JD Vance, Dr. Oz make dramatic move withholding $259.5M Minnesota Medicaid funds in ...

Vice President JD Vance announced a withholding of $259.5 million in Medicaid funds for Minnesota pending investigation into potential fraud, affecting nearly half of the state's recent Medicaid reimbursements. The move also includes a national pause on new enrollment of companies seeking Medicare reimbursement for durable medical equipment, due to high error and suspected fraud rates. These actions are part of a broader federal effort announced by President Trump to combat waste and abuse in government health programs.

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JD Vance, Dr. Oz make dramatic move withholding $259.5M Minnesota Medicaid funds in ...

Politics

JD Vance, Dr. Oz make dramatic move withholding $259.5M Minnesota Medicaid funds in first battle in the ‘war on fraud’

WASHINGTON — Vice President JD Vance will announce Wednesday afternoon that $259.5 million in Medicaid funds for Minnesota won’t be reimbursed pending investigation — along with a national pause on firms that can seek subsidies through Medicare for durable medical equipment like canes and walkers, The Post has learned.

Vance will appear alongside Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid

Services, to make the announcement — one day after President Trump announced a “war on fraud” in his State of the Union address.

The unusual mass-withholding of reimbursement to Minnesota impacts nearly half of the receipts submitted for the low-income Medicaid program in the past fiscal quarter.

US Vice President JD Vance speaking about combatting fraud, with Mehmet Oz standing next to him.

The “deferment” focuses on 14 programs identified by the state as having a high risk of fraud, including autism care, at-home rehabilitation, non-emergency medical transports and night supervision — some of which have been implicated in a large fraud scandal in the Twin Cities.

The funding for Medicaid reimbursement will be deferred for Minnesota until “further investigation is completed” into possible fraud impacting billing, an administration official said.

The Trump administration in January announced plans to pause future disbursement to all states pending review — after pausing various social-services funds for five Democrat-run states including Minnesota and New York — but the Wednesday announcement impacts receipts already submitted.

The new durable medical equipment policy, meanwhile, will restrict new companies from enrolling in the old-age Medicare program’s reimbursement system.

Officials last year identified an error rate of roughly 20% — or $1.5 billion — in durable medical equipment charges, of which about $1 billion is suspected to be fraudulent, officials said.

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The pause in new companies enrolling is intended to allow for a vetting of already-enrolled companies to weed out bad apples.

Unlike the Minnesota Medicaid pause, issues with Medicare equipment charges are clustered in Republican-led states, with disproportionate suspected fraud in South Florida and Harris County, Texas, one official said.

Trump announced at the State of the Union that Vance would be in charge of a national crackdown on abuse of government programs.

“I am officially announcing the war on fraud to be led by our great vice president, JD Vance,” Trump said, predicting, “we will actually have a balanced budget overnight. It will go very quickly. That’s the kind of money you’re talking about.”

Filed under: Attacks on Democracy

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