andrew S. Feldman’s Article on Anti-Kickback Statute Included in ABA Health Lawyer

Attorney Andrew S. Feldman’s Article on Anti-Kickback Statute Included in ABA Health Lawyer

Anti-Kickback Statute attorney, Andrew S. Feldman, published an article on Anti-Kickback Statute  in the Winter Edition of the ABA Health Lawyer. A link to the Article may be found here.

The Article on the Anti-Kickback Statute discusses the shortage of cases addressing the second provision of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute which potentially criminalizes sales and marketing arrangements involving services, equipment, or items covered by Medicare, Medicaid, or TRICare. Mr. Feldman also argues that, in practice, plaintiffs and prosecutors have consistently ignored and substantially under-utilized the “recommending purchasing, leasing, or ordering” provision of the Anti-Kickback Statute in criminal prosecutions and qui tam actions in comparison to the Anti-Kickback Statute’s companion provision prohibiting referrals and also analyzes some of the underlying policy concerns that may have contributed to the lackluster enforcement of this apparently forgotten provision of the Anti-Kickback Statute and the dearth of federal criminal and False Claims Act cases addressing its application.

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Attorney Andrew S Feldman Discusses Health Care Fraud and Abuse Laws at Annual Osteopathic Winter Seminar

Attorney Andrew S Feldman Discusses Health Care Fraud and Abuse Laws at Annual Osteopathic Winter Seminar

Recently, health care fraud and abuse defense attorney Andrew S. Feldman was honored as a speaker at the Annual Osteopathic Winter Seminar sponsored by the Pinellas County Medical Society in Clearwater Beach, Florida. During the presentation, Mr. Feldman discussed federal and Florida laws impacting health care providers. More specifically, Mr. Feldman spoke to the 400 attendee physicians and doctors of osteopathy about medical ethics emphasizing the Florida and federal fraud and abuse laws including Stark, the Anti-Kickback Statute, the False Claims Act, the Florida Patient Self-Referrral Act, the Florida Patient Brokering statute, and the health care fraud statute which all impact physician practices.  Mr. Feldman used a variety of hypothetical situations during the presentation to demonstrate the intersection between ethical pitfalls and fraud and abuse laws affecting physician practices in Florida and nationwide. Attendees at the conference were able to interact with the speaker, Mr. Feldman, and to provide their comments regarding the hypothetical scenarios. Following the presentation, attendees were also eager to address some of the hypothetical examples raised during the presentation.

The three day Winter conference was attended by physicians statewide.

Health care fraud attorney, Mr. Feldman, is a frequent speaker on health care fraud and abuse issues and represents physicians, pharmacists, pharmacies, home health agencies, managers of assisted living facilities, and sales and marketing professionals in matters involving allegations of health care fraud and abuse, violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute, pharmacy practice violations, and violations impacting compounding pharmacies.

If you are a doctor or a pharmacy under investigation, it is critical that you retain adequate and competent counsel.

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