Sunday, April 26, 2009

Patient Money - When the Medical Bills Swell, Seize Control - NYTimes.com

MEDICAL bills have a way of piling up — especially when you're sick or underinsured. Just ask Kirk Kupka, 48, and his wife, Susie, 53.

Mr. Kupka has multiple sclerosis. The Kupkas, who live in Lindstrom, Minn., have an annual income of $45,000 — a combination of her salary as an office manager and his disability payments.

More than 20 percent of that income goes toward health care. Their annual insurance premiums total $5,400, and then there's the $4,000 Mr. Kupka spends on drugs, doctor's visits and lab fees before he fulfills his policy's deductible.

In the three years since Mr. Kupka's disability forced him to stop working as a mental health therapist, he has accumulated $12,000 in debt.

"It's frustrating," he says. "We earn too much to qualify for state and county assistance, but not enough to stay ahead of the bills. I've thought maybe my wife and I should get divorced. But not only is it against our faith, it turns out it wouldn't help."

Medical debt can lead to drastic measures, forcing people to raid their 401(k)s, tap into home equity lines and, in some cases, declare bankruptcy. Surveys by the Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit health care research foundation, found that 41 percent of adults said they were struggling to pay their health care bills in 2007, up from 34 percent in 2005. That percentage is almost surely growing.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/25/health/25patient.html?hpw