Senior Medicare Patrols (SMPs) empower and assist Medicare beneficiaries, their families, and caregivers to prevent, detect, and report health care fraud, errors, and abuse through outreach, counseling, and education. SMPs are grant-funded projects of the federal U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), U.S. Administration for Community Living (ACL). Their work is in three main areas:1. Conduct Outreach and Education. SMPs give presentations to groups, exhibit at events, and work one-on-one with Medicare beneficiaries. 2. Engage Volunteers. Protecting older persons' health, finances, and medical identity while saving precious Medicare dollars is a cause that attracts civic-minded Americans. 3. Receive Beneficiary Complaints. When Medicare beneficiaries, caregivers, and family members bring their complaints to the SMP, the SMP makes a determination about whether or not fraud, errors, or abuse is suspected. When fraud or abuse is suspected, they make referrals to the appropriate state and federal agencies for further investigation.The SMP Resource Center provides key services to ACL's SMP programs located throughout the country, including the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. It serves as a central source of information, expertise, training, and technical assistance for SMP projects.The SMP National Resource Center promotes the sharing of knowledge and best practices for both novice and experienced SMPs, provides ongoing support and information on issues and trends in health care fraud, waste, and abuse, and develops new products and tools for the national SMP network.Read our full comment policy here: https://smpresource.news/commentpolicy