Md. Case: An Issue of Medical Judgment or Criminal Fraud?

Md. Case: An Issue of Medical Judgment or Criminal Fraud?

September 3, 2010

Md. Case: An Issue of Medical Judgment or Criminal Fraud?

By: Ifrah Law

On September 1, 2010, John R. McLean, a former cardiologist based in Salisbury, Md., was indicted by a federal grand jury for health care fraud and for making false statements to Medicare and Medicaid.

McLean is charged with performing operations to insert stents – devices to treat coronary disease – in the arteries of patients who did not need them according to accepted medical practice, and then falsifying their medical records to make it appear that they did need them. He lost his hospital privileges in 2007 after a hospital probe of his practices involving stents.

Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance won’t pay for a stent unless the patient has been diagnosed with a 70 percent or greater blockage of the artery. The indictment alleges that McLean inserted stents in patients with significantly less blockage but falsely stated that they were at the 70 percent level or above. Stents and the follow-up appointments and tests can be lucrative for a cardiologist, and the indictment says that McLean benefited from unnecessary stents to the tune of $519,000.

Prosecutors say it’s all about McLean receiving cash that he wasn’t entitled to.

The indictment says McLean engaged in a “scheme and artifice to defraud” Medicare, Medicaid and private insurers – specifically, by obtaining money based on “false and fraudulent pretenses.”

“We do not bring federal prosecutions for discretionary judgments about which reasonable medical professionals might disagree,” Rod Rosenstein, the U.S. attorney for Maryland, said in announcing the indictment.

We don’t condone falsifying medical records. But many doctors seem to think that stents can be helpful to patients even well below the 70 percent level of blockage, and no one has said that McLean’s patients died at higher rates or tended to have worse medical outcomes.

In our view, hospitals themselves are the best equipped to police doctors who aren’t following the rules, and prosecutors should be careful that they don’t make a disagreement over medical procedures into a federal criminal case.

Ifrah Law

Ifrah Law

Ifrah Law is a passionate team of experts that understands the importance of listening to and addressing specific concerns of clients – when facing the heat of a federal investigation or the ire of a business competitor. Experience in complex cases related to online gambling and sports betting, internet marking and advertising, and white collar litigation.

Related Practice(s)
Other Posts
ICOs Involving Non-Issued Cryptocurrency May Be Prosecuted Under Federal Securities Laws
White-Collar Crimes |
Sep 19, 2018

ICOs Involving Non-Issued Cryptocurrency May Be Prosecuted Under Federal Securities Laws

By: Jeffrey Hamlin
How to Raise Capital Through Registration Exempt ICOs
White-Collar Crimes |
May 15, 2018

How to Raise Capital Through Registration Exempt ICOs

By: Jeff Ifrah
Congress Passes the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act of 2017
White-Collar Crimes |
Mar 26, 2018

Congress Passes the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act of 2017

By: Jeffrey Hamlin
SEC’s Updated Cybersecurity Disclosure Guidelines Leave Questions Unanswered
White-Collar Crimes |
Mar 2, 2018

SEC’s Updated Cybersecurity Disclosure Guidelines Leave Questions Unanswered

By: Ifrah Law

Subscribe to Ifrah Law’s Insights