New study: Tort reform has not reduced health care costs in Texas

A new study found no evidence that health care costs in Texas dipped after a 2003 constitutional amendment limited payouts in medical malpractice lawsuits, despite claims made to voters by some backers of tort reform. Full Story »

Posted by Glenn LaBauve

See All Reviews »

Review

Dwight Rousu
4.4
by Dwight Rousu - Jun. 22, 2012

A good study and reporting of it, that SHOULD help expose the lies behind advocates of tort reform.

Having been nearly maimed and nearly killed by doctor's errors, I think there should be more suits for malpractice, and enough money to attract attorneys to pursue such suits.

Since tort reform, some Texas residents have complained that they cannot find a lawyer to pursue a malpractice case because of the $750,000 cap on payouts for pain, suffering, disfigurement and mental anguish. The limit often makes litigation cost prohibitive, patients and lawyers said. That concern was not raised in the paper, although the researchers said claims of huge malpractice payouts and rampant “frivolous” lawsuits before tort reform are greatly exaggerated by its advocates.

See All Reviews »

Dwight's Rating

Overall
4.4

Good
from 13 answers
Quality
4.5
Facts
5.0
Fairness
4.0
Sourcing
5.0
Style
4.0
Context
4.0
Depth
4.0
Enterprise
5.0
Relevance
5.0
Popularity
4.0
Recommendation
5.0
Credibility
3.0
More How our ratings work »