Why Medical Malpractice Is Off Limits
A few thousand trial lawyers have a lock on Democrats, who
refuse to consider any legal reform.
Eliminating defensive medicine could save upwards of $200 billion in
health-care costs annually, according to estimates by the American Medical
Association and others. The cure is a reliable medical malpractice system that
patients, doctors and the general public can trust.
But this is the one reform Washington will not seriously consider. That's
because the trial lawyers, among the largest contributors to the Democratic
Party, thrive on the unreliable justice system we have now.
Almost all the other groups with a stake in health reform—including patient
safety experts, physicians, the AARP, the Chamber of Commerce, schools of public
health—support pilot projects such as special health courts that would move
beyond today's hyper-adversarial malpractice lawsuit system to a court that
would quickly and reliably distinguish between good and bad care. The support
for some kind of reform reflects a growing awareness among these groups that
managing health care sensibly, including containing costs, is almost impossible
when doctors go through the day thinking about how to protect themselves from
lawsuits.
The American public also favors legal overhaul. A recent Common
Good/Committee for Economic Development poll found that 83% of Americans believe
that "as part of any health care reform plan, Congress needs to change the
medical malpractice system."
Congress now realizes it can't completely stonewall legal reform. But what
has unfolded so far is a series of vague pronouncements and token proposals—all
of which assiduously avoid any specific ideas that might offend the trial bar.
Here are some examples:
• On July 31, Rep. Bart Gordon (D., Tenn.), a Blue Dog Democrat,
introduced an amendment to the House health-care reform bill (H.R. 3200) to fund
pilot projects for liability reform, including pilots for "voluntary alternative
dispute resolution."
What happened? According to the online newsletter Inside Health Policy,
"While Gordon's amendment originally had seven policies that states could
implement in order to receive federal funding, the other five suggestions were
crossed out . . . due to the agreement with the trial lawyers."
• On Aug. 25, at a town-hall meeting in Reston, Va., Howard Dean,
former chair of the Democratic National Committee, was asked why there is
nothing in the health-care proposals about liability reform. Mr. Dean replied:
"The reason that tort reform is not in the bill is because the people who wrote
it did not want to take on the trial lawyers. . . . And that is the plain and
simple truth."
• On Sept. 9, President Obama made a commitment in a speech before
Congress to fix the problem of defensive medicine. On Sept. 17, his secretary of
Health and Human Services, Kathleen Sebelius, announced an initiative that will
allow states to test a variety of programs to "put patient safety first and let
doctors focus on practicing medicine." But in the initiative's statement of
goals made no mention of defensive medicine, or of pilot projects such as
special health courts. The funding for the initiative is a tiny $25 million.
According to Katharine Seelye on the New York Times's Prescriptions blog, "the
comparatively small budget seems commensurate with the administration's level of
interest in the subject."
The upshot is simple: A few thousand trial lawyers are blocking reform that
would benefit 300 million Americans. This is not just your normal
special-interest politics. It's a scandal—it is as if international-trade policy
was being crafted in order to get fees for customs agents.
Trial lawyers are agents, and their claims are only as valid as those they
represent. They argue, of course, that they are champions of malpractice
victims. As Anthony Tarricone, president of the trial lawyers association
(called the American Association of Justice) put it: "Trial attorneys see
first-hand the effects medical errors have on patients and their families. We
should keep those injured people in mind as the debate moves forward." But under
the current system, 54 cents of the malpractice dollar goes to lawyers and
administrative costs, according to a 2006 study in the New England Journal of
Medicine. And because the legal process is so expensive, most injured patients
without large claims can't even get a lawyer. "It would be hard to design a more
inefficient compensation system," says Michelle Mello, a professor of law and
public health at Harvard, "or one which skewed incentives more away from candor
and good practices."
Trial lawyers also suggest they alone are the bulwark against ineffective
care, citing a 1999 study by the Institute of Medicine that "over 98,000 people
are killed every year by preventable medical errors." But the same study found
that distrust of the justice system contributes to these errors by chilling
interaction between doctors and patients. Trials lawyers haven't reduced the
errors. They've caused the fear.
An effective justice system must reliably distinguish between good care and
bad care. But trial lawyers trade on the unreliability of justice. It doesn't
matter much whether the doctor did anything wrong—a lawyer can always come up
with a theory of what might have been done differently. What matters most is the
extent of the tragedy and that a case holds potential for pulling on a jury's
heartstrings.
Former Sen. John Edwards, for example, made a fortune bringing 16 cases
against hospitals for babies born with cerebral palsy. Each of those tragic
cases was worth millions in settlement. But according to a 2006 study at the
National Institutes of Health, in nine out of 10 cases of cerebral palsy nothing
done by a doctor could have caused the condition.
Unreliable justice is like pouring acid over the culture of health care. One
in 10 obstetricians have stopped delivering babies, unable to pay malpractice
premiums on the order of $1,000 per baby, according to the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). Some hospitals, including Methodist
Hospital and Chestnut Hill Hospital in Philadelphia, have stopped delivering
babies altogether; and the number of unnecessary caesarian sections have
increased to the detriment of the health of mothers, according to the ACOG.
Trial lawyers scoff at the idea of special health courts. "First you have a
court for doctors," a spokesperson for the trial lawyers, Linda Lipsen, recently
said, "and then what? A court for plumbers?" But America has a long tradition of
special courts for situations where expertise and consistency are
important—bankruptcy courts, tax courts, workers compensation tribunals, vaccine
liability tribunals, Social Security tribunals, and many more.
Trial lawyers often claim that any alternative to the current medical
malpractice justice system, such as specialized health courts, will only make it
more difficult for injured patients to seek justice. But that's why you start
with a pilot project. If these courts are unfair they will be rejected. But if
they succeed—that is, are fairer to patients and doctors—they could provide a
solid foundation for rebuilding an effective, less costly health-care system
than we have today.
Mr. Howard, a lawyer and author, is chairman of Common Good (www.commongood.org).
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