ALBANY, N.Y. , Feb. 9, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The New York StateWide Senior Action Council (StateWide), a 54-year-old non-profit organization dedicated to serving the needs and well-being of our State’s more than 3.6 million senior citizens, today announced its Medicare Fraud of the Month for February: Catheter Kit Fraud.
The StateWide Fraud of the Month is a component of the Senior Medicare Patrol (SMP), the definitive resource for New York State’s older adults and caregivers to detect, prevent, and report healthcare fraud, errors, and abuse. StateWide is New York’s grantee/administrator for this Federal Program.
Maria Alvarez, Executive Director of StateWide, advises, “Medicare beneficiaries across the country are discovering charges for urinary catheter kits they did not need, did not request, and never received. Scammers often bill Medicare for 200+ catheter kits at a time, resulting in suspicious claims ranging from $1,200–$2,400 or more on Medicare statements.”
How this Scam Works:

- Scammers use unsolicited calls, emails, or online ads to collect Medicare numbers.
- Medicare is billed for catheter kits that were never requested or ordered, and claims may appear legitimate because a familiar provider’s name is listed.
- The beneficiary is unaware until reviewing their Medicare Summary Notice (MSN) or Explanation of Benefits (EOB).
- Since many people affected by this scam never receive any catheters at all, reviewing Medicare Summary Notices (MSN) or Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is the only way to know Medicare identities have been misused.
- Don’t assume a charge is legitimate just because a familiar doctor’s name appears.
- Report unauthorized charges to the NYS Senior Medicare Patrol for items not received or needed.
- Never share personal Medicare information with unsolicited callers.
- If there are charges for catheter kits on Medicare statements that were never received or were not ordered by your doctor, contact the NYS Senior Medicare Patrol (NYS SMP) for help.

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