Help

BI’s Article search uses Boolean search capabilities. If you are not familiar with these principles, here are some quick tips.

To search specifically for more than one word, put the search term in quotation marks. For example, “workers compensation”. This will limit your search to that combination of words.

To search for a combination of terms, use quotations and the & symbol. For example, “hurricane” & “loss”.

Login Register Subscribe

Abbott Labs to pay $160M over kickbacks, false diabetes claims

Reprints
Abbott

(Reuters) — Abbott Laboratories will pay $160 million to resolve claims that two of its units submitted false claims to Medicare by providing kickbacks to diabetes patients, including “free” or “no-cost” glucose monitors, the U.S. Department of Justice said.

Monday’s settlement resolves claims that Arriva Medical LLC - once the largest Medicare mail-order diabetes testing supplier - and its parent Alere Inc. violated the federal False Claims Act from 2009 to 2016 by diverting Medicare funding from where it was needed.

The Justice Department said Arriva provided free glucose monitors, or glucometers, to induce patients to order more testing supplies, and routinely waived copayments.

Arriva was also accused of systematically charging Medicare, a U.S. government health plan, for glucometers given to ineligible patients, and submitting claims for 211 patients who had been dead at least two weeks.

Abbott, an Illinois-based medical device and nutritional products company, bought Alere for $4.5 billion in October 2017.

Arriva ceased operations two months later. Its founders, David Wallace and Timothy Stocksdale, agreed in April 2019 to pay $500,000 each to resolve Justice Department claims over the alleged kickbacks.

In a statement, Abbott did not comment on the settlement, but said Alere disclosed the matter in its financial filings. The defendants did not admit liability.

Gregory Goodman, a whistleblower and former $15-an-hour employee at an Arriva call center in Antioch, Tennessee, will receive $28.5 million from the settlement.

“Doing anything that defrauds the government or the Medicare program, it’s fellow Americans who end up paying for it,” Mr. Goodman, who turns 60 this week and recently retired from a career in sales, said in an interview. “The decision to move forward was quite simple.”

Mr. Goodman’s lawyer, Jerry Martin, a former U.S. attorney in Tennessee, said in an interview: “It shows you the power of the False Claims Act and how it can be harnessed to get big results.”

The False Claims Act lets whistleblowers sue on behalf of the federal government, and share in recoveries.

 

 

 

Read Next