Former Vicksburg physician pleads guilty to fraud, ordered to repay millions
Published 7:33 am Wednesday, June 17, 2020
A Mississippi physician who pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to commit millions in health care fraud involving compounded pain creams and weight-loss prescriptions learned the consequences of his actions Tuesday.
Dr. Shahjahan Sultan, M.D., 37 of Madison, was sentenced Tuesday by Senior U.S. District Judge Keith Starrett to four years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised released, U.S. Attorney Mike Hurst’s office announced. Sultan also worked for a period of time as an internist in Vicksburg.
Sultan was also ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $4,102,634.65 to Express Scripts (TRICARE), $582,280.79 to CVS Caremark and $115,611.03 to Catamaran. The Court further imposed a money judgment of more than $2.3 million.
In May 2014, Sultan entered into a contract with a pharmacy located in Jackson County.
According to the contract, Sultan agreed to prescribe individuals expensive compound medications in exchange for the pharmacy agreeing to pay Sultan 35 percent of the reimbursements it received for the prescriptions Sultan authorized. Health care benefit programs, including TRICARE, were billed for the compounded medications.
Sultan employed others who identified individuals in places like Jones County, who had insurance that covered the expensive compounded medications.
Sultan met with the insured individuals over telemedicine video-chat sessions. However, during such meetings, he did not perform thorough examinations of the individuals and did not determine the medical necessity of the compounded medications he prescribed. Sultan knew that some of the added ingredients in the compounded medication were not effective and were added solely to increase the reimbursement value. On occasion, Sultan called in compounded medications for individuals he had not previously examined.
From May 2014 through January 2015, Sultan and his co-conspirators prescribed millions of dollars of unnecessary compounded medications to patients. In total, the Court held Sultan responsible for causing over $8 million in intended loss to health care providers. Sultan pled guilty before Judge Starrett in November.
Thomas Edward Sturdavant, M.D., 56, of Kingsport, Tenn., Freda Cal Covington, R.N., 54, of Hattiesburg, and Fallon Deneem Page, R.N., 36, of Soso, were all indicted along with Dr. Sultan in June 2019. Sturdavant will be sentenced Monday. Covington is set for sentencing on June 24, and Page will be sentenced on July 7.