Editor:
Recent revelations about the number of doctors practicing in
Pennsylvania have cast serious doubt on whether there is, in fact, a
"malpractice crisis."
Yet,
despite a glaring lack of credible evidence, politicians in Harrisburg
are rushing headlong toward taking away Pennsylvanians' Constitutional
rights by placing "caps" on the amount of money juries can
award victims.
Recent stories in The Morning Call of Allentown have completely
discredited claims by the Pennsylvania Medical Society of doctors
fleeing the state in droves. The Call quoted the Medical Society's chief
researcher admitting to an 800-doctor gain since 2002. Over the past
couple years, the medical lobby's count of fleeing doctors has
fluctuated wildly - from 1,700 to 1,200 to 1,000 and, most recently,
507. Those are numbers developed by the Medical Society and the American
Medical Association, so their credibility is suspect at best.
Meanwhile, state licensure figures and the number of physicians paying
into the state's MCARE Fund - numbers not controlled by the medical
lobby - have shown steady increases in recent years.
Democratic leaders have called for an independent, nonpartisan task
force to determine exactly how many doctors are practicing in
Pennsylvania.
Before lawmakers approve the drastic measure of caps to address the
"malpractice crisis," they should at least determine whether
there is one.
The Committee for Justice for All urges the people of Northeastern
Pennsylvania to call your state legislators and tell them to get the
facts before taking away our rights.
The Committee for Justice for All is a nonprofit Northeastern
Pennsylvania advocacy group fighting to preserve the integrity of the
civil justice system and the Constitutional right of all Americans to
trial by a jury of their peers.
Paul
R. Lyon, Executive Director
The Committee for Justice for All
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