Contact: Joe King , Office
of Public Affairs
(815) 753-4299
January 6, 2005
NIU survey finds Illinois residents support medical malpractice
reform
DEKALB, Ill -- President George W. Bush knew in advance his
campaign for medical malpractice tort reform would play well
in Madison County, Ill., where he unveiled his plan Wednesday.
So did researchers at Northern Illinois University 's Center
for Governmental Studies, whose recently completed Illinois Policy
Survey, found that residents of southern Illinois were the most
likely in the state to have lost doctors due to rising malpractice
rates as well as the group most strongly favoring the capping
of awards in such cases.
Those feelings could be tied to the reputation of southern Illinois
' Madison County . It was recently ranked the worst “judicial
hellhole” in the nation by the American Tort Reform Foundation
for its propensity to hand out large settlements in medical malpractice
cases. That reputation has had consequences for residents of
the region.
According to the NIU survey, 44 percent of those living in southern
Illinois say they have lost a doctor because he or she left a
practice or moved a practice out of state to escape high malpractice
premiums. That is nearly triple the statewide average and four
times higher than in Chicago or the collar counties.
“This is the first hard data I have seen to quantify this issue,
and it is clearly a problem that touches the lives of people
living in that region,” says NIU Professor of Public Administration
Michael Peddle. “I think the history of places like Madison County
contributes to that problem, and doctors in that region can move
to any of several states without having to go too far.”
When asked who is most responsible for the rising cost of malpractice
insurance, 44 percent of southern Illinois residents blamed lawyers
seeking large settlements in court cases. That was significantly
higher than the statewide average of 34 percent, and far greater
than the 27 percent of Chicago respondents who shared that feeling.
“This could be a reflection of what their doctors are telling
them as they pack up and leave, or it could be fallout from the
hotly contested state supreme court election last fall in that
region, where one of the major issues was tort reform,” says
Peddle. “Either way, it is clear that people in southern Illinois
have some very strong opinions on the issue.”
Those strong feelings emerged again when the survey asked if
there should be a limit on the amount of money people can receive
from malpractice suits. Statewide, 67 percent of respondents
favored a cap, while in southern Illinois that percentage soared
to 81 percent. In no region was support below 60 percent.
The results of the survey also indicate that the level of concern
over health care issues in general remains high across the state.
Nearly two-thirds of the survey's respondents believe that state
spending for medical care programs should be increased, and 80
percent of respondents would be willing to pay $25 more per year
in taxes to prevent further cuts to medical care programs. These
levels of support were only rivaled by the support for spending
on public schools in Illinois .
Some 17 percent characterized the American health care system
as being in a state of crisis, while 55 percent said that it
had major problems. The most commonly cited concerns about health
care, named by 48 percent of respondents, were access and affordability – two
issues that may be directly related to malpractice concerns,
Peddle points out.
“When doctors leave their practice, reduce the scope of their
practice, or move their practice out of state, access to health
care for their former patients is adversely affected. The costs
of medical insurance can also be affected by many of the same
factors that have led to increases in malpractice insurance.”
Two-thirds of all respondents also said that it is the responsibility
of the federal government to make sure all Americans have health
care coverage. “I suspect many respondents see some form of national
health insurance or regulation as an attractive way of addressing
their concern about access and affordability in our health care
system,” said Peddle.
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