| Malpractice
Myths
NEW YORK TIMES
June 21, 2004
The power brokers obsessed with tort reform really have the jargon
down. They travel the country with overheated stories about runaway
juries and jackpot justice. The way they tell it, sinister lawyers
and opportunistic plaintiffs are on the hunt, preying on virtuous
corporations, hospitals and doctors in search of that big payout
from the lawsuit lottery.
So it's interesting to hear the following from the Center for Justice
and Democracy, a consumer advocacy group:
"It may be hard to understand why 'tort reform' is even on
the national agenda at a time when insurance industry profits are
booming, tort filings are declining, only 2 percent of injured people
sue for compensation, punitive damages are rarely awarded, liability
insurance costs for businesses are minuscule, medical malpractice
insurance and claims are both less than 1 percent of all health
care costs in America, and premium-gouging underwriting practices
of the insurance industry have been widely exposed."
In looking at medical malpractice cases, I've been amazed by the
cold-blooded attitude so many people have taken toward patients
who have been seriously, and sometimes grotesquely, harmed. Referring
to a Wisconsin woman who had both of her breasts removed after a
laboratory mix-up mistakenly indicated she had cancer, a doctor
from South Carolina told a Congressional subcommittee the following:
"She did not lose her life, and with the plastic surgery she'll
have breast reconstruction better than she had before."
Last week I interviewed a woman in Minerva, Ohio, whose abdominal
aorta was somehow ruptured while a doctor was performing a tubal
ligation. In a discussion of her malpractice suit, the woman, Deborah
Rayburn, said the foul-up was not immediately detected. When it
became clear that she was in serious trouble, another doctor was
called in. "He ended up cutting me open," she said, "and
he clamped the aorta."
Ms. Rayburn, who has two children, was unable to work for 18 months.
The surgery left her with a scar from chest to groin, and she said
she still experiences frequent abdominal pain.
When Ms. Rayburn filed suit, she said, she was made to feel as
though she had done something wrong, as if seeking compensation
was in some sense an affront to the system.
As a trial date approached, she said, she felt pressured by all
the parties involved to agree to a settlement, which she did. She
would have preferred to go to trial, she said, not because she was
looking for a big payday, but because all the details of her case
would then have come out publicly.
And that is one of the essential points that is overlooked by the
tort reform zealots: the problem when it comes to malpractice is
not the amount of money the insurance companies are making (they're
doing fine) or the rates the doctors have to pay, but rather the
terrible physical and emotional damage that is done to so many unsuspecting
patients who fall into the hands of careless or incompetent medical
personnel.
What is needed is a nationwide crackdown on malpractice, not a
campaign to roll back the rights of patients who are injured. Despite
claims by the insurance industry, there is no evidence that soaring
malpractice premiums are the result of sharp increases in the amounts
of money paid out for malpractice claims. And, tellingly, industry
executives are generally careful not to say that the tort reforms
will result in premium reductions.
This is all about greed. What tort reform will lead to, not surprisingly,
is an unwarranted burst of additional profits for the insurance
industry, which is why the industry is sinking so much money into
its unrelenting campaign for "reform."
It would be helpful if the nation's many good doctors would blow
the whistle on the insurance industry and its exploitive practices,
and on the members of their own profession who violate that essential
maxim, "First, do no harm."
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