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- Path: sparky!uunet!news.tek.com!shaman!endeavor18!alanj
- From: alanj@endeavor18.tek.com (Alan Jeddeloh)
- Newsgroups: pnw.general
- Subject: Re: Trust Me - I'm from the Government to help you
- Summary: Health Care Costs
- Message-ID: <2567@shaman.wv.tek.com>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 23:09:33 GMT
- References: <1993Jan18.194858.21798@ssc.com> <1586@nazgul.UUCP> <1993Jan24.074207.14191@eskimo.com>
- Sender: news@shaman.wv.tek.com
- Organization: Tektronix, Inc.
- Lines: 79
-
- In article <1993Jan24.074207.14191@eskimo.com> nanook@eskimo.com (Robert Dinse) writes:
- >In article <1586@nazgul.UUCP>, bright@nazgul.UUCP (Walter Bright) writes:
- > ...
-
- > Major cost of health providers overhead is malpractice insurance.
-
- > ...
-
- > Well, if the court system was fair, if frivilous law suits weren't
- >common place, if verdicts were based on factual evidence rather than emotional
- >considerations, then perhaps legitimate practitioners wouldn't need malpractice
- >insurance, but right now that isn't the case.
-
- Frivilous malpractive suits are not commonplace, contrary to the propaganda
- from the insurance industry, AMA, and Dan Quail. In a recent survey done
- in an eastern state (Pennsylvania?) a medical group concluded that OVER 90%
- of the jury findings in malpractice suits were justified. Note that the
- remaining less that 10% of the suits were not necessarily "frivolous", merely
- that the MEDICAL group disagreed.
-
- The media is fond of reporting multi-million dollar damage awards to dippy
- ladies in California, they seldom if ever report that the dippy cases get
- thown out on appeal.
-
- >...
-
- > There needs to be reform in the court system. There needs to be real
- >substantial penalties associated with frivilous law suits, or those that are
- >designed to transfer wealth as opposed to seeking compensation for damages.
- >There needs to be larger penalties for scam artists faking injuries in an
- >attempt to collect damages and there needs to be stiff penalties for any
- >lawyer or anyone else who cooperates in such scams.
-
- There are already restrictions to prevent filing frivilous suits. In
- Oregon, for example, one cannot file a suit without substantiated medical
- opinion that there is cause to file the action. Awards beyond documentable
- economic damages (i.e. for "pain and suffering") are strictly limited.
- Even so, it is easy in a malpractice case to ring up some astounding damages -
- and those damages are for a large part based on past and projected future
- MEDICAL costs.
-
- Two of the most expensive areas for malpractice insurance are obstetrics and
- anesthesiology. The reason these are areas are so expensive is that these
- are the areas where it more likely to do profound, permanent and irreparable
- harm to an individual. Parinatal hypoxia can cause blindness, deafness,
- cerebral palsey, developmental disabilities, and mental retardation. Such
- brain damage can and has resulted in infants left in a Permanent Vegitative
- State. (The "Baby Doe" laws left by the Reagan administration prevent parents
- from having a baby, EVEN WITH FLAT EEG's, from being removed from a respirator).
-
- A child damaged at birth faces a lifetime of special medical needs and reduced
- or nonexistant earnings. Skilled nursing care can cost $50,000 - $75,000, and
- is rarely covered by medical insurance. Even a child with only slight damage
- will find it difficult or impossible to get insurance coverage -- it becomes one
- of the "prexisting conditions" insurance companies are so fond of not covering.
- (If the child is covered by the parent's insurance, and the parents change jobs,
- guess what happens???) As a result, the parents of such a child *have no
- choise* but to sue to provide for their child's future care.
-
- I know of one case a couple years ago in Portland against Kaiser. A woman
- went into premature labor somewhere around 23 weeks gestation. According
- to the suit, the hospital did not attempt to stop labor. Twin girls were
- born, one of whom did not survive, the other suffered major brain damage.
- The girl was left blind, deaf and dumb, a quadriplegic, with cerebral palsey,
- and is severly mentally retarded. She is able to smile and likes to be held
- and rocked. She will need skilled nursing care for the rest of her natural
- life, such as it is. The mediated award (3-member mediation team) was over 4
- million dollars.
-
- (While we're on the subject, I might point out that the actual cost to the
- insurer in such cases is that of a specially structured annuity, designed
- to pay out a fixed amount, increasing with inflation, over the expected
- life of the child.)
-
- --
- Alan Jeddeloh W:(503) 685-2991 H:(503) 292-9740
- Tektronix, Inc.; D/S 60-850; PO Box 1000; Wilsonville, OR 97070
- Alan.Jeddeloh@tek.com
- You can put the children to bed, but you can't make them sleep!
-