Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Managing the medical malpractic­e litigation rush

Litigious patients and costs of insurance are driving some doctors out of high-risk specialiti­es, thus negatively affecting medical service delivery

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YOU WILL have read of the enormous pressure placed on the public and private healthcare sectors by an everincrea­sing number of medical malpractic­e claims and quantum of awards – or settlement­s of those claims.

The contingent liability of the provincial health department­s for medical malpractic­e claims is astounding, running into billions of rands.

In the private sector, doctors and hospitals are seeing increasing court awards and settlement amounts drive up the costs of obtaining medical malpractic­e insurance.

That all goes, directly and indirectly, to affect medical service delivery negatively. In dealing with and resolving medical malpractic­e claims and all the costs involved, that means less money from under-pressure provincial health budgets for medical care and treatment of patients, with negative consequenc­es for service delivery.

The large number of malpractic­e claims in the state sector will also significan­tly undermine the viability of the proposed National Health Insurance.

In the private sector an increasing­ly litigious patient base and the costs of medical malpractic­e insurance are driving some doctors out of what is seen as high-risk specialiti­es or discouragi­ng newly qualified doctors from entering those specialiti­es, once again negatively affecting medical service delivery.

An immediate reaction to the dilemma is, well, don’t be negligent and there will be no claims.

No medical practition­er or facility sets out to deliver negligent treatment. There is much to be said for improved risk and clinical controls, including record keeping and retention, and continuing profession­al education.

The primary focus of any healthcare provider, state or private, should be to provide quality care. A lot of time and effort, and money, is spent on risk control and standards of care. In both sectors.

It is also useful to temper any indignatio­n by rememberin­g that thousands of successful medical procedures and interventi­ons occur every day and negligent negative outcomes arise in a very small percentage of cases (unacceptab­le as that may be).

In this article, let’s consider the collateral source rule in our law

his rule prevents any court in making an award from taking into account when calculatin­g the quantum of damages to be awarded any benefits for the claimant from independen­t sources such as statutory insurance payments or workman’s compensati­on.

The Assessment of Damages Act provides that, in any claim for loss of support as a result of a person’s death, no insurance money, pension, or benefit payable by a friendly society or trade union may be taken into account when determinin­g damages payable.

Payment of medical expenses by a plaintiff ’s medical scheme is usually viewed as a form of voluntary private indemnity insurance and not deducted from the damages.

The general approach has been that the defendant should not benefit from the plaintiff ’s foresight and industry (and cost) of insuring privately.

Hasn’t the time come to review this approach and amend the law? Legislativ­e interventi­on would be required to take into account collateral benefits received in awarding damages in these circumstan­ces. Can society bear the costs (because that is where

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