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In Monday's report, contractors also said they had difficulty obtaining data they needed and said that daily access to real-time Medicare claims data is critical. One contractor said it eventually had to buy the data from another contractor, which caused a 30-day delay. The contractors generated only about 100 cases each of potential fraud using the limited data during a nine-month period. Critics say those figures are anemic compared to the billions of dollars of fraud occurring annually. U.S. Sens. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., have introduced legislation that would require Medicare officials to share fraud data with law enforcement and contractors, as well as put accuracy requirements into the payment administration contracts. CMS officials said they are working diligently to give contractors access to data. They also said the investigation was conducted during early stages of the transition, so many issues have since been addressed. They agreed contractors should have access to data, but the agency has not indicated that improved access has been put in place. Historically, Medicare has paid claims first and reviewed them later, which worked when most providers were hospitals. But the "pay and chase" method gives criminals weeks of lag time to get paid for fraudulent claims and skip town before authorities catch on.
Critics say separating contractors who pay claims from fraud contractors has created a system where the two are essentially working against each other. Fraud detection must be built into the payment system so contractors can track fraudulent claims as soon as crooks send them in, not days or weeks later, said Kirk Ogrosky, former head of the Justice Department's division that investigates health care fraud. "By divorcing the job of paying claims from detecting fraud, CMS encourages an ineffective `pay-and-chase' system," he said.
[Associated
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