Fortunately, there are many measures you can take to fight health care fraud:
- Guard your Medicare number. Protect it the same way you do for your credit card numbers. Medicare will never contact you for your Medicare number or other personal information. Don�t share your Medicare number or other personal information with anyone who contacts you by phone, email, or by approaching you in person, unless you�ve given them permission in advance.
- Don�t ever let anyone borrow or pay to use your Medicare number.
- If you�re looking to enroll in a Medicare plan, be suspicious of anyone who pressures you to act now for the best deal. There are no �early bird discounts� or �limited time offers.� Any offer that sounds too good to be true probably is.
- Be skeptical of offers for free gifts and free medical services. A common ploy of identity thieves is to say they can send you your free gift right away�they just need your Medicare number to confirm. Decline politely but firmly.
- Do your part to protect your friends and neighbors: remind them to guard their Medicare numbers, too.
- Check your Medicare Summary Notice (MSN)�which gives you information on services submitted under your Medicare number�to make sure you and Medicare are only being charged for services you actually received. While the MSN is only mailed to you every 3 months, you can access your Original Medicare claims at any time on MyMedicare.gov. You�ll usually be able to see a claim within 24 hours after Medicare processes it.
TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
To learn more about how to protect yourself from health care fraud, visit Medicare.gov/fraud, or contact our state�s local Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP), which is the OIC's Statewide Health Insurance Benefits Advisors (SHIBA) program.
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