Talk:Medical malpractice in the United States

Latest comment: 3 years ago by 74.130.71.163 in topic Suggestion for this page

I think the political controversy section should look something like this:

History of the insurance debate edit

Most medical providers and medical institutions have liability insurance, which protects them from claims up to the limits of their coverage. This is called indemnity. Insurance policies also provide for the legal defense in the case of a lawsuit, including the legal expenses and costs of experts and trial preparation. Some providers do not have insurance at all, or are self-insured. Malpractice insurance is regulated by each state, and rates vary depending on the type of specialty and, sometimes, the claims history of the person or institution. Rates are set each year.

Claims that there is a problem with malpractice insurance. According to the Insurance Information Institute, early in the 1970s, many insurance companies left the business due to the “rising claims and inadequate rates.” Responding to the lack of insurers, many doctor-owned malpractice insurance companies were established to provide affordable coverage. These companies had not experienced deficits and we(re) initially able to charge low rates. As time passed, these doctor-owed insurance companies constantly lost money on patient claims and were forced to increase the rates. Today, nearly fifty percent of medical malpractice insurance companies are doctor-owned and operated.[1] Insurance rates have continued to increase faster than the rate of inflation, though less rapidly in states that have passed tort reforms; according to the United States Department of Health and Human Services, "[m]alpractice reforms in the 1980s led to a 34% decline in malpractice premiums in those states that enacted reforms compared with states that did not enact reforms."[2].

Tort reform advocates claim that the study by the Center for Justice and Democracy reached its conclusion by deliberately omitting data from a health insurer, St. Paul, that left the business after a multi-billion dollar loss; when that data is included, the study results in the opposite conclusion: "In failing to take account for the market exit of some of the industry's largest players, mismatching premiums and losses, hand-picking dates to skew results, and painting a deceptive picture of the insurance industry's profitability, CJD's research is at best shoddy and at worst intentionally misleading."[3] An October 2005 study by the Health Coalition on Liability and Access found that the CJD study was "critically flawed" and that, once those flaws were fixed, there is "no evidence that medical malpractice insurance is overpriced."[4]

The argument that there is no insurance problem. The Center for Justice and Democracy released a study arguing that insurance companies have enjoyed increasing profits while medical malpractice claims and payouts remained constant.[5]

Economists have recently studied several questions central to the medical malpractice debate. While it has been claimed that excessive jury awards are responsible for increases in malpractice insurance rates, verdicts constitute only 4% of the medical malpractice payouts, with insurance company settlements comprising 96% of the payouts.[6] The same researchers found that the increases in payouts have been consistent with increases in the costs of health care.[7] Economists from Dartmouth College and the National Bureau of Economic Research have also found that "increases in malpractice payments made on behalf of physicians do not seem to be the driving force behind increases in premiums," and that "there is little evidence of increased use of many treatments in response to malpracticed liability at the state level, although there may be some increase in screening procedures such as mammography."[8]

Today edit

There are various bills that have been proposed in the U.S. Congress and in several states that would cap non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases at $250,000, and some proposals have included provisions permitting states to pass legislation that would override such a cap.

The arguments for reform. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the bill will reduce medical malpractice insurance rates in states that do not have caps by 25-30%. Some within the medical profession, insurance industries, and numerous lawyers and economists argue that the current American medical malpractice litigation system increases the cost of health care and threatens access to health care for all Americans. Supporters of tort reform contend that studies show that very few medical liability lawsuits stem from what they call true malpractice that very few cases of actual malpractice end up in suits, and that malpractice verdicts are just as likely to punish innocent doctors as wrongdoers. They argue that the cost of defensive medicine, in which physicians order tests or treatments or hospitalizations for medico-legal rather than clinical reasons, is as large as $50 billion per year, money that could be better used to improve health care elsewhere. The American Medical Association argues that excessive malpractice liability deters many doctors from practicing, and that the problem is especially acute for obstetricians and neurosurgeons; others dispute this.

Reform advocates suggest that N.Y. Times columnist Herbert's claim that the "insurance companies are doing fine" is directly contradicted, however, by the fact that in 2003 insurance companies had a combined ratio of 137.5, paying out $1.375 in medical malpractice defense costs, judgments, and settlements for every dollar collected in premiums.[9] Herbert's analysis was heavily criticized by supporters of tort reform as inaccurate in many other respects.[10], [11], [12].

The arguments against reform. In response, some consumer groups, patient rights organizations and lawyers who handle medical malpractice claims argue that the quality of health care in the United States of America is among the best in the world, and they contend that this results in part from the ability of citizens to obtain an effective judicial remedy when they are victimized by medical malpractice, and that any extra cost imposed is justified by what they consider the extra benefit. Defenders of the current system claim that there is virtually no frivolous medical malpractice litigation, because the high cost of pursuing medical malpractice claims, and the alleged reluctance of physicians to testify against their colleagues, forces plaintiffs' lawyers to spend large sums of money to litigate even minor malpractice claims. Bob Herbert, an opponent of tort reform and a columnist for the New York Times, writes: "the problem when it comes to malpractice is not the amount of money the insurance companies are making (they're doing fine) or the rates the doctors have to pay, but rather the terrible physical and emotional damage that is done to so many unsuspecting patients who fall into the hands of careless or incompetent medical personnel....What is needed is a nationwide crackdown on malpractice, not a campaign to roll back the rights of patients who are injured."[13]

Related discussions There are many other disputes relating to the question of medical malpractice reform; see tort reform and non-economic damages caps.

Common Good has proposed creating specialized medical courts to improve the American system; opponents of tort reform object to the idea.[14]

First section (after the introduction) edit

Needs some work. This really slants toward one side. Although the side opposing reform (for lack of a better term) is discussed in one paragraph, it is quickly rebutted. However, the 'pro' slant in the following paragraph is not rebutted. This is a very slanted article, still. I will try to work on it, as time permits.MollyBloom 02:55, 25 June 2006 (UTC)Reply


This is an article on Medical Malpractice NOT TORT REFORM edit

This is NOT a tort reform article. IF WIkipedia is to be taken halfway seriously as an encyclopedia, it should be written as one, and not a political debate forum. IN fact, there should not even be an entry on 'tort reform'. THe online Encyclopedia Brittanica does not have one, for good reason. The tort reform article, for example, uses references - both for and against tort reform - that violate WIkipedia 'reliable sources' guidelines. Almost ALL of them do, because the article is by defnition a political debate, and not an encyclopedic entry.jgwlaw 01:42, 10 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

An article on medical malpractice should inform the reader what the medical and legal definitions of medical malpractice are. It is not a propaganda opportunity to get one's point of view out on tort reform in the guise of informing. Accordingly, I deleted the external references as not really germane to this article. Most, if not all, were polemics regarding lawsuits. If I inadvertently deleted one that was not a polemic and actually was informative as to what malpractice is, how often it occurs, etc. feel free to put it back. Gfwesq 02:38, 12 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Medical Malpractice - worldwide edit

This artilce needs a worldview, and statistics on actual medical malpractice, that are not political. WIkipedia is not a vehicle for tort reformists or other political views. IN fact, no *real* encyclopedia would even have an entry on tort reform -- I checked. I would welcome international discussion on areas of the law, or statistics - I'm afraid I am not well versed in international law.jgwlaw 02:32, 10 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Corrections to misstatements of law edit

I made corrections to misstatements of legal process and the law as follows:

  • The elements of medical malpractice (and cited a Yale reference) -- The basic elements (in US law) are virtually the same as common law tort, based on English law. However, I again welcome legal differences, if any, in other countries about which I am unfamiliar.

  • Settlement -- First, there is no need of an admission of liability, so I changed that. Second, motivations for settling are varied, so I removed the speculation. jgwlaw 05:44, 10 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • Legal process -- the settlement does not occur before the filing of a case; I also added appropriate jurisdiction; and changed the comment on insurance and lawyer bringing the case. Cases can and are filed pro-se. There are doctors who choose not to take out medical malpractice insurance, It is better to keep this factual, and within the parameters of the legal process.
  • Judge and Jury - are not always untrained in medicine. Again, making generalizations is not wise in discussing legal issues. Secondly the fact-finder is not required by law to rely on experts. Experts must establish the standard of care, but the fact-finder must decide as to which expert is more credible, in the frequent case of 'dueling experts'. Expert witnesses must be qualified through a Daubert process (federal courts) or the relevant state court evidentiary rule (In Florida, it is Frye rule). I am not sure how much we want to go into this - input welcome.

I think that this article misstates the Frye and Daubert tests. Frye wasn't based on a Federal Rule, it was based on case law. Daubert was based on the Federal rules which were written after Frye, and expands the rule, not restricts it - it includes the Frye test, but it also considers other factors. And it doesn't have just 4 tests, it has more then that including the Frye test which isn't listed. One of those unlisted tests includes the ability of courts to evaluate any other relevant factors. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.226.234.201 (talk) 18:20, 4 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

NOT Tort Reform; Political articles and POV edit

I want any objective editor to look at this edit by Oliver and justify how this is accurate (with references and correct reading of such), and anything but POV. I cannot comprehend how anyone would dare try to turn Wikipedia into a blatant political vehicle, but it appears to be happening.

The group, Common Good has proposed creating specialized medical courts to improve the American system where almost 60% of all plaintif judgments are now consumed by attorney fees & court costs. These specialty "Health Courts" (similar to existing administrative tax or workmen's comp court proceedings)whose hallmark would be medically-trained, full-time judges making precedent-setting decisions about proper standards of care, would remedy the unreliability of our current system.

Proponents believe that giving up jury trials and scheduling noneconomic damages such as pain and suffering would lead to more people being compensated, and to their receiving their money sooner. Support for this alternative comes from sources ranging from The National Law Journal [1],the USA Today editorial page [2], The Wall Street Journal [3], Forbes magazine, the AMA, and the American College of Surgeons. The Harvard School of Public Health has been working with the Common Good initiative[4]in conducting research to answer unresolved health court policy questions by analyzing individual state constitutional impediments to health courts, doing projected cost analyses, developing a tiered schedule for noneconomic damages-which would have upper limits-and working out the standards for compensation.

Opponents of tort reform object to the idea.[5]

Now, the entire paragraph is pro 'tort reform' with one sentence that "Opponents of tort reform object to the idea." Can ANYONE justify NPOV on this? Also, the 60% reference is from an uncited report and the 60% not only misrpresented, but it is also out of context. THe actual report concluded that there was no effect on the cost of health care. jgwlaw 01:56, 11 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I'm sorry if you're anable to understand the relevence of this to malpractice, but it is indeed an increasingly popular idea being debated (this past week) in congress. This is an area where tort reform & med-mal overlap. There is not much POV in Common Good's ideas of pointing out the inefficiency, irrationality, and unpredictability of how we process med-mal claims American style.Droliver 00:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
The above says all that needs to be said about Rob Oliver's POV. Common Good is a 'tort reform' advocate. And, as usual, Rob does not provide references for his claims. I have explained the objection to the above paragraph in detail. jgwlaw 00:18, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I agree the info as added was propaganda. That said, this information and a larger section on criticism of medical malpractive lawsuits should be added to this article, just in a NPOV format. As it is now, the article is solely lacking because it lacks any criticism section at all. I'm going to work up a NPOV section on this, which I hope people will support.--Alabamaboy 14:25, 4 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

External link edit

I am an administrator here on the Wikipedia and am functioning as a neutral third party. Mike Teflon (talk) and I have been discussing linking to his site. Specifically, he would like to add a link to [http://www.millerandzois.com/malpractice-complaint-medical.html this article on medical malpractice. He believes it adds information which would be of general use to readers of this article. However, it is on a site that belongs to Mike Teflon so I suggested that he put the link up for discussion amongst the other editors of this page. Please speak up one way or another. If nobody objects within a week or so, I've said Mike can go ahead and add the link. If people object, though, my understanding is that Mike will not add the link. If you wish to reach me (that is, not Mike Teflon), please contact me directly on my user talk page. Thanks. --Yamla 02:10, 20 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

This is well said, thank you. I believe this is one of the few sample medical malpractice complaints available on the web and I think it would be of particular interest for someone using Wikpedia for the basic type of research the typical user might engage in who was reaching this topic on this medium. Thanks.Mike Teflon 17:08, 20 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Linking to a plaintiff's attorney's home page which actively solicits clients adjacent to this sample is inappropriate. There would seem to be many other sources if you want to demonstrate thatDroliver 01:15, 17 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
I agree--that is a totally inappropriate link. And not that it should matter, but I'm also an admin here.--Alabamaboy 16:26, 21 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Let' go out on a crazy limb here - Droliver is a doctor who supports tort reform —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.111.91.77 (talk) 20:06, 26 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

criticims section edit

I'm somewhat disappointed that the segment re. criticism of american medical malpractice has been neutered & now includes sentiments that in fact belittle the critical view. Laying out the arguments for the status quo: unpredictability, expense, and the fall-out effects of affecting available medical services is an important theme for providing context for the med-mal climate in the USDroliver 02:05, 22 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Merge proposal edit

I suggest that this article should be merged with medical error. Comments? -- FP (talk)(edits) 10:26, 18 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

There is no support and some opposition to a merge so I will leave the articles separate. -- FP (talk)(edits) 04:24, 25 November 2006 (UTC)Reply
Agreed. This is an entirely different article, although there obviously will be some overlap. Jance 05:08, 11 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

contrasting view doesn't really contrast edit

The criticisms section summarizes one criticism, that "an estimated 60% of malpractice lawsuit expenses are now consumed by administrative, or transaction, costs (eg, lawyer fees, expert witness charges, court costs), as compared with 25% to 30% for systems such as workers' compensation". It then goes on to say that: "In contrast, trial lawyers have asserted that the medical malpractice crisis is a myth ... According to [a study], 'the vast majority of expenditures go toward litigation over errors and payment of them.'" But of course the defense that a large portion of expenditures go towards litigation does not contrast with the criticism that a large portion of expenditures go towards litigation. --Delirium 10:55, 1 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Actually, it does, to the extent that the expenses would be substantially less if unmeritorious defenses were never litigated thereby unduly driving up the costs of litigations with these extra expenses [for purposes of preventing future plaintiff's from brining suit, and while also indirectly affecting their own insured's cost]. The purpose of the criticism is an assumption there is bad faith on the insurance industries part in litigating unmeritorious defenses. The criticism assumes an underhanded public policy agenda on the insurance industry's part to prevent future injured victims from bringing suit. The insurance industry's position can only be justified if the 60% administrative cost is unavoidable. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.9.2.22 (talk) 20:04, 10 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

"Outpatient"/ "outpatient settings" undefined edit

I think it would be helpful to define what "outpatients" are in the Statistics section. It would also help to give examples of what the "outpatient settings" in the statistics refer to--are they homes? Kennard2 02:16, 3 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

"Healthcare" v. "Health care" -- which one? edit

Both spellings are used on this page, and I'd prefer consistency within *this* article (even if it conflicts with other pages' use) rather than being only partly consistent. Choosing one makes it easier to change later :)

timbo 21:17, 11 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

For what its worth, the private sector uses the single word. The Federal Government uses two words: "Agency for Health Care Policy and Research," "Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America," and the "Health Care Reform Commission."

Linguists and grammarists side with the government saying that adjectives are supposed to be separated from the nouns they modify, as in the words medical care, nursing home, and emergency room. And the style guides of most news organizations specify using two words just as they used to for air plane, baby sitting, back bone, cell phone, child care, cross walk, earth quake, fire works, foot ball, life time, play thing, scape goat, voice mail and web site until they had to give in to the private sector's turning those into single words. Which is what is happening now. The private sector is people doing what works for them rather than what rules dictate and is using the single word. I predict a one word future.

However, right now spell check programs tend to change the one word into two. And picky people correct us for not following the rules of grammar. So I plan to use two words until more programs and institutions give in to the momentum in the private sector and switch to one word.Sighalot (talk) 13:04, 25 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Removed POV tag edit

No explanation was given. There's no way to fix the article if you don't explain, and tags for the sake of having tags does nothing but clutter up the Wikipedia. Could you please clarify what the problem is? MoodyGroove 20:30, 3 February 2007 (UTC)MoodyGrooveReply

The article is not POV. Originally, the article was almost all about tort reform and nothing about the purported subject. I and others have since created an actual article on the subject of medical malpractice =- what it is, what the claim involves, and some statistics by NEMJ on medical error.Jance 05:22, 6 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Restoring POV tag edit

Reasons for restoring the POV tag.

  1. The IOM study is (1) disputed as an overestimate[15][16]; and (2) refers to "medical error", which is a different concept from "medical malpractice." Yet it is treated as unalloyed fact here.
  2. The Harvard School of Public Health study is cited as "supporting the trial lawyer" position. But critics also cite it as supporting their position.[17] Rather than characterizing the study, why not simply report its statistics that 40% of suits demonstrate no medical error or no medical injury and that the American litigation system erroneously gives compensation to the undeserving and withholds it from the deserving at an error rate greater than 27%, and let people decide for themselves if those numbers support the position of trial lawyers or reformers?
  3. The GAO report (fn 9) is mischaracterized to minimize the effect of malpractice litigation on malpractice insurance. "GAO found that losses on medical malpractice claims—which make up the largest part of insurers’ costs—appear to be the primary driver of rate increases in the long run."[18]
  4. Evidence of the impact of malpractice law on defensive medicine is missing from the article.[19]
  5. Statistical evidence that malpractice law does affect doctor location decisions and access to health care is missing from the article. E.g.[20] Instead, this demonstrated fact is characterized as merely being "asserted".
  6. In the footnotes, Towers Perrin, which takes no position in the reform debate, but releases statistics trial lawyers don't like, is falsely characterized as an "interested party"; its critics, a trial-lawyer-funded leftist group, are treated as neutral. The Towers Perrin figures are consistent with other figures, including those cited by the New York Times, no reform supporter it.

-- THF 01:21, 9 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

I would also recommend a discussion of the famous Merenstein JAMA article on medical malpractice (JAMA link), which I discussed here. -- THF 04:52, 20 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

I agree that these are all issues to be corrected in this article. Does anyone else have problems with doing this? If not, I say we go for it.--Alabamaboy 14:34, 20 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
The problems remain largely unresolved, though the article is slightly better than it was six months ago. THF 19:08, 12 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

And now the section is considerably worse because of a self-promotional edit from a lay software engineer who is the legal expert at a trial-lawyer-affiliated thinktank.[21] Every purported statement of fact made in that one-sided paragraph is heavily disputed (and, frankly, outright false, though I recognize WP:V permits one to include false statements, so long as they are sourced). Health Affairs published my refutation of the claim that Massachusetts malpractice insurance rates have been declining, which came from a dishonest study that misrepresented its own data.[22] THF (talk) 03:15, 1 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I put back the paragraph that you removed, that states that studies of these claims of increasing malpractice verdicts and insurance costs driving doctors out of business show the claims are just false, and provided references to a couple of the studies. It is just a fact that studies have found these claims are just false and that is what the paragraph says. Corporate-funded "tort reform" organizations (like yours) have an interest in promoting these stories, but the studies say that are false and a statement that studies have shown this shouldn't be kept from the public, however much you would like them kept from the public. You can keep removing the factual statement that there are studies that say the insurance company claims are false, but it is just a fact that there are such studies and people will keep putting them back. Dcourtneyjohnson (talk) 01:57, 2 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Also, the institute you refer to is not "trial-lawyer-affiliated" in any way. I spoke at the ATLA national convention once. And I was a software engineer a few decades ago, before I was a vp marketing, a CEO and a Fellow and a SR Fellow at think tanks.Dcourtneyjohnson (talk) 02:03, 2 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

You have a bad habit of making false accusations against me: I was not the editor who removed your paragraph. More credible studies have found these facts to be true; the WP:NPOV policy, which you seem not to be aware of, requires a neutral presentation of the issues. I also note your violation of the No personal attacks policy.
I also note that you violated WP:PROMOTION and WP:SPAM by inserting a reference to a non-notable study by your employer without getting consensus for it on the talk page. You may wish to review the conflict of interest policy, because you have yet to make an edit on Wikipedia mainspace that has complied with policy.
Separately, it's funny how you complain about "corporate-funded" think-tanks when your think-tank doesn't disclose its funding, but, since Wikipedia is not a chat-room, that's neither here nor there. THF (talk) 02:18, 2 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

There is no "personal attack." Commonweal Institute is not my "employer" - I am a Fellow, but they do not "employ" me. What you call a "non-notable" study is by Lewis L. Laska, J.D., Ph.D., Professor of Business Law, College of Business, Tennessee State University, Nashville, Tennessee and Managing Editor, Medical Malpractice Verdicts, Settlements & Experts, with Katherine Forrest, M.D., M.P.H., Co-Founder, Commonweal Institute. As you know there are many other studies that show that the insurance-company-funded claims that doctors are forced out of practice by lawsuits do not hold water.Dcourtneyjohnson (talk) 02:29, 2 March 2009 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dcourtneyjohnson (talkcontribs) 02:27, 2 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

The Texas and Pennsylvania experience contradicts your claims about doctor mobility, as do the best econometric studies on the issue. I say the Laska report isn't notable because it hasn't been noted by journalists or by scholars or by the leading books on medical malpractice. Per WP:UNDUE, it doesn't belong in this article at all. In any event, please review the policies I pointed out, because you don't seem to understand them. THF (talk) 02:53, 2 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

POV? edit

A couple of issues: first, I agree that medical error is not synonymous with medical malpractice, and these should be separated (after all, there's already a separate article on medical error). For example, when inserting a central line, there's around a 5% chance of causing a pneumothorax. Such an adverse event might qualify as a "medical error" in many classification schemes, but it would certainly not be malpractice: assuming that there was a valid indication for inserting the central line, pneumothorax is a known complication which occurs in a small number of cases and is discussed in informed consent. Second, there should probably be some more meaningful discussion of the shortcomings of the malpractice system (at least in the U.S.) - for example, the focus on individual screwups makes it very hard to effect systematic changes - it promotes a "bad-doctor" model of malpractice instead of a "bad-system" approach. Second, a jury of laymen is not necessarily versed enough to evaluate malpractice claims on their merits - it often comes down to whose expert witnesses are more convincing. Also, claims that have the potential for a large judgement (e.g. injured babies or children) are often prosecuted, while malpractice occurring in an elderly patient or one unlikely to yield a large financial outcome may be less likely to be litigated on the contingency system. I can source all of these viewpoints, and think they would probably be more meaningful "Criticism of malpractice lawsuits" that the somewhat strawman arguments that are currently listed. Just my 2 cents. MastCell 18:03, 19 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

The "Criticism of malpractice lawsuits" section can always be added to with the info you mention but I don't see why any of that section's info should be removed. --Alabamaboy 18:07, 19 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, I wasn't necessarily proposing to remove any of that section. I would propose to remove or drastically shorten the section on "statistics on medical errors", as a) medical errors and malpractice are not synonymous, and b) there's a main article on medical error already. MastCell 21:59, 19 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • Medical error may not be synonymous with medical malpractice, but that's only because medical malpractice is more broad. Medical error is certainly a significant component of medical malpractice. Let's not skirt the issue by suggesting that we're talking about known complications to commonly performed clinical procedures. We're talking about giving the wrong medication, operating on the wrong organ, accidentally turning off the ventilator, failing to notice that the patient is VF because the alarms are turned off, that sort of thing. Best, MoodyGroove 18:34, 7 March 2007 (UTC)MoodyGrooveReply
I think the point of the JAMA analysis was that there's a lack of clarity on what we're talking about when we use the term "medical error". With the more dramatic estimates, some proportion are not clear-cut mistakes like those you describe, but are known complications of procedures. Besides, purely on Wikipedia grounds, when a main article (medical error) already exists, we should briefly summarize any relevant points and direct the reader to the main article. Right now the section is way too long. MastCell 20:16, 7 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

inquiry edit

A doctor who is on methamphetamine - a daily user - and perscribes drugs to non-patients... this situation would be considered malpractice, yes? He exchanges perscriptions for drugs. Could there be a case against this? I'm addicted to a few forms of pills, and I do not think he should have that power in his hands. It has caused major setbacks in my life, including mental anguish and a loss of opportunities, such as school and family life. I know I play a major part in the fault. I accept that blame. does anyone have any information they can provide? my email address is LaArana83@sbcglobal.net. The name is Carlos Thanks, in advance —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.247.10.228 (talk)

I'm sorry, but this isn't the right forum to seek legal advice. MastCell Talk 02:45, 2 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Question edit

My dad went to the emergency room today when they found a growth in his lung. It was caused by Agent Orange during the Vietnam war. They went in to scrape it off with a tube thing they stuck down his throat and accidently punctured his lung. Is this ample grounds to sue that place for every goddamned penny they have? Or should I sue the government because they bombed there own men with a deadly toxic gas that started this mess in the first place? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sage1989 (talkcontribs) 18:19, 25 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

I'm very sorry to hear that, but unfortunately this isn't a forum where medical or legal advice can be provided. MastCell Talk 18:23, 25 April 2008 (UTC)Reply


Then can you please give me a link to a forum that can? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sage1989 (talkcontribs) 18:31, 25 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

I am correcting loquitur for *loquitor --Laocoont (talk) 10:04, 11 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Statute of limitations edit

It's not true that the statute of limitations in the US ranges between "1 and 4 years." For birth/pediatric injuries in some states, the statute is tolled until the age of majority, effectively making the statute of limitations as many as 20 years; other states have a "discovery rule" that tolls the statute of limitations. Ask any doctor about tail coverage for more information. THF (talk) 13:34, 7 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

A recitation of the different statutes of limitations, and their restrictions, is unreadable for normal (non-lawyer) WP readers. I would remind the lawyers here that a reasonable-sized entry can't possibly define the statute of limitations for the U.S., much less Canada and the U.K. Furthermore, we shouldn't. People don't read WP to determine the merits of a case, they read WP to get a general understanding, before they go on to other sources.
I'd suggest the following:
A malpractice suit must be filed within a limited time, known as the statute of limitations. The time varies among countries and among states or regional jurisdictions within countries. In the United States, it ranges from 1 to 4 years. In Canada, it ranges from 2 to 3 years. In the United Kingdom, it is 3 years. However, there are exceptions to these limits, for example for children. Sometimes the statutory time limit starts with the date of injury, and other times the time limit starts with the date that the injury could have reasonably been discovered.
Nbauman (talk) 16:35, 7 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
No one is proposing a 50-state list. But it's misleading to say the statute of limitations is "4 years". The lack of a statute of repose and the uncertainty of a 18-year lag has a lot to do with why ob/gyn medmal insurance rates are so high. THF (talk) 16:41, 7 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
I'm just editing what I saw there. Is it incorrect to say that the statute of limitations in the U.S. ranges from 1 to 4 years, with exceptions?
There are people on this list who have more expertise than me in the law, but I have some expertise in writing things so that people can understand it. It's very difficult to write a summary of the statutes of limitations. Anything comprehensible to a layman would of necessity be oversimplified (and inaccurate).
I'll tell you what. Let's write one paragraph that's simple and understandable to the layman, at the expense of precision and generality, and a second paragraph that clears up any imprecision in the first paragraph.
I don't think that's an improvement. What are states in Canada? What percentage of readers know what a regional jursdiction is? --Mihai cartoaje (talk) 11:19, 17 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
In Quebec it is from the time the subject could have discovered it. For example, if a surgeon leaves an instrument inside a patient and it is discovered 6 months later on an X-ray, then the limitations start ticking from the discovery. I didn't write that the limitations are always timed from the malpractice act, and the sources really do mention 2 or 3 years. What I wrote is technically correct, the best kind of correct. --Mihai cartoaje (talk) 11:19, 17 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
Wikipedia is written for the general reader, not for lawyers. It doesn't do any good to add a paragraph if it is incomprehensible to the general reader. It doesn't matter whether it's correct if your reader can't understand it.
Try writing something that the general reader would understand. Nbauman (talk) 20:52, 17 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
You are addressing the wrong person. I'm the one who has been keeping it simple. --Mihai cartoaje (talk) 21:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

I added THF's exception for minors so it is not factually inacurate anymore. --Mihai cartoaje (talk) 22:20, 28 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

I added a small bit about the coming of age exceptions.ChillyMD (talk) 17:52, 19 July 2009 (UTC)Reply

RS issue edit

I've raised this edit at the RS/N board. THF (talk) 21:52, 17 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Scope Issue edit

After reading the Statute of Limitations section and this this talk section, I'm taking a bold step. Any kind of list of statutes of limitations is either going to be VERY limited - to the point of uselessness, even - in this article. I've changed the section to a small paragraph that links to the Statute of Limitations article, and added another link to a statute of limitations page on medical malpractice. I'm not sure what it takes to create a new article, and there isn't nearly enough information in this article for me to do so, with my limited knowledge of the subject. I've left a copy of the old text below--MutantPlatypus (talk) 04:58, 10 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

In the USA, these statute of limitations laws vary in different states between 1 and 4 years [23], with exceptions in some states for minors; for example, in some states minors have up until age 18 to file suit for an alleged injury. In Canada, the statute of limitations are 2 years in British Columbia [24], Alberta [25], Saskatchewan [26], Manitoba [27], Ontario [28], New-Brunswick [29], Nova Scotia [30], Newfoundland [31], and 3 years in Québec [32]. In the United Kingdom the statute of limitations is 3 years, however the Limitation Act 1980 exempt cases such as misdiagnosis where the claimant had no knowledge of the injury until a later date. The 3 year period does not start running until the date on which the claimant knows the identity of the defendant and has knowledge that the injury in question was significant and was attributable to negligence.[citation needed]

as biased as it gets.... edit

There's a section called

The case for medical liability reform

full of propoganda. Where are the counter arguments? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.22.251.96 (talk) 22:53, 29 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

For an example of the bias, the quote from the AMA report is "Physician advocacy groups say 60% of liability claims against doctors are dropped, withdrawn, or dismissed without payment. However even those cases have a price, costing an average of more than $22,000 to defend in 2008 ($18,000 in 2007). Physicians are found not negligent in over 90% of cases that go to trial - yet more than $110,000 (2008 estimate, $100,000 in 2007) per case is spent defending those claims.".

This sounds like 60% of claims are dropped before trial and without payment, and 90% of the remaining claims are found in the doctor's/hospitals favor. This first reading is incorrect as it does not mention the percentage of claims which are dropped before trial and with payment.

Even the originating AMA document doesn't include that information. For that you have to go to the DoJ's "Medical Malpractice Insurance Claims in Seven States" document and find that only Missouri and Maine have the statistics of the number of claims which are settled with payment vs. those which are not. The answer is "about 30%", and the average payment for claims which don't get to trial is a bit over $100,000. From the same document, only 5% of claims get to court, and the average payment for those which get to trial judgement is $250,000.

What this is saying is that 1/3rd of all medical claims are found - by the both sides, and before trial - as being deserving of malpractice liability payment. As a rough estimate using the above numbers, 1/3 of the overall case costs are for lawyers fees when there is no payment, and 2/3 of the overall costs are for lawyers fees + payouts when the plaintiff receives payment.

I claim that the AMA document is "full of propaganda" because it omits that rather important fact and that the section "The case for medical liability reform" inherits that bias by quoting that document without reference to its uselessness in being able to use that document in understanding the case for liability reform. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.194.35.253 (talk) 08:15, 9 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

What about the rest of the world? edit

This article seems to relate exclusively to the USA. Surely it should be called "medical malpractice in the USA" (if that merits an article of its own). 62.189.218.38 (talk) 17:29, 1 March 2010 (UTC) Tend to agree with that. Except for 'advanced"countries, concept of medical negligence is hardly, if ever, even thought about in the"Third World". In India - where I am - only with the arrival of Consumer Foras is it getting some attention. But hardly any statistics exist. If any has any, please add in ! Mangoeman (talk) 17:05, 9 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

The rest of the world is (or theoretically would be) covered in the article, Medical malpractice. Arllaw (talk) 19:40, 31 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

How much does malpractice insurance actually COST?! This is CRUCIAL information that MUST be included edit

It's crazy that this article is largely devoted to explaining the *costs* of malpractice insurance, but then never actually gives any actual *costs* of malpractice insurance! Sure, overall numbers are given for industry-wide dollar amounts, but no info is given about how much individuals and groups are ACTUALLY paying for this insurance. I know that it varies based on state, specialty, etc., but certainly SOME info on this _must_ be given. For instance, you can just include some ranges or averages, or even just a few random examples. For instance it could say that "in the US the average price that individual physicians pay for malpractice is $#0,000 per year." Or you can just choose a few representative examples. Maybe even make it a chart. For instance it could say

"The following are some typical US malpractice insurance prices: private OBGYN in NY = $#0,000 per year private ER physician in KA = $#0,000 per year group coverage for family physician in FA = $#0,000 per year"

... unless this info is already included in the article and I just missed it. Which is possible. But if it's not in here, then it really really must be added. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.190.101.145 (talk) 07:34, 8 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

Some information from 2007: http://www.modernmedicine.com/modernmedicine/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=532640  : "Family physicians, internists, and pediatricians all paid a median of $12,500 annually for med-mal coverage, based on the survey. Ob/gyns forked over more than four times as much, because of their propensity to be sued. GPs, many of whom are older and phasing out of practice, paid just $7,500." — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.194.35.253 (talk) 08:25, 9 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

Medical Malpracitce Insurance Basics/Costs to doctors edit

It would be beneficial to discuss medical malpractice insurance the specifics about the costs incurred by the doctors who have to pay for it. As medical malpractice has been presented, a doctor's protection from that, medical malpractice insurance, should be given.

It would be good to discuss costs, limits, uses, and the market.

Medicalmaster123 (talk) 19:40, 23 May 2011 (UTC)medicalmaster123Reply

That's fine, as long as you don't use commercial links to source it. OhNoitsJamie Talk 19:42, 23 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

Where is the section entitled "The case against medical liability reform"? edit

The article has an entire section that presents only one side of an argument. Where is the other side?

"Reform" in this case means limiting patients' right to sue when they are injured. Surely a case can be made that their rights should not be limited.

The Center for Justice and Democracy (http://www.centerjd.org) specializes in protecting patients' right to sue. Their website has many arguments that support their position.

Likewise, Public Citizen (http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=2513) argues that "Policymakers should focus on protecting patients and reducing medical errors, not limiting patients' rights." — Preceding unsigned comment added by MathPerson (talkcontribs) 19:12, 28 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Dubious 190k victims/year edit

The citation provided is Medical News Today citing a study by HealthGrades. This figure is disputed [33]. The accurracy of HealthGrades statistics is disputed too, as demonstrated by its own article. That's why I put the dubious tag — MIRROR (talk) 22:53, 22 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

Merge after move edit

This page was previously moved from Medical malpractice to Medical malpractice in the United States. I just re-created the former page as a stub, since most links pointing to it seem to be referring to the concept in general, not just in the United States. It seems like the content discussing medical malpractice in general should be under the more general title, with the latter article containing only the US-specific portions of the article. Augurar (talk) 06:03, 11 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

With no action taken in two years, I'm removing the tag from Medical malpractice.

External links modified (January 2018) edit

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Suggestion for this page edit

I came to this page seeking information about the history of medical malpractice insurance. I wanted to know when it was first introduced, how soon it became commonplace, and what the costs have been through the years. Anyone care to take this on? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.130.71.163 (talk) 03:41, 9 February 2021 (UTC)Reply