Showing posts with label How to protect your medical Identity Theft (health records). Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to protect your medical Identity Theft (health records). Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

How to protect your medical Identity Theft (health records)


How to protect your medical Identity Theft (health records)

 

This is another form of theft which is now getting very common. So we all have to aware about this as this will not only affect our medical records also payments from insurance.

What is all about medical Identity Theft?

A thief may use your name or health insurance numbers to see a doctor, get prescription drugs, file claims with your insurance provider, or get other care. If the thief’s health information is mixed with yours, your treatment, insurance and payment records, and credit report may be affected. If you see signs of medical identity theft, order copies of your records and check for mistakes. You have the right to see your records and  mistake being corrected.

Detecting Medical Identity Theft

Read your medical and insurance statements regularly and completely. They can show warning signs of identity theft. Read the Explanation of Benefits (EOB) statement or Medicare Summary Notice that your health plan sends after treatment. Check the name of the provider, the date of service, and the service provided. Do the claims paid match the care you received? If you see a mistake, contact your health plan and report the problem. Other signs of medical identity theft include:•a bill for medical services you didn’t receive
•a call from a debt collector about a medical debt you don’t owe
•medical collection notices on your credit report that you don’t recognize
•a notice from your health plan saying you reached your benefit limit
•a denial of insurance because your medical records show a condition you don’t have
Correcting Mistakes in Your Medical Records
Get Copies of Your Medical Records.
If you know a thief used your medical information, get copies of your records. Federal law gives you the right to know what’s in your medical files. Check them for errors. Contact each doctor, clinic, hospital, pharmacy, laboratory, health plan, and location where a thief may have used your information. For example, if a thief got a prescription in your name, ask for records from the health care provider who wrote the prescription and the pharmacy that filled it.You may need to pay for copies of your records. If you know when the thief used your information, ask for records from just that time. Keep copies of your postal and email correspondence, and a record of your phone calls, conversations and activities with your health plan and medical providers. A provider might refuse to give you copies of your medical or billing records because it thinks that would violate the identity thief’s privacy rights. The fact is, you have the right to know what’s in your file. If a provider denies your request for your records, you have a right to appeal. Contact the person the provider lists in its Notice of Privacy Practices, the patient representative, or the ombudsman. Explain the situation and ask for your file. If the provider refuses to provide your records within 30 days of your written request, you may complain to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights.Get an Accounting of Disclosures.

Ask each of your health plans and medical providers for a copy of the “accounting of disclosures” for your medical records. The accounting is a record of who got copies of your records from the provider. The law allows you to order one free copy of the accounting from each of your medical providers every 12 months. The accounting includes details about:•what medical information the provider sent
•when it sent the information
•who got the information
•why the information was sent
The accounting shows who has copies of your mistaken records and whom you need to contact. It may not have details about some routine disclosure of your information, like those from your doctor’s office to another doctor’s office, or disclosure of payment information to an insurer.Ask for Corrections

Write to your health plan and medical providers and explain which information is not accurate. Send copies of the documents that support your position. You can include a copy of your medical record and circle the disputed items. Ask the provider to correct or delete each error. Keep the original documents. Send your letter by certified mail, and ask for a “return receipt,” so you have a record of what the plan or provider received. Keep copies of the letters and documents you sent. The health plan or medical provider that made the mistakes in your files must change the information. It should also inform labs, other health care providers, and anyone else that might have gotten wrong information. If a health plan or medical provider won’t make the changes you request, ask it to include a statement of your dispute in your record.

Protecting Your Medical Information

Your medical and insurance information are valuable to identity thieves. Be wary if someone offers you “free” health services or products, but requires you to provide your health plan ID number. Medical identity thieves may pretend to work for an insurance company, doctors’ offices, clinic, or pharmacy to try to trick you into revealing sensitive information. Don’t share medical or insurance information by phone or email unless you initiated the contact and know who you’re dealing with.Keep paper and electronic copies of your medical and health insurance records in a safe place. Shred outdated health insurance forms, prescription and physician statements, and the labels from prescription bottles before you throw them out.Before you provide sensitive personal information to a website that asks for your Social Security number, insurance account numbers, or details about your health, find out why it’s needed, how it will be kept safe, whether it will be shared, and with whom. Read the Privacy Policy on the website. If you decide to share your information online, look for a lock icon on the browser’s status bar or a URL that begins “https:” the “s” is for secure.

 

How to Correct Errors in Your Medical Records

  1. Contact each health care provider and ask for copies of your medical records.
    1. Check your state’s health privacy laws. Some state laws make it easier to get copies of your medical records.
    2. Complete the request form and pay any fees required to get copies of your records.
      If your provider refuses to give you copies of your records because it thinks that would violate the identity thief’s privacy rights, you can appeal. Contact the person the provider lists in its Notice of Privacy Practices, the patient representative, or the ombudsman. Explain the situation and ask for your file. If the provider refuses to provide your records within 30 days of your written request, you may complain to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights.
  2. Review your medical records and report any errors to your health care provider.
    1. Write to your health care provider to report mistakes in your medical records.
    2. Include a copy of the medical record showing the mistake.
    3. Explain why this is a mistake and how to correct it.
    4. Include a copy of your police report or Identity Theft Report.
    5. Send the letter by certified mail and ask for a return receipt.
      Your health care provider should respond to your letter within 30 days. It must fix the mistake and notify other health care providers who may have the same mistake in their records.
  3. Notify your health insurer and all 3 credit reporting companies.
    1. Send copies of your police report or Identity Theft Report to your health insurer’s fraud department and the 3 nationwide credit reporting companies.
  4. Order copies of your credit reports if you haven’t already.
  5. Consider placing a fraud alert or security freeze on your credit files.
  6. Update your files.
    1. Record the dates you made calls or sent letters.
    2. Keep copies of letters in your files.
(Source- Federal Trade Commission)

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