Stacey Knoll thought the court summons she received was a scam. She didn鈥檛 remember getting any medical bills from Montrose Regional Health, a nonprofit hospital, after a 2020 emergency room visit.
So she was shocked when, three years after the trip to the hospital, her employer received court orders requiring it to start funneling a chunk of her paychecks to a debt collector for an 鈥 which had from interest and court fees.
The timing was terrible. After leaving a bad marriage and staying in a shelter, she had just gotten full custody of her three children, steady housing in Montrose, Colorado, and a job at a gas station.
鈥淎nd that鈥檚 when I got that garnishment from the court,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was really scary. I鈥檇 never been on my own or raised kids on my own.鈥
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News reviewed 1,200 Colorado cases in which judges, over a two-year period from Feb. 1, 2022, through Feb. 1, 2024, gave permission to garnish wages over unpaid bills. At least 30% of the cases stemmed from medical care 鈥 even when patients鈥 bills should have been covered by Medicaid, the public insurance program for those with low incomes or disabilities. That 30% is likely an underestimate since medical debt is behind other types of debt, such as from credit cards or payday loans. But even that minimum would translate to roughly 14,000 cases a year in Colorado in which courts approved taking people鈥檚 wages because of unpaid medical bills.
Among the other findings:
- Patients were pursued for medical bills ranging from under $30 to over $30,000, with most of the bills amounting to less than $2,400. As the cases rolled through the legal system, accumulating interest and court fees, the amount that patients owed often grew by 25%. In one case, it snowballed by more than 400%.
- Cases trailed people for up to 14 years after they received medical care, with debt collectors reviving their cases even as they moved from job to job.
- Medical providers of all stripes are behind these bills 鈥 big health care chains, small rural hospitals, physician groups, public ambulance services, and more. In several cases, hospitals won permission to take the pay of their own employees who had unpaid bills from treatment at the facilities.
Colorado has company. It is one of 45 states that allow wage garnishment for unpaid medical bills. Only Delaware, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Texas have banned wage garnishment for medical debt.

As 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News has reported, medical debt is devastating for millions of people across the country. And now the problem is likely to grow more pressing nationwide. Millions of Americans are expected to lose health insurance in the coming years due to Medicaid changes in President Donald Trump鈥檚 tax and spending law and if Congress allows some Affordable Care Act subsidies to expire. That means health crises for the newly uninsured could lead them, too, into a spiral of medical debt.
And the hurt will linger: Large unpaid medical bills are staying on credit reports in most states after a July reversed a new rule aimed at protecting consumers.
鈥淚f you can't maintain your health, how are you going to work to pay back a debt?鈥 said , deputy director of the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative, a nonprofit aimed at lowering health costs. 鈥淎nd if you fundamentally can't pay the bill, wage garnishment isn't going to help you do that. It's going to put you in more financial distress.鈥
Flying Blind on Medical Debt
When someone fails to pay a bill, the creditor that provided the service 鈥 whether for a garage door repair, a car loan, or medical care 鈥 can take the debtor to court. Creditors can also pass the debt to a debt collector or debt buyer, who can do the same.
鈥淎t any given point, about 1% of working adults are being garnished for some reason,鈥 said , an economist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who studied paycheck data from ADP, a payroll processor that distributes paychecks to about a fifth of private sector U.S. workers. 鈥淭hat's a big chunk of the population.鈥
But specific research into the practice of garnishing wages over medical debt is scant. Studies in , , and have found that nonprofit hospitals commonly garnish wages from indebted patients, with some studies finding those patients tend to work in low-wage occupations.
Marty Makary, who led research on medical debt wage garnishment in Virginia at Johns Hopkins University before joining Trump鈥檚 cabinet as Food and Drug Administration commissioner, has He co-authored a study that found 36% of Virginia hospitals, mostly nonprofit and mostly in urban areas, were using garnishment to collect unpaid debts in 2017, affecting thousands of patients.
The Colorado findings from 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News show that hospitals are far from the only medical providers going after patients鈥 paychecks, though.
Researchers and advocates say that, in addition to a dearth of court case data, another phenomenon tends to obscure how often this happens. 鈥淧eople find debt shameful,鈥 said Lester Bird, a senior manager at the who specializes in courts. 鈥淎 lot of this exists in the shadows.鈥
Without data on how often this tactic is employed, lawmakers are flying blind 鈥 even as a 2024 about 4 in 5 U.S. adults believe it鈥檚 important for the federal government to provide medical debt relief.
鈥楤lood From a Turnip鈥
Colorado was of to scratch medical debt from credit reports. Debt buyers in the state aren鈥檛 allowed to foreclose on a patient鈥檚 home. If qualified patients opt to pay in monthly installments, those payments shouldn鈥檛 exceed 6% of their household income 鈥 and the remaining debt gets wiped after about three years of paying.
But if they don鈥檛 agree to a payment plan, Coloradans can have of their disposable earnings garnished. The National Consumer Law Center gave the state a for state protections of family finances.
Consumer advocates said they aren鈥檛 sure how well even those Colorado requirements are being followed. And people wrote letters to the courts saying wage garnishment would exacerbate their already dire financial situations.
鈥淚 have begun to fall behind on my electricity, my gas, my water my credit cards,鈥 wrote a man in western Colorado to a judge that 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News obtained in the court filings. Court records show he was working in construction and at a rent-to-own store, with about $8,000 in medical debt. He wrote to the judge that he was paying close to $1,000 a month. 鈥淭he way things are going now I will lose everything.鈥
The people being sued in 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News鈥 Colorado review worked in a wide array of jobs. They worked in school districts, ranching, mining, construction, local government, even health care. Several worked at stores such as Walmart and Family Dollar, or at gas stations, restaurants, or grocery stores.

鈥淵ou're really kicking people when they're down,鈥 said Lois Lupica, a former attorney working with the Denver-based and the Debt Collection Lab at Princeton. 鈥淭hey're basically suing the you-can't-get-blood-from-a-turnip population.鈥
In 2022, court records show, Valley View health system based in Glenwood Springs was allowed to garnish the wages of one of its patients over a $400 medical bill. The patient was working at a local organization that the as part of the community benefits it provides to keep its tax-exempt status. Nonprofit hospitals like Valley View are required to provide community benefits, which can also include charity care that covers patients鈥 bills.
, the health system鈥檚 chief community relations officer, said it offers options such as interest-free payment plans and care at reduced or no cost to families with incomes up to 500% of the federal poverty level.
鈥淎s our rural region鈥檚 largest healthcare provider, it is imperative to the health and well-being of our community that Valley View remains a financially viable organization,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ost of our patients work with us to develop a payment plan or pursue financial assistance.鈥
The collection agency that took the employee to court, A-1 Collection Agency, as empathetic: 鈥淲e understand times are tough and money is tight.鈥
, who oversees operations at A-1鈥檚 parent company, Healthcare Management, said it accepts payment plans as small as $50 a month and that most of the hospitals it works with allow it to offer a discount if patients pay all at once.
鈥淪uing a patient is the absolute last resort,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e try everything we can to work with the patient.鈥
If you can't maintain your health, how are you going to work to pay back a debt?
Adam Fox, deputy director of the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative
Hospitals sometimes also garnish wages from their own employees for care they provided them. In one case, a hospital employee worked her way up from housekeeper to registrar to quality analyst. She even participated in public events representing her employer and appeared on the hospital鈥檚 website as a featured employee 鈥 while the court issued writs of garnishment until her $10,000 in medical bills from the hospital was paid off.
鈥淗ospital care costs money to deliver,鈥 said Colorado Hospital Association spokesperson Julie Lonborg about hospitals鈥 garnishing their own employees鈥 wages. 鈥淚n some ways, I think it's funny to be asked the question. I would understand if someone said, 鈥榃hy aren't you garnishing their wages?鈥欌
Studies show that hospital debt collection efforts through wage garnishment bring in only about 0.2% of hospital revenues, said , a senior attorney with the National Consumer Law Center, which advocates for people with low incomes.
"We also know that there are states that don't allow this at all,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ospitals are continuing to provide medical care to consumers.鈥
Smooth Sailing for Collectors 鈥 But Not for Patients
Health care providers appeared as the plaintiffs in only 2% of the medical debt cases. Instead, cases were filed almost entirely by third-party debt collectors and buyers, with BC Services and Professional Finance Company behind more than half of the cases, followed by A-1 Collection Agency and Wakefield & Associates.
Debt buyers make money by buying debt from providers who鈥檝e given up on getting paid then collecting what they can of the money owed, plus interest. Debt collectors get paid a percentage of what they recover. Some companies do a bit of both.
BC Services declined to comment, and Wakefield & Associates did not respond to questions.
Charlie Shoop, president of Professional Finance Company, said his company initiates wage garnishment on less than 1% of all accounts placed with it for collection.
Health care providers in Colorado can no longer hide behind debt collectors鈥 names when they sue people, according to a prompted by a in partnership with a .
In many states, the path for filing a case against a debtor and garnishing their wages is relatively smooth 鈥 especially if the debtor doesn鈥檛 appear in court.
鈥淚t's unbelievably easy,鈥 said Dan Vedra, a lawyer in Colorado who often represents consumers in debt cases. 鈥淚f you have a word processor and a spreadsheet, you can mass-produce thousands of lawsuits in a matter of hours or minutes.鈥
Within 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News鈥 sample, nearly all the medical debt cases were default judgments, meaning the patient did not in court or in writing. Missing a court date can happen for a variety of reasons, such as not receiving the notice in the mail, assuming it was a scam, knowingly ignoring it, or not having the time to take off from work.
Vedra and other debt law experts said a high rate of default judgments indicates a system that favors the pursuers over the pursued 鈥 and increases the chances someone will be harmed by an erroneous bill.
But in New Hampshire, creditors now have to keep going to court for each paycheck they want to garnish, because to garnish only wages that have already been earned, said an associate research professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University.
鈥淚t might not look like much on paper,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's just not worth it if they have to keep going back to court.鈥
If you have a word processor and a spreadsheet, you can mass-produce thousands of lawsuits in a matter of hours or minutes.
Dan Vedra
Wrongly Pursued for Bills
The nation鈥檚 medical billing setup is already prone to errors due to its complexity, according to , a law professor at George Washington University and a senior scholar at Stanford Medicine who has in several states. 鈥淏ills are not only noncomprehensible, but often wrong,鈥 Richman said.
Indeed, Colorado鈥檚 Health Care Policy & Financing Department, which runs Medicaid in the state, said it sent out nearly 11,000 letters in the past fiscal year to health providers and collectors that erroneously went after patients on Medicaid. Bills for Medicaid recipients are supposed to be sent to Medicaid, not the patients, who typically pay a nominal amount, if anything, for their care.
Shoop said his industry has pushed Colorado, without success, for access to a database that would allow them to confirm if patients had Medicaid coverage.
Colorado鈥檚 Medicaid program declined to comment.
Patricia DeHerrera in Rifle, Colorado, had to prove that she and her children had Medicaid when they received care at Grand River Health 鈥 but only after A-1 contacted her employer at the time, the gas station chain Kum & Go, with court-approved paperwork to take a portion of her paychecks.
She contacted the state, which to the hospital and the collector notifying them they were engaging in 鈥渋llegal billing action鈥 and telling the collector to stop. The companies did.
Theresa Wagenman, controller for Grand River Health, said if a patient can present a letter from a Medicaid caseworker saying they鈥檙e eligible, then their bills get removed from the collections pipeline. Wagenman also said patients get at least eight letters in the mail and several phone calls before Grand River gives the go-ahead for the collector to send them to court.
DeHerrera鈥檚 main advice to others in this situation: 鈥淜now your rights. Otherwise, they鈥檙e going to take advantage of you.鈥
Yet isn鈥檛 easy.

Nicole Silva, who lives in the 900-person town of Sanford in south-central Colorado, said she and her family were all on Medicaid when her daughter was in a car crash. Still, court records show, her wages were garnished for a $2,181.60 ambulance ride, which grew to from court fees and interest.
She the bill was wrong, contacting her county鈥檚 social services office, but Silva said it wasn鈥檛 helpful and she wasn鈥檛 able to reach the right person at a state office. The state Medicaid program confirmed to 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News that her daughter was covered at the time of the wreck.
Fighting the bill felt like too much for Silva and her husband to handle while parenting a growing number of kids, one of them severely disabled, and working 鈥 she as a preschool teacher and he as a rancher.
Not receiving the roughly $500 a month that she said came out of her pay was enough to affect their ability to pay other bills. 鈥淚t was deciding to buy groceries or pay the electric bill,鈥 Silva said.
When their electricity got shut off, she said, they had to scramble to borrow money from colleagues and friends to get it turned back on 鈥 with an extra fee.
She said the saga makes her hesitant to call an ambulance in the future.
Fox, of the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative, said consumers often think they cannot do anything to stop their wages from being garnished, but they can contest it in court, for example by pointing out they should have qualified for discounted 鈥 or charity 鈥 care if the hospital that provided the treatment is a nonprofit.
DeFusco, the economist, believes filing for is an underused option for debtors. It halts garnishment in its tracks, though not always permanently, and it comes with other consequences. But he understands it鈥檚 a Catch-22: It鈥檚 a and typically necessitates hiring a lawyer.
鈥淭o get rid of your debt, you need money,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd the whole reason you're in this situation is because you don't have money.鈥
Methodology
We wanted to know how often Coloradans get their wages garnished due to medical debt. Courts don鈥檛 compile this information, and researchers and advocates haven鈥檛 tracked it systematically.
So we created our own database. We requested a list of all civil cases across the state in which judges gave permission for a person鈥檚 earnings to be garnished 鈥 known as writs of garnishment in court lingo 鈥 from Feb. 1, 2022, through Feb. 1, 2024. The provided a list from all courts except for Denver County Court, which provided its own records. The combined list comprised nearly 90,000 unique court cases. We split up the cases by county population 鈥 small (fewer than 10,000 people), medium (10,000 to 100,000 people), and large (more than 100,000 people) 鈥 then generated a random sample of 400 cases from each group to ensure we evaluated medical debt across counties of all sizes.
To identify medical debt cases, we looked at the original creditors named in court records, primarily the complaints or affidavits of indebtedness. Often, this information was available through . When it wasn鈥檛 available online, we asked county courthouses to send us supporting documents. We counted dentists as medical providers. We excluded 14 cases in which the debt wasn鈥檛 exclusively medical.
We looked only at cases in which courts approved money to be garnished from someone鈥檚 paycheck, as opposed to from other sources such as their bank accounts. We did not review garnishment cases involving child support, taxes, or federal student loans.
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News intern Henry Larweh, data editor Holly K. Hacker, Mountain States editor Matt Volz, and web editor Lydia Zuraw contributed to this report.
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF鈥攁n independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .