Malpractice Reform as a Health Policy Problem

Document Type

Book Section

Publication Date

6-2006

ISBN

9780521614115

DOI

10.1017/CBO9780511617836.003

Abstract

When experts discuss health policy, they typically mean the factors that affect access to medical care, its quality, and its cost. The first medical malpractice crisis of the twenty-first century began in 2001 and continues into 2006. Previous malpractice crises occurred in the 1970s and 1980s. Until the current crisis, few connections have been drawn between the medical malpractice reform movement and overall health policy.

Malpractice crises are defined by rapidly rising liability insurance premiums for physicians, sometimes accompanied by difficulty obtaining insurance coverage at any price. Because lawsuits are upsetting as well as financially costly to physicians, and because armies of white-coated demonstrators make good political theater, hand-wringing over physicians leaving practice and hospitals closing their doors is standard fare for “tort reformers” in crisis years. During the longer intervals between crises, when insurance premiums are stable, malpractice reformers sustain momentum for their cause by suggesting that physicians' fear of litigation leads them to waste health care resources on “defensive medicine” and contributes significantly to overall medical inflation. For the most part, however, these issues have been voiced as political rhetoric and not incorporated seriously into policy making.

First Page

30

Last Page

42

Num Pages

13

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Editor

William M. Sage & Rogan Kersh

Book Title

Medical Malpractice and the U.S. Health Care System

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