Dr Omar Atiq is shown in this undated. PHOTO: APP/FILE

Pakistani-American doctor clears $650,000 of cancer patients’ debt as 'Christmas gift'

Dr Atiq, who received his medical degree from Peshawar, foregoes medical bills of nearly 200 patients


APP January 02, 2021
NEW YORK:

A Pakistani-American doctor has given nearly 200 patients a Christmas gift that he hoped would make their lives “a little bit easier”, erasing their more than half a million dollars in medical debt, according to media reports.

Dr Omar Atiq, who founded a cancer clinic in 1991 in Pine Bluff in the US state of Arkansas, sent out a notice to his patients just days before December 25, saying “the clinic has decided to forego all balances owed to the clinic by its patients,” according to the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.

The newspaper reported that Dr Atiq, an oncologist who received his medical degree from Khyber Medical College, Peshawar, had closed the clinic in February after nearly 30 years of providing cancer treatments, including chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

Atiq told ABC TV’s “Good Morning America” news programme in an interview published Friday that he had worked with a billing company for months to collect any remaining payments from patients, but eventually decided to stop contacting them.

As of December, the clinic still had a total of nearly US$650,000 in outstanding patient bills, according to Dr Atiq, who is also a professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.

“Over time I realised that there are people who just are unable to pay,” Atiq said, adding that he and his wife, Mehreen, thought about it and looked at forgiving all the debt.

“We saw that we could do it and then just went ahead and did it,” he added.

“You add to it the absolute devastation that the [coronavirus] pandemic has wrought, and you think thank God that we’re fairly comfortable and this was something we could at least do to help the community,” Dr Atiq said.

In the notice to his patients, Dr Atiq wrote that “Although various health insurances pay most of the bills for the majority of patients, even the deductibles and co-pays can be burdensome.”

“Unfortunately, that is the way our health care system currently works,” Dr Atiq continued, before telling patients that all remaining debts would be forgiven.

“Happy Holidays,” the doctor added.

Bea Cheesman, president of RMC of America, the billing company that worked with Dr Atiq, said that Dr Atiq’s decision to forgive all remaining debts was a “very kind gesture.”

“Dr Atiq is a very caring individual and he’s always been extremely easy to work with as a client,” Cheesman said.

“I think personally that it’s just a wonderful thing that he and his family did in forgiving this debt because the people with oncology bills do have more challenges than the bulk of the population.”

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