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License to Steal: Why Fraud Plagues America’s Health Care System

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This book brings an unusual opportunity to explore the peculiarities of America's health care industry's approach to fraud control, when compared with the financial services sector, credit card companies, or the Internal Revenue Service--all of which have to defend themselves against fraud.

240 pages, Paperback

First published August 8, 1996

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Malcolm K. Sparrow

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for George Crowder.
Author 2 books31 followers
July 19, 2017
An incredibly relevant topic, in light of our debate regarding healthcare insurance and the push towards single payer. Though this is a very, very complex and technical field, Sparrow clearly and engagingly explains the issues, as well as including analogies to fraud detection in other fields, such as credit cards and tax returns (fascinating).

Would love to see an updated or follow-up version of this that includes recent developments and issues raised by the Affordable Care Act.

Would also love to see studies of how similar issues are dealt with in other countries. Are they plagued with thieves as we are?
Profile Image for Bill.
55 reviews2 followers
June 19, 2008
This book is by a former British Constable who is now a professor at the Kennedy School of Government. If that isn’t intriguing enough to get you to read this book, let me say that it is the best non-fiction detective story that I’ve read since “The Untouchables” by Elliot Ness (who brought down Al Capone!).

I’m being a little misleading here. “License to Steal” is not really a “story” so much as a social science analysis of Medicare Fraud in the US. On the other hand, Sparrow does an excellent job of getting across the “story” in this analytical work. He makes a chilling case that fraud is costing the US billions and billions of dollars in the Medicare system. He reveals how ridiculous it is to believe that new technology and information systems are going to be able to make a dent in this fraud. In fact, he argues that the more automatic the payments systems are, the easier it is for criminals to test and game the system. It is like a huge computer game – send false claims to see which ones get rejected and which ones get accepted, then cash in on the successful strategies.

To show how important it is to use “intelligence” (in the human sense of that word!), he tells the story of a small insurance company that has a team of workers reviewing claims. One scam was uncovered because someone noticed that a large number of prescription claims were being submitted and that none of them were folded (9 times out of 10, men will fold a prescription form and put it in their breast pocket before filling it). A computer could never have discovered that because – well – because keypunch data doesn’t get folded.

Another chilling point is that the ‘return’ to insurance companies and the government for investigating fraud is always positive and large. So where are the hardnosed CEOs that want to maximize the return on investments? How much of the US’s excessive healthcare spending is due to mafia-like bleeding of the Medicare system? We’ll never know until someone in public policy heeds Sparrow’s call for a study that systematically samples and verifies Medicare claims. Imagine what we might find.
Profile Image for Leslie.
383 reviews10 followers
January 17, 2011
The small number of people who have read this book on goodreads probably indicates the poor visibility of, and interest in, the problems of healthcare fraud in the U.S. The book is more than a decade old and there is no telling what changes have occurred. Nonetheless, it provides a chilling look at the myriad ways that the healthcare system is vulnerable to abuses. It emphasizes the importance of the undetected burden of fraud--the total costs of healthcare fraud have amounted to as much as $500 billion dollars a year in 2000, of which only a small fraction was detected and an even smaller fraction was recovered. It also demonstrates the ways that patients can be materially harmed--less frequently by the overutilization promoted by fee-for-service structures, and more frequently by the underutilization potentiated by managed care. Finally, it analyzes the systematic underfunding of fraud control efforts, important gaps in the ways they currently operate that leave them exposed to the most lucrative forms of fraud, and potential ways to identify needs. Human abilities to detect unusual patterns in data are important and should be supported by the increasingly powerful disciplines and technologies available for analyzing data.

Considering the vast landscape of abuse portrayed, and the numbers and networks of powerful people involved, some of the inflammatory reactions to healthcare reform efforts may be effective lobbying to maintain easy access to giant streams of money to be dishonestly acquired.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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