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Opinion: Crushing medical debt is turning Americans against their doctors

A woman sorting through a pile of bills
Debra Smith of Spring Hill, Tenn., racked up more bills from medical providers and hospitals than she could pay, landing about $10,000 in debt.
(Mark Zaleski / Associated Press)
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For Emily Boller, it was a $5,000 hospital bill for a simple case of pink eye that took four years to pay off. For Mary Curley, it was the threatening collection letters from a lab that arrived more than two years later, just as her husband lost his job and the family was fighting to save their home.

For Cory Day, it was a $1,000 fee he was charged at an emergency room outside Los Angeles, even though he only checked in and then left before being seen. “I feel like the hospital is a predator,” Day said. “This is a place that’s supposed to be looking after you.”

The experience offered a stark lesson, he said: “Don’t trust the system.”

The No Surprises Act, which took effect this month, makes it illegal for hospitals to slap patients with sky-high charges for out-of-network care.

Jan. 18, 2022

Reporting on medical debt over the past two years, I’ve spent hundreds of hours on the telephone, in the living rooms and at the kitchen tables of patients like Boller, Curley and Day. They are among the 100 million people in America who have been driven into debt by medical and dental bills.

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Many of my conversations with patients have revealed a deep and disturbing disillusionment with our healthcare system.

Medical providers ignore this at their peril — and at a high risk to Americans’ health.

An estimated 100 million Americans have medical debt, and 18% say they will never be able to pay off what they owe.

July 31, 2022

Doctors and hospitals have long held an exalted position in American life, retaining public confidence even as the public has steadily lost trust in other institutions such as government, law enforcement and the media. Growing up, I shared this faith. My father was a physician who never hesitated to get up in the middle of the night and drive to the hospital to operate on a sick child in his care. But as a journalist covering healthcare the past 15 years, I’ve seen patients’ faith shaken.

They’re tired of shocking medical bills they didn’t expect and can’t afford. And they’re disgusted by the collection notices, the threatening phone calls and appointments they can’t get because they owe money.

The U.S. health system now produces debt on a mass scale, an investigation shows. More than 100 million people are affected, far more than previously reported.

June 23, 2022

Many Americans say they simply no longer trust their medical providers. This is borne out by a nationwide poll conducted by KFF, a nonprofit health policy research organizaton, as part of an investigation of medical debt. Just 15% of people with healthcare debt said they have a lot of trust that providers have patients’ best interests in mind. That’s about half the rate as among people without such debt.

Many caring people who work in healthcare understand this. I’ve met countless compassionate physicians, nurses and others who see firsthand the toll that debt is taking on their patients.

Three U.S. agencies are looking into whether medical credit cards can harm consumers with features such as exorbitant deferred interest fees.

July 8, 2023

But I’ve seen a lot more denial and finger-pointing by healthcare leaders. Hospitals and doctors blame the government for underpaying them and blame insurers for selling plans with unaffordable deductibles. Insurers blame providers for obscene prices. Everyone blames drug companies.

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And so, the suffering of patients deepens.

In a project on medical debt with NPR, KFF Health News documented cancer patients forced to hold off debt collectors while fighting off nausea and other toxic side effects of chemotherapy; older workers whose retirement savings were obliterated; 30-somethings unable to buy a home because their credit was ruined by healthcare debt; new mothers forced to take on extra work; parents unable to buy Christmas gifts for their children; and seniors who cut back on food because of medical debt.

Credit scoring formulas vary in how they treat medical debt. But now, credit bureaus are changing how they treat medical debts on credit reports.

Oct. 16, 2022

That our healthcare system would do this to people should be reason enough for hospital executives, insurance CEOs and senior physicians to stop the blame game and look in the mirror.

If nothing else, this should be a flashing red light: the simmering resentment of growing numbers of patients who feel victimized by this system.

We got a hint of the dangers of this during the COVID-19 pandemic, as Americans who distrusted the medical system proved easy prey for misinformation about vaccines and other public health measures, with sometimes fatal consequences.

Other systemic risks are lurking. I was once a political reporter and saw up close what an erosion of trust can do to a system, and how much more difficult it becomes to get things done when the public loses faith in its institutions.

One in 10 residents in Los Angeles County are burdened by medical debt. And the uninsured aren’t the only ones vulnerable to debilitating health bills.

June 7, 2023

And as the political turmoil of recent years shows, public anger and disillusionment can produce unpredictable, even dangerous results.

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Healthcare leaders — and physician leaders in particular — could alleviate patients’ financial suffering.

Physician groups and hospital systems, many of which are led by doctors, could look more closely at the bills they send patients and the collection tactics they use. Health insurers, whose leadership ranks also often include physicians, could reconsider the high-deductible plans they sell and ask whether they truly protect their customers. And physicians everywhere could speak up about the financial travails of patients in their care.

Absent action, patients’ trust is sure to erode further. And without the trust of the people it serves, this American healthcare system cannot long endure.

Noam N. Levey is a senior correspondent at KFF Health News.

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