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August 24, 2010
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Medical Malpractice News

 

Linder Votes To Protect Patients By Limiting Runaway Medical Malpractice Awards

House Bill Ensures Prompt Resolution of Claims While Placing Caps on Damages
 
Washington, D.C. - Congressman John Linder (R-Georgia) on March 13 joined with a majority of his House colleagues in voting to reform the broken medical liability system in the U.S., placing limits on soaring malpractice awards and bringing accountability back to the process. The HEALTH Act passed the House by a vote of 229-196.

“Across the country, patient care is being jeopardized by a medical liability system that rewards trial lawyers,” said Linder. “I have seen many friends leave the medical profession simply because they cannot afford to pay for their liability insurance, and it is the patients who suffer in the end. This bill should begin to address some of these imbalances,” Linder continued.

H.R. 5 is designed after a highly successful California law that has resulted in medical liability disputes being settled 26% faster, saving doctors and patients years in the courtroom, and saving California patients $6 billion annually on health care. The bill would institute a number of needed reforms, including a window of three years after suffering an injury during which an individual would be allowed to file a health care liability action and a cap on both non-economic and punitive damages. The bill would also direct that patients’ attorneys do not receive an unjust portion of a recovery, and ensure accountability by allocating damages in direct proportion to fault.

“The need for reform is clear. Malpractice insurance rates across the country have risen 505 percent since 1976, and the average jury award is now $3.5 million, up more than 70 percent since 1995,” said Linder. “The health care we receive in the United States is the best in the world because of the people who choose to enter the profession and the education they receive. It is a shame that we have allowed our runaway liability system to force many of these highly-trained professionals out of the medical field. We can - and must - do better,” Linder continued.

Less than 2 percent of malpractice claims result in trial victories for patients. Even in the case of a jury award, harmed patients receive less than 30 percent of what doctors pay for insurance. 

Please contact us if anyone you know has suffered from debilitating injuries due to medical malpractice in Oregon.

 

 
Did You Know?    
 
 
You still have rights even if you signed a consent form
A consent form does not give the health care provider a license to commit malpractice. While the execution of a typical consent form indicates acknowledgement of stated risks and complications associated with a given treatment or procedure, it does not relieve the health care provider from his or her duty of meeting the standard of care associated with such treatment or procedure.

 


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News about Medical Malpractice cases in Oregon and nationwide:

State Approves Sale Of Medical Malpractice Insurer
(Salem) State regulators have approved a plan to allow the acquisition of Oregon’s largest medical malpractice insurer by a California company. Sal...
Read more >


Linder Votes To Protect Patients By Limiting Runaway Medical Malpractice Awards
“Across the country, patient care is being jeopardized by a medical liability system that rewards trial lawyers,” said Linder. “I have seen many fr...
Read more >


Gov. Blagojevich Revives Medical Malpractice Reform Negotiations
University of Illinois Hospitals’ Special Counsel and former Chief Judge of the Cook County Circuit Court Donald P. O’Connell to serve as mediator in ...
Read more >


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Lawyers Oregon.com Terms

 


Today's Terms

Subrogation

Definition:
A process by which a third party is put in the place of a creditor so that the rights and securities of the creditor pass to that third person.

Confidentiality

Definition:
The principle that prohibits physicians from disclosing confidential comments made to them by patients unless required to do so by law. The law may require physicians to violate patient confidentiality if the patient poses a serious threat to his or her own health and the well-being or that of others.

Causalgia

Definition:
Pain, usually burning, that is associated with autonomic changes -- change in color of the skin, change in temperature, change in sweating, swelling. Causalgia occurs after a nerve injury.

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Malpractice Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Medical Malpractice:

  • Surgical Malpractice
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  • Bacterial Infections
  • Birth Injury
  • Dental Malpractice

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Oregon Medical-Malpractice Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Medical-Malpractice attorney you should contact our Medical-Malpractice Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Albany
  • Ashland
  • Beaverton
  • Bend
  • Canby
  • Central Point
  • Clackamas
  • Coos Bay
  • Corvallis
  • Cottage Grove
  • Dallas
  • Eugene
  • Forest Grove
  • Grants Pass
  • Gresham
  • Hermiston
  • Hillsboro
  • Hood River
  • Klamath Falls
  • La Grande
  • Lake Oswego
  • Lebanon
  • Mcminnville
  • Medford
  • Newberg
  • Ontario
  • Oregon City
  • Pendleton
  • Portland
  • Prineville
  • Redmond
  • Roseburg
  • Salem
  • Sherwood
  • Springfield
  • The Dalles
  • Troutdale
  • Tualatin
  • West Linn
  • Wilsonville
  • Woodburn
 


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