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How the Civil Justice System Protects Patients
Written by George Tait
Monday, 20 July 2009 00:00
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The injuries patients suffer from preventable medical errors are very real. Some are easily calculated, such as additional medical costs and lost wages, while others are less so, such as quality of life and pain and suffering. The problem with many medical negligence reforms is that they do not seek to prevent medical errors, but merely to shift the burden of these damages to the injured patients themselves. ![]() Caps on non-economic damages are one such “reform” that do nothing to reform medical negligence at all. Non-economic damages compensate patients for very real injuries—such as the loss of a limb or sight, the loss of mobility, the loss of fertility, excruciating pain, or severe disfigurement, or even the loss of a child or a spouse. In the name of a “medical negligence crisis” many states have moved to cap these damages. The effect is often to render many medical negligence cases too expensive to bring to trial, especially for women, children, the elderly and the disabled—those who may not have suffered substantial economic loss. University of Buffalo law professor Lucinda Finley found that such groups received restitution far below average levels, and had a far harder time even getting to court because the expenses of a case often outweighed any potential award. She concluded, “caps benefit insurance companies by increasing their profits, while producing no benefit for doctors, and causing a detriment to injured people, especially women and the elderly.”i The “reform” takes away the restitution, but does nothing to prevent the injuries.
Civil Justice and Patient Safety More Tort Reform Equals Worse Health Care Similarly, data collected from the non-partisan Commonwealth Fund show health care in states that cap damages in medical negligence cases tends to be of lower quality than health care in states that do not.ii Patients in states that do not cap damages have better access to health care and are more likely to be covered by health insurance than patients living in states with caps on damages. The aforementioned study from Tulane University also found that states with more accountability experienced lower rates of mortality.iii Analysis by Professors David Hyman and Charles Silver also found that insulating providers from liability was detrimental to patient safety, and concluded, “The widely held belief that fear of malpractice liability impedes efforts to improve the reliability of health care delivery systems is unfounded.”iv Professors Jonathan Klick and Thomas Stratmann similarly noted medical negligence reforms resulted in lower health care quality and increased infant mortality.v i Lucinda M. Finley, Hidden Victims of Tort Reform: Women, Children and the Elderly, 53 Emory L.J. 1263, Summer 2004.
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