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Medical Malpractice

A 45 year old rancher was awarded 6 million dollars in a medical malpractice lawsuit in Hawaii. Court records reflect that the Plaintiff went to Dr. Seid in 2001 when tests were run for health insurance and showed signs of kidney disease. For 2 years Dr. Seid treated the Plaintiff for high blood pressure, ignoring the test results regarding kidney disease. Dr. Seid eventually referred the Plaintiff to a specialist, but by this time his kidneys were already dead. The Plaintiff's expert witness testified that the Plaintiff should have been referred to a specialist in 2001 and that if his kidneys were timely and properly treated that the loss of his kidney function could have been delayed or prevented. The Plaintiff was a business owner in central Oahu and suffered catastrophic injury to both his health and his business.

Most doctors are skilled and qualified. However, medical studies show that at least 100,000 deaths per year come from medical mistakes. This does not count the toll on persons seriously injured. Unfortunately, this drives the cost of health care up, as patients like the one described above will now either need a lifetime of dialysis or a transplant. Better care not only saves lives, but also saves money.

Health Care Community Must Bring Errors to Light
Posted by: euser
November 19, 2010

The November 7, 2010 editorial in the Boston Globe entitled "GOP can streamline health law, improve malpractice system" Republicans are being called to "propose a much more robust program of resolving medical errors in ways that make patients whole and help the health care system become as mistake-free as possible."

In response to that editorial Jeffrey Catalano, VP of the Massachusetts Bar Association, makes an insightful rebuttal published November 14, 2010 also in the Boston Globe.

RE "GOP can streamline health law, improve malpractice system'' (Editorial, Nov. 7): You point out that the current medical malpractice system "provides benefits to too few deserving victims of physicians' mistakes.'' One large reason for this is that most of our hospitals are insulated from lawsuits because they are considered nonprofit and protected by the state's charitable immunity statute. This is despite the fact that they have total revenue in the hundreds of millions. As a result, large institutions are not held accountable for numerous medical errors that are systemic in nature, such as rampant infections, poor hospital procedures, or inadequate training and staffing.

Meanwhile, a crisis in health care quality continues to cause astronomical numbers of medical errors each year. According to the Institute of Medicine, 98,000 people die each year from medical errors. The cost to society of treating those who survive medical errors and suffer severe complications is estimated at nearly $20 billion per year.

This crisis continues because the medical community is not self-reporting and exposing its flaws and errors so that remedies can be implemented.

Our legal process serves a valuable role in improving the delivery of quality health care by exposing errors and allowing providers and hospitals to seek better means to improve physician-patient communication and prevent future mistakes. Health care providers at major medical centers have acknowledged that malpractice cases allow them to dig down and learn deeper lessons.

No reform should be implemented at the further expense of victims' access to justice, patient rights, and health care safety.

Rather, we should take measures that encourage more transparency and accountability in the health care profession.

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/letters/articles/2010/11/14/health_care_community_must_bring_errors_to_light/

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