CBO Raises Savings Estimate From Medical Malpractice Reform
Posted by admin in Cost, Tort ReformFrom Medscape
Medical-liability reforms such as capping noneconomic damages and tightening the statute of limitation for filing a suit would trim $54 billion from the federal deficit over 10 years, largely by curbing defensive medicine, according to a report released Friday by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).
Overall, tort reform would reduce the nation’s healthcare spending by 0.5%, the report stated. Forty percent of these savings would stem from lower malpractice insurance premiums for providers. The rest of the savings would result from lower use of healthcare services, as providers would order fewer tests and procedures intended simply to avoid a lawsuit.
The CBO estimate of tort reform’s potential to reduce the deficit is roughly 10 times greater than what it projected last December (a reduction of $54 billion instead of $5.6 billion). At that time, the agency said that evidence about the extent of defensive medicine — and how tort reform could reduce it — was murky. However, more recent research suggests that “lowering the cost of medical malpractice tends to reduce the use of health care services,” according to the latest CBO report.
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This should put to rest Tort reform advocates estimates of savings of $100 billion a year.
Way way way overblown and misused figures
Click here. You will be guided Medical Liability Malpractice Insurance.