By Michelle
Andrews MAY 31, 2019
Elham
Mirshafiei was at the library cramming for final exams during her senior year
at California State University-Long Beach when she grew nauseated and started
vomiting. After the 10th episode in an hour, a friend took her to the nearest
emergency room. Diagnosis: an intestinal bug and severe dehydration. In a few
hours, she was home again, with instructions to eat a bland diet and drink
plenty of fluids.
That
was in 2010. But the $4,000 bill for the brief emergency department visit at an
out-of-network hospital has trailed her ever since. Mirshafiei, 31, has a good
job now as a licensed insurance adviser in Palo Alto, Calif. But money is still
tight and her priority is paying off her $67,000 student loan debt rather than
that old hospital bill.
Once or
twice a year she gets a letter from a collection agency. She ignores them, and,
so far, the consequences have been manageable. “It’s not like electricity that
gets cut off if you don’t pay it,” she said.
Mirshafiei
has plenty of company. At least 43 million other Americans have
overdue medical bills on their credit reports, a federal Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau report on medical debt found in 2014. And 59% of people
contacted by a debt collector say the exchange was over medical bills, the most
common type of contact stemming from an overdue bill, according to the CFPB.
This
month, the CFPB proposed a rule to
frame what debt collectors are allowed to do when pursuing many types of
overdue bills, including medical debt.
Federal law already prohibits debt
collectors from harassing consumers or contacting them before 8 a.m. or after 9
p.m., among other things. But the law, which was passed in 1977, didn’t
anticipate emails and text messages. The CFPB’s proposal clarifies how debt
collectors can use these communication tools. And it would allow consumers to
opt out of being contacted this way.
The
rule also specifies that debt collectors can make no more than seven telephone
calls weekly over a specific debt.
But
some consumer advocates panned the effort. “This
really doesn’t go far enough to protect consumers and make sure that consumers
are not abused or harassed or subject to unfair collection practices in debt
collection,” said April Kuehnhoff, an attorney at the National Consumer Law
Center who specializes in debt collection.
For
instance, the center wants a limit of just three telephone attempts each week on
a debt. The seven-call limit could be particularly tough on people with medical
debt, Kuehnhoff said. They may accumulate bills from several providers for a
single medical event — hospital, doctors, a lab and a nursing home, for example
— and all could be in collections separately, potentially resulting in dozens
of calls each week.
Debt
collectors aren’t necessarily in favor of the seven-call cap either, but for
different reasons. They say that limiting the number of calls could lead to
more litigation or adverse credit reporting rather than working out a payment
plan. Overall, the proposed rule seemed to strike a good balance between
collection industry and consumer concerns, said Leah Dempsey, vice president
and senior counsel for federal affairs at ACA International, a trade group representing
2,500 debt collectors, asset buyers and related professions.
The
general consensus is that people should pay their debts. But taking
responsibility for medical debt isn’t always as straightforward as paying off a
large-screen TV that someone put on a credit card. Did health insurance pay the
correct amount? Was the person screened for eligibility for Medicaid, charity
care or financial assistance?
“The actual
debt collector problem is often about the lack of accountability that providers
have for the people that they pass their debt along to,” said Leonardo Cuello,
director of health policy at the National Health Law Program.
When a
debt collector calls, consumers who are confused about the bill should ask, in
writing and generally within 30 days, that the debt be validated. Debts are
often bundled and sold multiple times to different collectors, which means
errors may be introduced along the way. “There are no magic words; you don’t
need to cite the statute,” said Justin J. Lowe, legal director at Health Law
Advocates, a nonprofit law firm in Boston that helps people with low incomes
who are having trouble accessing or paying for medical care.
At that
point, the collection agency has to stop activities until it proves what the
consumer owes. The proposed CFPB rule would spell out verification information
that must be provided along with instructions for consumers about how to
dispute the debt.
The
proposal would also address other practices, including the collection of
so-called zombie debt. That refers to a bill that has passed a time limit — or
statute of limitations — for bringing legal action, often between three and six
years, depending on the state. In many states, if a collector sues someone for
such a time-barred debt, consumers can raise the issue in court in their
defense. If a judge agrees, the case could be dismissed.
Consumer
advocates have long wanted debt collectors to be prohibited from trying to
collect zombie debt. After several years, it can be difficult for patients to
remember whether a bill has been paid or to locate records, they argue.
The
proposed CFPB rule would prohibit debt collectors from suing or threatening to
sue consumers for zombie debt, but only if the collectors knew or should have
known that the statute of limitations had expired. That puts the onus on the
consumer to prove what was in the debt collector’s mind rather than merely
showing that too much time had passed to collect.
It’s
unclear how the proposed changes announced by the CFPB might affect
Mirshafiei’s situation. The statute of limitations in California on written
contracts is four years.
One
thing someone in Mirshafiei’s situation should be aware of is that making a
payment could reset the statute of limitations, Lowe said. The debt collector
could argue that by making a payment the person is affirming that he or she
owes the debt.
Because
of her damaged credit, Mirshafiei needed a relative to co-sign for student
loans for graduate school. She worries that if she tries to buy a house, she’ll
have trouble getting approved.
“I just
hope that in the next chapter of my life I don’t have to be denied things
because of this stain on my record,” she said.
As the
federal government moves ahead with the rule to address various types of debt
collection activities, legislators in a few states have introduced bills that
specifically target medical debt. Their efforts often focus on improving access
to financial assistance for medical care and limiting predatory debt collection
tactics.
Last
month, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed a law that reduces the maximum interest rate on
medical debt prior to a court judgment from 12% to 9%. It also prohibits
sending a medical debt to collections until 120 days after the patient is sent
the initial bill and requires collection agencies to provide itemized
statements to patients for medical and hospital debts and to notify them of
their possible eligibility for charity care.
In
Oregon, a bill sponsored by Rep. Andrea Salinas would require nonprofit
hospitals and affiliated clinics to provide care free of charge to families
with incomes up to 200% of the federal poverty level (about $43,000 for a
family of three) and charge a sliding scale for families earning up to 400% of
the poverty level (about $85,000 for a three-person family).
Like
the Washington law, the Oregon bill places
limits on the interest charged for medical debt. It also requires health care
facilities to screen patients for eligibility for financial assistance and
insurance.
The
bill passed the House earlier this month.
Some
hospitals already have strong financial assistance policies, but the playing
field needs leveling, said Salinas. “We really need hospitals to be a part of
the solution to prevent consumers from going into bankruptcy over medical
debt.”
Michelle
Andrews: andrews.khn@gmail.com,
@mandrews110
https://khn.org/news/mired-in-medical-debt-federal-plan-would-update-overdue-bill-collection-methods/?utm_campaign=KFF-2019-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=73248123&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8RkTZwwf1IwXfNya0C244QdveOrdQfnOHtOyIZ0PUV5kA6AnvkTXtmLrEflZjzFb1WWeoLh6SH8Uy4kSpXxJPIhYpoZg&_hsmi=73248123
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