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UCHealth agrees to $23 million settlement with the feds over false billing accusations

The Colorado U.S. Attorney’s Office alleged that the health system overbilled for some emergency care. UCHealth denies the claims.

The exterior of the University of Colorado Hospital on the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora, photographed on Oct. 18, 2019. The hospital is the flagship of the UCHealth system.
John Ingold/The Colorado Sun

UCHealth, the state’s largest medical provider, has reached  with federal authorities over allegations that it overbilled for emergency care at its hospitals, the Colorado U.S. Attorney’s Office .

The allegations claim that UCHealth hospitals from Nov. 1, 2017, through March 31, 2021, automatically used the most expensive billing code possible for certain emergency department claims submitted to government health coverage programs Medicare and TRICARE, which is for members of the U.S. military and retirees.

Using this billing code without having proper justification violates the Fair Claims Act, the feds allege.



“Improperly billing federal health care programs drains valuable government resources needed to provide medical care to millions of Americans,” Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, the head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division, said in a statement. “We will pursue health care providers that defraud the taxpayers by knowingly submitting inflated or unsupported claims.”

UCHealth denied wrongdoing.

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