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Legislators propose changes to medical malpractice restrictions

The hepatitis C crisis that continues to unfold in Southern Nevada played a critical role in the introduction Monday of an Assembly bill that would remove the key element of the 2004 medical malpractice reform initiative: a $350,000 cap on pain and suffering damages.

The bill also would give possible victims of malpractice a year longer to file claims while also allowing attorneys five years, rather than two, to bring a case to trial.


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Assemblywoman Sheila Leslie, D-Reno, who is majority whip of the lower house, said Monday that the hepatitis C cases arising out of clinics in Las Vegas serve as a reminder that there must be "more effective recourse for lives that have been ... negatively affected by a doctor."

"I think the hepatitis C tragedy was a catalyst for malpractice reform because an adequate remedy is needed by patients hurt by a doctor such as Dr. (Dipak) Desai," Leslie said.

Desai, the majority owner of the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada, was accused in 2008 of ordering his nurses to reuse syringes and single-use medicine vials to save money. The dangerous injection practices led to nine people being infected with hepatitis C and about 50,000 being told to get tested for infectious diseases, according to the Southern Nevada Health District.

More than 100 others may have contracted hepatitis at the clinics, health officials say.

State Sen. Barbara Cegavske, R-Las Vegas, said overturning the 2004 initiative, known as Keep Our Doctors in Nevada, "is a huge mistake. You don't undo something good because of something one doctor has done."

"We will lose more doctors in Nevada," she said. "Doctors' offices will close due to the increase in medical malpractice insurance rates. Specialists will not come and may leave."

Doctors and insurance executives, who largely funded the 2004 initiative, argued that large payouts in Nevada -- often for pain and suffering -- made medical malpractice rates escalate dramatically. That, they argued, was making doctors leave the state in droves.

Though that argument was found to be specious by the nation's General Accounting Office, it was used successfully to persuade Nevadans fearful of losing their family doctors to vote overwhelming for what was known as Question 3.

Before 2004, juries would sometimes award seven-figure judgements for pain and suffering to grieving parents who lost a child to medical negligence or to an individual whose quality of life had changed because of a physician's mistake.

Recovery of economic damages, including loss of future earnings and medical expenses, still remained in effect, but, to attorneys, that left many potential plaintiffs by the wayside. Children, homemakers, senior citizens, and people who are still able to work despite an injury have no loss of future earnings to calculate. Essentially, these malpractice awards would come out of the $350,000 now allocated to pain and suffering, a sum divvied up between the attorney and the client.

Gerald Gillock, a veteran plaintiff's attorney, said the cost of hiring experts and the long hours working a case often does not make it worthwhile to take a case when only $350,000 is at stake.

"If you're paying over $100,000 for experts to prove a case and it takes months or years, it's not worth it for anybody," he said. "People who have been harmed aren't getting the justice they deserve."

Since the passage of 2004 reforms, medical malpractice rates have dropped 30 percent in Nevada. Major insurance carriers writing premiums jumped from six to eight and minor carriers now number more than 80.

According to studies done by Medicare and Medical Economics, doctors nationwide spend between 3.2 percent and 3.9 percent of their practice incomes on malpractice insurance.

Sheldon Davidow, chief executive officer of Medicus Insurance Co., said his Texas-based firm decided to enter the Nevada market because of the stability afforded by the reforms that suggested there would be fewer large payouts. He said Monday he got approval three weeks ago to lower rates another 7.5 percent.

"We wouldn't even be talking about new legislation if it wasn't for Desai," said Dr. J. Kenneth Volker, a Las Vegas obstetrician/gynecologist who is also chairman of Premier Physicians Insurance Company, which writes malpractice insurance for physicians. "Malpractice rates are now down and competition is up."

However, Gillock and consumer groups, including the Ralph Nader-founded Public Citizen, say malpractice insurance rates often rise and fall in relation to other business ventures and investments of insurance carriers rather than malpractice payouts.

Dr. Weldon "Don" Havins, former president of the Clark County Medical Association, said that undoing the tort reform of 2004 could mean new doctors won't come to Nevada. He noted that the net gain in licenses issued to doctors who chose to practice in Clark County dropped to a low of seven in 2002.

Just the promise of medical tort reform passage in 2004, Havins said, brought a net gain in licenses that year to 212. The gains have continued and stabilized, he said.

"It would be a mistake to go back to where we were before," he said.

Richard Krikalo, who blames a botched retina reattachment procedure in 2007 for blindness in his right eye, disagrees. Lawyers, he said, told him time limitations were an issue. Under the present law, he had only a year to file a claim. Under the proposed law, plaintiffs would have two years.

"By the time I was sure that it couldn't get fixed, my year was already almost up," he said.

Because he can still work, Krikalo said, lawyers told him there would be no economic damages. "They said it would cost them so much in experts to prove what my doctor had done that the $350,000 just wasn't enough," he said.

"I could never even get my day in court after I lost an eye," Krikalo said. "That isn't right. I hurt."

Contact reporter Paul Harasim at pharasim@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2908.

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William wrote on April 16, 2009 12:36 PM: The nevada healthcare system is a wasteland. We have bad doctors that produce bad outcomes and get paid with GOOD MONEY. We must not alow this to continue. Contact your nevada legislators and ask them to support AB 495. We Need Reform.These bad doctors are driving up healthcare costs that we all pay for. They must be removed from the medical profession since they have no ethics. They just Bill and Kill.


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David wrote on April 16, 2009 12:25 PM: Nevadans, we all know of the incestuous nature of the medical board and the medical mafia. We need reform NOW. Call your elected officials and ask them to support AB495. Do not be intimidated by Sen. Barbara Cegavske. She is not protecting the residents and the visitors of Nevada. Shame on you Senator Cegavske. We live in a democracy and our votes will count in the future. Your elected position can be reversed!


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Ron wrote on April 15, 2009 08:14 PM: In the world arena Nevada Health care is a glorified Morgue. Our guests will not expose themselves to this. They elect to take their business to cities with outstanding healthcare like Washington DC, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Baltimore, Boston and the Midwest states. The consumerist health care arrogance in Nevada will drive the Silver State to Bankruptcy. REMOVE THE CAPS. PROTECT NEVADA FROM BAD DOCTORS.


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Tim wrote on April 15, 2009 07:58 PM: Nevada must get rid of bad doctors. Our economy is also suffering since our global tourists know what is going on here they will not put themselves in harms way. They visit cities with world class medical centers (ie New York, Los Angeles, San Diego , Midwest states etc. They speak loud and clear. IT is time for Nevadans to contact Sen Barbare Cegaske . We will also have the opportunity to vote. We must protect the silver state from bad doctors. They bill and Kill.


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Heart Broke wrote on March 31, 2009 11:55 AM: Remove the Caps on Malpractice Claims!
What a wonderful Idea. We lost our 15 year old Son in July of 2006 Due to Medical Malpratice and Gross Negligience From our E.R.Doctors and the compensation that we recieved, what a JOKE you can't put a price on a child or the pain this has caused for our Family. So why would anyone vote for caps on what you are able to recover for your loss! Yes I understand that removing the caps for medical malpractice migh leave some areas with a shortage of Doctors, but maybe this will make those Doctors pay a little more attention to the Patient instead of how fast they can get them out of the E.R. Room! I took our son to E.R. 4 times they never once took the time to look at anything and told me he had the flu. Finally on the 4th visit they decided to airlift him to another Hospital and within hours after arriving at the other Hosp. we were told our son was gravly ill and might not survive.7 days after he became ill, our son past away from Septic Shock, Multiple organ Failure caused From a Staph infection, That was treatable if only he was given atibiotics during the First few days of his Illness. Now we were left with the grief of Loosing our Son, massive medical bills and only 1 year to file a lawsuit. So I think removeing the caps and exteding the filing time is a good thing. As normal everyday citizens we are responable for our actions Why are Doctors any Different.


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DID YOU KNOW... wrote on March 27, 2009 01:50 PM: DID YOU KNOW THAT SB 495...

Eliminates plaintiff attorney contingency fee limitations, which the people voted into law in Ballot Question 3 in 2004 (KODIN). There would be no limit on what attorneys could charge and collect.

Eliminates the filing to trial date shortening provisions passed in AB 1. Cases filed after October 1, 2005 are to be brought to trial within 2 years. AB 495 to extend this to 5 years, thus delaying the time injured patients could receive compensation

Repeals Several Liability (fault based liability) in favor of reestablishing Joint and Several Liability (“deep pockets”) where someone 5% liable for an award must pay 100% of the award.

Reinstates the Collateral Source rule which “keeps the jury in the dark” by not permitting the submission of evidence of insurance payments to the injured.

Eliminates the ability of the defense to request structured periodic payments of future damages over $50,000, thereby increasing the risk of the award being squandered and the plaintiff needed public assistance (tax dollars).

"Lawyers" have waiting for the perfect opportunity to creep in and stir things up again for Nevadans.


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Joe wrote on March 25, 2009 01:23 PM: BOO HOO FOR LAWYERS. This article says the current legal fees are not enough for lawyers to take the case. If that were true, then how is it that there are still so many cases. The system is still overwhelmed. How can the lawyers afford all their ads on TV, and on the COVERS of phone books. Most cases don't even go to trial, because the lawyer is looking for a lucrative settlement. The defense of a worthy case costs so much in time and money, doctors sometimes settle to get on with their lives. This encourages lawyers to look for more cases. Overturning the current law that was established by popular vote is a mistake that will encourage more lawsuits. Bill AB 495 should be called the LAWYER LUCRATIVE LAWSUIT Bill. Everyone should call their Legislator to tell them to vote against AB 495


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responsible one wrote on March 24, 2009 08:02 PM: What crisis keeps unfolding...........U jack ....asses u scared the sh......it out of people with your cheap lawyer dictated journalism. The fact is 8 people were found after testing for 60,000. Makes you think the real conspiracy was to take he cap off and desai or anybody else was a means to achieve this.


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jayz wrote on March 24, 2009 07:59 PM: Congrats RJ You worked tirelessly to have this come to culmination. Week after week story about doctors , hospitals. I guess your cut in it is the advertising you get from all these trial attorney's but you are worse than a pros............titute at least they do state who their client/benefactor is.
MMhh what is Leslie's cut in all this. I really want to see how much are the lawyers contributing to her election or personal fund.


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doctor's wife wrote on March 24, 2009 04:45 PM: Got a call my my husband - a local physician. The sky is falling - again. He says: malpractice rates will go up, doctors will leave Nevada. I've been praying to God for a miracle so I could move out of Nevada. He might just have heard my prayer!


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