All important documents come via mail not email.
Dear Wilma Van Der Merwe,
There are a lot of fake e-mails telling the recipients that they either have a debt or that they earned a sum of money... What the sender wants is to induce the reader to send his data and then send him the "payment" amount or he will "instruct" the recipient on how to send a "small administrative fee" in order to collect the sum he earned...
In the hypothesis you still owe any medical fee to any institution, try to get in contact with them and check whether they had really sent the e-mail and ask them to send another one, with a specific term you agree on with them to add to their e-mail, so you can know for sure the origin of the communication (something like "as per our telephone conversation on 2018.11.21-10:45".
You see, I just received a notice of the cable company saying that they will offer a discount of 45% in the due value, but only if I pay the debt today and, if I lose this opportunity, the Internet services will be interrupted definitely... Well, I do not subscribe to the services of the mentioned company - they do not even operate in my city...)
Always check the veracity of the information, before answering any form of communications. In case the seem suspicious, try to get in contact with the originator by any regular means you have. And NEVER click on any links provided in the suspicious email, even those marked as "If you don't want to receive any more emails like this, please click here". They may lead to pages that will try to steal you data.
Hope this information can be useful to you!
Regards,
Miguel Luiz Martins
Testimonial: "Hi Thank you for the help. Much appreciated"
Sounds bogus. No return address or phone.
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