Re: Damage Cap Hits Some Hard

From: Gerald P. Rodríguez (geraldpr@cybermesa.com)
Wed Jul 14 10:54:39 2004


Sorry, I should have spelled out that the $140M reduced to $56M was the lawyers' portion.

gpr

>----- Original Message -----
From: "Gerald P. Rodríguez" <geraldpr@cybermesa.com> To: "Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L" <ob-gyn-l@dns.obgyn.net> Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2004 9:34 AM Subject: Re: Damage Cap Hits Some Hard

> I believe that the on-line Wall St. Journal is by subscription only. My
> print version of the WSJ yesterday (July 13) carried what is most
certainly > this same story on its "Personal Health" page, D-4. Headline reads
> "Malpractice Cap Helps Out Doctors.'' The article cites a Rand Corp.
> Institute of Civil Justice study that studied the long term effects of the
> 1975 "California Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act" that imposed
limits > on attorney fees and capped jury awards for "non-economic" damages, such
as > pain and suffering.
>
> Simply put, there was an overall cut in jury awards of 30% on the payouts
> from doctors and their insurers who *lose* at trial. These cuts are
> allocated as coming from patients and lawyers: 15% from injured patients
and > 60% from [now] injured lawyers. The cases reviewed by Rand would have
> yielded $140M (total of 257 plaintiff verdicts, from 1995 to 1999) but for
> this law that reduced these fees to $56M, or 60%. The overall awards
would > have been $421M, but this was cut by the trial judges by 30% to $295M.
The > article goes on to postulate that lawyers (in California) will be a bit
more > hesitant to file a lawsuit in cases that do not result in large economic
> damages.
>
> Another interesting factoid: 22% of the malpractice trials during the
study > period resulted in a victory for one or more plaintiffs.
>
> Bottom line according to the WSJ: Lawyers lost a lot more than patients.
>
> We have a similar law in New Mexico.
>
> BTW the US Senate a few days ago killed the federal version of this law,
> passed earlier by the House.
>
> Gerald P. Rodríguez, M.D., FACOG
> Santa Fe
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> "There is nothing so pitilessly and unconsciously cruel as
> sincerity formulated into dogma." In defense of Abe Lincoln.
> --James Russell Lowell 1863
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>

>> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <dean@thehuffpeople.net>
> To: "Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L" <ob-gyn-l@dns.obgyn.net>
> Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2004 8:13 AM
> Subject: Re: Damage Cap Hits Some Hard
>
> > .
> >
> > Interesting. Do you have a reference or a copy of the article that we
can > read?
> >
> > - - - -
> >
> > Quoting "Gerald P. Rodríguez" <geraldpr@cybermesa.com>:
> >
> > > This is a very interesting take on this news story. The Wall St.
> Journal
> > > today carries that news and says that the brunt of the savings has
been > at
> > > the expense of the tort/trial lawyers. I would prefer to believe that
> > > *this* is the real version of the truth.
> > >
> > > Gerald P. Rodríguez, M.D., FACOG
> > > Santa Fe
> > >
> > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > > "There is nothing so pitilessly and unconsciously cruel as
> > > sincerity formulated into dogma." In defense of Abe Lincoln.
> > > --James Russell Lowell 1863
> > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > >

>> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: <rmodugno@aol.com>
> > > To: "Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L" <ob-gyn-l@dns.obgyn.net>
> > > Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 8:54 PM
> > > Subject: Damage Cap Hits Some Hard
> > >
> > > > This story was sent to you by: Robert Modugno
> > > >
> > > > --------------------
> > > > Damage Cap Hits Some Hard
> > > > --------------------
> > > > --------------------
> > > > --------------------
> > > >
> > > > Savings from a state medical malpractice law limiting awards often
> come at
> > > expense of the most injured, study says.
> > > >
> > > > By Lisa Girion
> > > > Times Staff Writer
> > > >
> > > > July 13 2004
> > > >
> > > > California's landmark medical malpractice law has reduced jury
awards > by
> > > 30%, but the savings have come largely at the expense of severely
> injured or
> > > impaired patients, according to a study released Monday.
> > > >
> > > > The complete article can be viewed at:
> > > >
> > >
> >
>

http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-malpractice13jul13,1,2783923.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-business > > > >
> > > > Visit Latimes.com at http://www.latimes.com
> > > >
> > >
> >
>





use when must restrict search to only the ob-gyn-l forum...
Enter search keywords:
Returns per screen: Require all keywords:

Return to  OB-GYN-L Mail a New Message to the Forum: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net
Forum Administrator: geffrey.klein@obgyn.net
Report Technical Problems: webmaster@obgyn.net
Last Updated: Wed Jul 2 04:37:36 2008

The American Medical Association is no longer designating CME hours for AMA Category II CME credit. However, physicians themselves may self designate learning activities as Category II CME credit hours if they feel it is of sufficient educational merit and meets the formal definitions of continuing medical education. OBGYN.net believes these interaction in this forum meets these criteria. For further information see the AMA web site.