(1) the information is the
type of information routinely used in making credit eligibility determinations,
such as information relating to debts, expenses, income, benefits,
assets, collateral, or the purpose of the loan, including the use
of proceeds;
(2) the
creditor uses the medical information in a manner and to an extent
that is no less favorable than it would use comparable information
that is not medical information in a credit transaction; and
(3) the creditor does not take
the consumer’s physical, mental, or behavioral health, condition or
history, type of treatment, or prognosis into account as part of any
such determination.
(1) Examples
of the types of information routinely used in making credit eligibility
determinations. Paragraph (a)(1) of this section permits a creditor,
for example, to obtain and use information about—
(i) the
dollar amount, repayment terms, repayment history, and similar information
regarding medical debts to calculate, measure, or verify the repayment
ability of the consumer, the use of proceeds, or the terms for granting
credit;
(ii) the
value, condition, and lien status of a medical device that may serve
as collateral to secure a loan;
(iii) the dollar amount and continued
eligibility for disability income, workers’ compensation income, or
other benefits related to health or a medical condition that is relied
on as a source of repayment; or
(iv) the identity of creditors to whom
outstanding medical debts are owed in connection with an application
for credit, including but not limited to, a transaction involving
the consolidation of medical debts.
6-3505
(2) Examples
of uses of medical information consistent with the exception.
(i) A consumer includes on an application
for credit information about two $20,000 debts. One debt is to a hospital;
the other debt is to a retailer. The creditor contacts the hospital
and the retailer to verify the amount and payment status of the debts.
The creditor learns that both debts are more than 90 days past due.
Any two debts of this size that are more than 90 days past due would
disqualify the consumer under the creditor’s established underwriting
criteria. The creditor denies the application on the basis that the
consumer has a poor repayment history on outstanding debts. The creditor
has used medical information in a manner and to an extent no less
favorable than it would use comparable nonmedical information.
(ii) A consumer indicates
on an application for a $200,000 mortgage loan that she receives $15,000
in long-term disability income each year from her former employer
and has no other income. Annual income of $15,000, regardless of source,
would not be sufficient to support the requested amount of credit.
The creditor denies the application on the basis that the projected
debt-to-income ratio of the consumer does not meet the creditor’s
underwriting criteria. The creditor has used medical information in
a manner and to an extent that is no less favorable than it would
use comparable nonmedical information.
(iii) A consumer includes on an application
for a $10,000 home-equity loan that he has a $50,000 debt to a medical
facility that specializes in treating a potentially terminal disease.
The creditor contacts the medical facility to verify the debt and
obtain the repayment history and current status of the loan. The creditor
learns that the debt is current. The applicant meets the income and
other requirements of the creditor’s underwriting guidelines. The
creditor grants the application. The creditor has used medical information
in accordance with the exception.
6-3506
(3) Examples
of uses of medical information inconsistent with the exception.
(i) A consumer applies for $25,000 of
credit and includes on the application information about a $50,000
debt to a hospital. The creditor contacts the hospital to verify the
amount and payment status of the debt, and learns that the debt is
current and that the consumer has no delinquencies in her repayment
history. If the existing debt were instead owed to a retail department
store, the creditor would approve the application and extend credit
based on the amount and repayment history of the outstanding debt.
The creditor, however, denies the application because the consumer
is indebted to a hospital. The creditor has used medical information,
here the identity of the medical creditor, in a manner and to an extent
that is less favorable than it would use comparable nonmedical information.
(ii) A consumer meets
with a loan officer of a creditor to apply for a mortgage loan. While
filling out the loan application, the consumer informs the loan officer
orally that she has a potentially terminal disease. The consumer meets
the creditor’s established requirements for the requested mortgage
loan. The loan officer recommends to the credit committee that the
consumer be denied credit because the consumer has that disease. The
credit committee follows the loan officer’s recommendation and denies
the application because the consumer has a potentially terminal disease.
The creditor has used medical information in a manner inconsistent
with the exception by taking into account the consumer’s physical,
mental, or behavioral health, condition, or history, type of treatment,
or prognosis as part of a determination of eligibility or continued
eligibility for credit.
(iii) A consumer who has an apparent medical condition, such as a
consumer who uses a wheelchair or an oxygen tank, meets with a loan officer
to apply for a home-equity loan. The consumer meets the creditor’s
established requirements for the requested home- equity loan and the
creditor typically does not require consumers to obtain a debt-cancellation
contract, debt-suspension agreement, or credit insurance product in
connection with such loans. However, based on the consumer’s apparent
medical condition, the loan officer recommends to the credit committee
that credit be extended to the consumer only if the consumer obtains
a debt-cancellation contract, debt-suspension agreement, or credit
insurance product from a nonaffiliated third party. The credit committee
agrees with the loan officer’s recommendation. The loan officer informs
the consumer that the consumer must obtain a debt-cancellation contract,
debt-suspension agreement, or credit insurance product from a nonaffiliated
third party to qualify for the loan. The consumer obtains one of these
products and the creditor approves the loan. The creditor has used
medical information in a manner inconsistent with the exception by
taking into account the consumer’s physical, mental, or behavioral
health, condition, or history, type of treatment, or prognosis in
setting conditions on the consumer’s eligibility for credit.