In a pioneering study led by researchers at Tulane University, a financial assistance policy implemented by nonprofit hospitals in Oregon has been shown to significantly curb the incidence of medical debt escalating into collections—a financial burden that plagues millions of Americans. This comprehensive analysis, recently published in JAMA Network Open, utilizes county-level and hospital financial data spanning from 2015 through 2022 to compare Oregon’s experience with other Medicaid expansion states lacking analogous policies, revealing that Oregon’s legislative approach yielded a substantial decrease in medical debt collections.
The crux of Oregon’s policy, which took effect in 2019, revolves around stringent financial assistance protocols designed to shield patients from the often crippling aftermath of unpaid medical bills. Unlike the baseline federal requirements that mandate nonprofit hospitals to simply have a documented financial assistance policy without stipulating generosity, Oregon’s framework extends aid eligibility to individuals and families with household incomes up to 400% of the federal poverty level. Moreover, it enforces a critical safeguard whereby hospitals are prohibited from forwarding unpaid medical bills to collection agencies unless the patient has been definitively screened for assistance eligibility, ensuring that financial need is earnestly considered before aggressive debt recovery measures are undertaken.
Quantitative evaluations in the study suggest that Oregon’s policy was correlated with a reduction of between 872 to 1,180 fewer individuals per county entering medical debt collections—a finding with profound implications for the financial health and well-being of communities. Furthermore, the research documents a significant uptick in charity care—the provision of free or substantially discounted medical services—by hospitals in the state. From 2019 through 2021, average charity care expenditure per hospital surged between $235,000 and $637,000, underscoring a marked institutional commitment to financial relief for patients.
The broader context of this study gains urgency given impending Medicaid funding cuts projected to potentially leave up to 16 million more Americans uninsured by 2034, according to analyses by the Congressional Budget Office. Such developments threaten to exacerbate the already stark challenges of medical debt, which remains a leading cause of personal bankruptcy and financial instability in the United States. By demonstrating an actionable and replicable state-level policy framework, Oregon’s approach provides a potent blueprint for mitigating the anticipated surge in medical financial distress.
Lead author Dr. Tatiane Santos, an assistant professor of health policy at Tulane University’s Celia Scott Weatherhead School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, highlights a nuanced challenge in the policy’s implementation: knowledge and communication barriers. Many patients remain unaware of their eligibility for assistance, and not all hospitals actively inform or screen patients, creating gaps in protection. The findings intimate that while policy design is critical, effective implementation mechanisms—such as proactive outreach and patient education—are equally indispensable.
The study also notes a diminution in the policy’s impact during 2022, suggesting that sustained enforcement and perhaps policy refinements are necessary to maintain momentum. Recognizing this, Oregon revised its policy to include presumptive eligibility screenings, enabling hospitals to conduct automatic assessments that help identify patients likely qualified for assistance without requiring exhaustive documentation upfront. The policy was further bolstered by the 2025 amendment mandating more transparent and rigorous reporting standards for hospitals concerning their financial assistance activities.
Oregon’s legislative journey is not isolated; neighboring states such as Washington and Colorado have adopted comparable policies that broaden financial relief for hospital patients. Still, the breadth and depth of Oregon’s policy execution set a new standard, providing empirical evidence of tangible benefits in reducing medical debt and amplifying charity care. These insights may effectively guide other jurisdictions grappling with how best to shield vulnerable populations from the fiscal hazards of healthcare debts.
Financial assistance policies like Oregon’s represent a critical intersection of health equity and economic policy, aiming to dismantle systemic barriers that disproportionately impact low- and middle-income households. The study amplifies the discourse on how nonprofit hospitals fulfill their community benefit obligations, not merely through symbolic gestures, but via enforceable, patient-centered measures that translate into concrete economic reprieve.
Given the imminent policy landscapes and demographic shifts influencing healthcare access, states and health systems must innovate to preemptively address medical indebtedness. The evidence underscores that hospital-driven financial assistance programs, when embedded within robust regulatory frameworks, can serve as powerful mechanisms to temper the adverse effects of healthcare cost inflation and insurance coverage erosion.
This research offers vital empirical support for policymakers, healthcare administrators, and public health advocates seeking to design interventions that promote financial protection while upholding the sustainability of hospital operations. It also emphasizes the essential role of transparency, adequate funding, and accountability in operationalizing such programs effectively.
As the United States confronts mounting uncertainties regarding healthcare affordability, Oregon’s experience elucidates how thoughtful policy reforms can meaningfully influence the lived experiences of communities, reducing financial distress and enhancing access to necessary medical treatments without fear of punitive financial consequences.
Ultimately, this work calls for a reassessment of national and state-level strategies to balance healthcare cost containment with compassion and equity, reframing financial assistance as not merely a compliance requirement but a vital public health intervention with measurable outcomes.
Subject of Research: Financial Assistance Policies in Nonprofit Hospitals and their Impact on Medical Debt and Charity Care
Article Title: Financial Assistance Policy, Hospital Charity Care, and Medical Debt in Collections
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Keywords: Medical debt, Charity care, Financial assistance policy, Nonprofit hospitals, Medicaid expansion, Health equity, Health care costs, Health care policy, Medical economics, Medical facilities, Hospitals, Health care delivery

