Early this month, CVS agreed to pay nearly $38M to settle five related whistleblower cases concerning its dispensing of insulin pens. The government and many whistleblowers alleged that CVS improperly requested and received reimbursement for premature refills, dispensed more insulin pens than patients needed according to their prescriptions, and falsely under-reported the days-of-supply of insulin that its pharmacies dispensed.
The programs at issue included Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.
As part of the settlement, CVS admitted that government healthcare programs paid it substantial amounts for insulin pen refills that were ineligible for reimbursement and that CVS pharmacies dispensed more insulin to beneficiaries than they were prescribed. Insulin pens are devices for diabetic patients to self-administer insulin at home, and specific dosages are often calculated by a pharmacist. Most government health programs, and PBMs who administer them, have limits for how much insulin can be dispensed at once, for example, a one-month supply, and will not reimburse for more than those limits.
CVS allegedly skirted data reporting to circumvent these rules. To fill prescriptions as quickly as possible and to ensure that reimbursement claims were approved, CVS instructed its pharmacy staff simply to report the maximum dosage allowed under the beneficiary’s plan when dispensing insulin pens, which was often lower than the amount dispensed. In some cases, dispensing of insulin going forward was based on these false reports. Meaning some beneficiaries got much, much more insulin than prescribed, which is not only wasteful, but can be dangerous given that the medicine eventually expires.
The US further alleged that CVS management knew of this problem from audits but did nothing to remedy it. The settlement resolves five separate whistleblower lawsuits with overlapping allegations; some of the whistleblowers were former CVS pharmacists. The whistleblowers will receive a portion of the settlement as an award for bringing the conduct to the DOJ’s attention.
This is the latest news in a very busy few months of FCA activity for the healthcare giant.
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