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Monday, Aug 10 2015

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Thieves Stealing Personal Data To Get Health Care, Prescription Drugs

The Wall Street Journal examines the increasing number of identity thefts linked to medical care and the difficulties it can cause for consumers.

In a twist on identity theft, crooks are using personal data stolen from millions of Americans to get health care, prescriptions and medical equipment. Victims sometimes only find out when they get a bill or a call from a debt collector. They can wind up with the thief鈥檚 health data folded into their own medical charts. A patient鈥檚 record may show she has diabetes when she doesn鈥檛, say, or list a blood type that isn鈥檛 hers鈥攅rrors that can lead to dangerous diagnoses or treatments. Adding insult to injury, a victim often can鈥檛 fully examine his own records because the thief鈥檚 health data, now folded into his, are protected by medical-privacy laws. And hospitals sometimes continue to hound victims for payments they didn鈥檛 incur. (Armour, 8/7)

The fast-growing crime of medical identity theft is being fueled by the proliferation of electronic medical records and a sharp increase in data breaches at insurers and health care providers. ... Five things to know about medical ID theft and how to prevent it. (Armour, 8/7)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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