Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indian-American Doctor, Wife To Pay $1.2 Mn To Settle Fraud Charges

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jun, 2017 11:51 AM
    A prominent Indian-American doctor and his wife have agreed to pay USD 1.2 million to settle allegations of prescribing unapproved drugs in the US. 
     
     
    Anindya Sen, 68, owns two cancer centres in Greeneville and Johnson City in Tennessee. His wife Patricia Posey Sen, 69, managed his medical practice from 2009 through 2012.
     
     
    The couple allegedly profited by administering the cheaper unapproved drugs, the Department of Justice said. 
     
     
    They would pay USD 1.2 million to resolve state and federal False Claims Act allegations that their medical practice billed Medicare and Tennessee Medicaid for anti-cancer and infusion drugs that were produced for sale in foreign countries and not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for marketing in the US, it said. 
     
     
    “Billing for foreign drugs that are not approved by the FDA undermines federal health care programmes and could potentially risk patient safety,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad Readler of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. 
     
     
    The government alleged that the unapproved drugs that the Sens provided to patients and billed to Medicare were not reimbursable under those programmes. It is further alleged that the Sens purchased unapproved drugs because they were less expensive than the drugs approved by FDA for marketing in the US. 
     
     
    Claims settled by this agreement were allegations only and there had been no determination of liability, the Justice Department added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia woman has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for seven years after admitting she directed her teenage lover to kill another boyfriend during her final year of high school.

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear
    Quebec's latest politician goes by the nickname Rambo, loves to liberally sprinkle his comments with swear words, and is not ruling out civil war in the province.

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical
    BRAMPTON, Ont. — A company in Mississauga, Ont., has been fined $225,000 for importing and selling chemicals that harm the ozone layer.

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding
    VANCOUVER — Canada's Dominique Maltais is retiring from competitive snowboarding.

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious
    ST. ANTHONY, N.L. — The RCMP in northwestern Newfoundland say the disappearance of Jennifer Hillier-Penney is considered suspicious.

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious

    Pot Use On Rise, As Is Driving Under Drug's Influence, Ontario Survey Finds

    TORONTO — With Ottawa poised to legalize recreational marijuana next year, researchers are keeping a close eye on use of the drug, which has been steadily trending upward over the last couple of decades.

    Pot Use On Rise, As Is Driving Under Drug's Influence, Ontario Survey Finds