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Tuesday, Jan 23 2024

Full Issue

Half A Million New Yorkers May See Their Unpaid Medical Bills Cleared

The push, announced by Mayor Eric Adams, will clear about $2 billion of debt and comes thanks to a partnership with the nonprofit RIP Medical Debt. Meanwhile, $12 million in southwestern Virginia medical debt has been cancelled by the Secular Society, affecting over 14,000 citizens.

New York City will purchase millions of dollars of medical debt and then erase it in effort to help as many as 500,000 residents, Mayor Eric Adams announced on Monday. The program involves partnering with a nonprofit organization, RIP Medical Debt, that buys unpaid medical debt from hospitals at a steep discount and then clears it. The city will invest $18 million to relieve more than $2 billion in medical debt for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers, Adams said. (Gibson, 1/22)

The Blacksburg-based Secular Society announced Friday that it has purchased an additional $12.1 million in medical debt for 14,434 Southwest Virginia citizens 鈥 and that debt is now wiped out. The latest round of relief comes after the nonprofit has retired millions more of debt in the past. To be eligible for purchase and abolition, the debt must be owned by someone with a family income less than four times the federal poverty level or for whom a medical debt is 5% or more of their annual income, according to a Secular Society news release. (1/20)

On the high cost of drugs 鈥

An unusual bipartisan coalition of lawmakers is teaming up on drug pricing legislation, proving the issue may defy election-year partisanship as health care costs remain a top voter concern. The effort highlights the increased scrutiny some influential Republicans are giving an industry the GOP has long allied itself with. (Sullivan, 1/23)

Pharmaceutical companies are doing anything they can to stop President Biden鈥檚 Medicare program from being able to negotiate prices for their products, including suing the government. Experts say their efforts might actually benefit Biden by reminding voters that he鈥檚 taking on big drug companies. (Wilkerson, 1/23)

Also 鈥

There鈥檚 a pharmacy in the White House 鈥 or, at least, there鈥檚 a sign that says 鈥淧harmacy,鈥 though the people in charge insist it isn鈥檛 one. Whatever they call it, the office has had enough internal complaints to warrant a government watchdog investigation. (Trang, 1/23)

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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