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Showing Original Post only (View all)Why Americans Are Drowning in Medical Debt [View all]
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/10/why-americans-are-drowning-in-medical-debt/381163/After his recent herniated-disk surgery, Peter Drier was ready for the $56,000 hospital charge, the $4,300 anesthesiologist bill, and the $133,000 fee for orthopedist. All were either in-network under his insurance or had been previously negotiated. But as Elisabeth Rosenthal recently explained in her great New York Times piece, he wasn't quite prepared for a $117,000 bill from an assistant surgeon"an out-of-network doctor that the hospital tacked on at the last minute.
It's practices like these that contribute to Americans' widespread medical-debt woes. Roughly 40 percent of Americans owe collectors money for times they were sick. U.S. adults are likelier than those in other developed countries to struggle to pay their medical bills or to forgo care because of cost.
California patients paid more than $291,000 for the procedure, while those in Arkansas paid just $5,400.
Earlier this year, the financial-advice company NerdWallet found that medical bankruptcy is the number-one cause of personal bankruptcy in the U.S. With a new report out today, the company dug into how, exactly, medical treatment leaves so many Americans broke.
Americans pay three times more for medical debt than they do for bank and credit-card debt combined, the report found. Nearly a fifth of us will hear from medical-debt collectors this year, and they'll gather $21 billion from us, collectively.

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The discovery that ACA allows insurance to meet requirements but doesn't cover hospitalization
HereSince1628
Oct 2014
#7
It's coming! Just make sure to keep investing in health insurance corporations.
raouldukelives
Oct 2014
#33
My doc offers the same rate to a self pay patient that is agreed to for ins. co's and medicare.
napi21
Oct 2014
#53
Perhaps a highly skilled specialist in a rare aspect of the surgery being performed?
CTyankee
Oct 2014
#22
Health and education - two of the many things I think government should provide for it's citizens.
CrispyQ
Oct 2014
#28
i have been going ot this urgent care. with whole family.. get an xray and a month later a bill,
seabeyond
Oct 2014
#29
a doctor, that we are seeing, that takes care of the issue, reads it and then
seabeyond
Oct 2014
#34
Your x-rays have almost always been read by a radiologist.......for the last 40 years or more.
WillowTree
Oct 2014
#40
Wow willow. I was appreciating the info until the unwarranted snark at the end
seabeyond
Oct 2014
#41
America needs single payer. That's the only solution to the problem of medical debt.
Louisiana1976
Oct 2014
#51
I was worried about the issue of out-of-network, though I didn't realize that most ER physicians
pnwmom
Oct 2014
#52
Why did they tack on the assistant surgeon without clearing the insurance issue?
flamingdem
Oct 2014
#67