Ashley Savage
Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Originally published 3 MAR 23
Dr. Brian Hyatt stepped down as chairman of the Arkansas State Medical Board Thursday in a special meeting following "credible allegations of fraud," noted in a letter from the state's office of Medicaid inspector general.
Members of the board met remotely Thursday with only one item on the agenda: "Discussion of Arkansas State Board's leadership."
The motion to approve Hyatt's request to step down as chairman and out of an executive role on the board was approved unanimously.
Board members also decided that Dr. Rhys Branman will take over as the interim chairman until an election to fill the seat is held in April.
According to the board Thursday, the vacant seats for vice chair and chair of the board will be voted on separate ballots in the April elections.
The Medicaid letter states "red flags" were discovered in Hyatt's use of Medicaid claims and process of billing for medical services. In Arkansas, Medicaid fraud resulting in an overpayment over $2,500 is a felony.
"Dr. Hyatt is a clear outlier, and his claims are so high they skew the averages on certain codes for the entire Medicaid program in Arkansas," the affidavit states.
"The suspension is temporary and there's a right to appeal. I see only allegations and I don't see any actual charges and I haven't dealt with this a lot," said Branman.
Hyatt has 30 days to appeal his suspension from the Medicaid program.
Other information from the letter shows that Hyatt is alleged to have billed more Medicaid patients at the 99233 code than any other doctor billed for all of their Medicaid patients between January of 2019 and June 30, 2022.