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From the editor







SECOND
OPINION
BY SIDNEY HARRIS
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It’s high time to fix the malpractice mess
Your article “Showdown” in the summer issue of Yale Medicine
brings out the sorry state of affairs in the medicolegal climate. When
I began the practice of ob/gyn after World War II, my malpractice insurance
was $25 a year.

Albert W. Diddle, M.D. ’36
Knoxville, Tenn.


The lucid comments about the malpractice situation and its aggravations
were apt and helpful in understanding the dilemma. However they failed
to mention one of the major causes of premium increases, which is the
failure of state medical examiners boards to take steps to reduce the
number of compensable medical errors.

For some years the Public Citizen Health Research Group (PCHRG) has closely
followed malpractice suits decided in favor of the plaintiff. During the
period 1990-2000, 5 percent of the doctors were responsible for the payouts
in 54 percent of the suits. In other words, over half the cases of successful
litigation were the fault of only 5 percent of the practitioners.

Overall, of the 35,000 doctors who had two or more payouts during that
period, only 8 percent of them were disciplined by their state medical
examiners board. The PCHRG publishes these figures periodically, and they
emphasize that doctors who are repeatedly found to be at fault are responsible
for the increasing costs of insurance for the rest of the profession.
The conclusion is obvious: state boards should recognize that it is their
duty to discipline the repetitive offenders and with more than a tap on
the wrist.

Frederick W. Goodrich Jr., M.D., HS ’49
Medford, Ore.


In reporting on the current medical malpractice crisis, author Eli Kintisch
characterizes it as a battle between doctors and lawyers. The cliché
is catchy, but it is also misleading. Thousands of attorneys in this country,
myself included, devote their professional careers to defending health
care providers and hospitals in medical malpractice cases and advocating
for tort reform measures that limit physician liability. This is not a
case of doctor versus lawyer; it is both broader and more refined than
that. At best, the generalization oversimplifies the nuances of the debate.
At worst, it serves to perpetuate the misguided animosity that, sadly,
polarizes the professions and leaves patients stranded somewhere in the
middle.

Ken Baum, M.D. ’01, J.D. ’01
New Haven

More letters on this topic.
Knowing when not to retire
As a “mature physician” of 65, I found that I disagree with
a significant proportion of Dr. Kaufmann’s essay [“Knowing
When It’s Time to Quit,” Summer 2003]. I am at the stage of
my medical career where I am working because of my joy in the practice
of medicine and the feeling that I have something additional to offer
to my patients. This is true of many physicians in their prime, who have
continued to expand their base of medical knowledge and perhaps are now
more willing to listen. It would be a shame for the medical community
and for patients to lose such a valuable resource.

When I lose the desire to continue to learn, lose the joy of going to
my office and talking with my patients, then I will move to another phase
of my life, retirement.

Mark W. Lischner, M.D. ’65
Roseville, Calif.


To my former fellow, Herbert Kaufmann: I read your recent essay and was
delighted at your eloquence if pained at your conclusion that doctors
should retire. I am grateful as I approach 80 that you left unspecified
the age for desuetude. You condoned your own retirement by saying that
aging doctors grow out of touch with junior colleagues who prefer their
own peer group anyway, that older practitioners no longer understand the
science in medical journals and that—in your words—they grow
irrelevant as far as their colleagues are concerned.

I failed you as a teacher if you imagine that most of the people who come
to see me require that I trace the twists and turns of amino acids. It
may be fun to read the latest science, but little of that is required
to care for patients in the office or clinic. There are nowhere near enough
physicians, and we who are spared can make a contribution by working part
time in an office or clinic to let someone else bear the heavier burdens
of the hospital. We need elderly doctors in our intensive care units,
not taking care of patients and not, one hopes, lying in a bed, but as
knowledgeable patient advocates wandering around the unit asking questions
about what is being done and why, and to what purpose. The intensive care
unit might even be a place for elderly doctors to talk to the families
of the patients being taken care of by younger experts.

There is much good also to be said for the viewpoint of the old, who have
had experience and now have the leisure for contemplation. It takes staying
power, iron pants and stamina—and a willingness, no an eagerness,
to accept a changed role. People may think that you are irrelevant, but
as long as you are convinced that you are not, you have something to say
to them.

Howard M. Spiro, M.D.
Professor emeritus of medicine
New Haven

This letter is excerpted from a longer essay by Howard
Spiro that appears in full below.


Dear Herbert: I am responding to your essay and Howard Spiro's
response. You eloquently describe how, as we get older, our relationship
with our medical community changes—a discomfort and reality all
physicians must experience. At some point in time, I agree, it would be
wise to retire. At what point in time this happens will depend on the
individual.

Change in life is inevitable and we all respond differently. Your
response, seemingly, was to retire; Howard's was to adapt to it by accepting
a changed role; and mine was to create a new career. I also
retired three years ago, and although I loved the medical community that
I left behind, I decided to enter a new field and way of life. I have
been auditing courses at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies and am volunteering as a stewardship coordinator for a land trust.
Like Howard, I have a new niche, friends and colleagues, and I am enjoying
my new life immensely.

I would like to believe retirement is a beautiful phase of life
when a physician becomes free from the restrictions of a lifelong medical
career. The time that decision is made and the life that is subsequently
chosen will depend on ones attitude, desires, ambition and health,
not age. the three of us have made our choices.

Vincent A. DeLuca Jr., M.D.
Clinical professor of medicine (retired)
Branford, Conn.


Herbert Kaufmanns article was interesting and useful. I retired
at 70 to run a vineyard and winery. My experience is described in a chapter
in a book called Doctors Afield, published by Yale University Press
in 1999.

In my time at the School of Medicine, there were a number of optional
courses. Are those still offered? If so, I would suggest an elective on
retirement. Young people entering medicine often have a narrow view of
the world. Retirement is certainly not what they are thinking about. When
I retired from psychiatry and psychoanalysis, I was struck by how many
of my colleagues hung on way past the time when they should have quit.
They had nothing else to do. Some planning earlier in life would have
served them well.

George W. Naumburg Jr., M.D. 45
North Salem, N.Y.
Thanks for the news from Cedar Street
Again I am awed by this spectacular publication you have crafted with
its singular breadth and depth, sensitivity and historical continuity.
Yale Medicine is one of many publications I receive but the only
one I devour from cover to cover. Congratulations and thanks for an outstanding
contribution to generations of Yale physicians.

Glenn L. Kelly, M.D. ’62, HS ’66
Englewood, Colo.
Don’t make the same mistake that California
did
In addition to my medical training at Yale, I have a law degree from
Stanford. (OK, I know it’s second place to Yale’s traditional
dominance, but how many New Haven winters can one tolerate?)

As such, I have had the opportunity to view the range of perspectives
with respect to medical negligence issues, including those of clinical
practitioners, litigators, patients/clients and insurance companies (to
which I have consulted regarding risk management).

My state of California has a frankly ludicrous limitation of $250,000
for “non-economic damages.” This level was set in 1975, and
has not been changed in the intervening 28 years. I assume I need not
delve into the litany of comparative cost/price multiples that have been
experienced in all other areas of the economy during this time frame.

As you know, this means that a patient injured by treatment that
is judged to be negligent can recover only the cost of medical care and
lost wages, plus no more than $250,000 for the related pain and suffering
that he/she may experience for the remainder of his or her life.

Beyond this, of course, at least some amount of any award goes
to attorney’s fees. This amount is actually quite minimal, considering
the costs and risks involved, coming to 40 percent of the first $50,000
received, one third of the next $500,000, 25 percent of the next $500,000,
and 15 percent of any amount above $600,000.

Factored into this, of course, are the actual costs of handling
a case, including experts, who are paid out of pocket by the attorney
even in cases that are not ultimately pursued, or subsequently are unsuccessful;
various forms of demonstrative evidence, always expensive; and considerable
office and miscellaneous expenses. (This does not even include the costs
of the attorneys’ time to evaluate the great majority of cases that
are eventually not accepted and to engage in the long and arduous task
of quality representation for cases that are ultimately pursued.)

Of course, it often occurs that even clearly meritorious cases
are lost, for a variety of technical reasons. This results in enormous
unreimbursed expenses for the attorney.

As a result, there are few attorneys in California who will even
agree to handle medical negligence cases. Many of those will accept only
matters in which massive economic damages can be demonstrated, such as
with “bad baby cases,” which in my opinion are very often
not justifiable at all (resting only on an adverse outcome that it would
have been quite difficult to avoid), and brain injuries in relatively
young individuals.

I cannot tell you how many technically meritorious cases I and
my fellow attorneys have been obliged to turn away, because the litigation
risks are too high and/or the prospective damages, though significant,
are not great enough to justify pursuing in this hostile and inequitable
environment. Even though most competent attorneys would not consider assuming
the risk of taking a marginal case to trial, the great majority of cases
that do reach that stage are “defensed,” despite clear liability
and obvious proximate damages.

I find it amusing that an economic conservative such as myself
is aligned with the “trial lawyers,” but, as I hope is the
case for all of us, I do my best to thoroughly evaluate public policy
completely and without predetermined bias. In this instance, I would clearly
come down on the side of greater substantive and procedural fairness for
attorneys and their clients, regardless of the nature of my training and
experience.

Fundamentally, it is the insurance companies that are most responsible
for the sometimes outlandish policy costs. You know the story well, as
does the media, despite their tendency to reflexively assign fault to
trial attorneys. When inflation was extremely high and investment income
was soaring, the insurers took on any risk imaginable, in order to keep
those premium dollars coming in that could be multiplied several times
over with a reasonable investment strategy. During those years, insurance
executives paid themselves unconscionable salaries. Now that they can’t
count on investment income to any great extent, they attempt to maintain
their lifestyles off the backs of doctors.

Additionally, I would like to see greatly diminished awards for
the minority of “big cases” that seem to capture the sympathy
of the public and of juries, and garner awards out of all proportion to
liability and damages. Also, it is true that there are a small number
of states in which it is health care providers and plaintiff’s attorneys
that are somewhat unfairly advantaged.

But for the large majority of those injured by medical negligence,
the system is clearly stacked against them. Rather than propagating California’s
unconscionable arrangement across the country, measures should be taken
in states such as California to level the playing field, among all participants.

As for me, the various aligned forces that I have described, in
the realms of public policy, law, politics and economics, have induced
me to shift my focus to a greater involvement in the life sciences. I
find this to be unquestionably more enjoyable, and it optimizes the value
of my basic science and clinical research experience, regulatory knowledge,
and M.B.A. training. However, to the extent that in the aggregate such
realignments further disadvantage patients, I remain deeply troubled and
conflicted.

Mark Williams, M.D. ’79, J.D.
Menlo Park, Calif.
It’s never to late to work:
An open letter to Herbert Kaufmann
Dear Herbert,
I read your recent essay, delighted at your eloquence if pained at your
conclusion that doctors should retire but grateful—at near 80—that
you left unspecified the age for desuetude. Somewhat solipsistically,
you condoned your own retirement by pointing out that aging doctors grow
out of touch with junior colleagues who prefer their own peer group anyway,
that older practitioners no longer understand the science in medical journals
and that—in your words—they grow irrelevant as far as their
colleagues are concerned. But you mostly slight the “loyal patients,”
as you called them. They too have aged, and many would not have been unhappy
to rely on an old doctor like you who looks at the world from their same
perspective, a helpful coeval who can aid in their medical decisions and
minister in a way to their very human problems.

You and I are longtime friends, you were once my student and so
I hope you will let me repeat why I continue working, and why I believe
you have chosen wrongly. A mid-1930s liberal, I was raised in that more
generous era when obligations to the community arose from the sense that
we Americans were all in the same boat, or as John Donne put it, “No
man is an island, entire of itself.” On my retirement from Yale
at 75, I was eager to work for the poor, or disadvantaged as the postmodern
world has it, but the authorities in my clinical department were less
than enthusiastic at the prospect of my hanging around after 44 years.
Luckily enough, I joined the gastrointestinal group at 40 Temple St.,
a few blocks from where Marian and I live and a five-minute stroll to
the medical school. Working there happily since 1999, I find two days
a week for six hours just enough, for more would be tiring and might turn
me more cantankerous than ever.

I see all sorts and conditions of patients, some adolescents and
more adults, many my age or older. I feel great kinship with the elderly,
and I shape my advice to them rather differently from the way I did at
a callow 50. I am far less likely than before to urge optional surgery
for many chronic conditions, ever since several friends over 70 recovered
from operations far less alert and competent than they had been before.
Such post-operative deficits are not always obvious, but the family will
tell you that Grandpa has lost his sense of humor or that Grandma no longer
has her usual verve and enthusiasm. When people ask me what I lost after
my cardiac bypass, I reply—optimistically I hope—that I lost
my impatience. But maybe it’s those beta-blockers I take.

Those who come to see us old doctors get time and attention. We
can act as mediators between what the CAT scans and MRI show and what
the patient feels. We know the truth of the aphorism that the eye is for
accuracy but the ear is for truth. We have the time to listen, and I enjoy
the talkativeness that once would have annoyed me in my rush to get everything
done. We no longer fear death, nor are we greedy for more days on the
earth, like many of our aged patients who, given the chance to comment,
seem to agree.

Also, we have learned that time and “nature”—the
Creator if you will—heal many wounds, for we have practiced long
enough to be aware how many problems get better on their own. We are wary
of the urge to be “proactive,” so universal among our younger
colleagues. “Prevention” flies on every banner, and even 80-year-olds
cannot escape pills to lower cholesterol or tame the prostate. Cardiologists
straighten every bend and twist in the coronary vessels, even when their
patients have no pain, busy as the gastroenterologist plucking polyps
from octogenarian colons.

You worried that to practice at the top of the profession requires
keeping up-to-date on science, and you were disconsolate at your growing
failure to find intellectual delight in modern science, but you did not
seem to remember that the care of patients is just that, care and not
always cure. I failed you as a teacher if you imagine that most of the
people who come to see me require that I trace the twists and turns of
amino acids. It may be fun to read the science of our medical journals,
but little of that is required to care for patients in the office or clinic.
Indeed, I doubt that in daily practice even the wisest clinicians use
the organic chemistry or physics from college, or the molecular biology
of medical school.

I wish that you had continued to see patients one way or another.
For there is the matter of payback, our duty or obligation to continue
working at least part-time, though not in the same earnest frenzy as before.
There are nowhere near enough physicians, and we who are spared can make
a contribution by working part-time in office or clinic to let someone
else bear the heavier burdens of the hospital. We should enlist some of
the 70-year-old physicians spending their days on the golf course back
into practice some hours or days a week. They and their patients might
be the better for it.

You may have ignored too much the personal side of medicine and
medical care. Only now, after a lifetime of experience are you able to
share the viewpoint of the elderly. You may have missed a wonderful chance
to contribute, not as a brash technician but as a contemplative old physician.
We need elderly doctors in our intensive care units, not taking care of
patients and not, one hopes, lying in a bed, but as knowledgeable patient
advocates wandering around the unit asking questions about what is being
done and why, and to what purpose. The intensive care unit might even
be a place for elderly doctors to talk to the families of the patients
being taking care of by younger experts.

There is much good also to be said for the viewpoint of the old,
who have had experience and now have the leisure for contemplation. To
be sure, it is frustrating to recall clever schemes that failed in the
past and all too often to face blank stares in the condescension of the
young, ignored by being yes-yessed to death. Yet you still have much to
offer, to yourself and to your patients, and to your colleagues. It takes
staying power, iron pants, and stamina—and a willingness, no an
eagerness, to accept a changed role. People may think that you are irrelevant,
but as long as you are convinced that you are not, you have something
to say to them.

There are so many other things that physicians over 70 can still
do. My friends Kay and Robert Zufall opened a free clinic for Hispanics
in Dover, N.J., 10 years or more ago in a volunteer enterprise that still
gives other aging doctors the chance to work a few hours a day and to
talk with old friends. Osler may have been joking, but he was dead wrong
in any case. Surely you remember that Harvard Medical School did not admit
women as students until mid-1940s under the mistaken expectation that
they would abandon medicine for pregnancy. Look at all the women doctors
around us now.

Given your health and intellectual agility, you had another 15
years or more ahead of you. You should not now so eagerly abandon what
it took so long to learn, nor should any of us be abashed to continue
working, or to confess that work defines us and that we enjoy being useful.

God bless.

Your friend and quondam teacher,

Howard Spiro

From the Editor:
The things that matter
As one can see from these pages, our mailbag has been bursting lately.
Some of the letters affirm an idea expressed in Yale Medicine,
while others offer a wholly different perspective. I hope this means we
are covering topics of importance to readers and presenting a diversity
of views on questions that are too complex to have simple answers. Just
as the university thrives on the exchange of ideas, so does this magazine.

The topics in the Summer issue that drew the greatest response
were physician retirement and the malpractice insurance debate. Alumnus
Herbert Kaufmann’s article on why he decided to retire while still
in his prime (Knowing When It's Time to Quit) was unsolicited
but perfect for the Essay section. For our feature on the malpractice
debate (Showdown), we did ask readers for their opinions and
received a great number in reply. The letters are still coming.

Next we’re turning our focus to bioethics, a growth area in science
and medicine if ever there was one—and an area of increasing strength
at Yale. For our Spring issue, we’d like to hear from you about
the ethical dilemmas you have faced in your professional life. We will
pose the thorniest of these problems to a panel of bioethics experts from
the Yale faculty. Please send your story to: Ethics, Yale Medicine,
P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612 or by e-mail to ymm@yale.edu.
We’ll publish a selection of dilemmas, along with responses from
our resident experts, in Yale Medicine and on our website, info.med.yale.edu/ymm.
And since it is next to impossible to find universal agreement on the
things that really matter, expect to see more letters to the editor.

Michael Fitzsousa
michael.fitzsousa@yale.edu |
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