Reduce heath care - Tort reform is a bipartisan must
Written by Written by Rob Lillpopp on February 25, 2010 – 6:44 am

Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), the ranking member of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform provides the following op-ed to Politico.com.

“Now that his yearlong partisan push for government-run health care has so far failed to produce legislative results, President Barack Obama wants Republicans to join him for another White House summit to see if he can salvage his proposals. But unless the president and congressional Democrats address the need for tort reform as a critical component of cutting health care costs, a bipartisan solution seems unlikely.

The unsustainable path of rising costs is a serious national problem. Currently, health care spending exceeds $2.5 trillion per year. By 2019, it is expected to top $4.7 trillion per year. Any hope for cost containment would involve comprehensive medical malpractice reform to end the practice of defensive medicine, close the loopholes that allow frivolous lawsuits to clog up the system, and set reasonable limits on jury awards.

The president seems to think that eliminating wasteful spending alone would get Americans on track to more affordable coverage. But the government’s track record of recouping its losses from waste, fraud and abuse leaves something to be desired. In 2008, for example, the government recovered a meager $35 million from criminal prosecution of fraud once enforcement costs were factored in. Real savings would start when Congress tackles the billion-dollar problem of defensive medicine.

Defensive medicine — when doctors order unnecessary and usually expensive tests and procedures in order to avoid lawsuits — is a major contributor to skyrocketing health care costs. As much as $210 billion is spent on defensive medicine annually — equal to $700 for every U.S. man, woman and child. This helps drive up insurance premiums that are already too high for many Americans. And the excessive malpractice litigation inevitably leads to physician shortages — especially among obstetricians, neurosurgeons and emergency room physicians. ”

To read more click here.

Posted in  

One Response »

  1. My company’s health insurance premiums rose 31% on January 1, 2010.
    I have not seen less than double digit increases over the last 10 years. What kind of damn lie is this 5.5% “national average” statistic? It certainly does not reflect NYS coverage, business or individual.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

If you don't have an account, please register.