Medicare paid doctors $457 million in 2012 for 16 million tests to detect drugs — from prescription narcotics to heroin, according to a new report from Reuters.
A sharp rise in prescription drug abuse among older Americans has caused a nationwide increase in urine and blood tests, procedures that typically are potential areas of fraud among providers. The Office of the Inspector General of Health and Human Services, which heads Medicare, first started investigating scams in such tests in 2011.
The exclusive analysis published on Thursday also found that Medicare administrators paid three Connecticut doctors a total of $1.4 million after they billed the insurance program in 2012 for 24,000 drug tests — for only 145 patients. The individuals conducted as much as four times more drug tests per patient than any other provider in the country.
Two of the three doctors denied wrongdoing when questioned by Reuters, and the other individual declined to comment.
In addition, Medicare, the national federal insurance program for Americans aged 65 and older, issued $6.7 billion in 2010 for health care visits that were improperly coded, or 21% of the costs designated for assessment visits, according to the report.









