Supported by
500,000 New Yorkers Could Have Medical Debt Erased Under New Program
Mayor Eric Adams announced that the city would invest $18 million to buy up and then erase medical debt for New Yorkers who meet certain qualifications.
![Mayor Eric Adams seen with a serious face in the foreground of a photo. He wears a dark suit and pink tie, and is flanked by administration officials.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2024/01/22/multimedia/22ny-medical-debt-02-kzqm/22ny-medical-debt-02-kzqm-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
New York City will buy up millions of dollars of medical debt and erase it in a program that officials hope will ultimately help as many as 500,000 New Yorkers.
Mayor Eric Adams announced Monday that the city would invest $18 million in a partnership with a nonprofit organization that buys up unpaid medical debt from hospitals at steep discounts and then erases it. Hospital systems and commercial debt buyers are often willing to sell medical debt at steep discounts, and the $18 million could wipe out over $2 billion in unpaid medical bills, city officials said.
“Up to half a million New Yorkers will see their medical debt wiped thanks to this life-changing program — the largest municipal initiative of its kind in the country,” Mayor Adams said.
Daniel Lempert, a spokesman for the nonprofit organization RIP Medical Debt, said that the group had begun conversations with New York City hospitals about examining their books to identify patients eligible for debt relief. In deciding which debts to buy, the group looks for patients whose unpaid medical bills are at least 5 percent of their annual household income or patients in households with an income under four times the federal poverty line — which is $31,200 for a family of four.
New Yorkers do not need to apply to be included in the program. RIP Medical Debt said that those chosen to have their debts erased would receive a letter in the mail.
“No one in New York City, or in America, in 2024, should have to choose between getting the health care they need and paying their rent or buying food to feed their families,” the city’s health commissioner, Dr. Ashwin Vasan, said.
Advertisement