By Noam N. Levey, KFF Health News
The Trump administration took another step Tuesday to weaken protections for Americans with medical debt, issuing new guidance that threatens ongoing state efforts to keep that debt off consumers’ credit reports.
More than a dozen states, including Colorado , Washington, Oregon, California, Minnesota, Maryland, New York and most of New England, have enacted laws in recent years to keep medical debt from affecting consumers’ credit.
And more states — including several in conservative regions of the Midwest and Mountain West — have been considering similar protections, spurred by bipartisan concerns that medical debt on a credit report can make it harder for people to get a home, a car, or a job.
Nationwide, about 100 million people have some for

The Denver Post

AlterNet
Local News in D.C.
Raw Story
Local News in Texas
The Oregonian
America News
Reuters US Top
Today in History
Reuters US Politics
The List