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Related: About this forumDecision to Vacate Ban on Medical Debt Reporting Will Hurt People - Bloomberg Radio
Jul 18, 2025 Featured Videos
Rohit Chopra, former Director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, discusses the broader impact of a recent federal ruling on medical debt reporting.
A federal judge in Texas eliminated a Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule barring medical debt from credit reports and lending decisions, handing a win to credit reporting companies and the Trump administration.
The Medical Debt Rule exceeds the Bureaus statutory authority, Judge Sean D. Jordan of the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas said in a Friday ruling.
The CFPB under the leadership of acting Director Russell Vought moved to vacate the rule alongside industry plaintiffs the Consumer Data Industry Association and the Cornerstone Credit Union League, a Texas credit union trade group.
Jordan had subsequently allowed the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty, Tzedek DC, and other consumer groups to step in and defend it.
The CDIA, which represents major consumer credit reporting companies, and the CFPB argued that the agency under former Director Rohit Chopra exceeded its authority in banning the reporting of medical debt on credit reports.
Americas financial system is the best in the world because it is based on a full, fair and accurate credit reporting system, Dan Smith, the CDIAs president and CEO, said in a statement. Information about unpaid medical debts is an important element in assessing a consumers ability to pay.
The consumer advocate intervenors said they are evaluating their next steps.
Rohit Chopra, former Director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, discusses the broader impact of a recent federal ruling on medical debt reporting.
A federal judge in Texas eliminated a Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule barring medical debt from credit reports and lending decisions, handing a win to credit reporting companies and the Trump administration.
The Medical Debt Rule exceeds the Bureaus statutory authority, Judge Sean D. Jordan of the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas said in a Friday ruling.
The CFPB under the leadership of acting Director Russell Vought moved to vacate the rule alongside industry plaintiffs the Consumer Data Industry Association and the Cornerstone Credit Union League, a Texas credit union trade group.
Jordan had subsequently allowed the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty, Tzedek DC, and other consumer groups to step in and defend it.
The CDIA, which represents major consumer credit reporting companies, and the CFPB argued that the agency under former Director Rohit Chopra exceeded its authority in banning the reporting of medical debt on credit reports.
Americas financial system is the best in the world because it is based on a full, fair and accurate credit reporting system, Dan Smith, the CDIAs president and CEO, said in a statement. Information about unpaid medical debts is an important element in assessing a consumers ability to pay.
The consumer advocate intervenors said they are evaluating their next steps.
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Decision to Vacate Ban on Medical Debt Reporting Will Hurt People - Bloomberg Radio (Original Post)
SouthBayDem
Sunday
OP
So they want fraudulent and loosely-calculated medical bills to matter? Time to question their credibility.
Scott Alan Swaggerty
Sunday
#1
Scott Alan Swaggerty
(51 posts)1. So they want fraudulent and loosely-calculated medical bills to matter? Time to question their credibility.
Analysis: In Medical Billing, Fraudulent Charges Weirdly Pass As Legal
Much of what we accept as legal in medical billing would be regarded as fraud in any other sector.
I have been circling around this conclusion for the past five years, as Ive listened to patients stories while covering health care as a journalist and author. Now, after a summer of firsthand experience my husband was in a bike crash in July its time to call out this fact head-on. Many of the Democratic candidates are talking about practical fixes for our high-priced health care system, and some legislated or regulated solutions to the maddening world of medical billing would be welcome.
My husband, Andrej, flew over his bicycles handlebars when he hit a pothole at high speed on a Sunday ride in Washington. He was unconscious and lying on the pavement when I caught up with him minutes later. The result: six broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a broken finger, a broken collarbone and a broken shoulder blade.
The treatment he got via paramedics and in the emergency room and intensive care unit were great. The troubles began, as I knew they would, when the bills started arriving.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/analysis-in-medical-billing-fraudulent-charges-weirdly-pass-as-legal/
Putting a 600 dollar bandaid on a credit report says more about the lack of credibility the credit reporting agency has than it does the person with the bill's ability to pay.
https://www.vox.com/2016/5/13/11606760/emergency-facility-fees-american-health-care
Medical bills are too fraudulent to be a part of credit reports.
Much of what we accept as legal in medical billing would be regarded as fraud in any other sector.
I have been circling around this conclusion for the past five years, as Ive listened to patients stories while covering health care as a journalist and author. Now, after a summer of firsthand experience my husband was in a bike crash in July its time to call out this fact head-on. Many of the Democratic candidates are talking about practical fixes for our high-priced health care system, and some legislated or regulated solutions to the maddening world of medical billing would be welcome.
My husband, Andrej, flew over his bicycles handlebars when he hit a pothole at high speed on a Sunday ride in Washington. He was unconscious and lying on the pavement when I caught up with him minutes later. The result: six broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a broken finger, a broken collarbone and a broken shoulder blade.
The treatment he got via paramedics and in the emergency room and intensive care unit were great. The troubles began, as I knew they would, when the bills started arriving.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/analysis-in-medical-billing-fraudulent-charges-weirdly-pass-as-legal/
Putting a 600 dollar bandaid on a credit report says more about the lack of credibility the credit reporting agency has than it does the person with the bill's ability to pay.
https://www.vox.com/2016/5/13/11606760/emergency-facility-fees-american-health-care
Medical bills are too fraudulent to be a part of credit reports.
snot
(11,207 posts)2. Meanwhile, health insurers
are asking for 20% premium increases for next year (https://mishtalk.com/economics/insurers-request-huge-obamacare-rate-hikes-many-over-20-percent/ ).