Friday, April 23, 2021

PhilHealth ‘anomalies’

EDITORIAL
 
The series of scandals about corruption worth billions of pesos had rocked the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation and doesn’t seem to end.
    PhilHealth even came out with a press statement saying the “missing funds” reported earlier as having gone to pockets of corrupt PhilHealth officials are about to be liquidated.
But the mystery is getting deeper as according to PhilHealth officials, the public have to pay all contributions they didn’t pay ever since the Covid-19 pandemic started last year or they could not avail of medical benefits. Everything (monthly contributions) must be paid, according to PhilHealth workers.   
Now, Sec. Menardo Guevarra said the Dept. of Justice and the National Bureau of Investigation said they were willing to help the state-run PhilHealth investigate fresh reports of alleged “upcasing.” 
Guevarra made the statement after the PhilHealth said it conducted a probe on video posts claiming the resurgence of the so-called upcasing scheme where healthcare providers allegedly collude with patients to declare minor respiratory symptoms such as asthma as Covid-19 to claim higher benefits. 
“The DOJ-led Task Force Philhealth conducted a thorough investigation of upcasing schemes last year and cases were filed thereafter. PhilHealth is currently looking into new incidents of upcasing in relation to COVID claims,” Guevarra said. 
“With a former NBI chief as president/CEO (Chief Executive Officer), PhilHealth can very well handle this new investigation, but the DOJ and NBI will be ready to provide assistance if requested,” he added. 
Last year, the Task Force PhilHealth recommended the filing of criminal and administrative charges against seven officials of the agency for violations of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act over their alleged involvement in a multi-billion peso fund embezzlement. 
As a form of health-insurance fraud, upcasing refers to claiming for a related illness or procedure of higher severity or complexity to gain higher benefit payment. 
Those who would be found guilty may be fined P200,000 for each count, or suspension of contract up to three years of the healthcare provider, or both.  
It also constitutes a criminal violation punishable by imprisonment of six months and one day up to six years upon the discretion of the court in accordance to Section 38 of the Universal Health Care Law.

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