Military Treatment Facilities: Improvements Needed to Increase DOD Third-Party Collections
Abstract
Like the private health care industry, the cost of providing health care services to the Department of Defense's (DOD) active duty personnel, their dependents, retirees, and survivors and their dependents has increased dramatically over the past decade. In fiscal year 2003, DOD reported that more than 8.7 million Military Health System beneficiaries were eligible to receive health care at a cost of about $27.2 billion per year--up from a reported 8.2 million eligible beneficiaries at a cost of $15.6 billion in fiscal year 1997. To the extent that DOD beneficiaries have private health insurance coverage, DOD is authorized to bill insurance companies under the Third Party Collections Program. As such, DOD has the opportunity to defray the rising cost of providing health care to an increasing number of eligible beneficiaries. In October 2002, we reported that the three military treatment facilities (MTFs) we visited did not always bill and collect from private insurers for care that was reimbursable to the government. At all three facilities, we identified control weaknesses that resulted in instances where these MTFs had not identified all patients with third-party insurance and sometimes did not bill those insurers even when they were aware such coverage existed. Consequently, opportunities to collect millions of dollars of reimbursements from insurers for medical services provided were forgone.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Feb 20, 2004
- Accession Number
- AD1157870
Entities
People
- Gregory Kutz
Organizations
- United States Government Accountability Office