On May 6, most of the obstetricians in Las Vegas adopted a policy of
rejecting
newly pregnant women as patients, even if the woman was an
existing patient.
The doctors of Clark County, Nev., simply cannot afford the
necessary malpractice insurance. In Las Vegas, a doctor who
delivers fewer than 125 babies a year would pay between $40,000
to $80,000 in insurance. Delivering 125 to 175 babies would
raise the premium to over $100,000. The more babies they
deliver, the higher their premiums.
Las Vegas is not alone in its sudden shortage of obstetrical
care. Abuse of lawsuits is creating an alarming and needless
health crisis for women and newborns in the United States.
While lawyers pocket huge fees, expectant mothers are
encountering more difficulty in finding an obstetrician willing
to deliver their babies — or even consult with a midwife on
their pregnancies. If women do find a physician, the cost may be
prohibitive.
The insurance companies are terrified of lawsuits — and with
cause. According to the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists (ACOG), the "median medical liability award
jumped 43 percent in one year, from $700,000 in 1999, to $1
million in 2000; it has doubled since 1995."
"Neurologically impaired infants" account for 30 percent of
claims brought against obstetricians. The average award in such
cases is close to $1 million, but a recent award in Philadelphia
"reached $100 million." Moreover, the typical ACOG member will
be sued 2.53 times during his or her career.
The medical rebellion in Las Vegas came on the same day
that ACOG, at a press conference, issued a
Red
Alert listing nine states "in crisis" — states where
the cost of malpractice insurance is causing obstetricians to
move elsewhere, severely limit their practices or retire early.
Those states are: Florida, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New
York, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington, and West Virginia.
Crisis is not too strong a word. Look at
Florida: In
some counties, malpractice premiums can be as high as $209,000.
The scarcity of obstetricians became so acute that Florida now
allows doctors to "go bare" (practice without liability
insurance) in order to give pregnant women a better chance of
receiving medical care.
Or consider Mississippi, which is known for high jury awards
in medical cases. Mississippi is also known for "forum
shopping," by which plaintiffs' attorneys deliberately file
their cases in counties known to award high damages — even if
the case originates elsewhere.
As a result, most of the cities with populations under 20,000
no longer have doctors who deliver babies. Medical care is even
scarcer in rural areas.
Meanwhile, the doctors' fear of lawsuits has had a chilling
effect on alternative birthing as well. In California, for
example, a 1993 midwifery statute, the Licensed Midwifery
Practice Act, included a "supervisory clause" requiring a
midwife to be supervised by a physician during home births.
However, no corresponding obligation was placed upon physicians
to consult with midwives on home births.
Then, the California Medical Board defined the doctor's
supervision so as to make him or her responsible for the actions
of the midwife. This created a vicarious liability that most
doctors wisely refuse to assume. Those who do face a steep
increase in insurance premiums.
Midwives can practice "underground," but they run huge risks.
Faith Gibson, author of "The Official Plan to Eliminate the
Midwife 1899-1999" in
Liberty
for Women, describes one risk. "Every time a midwife
transfers a laboring woman to the hospital and an on-call
obstetrician gets notified to come in, he makes a complaint to
the Medical Board that she is practicing without a physician
supervisor. When the Medical Board holds such a hearing, the
price tag to the practitioner for legal fees is $50,000 to
$100,000."
Gibson — a practicing midwife and a midwifery activist —
believes lawyers stand in the way of practical solutions to the
birthing crisis. She wants to establish a no-fault compensatory
fund for "all birth attendants" — doctors and midwives — that
would pay medical expenses for neurologically damaged babies in
a manner similar to a workman's compensation fund.
But Gibson is convinced that "the trial lawyer lobby will
never let that get through, as they would lose all the money
they get for defending obstetricians against malpractice
cases."
Yet some solution must be found. ACOG President-elect Charles
B. Hammond has suggested some steps for reform.
"First, we consider insurance market reforms, to answer the
question, why are premiums so volatile for
doctors?" Hammond said. "Second, we reform our 'medical
justice' system: Those tort system and court procedures that
lend themselves to lawsuit abuse. Finally, we must be willing to
explore alternatives."
A recent
Harris
Poll found that 76 percent of physicians say that the fear
of malpractice lawsuits have hurt their ability to provide
quality care. Now, an entire category of doctors is starting to
refuse care altogether.
It is not because doctors are indifferent to the needs of
pregnant women. My father-in-law was a small-town GP for
decades, and his greatest joy was bringing new life into the
world. His retirement left pregnant women in the town — and in
much of the county — without a doctor willing to deliver babies.
He hates for women to be without medical care.
Nevertheless, the advice he now gives to his children and
grandchildren: Don't be a doctor. Become a lawyer, instead.