By Gilbert Ross, M.D. on 6.26.09 @ 6:07AM
The president is asking everyone to sacrifice -- except the
malpractice litigators.
This month, President Obama ventured into the lion's den of
healthcare reform. He tried to cajole a reluctant American
Medical Association -- and the physicians they represent -- to
accept his push for more government-provided medical service.
What he did not do, though, was offer to remove the largest thorn
in physicians' paw: run-amok malpractice lawsuits.
The President's stated goal is to get more Americans more
healthcare at less cost -- which means getting multiple
healthcare interest groups to pitch in and give up some of their
traditional perks. Unfortunately, his pitch to the AMA offered
only a pretense of concern for doctors' needs. Obama merely
dangled a tort-reform carrot before the doctors -- and exempted
the plaintiffs' bar from his general call for team play and
mutual sacrifice.
He specifically rejected capping damage awards for non-economic
issues (i.e., "pain and suffering"). Such caps are the only
medical malpractice remedy that reduces liability insurance
premiums and decreases the need for the wasteful and inefficient
practice known "defensive medicine."
No one really knows how much time is wasted by doctors (and money
by patients) on tests and procedures that do not actually help
diagnose or treat any condition but do help protect doctors from
the appearance of sub-standard care in malpractice lawsuits. This
practice is sometimes called "treating the chart rather than the
patient" -- making sure all hypothetical diagnostic bases are
covered. Some reliably estimate the cost to our healthcare system
at $100 billion, which does not take into consideration the
(real) pain and suffering of patients needlessly subjected to
tests and procedures to no good purpose nor that of doctors
subjected to multi-million-dollar damage awards for such
unquantifiable harms as "loss of consortium."
Over thirty states currently cap this type of award. Six-figure
malpractice premiums in high-risk specialties drive obstetricians
and orthopedists (among other specialists) out of states without
caps, reducing patient access. The institution of caps reverses
this flight by reducing frivolous lawsuits.
OUR MALPRACTICE TORT SYSTEM is seriously flawed, to say the
least. Most patients injured by medical negligence never sue,
while most lawsuits filed are dismissed or rejected by juries.
Many of those are frivolous -- crapshoots by greedy attorneys
trying to win the "lottery by jury." There must be a better way
to make injured patients and their families whole, at least
financially.
One way might be medical tribunals, in which a panel of objective
experts would contemplate the evidence and issue a ruling on
fault. To avoid concerns about the tribunals' constitutionality,
these decisions can be non-binding -- but would be available to
the jury if the parties felt the need to go that far. Another
method would be a no-fault system, with damage awards determined
by a board of laymen and experts, without assignment of blame or
fault. That determination can be a separate matter, handled by
medical boards.
One way or another, the new healthcare utopia should offer relief
from tort lawyer extortion for doctors who adhere to approved
practice guidelines and still find themselves under the
litigation gun.
This administration is going to ask for cooperation and sacrifice
from a wide spectrum of the healthcare industry and the
public:
• Big pharma (in the form of drug discounts and possibly price
controls, whether imported along with price-controlled foreign
drugs or mandated via Medicare Part D "negotiations").
• Insurers (who will have to compete with some form of "public
plan").
• Doctors (who will get reduced compensation from
government-financed insurance plans).
• Patients (who will likely see the newly-empanelled "Federal
Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research"
ration care to prevent "overly" expensive treatments and limit
the use of innovative but expensive new drugs, as has happened in
the UK).
Why are malpractice litigators exempt from pitching in? Given the
recent re-estimate of the massive cost of the President's
program, wouldn't a plan that included a simple, proven method to
reduce costs by $100 billion be worth more than a perfunctory "We
will explore a range of options" soundbite on tort reform, tossed
out to the assembled AMA doctors?
A federally mandated cap on non-economic damages would be
cost-saving and would demonstrate that we all will be
asked to do our part to improve American healthcare, even
lawyers.
topics:
Health Care, Tort Reform