The Home Instead Senior Care®
network developed Protect Seniors from
FraudSM,
a public education program that was conceived to try to prevent criminal acts
against the nation’s elderly. Ed Hutchison,
director of the Triads and an expert source for the Protect Seniors from Fraud program, states that attempts to steal personal and financial information from seniors is becoming all too common.
Others agree. “America’s rife with health scams,” said
James Quiggle, communications director at the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud
in Washington, D.C. “Crooks are offering fake health coverage, stripped-down
policies masquerading as real coverage.”
Here’s an example
of what Quiggle was talking about: An 86-year-old Denver woman recently was
sitting in her kitchen when the phone rang. She didn’t recognize the phone
number or the voice. “He asked if I was a senior, and he said, ‘We are sending
out new Medicare cards and I want to make sure I have all of your statistics
correct,’ ” she said.
He recited her
address and phone number, “to make sure they were right.” Then he read off a
series of numbers and asked if it was her bank routing number. “I didn’t know
at the time whether it was or not, so I just said no,” she said. “He said,
‘Could you give it to me so I’ll have it?’ I wasn’t so sure about that, and
when he started to say something, I hung up.”
When the scammer
tried to call again, she hung up, wrote the number from her caller ID and
dialed Medicare to report it.
For more about consumer insurance fraud, see http://www.insurancefraud.org/fraud-why-worry.htm#.UX62-6Kkrl8;
to
learn how Home Instead is educating about senior fraud, visit http://www.caregiverstress.com/senior-safety/con-cheat-seniors/.
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