Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-08-15
[Post from Infoglide] The Not So Great Fortune 500 Enterprise
“Of the various types of crime involving fraud, individual cases of people scamming workers’ compensation garner the most publicity. The stories typically read like this: ‘Joe Blow was drawing workers’ comp while working as a personal trainer, and after he was caught on video, he had to pay back $9000 and received a five-year suspended jail sentence.’ While the human interest aspect of these stories, especially those including video of an injured worker involved in heavy physical activity, capture the most public attention, more organized activities impact the U.S. economy much more negatively.”
Cato Unbound: The Sky Isn’t Falling
“But a careful observer can detect the outlines of other intelligence successes based on surveillance in recent events. When David Headley was arrested for allegedly seeking to commit terrorist acts in Denmark, news reports suggested that one of the key factors in his identification was his pattern of travel to the Middle East and his efforts to conceal those trips from the government. Review of his travel both provided the trigger to ask questions and the factual cross-check on the veracity of his answers. Likewise, when Najibullah al-Zasi was arrested, one factor that was publicly disclosed as a ground for suspicion was surveillance of his travel to Pakistan.”
CIO: Healthcare Data Quality: Providing Better Patient Care
“Three things immediately jump to mind. The first is something very basic, but important: being able to identify a patient. Think of how many different ways might a patient’s name appear in a physician’s database. From misspellings to inconsistent middle name initial usage, multiple combinations of a name can lead to confusion. If healthcare providers don’t know who their patients are, how can they provide them with quality service?”
GovMonitor: Washington Cracks Down On Workers Compensation Fraud
“‘For every dollar Labor and Industries spends to combat fraud, we’ve seen an eight dollar return,’ Gregoire said. ‘By preventing and punishing fraud, we protect workers and honest businesses from unfair competition. Fraud in the workers’ compensation system hurts our economy – honest businesses are undercut by those that don’t fairly participate in the system and workers pay more than they should when others claim more benefits than they deserve.’”
