- Journalists Share Latest on Baby Formula Safety, Estrogen Patches, and Postcancer Costs
- 12 new behavioral health study findings to know
- Prevention Efforts Increasingly See Suicide Through a Broader Lens
- California dental hygiene program placed on probation, accreditation at risk: 5 notes
- US depression rate remains near record high: Gallup
- FDA names acting director of vaccines and biologics center
- We Are Breaking Anesthesia — And Calling It a Staffing Solution
- Establishing Good Governance: Start with the Important Basics and Play the Long Game
- Mission, margin and a midterm clock: Healthcare signals to watch
- What ASC tech actually moves the needle — and what’s just ‘face paint’
- ADA pushes for increased federal oversight of dental insurance: 4 notes
- VisionMed appoints new strategic advisor of ambulatory, office-based surgery
- South Dakota hospital joins Monument Health
- Dental groups call on legislators to support federal oral health programs
- PDS Health joins AARP global collaborative
- Nemours Children’s Health breaks ground on multispecialty facility
- FDA Recalls Several Ghirardelli Powdered Beverages Over Potential Contamination
- Physician financial pressures, a breakdown
- Physicians’ wRVU problem, by the numbers
- CMS’ Medicare provider directory released Social Security numbers: Washington Post
- The best ASCs for colonoscopy, endoscopy in the Midwest: US News
- 2 post-acute groups react to bill to improve CNA training
- 32 hospitals closing departments or ending services
- Visa limbo drags on for hundreds of physicians: 5 notes
- Hygienist shortage a ‘retention’ crisis: ADHA
- Yale receives $10M for youth mental health
- PDS Health grows de novo network with 6 new practices
- Penn Medicine, CHOP name autism institute director
- Cleveland Clinic adds GI specialist
- FDA hands Pfizer, Arvinas’ Veppanu early approval for breast cancer subtype
- A new kind of ASC partner has entered the market
- 8 DSOs making headlines
- Heartland Dental adds Florida practice
- Colorado behavioral health provider to cut 111 jobs
- High-Intensity Exercise After Breast Cancer Surgery Helps Speed Recovery
- SALT Dental Partners opens de novo office in Washington, DC
- Noncompete rules shift again: 4 recent updates
- The 4 states with the most DSO activity in April
- 10 new ASCs in April
- Florida physician sued for alleged $1.9M fraud
- Omada signs on with Optum Rx's GLP-1 management program
- Trump Offers Third Candidate For Surgeon General After Pulling Dr. Casey Means' Nomination
- Industry Voices—Value-based care won the policy argument. Now it has to deliver
- Senators introduce clean extension to cost-based payments for some rural hospitals
- Expanding access, improving outcomes: How AI is transforming behavioral health referrals
- Beth Israel Lahey Health taps Heidi for system-wide AI scribe rollout
- Johnson & Johnson Enters Agreement to Acquire Atraverse Medical
- Johnson & Johnson Enters Agreement to Acquire Atraverse Medical
- enVVeno Medical Receives FDA IDE Approval for Non-Surgical Replacement Venous Valve
- enVVeno Medical Receives FDA IDE Approval for Non-Surgical Replacement Venous Valve
- Medtronic Gains CE Mark for Stealth AXiS surgical system
- Medtronic Gains CE Mark for Stealth AXiS surgical system
- Medtronic Continues Cardiovascular Care Growth with Completion of CathWorks Acquisition
- Medtronic Continues Cardiovascular Care Growth with Completion of CathWorks Acquisition
- Cleveland Clinic taps startup Luminai to test how AI can run hospital operations
- Look out Rexulti, Axsome's Auvelity has its nod for Alzheimer's agitation
- Cardio drug developer Esperion to go private in potential $1.1B buyout by ArchiMed
- Union workers at Korean CDMO Samsung Biologics kick off strike
- Summit's PD-1xVEGF interim trial miss surprises analysts, shares tumble
- Who do Americans believe have the most influence in healthcare?
- Health Tech Weekly Rundown: Sage launches Tasking for senior care workflows; St. Luke’s taps Auxira Health for cardiologist support
- Confusion Continues Over Age To Start Breast Cancer Screening, Survey Finds
- Senses, Not Muscles, Key to Speech Recovery After Stroke
- Antibiotics Not Linked To Celiac Disease Risk, Study Argues
- Common Knee Surgery Doesn't Help, Might Actually Make Things Worse, Clinical Trial Reports
- States Rush To Figure Out How To Enforce Trump's Medicaid Work Requirements
- Delays in Visa Program Threaten Placement of Hundreds of Doctors in Underserved Areas
- Gavin Newsom, Early Champion of Single-Payer, Moderates in the Face of Fiscal Limits
- A pivotal time for an RNA pioneer
- Repatha sales help Amgen overcome Prolia biosimilar hits in 1st quarter
- Novo Nordisk’s Rybelsus officially retired in US as ‘Ozempic pill’ takes branding center stage
- Verastem launches ‘Reimagine’ campaign to move ovarian cancer drugs into earlier lines
- From Prototype to Production: Building a Validation Strategy That Scales with Manufacturing Volume
- From Prototype to Production: Building a Validation Strategy That Scales with Manufacturing Volume
- Mount Sinai launches mental health program for performing artists
- Managing AI in Medical Technology: From Innovation to Compliance
- Managing AI in Medical Technology: From Innovation to Compliance
- Mississippi to distribute $13.5M for youth mental health programs
- ‘Heroism doesn’t scale’: 4 leaders warn of cracks in behavioral health system
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Sun’s $11.75B Organon buy; Astellas’ Xtandi peak; BeOne’s PD-1xVEGF bet
- Seven Things Every Medical Device Manufacturer Must Know Before Integrating AI
- Seven Things Every Medical Device Manufacturer Must Know Before Integrating AI
- The Structural Tension at the Heart of MedTech
- The Structural Tension at the Heart of MedTech
- Cybersecurity Tactics for Medical IoT Devices
- Cybersecurity Tactics for Medical IoT Devices
- From Toddlers to Teens: The Hidden Complexities of Bringing Pediatric Wearables to Market
- From Toddlers to Teens: The Hidden Complexities of Bringing Pediatric Wearables to Market
- Drug use by state in 2026
- DOJ launches West Coast Health Care Strike Force to target fraud in Arizona, Nevada, Northern California
- Tenet Healthcare met Q1's volume curveballs with 'old-fashioned discipline'
- FDA expectations create potential friction in new Form 483 response guidance
- Trump pulls surgeon general nomination of Casey Means, names Nicole Saphier as new pick
- New Medical Guidelines Urge More Fiber, Less Bathroom Scrolling on Your Phone
- Sleep and Anxiety Medications in Pregnancy Appear to Pose Little Harm
- Functional medicine provider Parsley Health now in-network nationwide
- Lilly touts 'encouraging' early days for Foundayo obesity launch, even as GLP-1 pill appears to lag Novo's
- BMS 'well prepared' for Camzyos competition as revenue from new products overtakes legacy portfolio
- Waystar kicks off 2026 with strong growth as it targets AI at $100B RCM labor pool
- Merck's growth products Winrevair, Ohtuvayre trending in opposite directions
- Trump's Medicaid Work Mandate Debuting in Nebraska to Much Dismay
- Nasal Spray Flu Vaccines Create 'Battlefield' In Adults' Noses
- Prehabilitation Slashes Post-Op Complications By Half, Review Says
- Understanding Emotions Could Be Key To Quelling Chronic Pain
- Meth Caused 1 In 6 Heart Attacks Over A Decade, Study Finds
- States Rush To Figure Out How To Enforce Trump’s Medicaid Work Requirements
- When Natural Disasters Strike, Another Crisis Hits Those Recovering From Opioid Addiction
- Photon, maker of modern prescription infrastructure, nabs $16M to scale
- Cigna to exit ACA market, pursue strategic alternatives for eviCore unit
- Amarox recalls batch of antidepressants in UK over packaging mix-up
- Bayer earns FDA untitled letter for Nubeqa's 'attention-grabbing visuals'
- Merck bats for heart disease awareness with new baseball-inspired campaign
- Avalyn heads to Nasdaq with oversized $300M IPO to fund reformulated respiratory drugs
- Europe’s drug regulator sets up new group to counter vaccine hesitancy
- Aidoc banks $150M backed by Goldman Sachs to scale clinical AI foundation model
- Healthcare costs remain a top concern for voters as midterms loom: KFF
- Nonprofit health systems are falling short on governance capabilities, report warns
- Novartis rounds out $23B US investment push with plans for North Carolina API plant
- Teladoc Health reports strong momentum behind BetterHelp insurance shift, CEO says
- AI Tool May Help Identify ADHD in Kids Long Before Typical Diagnosis
- Viz.ai partners with National Rural Health Association to expand AI understanding, access to rural hospitals
- FDA Moves to Real-Time Clinical Trial Patient Monitoring, Faster Drug Review
- AstraZeneca CEO's conservative MFN model excludes reference markets from forecast
- With Austedo at helm, Teva's impressive innovative drug sales signal company's successful metamorphosis
- Universal Health Services' Q1 2026 earnings growth dampened by volume hits
- AbbVie outlines Skyrizi defense against new J&J plaque psoriasis rival Icotyde
- Only 1 in 4 employers able to ‘absorb’ increasing health benefit costs without impacting business
- Dementia Screening Safe For Families, Trial Finds
- Online Program Soothes Post-Trauma Stress In Injured Children
- Mental Defeat Can Worsen Chronic Pain, Researchers Say
- Pooled Umbilical Cord Blood Boosts Stem Cell Transplant Success, Trial Finds
- US drugmaker’s reputations shift quickly amid political pressures, job cuts: survey
- Saving Lives by Changing Lives: The Next Frontier in Suicide Prevention
- Trump’s Medicaid Work Mandate Debuting in Nebraska to Much Dismay
- The push to expand access to emergency contraception
- Secret to Surviving 'Perfect Mom' Posts on Social Media Revealed
- Remarks at the Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee Meeting
- Getting All Your Ducks in a Row to IPO: Remarks at the Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee Meeting
- Remarks to the Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee
- CDC Warns of Antibiotic-Resistant Salmonella in Backyard Flocks
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- AI-driven coding platform Arintra rolls out new documentation improvement capabilities
- Florida Delays Children's Health Insurance Expansion as Uninsured Rate Rises
- Daylight Saving Time Fails to Boost Daily Steps, Study Finds
- Metabolic Syndrome Tied To Cancer Risk
- Mail-In Colon Cancer Test Kits Offer Affordable Screening
- U.S. Dentists Still Overprescribing Opioids Compared To Other Nations, Puerto Rico
- An Urgent Care Treated Her Allergic Reaction. An ER Monitored Her — For $6,700.
- Estrogen Patch Shortages Likely Driven By Empowered Women Seeking Relief, Expert Says
- First Gene Therapy for Genetic Hearing Loss, Otarmeni, Gains FDA Approval
Health care fraud isn't just a Minnesota tradition; Michigan has its own ingrained culture of health care fraud:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-secures-denaturalization-health-care-fraudster
DOJ cracks down on healthcare fraud in Michigan, charging three people who stole $20 million total
A former pharmacist was sentenced to 46 months in prison while another former pharmacist and his brother were sentenced to eight years and five years in prison, respectively.
By Natalia Mittelstadt - November 25, 2025The Justice Department is cracking down on healthcare fraud in Michigan, charging three people involved in two different schemes who stole a combined total of $20 million.
The DOJ has recently focused on instances of healthcare fraud in Michigan that resulted in tens of millions of dollars stolen from Medicare, Medicaid, and Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan. In addition to the recent cases resulting in years-long prison sentences, another case from over a decade ago just ended with the denaturalization of a woman from Venezuela who defrauded more than $5.4 million from Medicare while in Detroit.
Pharmacists abused trust, defrauded public
On Monday, Nabil Fakih, a former pharmacist who owned and operated a pharmacy in Dearborn Heights, Mich., was sentenced to 46 months in prison for his role in a healthcare fraud scheme, according to the DOJ. He was ordered to pay $4 million in restitution and to forfeit four real estate properties and $726,364.96.
From about 2011 to 2017, 50, Fakih, of Wayne County, billed Medicare for prescription medications that he did not dispense at his pharmacy, according to court documents. He submitted fraudulent claims for reimbursement to Medicare for high-reimbursing prescription medications, such as lung disease inhalers and blood thinners, that his pharmacy did not have the inventory to dispense.
Fakih concealed his fraudulent scheme by manipulating the inventory purchases at his pharmacy, as well as the receipt and transfer of the proceeds from the fraud, diverting the funds for his own personal use and benefit. In total, Fakih stole $4 million from Medicare. In August 2024, he pleaded guilty to one count of healthcare fraud at the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.
On Thursday, a former Michigan pharmacist and his brother were sentenced to eight years and five years in prison, respectively, for conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud, the DOJ announced Friday.
From about 2010 to 2019, a pharmacist, Raad Kouza, 59, of Wayne County, and his brother, a pharmacy manager, Ramis Kouza, 46, of Oakland County, billed Medicare, Medicaid, and Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan for prescription medications that they did not dispense at pharmacies they owned or operated in Michigan, according to court documents and evidence presented at trial.
The Kouzas billed Medicare, Medicaid, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan for expensive medications, such as antipsychotics and inhalers, and concealed inventory shortages at their pharmacies from multiple auditors. Medicare, Medicaid, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan lost more than $15 million total due to the fraudulent scheme.
The two brothers were convicted of conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud and wire fraud by a federal jury in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan in November 2024. They were ordered by the court at sentencing to pay approximately $15.5 million in restitution and the same amount in forfeiture.
Immigrant clinic owner stripped of citizenship
A few days before the Kouzas' sentencing, on Nov. 17, a woman who was a naturalized citizen and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud in 2012 was denaturalized, according to the DOJ.
The U.S. citizenship of Marieva Briceno, who defrauded more than $5.4 million from Medicare, was revoked after she obtained her citizenship by concealing her crimes from immigration officials.
Briceno, a Venezuelan native, owned three purported medical clinics in the Detroit area that paid people on Medicare to undergo unnecessary tests and procedures, per the DOJ. From May 2007 to January 2010, she and her co-conspirators submitted approximately $5,460,323 in fraudulent claims to Medicare for unnecessary medical services. Medicare ultimately paid $2,998,321.94 on those fraudulent claims, and Briceno personally received about $513,200 in fraudulent payouts.
Briceno applied for U.S. citizenship on Dec. 21, 2009, and on both her citizenship application and while under oath during an interview with immigration officials, she concealed her healthcare fraud and denied ever committing a crime for which she had not been arrested. As a result, she illegally procured her U.S. citizenship on March 19, 2010.
After the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida charged Briceno with healthcare fraud and conspiracy to commit healthcare fraud on Sept. 12, 2011, she pleaded guilty to the latter count on March 14, 2012, and was sentenced to 60 months in prison.
The DOJ on Aug. 12 sought Briceno’s denaturalization in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida based on her criminal conspiracy and failure to disclose it during her naturalization process. U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles ordered the revocation of Briceno’s U.S. citizenship last week.
“The denaturalization of Marieva Briceno shows that if you steal from the programs that serve our most vulnerable citizens, you will be found out, prosecuted, and suffer the consequences of your actions, up to and including the loss of your U.S. citizenship,” Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate of the DOJ's Civil Division said in a statement on Wednesday.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.
















