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Public Citizen report debunks med-mal myths.


Medical malpractice Improper, unskilled, or negligent treatment of a patient by a physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care professional.  payments to injured patients have been declining, despite the rising number of preventable medical errors See also medical error

As a general acceptance, a medical error occurs when a health-care provider chose an inappropriate method of care or the health provider chose the right solution of care but carried it out incorrectly.
, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a recent report by Public Citizen.

The Washington, D.C.-based consumer advocacy organization analyzed malpractice payments reported in the National Practitioner Data Bank National Practitioner Data Bank A database established by the Congress to facilitate professional peer review and restrict incompetent physicians' and dentists' ability to move from state to state, and elude discovery of previous substandard performance or  (NPDB NPDB National Practitioner Data Bank
NPDB Navy Provisional Detainee Battalion (US DoD)
NPDB Number Portability Data Base
) between 1990, the year the data bank was established, and 2005. It concluded that patient safety--not medical negligence litigation--is the real crisis. Contrary to widespread myths about skyrocketing payments to plaintiffs, the report found:

* The number of malpractice payments declined by 15.4 percent in the time period studied.

* The average annual payment decreased by 8 percent in that period and never exceeded $1 million after inflation adjustments.

* In 2005 alone, the sum of judgments for more than $1 million comprised less than 3 percent of the total value of malpractice payments.

The report suggested that malpractice payments are neither unpredictable nor irrational, as tort "reform" advocates claim, but instead correspond to severity of injury. More than 82 percent of the total sum of payments compensated patients who suffered the most severe injuries, and plaintiffs whose cases involved a "minor permanent injury" received 55 percent less than those who had a "significant permanent injury."

"Rather than providing irrational awards to undeserving plaintiffs, the current medical liability system is rational in its outcomes," the report concluded. The highest payments have gone to the families of people who died as a result of medical malpractice. In 2005, more than 64 percent of payments involved death or major injuries, while less than 2 percent were for an "insignificant injury."

In response to the report, the American Medical Association American Medical Association (AMA), professional physicians' organization (founded 1847). Its goals are to protect the interests of American physicians, advance public health, and support the growth of medical science.  (AMA (Automatic Message Accounting) The recording and reporting of telephone calls within a telephone system. It includes the calling and called parties and start and stop times of the call. ) issued a statement questioning the reliability of data obtained from the NPDB--which is maintained by the Department of Health and Human Services--citing a 2000 study by the Government Accountability Office The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is the audit, evaluation, and investigative arm of the United States Congress, and thus an agency in the Legislative Branch of the United States Government.  that found discrepancies in the database.

"What the AMA doesn't tell people is that the data is actually revised every quarter," said Seth Oldmixon, a legislative assistant at Public Citizen's Congress Watch group and the author of the report.

Other groups, such as the Physician Insurers Association, joined the AMA in criticizing the report's methodology, particularly its use of the medical care services index instead of the consumer price index to measure inflation.

"If you really want to determine a just compensation, you have to adjust for inflation based on the unusually high rate of inflation that medical services fall under," Oldmixon countered.

The critiques are "a red herring Red Herring

A preliminary registration statement that must be filed with the SEC describing a new issue of stock (IPO) and the prospects of the issuing company.

Notes:
 to distract from the real problem that there is a lack of serious attention to patient safety and physician oversight," he said. "There is a virtual epidemic of medical errors plaguing the country."

The Public Citizen report echoed findings from a 2006 Harvard School of Public Heath study that reviewed 1,452 closed malpractice claims from five liability insurers and determined that 80 percent involved injuries resulting in "significant or major disability or death." The Harvard study concluded that "portraits of a malpractice system that is stricken with frivolous litigation Frivolous litigation is a legal claim or defense presented even though the party and the party's legal counsel had reason to know that the claim or defense had no merit. A claim or defense may be frivolous because it had no underlying justification in fact, or because it was not  are overblown o·ver·blown  
v.
Past participle of overblow.

adj.
1.
a. Done to excess; overdone: overblown decorations.

b.
," and "the malpractice system performs reasonably well in its function of separating claims without merit from those with merit and compensating the latter."

The study also noted that while 63 percent of injuries were the result of a medical error, one in six of those claims did not result in compensation.

In addition to recommending improvements in patient safety and health-care provider training, Public Citizen's report stressed the importance of disciplining repeat offenders. Only 33 percent of doctors who made 10 or more malpractice payments were disciplined by their state medical board, and some doctors with up to 31 med-mal payments have never been subjected to any disciplinary action, according to the report.

Currently, attorneys and patients have no way of knowing who these doctors are, as the NPDB Public Use File conceals practitioners' personal information. The report urged Congress to lift the veil of secrecy, especially considering the small percentage of doctors responsible for the majority of the malpractice committed.

While 82 percent of doctors had not made a medical malpractice payment since 1990, 5.9 percent of the others accounted for 57.8 percent of all malpractice payments since 1991, according to the data.

"The report pokes a hole in the myth that it's lawsuits that are driving malpractice insurance Noun 1. malpractice insurance - insurance purchased by physicians and hospitals to cover the cost of being sued for malpractice; "obstetricians have to pay high rates for malpractice insurance"  premiums through the roof," said Jeffrey Roy, a Boston-based attorney who handles medical malpractice cases. "It validates a lot of what we have been saying for a number of years--that there is a great medical malpractice hoax Hoax
Balloon Hoax, The

news story in 1844, reporting the transatlantic crossing of a balloon with eight passengers. [Am. Lit.: The Balloon Hoax in Poe]

Piltdown man

missing link turned out to be orangutan. [Br. Hist.
.

"When I visit or speak with any group, I talk about these types of studies," Roy said. "There's still a level of skepticism out there [about medical malpractice claims]. People have been trained and brainwashed brain·wash  
tr.v. brain·washed, brain·wash·ing, brain·wash·es
To subject to brainwashing.

n.
The process or an instance of brainwashing.
 over the past couple of years. As more data like this comes out, we are going to be able to turn that page."

The full text of the report, The Great Medical Malpractice Hoax, is available online at www.citizen.org/documents/ NPDB%20Report_Final.pdf.
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Author:Villa, Alba Lucero
Publication:Trial
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:831
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