Wednesday, November 27, 2024
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CRMC Settles Lawsuit

Cookeville Regional Medical Center Board of Trustees have voted on a negotiated settlement to resolve allegations by the U.S. Department of Justice.

CRMC will pay $4.1 million to settle claims that it entered into improper contracts in 2012.

A press release said the allegations concerned physician agreements and did not involve the care provided at the medical center or the fees that patients paid. CRMC denies any wrongdoing, but has agreed to pay the settlement to avoid the expense and distraction of lengthy litigation with the federal government.

Officials said payment of the settlement will in no way affect the operations, patient care, or patient costs at Cookeville Regional.

“Because we always recognized that it was possible we would reach a point where it made economic sense to settle with the federal government, we have money set aside to pay the settlement without affecting the hospital’s stability,” stated Paul Korth, CRMC CEO. “Given our financial independence, this settlement will be paid out of hospital funds only as CRMC does not receive any taxpayer assistance. We also want to reassure our community that this expense will in no way affect patient care, patient costs, or our operations moving forward. We are pleased that this investigation will now be closed.”

“CRMC has fully cooperated with the federal government as they have investigated these charges,” added Korth. “We do not feel that the medical center has violated any laws and are disappointed that we have been put in this position. Nothing the federal government investigated concerned patient care. This amounts to a paperwork issue and a difference of opinion over how a contract should be structured. Even though we vehemently disagree with the federal government, we also feel an obligation to our community and have decided that a settlement is in our medical center’s best financial interest. We do not want to be subjected to even lengthier litigation that will result in further legal costs.”

The DOJ claimed that a 2012 contract that CRMC entered into with certain cardiologists employed by CRMC violated the Stark Law and the Anti-Kickback Statute, which govern the financial relationships between doctors and hospitals. The DOJ further claimed that CRMC violated the False Claims Act when it submitted Medicare claims for payments related to services resulting from those physician contracting agreements.

The settlement resolves all of the allegations related to those doctors.

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