Senate Medical Malpractice Compromise Bill on Hold - Sen. Feinstein has thus far been unable to gain the support of any U.S. Senate Democrats for her "pure MICRA" bill.

CAL/AAEM News Service pottsbri@yahoo.com
Tue, 1 Apr 2003 21:57:55 -0800 (PST)


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-----Original Message-----

From: CMA_ALERT [mailto:cma_alert@cmanet.org] 

Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 8:15 PM

1. Senate Medical Malpractice Compromise Bill on Hold 

As has been reported in Alert over the past few months, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) had hoped to introduce a national version of California's Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), which allows full recovery of economic damages-including lost earnings and benefits, medical care, and rehabilitation costs-but caps noneconomic damage awards at $250,000. Sen. Feinstein has thus far, however, been unable to gain the support of any U.S. Senate Democrats for her "pure MICRA" bill.

The senator has been working with Republican leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, M.D., in an attempt to craft a bipartisan compromise bill. But because of CMA's serious concerns about the proposed compromise, which would cap most noneconomic damages at $500,000 and provide for a $2 million cap on noneconomic claims in some "catastrophic" cases, Sen. Feinstein has decided not to introduce the bill.

"Senator Feinstein is an incredible physician ally and is not giving up on her commitment to find a real solution," says CMA CEO Jack Lewin, M.D. "The senator agrees with us that no bill at all is better than an ineffective one."

The good news, however, is that the Senate recognizes the urgency of this issue and will continue to address it in the weeks to come. Indeed, Sen. Feinstein continues to negotiate with her Senate colleagues, and hopes to craft a bill that will gain the support of Senate Democrats and the physicians the bill is intended to protect. CMA leaders have made it clear to Senate leadership that CMA will not compromise on the $250,000 cap or other key MICRA provisions.

Click here <http://www.calphys.org/html/bb183.asp> for more information.

Contact: Rachel Doherty Smith, 916/444-5532 or <mailto:rsmith@cmanet.org> rsmith@cmanet.org.



<http://www.calphys.org/html/alert_032703.htm#top> BACK 


Brian Potts 
Managing Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service 
MS-IV, UC-Irvine


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<P></P>
<P>-----Original Message-----</P>
<P>From: CMA_ALERT [</FONT><A href="mailto:cma_alert@cmanet.org"><U><FONT color=#0000ff size=2>mailto:cma_alert@cmanet.org</U></FONT></A><FONT size=2>] </P>
<P>Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 8:15 PM</P>
<P>1. Senate Medical Malpractice Compromise Bill on Hold </P>
<P>As has been reported in Alert over the past few months, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) had hoped to introduce a national version of California's Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), which allows full recovery of economic damages-including lost earnings and benefits, medical care, and rehabilitation costs-but caps noneconomic damage awards at $250,000. Sen. Feinstein has thus far, however, been unable to gain the support of any U.S. Senate Democrats for her "pure MICRA" bill.</P>
<P>The senator has been working with Republican leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, M.D., in an attempt to craft a bipartisan compromise bill. But because of CMA's serious concerns about the proposed compromise, which would cap most noneconomic damages at $500,000 and provide for a $2 million cap on noneconomic claims in some "catastrophic" cases, Sen. Feinstein has decided not to introduce the bill.</P>
<P>"Senator Feinstein is an incredible physician ally and is not giving up on her commitment to find a real solution," says CMA CEO Jack Lewin, M.D. "The senator agrees with us that no bill at all is better than an ineffective one."</P>
<P>The good news, however, is that the Senate recognizes the urgency of this issue and will continue to address it in the weeks to come. Indeed, Sen. Feinstein continues to negotiate with her Senate colleagues, and hopes to craft a bill that will gain the support of Senate Democrats and the physicians the bill is intended to protect. CMA leaders have made it clear to Senate leadership that CMA will not compromise on the $250,000 cap or other key MICRA provisions.</P>
<P>Click here &lt;</FONT><A href="http://www.calphys.org/html/bb183.asp"><U><FONT color=#0000ff size=2>http://www.calphys.org/html/bb183.asp</U></FONT></A><FONT size=2>&gt; for more information.</P>
<P>Contact: Rachel Doherty Smith, 916/444-5532 or &lt;</FONT><A href="mailto:rsmith@cmanet.org"><U><FONT color=#0000ff size=2>mailto:rsmith@cmanet.org</U></FONT></A><FONT size=2>&gt; rsmith@cmanet.org.</P>
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<P>&lt;</FONT><A href="http://www.calphys.org/html/alert_032703.htm"><U><FONT color=#0000ff size=2>http://www.calphys.org/html/alert_032703.htm#top</U></FONT></A><FONT size=2>&gt; BACK </P></FONT><BR><BR><STRONG>Brian Potts <BR>Managing Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service</STRONG> <BR>MS-IV, UC-Irvine<p><br><hr size=1>Do you Yahoo!?<br>
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