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PA Lab Must Pay $7.3M To NJ After Charging $1,000 For $3 For Drug Tests: Comptroller

A Pennsylvania-based lab has been ordered to pay $7.3 to the state of New Jersey after overcharging New Jersey’s Medicaid program for urine drug testing services, officials said.

Lab.

Lab.

Photo Credit: fernandozhiminaicela Pixabay

Atlantic Diagnostic Laboratories (ADL) in Bensalem violated Medicaid regulations when it charged Medicaid as much as $1,035 per drug test while charging other payers as little as $2.38 for the same test, New Jersey's State Comptroller's office (OSC) said citing an audit report.

Medicaid paid ADL between $63.40 and $180.40 for these same services. ADL also improperly billed for tests that the physician or provider had not ordered or for which ADL lacked sufficient documentation, OSC found.

The findings were from a sampling of claims from January 2015 to June 2018. During the audit period, ADL was one of the New Jersey Medicaid program’s highest-paid providers of independent clinical laboratory services.

OSC’s audit found that ADL violated one or more Medicaid regulations in all 261 instances sampled. In 88 of the 261 instances, ADL either billed for tests the healthcare provider had not ordered or lacked required documentation or signatures. 

OSC also found that ADL improperly unbundled claims, which is prohibited and typically results in a higher reimbursement rate for a provider. OSC is seeking to recover $2,943,586 for documentation deficiencies, $1,140,043 for unbundling claims, and a $3,269,332 civil penalty for knowingly submitting claims that violated the Medicaid regulations that prohibit laboratories from charging Medicaid more than other payers for identical tests.

In addition to overcharging Medicaid, ADL improperly sponsored three golf outings for one of its referring providers, OSC said. State law prohibits laboratories from giving “refunds, discounts or kickbacks, whether in the form of money, supplies, equipment, or other things of value,” and it prohibits laboratories from providing “other considerations to a physician or other practitioner, whether or not a rebate is involved.”

OSC made 11 recommendations.

The Office of the State Comptroller (OSC) is an independent State agency that works to make government in New Jersey more efficient, transparent and accountable. 

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