4 research outputs found

    AN EFFECTIVE HEALTH CARE INSURANCE FRAUD AND ABUSE DETECTION SYSTEM

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    Due to the complexity of the processes within healthcare insurance systems and the large number of participants involved, it is very difficult to supervise the systems for fraud. The healthcare service providers’ fraud and abuse has become a serious problem. The practices such as billing for services that were never rendered, performing unnecessary medical services and misrepresenting non-covered treatment as covered treatments etc. not only contribute to the problem of rising health care expenditure but also affect the health of the patients. Traditional methods of detecting health care fraud and abuse are time-consuming and inefficient. In this paper, the health care insurance fraud and abuse detection system (HECIFADES) was proposed. The HECIFADES consist of six modules namely: claim, augment claim, claim database, profile database, profile updater and updated profiles. The system was implemented using Visual Studio 2010 and SQL. After testing, it was observed that HECIFADES was indeed an effective system for detecting fraudulent activities and yet very secured way for generating medical claims. It also improves the quality and mitigates potential payment risks and program vulnerabilities.

    Examining the Transitional Impact of ICD-10 on Healthcare Fraud Detection

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    On October 1st, 2015, the tenth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) will be mandatorily implemented in the United States. Although this medical classification system will allow healthcare professionals to code with greater accuracy, specificity, and detail, these codes will have a significant impact on the flavor of healthcare insurance claims. While the overall benefit of ICD-10 throughout the healthcare industry is unquestionable, some experts believe healthcare fraud detection and prevention could experience an initial drop in performance due to the implementation of ICD-10. We aim to quantitatively test the validity of this concern regarding an adverse transitional impact. This project explores how predictive fraud detection systems developed using ICD-9 claims data will initially react to the introduction of ICD-10. We have developed a basic fraud detection system incorporating both unsupervised and supervised learning methods in order to examine the potential fraudulence of both ICD-9 and ICD-10 claims in a predictive environment. Using this system, we are able to analyze the ability and performance of statistical methods trained using ICD-9 data to properly identify fraudulent ICD-10 claims. This research makes contributions to the domains of medical coding, healthcare informatics, and fraud detection

    Data-Driven Implementation To Filter Fraudulent Medicaid Applications

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    There has been much work to improve IT systems for managing and maintaining health records. The U.S government is trying to integrate different types of health care data for providers and patients. Health care fraud detection research has focused on claims by providers, physicians, hospitals, and other medical service providers to detect fraudulent billing, abuse, and waste. Data-mining techniques have been used to detect patterns in health care fraud and reduce the amount of waste and abuse in the health care system. However, less attention has been paid to implementing a system to detect fraudulent applications, specifically for Medicaid. In this study, a data-driven system using layered architecture to filter fraudulent applications for Medicaid was proposed. The Medicaid Eligibility Application System utilizes a set of public and private databases that contain individual asset records. These asset records are used to determine the Medicaid eligibility of applicants using a scoring model integrated with a threshold algorithm. The findings indicated that by using the proposed data-driven approach, the state Medicaid agency could filter fraudulent Medicaid applications and save over $4 million in Medicaid expenditures

    Data-Driven Implementation To Filter Fraudulent Medicaid Applications

    Get PDF
    There has been much work to improve IT systems for managing and maintaining health records. The U.S government is trying to integrate different types of health care data for providers and patients. Health care fraud detection research has focused on claims by providers, physicians, hospitals, and other medical service providers to detect fraudulent billing, abuse, and waste. Data-mining techniques have been used to detect patterns in health care fraud and reduce the amount of waste and abuse in the health care system. However, less attention has been paid to implementing a system to detect fraudulent applications, specifically for Medicaid. In this study, a data-driven system using layered architecture to filter fraudulent applications for Medicaid was proposed. The Medicaid Eligibility Application System utilizes a set of public and private databases that contain individual asset records. These asset records are used to determine the Medicaid eligibility of applicants using a scoring model integrated with a threshold algorithm. The findings indicated that by using the proposed data-driven approach, the state Medicaid agency could filter fraudulent Medicaid applications and save over $4 million in Medicaid expenditures
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