I-T unearths doctor-medical centre nexus in Bengaluru; Rs 100 crore black money detected

| Updated: Dec 2, 2017, 21:10 IST

Highlights

  • The I-T department claimed doctors were being paid "for referring medical tests".
  • I-T sleuths seized about Rs 1.4 crore in cash and about 3.5 kg of jewellery during its three-day action against two IVF centres and five diagnostic centres.
  • They also seized foreign currency and detected foreign bank accounts with "deposits running into crores of rupees".

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BENGALURU: Income-Tax officials have unearthed a major multi-layered nexus between medical centres and doctors and an undisclosed income of Rs 100 crore after searches at a few IVF clinics and diagnostic centres here, the department said on Saturday.

It claimed doctors were being paid "for referring medical tests".

I-T sleuths, the department said, have seized about Rs 1.4 crore in cash and about 3.5 kg of jewellery and bullion during its three-day action against two in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) centres and five diagnostic centres.

They also seized foreign currency and detected foreign bank accounts with "deposits running into crores of rupees".

While the labs searches have declared an undisclosed income of over Rs 100 crore, the amount of referral fee in case of a single lab is more than Rs 200 crore, it said in a statement.

The searches at the diagnostic centres, a senior official said, uncovered various methods by which doctors were being paid for referring medical tests.

"The commission varied from lab to lab but the median range of normal cut/commission for doctors is 35 per cent in case of MRI tests and 20 per cent in case of CT scan and other lab tests. These payments are found to be disguised as marketing expenses," the statement read.

The department said referral fee to doctors was paid in at least four ways, including fortnightly cash payment and advance cash payment.

In some cases, referral fee paid to doctors by cheque was shown in books as "professional fee".


As part of a deal, doctors were employed as in-house consultants. "However, neither did they come to diagnostic centres nor saw patients or wrote reports. This payment is a disguised referral fee," the statement read.


The department claimed referral fee was paid to doctors by cheques under "revenue sharing agreements".


"Some of the labs employ commission agents whose job is to distribute money to doctors in envelopes.


"These agents insert a small chit in envelopes while giving them to doctors which contains the details — names of patients referred by the doctor, doctor's name, tests done, amounts billed, cut/commission amount to be given to the doctor and the date on which the test was done," it said.

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