Medical
Malpractice Crisis Affecting Pennsylavania Patient Care - Mixture of Financial,
Market Pressures Fray Physician - Patient Relationship and Impact Health Care
Quality
New study on medical malpractice released by The Project on Medical
Liability in Pennsylvania; funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
PHILADELPHIA,
PA (PRWEB) July 7, 2004 - The medical malpractice crisis gripping Pennsylvania
has sown widespread discontent among doctors in high-risk specialties, affecting
the quality of health care their patients receive, according to a new study released
today by The Project on Medical Liability in Pennsylvania and funded by The Pew
Charitable Trusts. Malpractice concerns could be harmful to the physician-patient
relationship, as the interplay between financial and market pressures changes
how physicians approach their work, the study says.
"Physician
satisfaction is often neglected or discounted as self-serving in policy debates,"
the authors say. "In this paper we outline a framework for understanding
why physician satisfaction matters for patient care and what factors influence
it. Professional dissatisfaction deserves policy attention if it has damaging
consequences for patients."
Nearly
40 percent of Pennsylvania high-risk specialists surveyed in 2003 were dissatisfied
with the practice of medicine, twice as high as the national rate in 1999. Studies
have shown that satisfied physicians tend to be more attentive to their patients
and have higher levels of satisfaction among their patients. But dissatisfied
physicians have been linked to riskier prescribing practices or engaging in "defensive
medicine" when treating patients.
"Our
findings suggest that the malpractice crisis in Pennsylvania is decreasing specialist
physicians' satisfaction with medical practice in ways that may affect the quality
of care. The relationship may be cumulative, with an acute malpractice crisis
acting as a 'last straw' among the physicians who are most affected by it,"
the report's authors conclude.
The
report, "Caring For Patients In A Malpractice Crisis: Physician Satisfaction
and Quality Of Care," is part of a special section published in "Health
Affairs" containing several other articles showing the complexity of the
medical malpractice crisis.
According
to the American Medical Association, about two-thirds of U.S. states are now in
the midst of a malpractice crisis or showing signs of trouble. Nowhere is the
problem more acute than in Pennsylvania, where several insurers have left the
market and premiums for coverage through the remaining insurers have increased
dramatically. To investigate the effects of the malpractice crisis on patient
care, the authors conducted a series of interviews with representatives from Pennsylvania
physician groups, hospitals, and insurers, followed by a mail survey of 824 Pennsylvania
physicians in high-risk specialties (emergency medicine physicians, general surgeons,
neurosurgeons, OB/GYNs, orthopedic surgeons, and radiologists).
KEY
FINDINGS
Pervasive
Job Dissatisfaction
Nearly 40 percent of the Pennsylvania high-risk specialists
surveyed in 2003 were dissatisfied with the practice of medicine. OB/GYNs were
most likely to report dissatisfaction. Career satisfaction among Pennsylvania
high-risk specialists was much lower than a 1999 national sample39 percent
compared to 19 percent.
Low
Marks for Pennsylvania
Seventy percent of specialists said that they would
be very or somewhat likely to recommend their specialty to someone graduating
from medical school today, but only 15 percent were willing to recommend practicing
in Pennsylvania. Nearly half responded that they were not at all likely to recommend
Pennsylvania. Specialists who had strong personal ties to the state (either grew
up or attended medical school in Pennsylvania) were no more likely than those
who did not to recommend practicing here.
Income
Squeeze
Rising liability insurance premiums and static or declining reimbursements
are putting physicians in an income bind. Specialists surveyed who felt heavily
burdened by malpractice insurance costs were least likely to report satisfaction
with their practice. Asked to characterize their current professional liability
insurance premium levels, 40 percent of specialists described their premiums as
an "extreme burden," 40 percent said that they were a "major burden,"
12 percent called them a "minor burden," and 2 percent said that they
were "not at all a burden."
Fraying
Relations with Patients
Liability pressures may affect physicians' satisfaction
and the quality of care by impinging upon the physician/patient relationship.
Just over half of surveyed specialists denied that malpractice concerns made them
less candid with their patients, but a sizable minority felt that they did. Physicians
who felt "wounded" by the malpractice system and those with high premium
burdens were significantly more likely to report such changes in patient relations.
Three-fourths of specialists agreed with the statement, "Because of concerns
about malpractice liability, I view every patient as a potential malpractice lawsuit."
Limited
Autonomy
The malpractice crisis may also be affecting physicians' satisfaction
by eroding their sense of control. Survey reports indicated that the liability
environment impedes specialists' perceived ability to deliver needed services
in the way they would like. Ninety-one percent of specialists surveyed said that
the malpractice system limits doctors ability to provide the highest-quality
medical care.
Cutting
Back on Care
Many specialists surveyed reported that their practice or hospital
was taking steps to reduce overhead costs, and nearly two-thirds reported that
their practice or hospital would likely reduce the number of clinical staff over
the next two years because of liability costs. Nearly three-fourths indicated
that their practice or hospital would likely reduce the number of administrative
staff, and a similar percentage reported that their practice or hospital would
cancel or delay capital improvements because of liability costs.
OUTLOOK
According
to the report, rising liability expenses in a severe malpractice crisis impose
costs on patients. Some costs are economicstate governments may divert tax
dollars toward subsidies for malpractice insurance premiums, and health insurance
costs may increase if provider reimbursement is raised in response to increased
overhead. But other costs come in the form of lower quality and availability of
health services. As the human face of such changes, physicians' behaviorparticularly
their anxieties and discontentshould become a critical policy focus, the
report recommends.
State
legislatures typically focus on three strategies to respond to a malpractice crisis:
insurance subsidies, stricter insurance regulation, and reforms to the tort liability
system. Overall, these reform strategies are responsive to physician dissatisfaction,
the report says, but their efficacy as a cure for the tort crisis and protection
for recurring crises is open to question. The core objective of such reforms should
not be to restore physicians' job satisfaction, but to improve the malpractice
systems performance in compensating patients and promoting high-quality
care. If a byproduct of reform is higher professional satisfaction, it's the patients
who stand the most to gain, the report says.
The
full report and other research by the Project on Medical Liability in Pennsylvania
may be found at www.medliabilitypa.org
About
The Project on Medical Liability in Pennsylvania:
The goal of the two-year,
$3.2 million Project on Medical Liability in Pennsylvania is to provide Pennsylvania
policy makers with objective information about the medical liability system; to
broaden participation in the medical liability debate to include new constituencies
and perspectives; and to focus attention on the relationship between medical liability
and the overall health and prosperity of the Commonwealth. The Project is working
with leading health policy experts from across the nation and will continue to
publish both original research based on new data and expert analyses. The Project
will generate information from a broad range of perspectives, without promoting
the agenda of any of the stakeholders in the debate.
The
other articles in this special edition of "Health Affairs" examine the
following:
William
Sage, from Columbia Law School, proposes overhauling the structure and financing
of malpractice liability insurance. Sage attributes much of the current crisis
to a widening gap between first-party health insurance and third-party malpractice
insurance. He urges Medicare and Medicaid to play a major role in the medical
liability system of the future.
Carol
Liebman and Chris Hyman of Columbia Law School examine a program of medical error
communication and mediation-based dispute resolution that can improve patient
care as well as reduce malpractice litigation. The measure can be adopted voluntarily
by hospitals and physicians even if political consensus on legislative reform
is lacking.
In
a critical review of recent proposals for "medical courts" and "expert
screening panels," Catherine Struve, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania
Law School, suggests simpler, more effective ways to help judges and juries make
better-informed rulings with respect to both liability and damages.
In
a study not part of the Pew research, Harvard's David Studdert and colleagues
review a sample of high-end jury verdicts that were subject to California's cap
on noneconomic damages. They conclude that the cap is unfair to patients who suffer
grave injuries involving pain and disfigurement.
The
researchers for this report are Michelle M. Mello, an assistant professor of health
policy and law, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of
Public Health. David Studdert is an associate professor of law and public health
at the Harvard School of Public Health. Catherine DesRoches is a research assistant
in that department. Jordon Peugh is a senior research manager at Harris Interactive
in New York City, where Kinga Zapert is a vice president. Troyen Brennan is a
professor of law and public health, Department of Health Policy and Management,
Harvard School of Public Health, and a professor of medicine in the Department
of Medicine, Harvard Medical School. William Sage is a professor of law at Columbia
Law School in New York City.