Suozzi Appoints Ex-Prosecutor
to
Lead Medicaid Investigations
Mineola, NY – Nassau
County Executive Thomas R. Suozzi today appointed
a former prosecutor as Director of Medicaid Investigations
to lead a team of investigators, researchers and
analysts who are pursing cases of Medicaid waste
and fraud within the county.
Suozzi
tapped Nicole
Watkins, 42, a former assistant district attorney
in the Manhattan District Attorney’s
office, to the new position. As a prosecutor in the
DA’s Special Prosecutions and Trial Bureaus,
Watkins investigated and prosecuted complex financial
crimes. She also built hundreds of domestic violence
and child abuse cases, developed trial strategies,
presented cases before grand juries and conducted
trials. As a prosecutor, Watkins built bridges with
outside organizations, working closely with law enforcement
agencies and community groups.
“The appointment of Medicaid czar is a key
part of the fight, and I’m very pleased to
have an experienced, aggressive prosecutor like Nicole
Watkins take on the challenge,” Suozzi said.
“I
am looking forward to joining Nassau’s team,” Watkins
said. “The county’s taxpayers deserve
a strong advocate to ferret out anyone who may be
abusing taxpayer money in this very important program.”
In
addition to this new appointment, Suozzi announced
an effort to work with home health care agencies
in the county to ensure that their billing procedures
accurately reflect the services they are providing
to Medicaid recipients. A county investigation found
that 16 home health care agencies in Nassau County
could not fully substantiate more than $700,000 they
billed to Medicaid during a six-month period, Suozzi
said.
Investigators are examining the financial records
of 37 home health care agencies that have contracts
with the County. All 16 of the agencies that have
been investigated so far submitted claims for payment
the county believes should be better documented,
investigators found. The unsubstantiated claims to
Medicaid total $700,865.
The discrepancies in the agencies’ records
were identified through the Automated Time and Leave
system, which the county launched in 2003. Home health
care agencies that do business with the county must
require workers to call into the system when they
start a shift, and again at the end of the shift.
But investigators found that time records at each
of the 16 agencies were inconsistent. Some home health
aides checked in at the beginning of the shift, but
didn’t check out at the end. Some checked out,
but neglected to check in. And others didn’t
report in at all.
Investigators
found wide variations in the procedures used by agencies
to confirm their aides’ hours of work when
the automated system wasn’t used. This lead
the county to conclude that this is an area of the
Medicaid billing system that needs to be tightened
up.
“We’ve been successful in putting the
Medicaid issue front and center, and we’ve
fought for and achieved results both in Albany and
here in Nassau County,” Suozzi said. “This
investigation shows the Automated Time and Leave
System we put in place is working, alerting us to
potential problems. But more needs to be done. Each
and every one of the agencies we’ve looked
at so far submitted thousands of dollars in claims
they can’t substantiate. Each one. And that’s
just in six months. Every dollar wasted in Medicaid
hurts this program, which remains a vital safety
net for so many of the county’s residents who
cannot afford private health insurance.”
The appointment of Director
of Medicaid Investigations is the first element
in Suozzi’s four-point
plan to rein in out-of-control Medicaid costs. The
plan also calls for:
- establishing clear lines
of communication between various County and State
agencies and making the system more efficient;
- enhancing the County’s
technology to automatically red-flag potential
fraud;
- getting the message out to the public and encouraging
whistle-blowers to come forward.
The cases have been turned over to the State Department
of Health, said Peter Clement, Acting Commissioner
of the Nassau County Department of Health and Human
Services. If a state review finds wrong-doing, the
agencies could face fines, sanctions and criminal
or civil charges.
The Suozzi administration
looks forward to working with home health care
agencies that contract with the county to make
the Medicaid system more efficient. Many of the
agencies involved provide critical services to
the neediest of the county’s residents.
“We are happy that the members of the home
care industry want to work with us on this vital
initiative,” Suozzi said.
County investigators are currently examining the
records of the remaining 21 home health care agencies
that have contracts with Nassau County.
New York State spends two
and a half more per Medicaid beneficiary than the
national average. Since taking office in 2001,
Suozzi has made reforming the bloated Medicaid
system a priority. He launched the “Fix
Albany” campaign two years ago to convince
state lawmakers to take action, and was part of a
bi-partisan group of New York county executives that
successfully fought Albany for a cap on local governments’ share
of the burden.
The Suozzi administration has also gotten local
results. The county and the New York State Attorney
General last month sued a Rockville Centre home care
agency, Nurses on Hand Registry, Inc., and its owner
for allegedly falsifying documents. County investigators
found the company had falsely billed $200,000 to
Medicaid for 10,000 hours of care.
The 16 home health agencies identified
in the county’s
probe had varying numbers of Medicaid clients they
serviced, ranging from one Medicaid recipient to as
many as 34. |