DNA
test scams appear to be ramping up
The 86-year-old woman
in rural Utah doesn’t usually answer solicitations from strangers, she said,
but the young couple who knocked on her front door seemed so nice. Before long,
she had handed over her Medicare
and Social Security numbers — and allowed them to swab her cheek to collect her
DNA.
She is among scores
of older Americans who have been targeted in a scam that uses
DNA tests to defraud Medicare or steal personal information.
Fraudsters find their victims across the country through cold calls, door
knocking, email, Facebook ads and Craigslist.
They also troll
low-income housing complexes, senior centers, health fairs and antique shops.
Sometimes they offer ice cream, pizza or $100 gift cards. Some callers claim to
work for Medicare, according to a fraud alert issued
July 19 by the Federal Trade Commission.
The woman in Utah
said she didn’t know the purpose of the DNA test she submitted to this month —
“I’m too old to remember” — but the visit troubled her for several nights, she
said.
“I’d lie awake
thinking about it, saying, ‘You fool, you shouldn’t have done that.’” (She
spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of being targeted by other scams.)
In interviews with
Kaiser Health News, seniors around the country reported feeling betrayed,
exposed and confused.
“I’d
lie awake thinking about it, saying, ‘You fool, you shouldn’t have done that.’”
One
Utah woman who fell for the scam
Capitalizing on the
growing popularity of genetic testing — and fears of terminal illness —
scammers are persuading seniors to take two types of genetic screenings that
are covered by Medicare Part B, according to experts familiar with the schemes.
The tests aim to detect their risk for cancer or medication side effects.
The scammers bill
Medicare for the tests. The patients, who might never receive any results,
typically pay nothing. But they risk compromising personal information and
family medical history. And taxpayers foot the bill for tests that may be
unnecessary or inappropriate.
Scammers can really
cash in: Medicare pays an average of $6,000 to $9,000 for these tests, and
sometimes as much as $25,000, according to the Office of Inspector General at
the Department of Health and Human Services.
DNA test scams appear
to be ramping up: Complaints to the inspector general fraud hotline have poured
in at rates as high as 50 per week, according to Sheila Davis, an OIG
spokeswoman. That’s compared with one or two complaints a week at the same time
last year, she said.
“That’s
a pretty egregious form of patient manipulation and emotional abuse.”
Shimon
Richmond Assistant
inspector general for investigations
The inspector general
issued a fraud alert in
June, urging seniors to refuse unsolicited requests for their Medicare numbers
and take DNA tests only with the approval of a doctor they know and trust. By
Medicare rules, DNA tests must be medically necessary and approved by a
physician who is treating the patient.
In cases that have
gone to court, scammers were accused of breaking those rules by paying
kickbacks to doctors who agreed to order DNA tests for patients without ever
treating them. The front-line recruiters who solicit the tests might work
directly for a lab, or as independent contractors who divide revenue with a
laboratory in exchange for bringing in extra business.
Some solicitors try
to scare seniors into cooperating, said Shimon Richmond, an assistant inspector
general for investigations. They warn seniors that they could be vulnerable to
heart attacks, stroke, cancer or even suicide if they do not take the DNA
tests.
“That’s a pretty
egregious form of patient manipulation and emotional abuse,” Richmond said.
Richmond said the two
tests involved in the scams are: CGx, which tests for genetic predisposition to
cancer, and PGx, a pharmacogenomic test for genetic mutations that affect how
the body handles certain medications. They’re part of a new frontier of
preventive genetic health.
In New Jersey, three
people were sent to federal
prison in May for a scheme that used a purported nonprofit
called Good Samaritans of America to persuade hundreds of seniors to take DNA
tests. The co-conspirators raked in $100,000 in commissions from labs that ran
the tests, according to the government.
“This is a gold-rush
area for folks. It’s leading to a big response by the government,” said
Assistant U.S. Attorney Bernard Cooney, a prosecutor in the case.
“This
is a gold-rush area for folks. It’s leading to a big response by the
government.”
Bernard
Cooney Assistant
U.S. Attorney
This month, a Florida
doctor was charged in
federal court for his role in an alleged fraud scheme to order
DNA tests for patients in Oklahoma, Arizona, Tennessee and Mississippi.
Patients were recruited through Facebook ads offering $100 gift cards,
according to court records. The doctor allegedly confessed that he was being
paid $5,000 per month to approve these tests, even though he never spoke to any
of the patients involved.
Some labs accused of
billing Medicare for unnecessary genetic tests — including Millennium
Health and Companion DX
Reference Lab — agreed to repay the government but declared
bankruptcy before doing so, leaving taxpayers on the hook.
Meanwhile, older
Americans are encountering sales pitches that leave them feeling deceived.
In Weslaco, Texas,
Will Dickey, a 71-year-old retired police detective, submitted to a DNA test at
a health fair in February.
“I have a bunch of
cancer in my family,” he recalled thinking, so “it’d help if I had an idea of
what genes I had in me.” Three weeks later, he saw the same salesperson
rounding up business at his RV park, where his wife and several neighbors got
their cheeks swabbed. Dickey, who spent 10 years working with DNA tests in a
police crime lab, said he was surprised at the cost: A lab in Mississippi
charged Medicare $10,410 for his tests.
He didn’t get results
until he requested them by phone. The report, which listed results as
“uncertain,” was “a bunch of gobbledygook that makes no sense to anybody who’s
not in the medical field,” he said. He reported the case to authorities as
possible fraud.
As in Dickey’s case,
scammers often gain access to places that seniors trust by persuading
gatekeepers to let them make presentations. Bev Beatty allowed a genetic
testing company to run a booth at a senior health fair she organized in Oak
Forest, Ill., last year. At least 10 seniors took the tests. Afterward, she was
irate to discover they had been roped into a scam. Test-takers told her they
never received their DNA results, even though Medicare paid thousands of
dollars.
Scammers often gain
access to places that seniors trust by persuading gatekeepers to let them make
presentations.
“If somebody’s going
to be fraudulent and bill Medicare, it kind of riles me up,” she said. “I would
like to see them hanged.”
In Paducah, Ky.,
Donald McNeill, a 72-year-old Vietnam War veteran, was persuaded at an event at
his senior center in December to submit a cheek swab for a DNA cancer
screening. The company never sent results, he said. But it billed $32,212.86 to
his Medicare
Supplement insurance plan. He’s worried his personal information
will be misused.
“I’ve lost my
identity to these people,” he said. “They got my DNA and they got my
information through this scam. I’m extremely upset.”
Others may face
consequences for merely engaging with scammers. In Idaho, a woman in her late
60s said she responded to an online ad for free genetic testing and got a
callback 20 seconds later. She received a cheek swab kit in the mail but,
suspecting a scam, never sent it in. Now, she said, she finds her phone
suddenly plagued by robocalls.
In California, 1 in 4
cases reported to the state’s Senior Medicare Patrol this year for potential
fraud have been related to genetic tests, according to Sandy Morales, statewide
volunteer coordinator.
Sherry Swan of
Roseville, Calif., is one of many who have filed complaints. She said she was
home one Sunday afternoon in early June when a man named Caleb knocked on her
door, and said, “I’m here to do your DNA testing.”
“What are you talking
about?” she recalled asking him. She said he failed to produce an ID when
asked. “It was just a scam from the minute he opened his mouth.”
In
California, 1 in 4 cases reported to the state’s Senior Medicare Patrol this
year for potential fraud have been related to genetic tests.
Swan said she spent
five minutes arguing with the man, then called the police when he left.
“I’m aggressive. I
work with homeless in the county,” said Swan, who is 64. But she said she
worried about the more passive and trusting neighbors in her senior living
complex. She later discovered that many had been persuaded to take the tests
and divulge their family medical histories.
A man named Freddy,
who answered a number on a flyer that Caleb had left at Swan’s door, said he
supervised Caleb as part of a team from Whole Home Solutions. He said the
operation was aboveboard because they enrolled only eligible Medicare
beneficiaries, and that a teledoctor would consult with the person’s treating
physician before the tests were sent in. The tests were handled by Pathway Labs
in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Pathway Labs CEO Rene
Perez confirmed his lab handled about 20 tests sent in by Whole Home Solutions.
But he said he cut ties with the company on July 6 on the advice of his
attorneys after receiving complaints about how seniors were being solicited for
the DNA tests. The lab worked with the outfit for about 45 days, Perez said.
Such experiences make
him “reluctant to take on new business” from similar entities sending in DNA
tests, Perez said.
“We strongly advocate
and believe in the benefits of genetic preventative health,” he said. “But the
problem that we see right now is that it’s really picking up momentum on the
national level. Unfortunately, when that happens, you get a variety of
different sorts of groups that essentially may see dollar signs.”
To seniors curious
about these DNA tests, Richmond of the inspector general’s office has this
advice: “If anyone calls you, or sends you an unsolicited request for your
Medicare number or to convince you or scare you into taking a genetic test,
either hang up the phone or say no.”
Seniors interested in
the tests should call their primary care provider, he said: “Don’t give into the
manipulation or the scare tactics to get this health care test from someone you
don’t know.”
If you suspect
Medicare fraud, contact the OIG
Hotline online or at 1-800-HHS-TIPS.
Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit news
service covering health issues. It is an editorially independent program of the
Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
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