South Carolina has 2nd-highest medical debt levels in the U.S., but little hope of expanded Medicaid coverage
Berkowitz was already working in health advocacy, but after her experience with her don, she became even more invested in her health advocacy and legal work in
"I still remember sitting next to my son, who goes, 'Well, I know you've been working hard for this,'" Berkowitz recalled. "I said, 'I'm crying because you won't be turned down for insurance once you're on your own.'"
Two years later,
Experts say there is a link between Medicaid expansion and medical debt. In states that passed Medicaid expansion, medical debt decreased, said Theodoros Giannouchos, a professor at the
Medical debt often falls on the shoulders of uninsured, low-income adults who don't have children, Giannouchos said. Those are the same people who would most likely gain coverage under Medicaid expansion, he said. About 13% of people in
Without Medicaid, the options for care are limited. Many people end up in emergency rooms for non-urgent care needs that could be covered by a primary care provider, Giannouchos said. His research found rates of people going to emergency rooms for non-urgent medical problems is significantly less in states that have expanded Medicaid.
Free and charitable clinics in
"The very people who most people assumed would get some relief from the Affordable Care Act, at least in
Foley sees the need for more coverage. Many patients with chronic illness often end up with medical debt that could have been avoided with coverage, she said.
"These bills that turn up for the uninsured are related to chronic conditions and are actually avoidable if they had access to care, if they had medication they could afford, if they could access follow-up care," Foley said.
In
Those with medical debt can have their wages or tax return garnished, Berkowitz said. A bill to stop health care providers from pursuing collections of medical debt or reporting the debt to credit agencies failed in the
"We're seeing garnishment of wages and tax returns for people who can least afford it in
Berkowitz said she feels for hospitals, which need the money to operate.
"When those payments are not received, it can have a significant impact on a hospital's ability to fund services for its community," Ames said.
Berkowitz hopes expanding Medicaid would benefit hospitals as well as patients, as patients who previously could not pay would gain coverage, she said. An estimated 350,000 more people would be eligible for Medicaid under expansion, according to the
The hospital association advocates for health coverage for low-income South Carolinians, Ames said.
Expansion has not been passed by the Republican-controlled government because of politics, Berkowitz said.
There have been some changes in sentiments about Medicaid expansion and health coverage, he said. After 10 years the federal funding has not changed, Giannouchos said. The COVID-19 pandemic emphasized the importance of health care, he said.
The American Rescue Plan Act provided additional incentive: more money for states that newly expanded Medicaid. Giannouchos said states that expand Medicaid also often see decreases in other costs from public health coverage that goes unpaid.
The changes gave Berkowitz and other advocates she works with more hope.
"We do have renewed hope. We know there is an increasing need," she said. "We are hoping we can show economically what it means for the states and have a real discussion about that. We want to make the business argument."
A traumatic brain injury and
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South Carolina has 2nd-highest medical debt levels in the U.S., but little hope of expanded Medicaid coverage
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