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President's Message:
Supporting Advocacy Efforts With Member Action
There
hasn't been much good news for the doctors of our Commonwealth
in the last few months.
On July 1, most of the physicians in Massachusetts
experienced a 20 percent hike in their medical liability premiums.
Additionally, the recently released 2003 MMS
Workforce Study and MMS
Physician Practice Environment Index painted a grim picture
of the situation facing physicians around our state. According to
the MMS Workforce Study, 32 percent of physicians surveyed said
they either plan to leave the state or will leave if the practice
environment gets worse.
To further exacerbate the problem, the MMS
Index dropped 3.9 percent in 2002. A main driver behind the sinking
index is the soaring cost of liability insurance.
But there is some good news to report. Milliman
USA, a global actuarial firm, conducted a national analysis of medical
malpractice claims in the 15 largest states from 1990 to 2001. This
research demonstrated that large states with caps for noneconomic
damages have below-average medical malpractice losses. In addition,
a recently conducted study by the nonpartisan Employment Policy
Foundation estimated that limiting damage awards in medical liability
cases could save between $54.8 billion and $97.5 billion annually.
The implications of these findings cannot be
underestimated. As we work to win the hearts and minds of lawmakers
and the public at-large, we must use facts and figures to convey
the gravity and severity of the problems plaguing physicians.
But statistics alone will not provoke reform.
It will require the continued vocalization of one clear message
from physicians around the state: "We cannot continue practicing
under the current conditions, and this means patient care and access
to care will be jeopardized."
Our success in achieving medical liability
reform will require sustained action and interest. We must build
on the momentum created by our April 8 rally at the State House
and the legislative breakfasts hosted by the districts around Massachusetts.
To this end, the MMS is planning a number of grassroots programs
for the fall, and we will be notifying you as the details are finalized.
I urge you to continue participating in these
MMS-led initiatives during this critical period in the legislative
process. I also ask that you encourage your colleagues who are not
MMS members to join in this all-out effort to reform the medical
liability system. As we push for the passage of our proposal, it
is the strength of your collective voices that will ring in the
ears of lawmakers as they ponder how to save our health care system.
- Thomas E. Sullivan, M.D.
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