By Ceci Connolly
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 10, 2005; Page A08
In his pitch for legislation imposing a "hard cap of $250,000" on
medical malpractice awards for non-economic damages, President Bush points the
finger at what he calls "a broken medical liability system." But a new
analysis of malpractice claims filed over 15 years in his home state of Texas
found no such crisis there. "We find no evidence of the medical malpractice crisis that produced
headlines over the last several years and led to legal reform in Texas and other
states," a group of four legal scholars concluded in a report being
released today. "What we found is a sea of calm" in Texas malpractice claim cases
from 1988 to 2002, said co-author David A. Hyman, a professor of law and
medicine at the University of Illinois. "So, at least in Texas, the tort
system can't be the cause of spikes in malpractice premiums." Texas was identified by the American Medical Association as one of more than
a dozen states suffering from a malpractice "crisis." The new study comes as the White House is touting its plan to limit
non-economic damages as a critical step in reining in health care costs. Bush,
the AMA and some conservative scholars argue that an onslaught of lawsuits --
and blockbuster jury awards -- have forced malpractice premiums to historically
high levels. "What's happening all across this country is that lawyers are filing
baseless suits against hospitals and doctors," Bush said in a recent speech
in Illinois. "So doctors end up paying tens of thousands, or even hundreds
of thousands, of dollars to settle claims, out of court, even when they know
they have done nothing wrong. "When insurance premiums rise, doctors have no choice but to pass some
of the costs on to their patients," Bush said. "If you're a patient,
it means you're paying a higher cost to go see your doctor." The Texas study found little to support those assertions. By virtually any
measure -- from number of claims filed to damages paid out -- the data reflect
amazing stability in the tort system, according to the peer-reviewed paper that
will appear in the May issue of the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies (www.utexas.edu/law/academics/centers/clcjm/preview).
"The clear implication is that 'runaway medical malpractice litigation'
makes a poor poster child for the cause of tort reform," the researchers
wrote. "The malpractice litigation system has many flaws, but at least in
Texas, sudden increases in claim frequencies and costs appear not to have been
among them." The team chose Texas because it is one of the few states with a publicly
available, comprehensive database of legal claims filed against physicians,
hospitals and other health care providers. Texas also is the second most
populous state and the third largest in health care spending. Malpractice insurance premiums in Texas rose an average of 135 percent from
1999 to 2002, prompting the state legislature to cap non-economic damages in
2003. Analyzing claims data from 1988 to 2002, the team found little change in the
number of claims filed or the total amount paid in damages, when adjusted for
population growth and inflation. The total number of claims per physician
actually declined from 1995 to 2002, and 80 percent of cases were resolved
without payment by the physicians or hospital. When adjusted for Texas's economic growth, "total payouts fell by $6
million annually," the analysis found. The $515 million in malpractice
payouts in 2002 represented 0.6 percent of health care spending in Texas that
year. "It's very hard to take the position malpractice is a major factor in
the increases in the cost of health care," Hyman said. "The actual
cost of malpractice payouts is really quite modest." Texas had its share of eye-poppingly large settlements. "But, contrary
to conventional wisdom, they are not increasing," the report said.
Settlements of more than $1 million have represented about 5 percent of the
total number of claims, or about 53 cases each year. Legal defense costs also
rose, but at a steady rate that can be easily managed by insurers, according to
the report. The study did not address whether doctors are practicing "defensive
medicine" -- ordering extra tests and procedures -- to guard against future
litigation. "The fact that a lot of doctors are getting sued may be problematic, but
it doesn't explain the premium increases" for malpractice or health
insurance, Hyman said. "Our point, which has been largely neglected in the furious battle over
malpractice liability, is that attempts to avoid crises in malpractice insurance
prices should focus on insurance, not litigation," wrote the group, which
included two professors at the University of Texas Law School and William Sage,
a physician and law professor at Columbia University. Although he had not yet studied the report, Donald Palmisano, immediate past
president of the AMA, said that in the 18 months since Texas enacted its caps,
one major insurer reduced malpractice premiums 17 percent and new carriers have
expressed interest in covering doctors in the state. "The most important thing passed on to the patient is that physicians
are available," he said. Paul B. Ginsburg, president of the Center for Studying Health System Change,
said the analysis provides fresh evidence that malpractice premiums "are
not a particularly important driver" of overall health care costs.