May 21, 2012

Hospital closes their OB unit, claiming runaway malpractice lawsuits to blame

If you believe that runaway lawsuit abuse in the United States does not affect the average citizen, take a moment to read about what’s happening in Brooklyn. A hospital has decided to shut down their OB department and stop delivering babies. Why? Just ask yourself. If you ran a hospital, how long could you continue to operate when you had to pay $8.8 million per year just to buy malpractice insurance to protect yourself from unscrupulous lawsuits? Actually, the $8.8 million is the malpractice insurance for OB alone and just a part of the total $22 million in annual medical malpractice costs. In this zero sum situation, doctors and hospitals lose money, while patients with bad outcomes and their lawyers gain money. The average patient is the big loser through higher costs passed down from the health care providers and more importantly, through lack of access to medical care, as in this case.

Lawyer will throw out the argument that it’s not their greed that is the root of the problem. Rather, they argue that it is actual medical malpractice that is the culprit. Well, then if that’s truly the case, then they should be happy each time a hospital closes or a doctor quits practicing, because it must be that only the bad hospitals and the bad doctors are affected. Somehow, I don’t think so.

  • http://www.fightingdocs.com Ken

    Maternity units across Pennsylvania have closed due to exponential malpractice insurance costs brought on by rampant medical liability lawsuit abuse.

    Philadelphia has some of the world’s finest medical teaching colleges, yet almost all the city’s labor and delivery rooms have shuttered in just the past decade. In fact, the city’s most heavily populated quadrant, “Northeast Philly” has lost all maternity units. If a woman arrives at a Northeast hospital with an obstetrical emergency such as her baby losing oxygen to its brain, her baby will die.

    For more background, see http://www.fightingdocs.com