Calling All Voters: Vote Like Your Health Depends on It
September 8, 2024
It’s time to vote for change. Together, we can end medical debt.
We have a medical debt crisis in this country. It is a crisis that impacts more than 100 million people in the United States – that’s 4 in 10 adults. And we need policymakers who will tackle the crisis with the urgency that is needed. The #MedicalDebtVoter campaign will keep the voices of those impacted front and center and demand action from our elected leaders.
We need bold policies that address the root causes of medical debt and protect our financial futures. This includes:
Credit Reform: End the practice of using medical debt as a measure of creditworthiness, so that unexpected health emergencies don’t destroy lives and futures.
Debt Protection: Ban the marketing of predatory deferred interest credit cards in health care settings, so that seeking care doesn’t trap people in an endless cycle of debt.
Community Investment: Ensure that non-profit hospitals are providing adequate charity care and truly investing in the communities they serve.
Empowering Voices: Give communities a meaningful role in deciding how health care resources are allocated, ensuring that investments are made in programs and services that are driven by communities and address the real needs of the people.
This election, your vote can help change the system. Join the #MedicalDebtVoter movement and make your voice heard for health justice.
People across the country are speaking up and making their voices heard:
Samuelwas on the brink of purchasing a home, with a strong credit score and a stable career. But after a sudden medical issue and billing errors from the provider, his credit score plummeted from 720 to 580 due to mounting medical bills. His story is all too common: 75% of voters support efforts to remove all medical debt from credit reports and 66% of voters say they would feel more favorable towards a policymaker that supports these efforts.
After being hit with high medical bills and unfair collection practices during his late wife’s and his own cancer battles, Terry Belk is channeling his grief into power to advance a national movement to end medical debt. He and others are advocating for policymakers to ban unfair medical debt collection practices, including those that led to him having to sign over equity in his home.
If non-profit hospitals and the broader health care system were more transparent and upfront about the costs of services and availability of financial support services, people like Margarita Emmanuelli, a veteran of the Navy, could avoid accumulating medical debt in the first place.
When Sahida and her husband learned of his epilepsy diagnosis, the couple was shocked. Then came the $8,000 hospital bill. Sahida now works as a health advocate in Illinois to fight for the rights of patients and hold hospitals accountable to their community benefit. “What the whole country should know is that health care is not a business. Health care is a right.”
Sherrell Byrd knows how it feels when medical debt grabs a hold of your life. She recalls her stack of medical bills — next to the usual monthly bills — and how the phone would ring only for it to be another collection call.
After a short inpatient stay at a hospital, Nicole was diagnosed with MS. Unable to work due to her condition, Nicole went down many avenues to receive assistance — submitting a financial assistance application, finding an experienced patient advocate, obtaining Medicaid coverage, and applying for disability benefits — but she still deals with illegitimate bills and confusing, lengthy processes.
Dana of Pennsylvania was diagnosed with breast cancer at 23 and had thousands of dollars in medical debt. She paid a lot of it with credit cards but is still suffering financially. She was never told about safety net programs (like SNAP) or charity care that might have helped her recover, physically and economically, from this illness.
If you’ve faced the burden of medical debt, your vote is your power. Let’s elect leaders who will prioritize health justice. Join the movement today! 🗳️ #VoteForHealth #EndMedicalDebt
of voters support removing medical debt from credit reports
66%
feel more favorable towards a policymaker that supports these efforts
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Health Justice is Economic Justice
New polling by Community Catalyst and HIT Strategies reveals strong bipartisan voter support for policies that tackle medical debt. The people have spoken — the connection between health care affordability and people’s overall health and economic well-being is clear.
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