Someone keeps saying that medical is the #1 reason to file. True or not?
The answer is inconclusive. A large proportion of those who file for bankruptcy have medical debts of some sort, which indicates that those who get medical debts are more likely to be in trouble financially. That's kind of the very nature of medical debt though, it can be large and unexpected. A large, unexpected bill is a great way to send people into bankruptcy.
I can see the average hard working/bill paying American feeling trapped like a rat on a sinking ship if they get $100K plus bill for a couple of heart stents. "OMG, I always pay my bills but I can never pay that." And then the collectors start. BK is a savior.
This is sort of the point IMO. Say you were forced to choose between two people that had both had collections placed on them. One guy had paid every bill he'd ever had except for a $10,000 medical bill that came from a heart attack. Another guy paid all his bills too except that one day he went to Best Buy and bought a $10,000 home entertainment center that he couldn't pay for.
I would rate the first person as more financially responsible than the other even though in dollar and collections terms they are identical. It doesn't mean that you must lend to either one of them, but a credit score is a continuum and to me that's a useful distinction to make.
Yeah, if they don't care about other collectors then the medical ones won't matter either.
What won't happen is that creditors actually look at a report and decide what's important to them.
Credit scores are a service provided to help creditors make those decisions quickly. I don't think they are perfect by any means, but at least to me this seems like a rational choice to make.