Kevin Drum reports on Tom Baker's The Medical Malpractice Myth:
1 There's a lot more genuine medical malpractice than you think. A long string of studies has shown that about 1 out of 100 hospitalized patients are victims of negligent malpractice. These studies were supervised by doctors and used a very strict definition of "negligent."Baker also has a proposed solution, which he calls the Patient Protection and Healthcare Responsibility Act. The four main goals of PPHRA are to reduce the actual amount of malpractice; provide patients with more information up front so they can decide if they are the victims of malpractice; make compensation for medical injuries fairer; and regulate the boom-and-bust insurance cycle that's responsible for the skyrocketing insurance premiums that are so disruptice for doctors.
2 Most victims never sue. Less than 5% of patients who are victims of negligence file a claim.
3 Patients who bring weak claims usually do so only because hospitals refuse to disclose information about their quality of care unless they are taken to court. Patients who learn that their care was reasonable usually drop their claims.
4 What's more, contrary to myth, insurance companies very seldom pay off weak claims even if patients continue to pursue them.
5 Rising malpractice awards are not responsible for skyrocketing insurance premiums. The insurance cycle is.
6 In any case, the evidence that fear of malpractice suits produces significant amounts of defensive medicine is pretty thin — although a small amount of defensive medicine does exist. Likewise, the evidence that malpractice payouts are driving doctors out of practice is low and mostly restricted to doctors in rural areas — which have been losing doctors for decades for financial reasons anyway.
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