Illinois Supreme Court and Medical Malpractice Caps

The Illinois Supreme Court recently decided to overturn a law that would have capped damages in Medical Malpractice cases.

Thursday morning the Illinois supreme court overturned a 2005 law that capped the amount of money victims can be awarded in medical malpractice lawsuits. Opinions on this decision vary to the extreme. Most citizens groups and trial lawyers praise the decision saying it protects patients and the separation of powers. But, most medical providers say, this will mean more expensive malpractice insurance and may force physicians out of Illinois.

Malpractice caps are a misleading way to save health care costs.  That is one of the often quoted arguments as to why medical malpractice caps should be enacted.  "Stop the out of control lawsuits and health care costs will go down."  Not true.  Lawsuit costs are only 2% of health care costs. 

Illinois lawmakers have tried three times to join the more than 30 neighboring states which do have medical malpractice lawsuit caps. But, the most recent attempt enacted in 2005, has been thrown out by the Illinois Supreme Court.

"The ruling is that the legislature does not have the power to do things that are properly within the judicial branch," says past president of the Illinois Trial Lawyer's Association. "It's called separation of powers."

http://www.wsiltv.com/p/news_details.php?newsID=9419&type=top

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Lawsuit filed to Challenge Texas Medical Malpractice Caps

The Malpractice Cap Law in Texas is just SO arbitrary.  Now, I don't believe that malpractice caps actually drive down insurance rates.  (That position is probably no surprise to anyone reading this as I am a plaintiff's lawyer)

Here's the thing:   If you set caps at a hard number then all you do is cap the amount that insurance companies pay.  Look at California.  They set malpractice caps years ago and they have never changed them for inflation.  So rates go up because of inflation, but the payout to victims can never go up.  What that does it puts the burden of medical mistakes on the injured, the victims of medical malpractice.

Here's part of the article in Texas:

Former Dallas Cowboy Ron Springs, who has been in a coma since the fall after surgery to remove a cyst, is one of 11 plaintiffs challenging Texas' medical malpractice cap in a lawsuit filed Monday.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas in Marshall, challenges the 2003 Medical Malpractice and Tort Reform Act, which limits awards in Texas. The lawsuit asks the court to declare the cap unconstitutional.

The law caps awards for pain and suffering at $250,000 for doctors, $250,000 for hospitals and $250,000 for nursing homes and other institutions for a maximum of $750,000 per claimant.

Source:  Houston Chronicle

Additional up to date information:  Medical Malpractice Law Blogs

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