Texas medical center institutions agree to pay $15M record settlement involving concurrent billing claims for critical surgeries

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Texas medical center institutions agree to pay $15M record settlement involving concurrent billing claims for critical surgeries​


Monday, June 24, 2024
Share
right caret

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of Texas
HOUSTON – Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center (BSLMC), Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) and Surgical Associates of Texas P.A. (SAT) have jointly agreed to pay $15 million to resolve claims they billed for concurrent heart surgeries in violation of Medicare teaching physician and informed consent regulations, announced U.S. Attorney Alamdar S. Hamdani.
BSLMC is a joint venture between CommonSpirit Health, a national hospital chain, and BCM, a medical school in Houston. BSLMC operates a teaching hospital, formerly known as St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital, in its Medical Center. BCM employs teaching physicians and residents who perform services at BSLMC, including Dr. Joseph Coselli, 71, Houston, and Dr. Joseph Lamelas, 63, Miami, Florida. SAT is a medical practice group affiliated with various cardiothoracic surgeons, including Dr. David Ott, 77, Houston.
The investigation began Aug. 7, 2019, upon the filing of a sealed qui tam lawsuit aka whistleblower complaint. The whistleblower alleged Coselli, Lamelas and Ott - three heart surgeons who performed at St. Luke’s - engaged in a regular practice of running two operating rooms at once and delegating key aspects of extremely complicated and risky heart surgeries to unqualified medical residents. The heart surgeries at issue are some of the most complicated operations performed at any hospital including coronary artery bypass grafts, valve repairs and aortic repair procedures. These surgeries typically involve opening a patients’ chest and placing the patient on the bypass machine for some portion of time.
Medicare regulations dictate when teaching physicians can leave the operating room for any operation, no matter how complex.
The settlement resolves allegations that from June 3, 2013, to Dec. 21, 2020, Ott, Coselli and Lamelas violated these rules in various respects. Surgeons often ran two operating rooms at once and failed to attend the surgical “timeout”— a critical moment where the entire team would pause and identify key risks to prevent surgical errors, according to the allegations.
Additionally, surgeons would allegedly enter a second or occasionally a third operation without designating a backup surgeon. At times, the surgeons allegedly hid these activities by falsely attesting on medical records they were physically present for the “entire” operation. In addition, medical staff did not inform patients the surgeon would be leaving the room to perform another operation.
“Patients entrusted these surgeons with their lives - submitting to operations where one missed cut is the difference between life and death,” said Hamdani. “Allegedly, the patients were unaware their doctor was leaving for another operating room. This settlement reaffirms the importance of Medicare requirements governing surgeon presence and ensuring that no physician - no matter how prominent or successful - can skirt around the rules.”
“The complete disregard for patient safety exhibited by these three doctors put patients at risk and violated Medicare regulations for their own convenience and greed,” said Special Agent in Charge Jason E. Meadows of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “This record settlement demonstrates our steadfast commitment to protecting Medicare beneficiaries and working with our law enforcement partners to utilize all the tools in our arsenal to hold accountable those who steal from Medicare and other federal health care programs.”
“Any time any one of us goes under the knife as a vulnerable patient, we implicitly trust that the surgeons and medical professionals have our best interest at heart, especially here in Houston’s world-renowned hospitals,” said Special Agent in Charge Douglas Williams of the FBI - Houston field office. “In this case, doctors gambled with their patients’ care, during complicated open-heart surgeries no less, compromising quality of care over quantity and then falsely billed Medicare for reimbursement of services they improperly delegated. We hope today’s civil settlement announcement represents accountability for doctors and hospitals everywhere.”
The $15 million recovery is the largest settlement to date involving concurrent surgeries.
The False Claims Act entitles the private whistleblower who commences the suit to a portion of the recovery. In this case, the whistleblower will receive $3,075,000.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office, DHHS-OIG and FBI conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brad Gray and Andrew Bobb are handling the case.
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
My issue is collusion between the government and doctors. Navalny had to leave the country to find out he got a dose. Well it is the same in the U.S.

ap19099418633938.jpeg


One scheme they will do is find out a medical 'vulnerability' and develop sophisticated schemes to exploit it, steer you towards jobs to make your shit 10x worse. Prevent you from developing medical evidence to get your claim for disability approved. I actually pieced together my medical condition based on activities I was steered toward on various jobs and reviewing medical records.

I go into hospitals not for medical care but to gather intel when I detect a suspicious pattern of behavior on jobs. The best time to get care is when you are awake and alert, this will tell you how they come at you with a heart attack or stroke.
 
Last edited:

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
If they discharge you without telling you your medical condition but you recover, that is a red flag. Another is misdiagnosing you on purpose, I had a couple of Indian doctors try this on me, they seem to be a tool for these operations.

I will bring in my own equipment and change up their setup and observe how they respond on jobs. One person got upset when I was not going along with the program, again make a mental note.
 
Top