Posts Tagged ‘medical’

UK patient: doc hurt my feelings by telling me to quit smoking

And she wins about $80,000 (plus attorneys’ fees) for her hurt feelings. Mrs. G delayed her caesarean a few minutes to have a pre-op cigarette; her coughing made her epidural more difficult, and Mrs. G and was criticized by anesthesiologist Dr. A, who noted the increased likelihood of surviving to see her daughter’s wedding if Mrs. G quit smoking. (Arthur Martin, “Doctor’s smoking jibe wins mother £44,000 payout”, Daily Mail, Dec. 21; Kevin MD blog). UK medical compensation has grown 30,000 percent in under ten years. The Daily Mail story also notes:

An employment tribunal heard that David Portman, 27, took 137 days off over a five-year period because of a series of ‘unfortunate accidents’.

When he took yet another week off because of his pet’s demise, bosses decided enough was enough and sacked him.

But Mr Portman won his claim for unfair dismissal – and this week walked away with undisclosed compensation reckoned to be at least £10,000.

The tribunal ruled his absences from work were all legitimate and mostly caused by injuries suffered in the course of his duties.

Mr Portman, who was based with Royal Mail in Sheffield, put his months off duty down to bad luck.

‘I felt really aggrieved when I was sacked without them taking into account my particular circumstances,’ he said.

GAO Report: “Science, Business, Regulatory and Intellectual Property Issues Cited as Hampering Drug Development Efforts”

A new report from Congress’s Government Accountability Office — am I the only one who didn’t notice that it changed its name from "General Accounting Office" over two years ago? — attempts to determine why the number of actual applications for approval of new drugs has increased at a much slower rate than the increase in pharmaceutical industry research and development expenditures.

Per the GAO panelists, "conflicting pressures of avoiding risk and producing a high return on investment" combine to curtail the development of the most innovative new drugs:

[C]ompanies prefer to produce drugs that require little risk taking but still offer the potential for high revenues.  This strategy has created an emphasis on producing ‘me too’ drugs — drugs which have a very similar chemical formulation to drugs already on the market.  These drugs are less risky to develop because the safety and efficacy of the drugs on which they are based have already been studied.  According to one panelist, an industry representative, because the length, complexity, and expense of developing a single drug have all increased dramatically over the last 10 to 15 years, companies must choose fewer drugs to develop.  As a result, they will often follow a business model that involves choosing drugs that are easy to develop, with a large market that will produce a large return on investment.

Another factor cited is "sponsors’ uncertainty over how they are to implement requirements for the safety and efficacy of new drugs."  The report notes

general agreement that the lack of precise FDA regulatory standards that outline what constitutes a safe and effective drug is a factor when making drug development decisions — weighing the safety of drugs against their potential therapeutic benefits.  Panelists generally agreed that because there are no precise standards for making these decisions, sponsors and FDA must address them on a case-by-case basis.  As a result, it was indicated that this uncertainty may lead a drug sponsor to abandon a drug rather than risk significant development expenditures.

While product liability litigation is not mentioned in the report by name, it clearly factors in to the industry’s aversion to "risk."  Moreover, at least some of the uncertainty and extra-cautious attitudes within the FDA can be traced to highly publicized — and heavily litigated — withdrawals of drugs based on safety concerns:

* * * Some analysts have reported that safety concerns during the 1990s — which led FDA to request that manufacturers withdraw pharmaceuticals including fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine (known as Fen-Phen) in 1997, Propulsid and Rezulin in 2000, and Baycol in 2001 — impacted FDA’s review requirements.  For example, a 2004 report completed for the European Commission — the executive body of the European Union — found that the withdrawals of these pharmaceuticals from the market affected FDA’s implementation of its regulatory standards.  According to this study, FDA began to demand more complex clinical trials that called for more testing on: (1) how drugs interact with each other, (2) the effect of drugs on liver toxicity, and (3) the relationship of drugs to cardiac risk. In addition, according to several drug development experts and some industry analysts, FDA has been requiring more lengthy and complex clinical trials, which call for more patients and increased costs. . . .

Commenting on the GAO report, Ronald Bailey (Reason Magazine, Hit & Run, "What’s to Blame for Fewer New Pharmaceuticals?," Dec. 20) summarizes:

Why have FDA regulators become more cautious?  Because, as Harvard Business School professor Regina Herzlinger explains in her May, 2006 article, Why Innovation in Health Care is So Hard (not online): ‘Officials know they will be punished by the public and politicians more for underregulating — approving a harmful drug, say — than for tightening the approval process, even if so doing so delays a useful innovation.’

I will venture to suggest that the FDA’s increased obsession with safety may be killing more people than it saves.  How about a GAO study on that question?  After all, if it takes the FDA ten years to approve a drug that saves 20,000 lives per year that means that 200,000 people died in the meantime.

The full GAO report, "New Drug Development: Science, Business, Regulatory and Intellectual Property Issues Cited as Hampering Drug Development Efforts," is available for viewing and download here [PDF].

Oklahoma Supreme Court Eliminates “Affidavit of Merit” Requirement in Med Mal Cases

The Oklahoma legislature, following the lead of a number of other states, attempted to limit unfounded claims for medical malpractice by mandating that all med mal suits be accompanied by an expert’s affidavit stating the expert’s opinion that the claim possesses merit.  The Oklahoma Supreme Court has now declared that requirement to be unconstitutional.  (See Business Insurance, "Okla. Expert Opinion Law Rules Unconstitutional", Dec. 20).

The Court states two grounds for its conclusion. First, the Oklahoma Constitution bars the legislature from adopting "special laws" in which different members of the same class are treated differently.  The Court concludes that the affidavit of merit requirement distinguishes medical negligence claims from all other negligence claims, in violation of the "special law" prohibition.  Second, the Court concludes that requiring potential med mal plaintiffs to bear the expense of obtaining a medical expert’s pre-litigation opinion — the Court estimates it to be between $500 to $5,000 — creates an economic bar at the courthouse door that impedes less wealthy claimants’ access to redress, thus depriving them of due process of law.

The court’s opinion in Monica B. Zeier vs. Zimmer Inc. and Theron S. Nichols, M.D., Oklahoma Supreme Court, No. 102472 (Decided Dec. 19, 2006) — which is not quite final and official as of this writing — is accessible through the Court’s website, here.

What does Warren Buffett’s MedPro say about caps?

Trial lawyers have pointed to Warren Buffett’s purchase of medical-malpractice insurer GE Medical Protective as evidence that medical malpractice insurance is profitable (e.g., this comment thread). Of course, there are two factors to Berkshire Hathaway’s high profitability, both ability to improve the business through sound management and ability to obtain assets cheaply—and it’s possible Buffett bought the now-named MedPro from General Electric because the latter was selling the business on the cheap to get out of insurance.

Of course, if there are inefficiencies in medical malpractice insurance, Buffett is as likely to find them as anyone: the profit motive gives him every incentive to. So what does his MedPro say about the “we need caps” vs. “it’s insurers’ fault” debate over malpractice insurance prices? Here’s what they said in response to the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s appalling decision to strike down caps:

Read On…

Better hector that patient, doc, or else

“An article in the journal Tobacco Control suggests suing doctors for failing to nag patients who smoke about quitting.” (Jacob Sullum, Reason “Hit and Run”, Dec. 6; MedPundit, Dec. 6; Randy M Torrijos and Stanton A Glantz, “The US Public Health Service ‘treating tobacco use and dependence clinical practice guidelines’ as a legal standard of care”, Tobacco Control (British Medical Journal), Dec. 2006).

Ob-gyns become cosmetic surgeons

Doctors are increasingly choosing to trade medicinal necessities for a luxury practice, a factor that many who simply count raw numbers of doctors fail to take account of. Now, one must acknowledge that there are several reasons an ob-gyn would choose to switch from delivering babies to performing cosmetic surgery: the hours are better, one doesn’t have to deal with the hassle of insurer and Medicare reimbursement, one’s patients are likely to be more genteel. But surely the $120,000/year difference in malpractice insurance has at least something to do with it on the margin. (Natasha Singer, “More Doctors Turning to the Business of Beauty”, New York Times, Nov. 30).

Sid Schwab (SurgeonsBlog) on getting sued

His first: “news of the lawsuit was in the newspaper before anyone had had the decency to contact me. What kind of people act like that?” Not that everyone sympathizes: “Ho hum,” says Greedy Trial Lawyer, who read the first two posts in Schwab’s series. “Get out the violins.” Don’t miss this one, or the outpouring of reader comments (parts one, two, three)(cross-posted from Point of Law).

Wrongful birth reaches Germany

“A court ruling which ordered a gynecologist to pay child support for up to 18 years as compensation for botching a contraceptive implant was condemned by the German media as scandalous on Wednesday. The Karlsruhe-based federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday that the doctor must pay his former patient, now a mother of a three-year-old boy, 600 euros ($769) a month because she became pregnant after he implanted her with a contraceptive device.” (“Doctor ordered to pay for unwanted baby”, Reuters, Nov. 15; “GYN’s “Human” Error Will Now Be Getting Child Support”, Deutsche Welle, Nov. 15). Similar: Apr. 9 (Scotland), May 9 and Jun. 8, 2000, etc.

Dr. Lawrence M. Poliner v. Presbyterian Hospital update

The ludicrous $366 million award on a conspiracy theory (Aug. 30, 2004; Sep. 2, 2004) was, as we predicted reduced by remittitur to a still ludicrous $22.5 million. (Plaintiff’s attorney’s press release, Sep. 21). Kevin M.D.’s commenters note that the trial bar simultaneously complains that doctors don’t do enough to police themselves and then hold doctors liable for policing other doctors.

Note that the doctors whom the verdict was issued against weren’t even the ones on the peer review committee that suspended Dr. Poliner’s privileges for a few months; they were just the ones who started the peer-review process.