Florida A.G. Moody Secures Millions for Florida Following Multistate Health Care Investigation
Attorney General
UHS is based in
Attorney General
The agreement resolves allegations that during the period from
- Admission of beneficiaries not eligible for inpatient or residential treatment;
- Failure to properly discharge beneficiaries when they no longer needed inpatient or residential treatment;
- Improper and excessive lengths of stay;
- Failure to provide adequate staffing, training and/or supervision of staff;
- Billing for services not rendered;
- Improper use of physical and chemical restraints and seclusion; and
- Failure to provide inpatient acute or residential care in accordance with federal and state regulations, including, but not limited to, failure to develop and/or update individualized assessments and treatment plans, failure to provide adequate discharge planning and failure to provide required individual and group therapy.
To view the agreement, click here (http://myfloridalegal.com/webfiles.nsf/WF/SSWN-BRRMVY/$file/UHS-FL+Fully+Executed+Agreement.pdf).
The government agencies allege that UHS's conduct violated the Federal False Claims Act and the Florida False Claims Act, resulting in the submission of false claims to the Florida Medicaid program.
This agreement results from 18 whistleblower lawsuits originally filed in the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners Announces Special Committee on Race and Insurance
Sen. Warren, Colleagues Question Trump Administration's Efforts to Understand, Inform Americans About Chronic Health Effects of COVID-19
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News