 Oct. 18, 2002 |
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| ASSEMBLY EDITION SAN DIEGO |
Delegates confront need for tort reform
BY JANE STOEVER
No holds barred. The Congress of
Delegates wrestled this week with the nation's medical liability insurance
crisis.
What's it mean to have high jury awards and high liability insurance
premiums? For answers, try these comments to a reference committee Tuesday:
- "A year ago, many family physicians in the little border towns in
southeastern Arizona dropped their obstetrics coverage. It was costing them
more in premiums than they were getting in Medicaid pay," said delegate Carlos
Gonzales, M.D., of Patagonia, Ariz. "It's a large border area; a large group of
people now don't have OB care."
- "We have one remaining company offering malpractice insurance in
West Virginia, and it says it's leaving. We will get tort reform, but it will
be worthless to us because, in a year, it will be overturned by our Supreme
Court," said delegate David Avery, M.D., of Vienna, W.Va. "Trial lawyers own
the state."
- "I do colposcopies and endometrial biopsies, and my premiums are
rising," said Laura Knobel, M.D., of Walpole, Mass., president of the
Massachusetts AFP. "This is about more than obstetrics."
Grassroots action
Some testifying to the reference committee swapped ideas on steps to
take to overcome the liability insurance crisis:
- "We need to partner with our hospitals on this," said Mary
Elizabeth Roth, M.D., of Southfield, Mich., an AAFP delegate to the AMA. "When
I get an action alert on this issue in my e-mail, I send it to every manager in
my hospital."
- "The latest Texas Medicine has a tear-out section, 'Tort
Wars.' It gives points to discuss with your patients, a letter to patients to
copy, even a poster for your office. The AAFP could do something like this for
Academy members," said Dale Moquist, M.D., of Bryan, Texas, chair of the AAFP
delegation to the AMA. "When 16 of the 19 members on the U.S. Senate Judiciary
Committee are trial lawyers, is it any wonder tort reform is stalled in the
Senate?"
- "The loss of malpractice insurance at a residency means residents
cannot be trained as they should be," said resident delegate Erika Bliss, M.D.,
of Seattle. "For us residents, this is an emergency. We need to portray this as
such to the public."
Resolutions
The delegates considered asking the Academy to form its own national
program for liability coverage.
"I don't think the Academy's role is to be an insurance company,"
said Pamela Kushner, M.D., of Long Beach, Calif., a member of the Commission on
Membership and Member Services. "In the 1980s, I was on the AAFP Professional
Liability Committee, and the same issue came up, and we decided against it."
On Wednesday, the delegates voted against having the AAFP provide
liability coverage. They did ask the Academy to:
- educate physicians, legislators, patients and the public about the
critical effects of liability insurance premium increases on access to care and
the cost of care;
- continue -- as a high priority and in conjunction with the AMA --
to lobby state and national leaders to pass liability insurance tort reform;
and
- collect information that will reflect the impact of the
reimbursement and liability climate on infant morbidity and mortality rates.
FP Report is published by the
AAFP News Department.
Copyright © 2002 by
American Academy of Family Physicians.