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Tips to prevent medical ID theft
Protect your medical records, pocketbook

BEAVERTON, Ore. -- Medical identity theft won't just harm your pocketbook, but could cost you your health. Unlike traditional identity theft, the consequences of medical identity go beyond the financial costs. They can impact your health due to inaccurate information being documented on medical records, potentially leading to future misdiagnosis and other complications.

Medical identity theft occurs when criminals steal health insurance identification or Social Security Numbers and use them to obtain healthcare services or reimbursement from insurers for fraudulent claims. According to the World Privacy Forum, as many as 250,000 to 500,000 consumers have been victims of medical identity theft as of mid-2006.

"Medical ID theft can be devastating for consumers," commented Doug Pollack, chief marketing officer for identity theft protection company ID Experts. "Checking for medical identity fraud must become a part of everyone's complete identity protection practices -- it's that prevalent."

ID Experts offers the following five steps to protect your healthcare information from being compromised by thieves:

Five Steps to Detecting and Preventing Medical Identity Theft:

1. Eliminate your Social Security number from your insurance records

If your insurance company, such as Medicare/Medicaid, still uses Social
Security Numbers as insurance identification, don't carry your card in
your wallet unless absolutely necessary. Instead carry a copy of your card
(front and back) and black out the last four digits. Write the name/phone
number of a personal contact on the card copy that could give the last 4
digits of your SSN to a medical provider in an emergency.

2. Get copies of your medical records, insurance claims and credit reports

Request copies of all records, claims and reports, in writing, to be sent
to a secure location such as a locked mailbox or P.O. Box.

3. Review all medical records, claims and reports for unusual entries

Look for services never rendered to you or your dependents, inaccurate
diagnoses, address changes, collections, and disclosures made to other
agencies or health providers.

4. Dispute any misinformation with your insurance provider, health
provider or credit bureaus for investigation and/or removal


Make all disputes in writing and provide copies of any claims that include
misinformation.

5. Protect the paper trail

Use your shredder to destroy claims that are more than seven years old.
Ask your insurance provider if you can receive online statements instead
of paper.
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