The Florida Shuffle: How to Spot a Bad Rehab (And What a Good One Looks Like)
Patient brokering and sober home fraud nearly destroyed Florida's treatment reputation. Here's how to protect yourself.
What Was the Florida Shuffle?
From 2012-2018, South Florida became ground zero for a massive rehab fraud epidemic. "Body brokers" were paid kickbacks to recruit people with good insurance into treatment centers — then shuffle them between facilities to maximize billing. People in crisis were exploited as billing vehicles. Florida's 2017 patient brokering law and U.S. DOJ prosecutions shut most of it down.
Red Flags of a Bad Treatment Center
Someone calls you unsolicited offering free flights or gift cards to attend
Cannot confirm CARF or Joint Commission accreditation status
Pressures you to decide immediately without time to research
More interested in your insurance than your clinical history
No licensed clinical director or medical staff on-site
Green Flags of a Legitimate Program
CARF or Joint Commission accreditation
LegitScript certification
Licensed clinical director with verifiable credentials
Transparent pricing and insurance billing practices
Aftercare planning integrated from day one
Find a verified, accredited program today
No kickbacks. No patient brokering. Just honest matching.