turbojimmy
Supporting Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2001
- Messages
- 5,560
I got a bill today from a collection agency. It's apparently related to when I had to bring my son to the ER on Xmas eve in 2007. I got lots of bills from that trip to the hospital and paid them all. At $98, this one is a pittance compared to the rest. I'm not great with record keeping, but when I get bills, I pay them. That's how I am. In checking with my bank, however, there's no record of a cashed check in that amount for all of 2008.
I'm extremely pissed off that these people would send my account to a collection agency without calling me or making any other attempt to contact me regarding the outstanding balance.
The same doctor worked on my wife a few months later when she had an emergency appendectomy. I distinctly remember sending a check for that bill but when I checked with my bank for a list of cashed checks that one does not appear either. I'm thinking they suck at book keeping.
In any event, I plan to call the doctor tomorrow and ask them WTF their problem is. You don't just send the account to a collection agency without some sort of due process.
But now I'm wondering what the implications are of just paying the bill from the collection agency? As a matter of principle I don't want to pay those blood-sucking vultures, but in reality it's not going to cost me any more money. The doctor loses because he has to turn over a portion of what they collect. I am concerned, however, that if I pay the collection agency that it's some sort of admission that I ignored the debt and that it will somehow affect my credit rating. I'd rather pay the doctor directly and have them call off the collection agency if that makes the credit rating situation any better.
Anyone know how this works and has any advice?
TIA,
Jim
I'm extremely pissed off that these people would send my account to a collection agency without calling me or making any other attempt to contact me regarding the outstanding balance.
The same doctor worked on my wife a few months later when she had an emergency appendectomy. I distinctly remember sending a check for that bill but when I checked with my bank for a list of cashed checks that one does not appear either. I'm thinking they suck at book keeping.
In any event, I plan to call the doctor tomorrow and ask them WTF their problem is. You don't just send the account to a collection agency without some sort of due process.
But now I'm wondering what the implications are of just paying the bill from the collection agency? As a matter of principle I don't want to pay those blood-sucking vultures, but in reality it's not going to cost me any more money. The doctor loses because he has to turn over a portion of what they collect. I am concerned, however, that if I pay the collection agency that it's some sort of admission that I ignored the debt and that it will somehow affect my credit rating. I'd rather pay the doctor directly and have them call off the collection agency if that makes the credit rating situation any better.
Anyone know how this works and has any advice?
TIA,
Jim