Consumer Groups Blast N.Y. Medical Malpractice Plan

April 7, 2008

Consumer and health advocacy groups in New York are criticizing a yet-to-be-made public plan to create a medical malpractice indemnity pool that would cover medical expenses for injured patients.

Although no plan to create the pool has been announced, the coalition of groups – which includes the New York Public Interest Research Group, the Center for Medical Consumers and the Center for Justice and Democracy – has nevertheless sent letters to Gov. David Paterson decrying the rumored plan, which they say is a poor fix for the state’s health care troubles.

“We don’t want the state subsidizing unsafe doctors,” said John Guyette, a spokesman for CURE-NY, an umbrella group for patient safety organizations in the state.

The group, in the letter, chides the administration for what it says is a “lack of transparency and openness” on the part of Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo and Health Commissioner Richard Daines. The two are heading efforts to find a solution to rising malpractice premiums. The groups say they have been left out of the process.

Andy Mais, spokesman for the New York’s Insurance Department, said “the administration is continuing to work with all stakeholders in an effort to develop a workable proposal.” He declined further comment on the group’s letter.

The budding controversy comes amidst a significant annual leap – roughly 14 percent – in malpractice premiums in New York State, a trend that doctors charge has forced doctors to retire early, or pack up and head elsewhere.

Last month, the Medical Society of the State of New York staged a rally in Albany to protest the premiums.

Topics New York

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Insurance Journal Magazine April 7, 2008
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