Committee adopts amendments, defers medical‑debt bill after broad testimony from patient advocates and hospitals
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Summary
Senate Bill 414 — intended to limit aggressive medical‑debt collections (including a 3% interest cap and bans on liens on primary residences) — drew supporting testimony from cancer and public‑health groups and cautious opposition from hospitals; the committee adopted an amendment and voluntarily deferred the bill for further negotiation.
Senate Bill 414, introduced by Senator Talbot, aims to limit certain collection practices for medically necessary care, cap interest on qualifying medical debt (amendment raised the cap from 2% to 3%), and prohibit liens on a patient’s primary residence. Talbot said the measure targets aggressive collection practices that harm vulnerable patients and survivors.
Advocates including the American Cancer Society, the Louisiana Public Health Institute and patient survivors described the financial harms of medical debt and urged protections. Alice Klein, government relations director for the American Cancer Society, said insured cancer patients commonly incur thousands in out‑of‑pocket costs and need guardrails against collection practices that can lead to foreclosure or bankruptcy. Jeannie Donovan, director of public health policy for New Orleans, described the city’s prior debt‑cancellation work and said the bill does not cancel debt but restricts extraordinary collection remedies.
Jennifer McMahon of the Louisiana Hospital Association told the committee hospitals absorb large shares of medical debt, already run financial‑assistance programs (some up to 700% of federal poverty level), and warned the bill as drafted unfairly singles out providers while excluding insurers, drug makers and credit‑card companies. Senator Talbot said he wanted to defer to work with hospitals and other stakeholders; the committee adopted an amendment (set 2095) and voluntarily deferred the bill for further negotiations.
