A version of this article was published in the November 2021 edition of Healthcare News.
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic created significant, highly publicized upheaval to the healthcare delivery system. Equally disruptive, the industry also had to face a delayed impact to COVID-19 payer claims processing workflow and provider revenue cycle.
With the millions of transactions that healthcare payers process and the billions of dollars paid each year to providers, COVID-19-related claims significantly increased the likelihood of payment integrity risks.
Performing an audit of healthcare claims could help payers and self-insured employers uncover these mistakes, reduce medical expenses, and improve the member’s experience, which underscores employee overall satisfaction with employer benefit plans and cost controls.
Learn more about the following:
- What is healthcare fraud?
- How can you identify fraud, waste, and abuse in healthcare?
- What is the impact of healthcare claims processing mistakes?
- How can employers prevent fraud, waste, and abuse with healthcare claims?
- What are the benefits of a healthcare claims audit?
- How has COVID-19 contributed to fraud, waste, and abuse in healthcare?
- What does the Department of Justice focus on to help combat fraud in healthcare?
What is healthcare fraud?
Healthcare fraud is the intentional deception or misrepresentation of fact that can result in unauthorized benefit or payment. Abuse means actions that are medically unnecessary or improper, inappropriate, and outside of acceptable standards of professional conduct.
Waste comes from errors, such as incorrect keying of billing codes, misuse of modifiers, and more deliberately through excessive treatments, overuse of medical services, medication and prescription refills, billing for unnecessary medical equipment, and unnecessary medical appointments.
Implementing best practices along with fraud, waste, and abuse (FWA) counter measures payers can continue to mitigate rising healthcare costs and claims processing waste.

