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Biden made a major dent in the student debt crisis — and it's time he does the same for the growing medical debt load in the US, attorneys and advocates say
cash and stethoscope
The medical debt load in the US currently totals around $195 billion, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.krisanapong detraphiphat/Getty Images
  • America's medical debt problem has parallels to the student debt crisis, experts told Insider.

  • Both are financially debilitating, putting people at risk of not being able to afford rent and food.

  • The Biden Administration is already taking steps to address it but the challenge of helping more low-income borrowers remains.

The Biden administration is finally delivering long-promised relief to more than 40 million Americans with federal student loans, half of whom will see their debt wiped out completely. But experts on medical debt say that student loans are just one piece of a household debt crisis, which debilitates millions of Americans.

At the end of August, President Joe Biden announced up to $20,000 in student debt for federal borrowers making under $125,000 a year — expected to completely eliminate the balance for 20 million borrowers. It takes a chunk out of what is often a prohibitive burden for many Americans, with interest snowballing an ever-mounting collection of bills that become impossible to pay off.

For some, medical debt can be just as prohibitive. The medical debt load in the US currently totals around $195 billion, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, and 23 million Americans have medical bills of at least $250. Three million have unpaid medical bills totaling over $10,000. Like student-loan borrowers, those with medical debt are not immune to unfair practices — the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau previously found that inaccurate medical billing cost Americans $88 billion last year.

When both medical and student debt snowball, they become conduits for potentially devastating financial consequences, leading people to lose their homes and face lawsuits, for instance. Experts on medical debt see that as just one parallel between the two crises. On the other hand, one major difference is that medical debt is typically an unavoidable, life-and-death situation, whereas student loans are often a choice.

"You literally had no option because it was an emergency situation," Berneta Haynes, a staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center told Insider. "The difference is that medical debt can happen to absolutely anybody, and it cannot be planned."

Medical debt creates "a racial wealth gap, and a racial health gap" in addition to burdening young and old people alike

Black college graduates are more likely to be in debt than their white peers, data shows, and that's because they have less wealth than their white counterparts historically. That's a wealth gap that translates to medical debt as well, Haynes said; one in three Black adults have past-due medical bills, compared to fewer than one in four white adults, she found in a study she published this year. She added that Black households are disparately impacted by aggressive medical debt collection practices, such as lawsuits and civil arrest for unpaid medical bills.