Our colleague Melissa L. Jampol of Epstein Becker Green has a new post on the Commercial Litigation Update blog that will be interest to our readers: “Opioids, Sober Homes and ‘Telefraud’: An Overview of the DOJ 2020 Healthcare Fraud Takedown.”
The following is an excerpt:
As we have previously reported, opioids have been a large focus of DOJ in the past few years in an attempt to stem the opioid epidemic through increased enforcement and this takedown is a continuation of those efforts. DOJ stated that the charges involved in the opioid-related takedown involved the submission of $800 million in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, and private insurance companies for treatments that were allegedly medically unnecessary and often never provided. DOJ also continued the trend of charging medical professionals with the illegal distribution of opioids (or operating pill mills). Providers need to be mindful of safe opioid prescribing guidelines, develop and implement rigorous compliance programs, and keep up to date on ever shifting federal and state laws in this area.
Over the past few years, we have been predicting that telehealth is ripe for enforcement. Although we have seen enforcement activity involving telehealth providers in the past, this is the first time that DOJ/HHS has focused so sharply on telehealth providers as the target of a major takedown. The 2020 Takedown is a warning to those in the telehealth industry to pay special attention to compliance infrastructures and efforts especially as use of telehealth to serve patients expands, and related regulations loosen in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Click here to read the full post on the Commercial Litigation Update blog.
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