Posts Tagged ‘debt’

Breast Cancer Survivor Jailed for Unpaid $280 Medical Bill

April 24th, 2012

In a throwback to the Victorian era, hard economic times are creating a comeback for debtors’ prisons, despite the fact that they have been ruled unconstitutional. But legal loopholes allow collections agencies to aggressively go after people who owe money. The Associated Press recently reported that an Illinois woman was sent to jail for an outstanding medical bill of $280, even though the bill was sent in error. Here is yet another horrid consequence of not having a universal, public healthcare system in the United States.

In more than one-third of states, people can be sent to jail if they can’t or won’t pay outstanding debts. Though California does place burdensome penalties on some debtors, the state isn’t as extreme as Illinois. As far as I know, there aren’t any cases here in the Golden State of people in jail for medical debt, thank goodness. But the fact that anywhere in this country, people are still being penalized for being poor makes America’s insistence that it is the “greatest country in the world” ring hollow. A truly great country does not put people in jail for debts, medical or otherwise. And a truly great country provides health coverage for all its people, making headlines like “Breast Cancer Survivor Jailed for Unpaid $280 Medical Bill” non-existent.

Sylvia@CaliforniaOneCare.org

How Can the U.S. Bring Down its Debt? It’s Obvious: Medicare for Everyone.

August 19th, 2011

The Saint-Louis Post Dispatch recently published an editorial that finally addresses the real solution to the nation’s debt woes:

If America truly is serious about dealing with its deficit problems, there’s a fairly simple solution. But you’re probably not going to like it: Enact a single-payer health care plan.
See, we told you weren’t going to like it.
But the fact is that everyone who has studied the deficit problem has agreed that it’s actually a health care problem — more specifically, the cost of providing Medicare benefits to an aging and longer-living population. The bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform reported last December: “The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects if we continue on our current course, deficits will remain high throughout the rest of this decade and beyond, and debt will spiral ever higher, reaching 90 percent of GDP in 2020.

Read the rest of the editorial here: http://www.stltoday.com/news/opinion/editorial/article_97afa329-42f8-5f12-adb0-97fa305c3e4b.html#ixzz1VJIHFMrk

I disagree with the paper’s assumption that the public is not going to like having to set up a single payer system. Polls routinely show enthusiastic support for providing Medicare to all Americans. It’s health reform opponents and corporate “sickcare” shills who like to demonize a popular idea and try to mute public support. Nevertheless, bravo to the Post-Dispatch. As the adverse effects of skyrocketing medical costs on the nation’s overall fiscal health become increasingly harder to ignore, hopefully more media outlets will begin calling for the United States to join the rest of the industrialized world and adopt Medicare for all.

Sylvia@californiaonecare.org