What Should Health Care Organizations Do to Reduce Billing Fraud and Abuse?
Katherine Drabiak, Jay Wolfson
Abstract
Whether physicians are being trained or encouraged to commit fraud within corporatized organizational cultures through contractual incentives (or mandates) to optimize billing and process more patients is unknown. What is known is that upcoding and misrepresentation of clinical information (fraud) costs more than $100 billion annually and can result in unnecessary procedures and prescriptions. This article proposes fraud mitigation strategies that combine organizational cultural enhancements and deployment of transparent compliance and risk management systems that rely on front-end data analytics.
Topics & Concepts
MisrepresentationCommitBusinessIncentiveSoftware deploymentAnalyticsHealth careComputer securityCompliance (psychology)Public relationsInternet privacyMedical emergencyMedicineComputer scienceData scienceOperating systemLawDatabasePolitical sciencePsychologySocial psychologyEconomicsEconomic growthMicroeconomicsPharmaceutical industry and healthcareHealthcare cost, quality, practicesHealthcare Policy and Management