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Raising Awareness of Medical Identity Theft

by Barbara Kram, Editor | October 08, 2008
Medical identity theft
is a real and growing concern
CHICAGO - Gaps in the HIPAA privacy rule may not extend to medical identity theft protection. Therefore, consumers must take precautions to safeguard and monitor their health information in order to protect themselves against possible financial ruin and health record fraud caused by medical identity theft, according to an article published in this month's issue of the Journal of AHIMA.

Medical identity theft's rising crime rate could have a devastating effect due to the incorrect information that may be entered into the health records of victimized patients exposing them to improper and potentially life-threatening treatment.

Raising Awareness of Medical Identity Theft explains that because the face of health information is changing in this electronic era, it is imperative for healthcare consumers to protect and monitor their health information with the same degree of diligence used to protect their financial information.

What consumers can do to protect themselves
AHIMA's electronic health information management work group on medical identity theft recommends that consumers follow these seven preventive measures:
-Share health and financial information only with trusted individuals, including providers
-Monitor benefits paid by health insurers
-Contact the insurer about charges for care not rendered
-Maintain copies of health records for comparison
-Check personal credit history for medical liens
-Safeguard all health insurance information including insurance cards, explanations of benefits and correspondence
-Refuse to provide insurance information to solicitors

This story also provides insight on the privacy risks associated with personal health records.

Read the complete article in the October issue of the Journal of AHIMA online at journal.ahima.org.

About AHIMA
The American Health Information Management Association is America's leading professional society whose mission is to "improve healthcare by advancing best practices and standards for health information management and [serve as] the trusted source for education, research and professional credentialing." AHIMA represents more than 52,000 specially educated HIM professionals who serve healthcare and the public by managing, analyzing and utilizing data vital for health system management. www.ahima.org