Epstein Nancy E
Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2002 Nov 15;27(22):2425-30. doi: 10.1097/00007632-200211150-00002.
A study of cervical spine malpractice cases was conducted. Identifying tort reform models may help to resolve a crisis in medical malpractice.
To identify tort reform models that may help to resolve a crisis in medical malpractice.
Medical malpractice faces a crisis. Insurance rates are exorbitant, yet many injured patients go uncompensated. Physicians practice defensive medicine for fear of suits, and society pays the price.
Using, 36 malpractice cases involving cervical spine surgery were identified: 20 from California ($250,000 cap on pain and suffering) and 16 from New York ("the sky's the limit"). Queries included who sued, who was sued, who won, who lost, and why? Six different tort reform models also were identified and explored.
Common bases for suits included failure to diagnose and treatment (56%), lack of informed consent (64%), new neurologic deficits (64%), and pain and suffering (72%). All of the six plaintiff verdicts (average, $4.42 million) and four of the nine settlements (average, $1.6 million) involving surgery that resulted in new postoperative quadriplegia appeared to be appropriate. However, the author could discern "no fault" in cases five defendants had settled, and the surgeons did not deserve to lose. On the other hand, the author found "fault" in five defense verdicts rendered to three newly quadriplegic patients and two with new postoperative root injuries. These patients deserved monetary awards, but received no compensation whatsoever. There currently are two models that would work better than the system in place in most states. These include the American Medical Association National Specialty Societies Medical Liability Project with the Alternative Dispute Resolution Model (SSMLP), and the Selective No Fault Models. Among the advantages shared by one or more of these models is their ability to reimburse injured patients while eliminating physician liability, to use malpractice panels rather than trials, and to put a cap on damages.
To solve the medical malpractice crisis, Congress, the individual states, or both should adopt tort reform. Two tort reform models compensating injured patients and eliminating physician liability appear to be not only effective but also fair to all concerned parties.
对颈椎医疗事故案件进行了一项研究。确定侵权改革模式可能有助于解决医疗事故危机。
确定可能有助于解决医疗事故危机的侵权改革模式。
医疗事故面临危机。保险费率过高,但许多受伤患者未得到赔偿。医生因担心诉讼而采取防御性医疗措施,社会为此付出代价。
确定了36起涉及颈椎手术的医疗事故案件:20起来自加利福尼亚州(痛苦和折磨赔偿上限为25万美元),16起来自纽约州(“没有上限”)。查询内容包括起诉方、被起诉方、胜诉方、败诉方以及原因。还确定并探讨了六种不同的侵权改革模式。
诉讼的常见依据包括诊断和治疗失误(56%)、缺乏知情同意(64%)、新的神经功能缺损(64%)以及痛苦和折磨(72%)。所有六起原告胜诉案件(平均赔偿442万美元)以及九起和解案件中的四起(平均赔偿160万美元),涉及导致术后新的四肢瘫痪的手术,似乎都是合理的。然而,作者在五起被告已和解的案件中未发现“过错”,外科医生不应败诉。另一方面,作者在三起新出现四肢瘫痪的患者和两起术后新出现神经根损伤的患者的五起被告胜诉案件中发现了“过错”。这些患者应获得金钱赔偿,但却未得到任何赔偿。目前有两种模式比大多数州现行的制度更有效。其中包括美国医学协会全国专业协会医疗责任项目与替代性纠纷解决模式(SSMLP),以及选择性无过错模式。这些模式中的一种或多种共有的优点包括能够赔偿受伤患者同时消除医生的责任、使用医疗事故小组而非审判以及对损害赔偿设限。
为解决医疗事故危机,国会、各州或两者都应采用侵权改革。两种既能赔偿受伤患者又能消除医生责任的侵权改革模式似乎不仅有效,而且对所有相关方都公平。