This is the fourth full year I’ve been tracking these numbers – I captured part of the year in 2012 – and the third year that I’ve captured filings by hospital. I include anything that is likely a patient debt owed to a hospital, nursing home, physician or physician group, medical supplier, and so on; I do not include filings by insurance companies, many of which are so diversified it would not be a fair assumption that the filing is related to medical care or health insurance.
In the first three years, the overall total was $67,965,862 – a staggering amount of money for a relatively small metropolitan area that includes the city of Syracuse and her suburbs, the towns and villages of Onondaga County, and to a lesser extent, some of the even smaller neighboring towns and villages. As I reported in the 2015 recap, we turned sharply down last year – some $7M – and the hope is that we will continue to see progress in the overall total. Of course, a better sign of health would be an increase in the number of satisfied judgments; people’s ability to pay off their debt (or their willingness, as the case may be) is something else I’m hoping to see this year.
This week, there were
- nine new judgments, totaling $144,060
- two satisfied judgments, for $16,409 and
- Two bankruptcies, totaling $13,991
Here’s the breakdown by hospital:
- Crouse had nine, with a net of $120,037
- St. Joe's had one, with a net credit of$6,420
- SUNY Upstate had two, totaling $15,427
- Community General, a part of SUNY, had one, for $12,517
This was the first filing for Community in fourteen weeks, and only their seventh filing since 2014.
The
paper only publishes filings of $5,000 or more.
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Thanks for sharing your thoughts!