The Florida Attorney General’s Office’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit secured more than $2.2 million for the Florida Medicaid program from Acadia Healthcare Company, Inc. Acadia, a health care provider based in Tennessee, alleged to have violated the Federal False Claims Act and the Florida False Claims Act by submitting false or fraudulent claims for inpatient behavioral health care to Medicaid and Medicare.

Acting Attorney General John Guard said, “Our Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, along with its colleagues in several states, has yet again done terrific work, holding accountable a health care company that sought to receive funds from the public fisc that it was not entitled. As they do every day, the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit will investigate, prosecute and recover public funds from those that engage in waste, fraud or abuse.”

The agreement resolves allegations that the defendant’s facilities admitted patients who were not eligible for inpatient treatment. It also resolved claims that Acadia failed to discharge patients who no longer needed inpatient care, leading to longer than needed inpatient stays. In addition, the settlement resolves allegations that the company provided inadequate staffing and failed to adequately train or supervise staff, resulting in patient harm.

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