Sun special investigation: In Their Debt PDF Print E-mail
Sun special investigation: In Their Debt  - Three decades ago, Maryland officials devised a novel system — now the only one of its kind — in which a state agency sets hospital rates for all patients. It was designed in part to guarantee hospital care whether patients could afford it or not. Hospitals received $921 million last year to cover costs of providing free and unpaid care, according to the most recent state records, and all hospital patients in Maryland contribute through the rates they pay. But an eight-month investigation by The Sun found that over the past five years some of Maryland's 46 nonprofit hospitals have received millions of surplus dollars from the payment system even as they sued tens of thousands of patients over unpaid bills. Many of these suits have been filed against patients in the poorest areas of the state.

December 21, 2008 - In their debt, First of three parts - - Maryland hospitals have stepped up debt collection, sometimes from the poor, and Gov. Martin O'Malley demands a review

Database: Judgments won by Md. hospitals 

Photos: Charity and lawsuits 

Video: Willie Mae White owes more than $36,000 after emergency aneurysm procedure 

December 22, 2008 - Their day in court, Second of three parts - - Hospital debt collection lawsuits can zoom through the courts, pitting experienced law firms against ill-informed defendants

Photos: Millions sought in lawsuits 

Video: Tamara Byrd sued after hospital stay 

December 23, 2008 - Loose rules, Third of three parts - - Maryland hospitals have fought back efforts by lawmakers to tighten oversight of collection policies

Photos: Cost Review Commission meeting 


December 24, 2008 - Tighter hospital control sought, Sun follow-up - - Lawmaker, judge look at ways to ease debt burden on poor


About this series 

To examine debt collection practices by Maryland hospitals, The Baltimore Sun compiled a database of 132,000 collection lawsuits filed by hospitals across the state from January 2003 through June 30 of this year. The Sun also compiled a partial database of judgments after state officials didn't respond to repeated requests for a complete file. The incomplete database contained $101 million in such judgments without counting most judgments of less than $2,000. Thousands of computerized court docket entries were analyzed to identify hospitals and lawyers filing large numbers of these lawsuits as well as document cases that ended in judgments, liens or other actions against patients. Reporters reviewed samplings of court files in several busy court districts, observed the collection process play out in the busiest of these courts in Baltimore City, and interviewed lawyers and patients involved in those proceedings. The Sun also obtained five years of financial records and other documents from the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission, which over a period of several months provided the newspaper with four different sets of data, each time contending that the previous version contained inaccuracies.

 Source: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/health/bal-hospitaldebt,0,1576461.storygallery

Copyright © 2009, The Baltimore Sun 



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