One of the most common types of healthcare fraud is billing fraud, especially upcoding and billing for services not actually provided.
What these mean
- Upcoding
A provider submits a claim using a billing code for a more expensive service than the one that was actually performed.
- Billing for services not rendered
Claims are submitted for appointments, tests, procedures, or treatments that never occurred.
Other common healthcare fraud schemes
- Unbundling
Charging separately for services that should be billed together at a lower combined rate.
- Kickbacks and referrals
Receiving or paying money or benefits in exchange for patient referrals.
- Identity theft / patient fraud
Using another person’s insurance information to obtain care or submit claims.
- Prescription fraud
Falsifying prescriptions or diverting medications for unauthorized use.
Why billing fraud is considered the most common
Healthcare systems process enormous numbers of claims every day. Small manipulations of billing codes or claims can be repeated across many patients and encounters, making this form of fraud both widespread and financially significant.
Important note: Not every billing error is fraud. Fraud requires intentional deception. Mistakes, poor documentation, or coding errors can lead to incorrect claims without being fraudulent.
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