You're dreaming if you think the democommiecraps in congress will allow any
of this.

On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 7:32 AM, Cold Water <[email protected]> wrote:

>   Tort reform must be part of health care reform By: Gov. Rick Perry
> Special to The Examiner
> August 13, 2009
>
> To hear federal officials tell it, they’ve got all the answers on health
> care and it’s up to the rest of us to sit, wait and embrace whatever
> solution — if any — they may eventually provide.
>
> I find this troubling, since states have shown they know a thing or two
> about solving problems that affect their citizens.
>
> Texas, in fact, stands as a good example of how smart, responsible policy
> can help us take major steps toward fixing a damaged medical system,
> starting with legal reforms.
>
> Just six years ago, Texas was mired in a health care crisis. Our doctors
> were leaving the state, or abandoning the profession entirely, because of
> frivolous lawsuits and the steadily increasing medical malpractice insurance
> premiums that resulted.
>
> Two-thirds of our state’s counties had no practicing obstetricians, and for
> pregnant women that meant long trips in cramped cars and higher fuel bills.
> Sixty percent of our counties had no pediatricians, which often meant
> delayed, or denied, health care for sick children.
>
> And 24 counties in the Rio Grande Valley had no primary care doctors.
>
> Each of those factors made it more likely that patients in underserved
> areas would postpone seeking care, which meant minor issues became major
> issues, and illnesses that could have been treated simply, easily and
> economically in a doctor’s office turned into severe health crises that had
> to be treated in the emergency room.
>
> And the situation was worsening with every passing day. By 2002, 13 of the
> state’s 17 liability insurance carriers had left, leaving less competition
> and leaving doctors with insurance bills that were seeing double-digit
> increases, if they could get insurance at all.
>
> That same year, applications for medical licenses plummeted to their lowest
> level in a decade.
>
> This being Texas, instead of throwing money at the problem or debating
> endlessly, we identified the root causes and decided to do something about
> it.
>
> In 2003, I declared the medical liability crisis an emergency item and the
> Legislature responded by passing sweeping reforms that protected the
> patient, but also shielded doctors and hospitals from unscrupulous trial
> lawyers eager to make a quick buck.
>
> We capped noneconomic damages at $250,000 per defendant, or up to $750,000
> per incident, while placing no cap on more easily determined economic
> damages, such as lost wages or costs of medical care due to injury.
>
> We ended the practice of allowing baseless but expensive lawsuits to drag
> on indefinitely, requiring plaintiffs to provide expert witness reports to
> support their claims within four months of filing suit or drop the case.
>
> These measures were supported by the people of Texas, who in September 2003
> approved a ballot measure, Proposition 12, authorizing all the changes.
>
> Changes were seen immediately, and continue to be felt. All major liability
> insurers cut their rates upon passage of our reforms, with most of those
> cuts ranging in the double-digits. More than 10 new insurance carriers
> entered the Texas market, increasing competition and further lowering costs.
>
> As a result, Texas doctors have seen their insurance rates decline by an
> average of 27 percent.
>
> The number of doctors applying to practice medicine in Texas has
> skyrocketed by 57 percent. In 2008, the Texas Medical Board received 4,023
> license applications and issued a record 3,621 new ones.
>
> In all, in just the first five years after reforms passed, 14,498 doctors
> either returned to practice in Texas or began practicing here for the first
> time.
>
> And our reforms finally brought critical specialties to underserved areas.
> The number of obstetricians practicing in rural Texas is up by 27 percent,
> and 12 counties that previously had no obstetricians now have at least one.
> The statistics show major gains in fields like orthopedic surgery,
> pediatrics, neurosurgery and emergency medicine.
>
> The Rio Grande Valley has seen an 18 percent growth in applications to
> practice medicine, adding about 200 doctors to this critically underserved
> area.
>
> And what about the money that used to go to defending all those frivolous
> lawsuits? You can find it in budgets for upgraded equipment, expanded
> emergency rooms, patient safety programs and improved primary and charity
> care.
>
> Success stories like ours need to be told and need to be remembered as we
> continue this national debate.
>
> Instead of handing down one-size-fits-all mandates on how it’s going to be,
> Washington, D.C., should be enabling states to set their own agendas and
> solve their own problems when it comes to health care.
>
> *Rick Perry is the Republican governor of Texas.*
>
>      *Find this article at:*
>
> http://www.sfexaminer.com/opinion/columns/oped_contributors/Tort-reform-must-be-part-of-health-care-reform-53083662.html
>
>
>
> >
>

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