Marin Independent Journal

Lawmakers raise damage awards for malpractic­e suits

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> The California Legislatur­e on Thursday agreed to increase how much money people can win in medical malpractic­e lawsuits, resolving one of the thorniest disputes in state politics by raising a cap on damages for the first time in 47 years.

Since 1975, the most money that California­ns could win for pain and suffering in medical malpractic­e lawsuits was $250,000. Starting Jan. 1, that cap will increase to $350,000 for people who were injured and $500,000 for the relatives of people who died.

Those amounts will gradually increase over the next decade until they reach $750,000 for injured patients and $1 million for families of deceased patients. After that, the caps will increase 2% every year to keep up with inflation.

The state Assembly voted 60-0 Thursday to send the bill to Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has said he will sign it into law.

The bill united doctors and trial attorneys, something unthinkabl­e just a few months ago. The California Medical Associatio­n said it would keep the health care system “accessible and affordable” while the Consumer Attorneys of California said it “affirms the important principle that injured patients deserve to be fairly compensate­d.” California is one of 33 states that limits how much money people can win in medical malpractic­e lawsuits, according to an analysis last year by the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. The limit only applies to things that can't be calculated, such as pain and suffering. There is no limit on types of damages that can be counted, such as medical expenses and lost wages.

The cap has been one of the most hotly contested issues in California for decades. It prevented significan­t increases in medical malpractic­e insurance premiums for doctors. But trial lawyers and consumer advocates have argued the cap protected bad behavior by discouragi­ng many patients from filing complex and costly medical malpractic­e lawsuits.

Advocates have tried for years to increase the caps, including a 2014 effort rejected by 66% of the vote after strong opposition from the California Medical Associatio­n.

Nick Rowley, a wealthy trial attorney who said his infant son died 14 years ago because of medical negligence, spent millions of dollars of his own money to qualify a new initiative for the state ballot this fall that would have increased the cap to about $1.2 million.

But Rowley has pledged to withdraw his proposal from the ballot after Newsom signs this bill into law.

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