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Protect your Medicare number, your other info, and your money
By
Bridget Small
June 6, 2022
Last year, the FTC got almost a
million reports about impersonation scammers — fake government agents, pretend grandkids, bogus sweethearts, and others who took almost $2.3
billion from people across the country. So far this year, impersonation scams
are still the most-reported fraud.
Scammers keep changing their stories
to catch you off-guard. Some scams even ask you for your Medicare number. If
anyone surprises you with a call, email, text, or message on social media and
asks for money or personal information — no matter what story they tell — it’s
most likely a scam.
During Medicare Fraud Prevention Week this week,
learn about protecting your number from health care
fraud. Then, take steps to keep impersonators away from your money and valuable
information:
Reduce unwanted calls and email
- Use call blocking technology or devices
that stop unwanted calls — like scams calls and illegal robocalls — before
they reach you.
- Use email spam filters to
reduce phishing scam attempts, and set your
computer software to update automatically.
Keep information private
- Medicare won’t call or text to
ask you for money. Even if your Caller ID says it's Medicare, it could be faked. Don’t share personal or
financial information with anyone who calls, emails, or texts saying they
are from a government agency.
- Don’t click links or open
attachments in email and text messages, even if they seem to come from
Medicare or a company you know. They could be messages phishing for your account numbers,
passwords, or other information.
Protect your money
- Refuse to pay anyone who
demands payment by wire transfer, gift card,
or cryptocurrency. Only scammers tell you to pay these ways. It’s hard to
track those payments, and almost impossible to get your money back.
If you suspect a scam, tell the
FTC: ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
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