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WASHING THEIR HANDS OF ILLINOIS
Doctors flee the state to escape its med-mal mess.
In October 2005, a story that would have been a minor item in
most newspapers made the front page of the Belleville, Illinois, News Democrat.[47]
There were new doctors in townand in Belleville, thats a big story.
Why? Because it meant that there would finally be enough orthopedic
surgeons to cover emergencies at St. Elizabeths Hospitalwhich had
been scraping by with only one. Belleville, you see, was in a swath of Illinois
that had long been in the grip of the plaintiffs bar, and skyrocketing
rates for malpractice insurance had driven doctors away.[48]
The insurance-rate spike was caused by a decade-long onslaught of malpractice
suits that had not only chased away doctors but shut down obstetric wards and
forced patients to travel hundreds of miles in search of care. New doctors in
Belleville, then, were good news for Illinois as a wholea sign that the
states salutary new tort-reform law was already having an effect.
Illinois comprehensive medical-liability reform, enacted
in August 2005, imposes caps on noneconomic awardsfor example,
damages for pain and suffering or emotional distressin malpractice litigation.
It also allows doctors to apologize to patients without having their apologies
used against them in court, and it raises qualification standards for the expert
witnesses whom trial lawyers hire to testify in their cases.[49]
Thats the good news. The bad news is that the malpractice
insurers that fled the states runaway litigation and outsize verdicts
have yet to return, and liability premiums, while dropping 5.2 percent in the
past year, are still sky-high.[50] Insurers slow
reaction is understandable, since Illinois activist supreme court struck
down as unconstitutional two previous reform efforts in 1975 and 1995.[51]
So rather than risk another court intervention, insurers will wait to see if
the new caps on noneconomic damages withstand the trial bars inevitable
higher-court appeal.
The Unhealthy Costs of Illinois Jackpot Justice
Still, that the reform was passed at all by the Democrat-controlled
Illinois legislature and that a firmly antireform Democratic governor signed
it into law signal a developing backlash against Illinois jackpot justice. Its
increasingly difficult to ignore the manner in which out-ofcontrol malpractice
lawsuits have inflicted real damage on health-care delivery in Illinois.
From 2000 through 2003, for example, more than half of the 950
licensed practitioners in Madison and St. Clair Counties were sued individually
or through their practices.[52] On any given day, as many
as a third of them would be subject to a suitputting the lie to the trial
bars claim that it only targets bad doctors.[53]
All told, more than 400 medical-malpractice cases were brought in Madison and
St. Clair Counties from 2000 through 2003, against 1,082 different defendantsincluding
both counties hospitals, which were hauled into court 220 times.[54]
Most of these suits were weak or groundless85 percent
of med-mal claims in St. Clair County and 71 percent in Madison County were
resolved with no payout from the defendantbut they still ate up millions
of dollars in court and lawyer fees.[55] Illinois
largest malpractice insurer, ISMIE Mutual Insurance Company, spent $150 million
between 2000 and 2005 defending claims that resulted in no payment to plaintiffs.[56]
To understand how so many meritless claims can be filed in the
first place, consider the staggering payouts that successful claims net lawyers
who hit the jackpot. In plaintiff-friendly Cook County, the average jury award
in 2003 was $4.45 million, up an astounding 314 percent since 1998.[57]
Pain-and-suffering awards averaged $3.12 million, 247 percent more than in 1998.[58]
From August 2003 to August 2004, Cook County juries handed out $161 million
to plaintiffs in 30 malpractice cases, including seven verdicts in excess of
$10 million and two in excess of $30 million.[59] Add nearly
half a billion dollars for 191 reported settlements at an average of $2.4 million
each,[60] and the tab in Cook County for 200 cases of alleged
malpractice climbs to over $600 million.
Because of such costs, malpractice premiums in Illinois are
now two to three times those of other states, and unaffordable for many physicians.
Shouldering most of the burden are valuable specialistsobstetricians,
orthopedists, and neurosurgeonswhose high-risk patients and procedures
make them especially vulnerable to lawsuits. In Cook County in 2004, the average
obstetrician paid $230,428 for malpracticecoverage, up 67 percent from 2003
and nearly 12 times what he would pay in nearby Minnesota.[61]
Illinois neurosurgeons paid $246,196, more than three times the $73,105 average
in next-door Indiana.[62] Orthopedistseven those
avoiding high-risk spinal workpaid $135,584, while Wisconsin orthopedists
paid only $23,012.[63]
Some Illinois doctors cant find a company to insure them
even at these off-the-scale rates. In 2002, malpractice insurers in Illinois
paid out $1.47 in claims for every dollar they collected in premiums, making
them among the biggest malpractice losers in the nation.[64]
No wonder that of the 17 malpractice insurers that did business in the Prairie
State in 2001, 12 have since headed for the hills.[65]
The five that remain have limited the issuance of new policies and restricted
the parts of the state and the specialties that theyll insure.[66]
Cook County's average jury
award in 2003 was
$4.45 million, up an astounding
314 percent since 1998.
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Trial lawyers blame the cost of malpractice insurance not on
runaway malpractice judgments but on price gouging by insurers.
But that claim rings hollow, since over two-thirds of Illinois insurers
have left the state in the last five years, and ISMIE, by far the states
largest med-mal insurer, is doctor-owned.[67] To buy the
trial bars propaganda, youd have to believe that doctors price-gouge
themselves; that supposedly rapacious insurers would flee a great price-gouging
opportunity; and, most absurdly, that price-gouging insurers are losing 47 cents
on every dollar.
Doctor Exodus Threatens Access to Care
Many Illinois doctors, hard-pressed to find affordable liability
insurancerequired for admitting patients to a hospitalhave simply
pulled in their shingles. In 2003, an estimated 131 physicians in Madison and
St. Clair Counties retired, moved to other states, or gave up doing highrisk
procedures that could land them in court.[68]
The ultimate losers, of course, are Illinois patients. Unchecked
malpractice lawsuits are not just costly and inconvenient, but literally lifethreatening.
Until early 2005, when Memorial Hospital in Carbondale managed to recruit a
neurosurgeon from St. Louis,[69] southern Illinois had
gone two years without one. Accident victims had to be transported 115 miles
to St. Louis for treatmentoften to St. Louis University Hospital, where
the number of trauma patients from Illinois more than doubled between 2002 and
2004.[70]
OB-GYNs, too, had been running for the borderat least
until the recent reform bill passed. One such obstetrician, Dr. Mark Edelstein,
had never been sued, but his malpractice premiums jumped from $36,000 to $110,000
anyway.[71] In 2003, he moved from Alton, in Madison County,
to Syracuse, New York, where he pays $35,000 a year.[72]
Alton also lost three orthopedic surgeons, a gastroenterologist, four internists,
and a neurologist.[73]
Hospitals fare no better than doctors. Between 2001 and 2003,
Illinois hospitals average annual insurance costs jumped from $1.5 million
to $2.8 million.[74] Provena Health, which operates six
hospitals in Illinois, has lost nine obstetricians and four neurosurgeons.[75]
Reeling from doctor flight and fearing potential suits over inevitable birth
defects, some hospitals have stopped delivering babies entirely.[76]
Will Reforms Turn the Tide?
Whether last years medical-liability reforms can stanch
the flow of physicians and insurers out of Illinois and restore critical services
to the states beleaguered hospitals remains to be seen. It could take
years of moving old cases through the pipeline before we see the reforms
full impact; ISMIE still has 5,300 cases waiting to be tried or settled under
the old law.[77]
But if other states are any guide, the newly enacted caps on
noneconomic damages, once upheld, will lower insurance premiums for doctors
by reducing extreme jury payouts. Medical-liability premiums have fallen 29.5
percent in Texas over the four years since it passed a reform including a constitutional
amendment,[78] and malpractice premiums have dropped 30
percent over the three years since comprehensive reform passed in Mississippi.[79]
Predictably, doctors are coming back: Texas is granting licenses to 400 more
new physicians per year than it was before the reforms, and the state is estimating
a record 4,100 applications for medical licenses in 2006, a 38 percent increase.[80]
Since noneconomic damages were 91 percent of the average Illinois
jury verdict in 2002, its not surprising that new Cook County filings
are down 25 percent in the last year.[81] If the supreme
court upholds the caps this time, Trial Lawyers, Inc. will lose a healthy source
of revenue, and Prairie Staters will be far better off as a result. Cook County's
average jury award in 2003 was $4.45 million, up an astounding 314 percent since
1998.
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47. Mike Fitzgerald, Belleville, OFallon get new doctors,
Belleville News-Democrat, Oct. 14, 2005, at 1A.
48. See American Medical Association, Americas Liability Crisis
Backgrounder (March 4, 2004).
49. See 2005 Ill. Laws 667.
50. See Colias, supra note 16.
51. Best v. Taylor Machine Works, 689 N.E.2d 1057 (Ill. 1997); Bernier v. Burris,
497 N.E.2d 763 (Ill. 1986).
52. See Dirty Little Secrets, supra note 27, at 5.
53. See Hale, supra note 33.
54. See Dirty Little Secrets, supra note 27, at 4-5.
55. See id. at 6.
56. See IllinoIs State Medical Society & Ismie Mutual Insurance Company,
The Medical Litigation Crisis 5 (2005) [hereinafter Litigation Crisis] (citing
Cook Counyy Verdict Rep.).
57. See id. at 3.
58. See id.
59. See Hale, supra note 33.
60. See Illinois Largest Verdicts and Settlements in 2004,
Crains Chicago Bus. (Feb. 28, 2005).
61. See Albert, supra note 33.
62. See Litigation Crisis, supra note 56, at 4.
63. See id.
64. See Kevin McDermott & Trisha Howard, System Is Sick, but Diagnosis
Is Elusive, St. LouiIs Post-Dispatch, Feb. 15, 2004, at C1.
65. See Alan J. Ortbals, Medical Malpractice Crisis Drives a Dozen
Insurance Carriers Out of Illinois, Ill. Bus. J., May 17, 2004.
66. See Litigation Crisis, supra note 56, at 5.
67. Id. at 1.
68. See Dave Whaley, Delegation Takes Case for Malpractice Reform
to Springfield, Telegraph (Alton, Ill.), March 24, 2004.
69. See Caleb Hale, Brain Surgery Returning to Carbondale Hospital,
S. Illinoisan, Feb. 25, 2005.
70. See Litigation Crisis, supra note 56, at 8.
71. See Shawn Clubb, Another Doctor Leaving Alton, Telegraph (Alton,
Ill.), Oct. 4, 2003.
72. See id.
73. See id.
74. See Illinois Hospital Association, Medical Liability CrisisFact
Sheet (2005).
75. See Litigation Crisis, supra note 56, at 7.
76. See id.
77. See Abdon M. Pallasch, How Caps Could Affect Jury Awards,
Chi. Sun-Times, May 27, 2005, at 10.
78. See TMLT Reduces Rates, Declares Dividend, Austin Bus. J.,
Sept. 13, 2006.
79. See Physicians Insurer Cuts Rates; Barbour Credits Tort Reform,
Hattiesburg Am., Sept. 13, 2006.
80. See Texas Medical Malpractice Reforms Result in Landmark Wins
for Physicians and Patients, States PIAA, Bus. Wire, Sept. 12, 2006.
81. See David Ziemer, Med Mal Cap Debate Moves to Senate, Wisc. L.J.,
Nov. 2, 2005; Colias, supra note 16.
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