We all expect a simple exchange from work: we give our time, energy and focus and in return receive compensation and benefits that support our lives. While most living expenses are planned and budgeted, not all can be anticipated
Medical debt is one of those unpredictable curveballs that can quickly disrupt financial wellness and compromise long-term stability. Healthcare costs are not simply another financial obligation. They represent a long-term burden that can undermine the very objectives employer-sponsored financial wellness programs are created to support.
Medical debt is one of the primary drivers of financial instability for working Americans. More than 15 million Americans have medical debt over $500 that is more than one year old. Collectively, these debts total tens of billions of dollars and can have lasting financial consequences.
Medical debt is different
Medical debt is different from other forms of debt because it is often unexpected, delayed and difficult to verify. Consumers may be billed months after receiving care, sometimes by providers they did not choose. Billing errors, duplicate charges and unclear pricing are common and unresolved bills are frequently sent to collections. As a result, medical debt can damage credit, limit access to loans or mortgages and force individuals to deplete savings or delay major financial decisions.
Recent research shows healthcare debt is a leading cause of personal bankruptcy in the United States. More than half of individuals with medical debt report that routine doctor visits contributed to their balance and about 60% cite lab fees or diagnostic tests. Creditors can take up to 25% of wages through garnishment and in New York alone, almost 4,880 homes were taken because of medical debt. Up to 25% of high-income hospitals pursue legal action against patients over unpaid bills.
The workplace impact and fiduciary responsibility for employers
This is not just a consumer finance issue. It directly affects workforce stability, productivity and overall plan value. Financial stress often follows employees into the workplace, contributing to anxiety, depression and physical health conditions. As employees increasingly prioritize financial stability, financial wellness benefits are shaping where people choose to work.
For self-insured employers, this is not just an employee issue. It is a plan-level and fiduciary concern. Even well-designed health plans may expose employees to billing errors, disputes or out-of-network charges. Coverage alone does not guarantee financial protection when billing practices are inconsistent or unclear.
The limits of financial wellness programs and regulatory gap
Employers have invested heavily in financial wellness programs such as Health Savings Account (HSA) education, student loan assistance and budgeting tools. These programs are valued but primarily used for anticipated financial decisions. Medical debt does not follow predictable patterns. It often requires resolution of billing issues before financial stability can be restored.
A regulatory gap continues to leave employees vulnerable. While there have been efforts to limit the impact of medical debt on credit reporting, uncertainty remains and protections such as the No Surprises Act continue to progress. This gap between regulatory intent and real-world outcomes creates both financial risk for employees and fiduciary risk for employers.
Redefining financial wellness: from education to protection
Employers can take a more forward-thinking strategy by determining areas where employees are vulnerable to unexpected billing, improving monitoring of claims and billing data and expanding financial wellness programs to include support for resolving medical billing disputes. Ensuring transparency, fairness and accuracy in billing practices, along with effective communication and accessible support, can strengthen employee trust and improve overall plan performance.
Financial wellness cannot depend solely on education. It requires addressing the real obstacles that prevent employees from achieving financial stability. Medical debt is one of those obstacles.
Addressing medical debt is not just a support function. It is a necessary step in delivering a benefits strategy that protects employees and strengthens long-term workforce performance.
Photo: KLH49, Getty Images
Christine CooperChristine Cooper, founder and CEO of aequum LLC, is a transformative leader in the healthcare industry who is recognized for her pioneering spirit, dedication to positively move the needle for constituents in the self-insured community and assist and defend plans and patients. Cooper continues to bring technological advancements to the market space and has assembled a tech-driven team that effectively partners with TPAs, insurers, medical cost management companies and stop-loss carriers throughout the country.
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