Medical Debt Relief: States That Act vs. States That Don’t

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What “medical-debt relief” looks like in practice

“Medical-debt relief” is a catchall term for several separate policies and programs:

State-funded debt purchases and forgiveness: States buy medical debt for pennies on the dollar from hospitals or collectors, then cancel it for patients. This approach has been used in Connecticut, New Jersey and other places.

Laws to restrict or ban medical debt reporting: Some states prohibit reporting medical debt to consumer credit bureaus, so outstanding medical bills don’t lower your credit score.

Hospital charity and negotiation programs: Hospitals may expand charity care or offer hardship discounts so seniors pay less or nothing out of pocket. (These are often local or hospital-specific.)

These policies are not mutually exclusive—a state can both buy debt to cancel it and pass rules that limit reporting. The bottom line is: relief can lift balances, remove collections, and protect credit.

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