Statement Of Senator Patrick Leahy
On Medical Malpractice Legislation (S.2061)
February 23, 2004
Mr. President, I am disappointed that
the majority appears to be playing politics with the medical
malpractice insurance debate. This is a one-size-fits-all bill for
a problem that varies greatly from State to State. The bill before
us would encroach on the rights of every State and would yank away,
probably for all time, the crucial legal rights of the American
people.
Great care is in order whenever
Congress considers such drastic steps that target the rights of the
public and of the States. But instead of introducing a bipartisan
bill and sending it through the committee process to reach
consensus, the majority is rushing a partisan bill directly to the
Senate Floor.
A CHAINSAW INSTEAD OF A SCALPEL
Instead of letting states find
solutions that are best for their citizens, the majority prefers
this attempt to tally points on some election year political
scoreboard for powerful special interests, at the public’s expense.
Instead of looking at the big picture -- at overly broad antitrust
immunity, ways to reduce medical errors, and at other real issues
that could make a real difference -- the majority has chosen to
coddle big insurance companies instead of to cure the problem.
Instead of letting the States continue to find solutions that are
best for their citizens, they would take a chainsaw to the legal
rights of the American people and to the prerogatives of each of the
50 States we represent here in the United States Senate.
MOST VULNERABLE PATIENTS: MOTHERS AND INFANTS
This is the second time that the
majority has taken this partisan approach. Last July, the majority
employed this partisan tactic and failed to pass legislation. Now
the majority is again rushing an extreme bill that overrides the
laws of each of the 50 States and severely limits the compensation
available to some victims of medical malpractice. This time,
however, the bill is limited to obstetrical and gynecological care.
Having failed to limit the rights of all patients, now the majority
wants to limit the legal rights of the most vulnerable patients:
mothers and infants.
REAL PROBLEMS, FALSE SOLUTION
This is highly unfortunate, because
our health care system is in crisis. We have heard that statement
so often that it has begun to lose the force of its truth, but that
truth is one we must confront, and the crisis is one that must be
tackled and solved.
Dramatically rising medical
malpractice insurance rates are forcing some doctors to abandon
their practices or to cross State lines to find more affordable
situations. Patients who need care in high-risk specialties, like
obstetrics, and patients in areas already underserved by health care
providers, like many rural communities, are too often left without
adequate care.
We are the richest and most powerful
Nation on earth. We should be able to ensure access to quality
health care to all our citizens and to assure the medical profession
that its members will not be driven from their calling by the
manipulations of the malpractice insurance industry.
The debate about the causes of this
latest insurance crisis and the possible cures grows shrill. I had
hoped for a calmer and more constructive discussion within the
Senate Judiciary Committee and on the Senate Floor.
My principal concerns are
straightforward: That we ensure that our Nation’s physicians are
able to provide the high quality of medical care that our citizens
deserve and for which the United States is world-renowned, and that
in those instances where a doctor does harm a patient, that patient
should be able to seek appropriate redress through our court system.
ONE SIZE DOES NOT
FIT ALL 50 STATES
To be sure, different States have
different experiences with medical malpractice insurance, and
insurance remains largely a State-regulated industry. Each State
should endeavor to develop its own appropriate solution to rising
medical malpractice insurance rates because each State has its own
unique problems. Some States such as my own, Vermont,
while experiencing problems, do not face as great a crisis as
others. Vermont’s legislature is considering legislation to find
the right answers for our State, and the same process is underway
now in other States. In contrast, in States such as West Virginia,
Pennsylvania, Florida, and New Jersey, doctors have walked out of
work in protest over the exorbitant rates being extracted from them
by their insurance carriers.
MAKING VICTIMS PAY FOR INSURANCE COMPANIES’ MISTAKES
Thoughtful solutions to the situation
will require creative thinking, a genuine effort to rectify the
problem, and bipartisan consensus to achieve real reform.
Unfortunately, these are not the characteristics of the bill before
us. Indeed, S.2601 is a partisan bill that was introduced only a
few days ago without any committee consideration. Ignoring the
central truth of this crisis – that it is a problem in the insurance
industry, not the tort system – the majority has proposed a plan
that would cap non-economic damages across the nation at $250,000 in
medical malpractice cases.
The notion that such a
one-size-fits-all scheme is the answer runs counter to the factual
experience of the States.
Most importantly, the majority’s
proposal does nothing to protect true victims of medical malpractice
and nothing to prevent malpractice in the first place. A cap of
$250,000 would arbitrarily limit compensation that the most
seriously injured patients are able to receive. The medical
malpractice reform debate too often ignores the men, women and
children whose lives have been dramatically – and often permanently
– altered by medical errors. The experience of Linda McDougall, who
testified last year before the Senate Judiciary Committee, is just
one tragic example of such an error. Mrs. McDougall is recovering
from an unnecessary double mastectomy, and her testimony reminded us
all of the real-life consideration of these issues. Arbitrarily
limiting injured patients’ remedies under the law without addressing
the system-wide medical errors that result in patient harm and death
is a recipe for failure.
We are fortunate in this Nation to
have many highly qualified medical professionals, and this is
especially true in my own home state of Vermont.
Unfortunately, good doctors sometimes make errors. It is also
unfortunate that some not-so-good doctors manage to make their way
into the health care system as well. While we must do all that we
can to support the men and women who commit their professional lives
to caring for others, we must also ensure that patients have access
to adequate remedies should they receive inadequate care.
High malpractice insurance premiums
are not the direct result of malpractice lawsuit verdicts. They are
the result of investment decisions by the insurance companies and of
business models geared toward ever-increasing profits as well as the
cyclical hardening of the liability insurance market. In cases
where an insurer has made a bad investment, or has experienced the
same disappointments from Wall Street that so many Americans have,
it should not be able to recoup its losses from the doctors it
insures. The insurance company should have to bear the burdens of
its own business model, just as the other businesses in the economy
do. And a nationwide arbitrary capping of awards available to
victims – as the majority has proposed here this week – should not
be the first and only solution turned to in a tough medical
malpractice insurance market. The problem at hand deserves
thoughtful and collaborative consideration in committee to achieve a
sensible solution that is fair to patients and that supports our
medical professionals in their ability to practice quality health
care.
OVERLY BROAD ANTITRUST IMMUNITY
One aspect of the insurance industry’s
business model requires a legislative correction: Its blanket
exemption from federal antitrust laws. Insurers have for years –
too many years – enjoyed a benefit that is novel in our
marketplace. The McCarran-Ferguson Act permits insurance companies
to operate without being subject to most of the federal antitrust
laws, and our nation’s physicians and their patients have been the
worse off for it. Using their exemption, insurers can collude to
set rates, resulting in higher premiums than true competition would
achieve – and because of this exemption, enforcement officials
cannot investigate any such collusion. If Congress is serious about
controlling rising premiums, we must objectively limit this overly
broad exemption in the McCarran-Ferguson Act.
More than a year ago, I introduced the “Medical Malpractice
Insurance Antitrust Act of 2003,” S.352. I want to thank Senators
Reid, Kennedy, Durbin, Edwards, Rockefeller, Feingold, Boxer and
Corzine for cosponsoring this essential and straightforward
legislation. Our bill modifies the McCarran-Ferguson Act with
respect to medical malpractice insurance, and only for the most
pernicious antitrust offenses: price fixing, bid rigging, and market
allocations. Only those anticompetitive practices that most
certainly will affect premiums are addressed. I am hard-pressed to
imagine that anyone could object to a prohibition on insurance
carriers’ fixing prices or dividing territories. After all, the
rest of our Nation’s industries manage either to abide by these laws
or pay the consequences.
Many State insurance commissioners police the industry well within
the power they are accorded in their own laws, and some States have
antitrust laws of their own that could cover some anticompetitive
activities in the insurance industry. Our legislation is a scalpel,
not a chainsaw. It would not affect regulation of insurance by
state insurance commissioners and other State regulators. But there
is no reason to continue, unexamined, a system in which the federal
enforcers are precluded from prosecuting the most harmful antitrust
violations just because they are committed by insurance companies.
Our legislation is a carefully tailored solution to one critical
aspect of the problem of excessive medical malpractice insurance
rates. I had hoped for quick action by the Judiciary Committee and
then by the full Senate to ensure that this important step on the
road to genuine reform is taken before too much more damage is done
to the physicians of this country and to the patients they care for.
But our legislation to narrow this loophole in the nation’s
anti-trust laws for medical malpractice insurers has languished for
more than a year in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Instead of
conducting hearings and a markup on our bill, the majority now
rushes a “tort reform” agenda item to the floor without any
committee consideration.
If Congress is serious about
controlling rising medical malpractice insurance premiums, then we
must limit the broad exemption to federal antitrust law and promote
real competition in the insurance industry, as well as attack this
problem at its core by reducing medical errors across our health
care system.
Unfortunately, the partisan bill
before us is not designed for creating a solution to a serious
problem. Instead, it is designed purely for politics, and that is
not only a waste of the Senate’s time and of the public’s trust; it
is also a shame.
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Contact: David
Carle, 202 224 3693 / Tracy Schmaler, 202 224 2154