GAO: legal costs drive med-mal rates

Congress’s General Accounting Office confirms what the Department of Health and Human Services and Joint Economic Committee (PDF) have found before it: “Increases in medical malpractice insurance rates in some states, including Pennsylvania, were due largely to high payoffs on legal claims, according to a congressional survey released yesterday. …’Losses on medical malpractice claims appear […]

Congress’s General Accounting Office confirms what the Department of Health and Human Services and Joint Economic Committee (PDF) have found before it: “Increases in medical malpractice insurance rates in some states, including Pennsylvania, were due largely to high payoffs on legal claims, according to a congressional survey released yesterday. …’Losses on medical malpractice claims appear to be the primary driver of increased premium rates in the long term,’ the report states. ‘Such losses are by far the largest component of insurer costs.'” (Lara Jakes Jordan, “Malpractice insurance rise tied to legal claims”, AP/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Jul. 29). Study: “Medical Malpractice Insurance: Multiple Factors Have Contributed to Increased Premium Rates”, Jun. (PDF format).

P.S. In August 2003 the GAO released a further look at medical malpractice problems, “Medical Malpractice: Implications of Rising Premiums on Access To Health Care“. Congress’s Joint Economic Committee later (Dec.) published a policy brief offering perspective on the GAO findings.

3 Comments

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