OPINION: Leaders should remain vigilant while seeking help for addicted
Published 11:20 am Monday, February 18, 2019
Clark County is making tremendous progress in a lot of ways of dealing with drug problems. But as we develop new strategies and open new doors, leaders must make sure they are proven strategies and useful doors.
The number of people with substance use disorders across the country has been surging for years. Many communities and good people have responded well, with real solutions that get people off of drugs and help them stay off. But greed-driven scammers have also noticed the drug epidemic.
Where good people saw a problem to solve, scammers saw a way to make tons of money.
In communities across the nation, supposed rehab centers have been caught essentially farming drug-addicted people for their insurance money, while offering them no actual help.
One of the worst examples is Kenneth Chatman, who ran a chain of sober homes and drug treatment centers in Florida.
Thousands sought help for drug problems at Chatman’s facilities. But according to the FBI, “instead, these vulnerable men and women — many of them young adults who had traveled far from their homes and families — were thrust into drug-infested flophouses. They were given no treatment, and many were abused and forced into prostitution.”
Chatman required urine tests from his “patients” multiple times a week, even as he allowed drug use to run rampant inside his facilities.
He would charge government health insurance as much as $5,000 per urine test, pocketing as much as $2,500 for himself each time, according to the FBI.
“Michelle Curran’s 20-year-old daughter, Mikaya, had been receiving treatment for her addiction to painkillers at a legitimate facility until one of Chatman’s centers lured her away,” according to a report from CNBC last year. “There, she relapsed. Eventually evicted from the facility, she shot up some bad heroin, overdosed and died.”
Chatman is not an isolated case.
The Orange County Register investigated rehab fraud in California in 2017, detailing how scam facilities use recruiters to find drug-addicted people to fill their programs, then suck as much insurance money out of them as possible before kicking them out.
This month in Cleveland, six people were indicted for allegedly billing Medicaid for “$48 million for drug and alcohol recovery services that were not provided, not medically necessary, lacked proper documentation, or had other issues that made them ineligible for reimbursement,” according to the Tribune Chronicle, an Ohio daily newspaper.
“Treatment for people struggling with drug and alcohol addiction is vitally important, but these defendants profited off the suffering of others,” the Tribune Chronicle quoted U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman.
Fortunately, we have no reason to believe any of the drug rehabilitation and treatment programs serving Clark County are frauds. But as the effort to help those addicted to drugs grows — and it must grow because there are many more who need help — we must remain vigilant.
Clark County is home to several programs that have the best interest of those wishing to get sober in mind, programs like Achieving Recovery Together, Celebrate Recovery, the Agency for Substance Abuse Policy and others.
If the county looks to expand its rehabilitation efforts further, it should make sure anyone it partners with is like these organizations — operating above-board and running programs that get results.
Leaders shouldn’t get caught thinking any additional drug programs are good, no matter what.
Anyone looking to open a drug rehab center, sober home or other drug-related programs should be able to prove to the community on an ongoing basis that results, not profits, drive them.
Editorials represent the opinion of the newspaper’s editorial board. The board is comprised of publisher Michael Caldwell and Bluegrass Newsmedia editors Whitney Leggett and Ben Kleppinger. To inquire about a meeting with the board, contact Caldwell at 759-0095.