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Some sex assault survivors have to pay thousands of dollars for emergency department visits

<i>Paul Hennessy/SOPA/LightRocket/Getty Images</i><br/>People are seen outside the entrance to the emergency room at Oak Hill Hospital in Hernando County. Survivors of sexual assault who are treated at emergency departments may be billed thousands of dollars for their care if they are uninsured
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Gett
Paul Hennessy/SOPA/LightRocket/Getty Images
People are seen outside the entrance to the emergency room at Oak Hill Hospital in Hernando County. Survivors of sexual assault who are treated at emergency departments may be billed thousands of dollars for their care if they are uninsured

By Carma Hassan, CNN

Survivors of sexual assault who are treated at emergency departments may be billed thousands of dollars for their care if they are uninsured, a new report finds, and even those with private health insurance have to cover some of the costs out-of-pocket.

Researchers used national data for emergency room visits and found that 16% of victims had to pay out-of-pocket for their emergency department visits in 2019, according to a research letter published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Survivors of sexual violence should not be forced to pay thousands of dollars for essential medical care after being assaulted,” Dr. Samuel Dickman, lead author of the letter and a physician at Planned Parenthood of Montana, said in a news release.

The charges averaged $3,551 for most survivors, with those who are pregnant having to pay even more: $4,553 on average, the researchers found. Victims with private health insurance were also still expected to cover approximately 14% of their emergency department costs out-of-pocket.

“Such costs may particularly burden low-income women and girls who disproportionately are victims of sexual assault,” the researchers wrote.

According to the researchers, the Violence Against Women Act of 1994 covers the cost of collecting evidence for sexual assault kits, but health care facilities can still bill for “diagnostic testing, laceration repair, counseling, prevention of sexually transmitted diseases and HIV infection, and emergency contraception.”

“The health care system needs to stop enforcing sexism. It’s time for the US to join the civilized world and make emergency care free,” co-author Dr. Steffie Woolhandler of the City University of New York at Hunter College said in the news release.

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