Following a detailed account of how scam artists can easily gain access to health care cash, six Democratic senators this week sent a letter to federal regulators urging them to “close loopholes” that allow “bad actors” to commit fraud.

The letter came in response to a recent story by ProPublica and Vox that traced the brazen scam of a Texas personal trainer, who despite having no medical credentials was able to submit a blizzard of fake bills with some of the biggest insurance companies in the country and recoup millions. The story revealed not only how David Williams exploited weaknesses at each step, but how slowly the insurers responded to his ongoing fraud.
Williams’ con, for which he was later prosecuted, was initially enabled by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The federal agency issues and administers National Provider Identifiers, or NPIs, the unique numbers medical providers need to bill insurance plans. ProPublica found that Medicare doesn’t check the credentials of medical providers who apply for NPI numbers, such as whether they have valid licenses, which means scammers can lie to obtain them. Williams obtained at least 20 NPI numbers and used them to bill insurers.
The insurers he scammed — Aetna, Cigna and UnitedHealthcare — then allowed his fraud to proceed for years, largely unchecked. The companies also failed to verify that Williams was a licensed physician, even as he billed them for complex, and expensive, office visits as an out-of-network provider. Instead, they paid him more than $4 million over a span of four years, despite alerts from his ex-wife and her dad about his scam. Williams was convicted of four counts of health care fraud in 2018 and sentenced to about nine years in federal prison. The insurers declined to comment on his fraud.

Health insurers are regarded as fierce defenders of health care dollars. But the case of David Williams shows one reason America’s health care costs continue to rise. The personal trainer spent years posing as a doctor and billing the nation’s top insurers, making off with millions.

Current and former investigators for health insurers and federal prosecutors said the simplicity of Williams’ scam, combined with weak oversight and enforcement, raises questions about what’s being done to combat rampant health care fraud. Experts estimate fraud consumes about 10% of the country’s $3.5 trillion health care tab — although the story found that large swaths of fraud are not being tracked. Those losses are eventually passed on to the public in the form of higher monthly premiums and out-of-pocket costs as well as reduced benefits.
In their letter, the senators asked the leaders of the Department of Health and Human Services and its Medicare division to detail what they’re doing to fix gaps in the system that allow fraud to flourish, including what measures Medicare has taken to strengthen the requirements for obtaining an NPI number. “Commercial health plans and their enrollees depend on the validity of federal provider identification systems in order to ensure that patients’ dollars are well spent,” the senators wrote.
In a separate email, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, who spearheaded the response, said ProPublica’s reporting “highlighted an area where the government could be stemming fraud but isn’t.”
She and her colleagues, she said, “want to know how CMS is using its authority to safeguard against health care scams like the one David Williams carried out for years.”
And she noted that if the senators “find that the agency can be doing more, then we will look to arm CMS with the tools it needs to protect patients and taxpayers, or hold them accountable for the failure to use tools already at their disposal.”
A spokesman for Medicare said that the agency would not have a comment on the senators’ letter, but that it would be responding to it. The agency has previously said that federal regulations don’t allow it to verify the licenses of NPI applicants. In their letter, the lawmakers said they would work with the regulators to identify any authority Medicare needs to address the security gaps.
In an email sent to ProPublica after the Williams story was published, Medicare officials quibbled with the story’s description of the NPI as “essentially the key that unlocks access to health care dollars.” A Medicare spokesman said that the phrase overstated the NPI’s significance because the identifier doesn’t guarantee payment or enrollment in a health plan or that the provider is licensed.
But Medicare’s own literature says medical providers and plans “must use NPIs”in their financial transactions. Any claim submitted for payment is required to include a valid NPI.
Medicare also asserted that providers must enroll with a health insurance plan to get paid. That’s true for Medicare, which covers people who are disabled or over age 65. But it’s often not the case with private insurers. The Williams story showed how “out-of-network” providers — those who are not part of a private insurer’s network — can still get paid.
Joe Christensen, who spent five years as a director in Aetna’s Special Investigations Unit and 13 years as director of Utah’s insurance fraud division, said health plans typically pay out-of-network claims without checking the providers’ credentials. He said that makes the integrity of NPIs essential. “Anybody with an NPI can bill,” Christensen said. Others experts told ProPublica the same thing.

Fraud is one reason we all pay so much for health care. But there are simple fixes that would make it more difficult for scammers to operate.

Out-of-network billing is common with private insurance plans. A JAMA Internal Medicine study published this week showed about 42% of privately insured patients at in-network hospitals got out-of-network bills in 2016. If providers’ licenses are not verified when they obtain an NPI, or when they submit an out-of-network bill to a commercial insurer, it creates a massive opportunity for scammers.
The Williams story also detailed the sluggish response of insurers to clear evidence of fraud. The personal trainer’s ex-wife, Amy Lankford, and her father, Jim Pratte, discovered the fraud by happenstance and reported it to regulators and the insurers for years. Even after the insurers had ascertained that Williams was not a doctor, they continued to process his bills and pay him because he used new NPIs.
In their letter, the senators also asked what Medicare could do to hold insurance companies accountable for their response to fraud.
On Tuesday, Pratte said the senators’ letter gave him hope. “It’s totally ridiculous,” he said. “Common sense would say you have to have some kind of credentials verified before an NPI can be issued.”
Verifying NPI applicants’ credentials “would be a simple and significant step in addressing those issues,” Pratte said.
The letter was signed by Cortez Masto; Sheldon Whitehouse, of Rhode Island; Maggie Wood Hassan, of New Hampshire; Tammy Duckworth, of Illinois.; Michael F. Bennet, of Colorado; and Robert Menendez, of New Jersey. The senators requested a response, in writing, by Sept. 9.

 

 

 

This story originally appeared here