Qui Tam Complaint Alleges Duplicate Testing At the Nation’s Largest Laboratories
Government prosecutors are having a hard time deciding whether or not to intervene in a Medicare-Medicaid qui tam lawsuit filed by a former Quest Diagnostics phlebotomist who claims that both Quest and Laboratory Corporation of America (LabCorp) have been conducting duplicative tests and billing for them since at least 2002. The case is filed on […]
Government prosecutors are having a hard time deciding whether or not to intervene in a Medicare-Medicaid qui tam lawsuit filed by a former Quest Diagnostics phlebotomist who claims that both Quest and Laboratory Corporation of America (LabCorp) have been conducting duplicative tests and billing for them since at least 2002. The case is filed on behalf of the United States and the state of California by the relator Elisa Martinez, a former Quest phlebotomist, and covers both Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. According to the original complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of California, both labs routinely conduct duplicate testing on the same patient, on the same date of service, and bill for both sets of tests, when they receive orders from two different physicians. Martinez also alleges that, in some cases, extra samples were collected or samples were split in order to have enough specimen to conduct both sets of tests. Defendants in the case are Quest Diagnostics Inc., Quest Diagnostics Clinical Laboratories Inc., Quest Diagnostics Inc. of Nevada, Quest Diagnostics Nichols Institute, Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings, and Laboratory Corporation of America. Allegations The whistleblower alleges that defendants have knowingly submitted, and continue to submit, false claims for the unnecessary duplicate tests ordered by different doctors instead of taking a more reasonable approach such as performing the tests once and sending copies to each of the ordering physicians. The complaint gives specific details of examples and includes documentation of these specific events attached to the complaint as exhibits. Martinez says she complained about the practice and questioned other phlebotomists about it but was told to ask her supervisor. When she asked her supervisor, Martinez alleges that she was told to “listen more and back up everybody.” Martinez took it on herself to try to confirm her suspicions about the practice and to confirm that duplicate claims were actually being filed by asking other employees. She was told by other phlebotomists who work at other Quest patient service centers that it was done at their facilities also. The billing was confirmed for Martinez by an employee in the billing department who told her that each of the tests had unique accession numbers and was billed separately. LabCorp was brought into the suit because one of the phlebotomists who used to work there told Martinez that LabCorp had the same policy and was doing the same thing that Quest was doing. The counts and potential damages listed in the complaint include:
- Defendants have knowingly presented or caused to be presented false claims under federal FCA laws and are subject to treble damages and penalties under the FCA;
- Defendants knowingly made false statements, created false records, and omitted material facts in order to get claims paid that otherwise would not have been eligible for payment;
- Defendants did not remit overpayments even though they were aware that the claims were in violation of Medicare billing rules and the FCA; and
- The complaint repeats each of the above counts except that they are in violation of California’s False Claims Act and requests the penalties prescribed under that law.
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