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The Obamacare Scare: Medical Debt Collectors in Scrubs?

ByColumn by ADAM LEVIN, Credit.com
July 07, 2012, 12:58 PM

July 9, 2012 -- Do you remember where you were last Thursday morning when every network interrupted its regular programming to announce the most anticipated Supreme Court decision since Bush v. Gore? It was not in the same category as the Kennedy assassination or Neil Armstrong's "giant leap for mankind" moment, but when it was reported that Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion in the Affordable Care Act case that saved Obama's individual mandate — the centerpiece of the legislation — time seemed to stand still, breaths were held and pundits and spinmeisters alike began dancing and whirling about like delirious dervishes.

There were the predictable high-fives at the White House; the "When I am elected, my first act on my first day in office will be to dismantle this legislative abortion (forget that I passed it in Massachusetts)" messaging of the Romney campaign; and the "We'll maim this mother before the end of the legislative term this year," coming from the NoMads — those icons of the Politics of No, the "I'm mad as Hell" folks from the Tea Party.

After this past week, few are willing to prognosticate what will happen in November, just as literally no one would have predicted that the Chief Justice would have been the voice of the majority in the National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius case.

But if by some chance through the trick-or-treat of a fickle November day, Mitt Romney and the Sons of the SuperPACs carry the election and are given the opportunity to gut the Affordable Care Act, I call upon them now to leave certain provisions in place — in particular those that protect Americans from the lowest of the bottom feeders in the current system: medical debt collectors.

[Related article: 7 Ways to Stop Overseas Debt Collection Scam Calls]

Under the ACA, there are a few little known provisions governing financial assistance, billing and collection practices. One of them limits the ability of medical debt collectors to harass patients in need of medical assistance during the screening and admittance process and collect on previous unpaid medical bills (Mark Rukavina outlined these provisions on Credit.com in a great piece titled, "How Obamacare Keeps Debt Collectors Out of Hospitals").

[Related article: 5 Credit Rules Everyone Should Follow]

What does it say about us as a nation where patients waiting in an emergency room or lying in (or near) recovery rooms after surgery can be confronted by a special "relative" or friend at their bedside. I am not talking about Aunt Susie or Uncle Bob. It's your friendly embedded (didn't they only do that with reporters in Iraq?) medical debt collector who is holding their own special brand of Get Well bouquet in the form of an invoice.

[Related article: A National Service Corps Can Solve the Student Loan Crisis]

The Attorney General of Minnesota was not amused when reports surfaced that a company had slipped collectors disguised as employees into emergency rooms demanding that patients cough up dough before receiving treatment.

I understand that our hospitals are desperate to recoup an estimated $39 billion for unpaid services but what kind of world do we live in where collectors masquerading as hospital employees, perhaps in possession of personal medical information, demand that the feeble, ill, and even the dying pay outstanding medical bills they could not afford in the first place before seeking emergency care. Does the phrase "Physician do no harm" not apply when a bill is due?

[Related Article: Warning: Medical Debts CAN Hurt Your Credit]

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