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New Medicare Cards are Designed to Reduce Medicare Fraud
(Family Features) Millions of people with Medicare will receive new, more secure Medicare cards in the mail in 2018. The new cards replace Social Security Number-based Medicare numbers with a new, unique, personalized Medicare Num- ber, known as the Medicare Beneficiary Identifier. Each person with Medicare will have his or her own number. The cards will be mailed automatically, free of charge, and there will be no changes to Medicare users’ current benefits.
The new Medicare cards no longer contain a person’s Social Security number, but rather a unique, randomly-assigned Medicare number that protects people’s identity, helps reduce fraud and offers better safeguards of important health and financial information. Removing Social Security Numbers from Medicare cards is one of the ways the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is helping
to protect the identities of people with Medicare. The unique Medicare Number not only increases protections from fraud for people with Medicare, it also makes it harder for criminals to use Social Secu- rity Numbers to falsely bill Medicare for care services and benefits that were never performed.
CMS is mailing the new Medicare cards in geographic waves. This means people with Medicare may not get their new
card at the same time as their friends or neighbors. People with Medicare and their caregivers can visit medicare.gov/newcard to find out when cards will be mailed to their areas. They can also sign up for email notifications about the card-mailing and check the card-mailing status in their states. As soon as people receive their new Medicare cards, they should safely and securely destroy their old Medicare cards and start using their new cards right away.
In addition to using the new cards, consider these tips for further protecting yourself from identity theft:
Protect the New Card Number
People with Medicare should guard their new card like it is a credit card and only give their Medicare Number to people they know should have it. Medicare, or someone representing Medicare, will never contact people with Medicare to ask for their Medicare Number or other personal information unless they have been given specific permission in advance.
Look Out for Scams
As the new Medicare cards are mailed, be on the lookout for scams.
Don’t pay for your new card. It’s free. If anyone calls and says you need to pay for it, that’s a scam.
Don’t give personal information to get your card. If someone calls claiming to be from Medicare asking for your Social Secu- rity Number or bank information, hang up. Medicare will never ask you to give personal information to get your new number and card.
Guard your card. When you get your new card, safeguard it like you would health in- surance or credit cards. While removing the Social Security Number cuts down on many types of identity theft, you’ll still want to pro- tect your new card because identity thieves could use it to receive medical services.
The 4 R’s of Fighting Fraud
It is important to remember that you are the first line of defense in protecting yourself against Medicare fraud, and should make
a habit of monitoring online accounts. Re- member the four R’s for fighting fraud:
Record doctors’ appointments and services Review claims for any you don’t recognize Report suspected fraud to CMS by calling
1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) Remember to protect your Medicare
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