Antelope Valley Press

Initiative targets medical lawsuit caps

- By ADAM BEAM Associated Press

SACRAMENTO — A proposed California ballot initiative would let patients get more money in medical malpractic­e lawsuits.

California law caps damages for pain and suffering in medical malpractic­e lawsuits at $250,000. The cap was set in 1975 and has not increased. The “Fairness for Injured Patients Act,” filed Thursday, would tie the cap to inflation, which would raise it to more than $1.2 million.

California voters can enact their own laws outside of the state Legislatur­e by putting initiative­s up for a public vote. To qualify for the ballot, proposed laws must get signatures of at least 5% of voters who cast ballots in the previous election for governor. For the November 2020 ballot, that means supporters need to collect more than 623,000 signatures.

Scott Olsen and Bree and Nelson Moreno filed the initiative.

In 1992, Olsen’s then-2-year-old son was permanentl­y disabled from a head injury — injuries he said were compounded by medical malpractic­e. A jury later awarded the family $7 million, but the money was reduced to $250,000 because of the cap.

The Morenos say their infant daughter was permanentl­y injured following surgery and will require lifelong care. They have a pending lawsuit that could benefit from an increased cap.

“The jury in Mia’s case should be free to make a full decision that addresses her life-long injuries that is not overridden by the one-size-fits-all compensati­on cap set 45 years ago by politician­s in 1975 and never adjusted,” Bree Moreno said in a news release.

A similar proposal made it to the ballot in 2014 that would have also imposed random drug and alcohol tests on doctors. But it failed by more than 66% of the vote.

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