New York State Bar Association/ Continuing Legal Education Presents: ‘Medical Malpractice’ – Register Today.

New York State Bar Association/ Continuing Legal Education Presents: ‘Medical Malpractice’ This Program will be for new and experienced attorneys. This seminar will provide an overview of key issues in Medical Malpractice Litigation through a combination of lectures and practical demonstrations.  Learn how to determine the relevant standard of care, how to prepare your case, how to avoid common pitfalls and how to examine expert witnesses.

Steven E. Pegalis of Pegalis & Erickson LLC. will be a key speaker on ‘Openings and Summations’, Friday -March 2nd at the Melville Marriott, Long Island. 

Register Now:

http://www.nysba.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Events1&Template=/Conference/ConferenceDescByRegClass.cfm&ConferenceID=5218

Doctor Misses Cancer, Victim Wins $15M in Malpractice Suit

The woman had a marble-sized lump that a doctor first said was not malignant.

By Greg Cergol
|  Friday, Feb 10, 2012  |  Updated 6:28 PM EST
Doctor Misses Cancer, Victim Wins $15M

A Long Island breast cancer victim has been awarded $15 million in a malpractice suit against her doctor after her cancer was initially missed, despite a lump in her breast.

Stephanie Tesoriero, 50, had claimed the doctor misdiagnosed her cancer, costing her precious time in fighting the disease.

“This could have all been avoided,” Tesoriero said.

The mother of three first discovered a marble-sized lump in her breast in 2002.

After reviewing her mammogram, Dr. Paul Fisher of the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Care Center in Stony Brook concluded there was “no evidence of malignancy.”  He ordered no further tests, according to Tesoriero.

The doctor instructed her to return for a normal exam in about a year, Tesoriero said. But the lump didn’t go away.

And when she received more tests 16 months later, Tesoriero said, another doctor found that the lump was as big as a golf ball. He determined it was, in fact, breast cancer.

“Why didn’t they find it the first time?” Tesoriero asked. “Why didn’t they go the extra step and do a sonogram?”

A mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation treatments all followed and, for a time, the cancer went into remission. That’s when Tesoriero decided to sue her doctor.

The two-week trial ended Wednesday with a jury of six women approving the multimillion-dollar award.

Two calls to Fisher’s lawyer were not returned. He remains on staff at the Baldwin Breast Care Center, but since the center itself was not named in the lawsuit and oversaw Tesoriero’s later treatment, a spokeswoman offered no comment.

“They found him negligent because he was,” said her lawyer Robert Fallarino. “There was something there, something she felt, and it needed to be evaluated and if it had been, we would not be here now.”

“I just wanted him to admit he made a mistake,” Tesoriero said of her doctor. “Doctors do make mistakes.”

Tesoriero’s cancer fight is far from over. The cancer has returned and has spread to her bones.

The prognosis is uncertain, her lawyer said. Tesoriero must now undergo chemotherapy treatments nearly every week for the rest of her life.

“I don’t want to see anybody else go through this,” Tesoriero said.  “It’s a tough fight.”

Tesoriero has spoken out, she said, to sound a warning for other women.

“If you have any suspicions, any doubts,” she said, “speak to the doctor and ask for another test.”

How Complaints From a Single Doctor Caused the Gov’t to Take Down a Public Database

by Marian Wang
ProPublica, Nov. 10, 2011, 12:20 p.m.

An agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that maintains a discipline and medical-malpractice database reopened it for public access yesterday, two months after the agency had first taken the database offline.

The National Practitioner Data Bank contains information used by hospitals, insurers, and licensing boards to track doctors’ records, check prospective hires, and make other decisions. A publicly available version of the database — which removed confidential identifiers such as doctors’ names and addresses — had long been used by reporters and others interested in patient safety. In the years it was online, journalists could reference the database and, with additional reporting, could at times identify doctors with uniquely long histories of being sued or disciplined for medical malpractice.

Then, two months ago, the government cut off public access — a decision that was sharply criticized by a number of journalism organizations and consumer groups.

What was behind that decision? Apparently, one Kansas doctor with a trail of malpractice suits.

A public records request by Sen. Charles Grassley and the New York Times turned up documents about the decision that shows that the agency closed the database days after the doctor, Robert Tenny, complained to the government. Thanks to the database, he told the Health Resources and Services Administration, or HRSA, he was about to get unwanted attention in his local paper.

We culled through the documents and pulled out some interesting snippets that give a glimpse into the backstory behind why the public database was temporarily shut down and why — even now — the restored database has some new restrictions.

A brief timeline:

Aug. 16 – A local newspaper reporter requested a comment from a neurosurgeon, Robert Tenny, through Tenny’s attorney. The reporter, Alan Bavley of the Kansas City Star, was working on a story about doctors who have went undisciplined despite histories of malpractice allegations. He had used both the public database coupled with publicly available court records to do his reporting.

Aug. 24 – The doctor sent a fax to Cynthia Grubbs at HRSA. Tenny asked for help, alarmed that the reporter had identified him and was poised to report on his malpractice settlements. The fax looked like this:

Aug. 26 – The HRSA wrote to the reporter, warning that he could face at least $11,000 in fines for each violation of confidentiality. The doctor was copied on the letter.

Sept. 1 – The agency cut off public access to the database.

Sept. 4 – An article ran on the front page of the Kansas City Star, telling the story of a woman who died in 2007 after undergoing a brain surgery with Dr. Tenny. It noted that Tenny had been sued at least 16 times for medical malpractice but had never been disciplined by the state’s licensing boards. (Update: Worth noting that according to the report, Dr. Tenny settled at least six of the 16 lawsuits; the others were either dismissed or the outcomes either weren’t clear. “In at least one case, the verdict was in Tenny’s favor,” the Star reported.)

On the same day, the doctor wrote to HRSA again, this time with a copy of the article, and he expressed a desire that this “will change the way public data is presented.”

Sept. 5, 7, 11, 14, 15, and 20 – Dr. Tenny wrote five more letters to HRSA, complaining that the newspaper was making “a concerted effort” to end his career and that the article “significantly questioned the security of your data.” He also speculated that the reporter had gotten improper access to information from the full data bank either from a local medical center or from a disgruntled former Data Bank employee.

Sept. 22 – The Kansas City Star wrote a story about how groups were urging that the database be reopened. Dr. Tenny wrote to HRSA again: “Stay strong and keep up the good work!” (The American Medical Association, around this time, also wrote a letter supporting the agency’s decision to remove the file.)

Sept. 26 – HRSA responded to Dr. Tenny’s six letters, telling him that the publicly accessible database had been removed, and that the agency had contacted hospitals to remind them of confidentiality requirements and sanctions for breaches of confidentiality.

Nov. 9 - HRSA restored public access to the database, but as many reports have noted, it comes with a major caveat. According to the website, users of the new database are no longer allowed to combine information gleaned from the public database with any other publicly available information in a way that would identify doctors. Or in other words, the government is now trying to tell the public — including the press — what it’s allowed to do with publicly available information. (The agency told the Kansas City Star that it has a duty “to make certain that information about individual practitioners remains confidential.”)

Sen. Grassley and others have pledged to keep fighting the agency’s interpretation of the law, questioning whether the database is ultimately meant to protect the public or to protect physicians.

“The interpretation of the law ought to be for public benefit,” Grassley said. “A single physician complained that a reporter identified him through shoe leather reporting, not the public data file. One complaint shouldn’t dictate public access to federally collected data for 300 million people.”

We’ve called Dr. Tenny’s office for comment but have not received a response.

Malpractice reform efforts stalled

Malpractice reform efforts stalled
By: Brett Norman
November 7, 2011 10:29 PM EST
In a bid to win support for health reform from skeptical doctors back in 2009, President Barack Obama pledged action on an item near the top of their wish list — malpractice reform.

And he delivered an initial step: $25 million to test alternatives to the medical liability system. That won praise from the American Medical Association, among others. But since then, tort reform on the federal level has been put on ice, a victim of both tight money and bitter politics.

Malpractice provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act were limited in the first place — $50 million for expanded state demonstration projects. And Congress didn’t fund it. Nor did the administration get the $250 million it requested for fiscal year 2012 for the Department of Justice to explore alternative approaches.

Meanwhile, House Republicans are pushing for the kind of reform they’ve backed for many years — a $250,000 federal cap on noneconomic damages and shortening the statute of limitations. But the bill, called the HEALTH Act, has little chance of clearing the Senate, which is controlled by Democrats, who have historically resisted tort reform.

The two sides have been arguing for years, with the Democrats accusing Republicans of siding with insurers instead of injured patients, and the Republicans saying Democrats are beholden to trial lawyers. Meanwhile numerous studies have documented ongoing problems with patient safety, as well as significant flaws in the way the legal system currently handles malpractice cases, sometimes dubbed “jackpot justice.”

Yet unless the supercommittee acts, it looks like tort reform will be left for now to the states — many of which have already taken some kind of action. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that tort reform similar to the Republican caps proposal would save $54 billion over 10 years.

“It doesn’t look like anything big is going to happen soon,” said Urban Institute scholar Randall Bovbjerg. The $250 million DoJ request to finance alternatives including so-called health courts, safe harbor and “disclose and apologize” models, “could have been a meaningful effort,” he added.

The ACA provisions, on the other hand, were worth little to begin with. The proposed $50 million “showed they cared about responding to reform and defensive medicine and such, but the restrictions in the law made it impossible for it to amount to anything,” Bovbjerg said.

“It was only ever intended as a political sop,” said Philip Howard, founder and chairman of Common Good, which advocates for expert health courts to settle medical liability claims. Backers of health courts say they would be fairer and more consistent than the current way of handling malpractice cases.

What’s left are the relatively limited projects funded in June 2010 with the initial $25 million through the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality — 13 planning grants of about $300,000 each and seven $3 million, three-year demonstration projects.

And even that AHRQ program is on hold. The Department of Health and Human Services solicited applications for a second round of grants but “since Congress hasn’t funded it yet, the applications have not been reviewed,” an HHS official said.

Congressional Republicans oppose the demonstration projects in hopes of positioning their tort reform law as a core piece — and a well-defined piece, after so much congressional debate — of their “repeal and replace” strategy for the ACA, staffers say.

“The president’s demonstration projects are an attempt to profess interest in malpractice reforms without actually taking action,” Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas) wrote in an email to POLITICO. “We don’t need to ‘demonstrate’ that medical malpractice reforms are effective; that has already been proven in the states where these reforms have been enacted.”

The caps, already in place in many states including Texas and California, may provide more predictability for doctors and malpractice insurers. But they do nothing to address the underlying system, which is increasingly understood to serve neither patients nor doctors well or fairly. But the political debate over how to address the problem has ossified into a rote partisan exercise, Bovbjerg said.

“The lawyers say the system works great,” he said. “The other side says it’s the worst thing since the fall of man from Eden, but if we have a little less of it, it will be fine.”

In his book, “Healthcare, Guaranteed,” Ezekiel Emanuel, a bioethicist now at the University of Pennsylvania and a former White House adviser on health policy, laid out the case against the existing malpractice system.

“Numerous studies have shown that the majority of patients who suffer a medical error are not compensated, while a select few win outsize awards. And on average, patients must wait nearly five years to resolve claims and receive payments from a malpractice case — six if the case is related to the delivery of a baby.”

Among the alternatives being developed in several states or communities include the “disclose and offer” or “disclose and apologize” model. First introduced by the Veterans Administration and adopted by other health systems, including the University of Michigan, it encourages health providers to acknowledge and apologize for medical errors and offer patients compensation. If the patient rejects the offer and opts to sue, any previous admission would be inadmissible in court. Proponents say this model encourages providers to identify mistakes openly — and work on ways to prevent errors or harm from happening to another patient.

Health courts, based on previous specialized courts, would provide administrative compensation as ordered by trained judges and medical experts, rather than the usual trial by a lay jury. These have not been tested yet.

The safe harbors model would protect providers from liability if they follow established best practice guidelines, although in many cases, those guidelines have not yet been specified or widely agreed on.

“There are a lot of ideas that need to be tested as a first step,” said Michelle Mello, a professor of public health at Harvard and a malpractice reform advocate who has applied for funding through AHRQ.

The initial round of AHRQ grants provided funding to develop and test some of these models, particularly the disclose and offer variety. The demonstration grants went to university researchers, health systems, a public health department and a court system.

And the idea was that some of the 13 planning grants would subsequently get project-level funding.

“That was the hope,” said Joy Wilson, health policy director of the National Conference of State Legislatures. “But it’s not easy to fund anything in this environment. It didn’t happen.”

Advocates of comprehensive malpractice reform are frustrated by the mismatch between rhetoric and action. And the AMA still wants a nationwide fix.

“It will come back around — and sooner rather than later — because fundamentally, you can’t manage health care if you can’t manage health care justice,” Howard said. “But no politician wants to do it.”

Med-mal cap does not pass constitutional muster

National Law Journal
ALM Properties, Inc.
Page printed from: http://www.nlj.com
Back to Article

Robert Peck of the Center for Constitutional Litigation responds to James Ho’s op-ed about medical malpractice reform.

September 12, 2011

In “Federalism and medical malpractice reform” [NLJ, Aug. 29], Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher partner James Ho defended H.R. 5, the congressional medical-malpractice damages cap bill against some carefully selected constitutional attacks. Missing from his attempt to justify congressional authority to amend state tort law was any willingness to grapple with fundamental constitutional principles that stand as insuperable obstacles to what H.R. 5 would do.

A federal law capping compensatory damages in state tort actions brought by the most catastrophically injured victims of substandard medical treatment cannot comport with the Seventh Amendment, which guarantees the right to trial by jury. The courts apply a historical test to determine whether constitutional jury-trial rights are infringed. The most recent review of that historical record by the U.S. Supreme Court occurred in a 1998 unanimous opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas, which found that, under the English common law that predated our Bill of Rights, jurors are “the judges of damages.” The Court then explained that any deviation from that venerable practice, which treats damages as part of the jury’s determination of the facts, fails to satisfy the “substance of the common law right” that the Seventh Amendment enshrined. Feltner v. Columbia Pictures Television Inc., 523 U.S. 340 (1998). It is worth mentioning that the winning advocate behind this argument was a lawyer named John Roberts Jr., now chief justice of the United States.

The Court reiterated the jury’s unimpeachable authority over any determination of noneconomic damages, the type of compensatory damages that H.R. 5 specifically attempts to limit, in Cooper Industries Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group Inc., 532 U.S. 424 (2001). There, the Court held that punitive damages were no longer a fact to be found by the jury under the Seventh Amendment but instead an expression of the community’s moral outrage at the misconduct and subject to judicial revision in accordance with due-process principles. The Court took pains to contrast the “evolved” status of punitive damages, which were jury-determined facts as long as they compensated for intangible injuries, with noneconomic damages, which remain “a question of historical or predictive fact,” within the exclusive province of the jury. For that reason, numerous state courts have struck damages caps for violating the cognate protection of jury rights found in their state constitution.

Mr. Ho also picked a single federal constitutional argument among many made in the course of still-pending Texas litigation to deride — that the Texas cap constitutes a taking, a position that former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor has suggested is correct.

A cap reduces compensation for proven invasions of bodily integrity supposedly to promote the public availability and affordability of health care. When full compensation for surgically removing the wrong ovary is denied through a cap, as in a case now pending before the Kansas Supreme Court, it becomes the obligation of the state to make up the difference between the jury’s verdict and the limitation. The argument thus has far more traction than Mr. Ho concedes.

CONFUSING CLIENTS WITH LAWYERS

In addition, Mr. Ho’s assertion that one of my law firm’s clients, the American Association for Justice (AAJ), ought to be consistent in its opposition to H.R. 5 with the arguments we make in court, fails to appreciate the difference between clients and their lawyers. AAJ does nothing hypocritical in emphasizing the fact that the federal government has no authority to amend state tort law, even as I argue in court that state constitutions generally prohibit such caps. After all, in the seminal case of Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), the Court made plain that “Congress has no power to declare substantive rules of common law applicable in a state,” even if the subject is “commercial law or a part of the law of torts.” That Congress could have the authority to alter state law directly was specifically considered and rejected by the framers of the Constitution. Plainly, H.R. 5′s proposed damage cap is unconstitutional any way one looks at it.

My firm, the Center for Constitutional Litigation (CCL), which does no lobbying, need not limit its in-court legal arguments to those made by AAJ, a client, in a different venue, even though our interests in assuring full and fair remedies to those injured through the fault of others coincide. And AAJ need not limit its arguments in Congress against H.R. 5 to those CCL makes in court. If that were so, members of Mr. Ho’s firm could be accused of being “funded” and limited to the arguments of its clients. In two of the most recent cases in which CCL and Gibson Dunn were opposing counsel, Gibson Dunn represented Philip Morris and a collection of tort reform groups (in neither case was CCL representing AAJ). Yet to suggest that those clients limit their arguments in lobbying forums to those that Gibson Dunn has used on similar issues in court is to deny the independence of the bar — and the separate existence of the client. Requiring such unity of voice of lawyers and clients regardless of the forum is the veritable bridge too far.

Robert S. Peck
Washington
The writer is president of the Center for Constitutional Litigation.

Doctors with histories of alleged malpractice often go undisciplined – KansasCity.com

Doctors with histories of alleged malpractice often go undisciplined – KansasCity.com.

What to do when you’re a Victim of Medical Negligence

 

Published date: 01 September 2011 |

Published by: Reporter

When anyone receives medical treatment the last thing they expect is to have their condition worsened due to malpractice or negligence. This is an unfortunate reality though, leaving many wondering how they can seek redress for their suffering.

We all expect any experience of medical treatment to go smoothly, but unfortunately this is not always the case. Like everyone else, doctors are capable of making mistakes but the nature of their profession means that these mistakes can often have serious consequences.

The unfortunate thing for doctors is that they work within a very complex field and whilst they receive thorough training, this will not always be perfect. This is because not all illnesses and diseases will present themselves exactly as they appear in books and there are a number of factors which can cause symptoms to be disguised or misinterpreted. Doctors, therefore, need to be constantly alert in order to make accurate diagnoses within short time frames and need to be aware of any relevant aspects of the patient’s history.

The problem is that there are times when this does not happen and a misdiagnosis can lead to further complications. During severe cases, the failure to administer appropriate treatment can lead to the death of the patient, leaving families distraught.

In any situation where medical treatment has not been administered to the appropriate level, those affected should seek professional advice. Speaking to specialists, such as medical negligence solicitors, will help establish the strength of a potential medical negligence claim. The solicitors will offer advice on the situation in order to determine the likelihood of success within a legal battle.

It is important to speak to qualified professionals from the outset as they will be able to determine the nature of your claim. All medical negligence solicitors will have received thorough training and should understand the delicate nature of such claims. They will therefore approach all situations with due sensitivity so that claimants feel more at ease discussing their personal situations.

It’s important to bear in mind that medical negligence claims can take a longer time than other claims to be finalised, meaning that you need to be fully prepared for what could be a lengthy battle.

Medical negligence solicitors will discuss all of this with you and will make sure you are fully prepared for the claim process before beginning. Many will also operate under a no-win-no-fee basis, meaning they will not charge you should your claim be unsuccessful. This means that you do not need to worry about your finances whilst pursuing your claim, something which puts off a number of prospective claimants.

Leading the News “Pro-plaintiff” film fueling debate over tort reform

Leading the News

“Pro-plaintiff” film fueling debate over tort reform.

The National Law Journal (6/28, Ingram) reported on “a pro-plaintiff documentary” by Oregon attorney Susan Saladoff “that’s a call to arms over tort law, jury awards and judicial elections.” “Hot Coffee” centers on “the high-profile 1994 case of an elderly New Mexico woman, Stella Liebeck, who spilled McDonald’s coffee on herself and sued.” Business groups including the US Chamber of Commerce have slammed the film, which “is an aggressive attempt to channel the public’s sympathy back to plaintiffs.” The film was applauded by American Association for Justice President C. Gibson Vance, who said, “Most people only have a limited idea of the necessity and importance of our civil justice system, and that powerful forces are constantly trying to undermine it or take it away.” He said Saladoff’s documentary “helps debunk the myths.”

Medical Errors/Healthcare

Report says wrong site surgeries occur as frequently as 40 times each week.

Modern Healthcare (6/29, McKinney) reported according to the Joint Commission, “National rates of wrong-site surgeries-which include wrong procedure, wrong side and wrong patient-can reach as high as 40 incidences a week.” The Commission’s Center for Transforming Healthcare “partnered with eight hospitals and surgery centers for the project. Those organizations used robust process improvement tools to identify problems and develop focused interventions.” Commission President Dr. Mark Chassin suggested, among other solutions, “a carefully standardized method of gathering patient information at the time of scheduling can reduce the likelihood of surgical errors.” The Commission will make available all the “interventions” this fall once the project has been completed.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal (6/30, Harasim) reported that the eight hospitals or surgical centers participating in the project found that in addition to ineffective communication and distractions that took place in the operating room, other things that led to wrong site surgery included deficiencies related to the pre-operation and scheduling processes.

Medscape (6/29, Crane) reported that “a ‘time out’ without full participation by all key people in the operating room was identified as another contributing factor that increased risk.”

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