Editor’s note: This article was updated on July 25, 2023, to clarify the benefits of specific reforms.
State and federal lawmakers have become increasingly concerned with reducing the burden of growing medical debt nationwide. The scope of the problem—more than 100 million people, or 41% of American adults, struggled to pay medical bills in 2022—and the financial consequences for families have prompted a series of reforms.
Congress, for example, enacted the No Surprises Act to protect consumers from unexpected medical bills and costs, and the Trump and Biden administrations both cited the need to reform health care billing and collection practices. And in several states, lawmakers have approved measures to regulate medical billing practices and how hospital charity care programs, which provide free or discounted care to financially eligible patients, should operate.
Still, despite these policy efforts and bipartisan prioritization of the issue, there has been limited recognition so far of the role that state courts play as a tool to collect medical debts, leaving critical gaps in reforms addressing how Americans navigate health care costs.
Medical debts find their way to state court dockets as consumer debt collection lawsuits, the highest-volume civil court case type. Limited data on civil caseloads makes it difficult to ascertain the exact volume of medical debt cases that hit state courts, but recent research reveals the most common forms of medical debt collection lawsuits:
Once medical debt cases hit state courts, they are often treated no differently from any consumer debt collection lawsuit, despite their particular circumstances and the increased protections that are intended to apply to them. These types of civil cases tend to pose several challenges, such as low defendant understanding of and participation in the lawsuits brought against them and the reality that few defendants have legal representation to help inform them of their rights. These factors contribute to about 70% of such cases ending in default judgments, or automatic wins for the hospital or collector suing. Judgments can then be used to garnish patients’ wages, seize money in their bank accounts, or place a lien on their homes. Both hospitals and debt buyers commonly leverage these court-authorized tools to satisfy medical debts.
Additionally, most court systems do not distinguish medical debt lawsuits from other civil cases. Nor do they regularly require the debt collectors to provide documentation, such as the original medical bills and identity of the hospital, to substantiate their claims. Documentation can be particularly important in medical debt lawsuits because patients may not recognize the debt if a third party is suing them and because medical bills frequently contain errors and incorrect charges.
Further, state and federal medical debt reforms often overlook the prevalence of medical debt lawsuits and therefore don’t extend revised policies or guidance to address the role of the courts. Since 2020, 13 states have enacted legislation related to medical debt protection, but lawmakers in only five—Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, and New York—included meaningful litigation provisions.
Maintaining the status quo means that many patients cannot effectively use state courts to dispute, settle, or resolve their medical debt issues, which leaves them vulnerable to further financial insecurity because of unpaid medical bills. Debts that are the subject of garnishment can linger for years, a scenario that not only affects patients but also results in delays and uncertainty for providers seeking to recoup costs.
As medical debt issues continue to garner national attention and action, all branches of government at different levels can act to account for the role of state courts in implementing safeguards:
Filling these policy gaps can bolster the effects of reforms to health care billing and costs that states are already championing. Civil courts need clear, consistent guidance on how to handle medical debt cases. When enacting comprehensive policy reforms, policymakers should include judiciaries in the process to ensure that they are delivering results that could help millions of Americans each year.
Natasha Khwaja works on The Pew Charitable Trusts’ civil legal system modernization project.