Most Patients Satisfied With Telehealth, But Some Exploited for Healthcare Fraud
By Pat Anson, PNN Editor
Telehealth has been a godsend for pain sufferers during the coronarvirus pandemic, with many patients discovering the ease and convenience of visiting with their doctors online or over the telephone. Some have even been able to get prescriptions written for opioid medication without an initial face-to-face meeting with their doctors – thanks to a DEA decision to relax some of the rules about prescribing controlled substances.
Unfortunately, some providers are taking advantage of patients — and the pandemic — by filing billions of dollars in false medical claims.
Saving Time and Money
Most patients who use telehealth – also known as telemedicine – to connect with pain management specialists were highly satisfied with their experience, according to a new study presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.
Last summer, researchers at UCLA’s Comprehensive Pain Center began giving patients the option of in-office visits or remote appointments via telehealth. Nearly 1,400 patients chose telehealth, resulting in nearly 3,000 virtual appointments before and during the pandemic, from August, 2019 to June, 2020.
“This era of contactless interactions and social distancing has really accelerated the adoption of telemedicine, but even before the pandemic, patient satisfaction was consistently high,” said lead author Laleh Jalilian, MD, an anesthesiologist at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.
“Patients who are being evaluated for new conditions may be better off having office visits initially. But once patients establish a relationship with providers, follow-up visits can occur efficiently with telemedicine, while maintaining patient rapport and quality outcomes. We believe 50 percent of our visits could be conducted via telemedicine.”
Asked about their experiences with telehealth, 92 percent of patients said they were satisfied. Many said they were happy to avoid the lengthy commutes and time spent in Los Angeles area traffic. On average, patients saved 69 minutes in traffic per visit and $22 in gas and parking fees.
For telehealth to be sustainable in a post-pandemic world, Jalilian says insurers should consider expanding reimbursement for providers to take into account the additional work and technology needed for telehealth visits. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has waived many of the limits on telehealth visits during the pandemic and some private insurers have followed suit.
“Now that telemedicine is more widespread, it may become a valued part of care delivery in chronic pain practices,” said Jalilian. “Clearly many patients benefitted from remote consultations and follow-up appointments using telemedicine. We hope it will encourage policymakers and insurance providers to continue to support these platforms and inspire more innovation in this developing field of research and patient care.”
Telehealth Fraud Takedown
But as demand has grown for telehealth services, federal prosecutors say hundreds of healthcare providers have exploited the situation. In what’s being called the largest healthcare fraud and enforcement action in Department of Justice history, criminal charges were recently filed against 345 doctors, nurses and other providers for submitting over $6 billion in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare, Medicaid and private insurers. Some of the false claims were for COVID-19 testing.
The fraud charges involve more than $4.5 billion connected to telemedicine, $845 million involving substance abuse treatment, and $806 million connected to illegal opioid distribution.
“This nationwide enforcement operation is historic in both its size and scope, alleging billions of dollars in healthcare fraud across the country,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Brian Rabbitt. “These cases hold accountable those medical professionals and others who have exploited health care benefit programs and patients for personal gain.”
Prosecutors say telemedicine executives allegedly paid kickbacks to doctors and nurse practitioners to order unnecessary medical equipment, genetic and other diagnostic testing, and pain medications, either without any interaction with patients or after a brief telephone conversation with patients they had never met or seen. Medical equipment companies, genetic testing labs and pharmacies then purchased the orders in exchange for illegal kickbacks and bribes.
In addition to those charges, CMS announced that it had taken administrative action against 256 healthcare providers, revoking their Medicare billing privileges because of their involvement in telemedicine schemes.
“Telemedicine can foster efficient, high-quality care when practiced appropriately and lawfully. Unfortunately, bad actors attempt to abuse telemedicine services and leverage aggressive marketing techniques to mislead beneficiaries about their health care needs and bill the government for illegitimate services,” said HHS Deputy Inspector General Gary Cantrell.
The charges against substance abuse treatment facilities -- known as “sober homes” – mostly involve illegal payments to patient recruiters for referring scores of patients to treatment facilities. The patients were then subjected to medically unnecessary drug testing – often billing thousands of dollars for a single test – and therapy sessions that were often not provided.
Some sober homes also allegedly prescribed medically unnecessary controlled substances and other medications to patients to entice them to stay at the facility. Prosecutors say the patients were then often discharged and admitted to other treatment facilities, or referred to other labs and clinics, in exchange for more kickbacks.