Cancer
care provider to pay U.S. $34.7 million over improper procedure: DOJ
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[March 09, 2016]
By Suzanne Barlyn
(Reuters) - Cancer care provider 21 Century
Oncology Inc has reached a $34.7 million settlement with the U.S.
government stemming from the improper use of a procedure that measures
the level of radiation that leaves a patient's body after treatment.
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The U.S. Department of Justice announced the settlement with Fort
Meyers, Florida-based 21 Century Oncology on Tuesday. The company,
which has offices in 16 states, performed and billed for procedures
that were not medically necessary and in some cases improperly
performed, the Justice Department said.
A 21st Center Oncology spokeswoman declined to comment immediately.
Physicians and physicists who performed the procedure, known as "the
Gamma function," were not properly trained to interpret or use the
results, the Justice Department said.
The oncology company billed Medicaid, a federal healthcare program,
for the procedure in cases where physicians did not review results
until seven or more days after the patients' final radiation
treatments and in cases where no results from the procedure were
available due to "technical failures" with equipment, the Justice
Department said.
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