Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Merck to Pay $650 Million In Medicaid Settlement


Feb. 8th Washington Post


Merck agreed yesterday to pay more than $650 million to settle charges that it routinely overbilled the government for its most popular medicines, the arthritis drug Vioxx and the cholesterol drug Zocor, cheating Medicaid out of millions of dollars in discounts over eight years.


Prosecutors say the drugmaker gave pills to hospitals at virtually no cost to hook poor patients on expensive medicine. When the patients left the hospital, they often continued taking the drugs, but with the government footing the higher bill.


The Merck settlement culminates an investigation that began in 2000 and is one of the first in a series of cases centering on whether drugmakers used unfair pricing practices to bilk the government. The Justice Department is looking into 630 health-care whistleblower claims.


H. Dean Steinke, a district sales manager for Merck, set off the investigation after he noticed his company was using questionable sales tactics. Steinke complained to his supervisors, who brushed him off, so he turned to federal authorities.


Steinke, a 51-year-old Michigan native, will receive about $68 million from the settlement as a whistleblower reward. He said he was prompted to go to authorities after his direct supervisor told him: "I don't care how you do it, but get the damn business," when he questioned the sales practices. "There comes a time when you just dig in your heels and say, 'You know what? They're not going to get away with it,' " Steinke said.


The agreement yesterday, one of the largest health-care fraud recoveries, also closes a related case about Merck overcharging for the antacid Pepcid. William St. John LaCorte, a doctor in New Orleans who questioned the Pepcid charges, will receive a yet-to-be-determined share of the settlement proceeds.


Merck did not admit wrongdoing. The country's third-largest drugmaker stood by its pricing strategies but wanted to resolve the disputes, executives said in a statement. Merck agreed to heightened oversight by regulators for five years as part of the deal. The company remains the focus of a separate grand jury investigation related to Vioxx marketing and is striving to execute another multibillion-dollar settlement of thousands of lawsuits filed by people who had heart attacks after taking the painkiller.


The whistleblowing case centered on Merck's giving hospitals across the country 92 percent discounts on Vioxx, an arthritis drug pulled from the market three years ago for safety concerns; Zocor, a popular cholesterol-lowering medicine that drew intense competition from rivals; and Pepcid, an antacid tablet now sold over-the-counter. Merck offered the pills at the discount under a legal loophole, known as nominal pricing, that Congress created a generation ago to give poor patients access to medicine.


Merck and industry experts had argued that the pricing strategy fell within the law and helped reduce costs for many government-funded hospitals. But prosecutors said the Whitehouse Station, N.J., drugmaker used the discounts to outflank its competition, offering massive markdowns to hospitals that agreed to put its medicines on a list of preferred drugs or to prescribe them for as many as three-quarters of eligible patients. In some cases, hospitals favored Merck's drugs over cheaper generics. This practice conflicted with the law because Merck did not offer Medicaid the same discounts, authorities said. The law requires the government be charged no more than other customers.


"The company perceived a loophole and tried to drive through that loophole," said L. Timothy Terry, who leads Nevada's Medicaid Fraud Control Unit and who played a central role in the case. "I think they were exploiting these programs."


The pricing allegations cover bills paid by federal Medicaid plans and plans for states from California to New York. Patrick Burns, a spokesman for Taxpayers Against Fraud, a nonprofit group that supports the pursuit of such cases, said the settlement calls attention to an improper business strategy that has been used by as many as a dozen other drug companies.


"It's heroin-dealer economics," he said. "Your first shot is for free, and after that it becomes more expensive . . . not to the hospital but to Medicaid, which is paying the bill."
Congress tightened the nominal pricing loophole at issue in the Merck case, but prescription drug costs continue to rise steadily, a major issue for presidential candidates jockeying to present health-care reform plans. Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, such key lawmakers as Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) and Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.) are pressing government administrators for better oversight of drug spending.


But, as the Merck investigation underscores, the road to financial recovery for the government and for the whistleblower is not always clear, or direct.


The Merck case had been quietly proceeding under court seal since December 2000, after Steinke came forward in Michigan. He initially worried that Merck's sales campaigns ran afoul of laws that prohibit kickbacks to doctors and hospitals. Over time, the case expanded into a deeper examination of whether Merck had complied with rules requiring manufacturers to offer federal and state agencies their "best price" on drugs.


Steinke took his case to Steven H. Cohen, of Chicago, and Mark Allen Kleiman of Santa Monica, Calif., lawyers who regularly handle whistleblower cases. Together, they filed a lawsuit and waited to see whether federal prosecutors in Philadelphia would intervene, which would have strengthened their case and potentially offered a big financial reward under the False Claims Act. More than three years passed with no clear word from government officials in Philadelphia or Washington about the Justice Department's interest in the case. Then Cohen and Kleiman learned that personnel changes in the U.S. attorney's office meant they needed to introduce new officials to the complex issues and the 10,000 pages of documents Steinke had compiled.
Sitting down with a new, skeptical lead prosecutor in 2004 marked a low point, the lawyers recalled. The allegations were too complicated, the prosecutor said, and the case was too difficult to prove. The lawyers reluctantly agreed with her.


"It was gut-wrenching," said Kleiman, a former health-care executive who attended law school after his own negative experience with corporate corruption.


"This will be called the worst day in our life," added Cohen, a former congressional staff member and the son-in-law of retired D.C. federal appeals court judge Abner Mikva.


Their mood lifted weeks later, when they bumped into a Nevada health-care official at a conference and he invited them to discuss their case. Steinke and the lawyers traveled to Carson City, Nev., where Deputy Attorney General Tim Terry told them he was interested. "Tim was a real advocate for us, immediately," Steinke said. By then he had left Merck and joined another pharmaceutical company. Eventually, he got out of the business.


Steinke's thick brown hair turned gray as he spent weeks of vacation time sitting in conference rooms in Philadelphia and Carson City, poring over 440 boxes of documents to help prosecutors make sense of the scheme. To decompress, he built a wooden deck in his backyard. The construction project consumed seven years.


Steinke, who has an undergraduate degree in fisheries and wildlife biology, said he has not drafted a blueprint for his future. He has a notion, though, to start a rehabilitation center for wounded animals with some of his settlement proceeds. For him, he said, the issue was not one of money but of principle.


"Sometimes you just get so frustrated about things that are wrong," he said. "These are the things that drive you, and you're not going to stop until things are resolved."

53 comments:

3rdWilliamCrawford said...

Wow, this just makes me want to move to Canada even more. Surely not all companies such as Merck are like this? However, paying $650 million and giving a 92% discount is ot a slight oversight.

Anonymous said...

I personally believe that Merck sales tactics in order to get lower members of the socioeconomic groups was wrong.

Although most of these people were on Medicaid/Medicare the government shouldn't have been hit with a large bill from hospitals practicing preferential treatments.

When you do dirty business it typically comes to light and this was obviously a lesson that Merck was going to learn sooner or later.

Unknown said...

George Huang
6th Period

Exploiting nominal pricing and other government programs designed to help the poor afford their medication is unacceptable; it’s illegal because Merck passed the savings on to hospitals, but not Medicaid, so that its products would remain profitable while outselling those of competitors. I hope in the future that pharmaceutical companies focus more on the effectiveness, safety, and affordability of their products than profits. If not, then I intend to establish my own company after I’ve graduated from college.

gillianwelch03 said...

Gillian Welch
3rd

It's about time that someone is getting into trouble for all this money in the healthcare system.
I wonder if anyone got into trouble after Michael Moore made his film? I bet there were a lot of questions raised.
Oh well.

KatherineGollahon_2ndperiod said...

Well its about time SOMETHING stated happening. How could the government NOT know that was going on for SO long! how could all those employees live with themselves knowing that thier companies tatics were SO questionable, i feel that the government should look WAY more into these things

KatherineGollahon_2ndperiod said...

Well its about time SOMETHING stated happening. How could the government NOT know that was going on for SO long! how could all those employees live with themselves knowing that thier companies tatics were SO questionable, i feel that the government should look WAY more into these things

Maura Fowler 02 said...

I was afraid to watch SICKO.

i was going to see it in theaters but of course they would never show it in Lubbock. I was afraid to see it because every time i watch movies like that or read articles like this i become so disturbed that i end up down right speechless. What can i say?

I hate the people who run this world.
No matter how important it is we will never be able to elect a president who will change the wrong and make it right. And if by miracle we do happen to elect a good one another Bush Nixon Jr. Jr. will come along and screw everything up.
I hate that.
The End.

Kyle Cruz 3rd said...

Its about time the big companies pay up, all corporations care about is increased profit not the well being of their customers, maby this will send the signal to others to do the right thing.

Jaysie said...

I was disgusted by the movie. This is like someone take my favorite things away from me. I used to have an "American Dream" too. But now it's gone.
In China, no matter what disease you have, no matter how skinny or fat you are; you can get a basic health insurance if you can pay about 13 US dollars a year to the insurance company. If you have a big injury will cost you more than 300 US dollars, the insurance company will pay 75% of it. Even if you don't have health insurance, an injury like THREE figures get cut off will only cost you less than 1000 US dollars.

I still feel bad about the movie. It hurts.

By Liulinbo Yang(6)

ColinButler2nd said...

I think there had to eventually be someone to come out and put blame on the healthcare companies for their corrupt ways. It just solidifies the reasons for the healthcare reform that is possible in the future. The universal healthcare idea is definitely a smoother idea than dealing with what the companies are doing.

Stephen Perl 2nd said...

This just furthers the argument that Health Insurance companies and Drug companies are corrupt. But then again, they don't seem that different from most other big businesses, like say, Wal-Mart.

PatrickMcNeill2pd said...

I hope the settlement actually goes back to help people who need it or it
will just be another show put on to try and make us feel like we have won something.

Halil Fried- 3rd period said...

Unless we get a universal health care system, this is just all going to get a lot worse. The health care companies pretty much run a monopoly. Yes, one guy was caught...but out of the thousands out there? Seriously. We need a change.

m_ybarra said...

Marisa Ybarra
AP Goverment 2nd

After seeing the movie SiCKO and coming to the realization that our health care system is so corupt and terrible, it makes me glad to see people getting what they really deserve and the companies expense. But then again that 650 million could have gone toward something better like paying for people's bills in hospitols and for their medical expenses. I know its that American way to make a law suit when we don't get our way but er should also make it a way of life to take care everyone, no matter what.

Amanda Betancur said...

This story just makes me sick. And it makes you wonder if there would be as much uproar if the case had not dealt with government money. What is the company used these same habit inducing tactics and no one was hurt, besides the poor patient.

Ethan A said...

2nd Period

Our healthcare system is wack. and medicaid getting ripped off by merck doesnt help at all. idk if this is the first time they have caught someone doing it but im sure that merck is not the only one.

screw our healthcare system and our medicine costs and our health insurance. why cant our hospitals be free and medicine cheap? it doesnt make any sense.

a said...

Luke D'Cunha
Period 2, government

I think that critics of universal health care will point to cases such as this one to argue that the government is not the best one to handle health costs, since it is so prone to allowing corruption. Merck, no doubt, would not be able to cheat private health insurance companies in such a manner, since the companies are much more wary about their money (this reminds me of an example in the book "Economics in One Lesson"). This is unfortunate.


Mr. Steinke, however, is one lucky man. He'll probably get fired, but he won't care with that huge sum of 68$ million dollars.

Unknown said...

It's astounding how determined, how courageous, how unrelenting we (or at least some of us) can be. That truly is one of humankind's most precious characteristics. The success of the lawsuit not only bolsters the common cliché that "you can achieve anything you set your mind to", but exemplifies how it is your life, not that of the government or capitalism or private business, and you have a hand in it.


Keti Tsereteli
Period 4
Grade 10
Human Geography

Preston Wick: 3rd Period said...

The British guy in SiCKO had a glorious, glorious accent. The movie was good too, I guess. The adventure to Cuba is pretty eye-opening. If people so much poorer than we are can avoid disease better than we can, who's the more developed nation? The overcharging for medicine is also pretty interesting. I'd like to know how much the Cuban government pays, though.

Grant Curry said...

I love Micheal Moore movies,
Bowling for Columbine is one of my favorite documentaries ever,
But,
I was VERY dissapointed with Sicko.
While the US health system is in desperate need of reform there are negative effects to universal health coverage, and he didnt show them. For the first time, Micheal Moore was completely one sided. Before Sicko Micheal always showed both sides to everystory but this time he didnt and I really feel like being so biased damaged the integrity of the film.

clarahester3 said...

After watching Sicko in class and then reading this article, I am really disappointed in our health-care system. The focus should be the health of our nation and not a maximum profit made from sketchy sales tactics.

Leslie said...

It is obvious that our nation needs to make changes to its health-care plan. Hopefully, with elections nearing, a new administration can bring this necessary change and eliminate such scandals as this.

AnjalieSchlaeppi06 said...

Interestiong... Well, after the movie and this, no offence, but on this subject i am really happy to be foreign...

Sometimes during the movie, i was lathing, for example when he is so surprise that you can have a Nany by the government or a doctor who comes at your house... I got this a couple of time...

tatdelawyer06 said...

@aol.comThe way I see it, this new medicine is just to get extra dollars off of medication that shouldn't be so expensive. Medicine is suppose to make people feel better. Hoe can people feel better if they are getting charged an arm and leg to pay for medication, that in turn is paying for government bills and such. These drugs they are giving aren't even the safest, most-reliable drugs. They have beenpulled form the market for health concerns, or sold over the counter. Hardly worth paying so much for. It is ridiculous that the government is trying to gain off our pain. They should deal with their financial problems, and not add to ours.

tatiana =)

Unknown said...

Why is universal healthcare (or healthcare in general) such a controversial topic lately? Don't get me wrong, I know it's an important issue, but aren't there other things that deserve equal, if not more, media coverage? I feel like the real interest behind healthcare lately is more political than simply care for our country, and that's kind of sad. :(

Tara Viswanathan
2nd Perioddddddd

CeciliaDeLeon06 said...

this reminds me of the lady on the video who went to cuba and got the same medication for 5 cents while over here in the us it was way more.

CeciliaDeLeon06 said...

this reminds me of the lady on the video who went to cuba and got the same medication for 5 cents while over here in the us it was way more.

danielmendoza 6th said...

This is why we have high costing medical care. All the corporations and companies care about is money and try to find any loopholes to get it. The government should see from this they need to have a better medicare plan and not just line their pockets.

ColtonLimmer6th said...

Colton Limmer 6th

My comment will be my thoughts about Sicko. I really liked the movie and thought it expressed the point about healthcare good. I thought it was weird on how every person interviewed was totally anti-US health care. There has to been some peolpe that are ok with it. I hope you are having a lot of fun over the break!

BrandonChristophe06 said...

Brandon Christophe
6th

This is very startling. I hadn't heard about this until now. It shocking to see how drug manufacturers especially a big one like Merk would take advantage of the system to gain profits.

Although it is shocking, it is not surprising. I wonder whether this tactic would have been exposed by Steinke if there was no whistle blower award; luckily, there are incentives for such things.

This is another startling example of the ill methods of drug manufacturers. It wasn't enough to swindle people out of healthcare, now we're screwing the government out of money. Hopefully the large settlement will teach some kind of lesson to these multi billion dollar drug manufacturers.

Damian Madrid 6th said...

Damian Madrid
6th

That's crazy. It is weird to imagine that after healthcare providers such as Signa (sp) have been exposed on documentaries like Sicko, drug manufacturers would attempt something like this.

Even more disturbing are the tactics employed to gain profits. The settlement is a great thing for the world because it sets an example that these actions will not be tolerated by the government or the general public.

Hopefully in the future there will be more Steinkes even if he only did it for the $68 mil.

kellyscott2 said...

This definitely reinforces the negative view of the American healthcare system that I initially formed after watching Sicko. The fact that a major pharmaceutical company is more interested in making money than actually helping people doesn't surprise me at all, but it is disappointing. I am not sure, however, that a socialized healthcare system would be free of this kind of corruption either.

gillianwelch03 said...

Gillian Welch
3rd

I really liked this.
It gave some insight and it wasn't like boring documentaries.
It got a little emotional too.

g.a.b.e. said...

I think all these patients suffered greatly and need justice to be brought trhough. I really enjoyed SICKO however eye-openining and unnerving it was. We may not need a socialist government, but we do need to deal with the problem at hand.

Gabriel Quinteros
2nd

nathanwatson2 said...

(are we still supposed to post?)

So, Michael Moore's film was admittedly very biased. There was a sort of selective blindness to the complications in the countries which already have universal health care; the point is, neither plan (and in fact, no plan of any type) can be perfect.

Universal health care is probably the most appealing mainstream plan, though, because you wouldn't have problems exactly like this article is pointing out--health care as it stands is run like a business, where the goal is to maximize profits, minimize effort, and minimize expenses. A number of individuals who practice medicine in the United States are in it for the money, not for the work of giving the precious gift of healthy life to patients. If only we had some way of removing this avaricious factor...

BUT WAIT! We do! Everybody, drop your plans for the pre-med junk now. Being a doctor is not the best-paying job, and it's not the way to help people. No, instead, fellow classmates, let's all become Computer Science/Engineering dual majors with concentrations in robotics! Why? Because, dear friends, we can eliminate doctors entirely and replace them with selfless, made-to-perfection robots. WHO'S WITH ME?!?

Carleen_DeArmon_Period-03 said...

Carleen DeArmon~3rd ♥

Does anyone actually research Michael Moore's propaganda? I mean, besides what he has up on Michaelmoore.com. There are a few dispicable healthcare practices in the US of A but in general we have the best healthcare system in the world, or close to it.

That English hospital Moore showed is so far in debt they've had to close down more than half of their wards according to a BBC news report, and the hospital he displayed in Cuba, Havannah Hospital, is a teaching hospital and one where only the phenominally rich go, and where the foreigners go. Cuba isn't such a bad place, if you go to the places reserved for tourists, of course.

Visit this site, please, and click, 'Read more,' on the majority of them: SiCKO falsehoods

Mr. Perry, I did what you told us to do, and one of the first things that I did when I came home was research all of these things on the internet, and I came up with more than enough evidence disproving most of what Moore claims to be true in his astoundingly-convincing "documentary."

Canadian Healthcare is more difficult to research, and as I have these questions on Congress to finish and I lost the site I was at about that system, I will end my spiel here.

I've made penpals with a few french people and they all tell me that Michael Moore only displayed a very well-off family in France, not a typical, everyday one.

~~Carleen~~

Period 6 Bradley Bremer said...

It seems like its almost impossible to find a large company that isn't corrupt these days, if theres large sums of money to be had there will always be people doing whatever it takes to get as much of it as possible, even if it means partaking in not so legal activities and hurting innocent people.

HaileyHatcher3 said...

It's funny when people are completely opposed to universal healthcare and stories like this come up. I am totally up for more taxes to get rid of the insurance companies "helping us".

Dylan B said...

I think that people shouldnt have to overpay for the medice they need to survive.

savedraanjelica said...

Anjelica Savedra
4th period
9th grade
I think that Merck shouldn't give different people different prices. He should give the same price so the people don't have to pay more. Medicaid shouldn't pay for the problems that the doctors made.I think that the article explains alot about the government prices. This blog is for the missing score i have.

sarah lambert said...

What makes me sad is that Merck got away with those things for so long. Everything they did was wrong. I hope that all the other health care companies learned from Merck's poor decisions.


Sarah Lambert
Human Geography Ap 4
9th grade

SarahRock said...

Well, I guess I'll be moving to Canada then...

But seriously, how could this have gone on for so long without anybody getting into trouble? I'm glad that this is finally out in the open and that some of the wrongs will be somewhat righted.

I really hope that some people got in big trouble after Michael Moore's movie came out.

PatrickMorales-2nd said...

This just goes to show how messed up and shady the healthcare industry really is. Merck should defintely pay up for all of this. I think 650 million is a sufficient amount.

Cheyenne Bell said...

Although Michael Moore is pretty much my hero, I was disappointed in this film. True our healthcare system is insane and unjust but this film was just too biased. immediantly after seeing I wanted to go research on my own as to not feel ignorant. As for the case, I wish more people were like Steinke. Hopefully more questions are going to be raised and we can begin a change.

Spencer Davis said...

I think the medical corporations most definitley had this coming. Their methods have been shady, and exploitative, hurting the american public for the sake of wealth, when they're the very people relied on to keep us -in- health, not to keep themselves in wealth.
It's funny how little nations we scorn ultimatley prove themselves more caring for the humanitarian effort and sake then big bad america. You'd think we'd be able to at least care for our citizens with all this wealth and prestige.

caseyfarmer03 said...

I just don't quite understand why we have such a problem with universal healthcare. I really fail to see the negatives in it. Admittedly, Sicko was very biased, but I still can't find anything that is blatantly unfair or wrong about trying to help everyone.

Unknown said...

It's about time that someone is getting into trouble for all this money in the healthcare system,
i mean seriously.
will these people ever get caught?

Johanna Bauersfeld
4th

Tristan Holaday (3) said...

That's horrible what Merck was doing. I wish more people, including myself, would stand up against corruption in this country like Mr. Steinke did. I just don't understand how people can be so greedy not caring that what they're doing is hurting and killing people. I pray things will start turning around.

Ashely Ambrosio said...

I love most of Michael Moore's movies but... this one was very disappointing!! it made the healthcare of the united states look REALLY bad!!! it really reinforces my point of view of the health care system! it is also disappointing to show how health care providers would go for more money than helping out the people in our society!

Ashely Ambrosio
4th

thomasmarmolejoperiod6 said...

Hmmm...after reading this..and watching SICKO (and also all the other corruptiveness going on in our country!) i finally realize that my original plan to move to england..is a good one. This really opened my eyes on how corrupted our gov't actually is. They do anything to earn an extra dollar. But they dont care how it affects us. They complain about people selling drugs illegaly. Or selling pills off the street..they complain how this is ruining america..by getting people addicted..but isnt that exactly what they're doing? that makes it right? the gov't can addict our people but the stret pushers cant? im not saying illegally selling drugs is a good thing here..im just trying to put into perspective how the try so hard to stop this stuff..but they do it themselves. therefore...ENGLAND here i come!

RJ Guajardo said...

We really are in need of a universal healthcare system so companies such as Merck don't get away with "stealing" from the government anymore.
If you make drugs to cure illnesses, I assume you should want to help people...not rob them.

codywilliams2nd said...

Wow. Who ever knew that squealing on your own company would gain you $68 million. Though, I do have to say that it was a somewhat justified action. The company was making price stabs, however, its not quite right to get a huge sum of the rip offs for taddle taling. Sure, a pat on the back isn't a big reward, but $68 mill. is a little excessive.

kellyscott2 said...

Hmm, so after reading my comment again as well as everyone else's, I feel slightly stupid for being completely manipulated by Sicko (just like pretty much everyone else). I still think the healthcare system is corrupt, but now I realize that so is every other business in America. And it's not that other countries are perfect and free of this kind of deception, but Sicko basically portrayed the U.S. as completely horrible and foreign countries as having more integrity (which is a pretty big exaggeration).