Doctors & Other Professionals Billing Medicare At Higher Rates
Thousands of doctors and other medical professionals have billed Medicare for increasingly complicated and costly treatments over the past decade, adding $11 billion or more to their fees — and signaling a possible rise in medical billing abuse, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity.
Between 2001 and 2010, doctors increasingly moved to higher-paying codes for billing Medicare for office visits while cutting back on lower-paying ones, according to a year-long examination of about 362 million claims. In 2001, the two highest codes were listed on about 25 percent of the doctor-visit claims; in 2010, they were on 40 percent.
Similarly, hospitals sharply stepped up the use of the highest codes for emergency room visits while cutting back on the lowest codes.
- Tags:
- American Medical Association (AMA)
- billing codes
- Brantley B. Pace
- Center for Public Integrity
- Cindy Schamp
- Donald M. Berwick
- electronic medical records (EMRs)
- fraud
- healthcare costs
- hospitals
- Jeremy A. Lazarus
- Marilyn Tavenner
- Mark B. McClellan
- medical billing abuse
- Medicare
- Stephen Pitts
- Thomas Weida
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