New York Personal Injury Law Blog: Why New York Medical Malpractice Insurance Jumped 14%

Eric Turkewitz, The Turkewitz Law Firm, New York, NY  

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

 

Why New York Medical Malpractice Insurance Jumped 14%

You may have seen the screaming New York headlines: Doctors hit with 14% increase in medical malpractice rates! Doctors in high risk specialties paying 6-figure insurance premiums! Insurance reserves so low carriers may become insolvent! Blame the lawyers! came the cry from the doctor's, for surely it must be due to medical malpractice cases. A little protectionism called tort "reform" would go a long way to curing the problem. Right?

Ahh, but truth is another matter. Was it really medical malpractice lawsuits that lead to this increase? Let's take a candid look at some actual facts:
  • New York's Superintendent of Insurance, who sets the amount of rate increases, says this jump comes "After years of artificially low rate increases" and that "the rate increase comes after years of setting rates below what was needed." He did it now in order to avert a possible "irreversible crisis." (Did doctors previously complain that their rates were too low?) So, the Superintendent says, New York must play catch-up with a big rate hike;
  • The State of New York had previously "appropriated" $691M of medical malpractice insurance reserves to balance the state budget from the Medical Malpractice Insurance Association. This association had been established by the state to satisfy any deficiencies attributable to the premium levels for malpractice policies, and for reinsurance. That surplus would have been used (if not taken for other purposes) for maintaining the solvency of New York's three medical malpractice insurance carriers.
OK, so the "crisis" was caused by lousy state policy under the George Pataki administration, by setting artificially low rates while also swiping the rainy day fund. Surely, however, the problem was also caused in part by increasing medical malpractice cases and payouts, right?

Well, no. In fact a study has shown that the number of medical malpractice cases in New York has remained static, and the amount of payouts has kept pace with other health care costs. When premiums go up, but the payouts are flat, you know you have a problem. But not one created by those who were injured by negligence.

And have high medical malpractice insurance rates in downstate counties chased away physicians, as the fear-mongers suggest? Not even close. It seems the number of doctor in New York jumped by 16% from 1995 to 2003, an increase greater than our growth in population. And the New York Times reported just last week in Few Young Doctors Step in as Upstate Population Ages, that while there was 6 percent growth in the number of doctors from 2001 to 2005, for a total of about 77,000 doctors, the way they are spread throughout the state is wildly uneven. The Times wrote:
While newly licensed doctors flock to New York City, Long Island and Westchester County, where there is already a glut, far fewer choose to practice in the vast upstate region.
As the article makes clear, and as New Yorkers know, upstate has suffered economic woes in past years, much of which was related to the loss of industry. This isn't a doctor issue. People move to the big city for a multitude of reasons, just as they always have.

Perhaps the problem is an onslaught of frivolous litigation? Nope, not that either, according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine that disproves the myth of frivolous malpractice litigation.

Here's a suggestion for the new Eliot Spitzer administration: Government clearly created this insurance problem, as your Superintendent admits. You therefore need insurance reform. So don't try to fix it on the backs of the most badly injured of New Yorkers with some type of "tort reform" because that won't fix a government created problem. Even insurance company insiders will tell you that "tort reform" will not bring on lower rates.

And while the governor's brother is a neurosurgeon in a downstate county, and therefore probably both at the top end of malpractice rates along with his colleagues and in a good position to lobby his brother, it's hard to evaluate the significance of such expenses without also knowing what their income is. Complaining about a low-six figure premium while taking home a seven-figure income for a high-risk specialty will not bring too much sympathy.

Now here is a reform that the doctor's may want to entertain: With up to 98,000 people per year dying from medical errors, and with 68% of New York's medical malpractice payouts coming from just 7% of the doctors, maybe, just maybe, a little more gazing in the mirror might be in order? Perhaps the medical lobby should inform their physician-constituents about the facts, instead of simply handing them propaganda to put in their waiting rooms?

So what do I expect from all this? Not insurance reform, for that would be the obvious thing. And not greater enforcement from the State Health Department on recurrently problematic doctors. It hasn't happened yet, so why expect it now? No, I believe many will use this governmentally created mess as an excuse to strip rights away from those most severely injured by malpractice. You can almost hear the screams for caps (even though we already have them) and health courts coming from the protectionists who want to shield the negligent from taking responsibility for their mistakes.

While New York's physicians already enjoy wide immunity from litigation payouts due to the horrible economics of taking medical malpractice cases, except in the most disastrous of matters, I fully expect their lobbyists will want more, more, more. And the facts be damned.
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Addendum, after Eliot Spitzer resigns: Eliot's Mess: The Ramifications for Medical Malpractice "Reform" in New York

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(Eric Turkewitz is a personal injury attorney in New York)

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Comments:
Speaking of facts be damned, thanks again for once again hanging your hat on the flawed Institute of Medicine study for your numbers. Didn't they teach you how to do research and critically assess studies in law school eric? I guess not when those studies support your argument. Playing loose and slippery with facts is why your profession is looked upon with such disgust.
 
As mentioned in the comments of a prior post, I have never seen any study that says the Institute of Medicine study is flawed. I offered you the opportunity to provide a link to an analysis, but you declined. In the meantime, I'll take the IOM study over anonymous comments on the internet.

The study is here for those who wish to form their own opinions:
To Err Is Human


--ET
 
Very well argued brief. Just a few questions please. If 68% of the payouts are related to 7% of the doctors and there is no problem with 'frivolous' lawsuits then why do 90% of Obstetricians report being sued at least once every 10 years, while 80% of Orthopedic Surgeons and 90% of neurosurgeons have been sued at least once? In the absence of non-merited lawsuits, what are the statistical probabilities of such occurrences?
 
Dave:

I have not seen that data that you refer to, so if you have a link, that would be great.

But there are a couple other issues also to think about: First, the insurance companies don't open their books on their underwriting practices, which means we work with imperfect information. Second, while I don't know what the data is with respect to each specialty sued, I would expect higher percentages with high risk specialties. Not because they are worse doctors, but because most acts of malpractice don't result in a lawsuit. As I discussed in Medical Malpractice Economics,
bringing such suits is financially quite difficult, so only the cases of the more profoundly injured are generally taken. In other words, the lower risk specialties enjoy greater immunity from suit because of the cost of bringing a smaller action.

--ET
 
No eric I did not decline. I told you to review NEJM and JAMA articles of the era (the study came out in 1999) to review the discussion and flaws at the time. The literature is out there (you do know how to use pub med or even google don't you?) It is you who declined to review obvious discussions/reviews in the literatue that show concerns/flaws with the study. I don't make a habit of doing malpractice lawyer's homework for them. I guess the difference between you and me is that I am interested in the best evidence available and not a W for my ego/checkbook.
 
As a physician, if my success rate for treatment was a mere 30%, I would not be in business. The fact that the majority of medical malpractice lawsuits are meritless speaks to how disingenuous trial attornerys are. It is now wonder that people don't respect your profession.
 
As a physician, if my success rate for treatment was a mere 30%, I would not be in business. The fact that the majority of medical malpractice lawsuits are meritless speaks to how disingenuous trial attornerys are.

The 30% success rate refers to verdicts, not cases. Most cases settle.
 
Actually, as I sat a meeting to garner support for legislative action last night, no one had any blame for the insolvency of our companies on the trial lawyers, per se. There is plenty of blame to go around, for sure. But faced with loss of our livelihoods, we must look for solutions at the legislative level. Many reasonable solutions exist, and I'd love to discuss and debate them with you, but in general the main advesaries to change in NY State have been the trial lawyer lobby.
I know that smart minds can prevail and we can come up with a solution that protects patient rights and safety as well as the economic interests of both doctors and lawyers, as we are both valuable members of our communities at large.
Eric, I thank you for posting a comment on my blog.
 
I am an orthopaedic surgeon who has never been sued, but am leaving NY for a friendlier climate. Tort reform states have much lower premiums, and there is not nearly as much hesitation in taking care of a complex patient who you know is at risk for a suboptimal outcome, no matter how hard you try to make them better. I think bad outcomes, not necessarily bad care (good care is based upon imperfect 2008 technology) generate lawsuits. I wish everybody could get better and made perfect, but we are not that good.

This hesitation to taking care of complex cases is a real and I believe terrible problem in NY, compared to the western state where I was a resident.

The blog refers to 7-digit incomes. I do not personally know anyone making this kind of money. I live in a tiny studio with uneven floors.
I can't imagine a physician who does not want to see truly injured patients compensated. But there are many anecdotal tales of perfect care that resulted in a known (1-2% risk or less, but it happens) suboptimal outcome.....and a lawsuit.
I've never gone through it. But I have observed my colleagues, even when what they did was reasonable in an effort to treat someone's physical injury.

Wrong-side surgery, large instruments left in the patient, medication errors that result in harm.......these things are obvious. But as an example: should our society spend $10,000 on a bone graft substitute for all patients whose leg a surgeon is trying to save from amputation---when you could get bone from the pelvis for free? Why would a surgeon spend that money? There is a relatively small incidence of pain at the site from where you took that bone. Surgeons have gotten sued over that even when they saved the patient's leg. I often use it for that reason (maybe part of why I have never been sued?). Maybe it's wiser to just send such a complex patient away to try and find another surgeon willing to take the risk...or the flack from the hospital and society for spending so much money? I don't send such patients away (regardless of their finances which is part of why I live in unglamorous surroundings)......but am also leaving NY so that I am never tempted----and so my kids' college fund does not go to premiums.

Good doctors hate seeing truly bad medical care more than anybody except patients---and want to see injured patients compensated. But good doctors are also effected badly by this liability problem. I am not going to pay $200,000 to step into an operating room when I could go to a tort reform state and pay 1/8 that. The difference is a good salary in and of itself. The current liability environment does nothing to promote better patient care. The science and technology of our field is imperfect---and we cannot bat 100%. Most of us try to and we need to police those who don't do so more effectively via our professional organizations.

A patient compensation fund for bad outcomes (that I would be happy to contribute a reasonable amount to) is an answer. Details would need a lot of working out.....but it would be a step in the right direction.
 
Doc:

Thanks for visiting and leaving your comments. But I don't think anecdotal evidence is very supportive, since one can easily find anecdotes of horrible malpractice and injustices done as well as frivolous suits.

Empirical evidence, however, shows no increase in lawsuits and payouts, and it also shows problems with New York's Department of Insurance and state tolerance of the few percent of doctors who do most of the damage.
 
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