Source: CNN
This year, an estimated 1.5 million Americans will declare  bankruptcy. Many people may chalk up that misfortune to overspending or a  lavish lifestyle, but a new study suggests that more than 60 percent of  people who go bankrupt are actually capsized by medical bills.
Bankruptcies  due to medical bills increased by nearly 50 percent in a six-year  period, from 46 percent in 2001 to 62 percent in 2007, and most of those  who filed for bankruptcy were middle-class, well-educated homeowners,  according to a report that will be published in the August issue of The  American Journal of Medicine.
Overall, three-quarters of the people with a medically-related bankruptcy had health insurance, they say.
"That  was actually the predominant problem in patients in our study -- 78  percent of them had health insurance, but many of them were bankrupted  anyway because there were gaps in their coverage like co-payments and  deductibles and uncovered services," says Woolhandler. "Other people had  private insurance but got so sick that they lost their job and lost  their insurance."
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