Merged threads?
Two separate stories? (I am not where it is convenient to download the vid posted in the OP).
Dr. Vainer brought whistleblower allegations a couple years ago and it was (magically--surprise!)
dismissed by the Feds. This looks like the same issue the plaintiffs vowed to ? The original lawsuit included bilking Medicare for Zemplar as well as Venofer.
"...
The lawsuit says that until January, for example, DaVita required nurses to use one 10-microgram vial of Zemplar, a vitamin D drug, instead of a six-microgram dose in three two-microgram vials,. It then billed Medicare for all 10 micrograms even though four went unused...
...Dr. Daniel Coyne, a nephrologist at Washington University School of Medicine who treats some patients at DaVita clinics, said it was “absolutely true” that the iron drug was given a bit at a time to make more money.In 2008, the latest year for which figures are available, DaVita spent more per patient on iron drugs than other dialysis chains, according to figures from a government-funded program that tracks dialysis. DaVita also had the highest expenditures on vitamin D drugs and Epogen. “How could it possibly be that patients in DaVita facilities were getting so much more iron than patients in other facilities and not getting iron overload?” said Dr. Coyne, who is not associated with the lawsuit. “The answer is the iron wasn’t going into them. It was being thrown away to make a profit.” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/he...wanted=1&_r=2&
I thought this CNN quote from this article regarding the lawsuit was humorous:
"The dialysis empire is run by CEO Kent Thiry, who dresses like one of the Three Musketeers, has adopted a company slogan of 'One for all and all for one' and in company staff meetings leads his employees, who he calls villagers, in cheers of "DaVita!"..."
Dialysis company accused of giant Medicare fraud - CNN.com
Ooops there's more.
Another suit this year:
"...The lawsuit was filed by Ivey Woodard, a former Amgen employee who claimed that DaVita allowed Amgen employees to, among other things, review charts of patients, which led to increased dosages of Epogen in some cases, according to the suit. The federal government declined to intervene in the suit and is not pursuing the matter, according to DaVita's latest annual report.
Fresenius Medical Care, Waltham, Mass., was dismissed as a defendant in the suit in 2010, according to court documents.
DaVita still faces investigations in other states that are mainly related to the company's dealings with physicians and joint ventures, according to its annual report. DaVita also is under investigation in New York by HHS' Inspector General's Office by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York, regarding its Medicaid-backed care."
Read more: DaVita settles False Claims case for $55 million | Modern Healthcare http://www.modernhealthcare.com/arti...#ixzz2Dqa31M2N
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Oh dear.
C'mon Trauma, get real. "More than meets the eye?" I'll say.
And let's not forget who our Obama-appointed Health Czar is, DeParle ... a coikidink in these DaVita lawsuits that the Feds "choose not to pursue?" I think not. Corporate America and the Feds... it's one big circle-jerk.
"...Among DeParle’s corporate connections:
DaVita Inc., which owns and operates kidney dialysis centers, has been the subject of several government probes into its billing and drug-prescribing practices, most recently in December by Justice Department investigators in Georgia. DeParle joined the DaVita board in May 2001 and resigned in July 2008 “to devote more time to her other business activities,” according to the company. She earned more than $2 million in compensation and stock sales, according to records at the Securities and Exchange Commission...
...
Five of the corporations whose boards DeParle served on have paid a total of $566 million since 2003 to settle fraud or product liability cases, often involving tax dollars paid by Medicare."
Obama health czar led companies in trouble - Health - Health care | NBC News