Ethics and Patient Safety Meet Fraud and Abuse - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ethics and Patient Safety Meet Fraud and Abuse

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Ethics and Patient Safety Meet Fraud and Abuse Jay Wolfson, DrPH, JD Distinguished Service Professor Public Health and Medicine Associate Vice President – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics and Patient Safety Meet Fraud and Abuse


1
Ethics andPatient Safety MeetFraud and Abuse
  • Jay Wolfson, DrPH, JD
  • Distinguished Service Professor
  • Public Health and Medicine
  • Associate Vice President
  • Health Law, Policy and Safety
  • University of South Florida
  • The Quality Colloquium 19 August 2008

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Three Views
  • The University Surgeon and His Wonderful Device
    Blinded by What We Believe to be True
  • The Terri Schiavo Matter Proffering
    Misleading/Unsupportable Clinical Advice
  • The Medicare Secondary Payor Act Charging to Fix
    the Window You Broke

5
What do health care providers have to worry about?
  • Screwing up clinically
  • Getting caught screwing up clinically
  • Getting sued for screwing up clinically
  • Seeing others proffering incorrect clinical
    advice
  • Getting arrested by the Feds for fraud
  • Having to fix something you screwed up
  • Getting paid to fix something you screwed up
  • Being the victim of somebody elses clinical
    error
  • Having your error publicized nationally

6
Blinded by the LightThe Trephene
  • Well respected chair of university Ophthalmology
    Department has a vision of a more efficient
    corneal transplantation process
  • Receives federal grants to develop and test
    device and procedure
  • Receives IRB approval and initiates multi-year
    study
  • Non-cylindrical trephene cuts corneas from
    cadavers with tabs around circumference
  • Fewer stitches, ostensibly faster healing
  • Conduct study on cats and assess
  • Deviates dramatically from IRB protocol .

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Lessons Learned?
  • University IRBs have aggressively re-designed
    their oversight requirements
  • Federal and state agencies have stepped up
    compliance reviews of university billing and
    clinical operations
  • Patients have initiated malpractice suits against
    physicians and institutions conducting/sponsoring
    research
  • Some are calling for additional levels of
    research/practice oversight and reporting

10
The Schiavo Matter Bearing (false?) Witness?The
Quality/Good Science Interface
  • Board Certified neurologist tells family that Ms.
    Schiavos condition is reversible
  • Family practitioner presents affidavit to court
    during appeal stating that condition is
    reversible
  • U.S. Senate Majority Leader, also a respected
    cardiovascular surgeon, testifies on the floor of
    Congress that Ms. Schiavo is not PVS
  • Dozens of physicians sign petitions and proffer
    letters to the court and the press stating that
    Ms. Schiavos condition is reversible and that
    she is not PVS

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13
CT Scan (Normal and Schiavos)
14
Lessons Learned?Monitoring and Sanctioning the
Clinical Activities of Colleagues?
  • What do we expect of our colleagues with respect
    to intellectual and scientific integrity, as it
    may relate to quality, safety and measurability?
  • When does what a clinician or expert says become
    not only malpractice, but a contributing factor
    in quality or safety?
  • How can we respond as a community of
    professionals to poor dangerous expert behaviors?

15
Charging to Fix the Window You Broke
  • How habit, complacency and lack of enforcement by
    public and private payors and regulators has led
    to a combination of ethics, safety and fraud
    issues

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The Medicare Secondary Payer Act 42 USC Section
1395 y C b)
  • Elements
  • General Implications
  • Specific Potential Applications
  • Corporate hospital chains
  • Not-for-profit chains
  • Large independents
  • Multispecialty groups
  • Commercial insurance

22
Present on Admission
  • Physicians and hospitals must code conditions at
    admission that can be used to assess the extent
    to which post admission processes may have caused
    a adverse event.

23
Shots Across the Bow
  • Brockovich, on behalf of the United States of
    America v. Tenet Healthcare Corporation, et
    al.,Case No. CV 06-4542 DOC (MLGx) (U.S. District
    Court for the Central District of California,
    2006)
  • Her seven lawsuits, filed in Los Angeles
    County Superior Court, allege that healthcare
    companies are charging Medicare, the federally
    funded health plan for seniors, to treat
    illnesses they helped cause by medical error
    or neglect.
  • The lawsuits do not involve specific allegations
    of wrongdoing but seek instead to find evidence
    of such treatments, arguing that Medicare should
    be reimbursed.

24
  • In November 2006, Tenets motion to dismiss a
    civil suit filed by plaintiff Erin Brockovich,
    was granted. Plaintiff alleged that Tenet and
    several subsidiaries inappropriately received
    reimbursement from Medicare for treatment given
    to patients whose injuries were caused by Tenet
    as a result of medical error or neglect, and
    sought damages of twice the amount that Tenet was
    allegedly obligated to pay or reimburse Medicare
    in connection with the treatment in question,
    plus interest, together with plaintiffs costs
    and fees, including attorneys fees.
  • After Tenets motion to dismiss was granted,
    Brockovich filed an appeal of the dismissal to
    the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit,
    but later voluntarily dismissed the appeal in
    March 2008.

25
Ethics, Safety and Fraud
  • More valid, accessible data, will afford a
    greater ability to monitor and measure clinical
    and administrative performance and activities
    against benchmarks for outcome, quality and
    safety, as well as fraud and abuse.
  • Increasingly scarce resources will pit measures
    of quality and safety against clinicians and
    institutions
  • The nexus of fraud safety and quality is at the
    crossroads of ethics.
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