Physicians Practice - January 2008 - (Page 2) EDITOR’S NOTE B O B K E AV E N E Y A TALE OF TWO SOLUTIONS? to lower insurance premiums for physicians. “The results are almost phenomenal,” Rendell gushed in October. “It is a problem that has, for all intents and purposes, been resolved.” Rendell’s solution was less aggressive than Texas’, and the results have been less dramatic. Instead of pain-and-suffering caps, which Rendell opposes, reforms included a new “certificate of merit” system, under which claims must pass a physician reviewer’s muster before moving forward, and rules Only an amendment to Pennsylvania’s constitution would make Texas-style pain-and-suffering caps possible. Even without caps, Rendell notes, the state’s two largest malpractice carriers kept their rates stable for six years and are now asking regulators for rate decreases. The physician hemorrhage Pennsylvania endured four years ago “has slowed to a trickle,” Sharps says. Yet Sharps, like many physicians in Pennsylvania, bristles at the governor’s mission-accomplished proclamation: “We’re seeing the IS THE MEDICAL MALPRACTICE INSURANCE CRISIS OVER? HAS THE LONG NIGHTMARE OF FRIVOLOUS JURY AWARDS, OVER-THE-TOP SETTLEMENTS, SKYROCKETING PREMIUMS, AND FLEEING PHYSICIANS FINALLY COME TO AN END? It has in Texas. Historically plagued with low numbers of physicians per capita, doctors are now flocking to the Lone Star State. Since 2003, when Texas passed the nation’s most aggressive package of tortreform measures, new physicians practicing there have climbed 18 percent, and the spike in 2007 was 30 percent. So overwhelmed is the state medical board with new license applications that incoming physicians are placed on a six-month waiting list. Key to the state’s reforms was a tight cap of $250,000 on pain-andsuffering jury awards. Trial lawyers continue to gripe that injured patients are harmed by such caps, but it’s clear that patients are harmed more by an inability to see a doctor than by an inability to sue a doctor for more than a quarter of a million bucks. The crisis is over in Pennsylvania, too, according to the governor, Ed Rendell (D), who says reforms he pushed for in 2003 cut malpractice claims in half and are now leading 2 | PHYSICIANS PRACTICE | JANUARY 2008 MISSION ACCOMPLISHED? The malpractice crisis is over in Pennsylvania, according to the governor. But is it? to prevent trial lawyers’ “venue shopping” for courts with plaintifffriendly reputations, whether the targeted physician practices in that jurisdiction or not. But the key to the governor’s plan was to shift some of the burden of sky-high premiums away from physicians and onto taxpayers. Pennsylvania physicians are required to carry at least $1 million in coverage — the first half in the private market, the rest from a state-run fund called MCare. Rendell’s idea was to use part of the state’s cigarette-tax revenue to subsidize physicians’ MCare premiums, with higher-risk specialists getting bigger discounts. “That one measure took 30 percent to 40 percent of many physicians’ premium bills away overnight,” says Lewis Sharps, a Philadelphia-area orthopedist and president of Positive Physicians Insurance Exchange, a malpractice insurer founded at the depths of the crisis. market soften but it would be wrong to describe the crisis as over.” While physicians have stopped fleeing, “it’s still extraordinarily difficult to recruit new ones.” There’s more to do, he says. Pennsylvania should establish a specialty court to handle malpractice cases, just as it has for bankruptcy and family law. Its certificate-of-merit system should be strengthened and loopholes to the venue-shopping restrictions closed. As for pain-and-suffering caps, well, Sharps would like nothing better, but he’s a realist. Texas has proven that caps work. While it’s too soon to be sure, Pennsylvania may prove that measures short of caps can also work — not as dramatically nor as quickly, but certainly better than nothing. • What do you think? Can the malpractice crisis be solved by reforms other pain-andsuffering caps? E-mail me your views at bkeaveney@physicianspractice.com. WWW.PHYSICIANSPRACTICE.COM http://WWW.PHYSICIANSPRACTICE.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Physicians Practice - January 2008 Physicians Practice - January 2008 Contents The Bigger Picture: Fixing Medicaid Letters Physicians Practice Pearls: You Can Teach an Old Dog New Tricks Noteworthy Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice Ask the Experts Idealab: 'How I Got Over My EMR Excuses' Technology: Don't Be Denied The Tech Doctor: Blessing or Curse? The Administrator's Desk: Learning From the Best Coding Career: To Partner, or Not? Management: Controlling Your Inventory Human Resources: How to Fire an Enployee Finance: Beyond Reimbursment - How to Fix Your Mix Classifieds Advertiser Index Physicians Practice - January 2008 Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page Cover1) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page Cover2) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page 1) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page 2) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page 3) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice - January 2008 (Page 4) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Bigger Picture: Fixing Medicaid (Page 10) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Bigger Picture: Fixing Medicaid (Page 11) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Letters (Page 12) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Letters (Page 13) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Letters (Page 14) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Letters (Page 15) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice Pearls: You Can Teach an Old Dog New Tricks (Page 16) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Physicians Practice Pearls: You Can Teach an Old Dog New Tricks (Page 17) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 18) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 19) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 20) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Noteworthy (Page 21) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 22) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 23) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 24) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 25) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 26) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 27) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 28) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 29) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 30) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 31) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 32) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 33) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 34) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Cover Story: Fee Schedule Survey: 2007 Results (Page 35) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 36) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 37) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 38) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 39) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 40) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 41) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 42) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Adding Ancillaries: Bucking the Practice (Page 43) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 44) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 45) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 46) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 47) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Ask the Experts (Page 48) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Idealab: 'How I Got Over My EMR Excuses' (Page 49) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Idealab: 'How I Got Over My EMR Excuses' (Page 50) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 51) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 52) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 53) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 54) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 55) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Technology: Don't Be Denied (Page 56) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Tech Doctor: Blessing or Curse? (Page 57) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Tech Doctor: Blessing or Curse? (Page 58) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Administrator's Desk: Learning From the Best (Page 59) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - The Administrator's Desk: Learning From the Best (Page 60) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Coding (Page 61) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Coding (Page 62) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Career: To Partner, or Not? (Page 63) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Career: To Partner, or Not? (Page 64) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Career: To Partner, or Not? (Page 65) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Management: Controlling Your Inventory (Page 66) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Management: Controlling Your Inventory (Page 67) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Management: Controlling Your Inventory (Page 68) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Human Resources: How to Fire an Enployee (Page 69) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Human Resources: How to Fire an Enployee (Page 70) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Human Resources: How to Fire an Enployee (Page 71) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Human Resources: How to Fire an Enployee (Page 72) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Finance: Beyond Reimbursment - How to Fix Your Mix (Page 73) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Finance: Beyond Reimbursment - How to Fix Your Mix (Page 74) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Finance: Beyond Reimbursment - How to Fix Your Mix (Page 75) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Finance: Beyond Reimbursment - How to Fix Your Mix (Page 76) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 77) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 78) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Classifieds (Page 79) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 80) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page Cover3) Physicians Practice - January 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page Cover4)
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