Even After Hospital Payment, Patient Dogged By Collections Agency
ABC News Fixer has tips for medical consumers to help protect their cash.
-- Dear ABC News Fixer: Back in September 2013, I had a surgical procedure at a local hospital. I had a payment plan and made monthly payments until I paid off the bill.
I have since been getting calls from a collections agency seeking $125. I have repeatedly told them that I have paid off the account, and I gave them the account number and the check number. The situation is always the same -- they take all the information and say they’ll get back to me. Months go by, I think it’s resolved, and then the incessant calls begin again.
I'm feeling harassed. This has been going on for close to 18 months and I cannot seem to get it resolved.
- Beth Becker, Deerfield, Ill.
Got a consumer problem? The ABC News Fixer may be able to help. Click here to submit your problem online. Letters are edited for length and clarity.
Dear Beth: There’s nothing more infuriating than being treated like a deadbeat when you’ve paid your bills. We had a little better luck sorting this out – and we also have advice for other consumers.
But first, to your problem: We went straight to Evonne Woloshyn, director of public affairs for Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge, Ill., and asked if she could find someone to pull you off this hospital bill merry-go-round. She got on it right away, and within a day they had zeroed out your balance and called off the collections agency.
Woloshyn also offered her apologies for the inconvenience and frustration and said they will make sure the mistake doesn’t negatively impact your credit report.
It helped that you stayed organized and kept good records of your payments. For other consumers who might be in a similar situation:
One last note: The proposed Medical Debt Responsibility Act -- legislation that would help consumers by requiring credit reporting bureaus to remove fully paid or settled medical debt from credit reports within 45 days – has been stalled in Congress. So for now, medical bills can continue to haunt consumers, long after their physical ailments are gone.
- The ABC News Fixer