Chicago
Hospitals Accused of Organ Transplant Fraud Reuters -
07/28/03 - Three Chicago hospitals were accused of fraud by prosecutors on
Monday for manipulating diagnoses of transplant patients to get them new livers.
Two of the institutions paid fines to settle the charges.
The University of Chicago Hospitals and Northwestern Memorial Hospital paid
fines of $115,000 and $23,587, respectively, without admitting or denying guilt
in the "whistle-blower" suits initiated by a transplant specialist.
The University of Illinois Hospital was sued for $3 million.
"By falsely diagnosing patients and placing them in intensive care to make them
appear more sick than they were, these three highly regarded medical centers
made patients eligible for liver transplants ahead of others who were waiting
for organs in the transplant region," said Patrick Fitzgerald, the U.S. attorney
for the Northern District of Illinois.
"Organ donation can be a matter of life and death. There is no room for fraud
when it comes to deciding which patient receives an organ," Illinois Attorney
General Lisa Madigan said in the joint statement.
Some patients were hospitalized in intensive care or given a more urgent
transplant status to make them eligible for precious livers from organ donors.
The suit against the University of Illinois hospital said the improper diagnoses
were used to meet the minimum number of liver transplants to qualify for
government health insurance programs.
Donated livers are in short supply, with nearly 20,000 Americans awaiting new
ones and roughly 5,000 transplants performed each year. The United Network for
Organ Sharing draws up regional lists based on patient need and other factors.
The cases grew out of a 1999 lawsuit filed by transplant specialist Dr. Raymond
Pollack, who will share in the fine proceeds.
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