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Net Malpractice Payouts Stayed Flat, Net Premiums Increased 120%From: R. Daniel Braun (dean@thehuffpeople.net)Thu Jul 7 14:22:08 2005
.. Net Malpractice Suit Payouts Stayed Flat, Net Premiums Increased 120% Over Last Five Years, Study Says Net medical malpractice claims paid by 15 large insurers nationwide did not increase between 2000 and 2004, but net premiums increased by 120% over the same period, according to a study scheduled for release on Thursday by the consumer advocacy group Center for Justice and Democracy <http://www.centerjd.org/>, the New York Times <http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/07/business/07insure.html?> reports. The claims totals in the study are calculated net of reinsurance payments. According to the study, between 2000 and 2004, the increase in malpractice insurance premiums collected by the 15 insurers was 21 times the increase in paid claims. In addition, between 2000 and 2004, the incurred-loss ratio -- the ratio of claims to premiums collected -- for the 15 insurers decreased by almost 25% to 51.4%, the study found. Nine of the 15 insurers reviewed in the study are mutual insurers owned by policyholders, and three are publicly traded companies that are part of larger conglomerates. The other three insurers reviewed are publicly traded companies that specialize in malpractice, and their stock prices each have each increased by more than 100% since May 2002. Jay Angoff, a consultant on the study and a former Missouri insurance commissioner, said, "In recent years, medical malpractice hasn't been unprofitable, but it's been phenomenally profitable." According to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal (D), the results of the study "have the potential to alter the debate fundamentally from seeming to cast the rapacious personal injury lawyers as the complete culprits and the insurers as innocent bystanders with doctors as victims to the insurers as equally responsible, if not more so."
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