The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Medicare card remake to protect seniors

- By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press

WASHINGTON » Medicare cards are getting a makeover to fight identity theft.

No more Social Security numbers plastered on the card. Next April, Medicare will begin mailing every beneficiar­y a new card with a unique new number to identify them.

“Criminals are increasing­ly targeting people age 65 and older for medical identity theft,” Medicare chief Seema Verma told The Associated Press. “We are committed to preventing fraud.”

Medicare is revealing the cards’ new design on Thursday as the government gears up for a massive transition that will involve coordinati­on with 58 million beneficiar­ies and their family members, plus hospitals, doctors, insurance companies, pharmacies and state government­s.

While the first mailings

of new cards begin next April, Congress has set an April 2019 deadline for all beneficiar­ies to have received one.

One goal is to make sure seniors know what’s coming

so they’re not confused by the change — and in the meantime, are reminded to guard their old cards that, if lost or stolen, can leave them vulnerable to financial and legal consequenc­es.

The government recorded 2.6 million cases of identity fraud involving seniors in 2014, up from 2.1 million in 2012.

Verma said one woman reported her Medicare card

was stolen, got a replacemen­t and thought no more about it until two years later when she learned she might be arrested: The thief had impersonat­ed her to get opioid painkiller­s.

Medicare has set up a website — www.cms.gov/ newcard — and is beginning ads to tell beneficiar­ies what to expect starting next spring. Medicare will automatica­lly mail beneficiar­ies their new card. They’ll be instructed to destroy their old cards after they get a new one. New cards may be used right away.

Private insurers already have stopped using Social Security numbers on ID cards.

While the Medicare change is crucial for seniors, the transition period also is a time when crooks may pounce, warned AARP’s Amy Nofziger, a fraud prevention expert.

“If anyone calls you to say you need to pay for your new Medicare card, it is a scam,” she said. “If anybody is calling you and asking you to verify your Social Security number in order to issue your new Medicare card, it is a scam.”

 ?? CENTERS FOR MEDICARE & MEDICAID SERVICES VIA AP ?? This is what the new Medicare card, right, will look like, compared to the current one at left. The cards are getting a makeover to fight identity theft. No more Social Security numbers will be placed on the card. Next April, Medicare will begin...
CENTERS FOR MEDICARE & MEDICAID SERVICES VIA AP This is what the new Medicare card, right, will look like, compared to the current one at left. The cards are getting a makeover to fight identity theft. No more Social Security numbers will be placed on the card. Next April, Medicare will begin...

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