More people have health insurance than ever before,聽but many still struggle to pay聽for care. According to a new report, medical debt is the No. 1聽reason consumers reported being contacted by a collection agency. If efforts to overhaul the health law result in more people losing their coverage, those numbers could rise.
The study by the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found that who reported they had been contacted by a debt collector聽said it was for medical services. Telecommunications bills were the second most common type of overdue bill for which debt collectors pursued payment, at 37 percent, and utilities were third, reported by 28 percent.
Unlike other types of debt, people with medical debt were prevalent across a range of income levels, credit scores and ages.
The survey sample was drawn from the CFPB鈥檚 consumer credit panel, a from one of the three major credit reporting agencies.
Insuring Your HealthConducted between December 2014 and March 2015, the survey asked respondents about their experiences over the past year with debt collectors.
Having medical debt turned over to聽collections can be a double whammy.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just that people may be reluctant to go for care because of the debt they might incur,鈥 said Mark Rukavina, a Boston-based health care consultant whose work has focused on affordability and medical debt. 鈥淚t might also ruin their credit.鈥 Having a medical bill in collection can substantially reduce consumers鈥 credit scores, Rukavina said.
The health law to retain their聽federal聽nonprofit status, including establishing written charity care policies. Hospitals must聽determine whether patients are eligible聽under their policies聽and provide it for those who are. They also must limit how much uninsured patients are charged and restrict aggressive billing and collections activities. Under those rules, nonprofit hospitals are barred from initiating “extraordinary聽collection actions鈥澛(such as reporting to credit bureaus, garnishing wages or placing a lien on property or taking legal action)聽until 120 days after the first billing statement is sent.
Although the rule doesn鈥檛 apply to for-profit hospitals, the regulation introduced a federal standard for reporting medical debt, Rukavina said.
The proportion of families that said they were having trouble paying their medical bills declined between September 2013, before the health law鈥檚 insurance marketplaces opened in 2014, and March 2015, according to by the Urban Institute.聽The study found that the percentage of families that had problems paying medical bills declined聽from 22 percent in 2013 to 17.3 percent in 2015. Being uninsured, having a low income and enrolling in聽a high-deductible plan聽each increased the odds of having trouble paying medical bills, the study found.
Republicans have vowed to press ahead with plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but since they don鈥檛 have enough votes in the Senate to get a full repeal through,聽they are initially focusing on specific聽provisions that can be undone by a simple majority vote during the budget process. The nonpartisan last week that under a Republican plan last year to partially repeal the law 18 million people聽would become聽uninsured in the first year, rising to 32 million in 2026.
鈥淏ecause more people would be uninsured, they鈥檇 be exposed to the full cost of their care and you鈥檇 very likely see the number of people who are carrying medical debt increase,鈥 said Sara Collins, vice president of health care coverage and access at the Commonwealth Fund, whose examine issues of medical debt and underinsurance.
If that happens, consumer protections could be even more important. Before the health law passed in 2010, some states passed hospital fair pricing laws that generally restricted how much hospitals could charge uninsured patients for care to no more than what is paid by public and private insurers.聽The law聽typically also required hospitals to provide free care to low-income uninsured patients.
The laws were often initiated in response to aggressive billing and collection practices by hospitals, which would charge uninsured patients far higher rates than those paid by insured patients, who benefited from discounts negotiated by their health plans.
The health law聽drew on elements of state fair pricing laws, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, was instrumental in adding those provisions, according to Rukavina. As such, they may be more likely to be retained in a Republican replacement to聽the law.
State fair pricing laws typically reduce the amount that uninsured patients pay by about 25 to 30 percent, a found.
Since the Affordable Care Act passed there hasn鈥檛 been much new activity at the state level on these laws, but that could change.
鈥淚n an ideal world, these laws would be redundant or unnecessary,鈥 said Benedic Ippolito, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who co-authored the study. 鈥淭his type of legislation appears to be a little more relevant now than we would have thought it would be.鈥
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