Uncle Sam whistleblower lawsuit: Omnicare took tens of millions of dollars in kickbacks

Omnicare Inc., a Fortune 500 company that provides pharmaceuticals to geriatric patients in skilled nursing facilities, nursing homes and assisted living facilities, took tens of millions of dollars in kickbacks from pharmaceutical manufacturer Abbott labs, accordinf to a whistleblower lawsuit filed by the Department of Justice and a whistleblower.

Federal regulations require nursing homes to retain consulting pharmacists such as those provided by Omnicare to ensure that residents’ drug prescriptions are appropriate. The United States alleges that Omnicare solicited and received kickbacks from Abbott in exchange for purchasing and recommending the prescription drug Depakote for controlling behavioral disturbances exhibited by dementia patients residing in nursing homes served by Omnicare. Omnicare’s pharmacists reviewed nursing home patients’ charts at least monthly and made recommendations to physicians on what drugs should be prescribed for those patients, the Government says. The government also alleges that Omnicare touted its influence over physicians in nursing homes in order to secure kickbacks from pharmaceutical companies such as Abbott.

Abbott allegedly made payments to Omnicare described as “grants” and “educational funding,” even though their true purpose was to induce Omnicare to recommend Depakote, an anti-seizure drug for patients with dementia. For example, according to the complaint, Omnicare solicited substantial contributions from Abbott and other pharmaceutical manufacturers to its “Re*View” program. Although Omnicare claimed that Re*View was a “health management” and “educational” program, the complaint alleges that it was simply a means by which Omnicare solicited kickbacks from pharmaceutical manufacturers in exchange for increasing the utilization of their drugs on elderly nursing home residents.

In internal documents, Omnicare allegedly referred to Re*View as its “one extra script per patient” program. The complaint also alleges that Omnicare entered into agreements with Abbott by which Omnicare was entitled to increasing levels of rebates from Abbott based on the number of nursing home residents serviced and the amount of Depakote prescribed per resident. Finally, the complaint alleges that Abbott funded Omnicare management meetings on Amelia Island, Florida, offered tickets to sporting events to Omnicare management, and made other payments to local Omnicare pharmacies.

In May 2012, the United States, numerous individual states, and Abbott entered into a $1.5 billion global civil and criminal resolution that, among other things, resolved Abbott’s civil liability under the False Claims Act for paying kickbacks to nursing home pharmacies.

In a prior case in June, federal officials Wednesday accepted the company’s offer to pay $124.2 million to settle a suit accusing the company of allegedly offering improper financial incentives to skilled nursing facilities in northern Ohio in return for their continued selection of Omnicare to supply drugs to elderly Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.

Last February, the company paid $4 milion to resolve allegations that Omnicare solicited and received kickbacks from California-based drug manufacturer Amgen Inc. in return for implementing programs designed to switch Medicaid beneficiaries from a competitor drug to Amgen’s Aranesp product.

In August 2012, it settled a 2007 lawsuit claiming it paid a kickback in buying a pharmacy company, and that it submitted false claims for reimbursement to government health insurers. Additional terms of the settlement were not released.

In May 2012, Omnicare settled another case with the U.S. Department of Justice for $50 million. The agency called it the “largest controlled substance settlement in history,” and said Omnicare gave nursing home residents medicines without a prescription, with missing prescription information or without documentation. It resulted in the company being agreeing to operate under a corporate integrity agreement with the federal government.

Finally, Omnicare agreed in November 2009 to pay $98 million to settle civil allegations by the U.S. government and various states that it took kickbacks from Johnson & Johnson.

Jeffrey Newman represents whistleblowers.