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Medical
identity theft: the importance of protecting
your health records
Many consumers take precautions against identity theft, but
what about medical identity theft? In
addition to financial peril, victims can
suffer physical danger if false entries in
medical records lead to the wrong treatment.
“The crime occurs when someone uses a person's name and
sometimes other parts of their identity --
such as insurance information -- without the
person's knowledge or consent to obtain
medical services or goods,” said Laurinda B.
Harman, PhD, RHIA, associate professor and
chair of the health information management
department at Temple University’s College of
Health Professions.
“A person's identity information can also be used to make
false claims for medical services or goods.
This is not a common event, but patients
need to be aware of it,” Harman said. She
will discuss the growing concerns of medical
identity theft as more medical facilities
move to electronic records during the 79th
Annual American Health Information
Management Association Convention Exhibit on
October 9 in Philadelphia.
The World Privacy Forum, a non profit, non partisan research
group, said it has received 20,000 reports
of medical identity theft in the past 15
years.
Medical identity theft frequently results in erroneous
entries being put into existing medical
records, and can involve the creation of
fictitious medical records in the victim's
name at various medical facilities. This
trail of falsified information in medical
records can plague victims' medical and
financial lives for years.
In Pennsylvania, two men were convicted of health insurance
fraud, theft by deception, identity theft
and forgery in 2006. Galen Baker stole a
coworker's identification to obtain nearly
40 individual prescriptions for Viagra, a
drug typically prescribed to treat erectile
dysfunction. Daniel Sullivan stole a man's
medical identification to pay for more than
$140,000 in hospital charges. In other
cases, health care employees stole medical
records to sell to third parties or file
false claims.
The entire health care system needs to be careful in its
hiring. Ethical principals need to be taught
and enforced for all employees, Harman said.
“As more patients begin maintain their own personal health
record, they will become more aware of the
fraud,” she said.
Harman suggests the following tips from the World Privacy
Forum to prevent theft, these include:
Review all “Explanation of Benefits” notices and any other
correspondence from insurance providers
describing the services that have been
received, the provider charges and payment
allowances. Report suspicious transactions
to your health insurer's special
investigations unit.
Request a complete list of annual payments your insurance
company has made for medical care.
Sometimes, thieves change billing address
and phone number, which means a patient may
not see all of the bills.
Get a copy of medical records, in case they're tampered with
in the future.
Keep track of medical and prescription benefits cards and
keep them in a safe place.
Harman, a health information management professional for over
35 years, said those in her field take the
issue very seriously.
“We need to take the role as the patient advocate. We need to
help them protect their patient information
and privacy. There aren’t the same
protections in place for medical identify
theft as financial identify theft,” she
said.
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