Minnesota DHS faces possible fines for breakdowns that led to Medicaid overpayments
Frustrated by a string of regulatory breakdowns at the state
A state
Because of those gaps, thousands of duplicate medical records in the state’s public health insurance program were created. In turn, that meant the DHS overpaid up to
The proposed penalties reflect mounting dissatisfaction at the State Capitol over a long string of financial missteps at Minnesota’s largest state agency, and a growing sense among lawmakers that the problems will not be corrected until the agency is held financially accountable. Since early last summer, DHS officials have acknowledged that repeated breakdowns in internal controls caused the agency to make more than
“There are people on both sides of the aisle who have become increasingly frustrated – by the lack of accountability and lack of transparency around the use of public funds at DHS,” said Sen.
State lawmakers have held multiple hearings since last fall over repeated gaps in DHS’ oversight of the state Medicaid program, known as Medical Assistance, the public insurance program that serves 1.1 million Minnesotans. At those hearings,
Still, embarrassing revelations continue to emerge. An internal DHS audit released in January disclosed that the agency’s behavioral health division had skirted state laws on contracting and conflicts of interest. The audit also found that the division essentially created its own separate procedures for reporting conflicts of interest and for monitoring contracting.
Then last month, the DHS disclosed another regulatory headache: Thousands of duplicate records within the state’s electronic system for tracking eligibility and enrollment in Medicaid. DHS conducted a review and found that, in the last fiscal year, more than 47,000 Minnesotans, or about 3% of Medicaid enrollees, had multiple personal identification numbers in the state computer system. That resulted in millions of dollars in overpayments to managed care organizations; as well as disrupted health care services for people who could have had claims delayed or denied.
The estimated financial impact of the duplicate billing problem is between
According to a report to the Legislature, DHS has been working on a large, multiyear project to identify and remove the duplicate records; make software upgrades to prevent the creation of new duplicate records; and to reduce the impact on Medicaid enrollees. That project is expected to be completed by
The agency said Tuesday it “is committed to payment accuracy and minimizing the impact of duplicate identification numbers on Medical Assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees. The recent report to the Legislature outlines steps DHS and [Minnesota IT Services] have already taken to make improvements, as well as our plan moving forward to address the issue by
The proposed legislation would impose fines if the DHS fails to meet that deadline. In the first year, the agency would pay
“We need to get leaders [at the DHS] to pay attention,” said Sen.
Twitter: @chrisserres
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