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CAPPING OF NON-ECONOMIC DAMAGES IN MEDICAL MALPRACTICE CLAIMS William Bell General Counsel Florida Hospital Association.

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Presentation on theme: "CAPPING OF NON-ECONOMIC DAMAGES IN MEDICAL MALPRACTICE CLAIMS William Bell General Counsel Florida Hospital Association."— Presentation transcript:

1 CAPPING OF NON-ECONOMIC DAMAGES IN MEDICAL MALPRACTICE CLAIMS William Bell General Counsel Florida Hospital Association

2 Problem Politics vs. Policy Legislation

3 The Problem Broken System Expensive - Skyrocketing premiums Slow - Takes 4 to 5 years from incident to resolution Unfair - Patients receive less than 50 cents on the dollar

4 The Problem  Declining access to healthcare services — trauma/ER obstetrics mammography other high-risk specialties  Affordability — Florida doctors’ premiums 55 percent above nation  Availability — Insurers writing policies dropped from 66 in 1999 to four  Frequency/severity of claims — Florida’s claims’ frequency 36 percent higher than nation;  Coverage declining — As costs rise, providers drop coverage limits to $250,000 minimum or carry no Insurance at all

5 Politics vs. Policy Similarities to 1970’s and 1980’s Affordability and Availability Third Cycle Tried Insurance and Tort Reform

6 Politics vs. Policy Differences from 1970’s and 1980’s Anesthesia - 70’s OB - 80’s Misdiagnosis - 2000’s Data, Experience, Court Decisions Fragile Health Care System

7 Politics vs. Policy The Goal Fair compensation to injured parties, while protecting coverage for all of us Three-fold Agenda Clear guidelines for litigation and compensation Stable insurance market Improved patient safety

8 Politics vs. Policy Research Coalition and Grassroots Public Education Legislation

9 What you can do www.healflhealthcare.org

10 Legislation Tort Reform Patient Safety Insurance Reform

11 Tort Reform Non-economic Damages Caps  Practitioner  Doctors  Employees  PAs  Non-Practitioner  Hospitals  HMOs  Employees

12 Tort Reform Practitioner Silo  $500,000 per claimant  $1,000,000 aggregate (2 or more claimants; e.g., spouse, children) All practitioners share aggregate cap No individual practitioner pays more than $500,000

13 Tort Reform Non-Practitioner Silo  $750,000 per claimant  $1,500,000 aggregate (2 or more claimants; e.g., spouse, children) Non-practitioner liability is limited to maximum in that silo, regardless of theory of liability All non-practitioner defendants share aggregate cap

14 Tort Reform Piercing – Two Avenues  Death or permanent vegetative state -OR-  Catastrophic injury plus “manifest injustice” finding (patient only)  Up to max in each silo: $1,000,000 for practitioners; $1,500,000 for non-practitioners

15 Tort Reform Emergency Room Cases  Practitioner  $150,000/$300,000  Non-practitioner  $750,000/$1,500,000 Definition of “reckless disregard” strengthened for purposes of Good Samaritan Immunity Cap applies through stabilization and, if necessary, surgery within a reasonable time No “piercing”

16 Tort Reform Application  $2.5 max non-economic damages  $1M + $1.5M  Set-offs for non-economic damages within silo  Total non-economic damages cannot exceed cap applicable to that silo  Retain current law re: set-offs for economic damages  Only economic damages are set off between silos

17 Ending Complex Problem: Health Care System Judicial System Insurance Regulated Separately Different Public Policy Goals Solution: Coordinated Approach and Common Goals Patient Access Quality of Care Cost Containment


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