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Personal Injury Lawyers in New York
Monday, December 10, 2007
Do You Know if Your Doc Has Been Accused of Malpractice?
New Yorkers know less about which doctors have been investigated for medical malpractice than people in other states do, and the agency responsible for disciplining physicians does little to root out misconduct and malpractice, according to state officials.
Public Citizen, the national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization founded by Ralph Nader, issued a study last week and urged New York to improve the system.
State Health Department Spokeswoman Claudia Hutton said other states generally allow people to access information on doctors who are currently under investigation for malpractice, something New York law prohibits.
"We get about 4,000 complaints a year,'' Hutton said. "About 800 of them, we believe, are substantiated and we open investigations on those. There's a difference between an accusation and a substantiated accusation ... we're not trying to hide things.''
The Office of Professional Medical Conduct is responsible for investigating doctor complaints, but state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli recently criticized its work.
"OPMC management concentrates little effort on proactively identifying cases of potential misconduct or ensuring that they have received all complaints,'' according to the comptroller's report released in September.
Only about 1 percent of doctors in New York are responsible for generating the highest malpractice payouts and can't find commercial insurance coverage as a result. It can be difficult for patients to determine if their doctors are considered too "high risk'' for insurance companies, according to the report issued by Public Citizen.
The report said patients pay the price for the lack of oversight for bad doctors -- sometimes with horrific errors like surgeries on the wrong limb or the wrong patient. It recommended reducing the costs by minimizing errors and improving the state's oversight.
If you or a loved one has suffered or died due to medical malpractice in Long Island or anywhere in New York, please contact the medical malpractice attorneys at Silberstein Awad & Miklos today to schedule your initial consultation.
Public Citizen, the national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization founded by Ralph Nader, issued a study last week and urged New York to improve the system.
State Health Department Spokeswoman Claudia Hutton said other states generally allow people to access information on doctors who are currently under investigation for malpractice, something New York law prohibits.
"We get about 4,000 complaints a year,'' Hutton said. "About 800 of them, we believe, are substantiated and we open investigations on those. There's a difference between an accusation and a substantiated accusation ... we're not trying to hide things.''
The Office of Professional Medical Conduct is responsible for investigating doctor complaints, but state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli recently criticized its work.
"OPMC management concentrates little effort on proactively identifying cases of potential misconduct or ensuring that they have received all complaints,'' according to the comptroller's report released in September.
Only about 1 percent of doctors in New York are responsible for generating the highest malpractice payouts and can't find commercial insurance coverage as a result. It can be difficult for patients to determine if their doctors are considered too "high risk'' for insurance companies, according to the report issued by Public Citizen.
The report said patients pay the price for the lack of oversight for bad doctors -- sometimes with horrific errors like surgeries on the wrong limb or the wrong patient. It recommended reducing the costs by minimizing errors and improving the state's oversight.
If you or a loved one has suffered or died due to medical malpractice in Long Island or anywhere in New York, please contact the medical malpractice attorneys at Silberstein Awad & Miklos today to schedule your initial consultation.
posted by Lynn at 6:11 AM
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