Uncategorized

IEPs, Insurance, and Insanity: How the System Sets Disabled Kids Up to Fail

Or: How They Tried to Give My 16-Year-Old Bad Credit Before She Even Gets Good Credit

I’m writing this while I’m still seeing red, because sometimes rage is the only appropriate response to systematic incompetence that targets our most vulnerable children.

My teenage daughter, just received TWO medical bills addressed directly to her. Not even to her, to her NICKNAME. Not to me, her parent and legal guardian. To HER. A minor who cannot legally enter into contracts, cannot vote, cannot even get a credit card, but apparently CAN be held financially responsible for psychiatric appointments that she never consented to pay for.

I’m beyond livid, and here’s why that’s food for thought…

The Legal Facts (Because Rage Needs Receipts)

Let me be crystal clear about what’s happening here, because the healthcare system is banking on parents not knowing their rights:

FACT: In the United States, minors (individuals under 18) are not legally responsible for debts incurred, including medical bills. The responsibility typically falls on parents or legal guardians.

FACT: Requiring a person to pay medical bills accumulated when they were a child is unethical and legally unsound because that child never entered into the contract – their parents did.

FACT: Minors are not authorized by law to enter into financial responsibility agreements with medical care providers.

Yet here we are, with a healthcare billing department that apparently thinks legal precedent is more of a “suggestion” than actual law.

The Double Whammy: IEP Violations Too

But wait, there’s more dysfunction! Not only did they bill my minor child directly, but the school also changed her IEP – removing over 200 minutes of support – WITHOUT any explanation to us as parents.

FACT: Schools must send prior written notice even if a teacher notified you verbally about a change. If the school fails to send you prior written notice, it’s violating the law.
Technically they did this actually to a degree, They dropped the change in my inbox without a single explanation or a shred of guidance if we didn’t agree. Right there at the top, in bold: “We don’t need your consent we’re just letting you know.” (or words to that effect) So I refused to sign it. Or send it.

So in the span of one week, TWO different systems designed to support my disabled child have completely failed her – and apparently think the law is optional.

The Real-World Impact: Setting Kids Up to Fail

Here’s what makes this so insidious: delinquent accounts can harm credit scores, and this will impact them on their 18th birthday and thereafter.

Think about that for a moment. The system is literally trying to saddle my child with bad credit for bills she cannot legally be responsible for, for services she didn’t consent to receive, related to disabilities she didn’t choose to have.

They’re setting her up for financial failure before she even gets a chance to build credit legitimately. Before she can vote. Before she can legally sign a lease or apply for college loans.

The Insurance Shuffle Shell Game

Here’s what started this rolling: My husband got a new job with new insurance. Somewhere in that transition – without any notification to us – some of her services were deemed “not covered” under the new plan. Instead of notifying THE ADULTS who are responsible for these decisions, they:

This is not incompetence. This is systematic targeting of vulnerable families who may not know their rights.

Where Do We Go From Here? A Call to Action

If you’re facing similar situations, here’s what you need to know:

Resources That Actually Help:

The Bigger Picture: Systemic Targeting of Vulnerable Families

This isn’t just about my daughter. This is about a healthcare system that routinely targets families of disabled children, knowing that:

It’s predatory, it’s illegal, and it needs to stop.

To the Healthcare Industrial Complex Reading This:

My daughter is not your cash cow. She’s a human being with rights, and those rights don’t disappear because she has disabilities. Sending bills to minors is not just morally bankrupt – it’s legally indefensible.

You picked the wrong family to mess with. I’m a mother with ADHD hyperfocus, unlimited internet access, and righteous fury. I will make this everyone’s problem until it’s fixed.

To Other Parents: You’re Not Alone

If this happened to your family, you’re not imagining it. You’re not overreacting. This IS wrong, it IS illegal, and you DO have options.

Don’t let them intimidate you with official-looking bills and threatening letters. Know your rights. Research them! Use your voice. Protect your kids.

And if you need someone in your corner who understands exactly how infuriating and overwhelming this is, I’m here. We’re all here. The parent warrior network is real, and we’ve got each other’s backs.

UPDATE: I’ll be following up with exactly how I handle this situation, including any responses I get and resources that prove helpful. Because other parents need to know their options when the system fails their kids.

Til next time gang, take care of yourselves, and each other!

Have you dealt with similar billing issues or IEP violations? Drop your experiences in the comments. Knowledge is power, and we’re stronger when we share information.