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Tenet’s $55.8-Million Payment Settles Claims

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Tenet Healthcare Corp., the second-biggest U.S. hospital chain, will pay $55.8 million to settle several allegations of Medicare fraud, including a whistle-blower lawsuit claiming that Tenet’s Brotman Medical Center in Culver City filed false cost reports.

The Santa Barbara-based company took reserves for the settlement before Feb. 28, the end of its fiscal third quarter, Tenet said.

Tenet’s settlement is the latest in a series involving hospitals that overbilled Medicare. The top hospital chain, HCA Inc., and Quorum Health Group Inc., now part of Triad Hospitals Inc., in recent months have reached multimillion-dollar settlements with the government.

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“These settlements mean the hospitals are giving money back to the Medicare program that was improperly taken,” said San Francisco lawyer Mary A. Inman of Phillips & Cohen.

The law firm represented the whistle-blower William Noll in the 1998 lawsuit against Brotman. Noll, Brotman’s former controller, will receive as much as 30% of the $9.75 million that Brotman will pay to settle the matter. Tenet acquired Brotman from OrNda Corp. in 1997.

Tenet also said Tuesday that it will pay $17 million to resolve allegations that its hospitals overcharged Medicare and other government health-care programs for laboratory services.

And in a third settlement that was packaged in Tuesday’s announcement, Tenet said it will pay $29 million in a case that accused Palmetto General Hospital in Florida of billing and cost-report violations for home health services once operated by that hospital. Tenet acquired Palmetto General in 1995.

The bond-rating firm Standard & Poor’s, noting that the total settlements Tuesday are small compared with Tenet’s cash flow, said there is no effect on the ratings or outlook for Tenet’s bonds.

Shares of Tenet rose $1.84 to $76.54 on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock has gained 30% this year.

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