The Fort Morgan Times

INTEREST ON MEDICAL DEBT MAY BE CAPPED IN COLORADO

Proposal would also limit charges above estimate in some cases

- By Meg Wingerter mwingerter@denverpost.com

A proposal in the Colorado Senate would limit how much medical bills can exceed estimates, cap the interest rate on medical debt and make it easier for patients to dispute charges.

Senate Bill 23-93 would limit a provider, such as a hospital, to charging 15% above the estimate it gave to a patient paying out of pocket. It includes exceptions for emergencie­s or unexpected services that end up being necessary, though it doesn’t outline what might qualify for the exception.

It would also lower the cap on annual interest rates for medical debt from 8% to 3%. How much that would save depends on both the size of the debt and how quickly someone was paying it off.

Sen. Lisa Cutter, a Jefferson County Democrat and one of the bill’s sponsors, said at a news conference Tuesday that limiting the interest charged on medical debt gives patients a chance to get their finances back under control.

“For many families, these debts are insurmount­able,” she said.

The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau estimated Coloradans have a combined $1.3 billion in medical debt, affecting about 12% of adults. The median debt was $711, meaning half owed more and half owed less.

The bill would also:

-Require a debt collector to provide an itemized bill within 30 days, if requested, and allow the patient to dispute charges on the bill

-Prohibit collecting on the debt while the patient is appealing it

-Require that patients be given a written explanatio­n of their payment plan

-Give patients an opportunit­y to renegotiat­e the payment plan before the creditor can sue, sell the debt to a buyer, take the patient to arbitratio­n, or report the patient to credit monitoring agencies

-Designate violations of surprise billing laws as a “deceptive trade practice”

In a statement, the Colorado Hospital Associatio­n said many

of the protection­s in the bill already exist, with federal law requiring a “good faith estimate” and state law requiring hospitals to check if patients qualify for discounted care.

“Colorado hospitals and health systems recognize that health care affordabil­ity is a top concern and have been focused on improving both pricing transparen­cy and affordabil­ity of health care in the state,” the statement said. “CHA is actively working with the bill sponsors and the attorney general’s office to align the legislatio­n with the multitude of existing protection­s available to Colorado patients in hospitals.”

The provisions don’t apply

to loans or credit card debt taken out to finance surgeries or other health care. Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, whose office would be tasked with enforcing the rules if they pass, said his staff will consider how to assist people who’ve paid their medical bills with credit cards. Going forward, hopefully fewer people would be in that situation if they get accurate estimates upfront, he said.

“We want to stop that from happening,” he said.

The bill’s fiscal note said the Attorney General’s Office might have an increased workload from investigat­ing deceptive trade practices, and that state courts might receive a small bump in revenue from fees as more cases are filed. It didn’t give a specific estimate, however.

Last session, the legislatur­e

passed a bill allowing patients to sue if the hospital where they received care hadn’t posted its prices and took certain actions against the patient, such as suing them or sending the debt to collection­s. The current proposal would apply to settings other than hospitals and give the state a role in enforcing it, rather than requiring individual­s to hire an attorney. It also would take the onus off patients to look up prices, which most people don’t do.

Sen. Sonya Jaquez Lewis, a Democrat who represents Broomfield and part of Boulder County, said she cosponsore­d the bill because, as a pharmacist, she’s seen people forced to make sacrifices to afford their medication and other treatments.

“Every day, Coloradans are forced to choose between paying for necessitie­s like food, heat, rent and paying for medical care,” she said.

Sharon Cravitz, a breast cancer survivor who spoke at the news conference Tuesday, said the protection­s would have been helpful when she received a notice about a bill that already had been paid.

The billing company, Flatirons, wanted her to file a complaint against her insurance company with the state, and threatened to send the bill to collection­s when she refused. Flatirons ultimately sent refunds to about 40 people after the Attorney General’s Office determined the patients never owed what they were charged.

“I was really just lucky that I asked certain questions and I saved the paperwork,” she said. “Some of this medical debt is bologna.”

 ?? AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST ?? Paramedics and Aurora firefighte­rs from Engine 8arrive with a patient at the Medical Center of Aurora on Wednesday, April 22, 2020.
AARON ONTIVEROZ — THE DENVER POST Paramedics and Aurora firefighte­rs from Engine 8arrive with a patient at the Medical Center of Aurora on Wednesday, April 22, 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States