Health care in America 'is completely out of whack' as millions face medical debt collections

Health care costs in the U.S. continue to grow year after year, leaving Americans with more and more debt.

According to Credit Karma data provided to Yahoo Finance, roughly 21 million Americans holding $46 billion of medical debt as of April 2021 face collections — meaning that a third-party debt collector is trying to obtain the money owed.

“Our system is completely out of whack,” Frederick Isasi, executive director at Families USA, a nonprofit and nonpartisan consumer health advocacy organization, told Yahoo Finance. “We’re spending too much money, and yet people could still lose their savings and their financial security. So there’s a lot of frustration about this.”

Made with Flourish
Made with Flourish

A survey of 3,753 adults living in all 50 U.S. states conducted from Feb. 15-21 via the Gallup Panel, indicated that an estimated 46 million people (or 18% of the U.S. population) would be unable to pay for health care if they needed to. (Medical debt often arises from unexpected medical expenses.)

Some have resorted to crowdfunding their medical costs. A study from the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) found that between May 2010 and December 2018, 26.7% of the 1,056,455 fundraisers on the crowdfunding site GoFundMe were for health-related costs. And those health-related campaigns sought a collective total of nearly $10.3 billion and raised about $3.7 billion.

Health care in America is an 'artifact'

The American health care system, unlike other developed countries, is dominated by employer-sponsored plans and leaves millions of citizens uninsured.

The structure is an “artifact” of World War II, according to Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

“Companies could not give workers raises, and you might expect in World War II, there's a real labor shortage because all the men were off fighting the war,” Gleckman explained to Yahoo Finance in a previous interview. “So there were really only women and young men and old men who were left in the United States to be the labor force. There was a lot of demand for labor and wage price controls on the government, which made it impossible for companies to give people raises. So what they did instead was they invented health insurance and gave workers health insurance benefits.”

Three women making US flags in a factory, USA, circa 1945. (Photo by Frederic Lewis/Archive Photos/Getty Images)
Three women making US flags in a factory, USA, circa 1945. (Photo by Frederic Lewis/Archive Photos/Getty Images) · Frederic Lewis via Getty Images

Two decades later, in 1965, Medicare and Medicaid were established as the first public insurance programs in the U.S. Medicare provides health care for anyone 65 years of age or older, while Medicaid serves as a resource for those whose incomes meet the federal poverty level threshold.