Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Intensive care unit in a hospital.
Intensive care unit in a hospital. - Credit: Sudok1 / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Health
Crime
Dutch Public Prosecutor
healthcare
care fraud
fraud
health insurers
Health Insurers Netherlands
criminal prosecution
DSW
public prosecutor
Friday, 1 November 2024 - 11:16

Share this article:

Few fraud reports against healthcare providers lead to prosecution

Health insurers in the Netherlands are overwhelmed with hundreds of fraud reports annually concerning potential misconduct by healthcare providers, yet only a handful of these cases are pursued and even fewer result in legal action. Each insurer receives between 150 and 400 fraud alerts per year, but most are not investigated due to the time-intensive nature of these cases.

A recent investigation by Pointer involving nine insurers highlighted the challenges insurers face due to limited resources. As one insurer clarified, "A report of an expensive car owned by a company director isn’t enough to start an investigation."

Insurers must prioritize cases with stronger evidence to justify an investigation, particularly since fraud investigations can quickly become lengthy and complex. The number of investigations varies among insurers, with smaller companies like Salland Zorgverzekeringen closing only a few cases per year.

Salland recovered partial overpayments in some instances but abandoned other cases when it deemed the chance of reimbursement “very low or nonexistent.” Larger insurers, such as DSW, managed more extensive probes; last year, DSW confirmed fraud in 27 cases, suspending payments or seeking reimbursements where applicable.

The National Labor Inspectorate (NLA) oversees healthcare fraud cases, referring them to the Public Prosecution Service (OM). However, the NLA submitted just 21 cases last year, citing the complexity of healthcare fraud investigations.

Some insurers, including Zilveren Kruis, warned that it remains “too easy to become a healthcare provider,” which sometimes attracts individuals with potentially harmful intentions.

More like this

Image
A police detention cell
38-year-old Amsterdam man arrested in fatal Amsterdam-Oost stabbing
Image
Nurses in a hospital storage room
Care sector still uses contested prior learning certificates despite fraud warnings
Image
Gray-tone image of a teenage girl sitting on the floor crying
OM demands five years for a man who posed as weight loss coach to sexually abuse girls
Image
Mammogram
Dutch health insurers give surgeons authority over breast reconstruction approvals
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Parent group sues Dutch state over tens of thousands of kids out of school
  • Around 300,000 Dutch households face hit from energy price surge, study finds
  • Two-year sentence for Dalfsen parents in child abduction case; no return to prison
  • Video: Paramedics assaulted in The Hague two days in a row
  • Vattenfall and Dutch start-up explore offshore data centres powered by wind farm

Top stories

  • Pinkpop expects extreme heat at festival; Race events adjust plans amid marathon deaths
  • Teen daughter reportedly in custody after married couple found killed in Groningen home
  • Hot & humid with temps up to 35°C; Code yellow warning for oppresive heat until Saturday
  • Two people found dead in recently sold home in Groningen town
  • Netherlands to introduce mandatory psychological evaluation for firearm permits

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content