A Survivor’s Guide to Medical Debt

Suicide attempt survivors often deal with high medical bills from subsequent health care. Here’s a helpful guide for how to start navigating them.

Marissa Evans
Elemental

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Photo: DNY59/Getty Images

If you or someone you know need help, consider calling The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1–800–273-TALK (8255) for English, 1–888–628–9454 for Spanish.

The last thing suicide attempt survivors think about in the first days and weeks of recovery is their medical bills. And yet as Elemental reported on Monday, many Americans who attempt suicide face the stress of paying off bills for their medical care.

Elemental spent several months reporting on self-harm and medical debt and asked a combination of suicide attempt survivors and health experts for some best practices for survivors looking for help with their medical bills. As one expert we spoke to put it: “The bill is a starting place, not the end of a sentence.”

1. Find an advocate

One of the hardest parts of dealing with medical debt is picking up the phone to call the hospital billing department, debt collector, or insurance company. Finding a family member, friend, mental health advocate, or community group that helps with financial counseling who is willing to sit…

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Marissa Evans
Elemental

Journalist who loves health, housing & social issues. Work seen in Oprah Magazine, The Atlantic + others. Love traveling, films, art, museums + hot wings.