Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
Current FIRs (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) are a vailable on the NM Legislative Website (legis.state.nm.us).
Adobe PDF versions include all attachments, whereas HTML versions may not. Previously issued FIRs and
attachments may be obtained from the LFC in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Barela
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/25/07
HB 1063
SHORT TITLE Malpractice Insurance Limits of Recovery
SB
ANALYST Earnest
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to House Memorial 25, requesting a study of revising the Medical Malpractice Act.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Regulation Commission (PRC)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 1063 increases from $600 thousand to $1.2 million the maximum compensation that a
medically injured patient can receive from a doctor or other health care provider who is covered
under the Medical Malpractice Act. The bill increases from $200 thousand to $400 thousand the
amount of coverage that the primary insurer must provide before the Patients Compensation
Fund begins contributing to the payment of the claim.
The new $1.2 million limit applies only to malpractice occurring after July 1, 2007.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the PRC, the current $600,000 limit of recovery in the Medical Malpractice Act has
not changed since 1995. This bill, according to a recent projection provided by the actuarial firm
retained by the Superintendent of Insurance to evaluate the Patients Compensation Fund, is likely
pg_0002
House Bill 1063 – Page
2
to increase by 7% to 14% the total malpractice losses incurred by doctors in the Fund. It would
also shift more of these claim costs to the primary insurer and reduce the amount of losses paid
by the Fund.
According to HPC, the language of the Act requires the use of occurrence coverage, which has
effectively limited the coverage under the Act to physicians. Consequently the impact of what is
proposed with HB1063 will almost entirely fall on New Mexico’s physicians.
The Medical Malpractice Act, enacted in 1976, was intended to “promote the health and welfare
of the people of New Mexico by making available professional liability insurance for health care
providers in New Mexico."
The current law contains the following benefits for qualifying health care providers:
$600,000 cap on damages other than medical bills and punitive damages
3-year statute of limitations on the filing of a claim (subject to extension for minors)
Mandatory review of claims by a medical/legal panel prior to the filing of lawsuits
State participation in malpractice insurance coverage via a “patients compensation fund"
HPC notes limited access to malpractice insurance reduces the number of practicing physicians,
and thus results in reduced access to health care. “For example, given New Mexico’s shortage of
physicians even with caps in place for thirty-two years, a modification of caps could aggravate
access to care in a primarily rural state that already has 30 of 33 counties well under the national
average of number physicians per 1000 population. Compared with much of the nation, New
Mexico is large, rural, poor and thinly populated. New Mexico is currently short between 310 to
550 physicians depending upon which ratio comparisons are used (2003 HPC data)."
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
House Memorial 25 mandates that the current limits of recovery in the Medical Malpractice Act
be studied by a special commission composed of the Medical Society, the Trial Bar, the
Superintendent of Insurance and a member of the House, and that the findings and
recommendations of that study be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Health Policy Commission provided the following background information.
The American Medical Association has listed New Mexico as one of only six states that,
from the viewpoint of physicians and insurers, are not in crisis. This is largely due to
physicians’ access to the Act and the amount of the caps, which is widely viewed as the
main stabilizing influence on their malpractice premiums. . . .
AP Capital is currently the primary insurer actively writing occurrence policies for
physicians in New Mexico, and the primary insurer of physician who want coverage
under the Act.
While physician liability rates in other states have soared—in some places to 500
percent—New Mexico’s average rate increases from 1994 to 2004 totaled 18.6 percent.
pg_0003
House Bill 1063 – Page
3
Typical New Mexico physician annual professional liability rates in 2005 were family
physician – $16,000; emergency medicine – $26,000; general surgeon – $76,000;
orthopedic surgeon – $76,000; and Ob/Gyn – $90,000.
New Mexico has shared in the nationwide trend for doctors, particularly those in high-
risk specialties, to leave private practice and seek facility-based employment, partly to
avoid having to purchase their own malpractice insurance because of the increasing cost
of insurance.
To understand how rising insurance costs are affecting health care providers, it is
important to examine both the size of premium increases and what is happening to
provider reimbursement. If physicians can charge more when their overhead costs
increase, there will be no crisis from their perspective. If this pass-through of costs is not
possible—for example because a single payer or small number of payers (Medicare,
Medicaid, or a large HMO or a combination of the three) has a dominant market share
and refuses to negotiate on this point (or operates under rate control as is the case with
Medicare and many commercial providers who peg their reimbursement off of Medicare)
then premium increases hurt providers more.
Compared to previous malpractice crises, the current era is characterized by greater use
of non-fee-for-service reimbursement arrangements and greater payer consolidation. As a
result, it is likely much harder for providers to negotiate upward adjustments in
reimbursement. Moreover, Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement has been flat or
declining for the last several years. The combination of lower income and higher
overhead creates an economic squeeze on physicians.
As a result of the above mentioned economic squeeze on many of New Mexico’s
physicians, some higher risk medical specialist groups have chosen to be employed by
integrated health systems that self insure or hospitals that employ them and can afford to
pay the premium for the group. However, to the extent that this type of physician
employment arrangements are not covering their own practice expenses (which all most
all are not) , then they must be subsidized by other parts of the health system resulting in
higher overall costs that are paid for by increasing health insurance premiums. More
importantly, with more physicians being insured outside the Act, there may be a concern
of a diminishing pool of revenue coming into the Patient Compensation Fund because of
health system employment which could in turn impact the availability and cost of
occurrence based policies. A self-reinforcing cycle may occur of fewer physicians left in
private practice and insured under the Act due in part to their ability to afford
professional liability insurance. This may be of particular concern to rural physicians not
employed and not desiring employment but having few alternatives other than
employment or departure from the state. Also, in rural areas, citizens may end up with
fewer provider choices as a result of their employers insurance not being available
through their local health system.
A national study (Health Affairs -May 31, 2005) found that the presence of caps on non-
economic damage awards has an impact on where doctors choose to practice, particularly
in rural areas. The study finds that the “27 states with caps on non-economic damages
had 2.2% more physicians per capita than states without such caps. Rural counties in
states with non-economic damage caps had 3.2% more physicians per capita than rural
pg_0004
House Bill 1063 – Page
4
counties in states without caps." Obstetricians and surgeons were noted to be the most
influenced by the presence or absence of caps.
States that capped non-economic damages in malpractice cases experienced a 2.4%
increase in overall physician supply compared with states that have no such caps, holding
other factors constant, according to another study (Journal of the American Medical
Association- June 1,2005). The study says physician services increased in every state
from 1985 to 2001, but states with damage caps saw a higher than average increase in the
number of doctors than states without tort reform.
An August 2003 GAO report with “limited available data indicated that growth in
malpractice premiums and claims payments has been slower in states that enacted tort
reform laws that include certain caps on non-economic damages. For example, between
2001 and 2002, average premiums for three physician specialties—general surgery,
internal medicine, and obstetrics/gynecology—grew by about 10 percent in states with
caps on non-economic damages of $250,000, compared to about 29 percent in states with
limited reforms."
The evidence would seem to indicate that the presence of caps is associated with better
physician supply.
“Defensive medicine" refers to the widespread practice of physicians to order excessive
tests, treatments and referrals in order to reduce their exposure to potential lawsuits rather
than to medically benefit their patients. The monetary costs of defensive medicine,
however, remain difficult to measure, with estimates ranging from 5% to 9% of total
health care costs (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services) to “small"
(Congressional Budget Office).
There is considerable debate nationally over how often physicians alter their clinical
behavior because of the threat of malpractice liability, or defensive medicine, and the
consequences of those behavioral changes. The most recent study is a Journal of the
American Medical Association study published in June 2005 of Pennsylvania physicians
which suggests that “ nearly all (93%) of the surveyed physicians reported practicing
defensive medicine." Forty-two percent reported that they had taken steps to restrict their
practice in the previous three years, including eliminating procedures prone to
complications, such as trauma surgery, and avoiding patients who had complex medical
problems or were perceived as litigious. Defensive practice correlated strongly with
respondents’ lack of confidence in their liability insurance and perceived burden of
insurance premiums." Pennsylvania is one of the states characterized as “in crisis" by the
American Medical Association. Malpractice insurance for a general surgeon in
Pennsylvania more than doubled to $72,518 in 2003 from $33,684 three years earlier.
Market Conditions Nationally
(Insurance Information Institute, February 2007)
Although the cost of medical malpractice insurance has stabilized or decreased for most
specialties in most geographical areas, it is still much higher than it was five or six years
ago and doctors who reduced their coverage at the height of the crisis are not yet rushing
to raise it again, according to Medical Economics. Doctors who left the traditional market
for a captive or risk retention group are for the most part still there.
pg_0005
House Bill 1063 – Page
5
Fewer medical malpractice claims are being filed, but the dollar amount of each claim is
increasing. In its Hospital Professional Liability and Physician Liability 2006 Benchmark
Analysis, which examined more than 47,700 claims representing more than $4.4 billion
of incurred losses, the insurance broker Aon found that the overall frequency of medical
malpractice claims has not increased for the second consecutive year. But while claim
frequency is stabilizing, according to the study, the average size (severity) of malpractice
claims continues to increase at a rate of 6 percent.
New Mexico’s experience in this area for 2005 was an average claims payment of
$226,974 (Source: Kaiser Family Foundation data).
The financial results of medical malpractice insurers show the crisis in medical
malpractice insurance is lessening as premiums reach acceptable levels relative to costs.
According to the National Underwriter Data Services, the medical malpractice combined
ratio, a measure of profitability, was 100.1 in 2005. This means that in 2005 for every
medical malpractice premium dollar collected, insurers paid out a little over one dollar in
claims and expenses. This represents a significant drop from 2003, when the combined
ratio was 138.8, and from the five previous years. The combined ratio does not take
account of investment income.
BE/nt