Capping damages for pain and suffering and other noneconomic
losses in a medical-malpractice lawsuit is "unfair" to injured
patients, a study due out today says.
The report will come just three days after the Pennsylvania House
of Representatives passed a bill to amend the state constitution to
allow such limits on malpractice and other liability suits.
The legislation does not specify a dollar amount at which
noneconomic damages would be capped, nor does the report say at what
level such caps would be unfair to patients. California, for
example, caps pain-and-suffering damages at $250,000.
Written by Max Mehlman, director of the Law-Medicine Center at
Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland and a professor of both
law and biomedical ethics, the 100-page report seems to undermine a
key change - noneconomic damage caps - promoted by the medical and
business communities in their two-year lobbying campaign.
Mehlman's analysis is part of the two-year, $3.2 million Project
on Medical Liability in Pennsylvania funded by the Pew Charitable
Trusts.
"Flat caps on noneconomic damages, which arbitrarily deny
compensation to the most seriously injured patients" are unfair,
Mehlman's report says.
However, the report recognizes that rising malpractice premiums
could create a shortage of doctors and hospital services.
"At some point, even severely injured patients would lose more by
being denied access to health care than by being unfairly
compensated for their injuries," the report says.
Chuck Moran, a spokesman for the Pennsylvania Medical Society,
said: "That is why we believe a reasonable limit on noneconomic
damages in malpractice suits is necessary."
David Lutz, president of the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers
Association, said yesterday that Mehlman's report confirmed the
argument his group has made.
"Here we have an objective source confirming that the most
seriously injured people would suffer unfairly if damage caps were
imposed," Lutz said. "We would hope that the General Assembly would
take note of this Pew report and give it weight."
Other malpractice changes Mehlman classifies as unfair include:
shortening the statute of limitations and "expert screening of
claims, because decision-makers are unlikely to be neutral and
impartial."
Mehlman finds that some widely debated changes to the malpractice
system are fair, including: limits on lawyers' contingency fees, the
payment of damages over time, stronger regulation of insurers, and
measures to deter frivolous suits.
"Fair compensation and fewer medical errors are not the only
objectives of the malpractice system," the report concludes. "It is
also vital to maintain patient access to health care, an
economically viable health-care sector, and a sustainable
malpractice financing system."
Last week, another Pew-funded study found that Pennsylvania is
among the states hardest hit by rising malpractice insurance
premiums.
Andrew Wigglesworth of the Delaware Valley Healthcare Council,
which represents area hospitals, said caps on noneconomic damages
had merit today.
"People absolutely need to be fairly compensated if they are
injured as a result of medical negligence," Wigglesworth said.
"I would argue, however, that it is unfair to the rest of the
community, which is seeing hospital maternity units close and trauma
centers shut down, not to rein in this out-of-control malpractice
system. Caps on noneconomic damages are a reasonable compromise
given the extraordinary cost of the current system."
Some experts argue that the malpractice system in Pennsylvania
and elsewhere is fundamentally unfair because it compensates too few
injured patients and provides some of those with excessively large
awards, the study notes.
Those experts argue that a no-fault system "would make the system
less expensive, prevent patient injury, and compensate more injured
patients."
But in Harrisburg, reducing premiums for doctors and hospitals,
not completely reinventing the malpractice system, is the focus of
policymakers.
Gov. Rendell released his malpractice package on Monday. It
included using $600 million in state money to help doctors pay for
malpractice coverage.
And with the House passage Tuesday of a bill to amend the state
constitution to allow damage caps, that legislation moves on to the
Senate, which is unlikely to vote on it until after the summer
recess.
A constitutional amendment must pass the General Assembly twice -
once in each of two consecutive two-year legislative sessions - and
then pass a voter referendum. That process could be completed in the
spring of 2005 at the earliest.
Susan Liss, executive director of the Pew-funded project, said "a
solution in Pennsylvania cannot be achieved without finding new ways
of looking at the issues. Focusing on patient fairness might help
break the gridlock."