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Suing for Medical Malpractice
 
 
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Suing for Medical Malpractice [Hardcover]

Frank A. Sloan (Author), Penny B. Githens (Author), Ellen Wright Clayton (Author), Gerald B. Hickson (Author)

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Book Description

September 15, 1993 0226762793 978-0226762791 1
Medical malpractice suits today can result in multi-million-dollar settlements, and a practicing physician can pay $100,000 or more annually for malpractice insurance. Some complain that lawyers and plaintiffs are overcompensated by exorbitant judgments that add to the rising cost of health care. But there has been very little evidence to show whether these arguments are true. In this timely work, six experts in health policy, law, and medicine study nearly 200 malpractice claims to show that, contrary to popular perceptions, victims of malpractice are not overcompensated and our legal system for dealing with malpractice claims is not defective.

The authors survey claims filed in Florida between 1986 and 1989 by people who suffered permanent injury or death during birth or during treatment in an emergency room. How often did illegitimate claims result in financial awards? What was the relation between the injury and the amount the patient lost economically? How much did the plaintiffs actually recover? How did the claimants choose their lawyers and what kind of relationship did they have?

Contrary to common perceptions, in the majority of cases the claims were merited, and the authors found that claimants were on average substantially undercompensated—only about one-fifth of plaintiffs recovered more than their economic loss caused by injury or death. The evidence in this book suggests that placing dollar limits on malpractice cases is unjustified and that our tort system is not so faulty after all.

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More About the Author

Frank Sloan is the J. Alexander McMahon Professor of Health Policy and Management and Professor of Economics at Duke University since 1993. He is the former Director of the Center for Health Policy, Law and Management at Duke (CHPLM) that originated in 1998. He holds faculty appointments in five departments at Duke, with Economics being his primary appointment. He did his undergraduate work at Oberlin College and received his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University.

Before joining the faculty at Duke in July 1993, he was a research economist at the Rand Corporation and served on the faculties of the University of Florida and Vanderbilt University. He was Chair of the Department of Economics at Vanderbilt from 1986-89. His current research interests include alcohol use and smoking prevention, long-term care, medical malpractice, and cost-effectiveness analyses of medical technologies. He also has a long-standing interest in hospitals, including regulation of hospitals, health care financing, and health manpower.

Frank has served on several national advisory public and private groups. He is currently the chair of the Institute of Medicine Committee investigating adjustment factors in Medicare payments. He was formally a member of the Physician Payment Review Commission. He is the author of about 300 journal articles and book chapters and has coauthored and coedited about 20 books.
Professor Sloan is the president elect for the American Society of Health Economists.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The tort liability system is charged with several responsibilities (American Assembly 1990,6). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nonmarket loss, medical malpractice claimants, room claimants, noninterviewed cases, medical malpractice study, physician panelists, nonpecuniary motive, physician raters, lawyer specialization, claimant sample, emergency room injuries, medical malpractice insurers, liability ratings, nonmeritorious claims, emergency room sample, medical malpractice premiums, tort liability system, emergency room cases, alleged outcome, claiming process, physician panels, initial ask, malpractice disputes, medical malpractice crisis, noneconomic loss
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Harvard Medical Malpractice Study, United States, New York, Supreme Court, General Accounting Office, Social Security, Health Interview Survey, Palm Beach, University of Florida, Decedents Left, Florida's Department of Insurance, Institute of Medicine, Model Rule, North Carolina, Consumer Price Index, First Amendment, Hope Haven Clinic, Medical Economics, National Survey of Family Growth, South Florida
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