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UnitedHealth Group has optimized its ability to increase Medicare Advantage members' sickness scores and corresponding government payments by directly employing thousands of physicians at Optum and integrating sophisticated software tools into clinical workflows, according to a Dec. 29 investigation from The Wall Street Journal.
CMS bases Medicare Advantage payments on patient risk scores derived from medical diagnoses. According to the report, UnitedHealth uses software to suggest potential diagnoses for patients, which physicians must address before completing patient visits. These diagnoses are often obscure or minimally substantiated, physicians formerly employed by the company told the WSJ. The report found that sickness scores for UnitedHealth patients transitioning from traditional Medicare increased by 55% during their first year in a Medicare Advantage plan, outpacing the 30% industry average and leading to higher payments.
UnitedHealth also incentivizes physicians to confirm diagnoses through performance-based compensation plans, according to the report.
In a statement to the WSJ, a spokesperson for UnitedHealth said the company's practices lead to "more accurate diagnoses, greater availability of care and better health outcomes and prevention, including less hospitalization, more cancer screenings and better chronic disease management."
In February, the newspaper reported that the DOJ has launched an antitrust investigation into UnitedHealth, probing the company's relationship between its insurance unit, UnitedHealthcare, and Optum.
Nearly every major Medicare Advantage carrier has been accused of or settled allegations of upcoding in recent years. An investigation published in the WSJ in July found MA plans received $50 billion in payments between 2018 and 2021 for "questionable diagnoses" insurers added to medical records. An audit by HHS' Office of Inspector General published in October found MA companies brought in $7.5 billion in "questionable" payments found during in-home visits and chart reviews.
In the most recent example, MA insurer Independent Health will pay up to $98 million to settle allegations that a now-defunct subsidiary knowingly submitted invalid diagnoses to boost Medicare Advantage payments, according to the Justice Department.
[EXTERNAL LINK] - Sickness scores surged for UnitedHealth Medicare Advantage patients: WSJ
CMS bases Medicare Advantage payments on patient risk scores derived from medical diagnoses. According to the report, UnitedHealth uses software to suggest potential diagnoses for patients, which physicians must address before completing patient visits. These diagnoses are often obscure or minimally substantiated, physicians formerly employed by the company told the WSJ. The report found that sickness scores for UnitedHealth patients transitioning from traditional Medicare increased by 55% during their first year in a Medicare Advantage plan, outpacing the 30% industry average and leading to higher payments.
UnitedHealth also incentivizes physicians to confirm diagnoses through performance-based compensation plans, according to the report.
In a statement to the WSJ, a spokesperson for UnitedHealth said the company's practices lead to "more accurate diagnoses, greater availability of care and better health outcomes and prevention, including less hospitalization, more cancer screenings and better chronic disease management."
In February, the newspaper reported that the DOJ has launched an antitrust investigation into UnitedHealth, probing the company's relationship between its insurance unit, UnitedHealthcare, and Optum.
Nearly every major Medicare Advantage carrier has been accused of or settled allegations of upcoding in recent years. An investigation published in the WSJ in July found MA plans received $50 billion in payments between 2018 and 2021 for "questionable diagnoses" insurers added to medical records. An audit by HHS' Office of Inspector General published in October found MA companies brought in $7.5 billion in "questionable" payments found during in-home visits and chart reviews.
In the most recent example, MA insurer Independent Health will pay up to $98 million to settle allegations that a now-defunct subsidiary knowingly submitted invalid diagnoses to boost Medicare Advantage payments, according to the Justice Department.
[EXTERNAL LINK] - Sickness scores surged for UnitedHealth Medicare Advantage patients: WSJ