Recently in Premises Liability Category

November 18, 2009

Plaintiff's attorney held liable to ERISA plan for not paying lien

Attorneys beware--watch out for those subrogation liens.

Two days ago, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a summary judgment where a plaintiff's attorney was found liable to the ERISA health plan for settlement funds he disbursed. A fellow blogger, Health Plan Law, has a great discussion of the case here.

For those with personal injury lawsuits, if your health insurance company pays for your medical and you ultimately recover money from the person who caused those injuries, your health insurance company has a subrogation lien for the amount of medical paid. That means you could possibly have to pay the insurance company for the amount it paid for medical expenses you ultimately recovered from the liable party.

In the case above, the client did recover monies and the attorney disbursed the settlement funds without paying the insurance company back for the medical it paid on behalf of the client. The plan ultimately sued the client and attorney for the money. Lesson to all parties. Prior to settling a personal injury case or disbursing funds from a personal injury settlement, make sure you have paid all liens.

Reported by: Robert Kisselburgh, Mississippi Accident Injury Lawyer

November 7, 2009

AAJ President debunks "medical malpractice crisis" myths

Tort reform myths debunked

Anthony Tarricone, president of the American Association of Justice, wrote a good article debunking the top 5 myths regarding medical negligence and the need for more tort reform. If we are going to debate the issue, then let's get the fact straight. The fact is that more tort reform will do nothing to protect those patients injured by a doctor nor reduce the costs of health care. Check out the previous post here to read a great article discussing the cause of increase medical costs.

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October 11, 2009

Tort Reform not needed in Mississippi or elsewhere

Tort Reform debate is a red herring in Mississippi and other states

Lies.jpgOver the last couple months, the "Tort Reform" debate has heated up again. With Washington looking at health insurance reforms, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and their many mouthpieces are talking about the need for more tort reform. Folks, it's a red herring. The high cost of health insurance is not due to out-of-control lawsuits brought by evil plaintiff attorneys. The facts prove it.

One of the great myths perpetuated during these tort reform debates is that doctors are practicing defensive medicine because they are afraid if they don't run the test, they will be sued. This myth was busted by a number of reports showing defensive medicine is motivated more by profits for doctors who are making money when they send patients for medical imaging. The New Yorker ran a great piece about the high costs of medical care in McAllen, Texas, the Dallas Morning News reported on the increase of medical imaging in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex and doctor discussed his first-hand experience with over-utilization as a patient.

Indicative of the myth is a great exchange between local two McAllen, Texas doctors in the New Yorker article:

"McAllen is legal hell," the cardiologist agreed. Doctors order unnecessary tests just to protect themselves, he said. Everyone thought the lawyers here were worse than elsewhere.

That explanation puzzled me. Several years ago, Texas passed a tough malpractice law that capped pain-and-suffering awards at two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Didn't lawsuits go down? "Practically to zero," the cardiologist admitted.

"Come on," the general surgeon finally said. "We all know these arguments are bull---t. There is overutilization here, pure and simple." Doctors, he said, were racking up charges with extra tests, services, and procedures.

Another great myth perpetuated during the tort reform debate is that doctors are leaving the state due to out of control lawsuits. This was a big one used by Mississippi's governor. However, facts prove otherwise. A recent article reported there was no decrease in the number of doctors in Mississippi. It stated, "Information compiled by the American Medical Association ... shows that the number of physicians in Mississippi rose steadily in years leading up to tort-reform legislation in 2004, and even slowed its increased following 2004."

So let's put the "tort reform" punching bag away and get down to studying the true problems of our health care system and the need for reform.

h/t: ThePopTort.com has a number of articles on this issue at here, here, here, and here.

Information provided by Robert Kisselburgh, Mississippi Accident Injury Attorney