With Obamacare kicking in, scammers are busy trying to trick the elderly into giving banking or credit card information or Social Security numbers.
Some of the scams:
1. You
need a special card for Obamacare, and you are required to give the
information or you won’t be covered. Don’t do it. There’s no such thing as a
special card for Obamacare.
2. The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services awarded $67 million in grants to community organizations to help you
sign up for coverage through health care exchanges (also called marketplaces) when open enrollment starts Oct. 1. Scam artists are posing
as community “navigators” to gather your personal information -- such as
your Social Security number -- to try to steal your identity, or to sell you
phony health insurance. Don’t do it. And don’t click on their web sites either.
YOU find a navigator in your area through your state’s exchange so you’ll know
you’re dealing with a legitimate outfit.
3. Medicare beneficiaries receive calls from
insurance agents -- or people posing as insurance agents -- telling them that
they’re going to lose their Medicare benefits or access to their doctors
because of Obamacare and that they should sign up for a Medicare Advantage plan
instead. They either steal the person’s premiums entirely or get a commission
from the sale. Don’t do it. Ask your doctor if he/she still is participating in
Medicare or your Medicare Advantage plan before making any changes.
Best tactic:
Ignore all calls that YOU didn’t initiate.
Beacon
Journal retirees keep their same coverage when Obamacare kicks in so they don't need to do anything to keep their usual coverage.
To read the
entire Kiplinger magazine article, click on http://www.kiplinger.com/article/insurance/T048-C001-S003-how-to-avoid-obamacare-scams.html
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