Report Hospital Billing Fraud and Collect Large Financial Rewards: Medical Professionals That Properly Report Hospital Billing Fraud Can Collect Large Financial Rewards By Hospital Billing Fraud Lawyer Jason S. Coomer 
Hospital billing fraud 
      includes upcoding, false coding, false certifications, 
      double billing, phantom patients, unbundling, and illegal kickbacks.  These forms of billing fraud are costing the government billions of dollars and can be the basis of qui tam whistleblower reward 
      lawsuits that offer large financial rewards to medical 
      professions including hospital administrators and other hospital employees that properly expose significant hospital billing fraud.   
Being the First to File on a Hospital Billing Fraud Scheme is 
      Essential for Recovery Under the False Claims Act
It is essential to not delay in 
      coming forward with a Hospital Billing Fraud Qui Tam 
      Whistleblower Action as 
      the first whistleblower to file is eligible to be a relator and 
      can make a large recovery for exposing the 
      fraud.  Additionally, when the fraudulent scheme is 
      exposed, the people that kept the fraud secret can 
      sometimes be found liable for criminal activity for not 
      exposing the fraud that was being committed.
Hospital Billing Fraud Whistleblower Lawsuits Include Upcoding Qui Tam Whistleblower 
     Lawsuits and Coding Fraud Whistleblower Lawsuits
Upcoding occurs when a medical 
      service provider intentionally and fraudulently upcodes 
      services to obtain a higher reimbursement than one that 
      is entitled to for the service that was actually 
      provided.  In both the Medicare and Medicaid 
      systems a set of billing codes is used by healthcare 
      providers to bill for services. These codes are known as 
      the 
      Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS). A 
      service provider that intentionally uses a higher paying 
      code to fraudulently reflect that a more expensive 
      procedure or device was involved in the patient’s 
      treatment than actually was used or was necessary.  
      A pattern of intentional upcoding treatment can result 
      in large profits for the healthcare provider, but also 
      cost taxpayers millions of dollars.
Upcoding fraud is typically hard to 
      catch without the help of persons with inside 
      information because that Healthcare Common Procedure 
      Coding System (HCPCS) codes are billed electronically 
      and can easily slip through the system.  Therefore 
      unless the upcoding is caught through a random audit 
      (approximately 2% of the claims per year are audited), 
      it is up to insiders, informants, heroes, and health 
      care professionals to catch fraudulent upcoding.
Another type of coding fraud is 
      “unbundling”, where bundled related procedures or 
      composite lab tests are run together, but billed 
      separately by the lab or healthcare provider to obtain 
      more compensation.  These types of billing fraud 
      also allow healthcare providers and labs to make higher 
      profits by bilking Medicare, Medicaid, and taxpayers out 
      of millions of dollars.  These unbundling fraud 
      schemes are also hard to detect without someone that is 
      familiar with the codes and billing.
Hospital Billing Fraud and Other Forms of Health Care 
     Fraud Are Costing The United States and U.S. Taxpayers About 
     $100 Billion Each Year
Law enforcement authorities estimate 
      that health-care fraud costs taxpayers about $100 billion each year.  Through Health 
      Care Fraud Qui Tam Lawsuits billions of dollars have 
      been recovered from individuals and organizations that 
      have committed health care fraud on the United States 
      Government and State Governments. 
      
HEALTH CARE FRAUD CASE NETS RECOVERY 
      OF $1.7 BILLION 
HCA Inc. (formerly known as 
      Columbia/HCA and HCA - The Healthcare Company) and HCA 
      subsidiaries agreed to pay the United States over $1.7 
      Billion including $631 million in 2003 for civil 
      penalties and damages arising from false claims the 
      government alleged it submitted to Medicare and other 
      federal health programs. In 2000, HCA subsidiaries pled 
      guilty to substantial criminal conduct and paid more 
      than $840 million in criminal fines, civil restitution 
      and penalties.  HCA will paid an additional $250 
      million to resolve overpayment claims arising from 
      certain of its cost reporting practices.  In total, 
      the government will have recovered $1.7 billion from 
      HCA. 
This Qui Tam settlement resolved 
      fraud allegations against HCA and HCA hospitals in nine 
      False Claims Act qui tam or whistleblower lawsuits 
      pending in federal court in the District of Columbia. 
      Under the federal False Claims Act, private individuals 
      may file suit on behalf of the United States and, if the 
      case is successful, may recover a share of the proceeds 
      for their efforts. Under the HCA settlement, the 
      whistleblowers will receive a combined share of 
      $151,591,500.00.