[Mb-civic] Malpractice
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Thu Jul 14 17:29:41 PDT 2005
http://newstandardnews.net/content/index.cfm/items/2070
New Study Says Malpractice Insurers Claims False
by Brendan Coyne
Jul 8 - Calls for reform in medical malpractice law may be aimed in the
wrong direction, according to a study released yesterday which found
that the leading malpractice insurers raised their rates dramatically
over the last four years even though the amount they had to pay in
lawsuits remained virtually flat.
While medical malpractice reform enthusiasts have blamed rising
insurance premiums on the prevalence of lawsuits against doctors and
medical providers, industry watchdogs have frequently pointed to
studies showing that lawsuits have little do with the price of malpractice
insurance.
The most recent study, "Falling Claims and Rising Premiums in the
Medical Malpractice Insurance Industry," conducted for the Center for
Justice and Democracy by former Missouri Insurance Commissioner
Jay Angoff, found that the fifteen largest insurers are taking in more
than double the amount in premiums that they accrued in 2000.
Meanwhile, the report says, payouts have risen slightly more than 5
percent in aggregate during the same period.
Additionally, stock prices for three companies that deal almost
exclusively with medical malpractice insurance AP Capital, FPIC and
ProAssurance doubled in the past three years, the study found.
In response to the findings, several state officials and consumer
advocates condemned insurers for allegedly "price gouging" doctors.
Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal accused the
companies of profiteering, and Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon
said in a statement, "There is no excuse for malpractice insurers
doubling their rates while their claims payments decrease."
Some companies are paying as little as 10 cents in claims for every
dollar in premiums collected. According to the report, one firm,
Lexington Insurance Company, a subsidiary of AIG, increased its
premiums by 2200 percent while paying out just 14 cents on the dollar
in claims since 2000.
The industry criticized the study for failing to take into account current
underwriting costs, the Associated Press reports. Larry Smarr of the
industry group Physician Insurers Association of America (PIAA) told
the news outlet that companies collect premiums based on future cost
projections.
But Angoff's study determined that insurers had regularly increased
premiums at rates far exceeding the projected losses in each of the
past four years, while trends in the study suggest no attendant future
rise in claims. In addition to increasing premiums dramatically since
2000, the 15 companies studied expect to raise rates higher even as
they project a drop in future claims payouts, the study found.
Last February, Smarr said that rising malpractice premiums were
leading to a "growing crisis of access to the health care system for
patients across the country." He told a February hearing of the House
of Representatives' Small Business Committee that "increased
premiums are caused by the ever-increasing size of medical liability
insurance payments and awards" leading to "ever-escalating losses."
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