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Doctors Taking Leaves of Absence to Protest Rising Malpractice Premiums; A City Without Surgeons
Wheeling (WV) Intelligencer & News-Register ^ | Dec. 28, 2002 | Justin Anderson and Michelle Blum

Posted on 12/28/2002 7:22:06 AM PST by mountaineer

More than a dozen surgeons at the area's two largest hospitals will be off the job starting Jan. 1 to protest rising medical malpractice insurance premiums in West Virginia.

Wheeling Hospital Administrator and Chief Executive Officer Dr. Donald Hofreuter said 12 surgeons in the orthopedic, thoracic-cardiovascular and general surgery departments have filed for leaves of absence starting Wednesday, with another surgeon scheduled to take leave Jan. 3. Brian Felici, incoming president and CEO of Ohio Valley Medical Center, said 12 surgeons in the same specialties at his facility have also filed for leaves of absence.

At Wheeling Hospital, out of eight surgeons in the orthopedic surgery department, four filed for leaves of absence. In general surgery, three of the seven surgeons filed. Cardiovascular surgery will lose all six of it surgeons.

"As of right now, this looks like it's going to happen," said Wheeling Hospital spokeswoman Lynn Wood.

Hofreuter said Friday afternoon the surgeons' individual actions were prompted by "a lot of concern and frustration'' for the medical malpractice climate in West Virginia. Other hospitals in the area are expected to have similar results.

However, Wheeling Hospital is the only facility in the Upper Ohio Valley region with the capabilities for heart surgery, Hofreuter said. "This service will be removed from the area,'' he said.

The leaves of absence requests are for 30 days, with the option to extend.

The first leave of absence request was submitted on Monday - the 13th on Thursday.

Hofreuter said the immediate effects of the leaves of absence involve a reduction in the surgical services rendered by the hospital.

Most of the 13 surgeons are insured by the West Virginia Board of Risk and Insurance Management. Hofreuter said he has met with the surgeons, local lawmakers, the governor's office and the administration at BRIM in an effort to solve the problem.

"These gentlemen (surgeons) are concerned with the affordability of coverage," Hofreuter said. "We've had seven meetings in the last two weeks."

Hofreuter couldn't say if any other surgeons would step forward and request leaves of absence, adding, "In today's (medical malpractice insurance) climate, I'm ready for anything."

Wheeling Hospital owns its own ambulance company, enabling those patients who need services not offered at the hospital transportation to one that does. Washington Hospital in Washington, Pa. and Trinity West Medical Center in Steubenville both offer cardiac surgery.

"The hospital's not closing," Hofreuter said. "It's been here for 152 years and we're going to continue to serve the public."

Emergency medical services will still be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Hofreuter said Wheeling Hospital's sister facility, Belmont Community Hospital in Bellaire, could see an increase in patient volume in the coming weeks.

At OVMC, Felici said Friday the facility has received letters from about a dozen general, orthopedic, and cardio-thoracic surgeons indicating that as of Jan 1, they will be taking leaves of absence.

"The hospital has, as a result, put a plan into place to deal with this," he said.

All elective surgical procedures scheduled for early 2003 for the particular surgeons have been taken off OVMC's schedule, he said.

Felici said any patients coming to OVMC's EMSTAR unit for medical care will receive care. However, should they require surgical treatment, they would be transported to another facility, he said.

"Patients who present to the ER will be cared for. We're not changing any of our services. The ER will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week," he said. "We do have protocols in place to transfer patients if need be."

The hospital, he said, has alerted the air ambulance service it has dealt with for helicopter transport of patients requiring neurosurgical care "that the numbers of patients requiring transport are going to go up."

In some cases, patients might be transported to OVMC's sister facility, East Ohio Regional Hospital in Martins Ferry, he said.

The cases will be dealt with on an individual basis. While some could be transferred to EORH, other patients could be taken to facilities in Morgantown, Columbus, and Pittsburgh, he said.

Felici said the hospital "understands the surgeons' plight" and supports their position to have the West Virginia Legislature reform medical liability insurance laws. He noted that the hospital's medical liability insurance premium runs $10,000 a day.

"We understand what they're trying to accomplish. I want to make that clear," he said.

As to how long the leaves of absences could continue, Felici couldn't say.

"The initial requests of the surgeons indicates it is month to month," he said.

The effects on operations at OVMC could be far-reaching.

He predicted a partial downturn in patient volume at OVMC as well as "some increased volume" at EORH.

"We've put into place a plan for increased support services at East Ohio," he said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Ohio; US: Pennsylvania; US: West Virginia
KEYWORDS: medicalmalpractice; tortreform; triallawyers
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To: friendly
West Virginia (#49) and Mississippi (#50) are the poorest, most corrupt, and most 3rd World of all 50 states, yet have many of the richest lawyers. Mississippi judges get huge "loans" and oceanfront condos from the crooked trial lawyers.

We are looking for a second orthopeadic surgeon at out hospital. At the next medical staff meeting, I'll propose that we target the advertising of our opening to West Virginia surgeons.

41 posted on 12/28/2002 11:04:18 AM PST by Polybius
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To: Lancey Howard
Meantime, we're screwed. Thank you for a near perfect analysis of the democrat (read Hillary & Bill Clinton) strategy. I agree completely.

The democrats will enrich themselves (or at least their trial lawyer constituency), destroy the trauma and obstetrical system, and have the SHAMELESS gall to demand a federal takeover and universal health system to "correct" the non-functional, lawyer-ravaged system.

Are Bush and Doc Frist smart enough to defeat this evil plan, expand health care access, and enact tort reform? YES!

42 posted on 12/28/2002 11:12:07 AM PST by friendly
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To: RLK
According to a blurb posted here several weeks ago, the typical insurance cost for an OB/GYN is $110,000 per year.

Which is why more and more "OB/GYN" practices all over the country are turning into "GYN" practices and Family Practitioners are dropping the OB side of their practice.

As one practitioner who dropped OB said when he explained his decision to me, "The outcome for any birth now is either a perfect baby or the Lottery Jackpot. I am not willing to risk being the Lottery Jackpot any longer."

If the trend continues, Americans might have to go back to delivering babies at home with a local mid-wife like they did back in great-grandma's time.

Or they can call their malpractice lawyer to come over and help deliver the baby.

43 posted on 12/28/2002 11:18:11 AM PST by Polybius
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To: Polybius
A simple, high yield, low cost campaign to get your "orthopod":

1) Get mailing lists and office phones of Mississippi, West Virginia, and Clark County, Nevada (Las Vegas) physicians. All have horrific environments for orthopedists. Should be readily available from the state/county medical societies.

2) Write and call each EMPHASIZING THE DECENT LIABILITY CLIMATE OF YOUR LOCAL HOSPITAL. This will be music to their long suffering ears.

3) You will get a boat-load of follow-up responses and a great new orthopedist in no time. Good luck!

44 posted on 12/28/2002 11:21:41 AM PST by friendly
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To: Polybius
You'll probably have a flood of resumes!
45 posted on 12/28/2002 11:24:26 AM PST by mountaineer
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To: mountaineer
Insurance for the medical providers is becoming a problem across the entire USA. The roots are many from lawsuit abuse, lack of policing within the medical industry, etc. In Texas the number of insurance carriers has dropped from 17 down to 4 within the last couple of years. Doctors are leaving the practicing profession to other fields of teaching, research, consulting, etc.
46 posted on 12/28/2002 11:28:19 AM PST by deport
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To: mountaineer
All the above posts are significant, but I want to note that they all concern themselves with OB and ortho. The article also mentions GS--general surgeons, whose numbers are presently dwindling.

It is the general surgeon who is the de facto trauma surgeon in many communities. That is, you get in a car wreck, he sews you back together.

The article states "our emergency rooms are up and operating." What a laugh. Not to run down the ER docs, but a trauma center does not live up to the name without a general surgeon on call and ready. And those ER docs, without a surgeon handy, are going to get the blame when things don't turn out well, and will be leaving WV, too.

47 posted on 12/28/2002 11:31:41 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: friendly; mountaineer
West Virginia (#49) and Mississippi (#50) are the poorest, most corrupt, and most 3rd World of all 50 states, yet have many of the richest lawyers.

I doubt this has any progressive bearing on the population's general healthcare... Is this just a case of "backwoods southern lawyers" seizing on a situation ripe for opportunity? Because I imagine it abounds in WV-- enough opportunity for perceived inattentiveness/malpractice, and enough hicks willing to try to make a buck off their inbred offspring's hairlip or whathaveyou...

I have yet to meet anybody from West Virginia of whom I thought much...

48 posted on 12/28/2002 11:35:40 AM PST by maxwell
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To: Go Gordon
"A lawyer called in and made a very interesting observation. He stated that insurance companies make money by investing, not directly from the premiums they charge. The premiums are invested and the return on the investment is their real profit, and that almost all of the premiums are eventually paid out for the cost of administration, defending claims, defending lawsuits, and huge awards."

According to my insuror, the Doctor's company, this is not entirely true. Stocks constitute only a small percentage of insurance company portfolios. Premium costs are subsidized by investments, but payouts really are not...the premiums have to cover the payouts...this is generally a matter of law laid down by each state which mandates cash reserves held by insurors, etc.

Generally, this argument is used to deflect the real issue, which is that lawyers in many states have virtually a free hand to bring suits and no responsibility whatsoever if they lose. I always laugh at the attorneys who say that bad doctors are the reason for so many suits...if that were true, then why is it that something like 90% of all medical malpractice claims are eventually resolved in favor of the physician? Are these attorneys willing to pay the costs of the 90% of doctors who win their claims?


49 posted on 12/28/2002 11:35:50 AM PST by Jesse
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To: mountaineer
I have yet to meet anybody from West Virginia of whom I thought much...

...present company excluded, of course. ;) [attempts to remove feet from mouth]

50 posted on 12/28/2002 11:37:33 AM PST by maxwell
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To: maxwell
Is this just a case of "backwoods southern lawyers" seizing on a situation ripe for opportunity?

West Virginia and Mississippi are very poor, but are home to many wonderful, beautiful people.

Unfortunately the corrupt lawyer industry is powerful and exccedingly rich, like bad villians in a John Grisham novel. Think of lawyer Trent Lott and his relative the notorious billionaire tobacco crook shyster Dickie Scruggs. They are amazing well connected, and the judges and juries are paid off, according to newspaper articles and 60 Minutes investigations.

51 posted on 12/28/2002 11:41:58 AM PST by friendly
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To: friendly; mountaineer
West Virginia and Mississippi are very poor, but are home to many wonderful, beautiful people.

Yeah I know... I lived in MS for a couple years actually and there were some great folks down there... I guess I just had the bad luck to run into some real doozies from WV...

52 posted on 12/28/2002 11:44:50 AM PST by maxwell
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To: mountaineer
How dare those quacks do that.
They should be FORCED back to work, shackled if need be,
then SUED!

53 posted on 12/28/2002 11:49:52 AM PST by Kozak
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To: mountaineer
While doctors are leaving town and patients find themselves having to travel one to two hours to visit doctors in Pittsburgh, Columbus or Morgantown, the personal injury lawyers are doing just fine, thank you.

==============

Well, then, that's all that matters, doesn't it?

54 posted on 12/28/2002 11:51:12 AM PST by yankeedame
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To: maxwell
The problem with most West Virginians (not unique to them, by the way) is that they've become acclimated to the notion that someone other than themselves should and will provide for their every need. To some extent, we probably can credit Robert C. Byrd and his compadres in Congress for having created this dependent class.

West Virginians traditionally are hard-working, independent and patriotic (a higher percentage of residents are veterans than you'll find in most states, for example), but a few decades of the welfare state have turned them into the sort of people who file lawsuits every time they or a family member suffers a medical problem. Personal injury lawyers feed this "you deserve money for your injury" attitude, irrespective of the lack of fault on the part of the doctors and hospitals.

55 posted on 12/28/2002 11:52:33 AM PST by mountaineer
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To: All
An illustrative case.
56 posted on 12/28/2002 11:56:44 AM PST by mountaineer
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To: mountaineer
An illustrative case.

Yep, I'd say that sort of thing ain't peculiar to WV... "Inadequate staffing" to notice and address the problem in time? Hell's bells, where would one draw the line on THAT one?! Makes it hard to drudge up much of any Christian charity for folks like that...

57 posted on 12/28/2002 12:02:58 PM PST by maxwell
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To: DeaconBenjamin
Oh, and lets eliminate all pension and benefits to legislators and their staff -- enforcement to be retroactive

==============

Many moons ago I read something to this effect. The writer had done the math and pointed out that even if every member of congress got paid a $1,000,000 a year, tax free but got no pensions, no retirement "benefits", etc. the US Treasury (and the US taxpayer, of course) would save $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ -- serious money.

After all, in what other job do you qualify for full retirement + a golden parachute after only 2 years on the job?

58 posted on 12/28/2002 12:09:54 PM PST by yankeedame
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To: friendly
West Virginia (#49) and Mississippi (#50) are the poorest, most corrupt, and
most 3rd World of all 50 states, yet have many of the richest lawyers.


It's only fair to mention another state that may soon compete for one of these spots...
California.
Especially if their state budget crisis isn't fixed correctly...quick.

Even at that physical infrastructure is crumbling in many parts of "The Golden State".
About five years ago my brother (living them in Starkville, MS) was chuckled when
I sent him an article about this from one of the news mags (US News & World Report?) titled:

"The Mississipification of California"
59 posted on 12/28/2002 12:13:31 PM PST by VOA
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To: upchuck
Although, knowing Congress, they'd probably just pass legislation forcing the doctor's back to work.

Or import foreign doctors?

60 posted on 12/28/2002 12:16:14 PM PST by nanny
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