Posted on 12/31/2019 3:31:47 PM PST by spintreebob
The federal government funneled billions in subsidies to software vendors who overstated or deceived the government about what their products could do, according to whistleblowers.(LYDIA ZURAW/KHN)
This story also ran on Fortune. This story can be republished for free (details).
Derek Lewis was working as an electronic health records specialist for the nations largest hospital chain when he heard about software defects that might even kill a patient.
The doctors at Midwest (City) Regional Medical Center in Oklahoma worried that the software failed to track some drug prescriptions or dosages properly, posing a huge safety concern, Lewis said. Lewis cited the alleged safety hazards in a whistleblower lawsuit that he and another former employee of Community Health Systems (CHS) filed against the Tennessee-based hospital chain in 2018.
The suit alleges that the company, which had $14 billion in annual revenue in 2018, obtained millions of dollars in federal subsidies fraudulently by covering up dangerous flaws in these systems at the Oklahoma hospital and more than 120 others it owned or operated at the time.
The whistleblowers also allege that Medhost, the Tennessee firm that developed the software, concealed defects during government-mandated reviews that were supposed to ensure safety.
Both CHS and Medhost have denied the allegations and moved to dismiss the suit. The motions are pending. Last month, Department of Justice lawyers wrote in court filings that they were still investigating the matter and had not yet decided whether to take over the case.
The lawsuit is one of dozens filed by whistleblowers, doctors and hospitals alleging that some electronic health records (EHR) software used in hospitals and medical offices has hidden flaws that may pose a danger to patients and that a substantial chunk of the $38 billion in federal subsidies went to companies that deceived the government about the quality of their products, an ongoing Fortune-KHN investigation shows. The subsidies were designed to persuade hospitals and doctors offices to install software that would track the medical history of every patient and share the information seamlessly with other health care providers.
But the software makers allegedly gamed the system, repeatedly. Three major EHR vendors have made multimillion-dollar settlement deals totaling $357 million over Justice Department investigations which include allegations that they rigged or otherwise gamed the governments certification test. At least two other companies are under investigation.
Beyond those cases, federal officials have paid hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies to doctors and hospitals that could not show they were even qualified to receive them, according to federal officials. Nearly 28% of doctors and 5% of hospitals who attested to meeting government standards later failed audits. Federal officials told Fortune and KHN that they have clawed back $941 million in improper subsidies.
Were entering an entirely new area of health care fraud, John OBrien, senior counsel with the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, said in a July 2017 video announcing a $155 million False Claims Act settlement with eClinicalWorks, one of the nations leading sellers of EHRs for physicians.
The concern is not just over wasteful spending of tax dollars. EHRs monitor the medicines people take and their vital signs, so software glitches that prevent doctors from accessing files quickly, that mix up patients or send vital test results to the wrong file can contribute to serious injuries, or even deaths.
In March, Fortune and KHN revealed that thousands of injuries, deaths or near misses tied to software defects, user errors and other problems have piled up in various government-sponsored and private repositories.
Ultimately, its about patients getting the right care, Andrew Vanlandingham, the HHS inspector generals senior counselor for health information technology, said in an interview. He said that investigators are gearing up for more scrutiny of the important industry, including closer monitoring to make sure that records software is safe.
The Justice Department accused eClinicalWorks, an EHR company whose medical software is used by 130,000 providers, of rigging the governments certification test, claims the company has denied. eCW settled the case for $155 million in 2017. Leaping Into The Digital Era
In 2009, Congress committed billions of dollars in economic stimulus funds to bring the era of paper medical records to a close. Officials hoped to cut down on medical errors caused by illegible paper records and draw on the power of massive troves of medical data to drive down the cost of health care and help develop improved treatments for disease.
The hastily devised plan offered Medicare doctors and other medical professionals up to $44,000 and $64,000 in subsidies if they bought the software and accepted patients on Medicaid, the federal health care program for low-income people.
The money was intended to help them pay vendors to install EHRs in their offices. Hospitals, which required more sophisticated and costlier software, could receive millions in subsidies, based on the number of inpatients treated. To give them a nudge, officials warned doctors and hospitals that failure to wire up would trigger gradual cuts in their Medicare payments. EHR vendors had to meet certification standards set by the HHS Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, or ONC.
Providers had to attest that their EHR software could perform a variety of functions, which the government described as making meaningful use of the technology.
Certification was essentially an open-book test in which the government gave vendors the questions in advance for instance, the names of 16 or so drugs the system would have to prescribe electronically to pass. The Justice Department has alleged that some vendors simply doctored their software to pass the test for example, programming the required codes for just the specified 16 drugs they would be tested on, rather than all medicines as officials had expected.
Frank Poggio who recently retired from a 45-year career in health technology, saw the cases of fraud coming, he said, because the tests were superficial, and if you wanted to game it, you could game it.
Poggio said there were many weaknesses in the system that allowed a vendor to show a prototype as opposed to live software.
Dr. Scott Monteith, a Michigan psychiatrist who served as an early certification juror, said he saw some limitations firsthand. He said one vendor took 30 minutes to produce a list of patients who had diabetes and also smoked, data he figured any computer program should be able to spit out in seconds. The vendor passed.
Thats an example of how poorly thought-out the whole thing was, said Monteith, who noted he was then, and still is, a big booster of EHRs.
Jeffery Daigrepont, a senior vice president at Coker Group, a firm that advises health providers on business decisions, said the government erred by handing out too much money in the early stages of the program, when many doctors and hospitals had not yet done much more than agree to participate.
It was an upside-down pyramid, he said. You got the bulk of the money for doing the least amount of effort.
Dr. John Halamka, a physician and Harvard Medical School professor who chaired the ONC standards committee, which wrote the certification rules, defended the process.
The only problem [with certification] is that it presupposed that the product the vendor certified would be the same product they sold, Halamka said. It presupposes that people will go into the certification process and participate in good faith.
That did not always happen in the rush to snatch up subsidy dollars, according to the whistleblowers suits. The Justice Department case against eClinicalWorks, which has 130,000 providers, accused the company of rigging tests to win certification, claims the company has denied. The company did not respond to numerous requests for comment.
The government accused Greenway Health, a Florida-based EHR developer with 75,000 providers, of doing the same thing. The DOJs complaint included a number of instant-message exchanges between Greenway employees in which they allegedly discuss their plan for gaming the certification process by shortcutting some functionality of the software. In February, Greenway Health settled with the government for just over $57 million without admitting wrongdoing.
The whistleblower case filed by Lewis and former co-worker Joey Neiman accuses the CHS hospital chain of submitting more than $385 million in false claims for EHR stimulus payments between 2012 and 2014.
The government accused Greenway Health, a Florida-based electronic health records company, of gaming the governments certification process. In 2019, the company settled those allegations for $57.25 million without admitting wrongdoing.
Visiting the Oklahoma hospital as part of a troubleshooting team in June 2015, Lewis heard that physicians worried flaws in the system could result in patients being sent home with the wrong drugs, doses or instructions, according to the suit.
Things got so bad that local doctors were threatening to admit patients elsewhere unless the hospital fixed the software problems, according to the suit.
In a statement, CHS said it had complete confidence in its records systems. The allegations made in the lawsuit against our hospitals are completely without merit, the company said. Medhost denied its software has flaws, noting in its statement: Hundreds of facilities have successfully used our software over the years and continue to do so today.
Few in the industry seemed surprised by such allegations. When news of the eClinicalWorks case broke, Farzad Mostashari, who led the ONC from 2011 to 2013, tweeted: Let me be plain-spoken. eClinicalWorks is not the only EHR vendor who flouted certification/misled customers. Other vendors better clean up.
The Electronic Health Record Association, a trade group that represents more than 30 vendors, did not respond to a request for comment. However, vendors have argued that they faced a tangle of regulations that required them to meet constantly shifting standards that government officials often could not explain.
ONC officials declined to answer written questions. But in a statement, ONC said it takes steps to ensure that products are safe for patients and usable by providers. ystem Glitches And Accusations Of Gaming The System
While the ONC sets the standards, the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) had the job of paying doctors and hospitals that attested to meeting the meaningful use criteria. As of September 2018, CMS had paid out $38.4 billion in these funds.
In 2012, CMS hired accounting firm Figliozzi and Co. of Garden City, N.Y., which audited almost 50,000 medical professionals. Nearly 28% failed, despite the fact that they had previously attested to meeting the standards. Hospitals did better, posting a 5% failure rate. CMS officials said they have recovered some $941 million in these improper payments. The losses to the Treasury are likely far higher because only 14% of the medical professionals and 40% of the hospitals receiving payments were audited.
Hamstrung By Technology?
ONC officials said they keep no log of complaints they receive.
A study published in JAMA this month found that 40% of the software that ONC singled out for post-marketing review had flaws that could lead to patient harm, including inaccurate drug codes, information displaying incorrectly and decimal points gone missing.
Thats a concerning number, and we have to do something to address that, said researcher Raj Ratwani, the director of the MedStar Health National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare and a co-author of the study. These systems were used in 786 hospitals and by 37,365 provider organizations, according to Ratwani, who said theres no way to know how many defects have been fixed.
ONC has decertified about 100 pieces of once-approved software products. But most were tiny market players that had few or no users and went out of business. PlatinumMD, which had just 48 meaningful users, is an example. In a 2014 whistleblower lawsuit, San Diego urologist Dr. Scott Brown alleged that PlatinumMD filed for $18,000 in subsidies on his behalf even though it had not yet fully installed his EHR. In February 2016, the defunct companys owners settled the case without admitting liability by paying the government $180,000.
Another 132 government-certified products have been flagged for corrective action due to non-conformities. As for the technology that the government alleges was fraudulently certified, its still used in health care settings across the country.
While those vendors faced multimillion-dollar settlements and now must operate under the oversight of a government monitor, their technology was not taken off the market. Nor were they dumped by many customers who, for the most part, however dissatisfied, were stuck with it.
ONC seemed to acknowledge that decertifying a large vendor would cause a major disruption, noting in an October 2016 regulation: Our first and foremost desire would be to work with developers to address any problems.
In the regulations, ONC cited the costs medical providers would face should their EHR vendor shut down as ranging from $33,000 to as much as $650 million.
It is very difficult to switch product, said Steve Waldren, chief medical informatics officer for the American Academy of Family Physicians. You couldnt just go down the street and pick up another EHR, put it in and move your data over.
He noted that beyond the considerable cost of the technology, providers would have to take time to learn a new system.
ONC does seem to have a stance that removing some of these players from the market would be very disruptive, said Brad Ulrich, a Tennessee health IT expert. They are almost too big to fail.
Trump is now not honoring those gentlemen's agreements. Trump is no gentleman.
This is just scratching the surface. The level of error in government software would never be allowed at the P&C Insurance Companies I worked at.
are these the same guys that wrote the Obamacare software?
The EHR will prove to have been a catastrophic error.
Repeal every word of The Unaffordable Care Act.
I notice they named whistleblowers here.
And electronic records are a pain in the neck for providers to fill out.
This will get you killed...
On thing that has injured or killed more than a few patients is sending the medical reports to India to be transcribed.
We’ve found that the common cause is a tsunami of money granted by the Obama administration. Contractors received $150-500 million for each web site that really needed only $10-20 million to develop. With all the money available to them, spending the money became the objective. Thousands of programmers were hired, most of whom apparently were completely incompetent. As each web site disaster unfolded, corruption and fraud to the point of criminality took over.
http://www.generationaldynamics.com/pg/ww2010.i.hcgov150823.htm
I’m so sick of fraud at all levels of society.
it starts with good-ole-boy networks, such as fraternities, sororities and the like. seems like a good place to start.
So what ? Did any of the criminal frauds go to prison ?
michelle obama must have a friend making money in this crimes just like the obamacare website.
software glitches that prevent doctors from accessing files quickly, that mix up patients or send vital test results to the wrong file
"Mistakes" buried in layers of bureaucratic SNAFUs means that nobody is responsible or accountable for anything.
Where's the reset button? The best I can do on my end is hope that I don't get sick or injure myself. :(
Not for my doctor!
They are inefficient and just plain garbage!!!!!
Clicking on the wrong thing on a computer program is much more common then “poor handwriting” mistakes.
I think one of the great threats to our health care system, is that hospitals employee’s are not being trained to use a fall back paper system.
In 2012, a derecho hit our area and one local hospital had to close down because they didn’t have enough generator capacity to run their computers!
In 2016, Med-star Georgetown Hospital in DC ERMs were hacked and held for ransom. It was a mess. They didn’t train their personnel to use a paper fall back. Newbie docs were clueless when it came to writing out prescriptions!!!
We are way to dependent on something that is so fragile.
“The federal government funneled billions in subsidies to software vendors who overstated or deceived the government about what their products could do, according to whistleblowers.(LYDIA ZURAW/KHN)
Just another “successful” government run program.
A gentle reminder - what the vast majority of people think of as THEIR medical records, are in fact, NOT theirs. They are the doctor’s medical records about you.
Another long-term issue is the default question, “Do you have guns in the house?” This can create a database of all gun owners if it hasn’t already been compiled.
Just ask the medical billers & coders; they’ve been screaming for years now that EHR is another way for fraud to creep in.
It’s also another way to offshore jobs, risk patient identity theft and skirt USA HIPAA laws. You mean to tell me that every physician who works for a hospital that does their billing & coding is going to fly over to whatever country is handling their business to make sure this information is safe?! I have a bridge to sell you in Phoenix.
Don’t get me STARTED on this subject!! UGH!!!
The federal government funneled billions in subsidies to software vendors who overstated or deceived the government about what their products could do, according to whistleblowers.(LYDIA ZURAW/KHN)”
As a former DOD Employer I can assure you that EVERY freaking software solution was immediately identified by us (the user) as having flaws. When asked to comment on the issues we would issue pages of comments and suggestions. Upper management chose to believe the vendor who would basically blow off the issues with statements like “This will be addressed in a week or so after the software implementation date.” Then it was ignored or not fixed right.
Result was employees having to run both the old and the new software (which of course did not communicate with each other) and created more workload.
Saw it dozens of times.
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