Malpractice Insurance: No Clear or Easy Answers
By JOSEPH B. TREASTER

To control the rising costs of medical malpractice insurance,
President Bush is urging Congress to impose limitations on lawsuits
like those introduced in California in 1975, which insurance
companies and doctors say have sharply reduced their expenses.
President Bush, the American Medical Association and the medical
malpractice insurers all say that the linchpin of the California
action � a limit of $250,000 on payments for pain and suffering in
malpractice lawsuits � will benefit doctors, insurers and patients
across the country. 
"If one of the goals of a good health care system is for it to be
affordable and accessible, and if lawsuits are running up the cost of
medicine and/or driving docs out of business because the practicing
of medicine is too expensive, we've got to do something about it,"
Mr. Bush said in a speech yesterday to a national conference of the
A.M.A. in Washington.
But a closer look at the California experience with medical
malpractice suggests that the lessons of liability caps are not so
clear for either the doctors or the patients. Since 1975, doctors in
the state have had a drop in the level of their premiums. But the
greatest drops in premiums and, so far, the most consistent, did not
come until after California adopted price controls in 1988, throwing
into question the effects of the caps alone. 
Where the caps have had an effect, according to many plaintiffs'
lawyers and consumer advocates, is on the chances of compensation for
a whole category of malpractice victims. Consumer advocates and
plaintiffs' lawyers say thousands of victims of malpractice have been
unable to get lawyers to take their cases because of the limited
payouts and that those who do get lawyers generally receive much less
than victims in other states. 
A bill that would limit payments for pain and suffering in medical
malpractice cases to $250,000 was endorsed on a voice vote by a
subcommittee of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce yesterday
and it is expected to be voted on by the full committee in a few
days. Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, said the House might vote
on the measure as early as next week. Democrats in the Senate have
promised to block the bill, which they say protects insurance
companies at the expense of victims. 
Over the 27 years since the limit on lawsuits was established in
California, the state has shifted from being one of the most
expensive places for doctors to buy insurance to one of the least
expensive. For example, some of the largest insurers in California
estimated that calculated in current dollars, premiums have fallen
about 40 percent during that time, to about $14,000 a year.
An analysis by the Consumer Federation of America, puts the premiums
even lower, although that calculation includes some doctors working
as researchers and others who do not actually buy insurance. 
At $14,000, California doctors are paying roughly half the average
cost of coverage in states like New York and Pennsylvania and a
little more than a third the cost in West Virginia, the highest in
the country at $39,050. Some doctors in New York pay more than
$100,000 a year for insurance, and obstetricians in South Florida pay
$200,000 a year.
But it took several years after the imposition of the caps in 1975
before doctors in California saw a benefit in the form of lower
premiums. There are varying interpretations of what caused that
delay. 
Frank A. Sloan, an economics professor at Duke University
specializing in health policy and management, said he had tracked
similar lags in other states that imposed limits on awards for pain
and suffering. 
"If anyone thinks caps on pain and suffering are going to work
miracles overnight, they're wrong," Mr. Sloan said. "Bush will
probably be out of the White House before we see appreciable relief
from this policy."
Jamie Court, the executive director of the Foundation for Taxpayer
and Consumer Rights in Santa Monica, argued that the main reason for
the decline in premium costs in California had not been the limits on
lawsuits, but the law in 1988, first proposed by his group, that
prohibited annual increases greater than 15 percent by insurers
without a public hearing. The measure, known as Proposition 103,
required insurers to rebate earlier premiums and led to a freeze on
premiums for several years. 
"Caps don't have any effect on premiums," Mr. Court said. "If you
don't limit what the insurers can charge, they will just make more
profit as the cost of claims goes down."
John Garamendi, the insurance commissioner of California, said both
measures had helped keep costs down. However, there is no provision
for controlling insurance rates in the Bush proposal. 
As a result of premiums being held in check, doctors and medical
malpractice insurers say, doctors are not fleeing California or
retiring early as they are in states like New Jersey, Pennsylvania
and Florida where costs have skyrocketed.
The insurance companies say the limits on awards for pain and
suffering eliminate an emotional wild card in dealing with claims.
They are prepared to pay for such measurable damages as lost income
and medical expenses, which can easily run into the millions. But
they say they need protection from huge awards by sympathetic juries
for pain and suffering, which cannot be objectively defined.
"One jury might award $250,000 for an injury; for the next jury, it
might be $250 million," said Dr. Richard E. Anderson, the chairman of
the Doctors Company, the third-largest insurer of doctors in
California.
But consumer advocates and plaintiffs' lawyers say that because of
the limited payouts, many people with valid cases are unable find
lawyers to take their cases. No one has kept track of the rejected
cases. But Mary E. Alexander, the president of the Association of
American Trial Lawyers who practices law in San Francisco, said,
"You're talking thousands."
Moreover, they say, those patients who do find lawyers are likely to
receive far less in compensation in California than in most other
states. 
"There are certainly cases where an individual who has been seriously
harmed by a true malpractice has not been able to receive benefits
that most people would think appropriate," Mr. Garamendi said.
In 2000, for example, the average payment to a victim of malpractice
in California was $142,637 � lower than in every state but Michigan,
and about a fourth that in Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania, the
two most generous places. According to the American Medical
Association, payouts of more than $1 million to victims occurred
about three times as often in New York and New Jersey as in
California.
California still has a higher percentage of lawsuits per doctor than
the national average, according to an association of insurance
companies, hospitals and medical associations called Californians
Allied for Patient Protection. But consumer advocates and plaintiffs'
lawyers say that many legitimate cases in California are not being
pursued.
Those least likely to find a lawyer, the consumer advocates and
lawyers say, are the survivors of infants, elderly people and
homemakers who are killed in a medical mistake. For their survivors,
citing pain and suffering is frequently the only legal recourse.
Since no one is financially dependent upon these victims, there is
legally no economic loss; because of their deaths, there can be no
future medical costs. That leaves the survivors � whether there is
one or several � with a maximum payment for their pain and suffering
of $250,000.
"Where the liability is obvious, the settlement will be almost
instant � for $250,000," Dr. Anderson said. "It requires almost no
legal effort at all if the liability is obvious."
But plaintiffs' lawyers say the liability is seldom obvious to the
insurance companies. 
"If you're talking about getting the full $250,000, you're going to
have to go to trial," said Ken Sigelman, a doctor and lawyer who is
the chairman of the medical malpractice committee of the Consumer
Attorneys of California, the state's organization of trial lawyers.
"If the insurance company knows that's the most they have to lose,
they're usually not going to offer that much before trial."
Even in those cases resolved on the eve of trial, lawyers say, they
typically have to invest up to $100,000 to hire experts and develop
the cases. They would do the same work and invest the same amount of
money to tackle a case with a potential payoff in the millions. So
they choose the more lucrative cases.
Mr. Sigelman said he rejected about 100 of the limited-payout cases a
year, about half of which he regarded as very strong cases. The
others looked promising, he said, but would require research to
determine their true strength. 
Another lawyer, Ned Good, a former president of the California trial
lawyers association, said, "There's isn't a week that goes by that I
and most of the better lawyers I know in my state don't turn down a
medical malpractice victim." Mr. Good now has a form letter that he
sends out, rejecting these cases.
In stark contrast to an an infant who dies as a result of
malpractice, one that lives and is likely to need decades of
expensive medical care can be worth millions to a lawyer and client.
That contrast is painfully evident in the case of the Kaiser family
of San Pedro, Calif. On July 25, 2000, Dennis and Wendy Kaiser became
the parents of a 4-pound, 9-ounce baby boy. The child, who they named
Casey, was born five weeks earlier than expected and suffered severe
brain damage. 
When the couple � he is a public relations executive, she a dental
hygienist � realized months later that they were probably facing
millions in medical expenses, they found several lawyers willing to
work with them. They decided to go with Russell S. Kussman, a doctor
who had become a trial lawyer specializing in medical malpractice.
But last September, Casey Kaiser died. Soon after, Mr. Kussman said
that he was sorry but that he could no longer represent the Kaisers.
Since then, Mrs. Kaiser said, she has spoken to seven other lawyers.
None would take the case. One asked the Kaiser's to pay an hourly
charge for him to review medical records, Mrs. Kaiser said. Another
would take the case, she said, if the Kaisers agreed to pay the
expenses. They are now on the verge of giving up.
"I know it's just going to bring up emotions that I've tried to put
to rest," Mrs. Kaiser said. "All it's going to do is stretch out the
hurt."

 


__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Tax Center - forms, calculators, tips, more
http://taxes.yahoo.com/

--- URG-L
Pour modifier votre adresse de courriel sur URG-L, envoyez un avis a 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] en indiquant votre nouvelle adresse ainsi 
que l'ancienne et le nom de la liste.


Répondre à