For Immediate
Release: July 29, 2004
Hobson: Republicans Attempting to Manufacture
Health Care Crisis for Political Gain
Republicans in the Legislature continue to
talk about lawsuit abuse in Oklahoma and yet they still
haven’t provided any evidence that such abuse exists,
the leader of the Oklahoma State Senate said Thursday.
“The evidence doesn’t support
the claims being made by the Republican leadership in the
Legislature. They are simply attempting to manufacture a
crisis in an effort to gain attention and a political advantage.
They are the ones embarrassing Oklahoma,” said Senate
President Pro Tempore Cal
Hobson.
Hobson noted that a special 23-member joint
House-Senate committee held more than 15 hours of public
hearings on tort reform last April and May.
“Not one of the 40 witnesses who testified
before the committee offered specific evidence of a case
in which an Oklahoma jury made an outrageous award. Maybe
they have lawsuit abuse in other states but we haven’t
seen it here,” Hobson said.
What came out of the hearings and work by
the committee that wrote the tort reform measure, House
Bill 2661, was that the state’s largest medical malpractice
insurance issuer was facing a financial crisis, Hobson said.
“House Bill 2661 addressed that crisis
and we need to give it time work,” Hobson said.
Hobson noted that the Oklahoma State Medical
Association, the Oklahoma Hospital Association and the Oklahoma
Association of Health Care Providers all supported House
Bill 2661.
On its website, the American Medical Association
lists 20 ‘states in crisis.’ Those states don’t
include Oklahoma.
“The most recognized medical organization
in the country says Texas, Arkansas and Missouri are ‘states
in crisis,’ but says Oklahoma is not,” Hobson
said.
Interestingly, Hobson said, the seven other
states listed in the Tuesday advertisement placed by the
American Neurological Surgery Political Action Committee
in the Wall Street Journal are on the AMA’s list.
He also cited a report in the trade magazine
Medical Liability Monitor the shows medical malpractice
rates in Oklahoma are lower than in almost every other state
in the nation. Only South Dakota, Nebraska and Minnesota
had lower average rates, according to the report which was
included in a recent report by the federal government’s
General Accounting Office.
“Oklahoma doctors are paying less for
medical malpractice insurance than their colleagues across
the nation. The American Medical Association says Oklahoma
isn’t a ‘state in crisis.’ And nobody
has yet to offer a single case in which a so-called run-away
jury awarded an outlandish amount of money to a plaintiff
in a medical malpractice case in our state.
“I renew my challenge to Senators Williamson
and Coffee to stop playing political football with health
care in our state,” Hobson said.
For
more information contact:
Senate Communications Office -
(405) 521-5774
