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Malpractice News
Sen. Patrick Leahy On Medical Malpractice Legislation
I find it unfortunate that we do not hear any discussion by proponents of this legislation about what is best for patients injured or killed by medical errors. The debate in favor of malpractice award caps has been cast in terms of patient accessibility to health care, but what about patient safety? Capping non-economic damages may benefit insurance companies, but it does nothing for victims and nothing to address the serious problem of preventable medical errors.
Despite all of the rhetoric and all the myths and misinformation about the so-called crisis facing our medical professionals, what about the fact that medical errors kill up to 100,000 people each year? How does capping what a victim can recover help address this tragic fact? Rather than having all the talk be about alleged physician shortages and phantom reductions in insurance rates, we should be looking at how to improve the quality of care patients receive and how to improve patient safety. This legislation does nothing to provide any incentive for health care providers to improve the safety of their services, drug companies to rigorously test their products, or nursing homes to provide responsible and compassionate care to our elderly citizens.
As insurance rates, like gas prices, continue to soar to the benefit of corporate profits, as the number of uninsured continue to rise during this presidency, the Republican-controlled Senate seeks to take up partisan legislation that will help a few very powerful insurance companies become even more powerful. Rather than take up legislation to apply competitive antitrust principles to the business of insurance, the Majority Leader insists that we limit our actions to legislative proposals that will deprive citizens injured by medical errors a full measure of justice. Instead of taking up legislation to push the frontiers of life-saving medicine through stem cell research, we are going to debate whether we should make it easier for insurance companies to continue their predatory behavior at the expense of both doctors and patients.
In recent weeks, hundreds of thousands of Americans have taken to the streets in peaceful demonstrations to urge sensible and humane immigration reform and the public clearly wants Congress to address these issues and to strengthen our borders, and instead we are discussing how to dismantle our internal borders and tread on state sovereignty by nullifying state tort law. A war rages in Iraq in which our Nation’s best and bravest are making the ultimate sacrifice to advance democracy, and meanwhile we are talking about how to curtail Americans’ access to justice. Forty-five million people do not have health insurance in this country, and yet we are considering legislation that will make it harder for children who suffer lifelong injuries from medical errors to get the long term care they need. The gap between the richest Americans and everyone else continues to widen, but instead of taking up legislation to raise the minimum wage, the Majority Leader wants to shield lucrative insurance companies from having to pay fair awards to medical malpractice victims. Where in the Majority Leader’s schedule are the American people’s real priorities? Read more at leahy.senate.gov
Many people don’t know what expenses are typically included in a settlement
A typical medical malpractice claim will include compensation for pain and suffering, payment of medical expenses for treating the injury caused by the malpractice and reimbursement for any past, present or future financial losses that you have incurred as a result of the malpractice. However, this varies by State.
Newsroom
News about Medical Malpractice cases in Illinois and nationwide:
Definition:
A large class of claims related to anesthesia has resulted from cases where the anesthesiologist or anesthetist did not take a complete medical history of angina, myocardial infarction, recent upper respiratory infection, and asthma.
Medical negligence
Definition:
Failure of a physician or other medical personnel to meet the standards of conduct for duties relating to the medical profession. Those standards are based on what a reasonable person with the requisite knowledge and skills would or would not do.
Miscarriage
Definition:
When circumstances cause the mother's body to react to a problem in the pregnancy. This may cause bleeding, cramping, and will ultimately cause the loss of the pregnancy.
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