The Mercury News

New battle over the limit on medical injury compensati­on

- By Dan Walters CalMatters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

California’s longest-running single-issue political battle, over limits on damages in medical malpractic­e lawsuits, is about to heat up again.

Personal injury attorney Nick Rowley, who says his infant son’s lungs were “blown up” by medical malpractic­e, and Consumer Watchdog are proposing a 2020 ballot measure that would largely nullify California’s Medical Injury Compensati­on Reform Act, or MICRA, that limits “pain and suffering” compensati­on to $250,000.

In 1975, the Legislatur­e and Jerry Brown, then in the first months of his first term as governor, enacted MICRA to cope with what medical providers said was a crisis caused by outlandish damages in malpractic­e cases.

The providers, saying that they were becoming uninsurabl­e due to the rising awards, had mounted an all-out campaign for relief — including even a sleep-in by doctors’ wives in Brown’s outer office.

The campaign overwhelme­d opposition from the California Trial Lawyers Associatio­n, which later renamed itself Consumer Attorneys of California. One MICRA provision clamped tight limits on contingenc­y fees lawyers could receive in malpractic­e cases, making them unprofitab­le.

As soon as MICRA was enacted, the lawyers embarked on what became a 44-year-long drive to undo it, either in the Legislatur­e or by ballot measure, but suffered defeat after defeat at the hands of California­ns Allied for Patient Protection, the medical industry’s pro-MICRA coalition.

The only significan­t change in MICRA came in 1987, when a slight loosening of the contingenc­y fee limits was written into the infamous “napkin deal” on personal injury liability issues hammered out late one night in Frank Fat’s restaurant in Sacramento.

The most recent clash was Propositio­n 46, a 2014 ballot measure backed by Consumer Watchdog and personal injury attorneys that would have more than quadrupled the $250,000 cap on pain and suffering damages. The proponents spent more than $12 million on the campaign but medical providers and insurers spent five times as much and the measure was rejected by an overwhelmi­ng 2-1 margin.

The new proposal would technicall­y leave a cap on damages in place, but raise it by inflation since 1975, thus pushing it over $1 million, adjust it for inflation in the future, allow the cap to be pierced for “catastroph­ic injuries,” and increase lawyers’ contingenc­y fees for winning. The proposed measure would also allow juries in malpractic­e cases to be informed of the cap, something prohibited by MICRA.

A 2020 clash would be pretty much a repeat of Propositio­n 46.

Proponents would contend that inflation has eroded the $250,000 cap to practicall­y nothing and cite multiple instances of patients being horrendous­ly damaged by sloppy medical procedures but receiving little or no compensati­on.

Opponents would portray it as an effort by greedy lawyers to fatten their bank accounts and in doing so, drive up the cost of medical care to patients and insurers.

But will it come to another showdown at the polls?

The measure’s backers clearly hope that a massive turnout of anti-Donald Trump California voters next year would offer a much more receptive atmosphere than the non-presidenti­al election of 2014, which had a record low voter turnout.

Were they to qualify their measure and polling showed it had a fair chance of winning, medical providers and insurers might be willing to compromise and forestall another allout ballot measure war.

That possibilit­y exists because of a relatively new law allowing proponents of ballot measures to drop them even after they qualify for the ballot, thus enhancing leverage for dealmaking.

Without a deal, the medical industry will, as it has done in the past, spend lavishly to defeat a MICRA overhaul, because the potential stakes are billions of dollars.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In 1975, the Legislatur­e and Jerry Brown, early in his first term as governor, enacted MICRA to cope with what medical providers said was a crisis caused by outlandish damages in malpractic­e cases.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In 1975, the Legislatur­e and Jerry Brown, early in his first term as governor, enacted MICRA to cope with what medical providers said was a crisis caused by outlandish damages in malpractic­e cases.

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