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Iowa Medicaid Sends $4M Bills to Two Families Grieving Deaths of Loved Ones With Disabilities

Kaiser Health News
February 2025

Collection agents for the state of Iowa have sent letters seeking millions of dollars from the estates of at least two people with disabilities who died after spending most of their lives in a state institution.

The bills are extraordinary examples of a practice called Medicaid estate recovery. Federal law requires states to try to collect money after some types of Medicaid recipients die. The point is to encourage people to use their own resources before relying on the public program. But some states, including Iowa, are particularly aggressive about the collections, national reports show.

The national group Justice in Aging has helped lead opposition to Medicaid estate recovery programs. Eric Carlson, a California attorney for the group, said the issue usually comes into play after the death of a person who had nursing home care covered by Medicaid. Recovery demands often force survivors to sell homes that are their families’ main form of wealth, he said.

Carlson said he hadn’t previously heard of Medicaid estate recovery bills topping $4 million, like the ones sent to survivors of the two Iowans with disabilities.

He wondered why debt collectors would pursue such cases, which are unlikely to yield any money but could cause anxiety for families. “Of course, if you open up a piece of mail that says you owe millions of dollars, you’re going to think the worst,” he said.

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