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Common Health Insurance Frauds
Medical Equipment Fraud:
Equipment manufacturers offer "free" products to
individuals. Insurers are then charged for products that
were not needed and/or may not have been delivered.
Unnecessary and sometimes fake tests are given to
individuals at health clubs, retirement homes, or shopping
malls and billed to insurance companies or Medicare.
Customers or providers bill insurers for services
never rendered by changing bills or submitting fake ones.
Medicare fraud can take the form of any of the
health insurance frauds described above. Senior citizens are
frequent targets of Medicare schemes, especially by medical
equipment manufacturers who offer seniors free medical
products in exchange for their Medicare numbers. Because a
physician has to sign a form certifying that equipment or
testing is needed before Medicare pays for it, conartists
fake signatures or bribe corrupt doctors to sign the forms.
Once a signature is in place, the manufacturers bill
Medicare for merchandise or service that was not needed or
was not ordered.
Some Tips to Avoid the Health Insurance Fraud:
-
Never sign blank insurance claim forms.
-
Never give blanket authorization to a medical
provider to bill for services rendered.
-
Ask your medical providers what they will charge and
what you will be expected to pay out-of-pocket.
-
Carefully review your insurer's explanation of the
benefits statement. Call your insurer and provider if you
have questions.
-
Do not do business with door-to-door or telephone
salespeople who tell you that services of medical equipment
are free.
-
Give your insurance/Medicare identification only to
those who have provided you with medical
services.
-
Keep accurate records of all health care
appointments.
-
Know if your physician ordered equipment for
you.
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