An Arm and a Leg

An Arm and a Leg

A show about the cost of health care that’s more entertaining, empowering, and occasionally useful than enraging, and terrifying and depressing. Reporter Dan Weissmann digs in to show how we got into this crazy mess and how we just might live through it.

  • 23 minutes 40 seconds
    Winning a two-year fight over a bogus bill

    A few months ago, we got a note from a listener named Meagan, who wanted to thank us. 

    She said the stories she heard on this show had given her the advice and encouragement she needed to finally win a fight against a medical bill she didn’t owe — a battle she’d been waging for more than two years.

    As Meagan tells us, those two years were filled with wild twists and turns and a lot of disappointment.

    We hear what kept her motivated and encouraged despite all the setbacks – and after an insurance rep pointed her to a free legal resource — the tactic that finally led to a breakthrough. 

    Here’s a resource we mention — with a spoiler alert: It’s the sample cease-and-desist letter that a lawyer shared with Meagan. 

    We’ll break down the details — how a letter like this could work, in certain situations — in a future First Aid Kit newsletter.

    Here’s a transcript of this episode

    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.

    Of course we’d love for you to support this show.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    20 March 2025, 10:00 am
  • 19 minutes 31 seconds
    A medical-debt watchdog gets sidelined by the new administration

    A federal agency called the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — CFPB for short — has taken big steps to help people with medical debt. In early February, the Trump administration moved to effectively shutter the agency. 

    We talked with credit counselor Lara Ceccarelli about how the CFPB has helped clients at the nonprofit where she works, and how she’s navigating the sudden change. 

    And consumer-rights advocate Chi Chi Wu — an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center — describes the court battle she and her colleagues are mounting to slow down the agency’s dismantling — and where things could go from here. 

    We’ll track this developing story in next week’s First Aid Kit newsletter, so if you’re not signed up, this is a great time to start: www.armandalegshow.com/firstaidkit.

    Here's a transcript of this episode

    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.

    Of course we’d love for you to support this show.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    27 February 2025, 10:00 am
  • 4 minutes 49 seconds
    Big news: Our ‘First Aid Kit’ newsletter is now weekly

    Hey – real quick: some big news from the team at An Arm and a Leg. Our First Aid Kit newsletter is going weekly! First Aid Kit brings you advice from our show and more on how to survive and navigate America’s health care system. 

    And allow us to introduce First Aid Kit’s new writer, Claire Davenport. 

    When she was our intern last summer, she reviewed An Arm and a Leg’s entire catalog of episodes, and took notes along the way. Now she’s bringing the practical lessons from all that reporting straight to your inbox, every week. 

    Get it while it’s hot: sign up for First Aid Kit here



    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    24 February 2025, 10:00 am
  • 9 minutes 33 seconds
    How do you deal with wild drug prices?

    We’re kicking off a new reporting project about how much we pay for our medicine — and what we can maybe do about it — and we want to hear your stories.

    Because: Getting a case of sticker shock with a prescription happens all the time. 

    So we’re asking: What have you done — or tried to do — to get the medicines you need at prices you can afford? And what did you learn that might be useful for other people to know?

    Maybe you learned a strategy that actually WORKED for you. Like using a coupon or ordering drugs from online pharmacies — even pharmacies in other countries.

    Maybe it was, “Man, I learned about a new way I’m getting screwed.” 

    However things went, tell us about it here: armandalegshow.com/drugs

    Your story can be short or long, scary or uplifting – whatever you’ve gone through to get your meds, whether it worked or not, we want to hear about it.

    The more we learn about these strategies, and about new ways we’re getting beat up, the more we can work together to do something about it. 

    And over the next couple of months, we’ll dig into everything you bring us, call up some experts, and start bringing you what we’re learning.

    Meanwhile, if you could use some tips right now for getting a better price for your prescription, we’ve just posted a batch to our First Aid Kit newsletter – check it out here.

    Fair warning: It’s a collection of band-aids — that’s what you find in a first aid kit — but it’s a start.

    Here’s a transcript of this episode

    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.

    Of course we’d love for you to support this show.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    3 February 2025, 11:00 am
  • 25 minutes 26 seconds
    The ‘Shkreli Awards’ — for dysfunction and profiteering in health care

    You remember a guy named Martin Shkreli? If his name rings a bell, it’s probably because back in 2015, he jacked up the price of an old drug — from around $13 a pill to $750. The media dubbed him “the pharma bro,” and he became a symbol of brazen pharmaceutical greed. 

    Now, he’s the namesake for the Shkreli Awards — a kind of Oscars for the most outrageous examples of greed, fraud, and general brokenness in American health care. 

    Every year, a health care think tank called the Lown Institute ranks the top ten worst stories and holds an award ceremony to “honor” the winners. 

    We’re bringing you highlights from this year’s ceremony – featuring things like human bones for sale without the consent of the deceased or their families, phantom urinary catheters, and so much more – and some reflections from the Lown Institute’s president, Dr. Vikas Saini. 

    “Showing all these stories together paints a picture of a health care system in desperate need of transformation,” Saini said at the ceremony. “Not just because the stories are shocking, but because often what they're depicting, like Martin Shkreli's infamous price hike, is perfectly legal.” 

    Here’s a transcript of this episode

    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.

    Of course we’d love for you to support this show.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    16 January 2025, 10:00 am
  • 57 seconds
    This is An Arm and a Leg
    An Arm and a Leg is a show about why health care costs so freaking much, and what we can (maybe) do about it. New episodes every three weeks.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    6 January 2025, 11:10 pm
  • 11 minutes 48 seconds
    A listener fighting the good fight

    A few weeks ago, a listener sent us a note with a link to a news article about a new resolution that had recently been adopted by the American Medical Association – the largest group representing doctors in the US. 


    The resolution said: hospitals need to do more to guarantee charity care to patients who qualify. Legislators and regulators should make them. 


    Our listener was the author of that resolution, and he told us he first learned about charity care through this podcast. 


    His name is Joey Ballard and he’s an internal medicine resident at the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC).


    We talked with him about his early organizing as a medical student, bringing the resolution to the AMA, and the optimism he feels bringing the fight for charity care to the hospital he works at now.


    Here’s a transcript of this episode. 


    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


    And again... we’d love for you to support this show.


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    30 December 2024, 11:00 am
  • 27 minutes 20 seconds
    Revisiting ‘Christmas In July’

    Today we’re revisiting one of our favorite episodes from the archive – a story about giving – and bringing you an update.  


    In 1980, a young father named Denny Buehler was battling leukemia and needed to travel from Cincinnati to Seattle for treatment. To raise the money, his friends and family threw a softball tournament. 


    Denny passed away a few months later. But his friends and family turned the softball tournament into a beloved tradition, and a chance to give back. For more than 40 years, they’d host the games and sell hot dogs to raise money for people in the area who needed help with medical expenses. 


    Then in 2019, the Denny Beuhler Memorial Fund found a way to make the money they’d fundraise go a hundred times farther. Literally. 


    Inspired by a segment on Last Week Tonight, they partnered with a group to buy up old medical debt – and erase it. 


    Now in 2024, that group – now known as Undue Medical Debt – has grown its influence and helped crush billions (!) in debt.


    Here’s a transcript of this episode


    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


    And again — we’d love for you to support this show.


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    12 December 2024, 11:00 am
  • 28 minutes 6 seconds
    New lessons from the fight for charity care

    Longtime listeners to this show know we’ve been talking about something called “charity care” for years. Federal law requires that all nonprofit hospitals have charity care policies – that is, financial assistance policies — to reduce or remove people’s medical bills. 


    The problem: people don’t know about it, and hospitals don’t always make it easy to access. New research suggests that the scale of this problem is huge: hospitals are failing to provide more than 14 billion dollars worth of charity care to people who qualify for it. Instead, that money becomes medical debt.


    That research comes from the nonprofit Dollar For, an organization dedicated to helping people get charity care. We’ve been talking with Dollar For’s founder, Jared Walker, for years – following his team on their mission to crush medical debt, one charity care application at a time. 


    Jared brings us up to speed on Dollar For’s latest research, their efforts to reach hospitals, and how new programs targeting medical debt in places like North Carolina may change things. 


    That new program in North Carolina is estimated to wipe out $4 billion in medical debt. We look into how it took shape. 


    Plus, we meet Clara, a listener who used her impressive research chops to get charity care from a hospital in New York. In the process, she crafted an expert charity care appeal letter, and shared a template with us. 


    Use case: the hospital has denied you charity care after you applied, or offered you less than you need. Here’s the template


    Of course, Dollar For has tons of resources, including a tool to help you quickly figure out if you qualify for help. And staff to help if you get stuck. Start here: https://dollarfor.org/help/


    Here’s a transcript of this episode


    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


    Of course we’d love for you to support this show. This month, every dollar you give gets matched dollar-for-dollar, by NewsMatch, from the Institute for Nonprofit News."


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    22 November 2024, 11:30 am
  • 22 minutes 29 seconds
    Fight health insurance — with help from AI

    Several listeners sent us an article with the headline Make your health insurance cry, about a new AI tool to fight health insurance. We had to learn more. 


    Meet Holden Karau: a Bay Area software engineer who says she’s “trying to make health insurance suck a little bit less.”


    So she’s created an AI tool to appeal insurance denials.


    Her project, Fight Health Insurance, is a labor of love (she’s not earning money from it) and fueled by hatred (of insurance companies). 


    It draws on her tech expertise and on her years of experience fighting health insurance: for gender-affirming care, for rehab after getting hit by a car, and even for her dog, Professor Timbit. 


    We talked with Holden about what it took to build the tool, how it works, and what she hopes comes next.


    Here’s a transcript of this episode


    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


    Of course we’d love for you to support this show. This month, every dollar you give gets matched dollar-for-dollar, by NewsMatch, from the Institute for Nonprofit News.


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    1 November 2024, 10:30 am
  • 24 minutes 35 seconds
    Can racism make you sick?

    Something different: We talk with journalist Cara Anthony about topics that don’t always come up in conversations about the cost of health care. 


    For the last four years, she’s been reporting on the public health effects of racism, violence, and intergenerational trauma in a small Missouri town.. The result: A new documentary and podcast series called Silence in Sikeston.   


    She sat down with us to talk about the value of breaking silences and the possibility for healing. 


    Here’s a transcript of this episode


    Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


    Of course we’d love for you to support this show.


    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    17 October 2024, 10:00 am
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