Nursing homes to educate on fraud detection
Contemporary Long-Term Care Weekly, December 27, 2006
Effective January 2007, nursing homes are required to teach their employees how to detect fraudulent acts and report it to the government, reported The New York Times. The new law is part of the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) and will require nursing homes receiving at least $5 million a year in Medicaid reimbursement to train their staff on ways to detect fraud, waste, and abuse. In 2006, the government recovered more than $3.1 billion in cases involving fraud; of that amount, 72% was from the healthcare industry. Under the DRA, employees who report fraud will be protected against retaliation, according to The Times.
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