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Congress? Barristers, Pits, and Sugar

The new atmospherics of medical malpractice reform.

Appearing to embrace the new civility and bipartisanship that’s the currently appropriate stance for politicians following the Tucson shooting, President Obama in his State of the Union address tossed a bone to the newly empowered Congressional Republicans by giving a half-hearted nod to medical malpractice reform.

“I’m willing to look at other ideas to bring down costs, including one that Republicans suggested last year — medical malpractice reform to rein in frivolous lawsuits,” said Obama, referring to the newly enacted health care law and his willingness to work with Republicans to “fix what needs fixing.”

Linking the words “frivolous” and “lawsuits” is not something that trial lawyers, major political donors to Obama, like to hear.

President Obama’s comment on medical malpractice reform came one day after House Republicans introduced a bill — H.R. 5 — that would limit punitive damages in malpractice lawsuits.

The American Association for Justice (formerly called the Association of Trial Lawyers, but “Justice” has a better ring to it, sounding less seedy and money-grubbing) calls the new House medical liability bill “extreme.”

“Opponents of the civil justice system have introduced H.R. 5, a bill that severely restricts the rights of medical negligence victims,” says a statement from the American Association of Justice. “Breathtaking in scope, H.R. 5 applies to medical malpractice, pharmaceutical products, nursing homes and health insurance claims, while it ignores the fact that 98,000 patients die every year from medical errors.”

Oddly, the American Association for Justice, with every incentive to exaggerate the number of preventable deaths from medical errors, appears to be using numbers that may be only half as large as the actual problem.

An article in Scientific American in August 2009, “Deaths from avoidable medical error more than double in past decade, investigation show,” reports the following: “Preventable medical mistakes and infections are responsible for about 200,000 deaths in the U.S. each year, according to an investigation by the Hearst media corporation. The report comes 10 years after the Institute of Medicine’s ‘To Err Is Human’ analysis, which found that 44,000 to 98,000 people were dying annually due to these errors and called for the medical community and government to cut that number in half by 2004.”

On the other side, pro-reform advocates point to studies showing that just the cost of defensive medicine is draining up to $150 billion per year out of the health care system, a wasteful and unwarranted expense that also produces death within the system.

In other legal news in Congress, Democratic congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio is now suing a cafeteria in the Longworth House Office Building for $150,000 for supposedly inflicting “serious and permanent” damages that he allegedly suffered after biting an olive pit that was supposedly in a sandwich wrap.

The suit claims that Kucinich encountered the allegedly dangerous wrap, containing supposedly “dangerous substances,” some years ago — “on or about April 17, 2008.”

The question from the kitchen: “Anyone remember who was wrapping those wraps back then, three years ago? Wasn’t it that guy Diego, the one from Tijuana who was eating olives every minute so he wouldn’t smoke?”

In other legal news from a Congressional cafeteria, remember when Bernice Harris, a longtime cashier in the U.S. Senate cafeteria was accused of “harassment” after calling one of her regular customers “honey” and “sugar”?

Being called “baby,” complained Christopher Held, an employee of Sen. Mitch McConnell, was “real bothersome.” 

To toughen themselves up for their next round of allegedly harsh and unwelcome interactions with the help in the cafeteria line, Senate staffers might want to try a stint with a gun in Afghanistan, something a little tougher than being subjected to hearing a sweet lady, raised in an age before we sued Betty Crocker for making us fat, say, “Sugar, don’t forget, we’re serving meat loaf tomorrow, with real mashed potatoes.”

About the Author

Ralph R. Reiland is the B. Kenneth Simon professor of free enterprise and an associate professor of economics at Robert Morris University in Pittsburgh.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (10) |

Appleby| 2.1.11 @ 6:43AM

Two groups of people will never go out of business: undertakers and lawyers.

Fortunately for me.

Ned the Red| 2.1.11 @ 11:34AM

Kucinich now says, “I am dropping the lawsuit because I now believe the damage to my mouth and teeth came from extraterrestrials who planted a thought control device in my head during an alien abduction. The story about the olive pit was planted into my mind by the aliens to cover their work.”  When Dennis was asked how he knew this new explanation was true, he said, "I could not figure out why I kept having dreams where I was repeatedly being water-boarded by Dick Cheney and George Bush only instead of water they used olive oil, saying the pit needed nutrients. I think this is part of my subconscious mind telling me what really happened.”Later the congressman said, “I don't know if this means Dick and George are aliens or if they were used as surrogates in my dream to promote some other idea being planted into my thoughts, but I do know they both looked very scary in long white coats. Just before I woke up Nancy Pelosi walked into the room and inserted something into…..”

ShortNSweet| 2.1.11 @ 12:20PM

I once learned the lesson of a lifetime...from my mother...and I share it with AmSpec Readers...
My mother had quadruple by-pass several years ago, at a top notch hospital. She woke up on the operating table with her chest cranked wide open. Suffering from PTSD from this horrific event, she was unable to speak of the incident for some 30 days, to my brother, who is a MD. His first reaction was anger. When she finally told me, in a restaurant a few weeks later, my first reaction was a very tearful anger. My mother reached across the table, placing her hand upon mine, and with these words cooled that anger..."We don't go after this man's job, we don't sue them, we forgive them for a mistake that was very much unintended. No one meant to hurt me. God forgives us, and we will forgive men." I'm not trying to praise my mother, as she too is only human, but the point of my sharing is that if more people reacted to mistakes, in this way, the US, and the world would be a better place. Now, in similar circumstances, and yet no where near as extreme, I remember to forgive and forget! God please bless us all!

Impeach Don't Wait| 2.1.11 @ 10:39PM

I'm reading your mother's words while I happen to be listening to Mario Lanza sing "The Lord's Prayer." Tears well up when I reread your mother's account. Thanks for sharing it.

FREE tea| 2.3.11 @ 1:22AM

---ENOUGH with the sideshows!

GET DOWN to the over-awing health issues
of the time ----the coming madatory injection
campaigns (i.e. stealth eugenics even as solid evidence of an autism and brain damage 'side effect' link is becoming solidly established
thanks to the remnants of NON-Rockefeller
medicine)

--AND the unmonitored and widepread introduction
of these 'sterilization and cancer friendly'
GMO's. -----ECO devastation we can believe in!

AGAIN, opening, auditing and 'warmly' prosecuting the FED and their back boys in the
VAST and entrenched, ultra-rich, eugenocide
and Globalist driven, Freemasonic, i.e. Luciferian
(NO JOKE FOLKS ----DO CHECK IT OUT!) ---capstone 'charitable'
foundations BOTH here and in London
(-------C'mon mates!).

HUAC meets Nuremberg ---can there now be any doubt? -----ANY doubt at all?

"Come out from among them.
Do NOT partake of their sin."

-AMEN-

Reebok | 8.11.11 @ 4:22AM

is good

العاب بنات | 4.11.12 @ 4:15PM

thank you

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