Latest News

SUNY Downstate Emergency Medicine Doc Charged With $1.5M Fraud


 

Even Small Medical Offices Can Act to Prevent Fraud

What can be done to prevent this kind of fraud? “Each employee should be required to submit actual receipts or scanned copies, and the reimbursement requests should be reviewed and inputted by a separate department or office of the organization to ensure that the expenses are legitimate,” Mr. Weber said. “In addition, all credit card statements should be available for review by the organization either simultaneously with the bill going to the employee or available for audit or review at any time without notification to the employee. Expenses that are in certain categories should be prohibited automatically and coded to the card so such a charge is rejected by the credit card bank.”

Smaller businesses — like many medical practices — may not have the manpower to handle these roles. In that case, Mr. Weber said, “The key is segregation or separation of duties. The bookkeeper cannot be the person receiving the bank statements, the payments from patients, and the invoices from vendors. There needs to be at least one other person in the loop to have some level of control.”

One strategy, he said, “is that the practice should institute a policy that only the doctor or owner of the practice can receive the mail, not the bookkeeper. Even if the practice leader does not actually review the bank statements, simply opening them before handing them off to the bookkeeper can provide a level of deterrence [since] the employee may get caught if someone else is reviewing the bank statements.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Expanding Use of GLP-1 RAs for Weight Management
MDedge Endocrinology
Revamping Resident Schedules to Reduce Burnout
MDedge Endocrinology
Primary Care Internal Medicine Is Dead
MDedge Endocrinology
For Richer, for Poorer: Low-Carb Diets Work for All Incomes
MDedge Endocrinology
Healthcare Workers Face Gender-Based Violence
MDedge Endocrinology
Push, Fail, Push Harder: Olympic Athletes Who Became MDs
MDedge Endocrinology
Doctor on Death Row: Ahmad Reza Djalali Begins Hunger Strike
MDedge Endocrinology
The Rise of the Scribes
MDedge Endocrinology
A Guide to Eating Healthy While Working in Healthcare
MDedge Endocrinology
Insurers’ Rules and AI for Preauthorization: ‘Ethically Nuts,’ Says Ethicist
MDedge Endocrinology