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Cheats cost health service in Lothian thousands of pounds

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Published Date: 25 June 2009
DENTISTS claiming NHS treatment for private patients, and consultants offering ultrasounds for payment are among alleged frauds costing NHS Lothian thousands of pounds.
Health workers stealing food and others working for private companies when signed off sick are also part of a fraud breakdown, released to the Evening News under Freedom of Information.

A combination of sealed cases and ongoing investigations has
seen NHS Lothian potentially lose out on around £13,000 last year.

And examples of these range from pharmacists accidentally ordering repeat prescriptions, to employees stealing cash from patients.

NHS chiefs said work was ongoing to clamp down on fraud, which across the UK costs millions to the health service each year, and also flag up to staff those who may be unintentionally making bogus claims.

In one case investigated by health chiefs, a dentist was allleged to be claiming NHS treatment for private patients, potentially costing the health board nearly £1,500, but the charge could not ultimately be proved.

Food worth around £2,600 went missing from an NHS kitchen, but again no case could be proven.

Another employee who was off sick as a nurse, returned to work as a bank nurse, therefore getting double money, although NHS Lothian documents show "flaw in the time management system hampered investigation".

Other health workers have been paid twice for working in the same departments at the same time, while one consultant was accused of offering private scans and ultrasounds to around 19 patients last year.

Again, the investigation could not prove any wrongdoing, at a cost of around £400 to the taxpayer.

There are also six ongoing investigations regarding non- eligible overseas visitors who received treatment without charge, which could ultimately cost as much as £4000.

In one case, a dental receptionist was suspected of destroying a GP's electronic records, as well as stealing cash from patient payments.

The NHS has a counter-fraud team, which recently paid visits to the ERI and St John's Hospital in Livingston.

Service communications manager Stephen Frier said: "Only a very small number of healthcare professionals, staff and patients seek to defraud the NHS, but our main aim is to identify those areas of misuse of resources and reduce it to an absolute minimum."

Alan Boyter, director of human resources and organisational development, NHS Lothian, said: "People who steal from the NHS are stealing from the sick and we will immediately report any suspected fraud to the police.

"We have a robust and effective system, working with NHS counter-fraud services, for detecting the tiny minority of NHS staff who may be tempted to steal."





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  • Last Updated: 25 June 2009 10:28 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Health of the NHS
 
1

simonp,

25/06/2009 12:09:15
and as a percentage of revenue £14k is prob very small. not as much as is wasted by people not turning up!!
2

colin syme,

East lothian 25/06/2009 13:33:43
Why shouldn't these health care professionals receive perks and benefits, otherwise they might leave the NHS,----and become a MP or council official, snorting at the trough has become an official way of life in modern Britain.
3

Watch Us Wreck The Mic, Psyche.,

25/06/2009 14:46:57
What a rubbish piece of "investigative journalism" (investigative ji$m?).
4

Angus R,

25/06/2009 15:30:05
So a quick scan of this story shows that of all the investigations nothing was proven or turned up? Sounds like the investigators are either useless or at it (or no wrong doing is being done)
5

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 25/06/2009 16:09:25
If and when they are caught,ht them in the pocket where it hurts them,cheats.
6

maz1,

edinburgh 25/06/2009 19:22:08
This is a drop in the ocean compared with the cost of the NHS providing free healthcare for every immigrant, families of foreign students etc who continue to flood into Britain demanding free healthcare, interpreters etc, that is why free healthcare for all can not be sustained for the people of the UK, a small island cannot provide free healthcare for the rest of the world.
7

noswod,

Honestas 25/06/2009 21:55:14
Aye the mechanisms O the health proffessional within the National Health service are exposed.i.e we earn a basic O £150.000 pa plus extras. unfortunately under Camerons regime we will only earn £100k derey me. The economic reality syndrome is coming to you middleclass Jockies very fast. Unfortunately the rip off is over for poor performance. Doctakars kiss goodbye tae £125k pa WhiteHa will no longer fund this level of USA type O cash. Aye these Edinburgh Liberal types ill have ta make it on £75k pa what a shame.

8

Ian down under,

Musselburgh 26/06/2009 05:03:26
If they are cheating or stealing then punish them in the normal way with appropriate evidenceand fair trials. At the same time accept that the front line staff do a tremendous job in difficult circumstances.
I know of one health area in England which in 1980 for 3 hospitals with 900 beds, around 300 nurses, 50 doctors and in-house portering, cleaning and support staff, as well as a full laboratory service. The A&E department saw 60 000 patients a year.
Management and admin was 7 people, a Unit manager, a finance manager, a personnel manager and 4 clerks. There were no computers and payroll was done on the local council computer, once a month.
That same health area now has 35 mangers and 60 admin clerical staff, only has 600 beds and no in house ancillary staff. The managers all get company cars and travel perks. That sadly is the same picture throughout the NHS. Doctors and nurses working very hard and managers with the snouts well in the swill and doing nothing to actually deliver health care.

 

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