American Trial
Lawyers on Trial and Jury System on Malpractice Decision-Making
Trial by jury,
instead of being a security to persons who are accused, will be a delusion, a
mockery, and a snare.
Thomas, Lord
Denman (1779-1864), O’Connell v. The
Queen (1844)
October 4, 2012
- Ask doctors what they dread the
most about the current system and what needs to be fixed, and dread of a
malpractice suit will invariably appear on their list.
Ask high tech specialists about what most
contributes to their practice overhead, and high costs of malpractice premiums,
often $100,000 or more annually, will make the list.
Ask medical society executives what draws or
distracts doctors to or from their
specialty or their region of the country, and they will list malpractice
premium costs.
Ask dispassionate experts what drives up costs of health care,
and sooner or later, they will mention “defensive medicine” costs.
Ask doctors what issue health reform has
not been addressed, and they will say “tort reform.”
Ask why this is so, and the answer is that the Trial Lawyers of America are a big contributor to the Democratic Party.
Ask why frivolous malpractice suits cost
so much in terms of dollars and physician psychological damage, and these
factors would make list.
·
The
cost of defensive medicine is in the $45 billion to $200 billion range, no one
knows how much.
· The
frequency of these suits causes physicians to regard many patients as potential
enemies.
·
Doctors
who have been sued often quit practice, retire, or regard subsequent patients with skepticism.
·
Many
physicians, particularly young
physicians, become hospital employees to
avoid their malpractice premiums.
·
States
with low premiums, or caps on damages, like Texas, become a magnet for
attracting physicians.
·
Some
attorneys, like John Edwards, a former Vice-Presidential candidate, become
wealthy by exploiting emotions of juries by showing victims of supposedly
avoidable medical injuries, children
with cerebral palsy secondary to prolonged labor or a delayed C-Section, in
open court.
These are some of the reasons why trial
lawyers are now on trial, as explained in this HealthAffairs.org article of
October 2 why there is growing bipartisan support for health courts. Its author, Philip K. Howard, a lawyer
himself, has long advocated health
courts rather than jury trials to settle malpractice siots and is founder and
president of the Common Good
“The rising cost of America’s health care system – already 18
percent of GDP – is driving the country toward the fiscal brink, and nowhere is
the need for a new paradigm to control costs more evident than in the area of
medical liability. Doctors’ justified distrust of medical justice (which has an
error rate of 25 percent) leads them to prescribe and perform treatments for no
other reason than to prevent lawsuits. This “defensive medicine” is estimated
to cost anywhere from $45 billion to more than $200 billion a year.
Fortunately, a growing bipartisan consensus is pointing the way to a solution.”
“There is widespread public support
for the creation of special health courts. Moreover, despite the highly
polarized nature of American politics today, there is consistent support across
political parties. A nationwide poll,
conducted in April by the Clarus Research Group for Common Good, the
nonpartisan organization I chair, revealed that 66 percent of voters support
the idea of creating health courts to decide medical claims. Only 25 percent
said that those claims should be decided as they are now, and there was
virtually no difference between Democrats and Republicans on the issue: 68
percent of Republicans, 67 percent of Democrats, and 61 percent of independents
support health courts.”
“Among the poll’s other findings
were the following:
-
A strong majority of voters – 75
percent – believe that “lawsuits and legal fees are a major cause of high
medical insurance rates.” Eighty-nine percent of Republicans, 76 percent of
independents and 62 percent of Democrats agree on this.
-
Sixty-eight percent agree that
“plenty of good doctors are leaving the practice of medicine because of the
number of lawsuits and the cost of liability insurance.” Seventy-eight percent
of Republicans, 64 percent of Democrats and 61 percent of independents agree. “
The Ins And Outs Of Health Courts
“The concept of health courts
originated with and has been championed by Common Good, working in conjunction
with experts at the Harvard School of Public Health and with funding from the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. It emerged both because of the overall error
rate of the current system and because the system is not effective for injured
patients. It takes an average of five years to resolve a claim, and almost 60
percent of an award goes to lawyers and administrative costs.
“Health courts would have judges
dedicated full-time to resolving health care disputes. The judges would make
written rulings to provide guidance on proper standards of care. These rulings
would set precedents on which both patients and doctors could rely.”
“As with similar administrative
courts that exist in other areas of law – for tax disputes, workers’
compensation and vaccine liability, among others – there would be no juries. To
ensure consistency and fairness, each ruling could be appealed to a new Medical
Appellate Court.”
“Health courts are aimed not at
stopping lawsuits but at making medical justice reliably distinguish between
good care and bad. They, therefore, hold the key to eliminating the staggering
waste of defensive medicine better than any other proposed reform.”
“While caps on damages limit the
scope of awards, they do nothing to protect a blameless doctor from liability.
Instead of upholding reasonable standards of care, the current system is an ad
hoc process in which one jury could find liability where another jury on the
same facts finds no liability. This unreliable system – referred to by one
prominent scholar as “an engine of inconsistency” – is why distrust of justice
by doctors is nearly universal.”
The One Interest Group That Opposes
Health Courts
“The fascinating question for
Washington, DC and the nation is: Will the one, mighty, special interest that
opposes health courts – the trial lawyers, who benefit greatly from the current
unreliability of medical justice – continue to rule the nation’s capitol on
this issue?”
“So far the trial lawyers are
prevailing, with legislation supporting health courts defeated in Congress –
but the public is increasingly balking at the staggering and unnecessarily high
cost of health care. At some point the public will ask why they have to pay for
“defensive medicine”, which serves no purpose other than protecting doctors
from a wildly erratic and debilitating system of medical justice.”
That point is getting closer. Why,
after all, should the public continue to pay for the high cost of something
that is totally unnecessary?
Tweet:
Trial lawyers are on trial because
the cost of malpractice lawsuits is drive up costs of health and juries are unpredictable and inaccurate.
1 comment:
Thanks for posting this one. It definitely enlightened me on the subject matter. Your articles are always helpful.
Post a Comment