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You may have seen articles and news
stories claiming that "runaway jury awards" and "greedy
trial lawyers" are causing medical malpractice premiums to
skyrocket, thereby driving doctors out of Washington State.
Doctors around the state are "demanding" that our two
Senators and state legislators enact "caps" on jury verdicts
to prevent malpractice relates from rising. THESE CLAIMS ARE
FALSE.
A number of studies reveal the truth---that caps on damages
DO NOT reduce insurance premiums. Caps on damages only
restrict the rights of patients who have been seriously
injured at the hands of a negligent physician. Most insurers
continue to increase malpractice premiums at a rapid pace,
regardless of damage caps on medical malpractice lawsuits.
Over the past year and a half, Texas, Florida, Oklahoma,
Ohio, Mississippi and Nevada have tried to solve their
state's insurance problems by limiting injured consumers'
right to sue in court (so-called "tort reform"). It has
failed every time. The reason is: the causes and solutions
to insurance problems lie with the insurance industry, not
the legal system.
The number and value of medical malpractice payments made to
patients on behalf of Washington doctors have declined
significantly, according to an analysis of federal
government information released today by the national
consumer group Public Citizen.
Key findings in the Public Citizen report (Fewer Lawsuits
and More Doctors: The Myths of Washington State's Medical
Malpractice "Crisis") include:
* The number of medical malpractice payments made on behalf
of Washington doctors declined 35.6 percent between 1999 and
2004. * There was a 42.2 percent drop in the total value of
Washington doctors' medical malpractice payments between
1997 and 2004, when adjusted for medical inflation. The
inflation-adjusted peak in 1997 was $50.7 million, compared
with $29.3 million in 2004. The drop between 2002 and 2004
was 30.6 percent. The number of million-dollar payments has
declined from a high of 10 in 1997 to two in 2004; jury
verdicts have remained flat at about 3.2 percent of all
payments since 1991. * Rather than providing windfalls to
patients with minor injuries, Washington doctors'
malpractice payments overwhelmingly benefit those most
seriously injured by doctors. The most serious cases account
for 84.9 percent of all payments made, compared to only 15.1
percent of all payments for minor injuries. * The
population-adjusted number of malpractice filings is down
23.1 percent since 1995, dropping from 9.41 per 100,000
people in 1995 to 7.24 in 2004. Malpractice payouts
attributable to obstetrics cases ' doctors say OBs are among
the hardest hit by lawsuits ' are down significantly. The
number of payments attributable to OB cases fell 25.4
percent between 1994 and 2004, while the value plummeted by
65.9 percent.
Christopher M. Davis is the managing partner of Davis Law Group. He brings over 15 years of practical yet innovative experience to personal injury cases. He practices law in Seattle, WA. You can learn more about Mr. Davis at http://www.InjuryTrialLawyer.com or http://www.seattleaccidentnews.com .
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