According to a national study by the Insurance Information Institute, 71 percent of product liability awards and 53
percent of medical malpractice awards amounted to $ 1 million or more.
Product Liability: According to a national study, 71 percent of product liability awards and 53
percent of medical malpractice awards by the courts amounted to $ 1 million or more.
Nearly 20
percent of all medical malpractice suits are filed against OBGYN's, more than any other type of doctor.
It has been estimated that 50
percent of medical malpractice lawsuits are against surgeons every year.
Among tort trial cases concluded in 2001, litigants filed appeals in approximately 33 percent of product liability and 18
percent of medical malpractice trials.
As reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association, problems with medical diagnoses are raised in nearly 20
percent of all medical malpractice actions.
In 62
percent of medical malpractice cases involving objects left in the body, the object was thought to have been accounted for until it caused problems for the patient.
Not exact matches
Last year, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office concluded that enacting
medical malpractice reform would, on average, reduce
malpractice insurance costs by 10
percent nationwide, and probably more in New York, resulting in a more than $ 300 million
of overall reduction in health care spending in our state budget.
But after Horner accused Cuomo
of cutting a «naked political deal» with hospitals to cap non-economic damages in
medical malpractice suits to get their support for a painful 2 -
percent cut in Medicaid reimbursement, the administration is singing an entirely different tune.
According to the most recent National Center for State Courts (NCSC) data, in 2012
medical malpractice case filings represented well under 1
percent of all incoming civil cases and less than 7
percent of incoming tort cases in the courts
of 8 states reporting.
States that enacted new limits on patients» legal rights in
medical malpractice cases saw an average 22.7
percent decrease in pure premiums from 2002 to the present — but states that did nothing saw a larger average drop
of 29.5
percent.
The study reviewed records
of 2,341 patients admitted to the hospitals and found 18
percent had been harmed by
medical malpractice, some more than once.
Your Central New York
medical malpractice lawyers, Michaels & Smolak, have a quiz for you: What
percent of doctors do you think end up paying 32 %
of all
medical malpractice claims?
According to the National Center for State Courts,
medical malpractice cases represent what
percent of all state civil caseloads:
Oh yes, the answer is «d.»
Medical malpractice cases make up less than half
of a
percent of civil cases — hardly a deluge.
A Congressional Budget Office report from 2004 found that
medical malpractice costs only contributed to 2
percent of U.S. healthcare spending.
More than 10
percent of the nation's reported
medical malpractice payments involve California physicians.
Under this law, an Illinois
medical malpractice lawyer's payment is capped at 33 1/3
percent of the award.
In fact, California's
medical malpractice insurance industry has become so bloated due to this cap, that «as little as 2 or 3
percent of premiums are used to pay claims» and «the state's biggest
medical malpractice insurer, Napa - based The Doctors Company, spent only 10
percent of the $ 179 million collected in premiums on claims in 2009.»
«1 Thus a patient who has a forty
percent chance
of survival at the outset, but whose chances
of survival were reduced to ten
percent by a
medical error, can sue for
medical malpractice.
According to state data examined by the National Center for State Courts, which is the one and only entity that compiles data like this,
medical malpractice cases represent 4.6
percent of the total state tort caseloads.
Some
of the largest headline - grabbing
medical malpractice awards in New York ultimately resulted in settlements that were what
percent of the jury verdict?
o o
Medical malpractice cases currently constitute only about four
percent of all tort cases in state civil courts (in thirteen states reporting), 10 so removing them would provide only minuscule savings.