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IPFS News Link • Big Pharma

Pharma's Criminal Business Model -- and How the U.S. Government Benefits From It

• By Childrens Health Defense Team

The False Claims Act, which enables civil cases involving fraud and false claims against the government, dates back to the 19th century and Civil-War-era defense contractor fraud — but in modern times, healthcare fraud is the "top driver of FCA activity, both in the number of cases filed and total dollars recovered."

In fiscal year 2021 — a year in which medicine and pharma went to town with demonstrably murderous COVID-19 hospital protocols and vaccines — the act brought in $5.6-plus billion, the second largest annual total in the FCA's history.

Eighty-nine percent of those settlements and judgments were related to "drug and medical device manufacturers, managed care providers, hospitals, pharmacies, hospice organizations, laboratories and physicians."

And, though the total amounts were smaller in the three preceding years — fiscal years 2020, 2019 and 2018 — healthcare-related cases still predominated, accounting for 86% to 87% of settlements and judgments.

In 2016, and again in 2019, the consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen zeroed in on "ongoing, systematic wrongdoing" by the pharmaceutical industry, analyzing up to 27 years (1991-2017) of criminal and civil penalties paid to the federal or state governments, whether via the FCA or other mechanisms.


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