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Health Care Torts Spring 2004

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Health Care Torts Spring 2004 Edward P. Richards Harvey A. Peltier Professor of Law Paul M. Hebert Law Center Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, LA 70803-1000 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Care Torts Spring 2004


1
Health Care TortsSpring 2004
  • Edward P. Richards
  • Harvey A. Peltier Professor of Law
  • Paul M. Hebert Law Center
  • Louisiana State University
  • Baton Rouge, LA 70803-1000
  • richards_at_lsu.edu
  • http//biotech.law.lsu.edu

2
Course Organization
  • Most of the classes will involve discussion of
    cases and other materials
  • No book - everything will be on the WWW or handed
    out
  • Limited PowerPoint

3
Discussion Groups
  • You will be assigned to one of four groups
  • Your group will be responsible for the materials
    assigned for a given day
  • If we do not finish, you carry over until we
    finish the material
  • If you are not in class when I call on you, you
    are responsible for group assignment due the next
    day you are in class, whether it is your group or
    the next
  • If you do not prepare, I reserve the right to
    reduce your final grade by up to a letter

4
Purpose of the Course
  • Law
  • Learn basics of health care tort law in the US
  • Learn the special issues of LA health care tort
    law
  • Risk Management
  • Discuss how to counsel clients to reduce
    liability
  • Public Policy

5
Why Study Health Care Torts?
  • Medicine is in flux
  • There is no societal consensus on acute medical
    care or on prevention
  • Health care finance is a mess
  • Health care is seen as too expensive
  • Ripe ground for tort law
  • Difficult policy problems

6
Legal Role of Tort Law
  • Interstitial Compensation
  • Provides a compensation system for rare or
    unanticipated injuries
  • Provides a background deterrence system for
    evolving societal problems
  • Acts as a general claims resolution system for
    routine claims

7
Political Role of Tort Law
  • Bread and Circuses
  • Lottery Justice
  • Creates the illusion of justice through anecdotal
    compensation and deterrence
  • Defuses political action that would increase
    individual justice
  • Generates high transaction costs that support the
    bar and politicians and entrench the system

8
Is Tort Law a Good Thing in Health Care?
  • Pros
  • Informed consent
  • Helped highlight problems of managed care
  • Can target unethical or incompetent behavior
  • Cons
  • Vaccine law
  • Contraceptive liability
  • Medical malpractice insurance issues
  • Interferes with quality assurance

9
History of Medicine
  • Why bother?

10
Cavemen to the Civil War
  • Rich literature
  • Lots of theories of medicine
  • Lots of treatments
  • Only a few things worked at all
  • Some cutting and sewing of wounds
  • Some drugs - opium, digitalis
  • On balance, you were better off without medical
    care

11
Pre-Modern Era Science Leads Practice
  • Early 16th Century - Paracelsus -Transition From
    Alchemy
  • Mid 16th Century - Andreas Vesalius - Accurate
    Anatomy
  • Early 17th Century - William Harvey - Blood
    Circulation
  • 1800 - Edward Jenner - Smallpox
  • 1846 - William Morton - Ether Anesthesia
  • 1849 - Semmelweis - Childbed Fever - Controlled
    Studies
  • 1854 - John Snow - Proved Cholera Is Waterborne

12
The Profession - Through the 1870s
  • Most Medical Schools are Diploma Mills
  • No Bar to Entry to Profession
  • Small Number of Urban Physicians are Rich
  • Most Physicians are Poor
  • Cannot Make Capital Investments
  • Training
  • Medical Equipment and Staff
  • Physicians Push for State Regulation

13
Schools of Practice
  • Allopathy
  • Opposite Actions
  • Toxic and Nasty
  • Homeopathy
  • Same Action as the Disease Symptoms
  • Tiny Doses
  • Less Dangerous
  • Naturopaths, Chiropractors, Osteopaths, and
    Several Other Schools

14
Legal Consequences
  • No Testimony Across Schools of Practice
  • Different from Medical Specialties
  • Surgery, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics
  • All Same School of Practice - Allopathy
  • All Same License
  • Cross-Specialty Testimony Allowed
  • Still important with the rise of
    alternative/quack medicine
  • Locality rule - no national standards

15
Pre-Modern Hospitals
  • L'Hotel-Dieu - Paris
  • Myth dates it from medieval times
  • Nursing, no medical care
  • The Church did not believe in medicine
  • US Hospitals
  • Run by Nuns
  • Just lodging and nursing

16
Legal Consequences
  • Charitable Immunity
  • Really want to sue a nun?
  • Borrowed Servant Doctrine
  • Seen as protective, but really allowed suit
    against the only solvent, reachable party
  • Capitan of the Ship variant
  • No legal relationship with the physicians

17
Beginnings of the Modern Era
  • 1850 - Report of the Sanitary Commission Of
    Massachusetts
  • 1860-1880s - Louis Pasteur - Scientific Method,
    Simple Germ Theory, Vaccination For Rabies,
    Pasteurization
  • 1867-1880 - Joseph Lister - Antisepsis
    (Listerine)
  • 1880s - Koch - Modern Germ Theory
  • Organic Chemistry 1880s - drugs
  • 1860s - 1900s - Sanitation Movement - Modern
    Public Health

18
Modern Medicine and Surgery
  • Surgery Starts to Work in the 1880s
  • Surgery Can Be Precise - Anesthesia
  • Patients Do Not Get Infected - Antisepsis
  • Professionalism Starts to Matter
  • What is a Quack if Nothing Works?
  • Why Train if Training Does Not Matter?

19
Licensing and Education
  • Effective Medicine Drives Licensing
  • Licensing Limits Competition
  • Physicians Start to Make Money
  • Money allows investment in capital stock
  • Training
  • Equipment
  • Staff

20
Hospital-Based Medicine
  • Started With Surgery
  • Medical Laboratories
  • Bacteriology
  • Microanatomy
  • Radiology
  • Services and Sanitation Attract Patients
  • Internal Medicine
  • Obstetrics Patients

21
Reformation of Hospitals
  • Paralleled Changes in the Medical Profession
  • Began in the 1880s
  • Shift From Religious to Secular
  • Began in the Midwest and West
  • Not As Many Established Religious Hospitals
  • Today, Religious Orders Still Control A Majority
    of Hospitals

22
Post WW II Technology
  • Ventilators (Polio)
  • Electronic Monitors
  • Intensive Care
  • Hospitals Shift From Hotel Services to Technology
    Oriented Nursing

23
Post World War II Medicine
  • Conquering Microbial Diseases
  • Vaccines
  • Antibiotics
  • Shift to Chronic Diseases
  • Better Drugs
  • Better Studies
  • Childhood Leukemia
  • Shift to Specialty Training

24
Health Care Finance Post WW II
  • Kaiser started during the 1930s to care for
    workers on the Grande Coulee Dam
  • Blue Cross/Blue Shield was started by docs and
    hospitals to assure their payment
  • Health insurance became a common employment
    benefit during WW II to escape from wage controls
  • Indigents were only covered by charitable
    institutions

25
Corporate Practice of Medicine
  • Physicians Working for Non-physicians
  • Concerns About Professional Judgment
  • Cases From 1920 Read Like the Headlines
  • Banned In Most States
  • LA does not ban, but says there cannot be any
    control of medical decisionmaking
  • http//biotech.law.lsu.edu/cases/la/adlaw/bome/Emp
    loymentofPhysician.pdf

26
Physician Practice Organization
  • Mostly Small
  • Sole Proprietorships
  • Partnerships
  • Then Professional Corporations
  • Limited bargaining power
  • Cannot join with other doc groups for bargaining
    because of antitrust laws
  • Pressure to form larger corporate units

27
Impact of Corporate Practice Bans
  • Physicians Do Not Work for Non-Governmental
    Hospitals
  • Contracts Governed by Medical Staff Bylaws
  • Sham of Buying Practices
  • Physicians Contract With Most Institutions
  • Charade of Captive Physician Groups
  • Managed Care Companies Contact With Group
  • Group Enforces Managed Care Companys Rules
  • Very important to sort out when you are filing a
    lawsuit

28
Legal Consequences when Suing Hospitals
  • Physicians are Independent Contractors
  • Hospitals Are Not Vicariously Liable for
    Independent Contractor Physicians
  • Hospitals Are Liable for Negligent Credentialing
    and Negligent Retention
  • Hospitals Can Be Liable if the Physician is an
    Ostensible Agent

29
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals
  • 1950s
  • Now Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health
    Care Organizations
  • American College of Surgeons and American
    Hospital Association
  • Split The Power In Hospitals
  • Medical Staff Controls Medical Staff
  • Administrators Control Everything Else
  • Enforced By Accreditation

30
Contemporary Hospital Organization
  • Classic Corporate Organizations
  • CEO
  • Board of Trustees Has Final Authority
  • Often Part of A Conglomerate
  • Medical Staff Committees
  • Tied To Corporation by Bylaws
  • Headed by Medical Director
  • Constant Conflict of Interest/Antitrust Issues

31
Medical Staff Bylaws
  • Contract Between Physicians and Hospital
  • Not Like the Bylaws of a Business
  • Selection Criteria
  • Contractual Due Process For Termination
  • Negotiated Between Medical Staff and Hospital
    Board
  • If the met federal standards, peer review
    decisions are exempt from antitrust law attack

32
Managed Care Revolution
  • Driven by special ERISA rules
  • HMOs really started in the 1970s
  • Caught fire in the 1980s
  • Managed care high point in the late 1990s
  • Liability concerns are pushing companies to
    passive management of costs
  • Important legal issues on when you can sue the
    insurer for malpractice

33
Managed Care Pressures on Hospitals
  • DRGs
  • Capitation
  • Negotiated Reimbursement
  • Still Need Butts in Beds
  • Must Get Them Out Quick and Cheap
  • Death Can Be Very Cheap
  • Right to Die Yes Please Do!!

34
Managed Care Pressures on Docs
  • When is Denying Care Cheaper?
  • What is the Timeframe Issue?
  • Insurers Now Control the Patients
  • Employee Model
  • Contractor Model
  • De-selection
  • Financial Death
  • No Due Process

35
New Challenges
  • Aging Population
  • Emerging Infectious Diseases
  • Antimicrobial Failure
  • New Agents (HIV, Ebola)
  • How To Pay For Health Care
  • How To Deliver Health Care
  • Medical Business Organizations
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