We granted a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ opinion in
Haselden v. Davis,
FACTS
These are wrongful death and survival actions brought by the estate of Carolyn Hill (Hill), who died of breast cancer in 1994. The complaints alleged her treating physician, Petition *483 er S. Perry Davis, M.D. (Davis), was negligent in failing to timely read a suspicious mammogram, which had been performed on Hill in November 1991. As a result, Hill’s breast cancer was not diagnosed until June 1993, by which time it had metastasized into her lymph nodes. 1
At trial, the court allowed introduction of $77,905.21 in medical expenses billed to Hill. Davis argued that only those amounts actually paid by Medicaid should be admitted into evidence, for a total of $24,109.04. The difference between the “billed” amounts and the amounts actually “paid” by Medicaid, totaled $51,620.59. The jury awarded a total of $1,082,103.71 to Hill’s statutory beneficiaries and $1,000,000.00 to her estate. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
ISSUE
Is evidence of amounts billed by a treating physician admissible to establish a medical malpractice plaintiffs damages, where the plaintiff is a Medicaid patient who is not liable for any amounts billed in excess of the amount paid by Medicaid?
DISCUSSION
Davis argues the trial court should have limited Hill’s recovery for medical expenses to those amounts actually paid by Medicaid. We disagree. We find both the amount of the Medicaid payment and the amount billed by Doctor Davis were admissible 2 to establish the amount of Hill’s damages. 3
*484
A plaintiff in a personal injury action seeking damages for the cost of medical services provided to him as a result of a tortfeasor’s wrongdoing is entitled to recover the reasonable value of those medical services, not necessarily the amount paid. 22 Am.Jur.2d
Damages,
§ 198 (1988). Although the amount paid may be relevant in determining the reasonable value of those services, the trier of fact must look to a variety of other factors in making such a finding. Among those factors to be considered by the jury are the amount billed to the plaintiff, and the relative market value of those services.
Kashner v. Geisinger Clinic,
*485
We are cognizant that several courts hold that the amount paid by Medicaid (or similar programs) is dispositive of the reasonable value of medical services.
See e.g. Moorhead v. Crozer Chester Medical Center,
However, to hold that the plaintiff is limited to damages in the amount actually paid by Medicaid is contrary to the purposes behind the collateral source rule and would result in a windfall to the defendant tortfeasor. In our view, a defendant physician who agrees to become a Medicaid provider, thereby agreeing to accept as compensation for medical services those amounts set forth in the Medicaid agreement, who thereafter bills a Medicaid patient for the full value of his services, may not claim that the true, reasonable value of those services is the lesser amount paid by Medicaid. Accordingly, we hold the amount billed by Davis was relevant to establish the reasonable value of the services provided to Hill. 4
Accordingly, the Court of Appeals’ opinion is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
I am in complete agreement that the reasonable value of medical services is a jury issue and that Medicaid is a collateral source. I disagree that the amount of billed medical services which is not paid by Medicaid ($51,620.59) is recoverable as compensatory damages. Medicaid’s unique characteristics and the law of damages require finding only the amount paid by Medicaid is recoverable as compensatory damages.
*486
The collateral source rule prohibits the reduction of compensation received by an injured party by compensation received from a source wholly independent of the wrongdoer.
In re W.B. Easton Const. Co., Inc.,
Having concluded Medicaid payments are a collateral source does not end our inquiry. While the collateral source rule applies to “compensation received” by the plaintiff, the rule itself does not address whether the “amount billed” or the “amount paid” is the amount of “compensation received” subject to the rule.
See In re W.B. Easton Const. Co., Inc., supra; see also Bates v. Hogg,
The majority of courts to consider this issue have concluded the collateral source rule applies only to the amount paid by Medicaid.
See, e.g., Me Amis v. Wallace,
The majority of courts to consider this issue predicate their holdings on the central tenet of compensatory damages: awards are intended to make an injured person whole by placing him in the position enjoyed prior to the injury and no more.
See Kapuschinsky v. United States,
The Medicaid program provides individuals with medical treatment by doctors who agree to accept such patients in exchange for payment at a predetermined rate schedule. The patient not only receives medical care, but also incurs no liability for the cost of the care once the doctor accepts payment. The difference between the amount billed and the amount paid, the amount in issue in this case, is “phantom” money in that no one has paid the amount and no one will incur a debt for the amount.
What distinguishes Medicaid from traditional insurance programs and, even its Medicare counterpart, is, the recipients, who fall below a certain income level to be eligible, do not pay to receive the benefit. While the care of the impoverished is an admirable social policy goal, in terms of the law of damages, the Medicaid patient receives a windfall based on a loss not personally incurred. The question is “whether the ‘reasonable value’ measure of recovery means that an injured plaintiff may recover from the tortfeasor more than the actual amount he paid or for which he incurred liability for past medical care and services.” Hanif, 246 CaLRptr. at 194-95. Stated another way, should a plaintiff be entitled to claim and should a defendant be subject to liability for this “phantom” money.
Because the plaintiff has never paid nor will ever be liable for the written-off difference between the billed and paid amount, it is “unconscionable to permit the taxpayers to bear the expense of providing free medical care to a person and then allow that person to recover damages for medical services from a tort-feasor and pocket the windfall.”
Bates,
The amount Medicaid pays is a collateral source to benefit a plaintiff who has a right to recover that amount. The excess between the amount billed to and the amount paid by Medic *488 aid, for which a plaintiff is no longer liable, is not protected by the rule. It is not reasonable, under principles of compensatory damage law, to allow Plaintiff to receive a windfall in damages of amounts for which no entity is liable. 5
The majority opinion predicates its definition of compensatory medical damages on the legal fiction that the billed amount, which no one incurred as a debt, can be a reasonable amount of damages. This Court has created a right to a compensatory remedy for a debt which never has nor ever will exist. In sum, this Court’s opinion may be interpreted as a plaintiffs right to be reimbursed for money that will never be expended.
Because the majority desires to require doctors to bear the cost of reimbursing an injured party for a non-existent debt, I dissent.
Notes
. A more detailed recitation of the facts is set forth in the Court of Appeals’ opinion.
. It is unclear, from footnote 25 of the Court of Appeals' opinion, whether the amount of Medicaid payments was placed before the jury.
Haselden,
. We concur with Hill that the collateral source rule applies to Medicaid payments.
See e.g., Davis v. Management & Training Corp. Centers,
*484
. Our holding is criticized by the dissent as "requirfing] doctors to bear the cost of reimbursing an injured party for a non-existent debt.” On the contrary, we simply hold that the reasonable value of the medical services is for the jury's determination.
. I would limit this Court's holding to Medicaid because of its unique attributes without deciding whether an individual who has purchased medical insurance and paid premiums, through a private insurer or the Medicare system, should be allowed to introduce evidence of write-offs which may be a part of the benefit of their bargain.
Compare Strahley v. Mercy Health Center of Manhattan,
