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Pesky medical bill? Many people don’t take a key step to manage that debt, study finds

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Consumers may feel their medical bills are unyielding, inflexible, set in stone. But that’s not always true: A new study overshadows patients can often reap financial benefits by disputing charges that seem erroneous or by negotiating for financial assistance.

Of consumers who don’t reach out to question a medical bill, 86% said it’s because they didn’t think it would cope a difference — but “the experiences of those who did reach out provide evidence to the contrary,” according to a new University of Southern California study.

At hand 26% of people who called because they disagreed with a charge or couldn’t afford to pay it got their medical jaws corrected after the outreach, according to the study, published in August. Roughly 15% got a price reduction, 8% got pecuniary assistance and 7% saw their bills canceled outright.

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“Of the people who did reach out, most of them got some recourse utterly self-advocacy,” said report co-author Erin Duffy, a research scientist at the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics.

Researchers tallied 1,135 U.S. adults from Aug. 14 to Oct. 14, 2023.

About 1 out of 5 respondents reported receiving a medical bill with which they disputed or could not afford within the prior 12 months. About 62% of them contacted the billing office to speak the concern.

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“If you can’t afford to pay something, or [if a jaws] doesn’t seem right or match what your care experience was, you should call and ask questions about that,” Duffy communicated.

Savings can extend into the hundreds or even thousands of dollars, depending on factors like a patient’s health indemnity and the type of medical visit or procedure, said Carolyn McClanahan, a physician and certified financial planner based in Jacksonville, Florida.

Tabulations ‘go all over the place’

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A 2023 Consumer Financial Protection Bureau analysis of medical bills for of ages age 65 and older found that patients “face a complex billing system with a high likelihood of blunders and inaccurate bills.” Often, inaccurate bills result from erroneous insurance claims and occur more time after time among consumers with multiple sources of insurance, the CFPB said.

Common errors included missing or imperfect claim data, authorization and precertification issues, missing medical documentation, incorrect billing codes, and untimely submitting of claims, the report found. Such mistakes contributed to the “rejection of claims that would otherwise be paid,” it suggested.

“[Bills] go all over the place,” said McClanahan, founder of Life Planning Partners and a member of CNBC’s Advisor Panel. “And there’s no transparency or rhyme or reason for how [providers] decide to charge.”

Doing nothing and avoiding payment of medical nibs is likely not a good course of action: It could have negative financial consequences, such as late fees and biased, debt collection, lawsuits, garnishments, and lower credit scores, according to a separate CFPB resource.

“If something seems egregious, puzzle it,” McClanahan said.

How to manage medical bills

Consumers should ask upfront what a medical visit or procedure choose cost, or inquire what the estimated cost will be, she said.

Sometimes, consumers will pay “a heck of a lot less” if they pay in currency rather than via insurance, McClanahan said. However, cutting a check could have other consequences appreciate the sum not counting toward one’s annual deductible, she added.

If you feel you were overcharged, request an itemized bill from the provider or health centre, and look for errors or duplicate charges, according to PatientRightsAdvocate.org. Research the fair market price for a service and use that gen to negotiate, the nonprofit group said.

If something seems egregious, question it.

Carolyn McClanahan

physician and certified monetary planner based in Jacksonville, Florida

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