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Obama Tort Reform Initiative Won't Get Us Far

By Ken Terry | Sep 18, 2009

When President Obama proposed state demonstration projects to address the high cost of malpractice insurance and defensive medicine, he was not only playing to Republicans who have long advocated it, but also to the AMA, which regards tort reform as one of its top priorities. But after the White House revealed the details of its plan today, some physician leaders were upset. The Washington Post quoted Peter Levine, head of the Medical Society of the District of Columbia, as saying that the $25 million program announced by the President was “smoke and mirrors.” Some physicians even suggested that Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid, who is reportedly close to trial lawyers, had put the fix in to prevent a more robust malpractice initiative from being included in Sen. Max Baucus’ reform bill. (Reid denies it.)

Regardless, the White House program is kind of wimpy. First, $25 million is barely a throat-clearing exercise for demonstration projects in other areas of government, such as Medicare. Second, the program has the two-fold aim of improving patient safety and trying out different approaches to tort reform. So it’s not even clear what it’s trying to accomplish. And third, the amounts of competitive grants being given to individual states–$3 million each over three years for evaluation and $300,000 each for implementation–are little more than seed money that the states would have to supplement to launch the demonstrations. Considering the crisis in the economy and state budgets, that seems far-fetched.

Not all federal initiatives involving states are necessarily doomed. For example, the medical home campaign recently announced by Medicare will also depend on state efforts. But if Medicare weighs in with a decent dollop of funds, many states might be interested, because this demonstration project could lead to cost savings in their own Medicaid programs. But states are unlikely to benefit from a reduction in malpractice costs, except to the extent that high insurance premiums are driving physicians out of their states. Moreover, Democratic state officeholders are less likely than their Republican counterparts to support tort reform.

Ultimately, however, the federal government cannot implement tort reform on its own, as long as the states retain authority over malpractice suits and liability insurance. So Washington and the states will have to find a way to work together to address the inequities of malpractice liability, which is driving up health costs without providing justice to the majority of injured patients.

Ken Terry, a former senior editor at Medical Economics Magazine, is the author of the book Rx For Health Care Reform. follow all BNET Healthcare posts on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    Dr. O

    09/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Obama Tort Reform Initiative Won't Get Us Far

    I don't understand how the trial lawyers continue to hold so much sway over our legislatures. Money is thier obvious leverage but if our legislatures actually have the welfare of citizens foremost in thier minds, they would limit the percentage awards given to lawyers and further limit the frivoulos expenses that the lawyers claim in putting together legitimate patient claims. After all is it really likely that we will have to do with less legal representation if we don't pay lawyers so much? The insurance companies are also shameless in this battle in the way that they exploit the media and advertise in thier own promotional liturature how much medical claims actually cost. It is a great deal less then what most people and doctors think it is and the costs are actually controlled largely by the Insurance companies themselves when they pull out all the stops in defending practitioners who actually have made a mistake that damaged a patient. Judges also bear a burden in this issue. As long as the legal battles rage on the way they have for the last fiftly years, the lawyers win?

  •  
    2

    verycold

    09/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Obama Tort Reform Initiative Won't Get Us Far

    What is interesting is that Obama has routinely blasted doctors for performing unnecessary procedures insisting it is all because the doctor will get paid better. For some strange reason Obama is unwilling or not capable of connecting the dots and realizing that often doctors prescribe medicines and procedures to protect themselves. Why is that concept hard to comprehend?

    So that leaves us with the only option, his party's close ties with trial lawyers for his refusal to see that tort reform is of course necessary with any reform. Reform is a big umbrella and everybody needs to make concessions. It wasn't one group that has gotten out of line, it is an entire industry with related industries that need reining in.

  •  
    3

    dkberry

    09/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Obama Tort Reform Initiative Won't Get Us Far

    "For some strange reason Obama is unwilling or not capable of connecting the dots .... Why is that concept hard to comprehend?"

    1. he's a lawyer ... 2. the inconvenient truth ... 3. surrounded by those whose professional background is supporting trial lawyers... such as Sebelius who was lobby for them.

    With academia in his pocket there are no independant studies that show the impact of not the the awards but the cost of insurance for the practitioner. Studies funded by the medicos or insurance companies are looked at as flawed... while the academic pieces simply spend grant money to deliver the perspective of those who hired them... legislators who are lawyers.

  •  
    4

    verycold

    09/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Obama Tort Reform Initiative Won't Get Us Far

    Over and over this administration says that if the bill is bad they will own it. So as an example, did health insurance reform in Mass actually help reduce cost and give health care to all? Well it seems that the stats say that more MA residents have access to health care than other states. The flip side is that the cost is bankrupting the state and there are far too few doctors to see all the patients and thus longer wait periods. This was Mitt's conception carried on by democrats. Is anybody proud and owning this reform?

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