Wall St. Jour: Oct 28, 1999 :HMO Lawsuits
HMO lawsuits will drive up costs. HMOS will be forced to - spend more on healthcare :Good for providers ( HRC ). -spend more on good reliable providers ( HRC ) instead of on cheaper fly by nights, to avoid lawsuits, ( good for HRC ).
" Markets, by contrast, respond to the predicament that people find themselves in before the fact. It asks them to choose coverage and price levels before they know their individual health needs. But after tragedy occurs, no rationing of health care is satisfactory. Desperate patients demand pricey specialists, expensive procedures and experimental treatments ".
TA
--------------------------------- Commentary
Oct. 28, 1999
interactive.wsj.com
HMO Lawsuits: A Liability for Patients, Too
By Richard A. Epstein, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School.
One of the major initiatives on today's policy screen is to expose health-maintenance organizations to tort liability for patients' bad medical outcomes.Last month California enacted legislation expanding HMO tort liability. In Washington, Reps. Charlie Norwood (R., Ga.) and John Dingell (D., Mich.) are leading the charge to remove the federal statutory barriers to tort suits against employer health plans that improperly deny benefits to its members.
At the same time, the state courts have joined the chase on two theories. The narrower theory, which tracks the Norwood-Dingell bill, allows the patient to hold the HMO responsible for its own dereliction, typically its refusal to authorize some needed treatment. The more ambitious theory, just embraced in Illinois, holds the HMO vicariously liable for the physician's negligence, even if the HMO is guilty of no negligence of its own. Two arguments buttress this position. First, stringent HMO controls make physicians de facto employees of the plan, and not mere "independent contractors." Alternatively, the HMO holds itself out to its customers as being responsible for physician care by announcing, for example, that it will take care of "all your health-care needs" by supplying "comprehensive high-quality service."
The philosophy driving expanded liability is easy to discern. Brushing aside the prospect of increased cost, the Illinois court noted: "Market forces alone are insufficient to cure the deleterious effects of managed care in the health care industry." The court added that HMOs are subject to the same rules as everyone else. Part right, and part wrong. Right, because HMOs are not "special" organizations, governed by their own set of rules. Wrong, because Congress and the courts hold HMOs to unsound general rules.
Tough tort rules of liability make sense for protecting strangers from business misdeeds. The firm that pollutes the air or runs down an innocent pedestrian must be made to internalize the costs that it imposes on others by assuming liability, thereby preventing the firm from receiving forced subsidies from the people it injures. No business should remain in operation if its own revenues cannot cover the costs it inflicts on outsiders. In this context, principles of vicarious liability and negligence strengthen the market system by counteracting the implicit liability subsidy.
Patients, however, are not strangers to the HMO. They have an opportunity, either alone or in groups, to enter into contracts that specify in advance the level of services provided and the fees to be charged for those services. Where's the market failure when both parties to the transaction have the incentive to seek the right level of care for the right price? Using employers and other third-party agents stops clever HMOs from duping gullible employees who overlook the fine print in their contracts.
In this setting, each extra dollar of damage payments and litigation expenses at the back end requires fresh funding at the front end. To cover their higher costs, HMOs must raise fees and lose market share as employers pull out from plans that are now priced for more than they're worth. Alternatively, the HMOs get hit by price controls, at which point they exit the field unless bankruptcy gets them first. It's no accident that the number of uninsured moves up hand in hand with each new legal mandate.
Physicians, who chafe under HMO practice restrictions, may cheer the HMOs' pending demise. But their patients should be suspicious about this new celebration of physician autonomy and the familiar claims of inferior medical service. The HMO is no cute marketing trick. It responds to serious structural flaws in the old deals whereby third-party insurers signed blank checks for whatever services conscientious physicians ordered. That cozy arrangement induced excessive, and often unnecessary, amounts of medical care; "better safe than sorry" sounds great when someone else pays the bill. The HMO helped address both problems. Its increased level of service review cut out some of the excesses. Furthermore, elaborate HMO databases often provided solid information as to which treatments worked, and which did not.
The right question to ask is not whether HMOs misfire. It is whether they perform as well as the next-best alternative. Viewed in the round, the modern studies are virtually unanimous that HMOs, on average, provide care equal to that under the older fee-for-service system, and at a lower price. Surveys also indicate that most members, most of the time, are satisfied with the care they receive.
The demonization of the HMO in today's folk culture doesn't depend on detailed knowledge of success or failure in any given case. The problem lies in the law of large numbers. Any system that enrolls tens of millions of members is sure to produce some injustices and outrages. These stories quickly make it to the front pages and the legislative hearings. The success stories are forgotten as the pressure builds for reform that in fixing outliers imperils the system as a whole.
Markets, by contrast, respond to the predicament that people find themselves in before the fact. It asks them to choose coverage and price levels before they know their individual health needs. But after tragedy occurs, no rationing of health care is satisfactory. Desperate patients demand pricey specialists, expensive procedures and experimental treatments.
HMOs were born because their members want both effective care and low prices--which requires HMOs to act both as providers who give care and as gatekeepers who can deny excessive care. If direct tort liability were cost-justified, then HMOs would voluntarily adopt it. But imposing unwanted tort liability on the HMO impairs its ability to discharge that critical, if unpleasant, checking function. Individual physicians and practice groups can be counted on to defend themselves from charges of medical malpractice by saying that the HMO made us do it. The HMO that calls 99.9% of the cases correctly could be bankrupted by decisions deemed incorrect after the fact in 0.1% of the cases.
When the dust settles, the supporters of the new tort initiatives will conclude that failed markets must be replaced by direct government provision of comprehensive health care, uncontaminated by the crude profit motive. They will neglect to mention that these "market failures" were driven by a network of government regulations of which tort liability is only the most conspicuous. Yet when government health care is besieged by liability, the next wave of reforms will immunize the government programs from tort liability.
Our object lesson: market failures, so-called, lead to government regulation, while failed government regulation leads to, well, more government regulation. An outraged American public that gets what it wants may get what it deserves. |