Senate Bill 321
Senate Bill 321
Senate Bill 321
SESSION 2023
S 1
SENATE BILL 321
1 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
2 AN ACT TO ADOPT THE PRO-FAMILY, PRO-CONSUMER MEDICAL DEBT
3 PROTECTION ACT TO SET TRANSPARENT PARAMETERS AROUND THE
4 PROVISION OF FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FOR IMPOVERISHED FAMILIES AND
5 LIMIT THE ABILITY OF LARGE MEDICAL FACILITIES TO CHARGE
6 UNREASONABLE INTEREST RATES AND EMPLOY UNFAIR TACTICS IN DEBT
7 COLLECTION.
8 The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
9 SECTION 1. Chapter 131E of the General Statutes is amended by adding a new
10 Article to read:
11 "Article 11C.
12 "Medical Debt Protection Act.
13 "§ 131E-214.21. Short title and purpose.
14 This Article may be cited as the "Medical Debt Protection Act." The purpose of this Article
15 is to reduce burdensome medical debt and to protect patients in their dealings with medical
16 creditors, medical debt buyers, and medical debt collectors with respect to such debt. This Article
17 is a consumer protection statute and shall be liberally and remedially construed to effectuate its
18 purposes.
19 "§ 131E-214.22. Definitions.
20 The following definitions apply in this Article:
21 (1) Consumer. – A natural person who has incurred a debt or alleged debt for
22 primarily personal, family, or household purposes.
23 (2) Consumer reporting agency. – Any person, which, for monetary fees, dues, or
24 on a cooperative nonprofit basis, regularly engages in whole or in part in the
25 practice of assembling or evaluating consumer credit information or other
26 information on consumers for the purpose of furnishing consumer reports to
27 third parties.
28 (3) External review. – Review of an adverse benefit determination, including a
29 final internal adverse benefit determination, conducted pursuant to an
30 applicable State external review process as described in Part 4 of Article 50
31 of Chapter 58 of the General Statutes, a federal external review process as
32 described in 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-19, a review pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1133, a
33 Medicare appeals process, a Medicaid appeals process, or another applicable
34 appeals process.
35 (4) Extraordinary collection action. – An extraordinary collection action includes
36 any of the following:
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General Assembly Of North Carolina Session 2023
1 a. Selling an individual's debt to another party, except if prior to the sale,
2 the medical creditor enters into a legally binding written agreement
3 with the medical debt buyer which includes the following provisions:
4 1. The medical debt buyer or collector is prohibited from
5 engaging in any extraordinary collection actions to obtain
6 payment for the care.
7 2. The medical debt buyer is prohibited from charging interest on
8 the debt in excess of that described in G.S. 131E-214.23.
9 3. The debt is returnable to or recallable by the medical creditor
10 upon a determination by the medical creditor or medical debt
11 buyer that the individual is eligible for financial assistance.
12 4. If the individual is determined to be eligible for financial
13 assistance and the debt is not returned to or recalled by the
14 medical creditor, the medical debt buyer is required to adhere
15 to procedures which shall be specified in the agreement that
16 ensure that the individual does not pay, and has no obligation
17 to pay, the medical debt buyer and the medical creditor
18 together more than he or she is personally responsible for
19 paying in compliance with this Article.
20 b. Reporting adverse information about the patient to a consumer
21 reporting agency.
22 c. Actions that require a legal or judicial process, including, but not
23 limited to:
24 1. Placing a lien on an individual's property.
25 2. Attaching or seizing an individual's bank account or any other
26 personal property.
27 3. Commencing a civil action against an individual.
28 4. Garnishing an individual's wages.
29 (5) Gross charges. – A covered health care provider's full, established price for
30 health care services that the covered health care provider charges uninsured
31 patients before applying any contractual allowances, discounts, or deductions.
32 (6) Health care services. – Services for the diagnosis, prevention, treatment, cure,
33 or relief of a physical, dental, behavioral, substance use disorder or mental
34 health condition, illness, injury, or disease. These services include, but are not
35 limited to, any procedures, products, devices, or medications.
36 (7) Household income. – Income calculated by using the methods used to
37 calculate Medicaid eligibility, as set forth in 42 C.F.R. § 435.603, unless that
38 law should be repealed, then by applicable State law.
39 (8) Internal review or internal appeal. – Review by a health insurance plan or other
40 insurer of an adverse benefit determination.
41 (9) Large health care facility. – Includes any of the following entities:
42 a. Any hospital licensed under this Chapter or Chapter 122C of the
43 General Statutes, whether a nonprofit subject to 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3),
44 a hospital owned by a county, municipality, the State, or a for-profit
45 entity.
46 b. Any outpatient clinic or facility affiliated with a hospital or operating
47 under the license of a hospital described in sub-subdivision a. of this
48 subdivision.
49 c. Any ambulatory surgical center licensed under this Chapter.
50 d. Any practice which provides outpatient medical, behavioral, optical,
51 radiology, laboratory, dental, or other health care services with