Paying off medical debt has little impact, study finds
ALLISON SESSO, RIP MEDICAL DEBT’S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, SAID THE STUDY WAS AT ODDS WITH WHAT THE GROUP HAD REGULARLY HEARD FROM THOSE IT HAD HELPED.
Over the past decade, RIP Medical Debt has grown from a tiny nonprofit group that received less than $3,000 in donations to a multimilliondollar force in healthcare philanthropy.
It has done so with a unique and simple strategy to tackling the enormous amounts that Americans owe hospitals: buying up old bills that would otherwise be sold to collection agencies and wiping out the debt.
Since 2014, RIP Medical Debt estimates that it has eliminated more than $11 billion of debt with the help of major donations from philanthropists and even city governments. In January, New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced plans to give the organization $18 million.
But a study published by a group of economists Monday calls into question the premise of the high-profile charity. After following 213,000 people who were in debt and randomly selecting some to work with the nonprofit group, the researchers found that debt relief did not improve the mental health or the credit scores of debtors, on average. And those whose bills had been paid were just as likely to forgo medical care as those whose bills were left unpaid.
“We were disappointed,” said Ray Kluender, an assistant professor at Harvard Business School and co-author of the study. “We don’t want to sugarcoat it.”
Allison Sesso, RIP Medical Debt’s executive director, said the study was at odds with what the group had regularly heard from those it had helped. “We’re hearing back from people who are thrilled,” she said.
In a survey that the group conducted last year, 60% of people with medical bills said the debt had negatively affected their mental health, and 42% said they had delayed medical care.
Studies had shown significant mental-health and financial improvements for other types of debt relief, such as paying off student loans or mortgages. But those debts have more urgency: Homeowners who do not pay their mortgages could quickly lose their homes, whereas a hospital bill can languish for years with little consequence.
Major credit-reporting agencies removed debts smaller than $500 from credit reports last year, further lessening the impact of outstanding debt. And the federal government is pursuing rules that would remove medical bills entirely from credit reports.
The study, published as a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, is one of the first to look at the impact of medical-debt relief on individuals.
“It’s a big policy area right now, so it’s important to show rigorously what the results are,” said Amy Finkelstein, a health economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology whose research has shown significant positive effects of gaining health insurance.
Finkelstein is also codirector of J-PAL North America, a nonprofit group that runs randomized experiments on social programs and provided some funding for this project.
“The idea that maybe we could get rid of medical debt, and it wouldn’t cost that much money but it would make a big difference, was appealing,” Finkelstein said. “What we learned, unfortunately, is that it doesn’t look like it has much of an impact.”
For some in the study with no other debt in collections, the erased medical bills did lead to a 3.6-point bump in their credit score, on average.
The researchers were startled to find that for some people, particularly those who already had high levels of financial stress, debt relief worsened their depression. It’s possible, the researchers speculated, that being told about the sudden payoff had inadvertently reminded debtors of their other unpaid bills.
RIP Medical Debt has “evolved” since 2020, when the experiment concluded, Sesso said. Major donations now allow the group to buy up billions in debt in a single city, which she said could have a larger impact on beneficiaries’ finances.