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Eric Turkewitz, The Turkewitz Law Firm, New York, NY |
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Monday, March 10, 2008New York Doctors Rally In Albany for Tort "Reform"
New York's doctors, led by the state Medical Society, rallied last week for tort "reform," blaming lawsuits for the increase in insurance premiums. According to a medical society press release, 1,500 physicians traveled to Albany last Tuesday to protest on the steps of the State Capitol. The issue they brought to the legislators was high medical malpractice premiums, which I reported last July jumped 14% (see: Why New York Medical Malpractice Insurance Jumped 14%).
As you can see from that link (You did read that link, didn't you? I hope so because it's important), the jump was related to artificially low rates set by the New York Insurance Department for years combined with the state swiping almost $700M from the rainy day fund. But when the doctors rallied in Albany, it was injured patients that were their targets. In a surreal moment, Dr. Robert Goldberg, the head of the Medical Society, offered up in a press release this humdinger of Doublespeak: Physicians firmly believe that patients who truly suffer injury due to medical error should be fully reimbursed for economic damages, but non-economic awards must be reined in and the litigation process must be made equitable.In other words, caps on lawsuits must be imposed on the most badly injured individuals because it would be inequitable to fully compensate them. Equity, it appears, demands giving some level of protectionism to the person that caused the injury. George Orwell would certainly be proud. One of the reasons this bit of propaganda is important is because payments to the injured had nothing to do with the rate hike. In fact, both the number of malpractice case and the amount of payments made have been relatively flat nationwide since 1991. And the nationwide trend does not differ in New York. In November 2007, Public Citizen put out a report (that I discussed previously here: Will NY Doctors Be Hit With $50,000 Surcharge?) that reached these conclusions, among many others:
Full disclosure: I have lobbied New York's legislators several times in the past to keep the courthouse doors open for the injured, and am currently scheduled for a return visit in May with the New York State Trial Lawyers Association. -------------------- Addendum - see also:
Labels: Insurance Industry, Medical Malpractice
Comments:
Eric
You mention number of cases that have resulted in payouts (effectively no change). Are there stats documenting number of actions brought against docs over last 5-10 years that did not go to court or were dropped? Thanks Brad
The Public Citizen report linked above is the most comprehensive I have seen on the subject. Since it was published at the end of 2007, it is also the latest information.
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