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"And it's not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people
who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment
as a way to explain their frustrations."
-- Barack Obama, April 2, 2008
►
The
Report Obama and Congress has not shown you I
have said with good reason that the government wants to force
insurance companies to accept someone with pre-existing conditions
to cut government health costs by passing it to you instead. A
hidden tax. Because
it will dump roughly the $33 billion it costs per year for people
(660,000+ on the government dole - 1.1 million+ total) with AIDS to
private insurance rates. I already lost my -private- insurance
policy when it was canceled for everyone because no one foresaw the
AIDs problems. Congress
is not treating insurance companies like insurance companies, they
are preventing free association in violation of the Constitution and
usurping State rights with that proposed mandate AND they are
treating insurance companies like a public hospital instead. It will
either drive insurance companies out of business or drive our own
policy costs through the roof so we can not afford them. Either way
the socialists win.
Obama and
Congress are lying to you, they know the truth, and are hiding it. Just
in this one report look at the $ saved from fake AIDs claims. For
every dollar they spend on fraud prevention they save $17 dollars!
17:1 ! Search for it in the text below. I
came about this report because when I heard Slick Willie II mention
"electric wheel chairs" in his speech about Medicare
fraud, I just knew something was wrong about it. When I started the
search I figured Obama had something about wheel chairs over
Pelosi's head, I was wrong. He was superficially quoting this
report. While
people are unemployed and billions of stimulus dollars borrowed from
China are wasted, Congress has wasted over a year on Obama Care
while not saving tens of billions in combating fraud. They just want
to dump more money into the problem instead. I called senators and
representatives and e-mailed them about the 1854 senate document I
just posted. I neglected to tell them I had this report and mailed
it to others. OOPS! When
you have them all sitting around that table on Feb 25th, know that
they are all liars and concealers of the truth. Note the date. All
the mis-spellings are the work of our highly paid government
employees that can not use a spell checker for work submitted to
Congress. Please
note the things such as registering health care workers and giving
the government your phone numbers which found their way into the
tombs of hell called Obama Care. ============================== Statement
of Lewis Morris
Chief
Counsel
Office
of Inspector General
Department
of Health and Human Services
April 22,
2009
Before
the Senate Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management, Government
Information,
Federal Services, and International Security
THE
FRAMEWORK FOR COMBATING FRAUD, WASTE, AND ABUSE IN FEDERAL HEALTH
CARE PROGRAMS
On
behalf of Inspector General Levinson and the Office of Inspector
General (OIG), I thank you for the opportunity to discuss the OIG’s
health care antifraud strategy; the different ways Federal health
care programs are vulnerable to waste, fraud, and abuse; and the
ways Congress can help strengthen the integrity of these critical
programs.
Collaboration
Is Essential to a Successful Antifraud Strategy
OIG
is an independent, nonpartisan agency committed to protecting the
integrity of the 300 agencies and programs administered by the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Approximately
80 percent of OIG’s resources are dedicated to promoting the
efficiency and effectiveness of the Medicare and Medicaid programs
and to protecting these programs and their beneficiaries from fraud
and abuse. Thanks to the hard work of our 1,500 employees and our
law enforcement partners, from FY 2006 through FY 2008, OIG’s
investigative receivables averaged $2.04 billion and its audit
disallowances resulting from Medicare and Medicaid oversight
averaged $1.22 billion per year.
The
result was a Medicare-and Medicaid-specific return on investment for
OIG oversight of $17 to $1.
In
addition, in FY 2008, implemented OIG recommendations resulted in
$16.72 billion in savings and funds put to better use.
OIG
is not alone in the fight to combat fraud and preserve the integrity
of Federal health care programs. We work closely with the Department
of Justice (DOJ) and our State law
enforcement
partners, as well as with our colleagues in the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Food and Drug Administration.
The Government’s enforcement efforts in FY 2008 resulted in
455 criminal actions against individuals or entities that engaged in
crimes against departmental programs and 337 civil actions, which
included False Claims Act and unjust enrichment lawsuits filed in
Federal district court, Civil Monetary Penalties Law settlements,
and administrative recoveries related to provider self-disclosure
matters. Also in FY 2008, OIG excluded 3,129 individuals and
entities for fraud or abuse that affected Federal health care
programs and/or our beneficiaries. Common reasons for exclusion
included convictions for crimes concerning Medicare or Medicaid,
patient abuse or neglect, and license revocation.
The
collaborative antifraud efforts of HHS and DOJ are rooted in the
Health Insurance
Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996, P. L. 104-191 (HIPAA), which
directed the
Secretary
of HHS, acting through OIG and the Attorney General, to promulgate a
joint Health Care Fraud and Abuse Control (HCFAC) Program. The HCFAC
Program and Guidelines went into effect on January 1, 1997. HIPAA
requires HHS and DOJ to report annually to Congress on HCFAC Program
results and accomplishments. HCFAC Program activities are supported
by a dedicated funding stream within the Hospital Insurance Trust
Fund.
In
its 11th year of operation, the HCFAC Program’s continued
success confirms the soundness of a collaborative approach to
identify and prosecute health care fraud, to prevent future fraud
and abuse, and to protect Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. Since
its inception, HCFAC Program activities have returned over $11.2
billion to the Medicare Trust Fund. As I will discuss, the
Government’s efforts to address durable medical equipment
(DME) and infusion fraud in South Florida and Los Angeles exemplify
the benefits of a collaborative approach. Although I will highlight
fraud in the area of DME and infusion, fraud and abuse occur among
all types of health care providers and suppliers.
The Federal
Health Care Programs Are Vulnerable to Waste, Fraud, and Abuse
The
United States spends more than $2 trillion on health care every
year. The National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association estimates
conservatively that of that amount, at least 3 percent—or more
than $60 billion each year—is lost to fraud. For Federal
health care programs to serve the medical needs of beneficiaries and
remain solvent for future generations, the Government must pursue an
aggressive and comprehensive strategy to address waste, fraud, and
abuse. That strategy must be broader than investigating and
prosecuting detected instances of fraud. Thus, our strategy is also
informed by OIG audits, evaluations, and inspections, which have
identified payments for unallowable services and improper services
not rendered, and other types of improper claims. OIG also has found
that Medicare’s reimbursement rates for certain items and
services
are too high, resulting in wasteful expenditures and opportunities
for fraud.
OIG
reviews have identified payments for unallowable services, improper
coding, and other types of improper payments for various inpatient
and outpatient services. Improper payments range from reimbursement
for services provided to inadequately documented and inadvertent
mistakes to outright fraud and abuse. Expenditures for inpatient
services, including those provided by inpatient hospitals and
skilled nursing facilities, account for one-third of all Medicare
expenditures. OIG work has uncovered problems with hospitals taking
advantage of enhanced payments by manipulating billing; hospitals
reporting inaccurate wage data, which affects future Medicare
payments; and inpatient facilities that may be gaming prospective
payment reimbursement systems by discharging or transferring
patients to other facilities for financial rather than clinical
reasons.
OIG
also continues to identify vulnerabilities related to certain types
of services provided by physicians and other health professionals,
including services related to advanced imaging, pain management, and
mental health. For example, OIG found that from 1995 to 2005,
expenditures for advanced imaging paid under the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule grew more than fourfold, from $1.4 million to $6.2
million. Services provided by independent diagnostic testing
facilities (IDTFs) accounted for nearly 30 percent of this growth.
OIG work has found problems with IDTFs, including noncompliance with
Medicare requirements and billing for services that were not
reasonable and necessary.
While
we are continuing to identify vulnerabilities throughout the
program, OIG and our law enforcement partners also are focusing
antifraud efforts in geographic areas at high risk for Medicare
fraud, including South Florida and Los Angeles. Our investigations
identified significant vulnerabilities, including: (1) DME suppliers
circumventing enrollment and billing controls; (2) high levels of
improper Medicare payment for certain types of DME, prosthetics,
orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS); and (3) inappropriate
reimbursement rates for certain DMEPOS.
In
2007, the Government launched in South Florida a Medicare Fraud
Strike Force
(Strike
Force) made up of staff from OIG, the U.S. Attorney’s Office
for the Southern District of Florida, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and DOJ. The Strike Force’s mission is to
identify, investigate, and prosecute DMEPOS suppliers and infusion
clinics suspected of Medicare fraud. To date, the Strike Force has
opened 137 cases, convicted 146 of its targets, and secured $186
million in criminal fines and civil recoveries.
The
recent investigation and prosecution of Medcore Group LLC (Medcore)
and M&P Group of South Florida (M&P) illustrates the
Medicare program’s vulnerabilities. Medcore and M&P
operated as Miami-based HIV clinics from approximately 2004
through 2006, billed approximately $5.3 million to the Medicare
program, and actually received more than $2.5 million in payments.
From their inception, Medcore and M&P were set up as criminal
enterprises designed to defraud Medicare. The scheme was to submit
claims for medically unnecessary HIV infusion and injection
treatments. The three owners of Medcore and M&P included a
former gas station attendant, a trained cosmetologist, and an
individual currently incarcerated for Medicare fraud involving a
separate DME company he operated from 2001 to 2003. None had more
than a high-school education and none had any medical background.
At
trial, one of Medcore’s owners, Tony Marrero, testified that
the scheme was so profitable so quickly, that he became concerned
about getting caught and decided to set up a second fraudulent
clinic, M&P, in the name of his wife. M&P was located in the
same building as Medcore, had the same employees, submitted claims
under the Medicare provider number of the same physician, and had
six patients in common. In fact, the same doctor worked at other
Miami-area infusion clinics, which billed Medicare for more than $60
million between 2004 and the end of 2005. Mr. Marrero testified that
when his wife no longer wanted to be associated with M&P, he
sold the clinic to Gustavo Smith in exchange for $100,000 delivered
to him in cash in a paper bag. Mr. Smith was later convicted of
health care fraud in connection with a different DME scheme and has
since fled to Cuba.
Mr.
Marerro also testified at trial that he had an arrangement with a
pharmaceutical wholesale company to buy invoices that showed the
purchase of large amounts of medications, when only minor amounts
were actually purchased. One of the medical assistants testified
that she manipulated the patients’ blood samples to ensure
that lab results would appear to support the Medicare claims.
On
March 17, 2009, a federal jury in Miami convicted two physicians and
two medical assistants who worked for Medcore and M&P in
connection with the $5.3 million fraud scheme. The government
obtained six pleas before trial resulting in 10 convictions in
total.
EXPLOITATION
OF THE SYSTEM’S VULNERABILITES
OIG’s
fraud-fighting efforts in South Florida and Los Angeles also draw on
the expertise of our auditors and evaluators. For example, OIG
identified weaknesses in Medicare’s supplier enrollment
process and its supplier oversight activities. In 2007, OIG found
that 31 percent of DMEPOS suppliers in three South Florida counties
did not maintain physical facilities or were not open and staffed,
contrary to Medicare requirements. Similarly, in 2008, OIG inspected
905 suppliers in Los Angeles County and found that 13 percent did
not have physical facilities or were not open during repeated
unannounced site visits.
OIG
also found that CMS has had limited success controlling aberrant
billing by infusion clinics. In the second half of 2006, claims
originating in three South Florida counties accounted for 79 percent
of the amount submitted to Medicare nationally for drug claims
involving HIV/AIDS patients and constituted 37 percent of the total
amount Medicare paid for services for beneficiaries with HIV/AIDS.
However, only 10 percent of Medicare beneficiaries with HIV/AIDS
lived in these three counties.
In
additional work, OIG identified strategies that DMEPOS suppliers had
used to circumvent billing controls and defraud the program.
Medicare regulations require DME suppliers to provide the Medicare
provider identifier of the physician who ordered the equipment on
the claim. Until May 23, 2008, Medicare used unique provider
identification numbers (UPIN) and then switched to national provider
identifiers (NPI). Requiring the UPIN (or NPI) on claims is intended
to indicate that a physician has verified the need for the DMEPOS
and to enable CMS to determine who prescribed the DMEPOS as part of
any post-payment reviews. OIG studies have uncovered: (1) the use of
invalid or inactive UPINs, (2) the use of UPINs that belonged to
deceased physicians, (3) the improper use of surrogate UPINs, and
(4) the use of legitimate UPINs that were associated with an
unusually large number of claims. UPIN vulnerabilities, as well as
other challenges, may affect the integrity of the new NPI system.
Therefore, OIG has planned additional work to examine the accuracy
and completeness of NPIs.
OIG
also has found that certain types of DMEPOS are particularly
vulnerable to improper
payments.
For example, an investigation of a large wheelchair supplier found
that the company had submitted false claims to Medicare and
Medicaid, including claims for power wheelchairs that
beneficiaries did not want, did not need, or could not use. In
2007, the company agreed to pay $4 million and relinquish its right
to approximately $13 million in claims initially denied for payment
by CMS. Nationally, in 2004, OIG estimated that Medicare and its
beneficiaries paid $96 million for claims that did not meet
Medicare’s coverage criteria for any type of wheelchair or
scooter and that they spent an additional $82 million in excessive
payments for claims that could have been billed using a code for a
less expensive mobility device.
Prior
OIG work also has found that Medicare pays too much for certain
pieces of DMEPOS and related supplies, such as power wheelchairs,
hospital beds, diabetic supplies, and home oxygen equipment. For
example, in a 2006 report, OIG found that Medicare had allowed, on
average, $7,215 for the rental of an oxygen concentrator that costs
about $600 to purchase new. Additionally, beneficiaries incurred, on
average, $1,443 in coinsurance charges. We determined that if home
oxygen payments were limited to 13 months rather than the current 36
months,
Medicare
and its beneficiaries would save $3.2 billion over 5 years. In other
work related to Medicare pricing, OIG currently is conducting work
to examine the appropriateness of prices that Medicare pays for
wheelchairs by comparing Medicare prices to suppliers’
purchase prices.
OIG
recently found that Medicare reimburses suppliers for negative
pressure wound therapy pumps based on a purchase price of more than
$17,000 but that suppliers paid an average of $3,600 for new models
of these pumps. Negative pressure wound therapy pumps are a type
of DME used to treat ulcers and other serious wounds. When Medicare
first started covering wound pumps in 2001, it covered only one
model, which was manufactured and supplied by one company. Medicare
paid for this pump based on the purchase price as identified by that
company. In 2005, Medicare expanded its coverage to include several
new pump models manufactured by other companies. However, Medicare
reimburses suppliers for these new pumps based on the original
pump’s purchase price, which is more than four times the
average price paid by suppliers.
An
Effective Antifraud Strategy Should Embrace Five Principles
Based
on the Government’s investigation and prosecution of health
care fraud and oversight of Federal health care programs, we believe
an effective strategy to combat health care waste, fraud, and abuse
must embrace five principles:
1.
Scrutinize individuals and entities that want to participate as
providers and suppliers prior to their enrollment in health care
programs.
2.
Establish payment methodologies that are reasonable and responsive
to changes in the
marketplace.
3.
Assist health care providers and suppliers in adopting practices
that promote compliance with program requirements, including quality
and safety standards.
4.
Vigilantly monitor the programs for evidence of fraud, waste, and
abuse.
5.
Respond swiftly to detected frauds, impose sufficient punishment to
deter others, and
promptly
remedy program vulnerabilities.
These
principles are equally applicable to OIG’s enforcement
strategy, CMS’s program integrity efforts, and Congress’s
legislative agenda. When OIG provides CMS with the results of its
audits, inspections, and investigations, these principles are often
reflected in OIG’s programmatic recommendations and suggested
corrective actions. We offer the following ideas if Congress is
considering strengthening the integrity of Federal health care
programs.
Scrutinize
individuals and entities that want to participate as providers and
suppliers prior to their enrollment in health care programs.
As
the Medcore and M&P case demonstrates, a lack of effective
screening measures gives dishonest and unethical individuals access
to a system that they can easily exploit. Even after Medcore had
billed Medicare for $4 million in fraudulent claims, it was easy for
the clinic’s owner to obtain a provider number in his wife’s
name for a second clinic, M&P, operating in the very same
building as Medcore, with the same medical director, employees, and
patients. When one of the owners, Mr. Marrero, ultimately sold M&P
for $100,000 in cash, he testified that he went to a lawyer’s
office so the lawyer could fill out paperwork to put ownership of
the clinic in the name of two nominee owners—rather than
Gustavo Smith’s name. Although it involved cash exchanged in a
paper bag in a parking lot, the sale was structured as a stock sale
so the new “owners” would have 90 days to notify
Medicare of the change in ownership, allowing a window of time for
the fraud to continue under new “ownership.” In our
experience, it too easy for organized crime to recruit nominee
owners of fraudulent companies.
We
advocate strengthening enrollment standards and making participation
in Federal health care programs as a provider or supplier a
privilege, not a right. All providers and suppliers applying for
enrollment in Medicare or Medicaid should be screened before they
are granted billing privileges. Heightened screening measures for
high-risk items and services could include requiring providers to
meet accreditation standards, requiring proof of business integrity
or surety bonds, periodic recertification and onsite verification
that conditions of participation have been met, and full disclosure
of ownership and control interests. New providers and suppliers
should be subject to a provisional period during which they are
subject to enhanced oversight, such as prepayment review and payment
caps. The cost of this screening could be covered by charging
application fees.
Establish
payment methodologies that are reasonable and responsive to changes
in the
marketplace.
OIG
has conducted extensive reviews of Medicare payment and pricing
methodologies and has determined that the program pays too much for
certain items and services. When reimbursement methodologies do not
respond effectively to changes in the marketplace, the program and
its beneficiaries bear the cost. As the experience of South Florida
illustrates, excessive payments are a lucrative target for
criminals. These criminals also can reinvest some of their profit in
kickbacks for additional referrals, thus using the program’s
funds to perpetuate the fraud scheme.
We
support efforts to pay appropriately for the items and services
covered by Federal health care programs. Although CMS has the
authority to make certain adjustments to fee schedules and other
payment methodologies, for some changes, congressional action is
needed. Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement systems should be
aligned to ensure that payments are reasonable and responsive to
market changes.
Assist
health care providers and suppliers in adopting practices that
promote compliance with program requirements.
Health
care providers and suppliers must be our partners in ensuring the
integrity of Federal health care programs and should adopt internal
controls and other measures that promote compliance and prevent,
detect, and respond to health care fraud, waste, and abuse.
Requiring health care providers and suppliers to incorporate
integrity safeguards and tools into their organizations is an
essential component of a comprehensive antifraud strategy. In many
sectors of the health care industry, such as hospitals, compliance
programs are widespread and often very sophisticated; other sectors
have been slower to adopt internal compliance practices.
Compliance
programs benefit industry stakeholders by improving their business
practices, by fostering early detection and correction of emerging
problems, and by reducing the risk that they will become the subject
of a fraud prosecution.
States
also have begun to recognize the value of compliance systems. For
example, New York now requires providers and suppliers to implement
an effective compliance program, as defined by OIG, as a condition
of participation in its Medicaid program. Medicare Part D also
requires that prescription drug plan sponsors have compliance plans
that address eight required elements.
Although
compliance programs do not guarantee reduced fraud and abuse, they
are an important component of a comprehensive government-industry
partnership to promote program integrity.
We
recommend that providers and suppliers should be required to adopt
compliance programs as a condition of participating in the Medicare
and Medicaid programs. As part of its effort to promote compliance
with program requirements, OIG has extensive experience in the
development of compliance program guidance and could assist in this
important integrity initiative.
Vigilantly
monitor the programs for evidence of fraud, waste, and abuse.
The
health care system compiles an enormous amount of data on patients,
providers, and the delivery of health care items and services.
However, Federal health care programs often fail effectively to use
claims-processing edits and other information technology to identify
improper claims before they are paid. To state the obvious,
Medicare should not pay a clinic for HIV infusion when the
beneficiary has not been diagnosed with the illness, pay twice for
the same service, or routinely process a claim that relies on the
UPIN of a deceased physician. Like many infusion fraud
schemes, Medcore and M&P gained the cooperation of patients by
giving them kickbacks of up to $200 per visit. Four patients
testified that they took kickbacks and never received any medication
at the clinics. One patient testified that he used his payments from
the
clinics
to support his cocaine addiction. Another patient testified that he
did not have HIV, even though the clinics’ documents showed he
was being infused with medication to treat HIV. By the patients own
admission, they had been receiving kickbacks from numerous Miami
clinics for many years. The Medicare data showed they had received
millions of dollars in infusion treatment, DME, and other services
they did not require. Had the government been vigilantly monitoring
the claims submitted on behalf of these beneficiaries, the scheme
might have been detected more quickly.
CMS
has taken significant steps to enhance payment accuracy and internal
controls. For
example,
CMS proposed a centralized data repository, known as One Program
Integrity System Integrator (One PI), which would warehouse data on
Medicare Parts A, B, and D and on Medicaid. However, the target
implementation date for One PI has been delayed, and CMS has not
provided a new expected timeframe for completion and operability.
In
addition to structural improvement to the data systems, real-time
access to all relevant
Medicare
and Medicaid data by law enforcement is critical to the success of
the antifraud effort.
Currently,
law enforcement receives data weeks or months after claims have been
filed, making it more difficult to detect and thwart new scams.
MY
NOTE: I already pointed out previously how cops in states have used
medical records (aspirin!) to deny gun permits and we know what they
did to Joe the Plumber. In Georgia Vernon Jones political opponents
had back ground checks run on them by the police. Think about this
next section. We advocate
that law enforcement have real-time access to Medicare and Medicaid
program data. In addition, we recommend that Congress authorize OIG
to streamline the process for matching Medicare data to other
relevant databases,
such as
Medicaid data obtained from States and data from the Social Security
Administration.
We
also recommend the consolidation and expansion of the various
provider databases,
including
the Health Care Integrity and Protection Data Bank, the National
Practitioner Data Bank, and OIG’s List of Excluded
Individuals/Entities. Providing a centralized comprehensive database
of adverse actions and other sanctions imposed on individuals and
entities would be an effective means of preventing providers and
suppliers with problem backgrounds from moving from State to State
unnoticed by licensing, government, and health plan officials.
Respond
swiftly to detected fraud, impose sufficient punishment to deter
others, and promptly remedy program vulnerabilities.
Our
investigations have shown an increase in organized crime in health
care. Health care fraud is attractive to organized crime because the
penalties are lower than those for other organized-crime-related
offenses (e.g., offenses related to illegal drugs); there are low
barriers to entry (e.g., a criminal can easily obtain a supplier
number, gather some beneficiary numbers, and bill the program);
schemes are easily replicated; and there is a perception of a low
risk of detection. We need to alter the cost-benefit analysis by
increasing the risk of swift detection and the certainty of
punishment.
As
part of this strategy, law enforcement must accelerate the
Government’s response to fraud schemes. The Government’s
strike force model has proved highly successful. In addition to
prosecuting criminals and recovering funds for the Medicare Trust
Fund, the South Florida Strike Force has had a powerful sentinel
effect. Medicare claims data show that during the first 12 months of
the Strike Force (March 1, 2007, to February 29, 2008), claim
amounts submitted for DME decreased by 63 percent to just over $1
billion from nearly $2.76 billion during the preceding 12 months (a
drop exceeding $1.7 billion).
Although
resource intensive, the strike force is a powerful antifraud tool
and represents a
tremendous
return on the investment. Building on the success of the South
Florida Strike Force, in March 2008, DOJ and OIG created a second
Strike Force in Los Angeles. Since operations began, the Strike
Force has opened 46 cases and indicted individuals and organizations
that collectively have made almost $13 million on fraudulent claims
to the Medicare program. The schemes include false claims for
wheelchairs, orthotics, and other DME that was medically unnecessary
and/or was not provided to the beneficiaries identified in claims.
OIG
uses a range of administrative sanctions, including civil money
penalties (CMPs) and
program
exclusions, as an adjunct to criminal and civil enforcement. We have
identified a
number
of enhancements to these administrative authorities that, if
mandated by Congress,
would
increase our ability to address emerging schemes, such as
authorizing CMPs for the submission of erroneous data used as the
set Medicare payment and a CMP for the ordering or prescribing of
items or services by an excluded person.
Conclusion
OIG
and its law enforcement partners have implemented a comprehensive
strategy to combat waste, fraud, and abuse in Federal health care
programs. However, sophisticated health care fraud schemes
increasingly rely on falsified records, elaborate business
structures, and the participation of health care providers,
suppliers, and even patients to create the false impression that the
Government is paying for legitimate health care services. Applying
the principles described above as the framework will identify new
ways to protect the integrity of the programs, meet needs of
beneficiaries, and keep Federal health care programs solvent for
future generations.
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