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Texas Tort Reform: More Complaints, Lower Costs


 

FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOUTHERN SURGICAL ASSOCIATION

HOT SPRINGS, VA. – Since tort reform in Texas, the number of lawsuits and associated costs have decreased, but patient complaints to the state medical board and board investigations of physicians have risen, according to an analysis presented at the meeting.

Dr. Ronald M. Stewart and his colleagues from the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio obtained publicly available data from the Texas Medical Board and compared the 7-year period before tort reform (1996-2002) and the 6 years after the law was enacted (2004-2010).

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"It appears that tort reform in Texas has done what it was intended to do," said Dr. Russell Postier.

The data were adjusted for the increase in the physician population; before reform there were about 170 physicians per 100,000 residents. After the law went into effect, the number rose to 195 physicians per 100,000, said Dr. Stewart, chairman of the department of surgery.

Before reform, about 125 complaints per 1,000 physicians were made to the medical board. That number increased by 13% after reform, to around 140 complaints per 1,000 physicians, said Dr. Stewart.

The rate of investigations increased from 38 per 1,000 to 52 per 1,000, with 5% of physicians the subject of a medical board inquiry. Postreform, there were more disciplinary actions when compared to open investigations, at about 8 per 1,000 in the latter period. Before reform, 0.5 per 1,000 physicians were ordered to revoke or to voluntarily surrender their licenses; after reform, that value rose to 0.8 per 1,000, a significant increase, noted Dr. Stewart.

The most striking change before and after reform was the decline in financial penalties. The state collected a total of $4.7 million in the postreform period. To put that figure into context, the San Antonio department of surgery alone spent $4.8 million on liability settlements in the prereform period, said Dr. Stewart.

It’s not clear why complaints and disciplinary actions went up, Dr. Stewart said. Having access to electronic information and greater awareness of the ability to complain to the medical board probably spurred more patient reporting.

The increases in investigations and disciplinary actions were mainly driven by the legislature, according to Dr. Stewart. The lawmakers mandated greater oversight by the medical board, so that undoubtedly led to an increase in enforcement.

"It appears that tort reform in Texas has done what it was intended to do," increased the activity of the Texas Medical Board, and decreased the activity of the medical liability tort system, said Dr. Russell Postier, chairman of the surgery department at the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, in discussing the paper.

Further, it appears to have increased the number of physicians practicing in the state, which could "make other states take notice and potentially enact tort reform," Dr. Postier said.

Dr. Stewart said that putting malpractice in the hands of the medical board had decreased costs and been generally positive. For instance, he said, the medical board process is transparent and allows more input from stakeholders like physicians.

"There’s no question that the benefits of tort reform in my opinion outweigh the potential negative consequences to physicians," he said.

Dr. Stewart and Dr. Postier reported no financial conflicts.

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