I recently covered a previous entry by Rangelmd.com on defensive medicine, and he has posted another one that is really good. I think this is especially relevant in light of the opposition to tort reform that I quoted yesterday. Keep it in mind: “To take away the incentive to make it [medicine] safer is the wrong way to go.”

istock_000003394813xsmall.jpg

But who is safer getting unnecessary treatments? Read the story and ask if the high pressure of medical malpractice liability is really doing anything for patients beside raising the price of medicine.

The practice of emergency medicine (among other high risk specialties) has become so regimented and infused with defensive medicine tactics that many ER docs are not even aware of how this has changed the way they think. It seemed as if this ER physician could not fathom the concept that we would send home a patient who could easily have just had a heart attack despite the fact that we were going to do absolutely nothing different for her then if she went home. Even though the possibility of litigation in this case was remote it was the constant and overall threat of litigation that has fundamentally changed the thinking of physicians and how they practice medicine.

This change in thinking has had significant consequences. Ever wonder why we spend so much on medical care? Part of the answer lies in this example. This ER doc was about to turn an $800 ER visit into a $4,000 hospital admission. Now imagine this happening all over the country in multiple variations and degrees of absurdity tens of thousands of times EVERY DAY.

Of course, tort reform doesn’t deny people compensation for real harm. But the idea that unreformed fear of unlimited medmal liability is really motivating any improvement in medicine sounds farfetched. It simply doesn’t match the evidence.