The Malpractice ProblemPublished: 2009-11-03 00:59:57Author: Stanley Goldfarb | CBS News | October 28, 2009The extra imaging study, the extra day in hospital at the end of an
admission, the repetitive laboratory testing, the admission to the
hospital to be "sure" about the diagnosis are all inherent in the
culture of American medical care. The avoidance of litigation has
become ingrained into all aspects of medical care. Since physicians are
not liable for the increased costs of care but are liable for any error
or missed diagnosis, it would be foolish for them to act in any other
fashion. The costs of this mindset cannot be easily assessed by
surveys.
No one can identify how the current health care bills being debated
and apparently continuously modified in Congress will reduce the cost
of health care. They may produce a reduction in insurance premiums for
some, but just paying less for health care does not magically produce a
diminution in the actual cost of health care. The latter would only
occur if there were large profits in the overall health care enterprise
that could be trimmed without changing the basic character of the
system. But no one has identified such profits. The president points to
for-profit insurance companies, but for-profit insurance companies only
make up 25 percent of the system and they are not that profitable,
ranking 85th among all U.S. industries. "Reform" will redistribute the
money, not reduce the overall cost. This is pretty much what the
American Health Insurance Plans study, so denigrated by the president,
concluded. Unless the costs of health care fall, lowering insurance
payments in one segment of the populace will inevitably cause an
increase for some other group.
There is much that can be done to make our system more efficient.
Tort reform is a great place to start. Medical errors are common and
fairness demands that compensation be paid when someone is injured.
However, the price for the current system is enormous. The view from
the left is that the direct costs of the current malpractice system --
the actual payout of dollars in lawsuits -- are pretty minimal compared
to overall health care spending. The indirect costs, the use of tests
and procedures to avoid lawsuits, are also said to be overstated in
studies, as those who answer surveys about this issue are assumed to be
biased. The view from the right is precisely the opposite and ascribes
an important component of health care spending to malpractice costs.
This view also blames the lawyers.
The experience in Texas, where there is a law capping payments for
pain and suffering to $250,000, suggests some benefit. For example, as
reported in the Wall Street Journal, malpractice suits have been
dramatically reduced. The year before the caps on pain and suffering
payments took effect, there were over 1,100 medical liability suits
filed in Dallas. Only 142 cases were filed in 2004. In addition, there
was a surge of physicians entering Texas to set up practice as
malpractice premiums fell by about 50 percent. Texas also is actually a
state with low health care spending. According to the National Center
for Policy Analysis, although Texas is fifth highest in Medicare
spending per capita, it is 43rd in per capita spending for the state's
entire population. Whether the malpractice caps in Texas account in any
way for these data is uncertain but the pattern is encouraging.
Full story