A sleep diagnostic company illegally billed Medicare for almost $9 million in fraudulent sleep tests, according to a government lawsuit naming the company and two executives as defendants.
The Department of Justice intervened in two False Claims Act lawsuits originally brought by whistleblowers against Snap Diagnostics LLC and filed its own complaint against Snap, its founder Gil Raviv, and Vice President of Marketing Stephen Burton. The DOJ said Snap would routinely bill Medicare for two or three nights of sleep testing services, which are frequently used to diagnose sleep disorders like apnea, even though only one night of testing was ...
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