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Article on John Edward's record on Malpractice Suits

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  • Article on John Edward's record on Malpractice Suits

    I don't want to get flamed for posting this. My hubby is big on tort reform and medical malpractice, and this article was forwarded onto him, which he sent to me. I found it rather interesting to read some of the "tatics" John Edwards used to sway juries.

    It's an interesting read. Now that we are getting closer and closer to finishing, malpractice and the situation in certain states is becoming a deciding factor for us.

    -----------------------------------------------------------
    EDWARDS' MALPRACTICE SUITS LEAVE BITTER TASTE
    By Charles Hurt
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    The American Medical Association lists North Carolina's current health
    care situation as a "crisis" and blames it on medical-malpractice
    lawsuits such as the ones that made Democratic vice-presidential candidate
    Sen. John Edwards a millionaire many times over.

    One of the most successful personal-injury lawyers in North
    Carolina history, Mr. Edwards won dozens of lawsuits against doctors and
    hospitals across the state that he now represents in the Senate. He won
    more than 50 cases with verdicts or settlements of $1 million or more,
    according to North Carolina Lawyers Weekly, and 31 of those were
    medical-malpractice suits.

    During his 20 years of suing doctors and hospitals, he pioneered
    the art of blaming psychiatrists for patients who commit suicide and
    blaming doctors for delivering babies with cerebral palsy, according to
    doctors, fellow lawyers and legal observers who followed Mr. Edwards'
    career in North Carolina.

    "The John Edwards we know crushed [obstetrics, gynecology] and
    neurosurgery in North Carolina," said Dr. Craig VanDerVeer, a Charlotte
    neurosurgeon. "As a result, thousands of patients lost their health
    care."

    "And all of this for the little people?" he asked, a reference to
    Mr. Edwards' argument that he represented regular people against mighty
    foes such as prosperous doctors and big insurance companies. "How many
    little people do you know who will supply you with $60 million in legal
    fees over a couple of years?"

    Through a spokeswoman, Mr. Edwards declined to comment beyond
    e-mailing his and John Kerry's "real plan for medical-malpractice reform."

    The plan calls for one measure that Mr. Edwards previously had
    said is meaningless and does not impose caps on verdicts for economic
    damages or limits on attorneys' fees.

    One of his most noted victories was a $23 million settlement he
    got from a 1995 case — his last before joining the Senate — in which he
    sued the doctor, gynecological clinic, anesthesiologist and hospital
    involved in the birth of Bailey Griffin, who had cerebral palsy and other
    medical problems.

    Linking complications during childbirth to cerebral palsy became a
    specialty for Mr. Edwards. In the courtroom, he was known to dramatize
    the events at birth by speaking to jurors as if he were the unborn
    baby, begging for help, begging to be let out of the womb.

    "He was very good at it," said Dr. John Schmitt, an obstetrician
    and gynecologist who used to practice in Mr. Edwards' hometown of
    Raleigh. "But the science behind a lot of his arguments was flawed."

    In 2003, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American
    College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists published a joint study that cast
    serious doubt on whether events at childbirth cause cerebral palsy. The
    "vast majority" of cerebral palsy cases originate long before
    childbirth, according to the study.

    "Now, he would have a much harder time proving a lot of his
    cases," said Dr. Schmitt, who now practices at the University of Virginia
    Health System.

    Another profitable area of litigation for Mr. Edwards was lawsuits
    against psychiatrists whose patients committed suicide.

    In 1991, he won $2.2 million for the estate of a woman who hanged
    herself in a hospital after being removed from suicide watch. It was
    the first successful medical-malpractice case in Mr. Edwards' home of
    Wake County.

    During jury selection, Mr. Edwards asked potential jurors whether
    they could hold a doctor responsible for the suicide of their patients.

    "I got a lot of speeches from potential jurors who said they did
    not understand how that doctor could be responsible," Mr. Edwards
    recalled in an interview shortly after the trial. Those persons were excluded
    from the jury.

    In the end, Mr. Edwards scored $1.5 million for "wrongful death"
    and $175,000 in "emotional distress" for the woman's children.

    "One thing I was grappling with was how to explain to the jury the
    difference between loss of companionship and society — the things
    under the wrongful-death statute — and emotional pain and suffering, which
    superficially sound like the same thing," he said at the time. "What we
    did was to tell them the wrongful-death damages are for the loss of all
    the things that a mother does for the child. But the emotional pain and
    suffering damages represent the grieving. The pain is something you
    feel over the death of your mother."

    In 1995, as Mr. Edwards neared the pinnacle of his success,
    Lawyers Weekly reported on the state's 50 biggest settlements of the year.

    "Like last year, the medical malpractice category leads the new
    list, accounting for 16 cases — or 32 percent — three points better
    than last year," the magazine reported. "By and large, that upward trend
    had held since 1992, when only four [medical malpractice] cases made the
    survey."

    Mr. Edwards was singled out.

    "Another reason for this year's [medical malpractice] jump was a
    strong showing by the Raleigh firm of Edwards & Kirby," it reported.
    "Partner John Edwards was lead counsel in eight of the 16 medical
    malpractice cases in the top 50."

    Later in that article, Mr. Edwards was interviewed about the $5
    million he won from doctors who delivered Ethan L. Bedrick, who had
    cerebral palsy. Mr. Edwards credited the jury focus groups that he routinely
    used to help prepare his arguments.

    "They gave me several bits and pieces of information to use when
    addressing the jury," Mr. Edwards was quoted saying. "You can use them
    to decide whether to get involved in a case or whether to accept a
    settlement offer, but our primary use is trial presentation."

    The article went on to observe: "Focus groups can be put together
    for as little as $300, according to Edwards — a small investment
    compared to the $5 million won in Bedrick."

    It is not clear just how much Mr. Edwards made as a lawyer, but
    estimates based on a review of his lawsuit settlements and Senate records
    place his fortune at about $38 million.

    Like many Democrats, Mr. Edwards has benefited from the
    generosity of fellow trial lawyers, who have given millions of dollars to Mr.
    Edwards' political campaigns and other political endeavors.

    Part of the platform that Mr. Edwards is running on includes
    medical-malpractice reform. The Democrats' plan would go after insurance
    companies that increase doctors' premiums and ban lawyers and plaintiffs
    for 10 years if they file three frivolous lawsuits.

    One tenet of their plan would "require that individuals making
    medical-malpractice claims first go before a qualified medical specialist
    to make sure a reasonable grievance exists."

    However, Mr. Edwards said in a 1995 interview that such
    pre-screening is unnecessary.

    "Pre-screening as a concept is very good, but it's already done by
    every experienced malpractice lawyer," he told North Carolina Lawyers
    Weekly.

    As a result of these and other cases, insurance rates for doctors
    have skyrocketed — putting some out of business and driving others
    away, especially from rural areas. And doctors who have lost cases to Mr.
    Edwards have been bankrupted.

    Patients, meanwhile, are left with rising health care costs and
    fewer — if any — doctors in their area. It is increasingly a nationwide
    problem, physicians say.

    Dr. VanDerVeer, the Charlotte neurosurgeon, recalled one recent
    night on duty when two patients arrived in an emergency room in Myrtle
    Beach, S.C., where the area's last neurosurgeons quit earlier this year.

    "No one in Myrtle Beach would accept responsibility for these
    patients," he said. And because it was raining, the helicopters were
    grounded, so the patients were loaded into ambulances and driven the four
    hours to Charlotte.

    Upon arrival, one patient had died, and the other learned that she
    merely had a minor concussion — and a $6,000 bill for the ambulance
    ride.

    "That's just one little slice of life here," Dr. VanDerVeer said.
    "It's a direct result of the medical-malpractice situation that John
    Edwards fomented."

    Dr. Schmitt had spent 20 years delivering babies in Raleigh.
    Though he had no claims against him, his insurance tripled in one year. With
    no assurances that his rates would ever drop, or just stop rising, he
    left town.

    For Mr. Edwards' part, he doesn't necessarily begrudge the doctors
    he sues.

    In the book he wrote while campaigning for president, "Four
    Trials," Mr. Edwards referred to the doctors who he'd won millions from in
    two cases.

    "In the E.G. Sawyer case and the Jennifer Campbell case, the
    defendants were not malevolent but were caring and competent doctors who
    worked in good hospitals and yet made grievous mistakes," he wrote. "They
    had erred in their judgment, but no one could despise them."

    Doctors, however, take it all a bit more personally.

    "We are currently being sued out of existence," Dr. VanDerVeer
    said. "People have to choose whether they want these lawyers to make
    gazillions of dollars in pain and suffering awards or whether they want
    health care."









    -----------------------------------------------------------
    This article was mailed from The Washington Times
    (http://www.washingtontimes.com/national ... -1949r.htm)
    For more great articles, visit us at http://www.washingtontimes.com

    Copyright (c) 2004 News World Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
    Gas, and 4 kids

  • #2
    Don't worry, Crystal, there will be no flaming from here! I think it was a huge mistake for Kerry to pick Edwards as a running mate, with his reputation.

    My husband is generally pretty mild mannered and not likely to sound off about politics or politicians, but his eyes almost bulge out of his head when he talks about John Edwards.

    Someone who has made millions persuading juries to believe things that are not entirely the truth is NOT someone I want governing.

    I know someone is going to say that Bush lied about the WMD.....save it, because I think he got bad intelligence, as did Kerry, who ALSO voted to go to war.

    I will be so glad when this is all over!! DH and I voted Thursday night.....I can't wait until the polls close on Tuesday, so that hopefully some of the negative stuff will die down. There is quite a bitter Senate race going on in Oklahoma, and we live on the border, so we are getting all of those commercials. Even locally, one of the candidates running for judge here in our city actually hired a private investigator to find her opponent's ex-wife and try to get dirt on him! The plan fizzled because the ex had nothing bad to say, and even wrote to the paper to expose the ploy. I am sick of it all.

    Sally
    Wife of an OB/Gyn, mom to three boys, middle school choir teacher.

    "I don't know when Dad will be home."

    Comment


    • #3
      I agree with much of the sentiment of the article. At the same time, I have no doubt that John Edwards was not so powerful that he alone was responsible for crushing ob/gyn in the entire state of N. Carolina. I have a real distaste for trial lawyers and am very much in support of capping med malpractice awards. Of course, if one of my children were genuinely injured by negligence I would want to hire one of those pesky malpractice lawyers....

      The argument though that the CP lawsuits are 'junk science' isn't a valid criticsm. At the time that he was arguing many of his cases, there was not a clear understanding of this. He was arguing based on the medical knowledge at the time. Hindsight is 20/20.

      At the end of the day, shouldn't we be applauding the fact that Edward rose up from a poor upbringing, went to law school and then made a lot of money? Isn't that 'the american way'?


      Summary of John Edward's Cases:

      Lakey v. Sta-Rite Industries
      (Wake Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1996)
      5-year-old girl was disemboweled, but survived, after being caught and suctioned by wading pool's defective drain. Despite 12 prior suits with similar claims, manufacturer continued to make and sell drain covers lacking warnings. Product
      Liability $25M
      settlement

      Passe v. General Transport Systems, Inc.
      (Wake Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1997) 850-lb. box delivered to attorney's home, fell on him breaking his back, causing paraplegia, and confinement to wheelchair. Negligence $4M
      settlement

      Weckbacher v. J.B. Hunt Transport
      Servs., Inc.
      (U.S. Dist. Ct., E.D.N.C. 1997) 33-year-old died during rescue attempt after head-on pickup–tractor-trailer collision. Settlement included worker's comp claim. Wrongful Death $3M
      settlement

      Buck v. Atlantic Veneer Corp.
      (Carteret Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1987) Worker fractured both ankles, jaw, and skull after fall from 24-foot scaffold in defendant's plywood plant. Premises
      Liability $2.3M
      verdict

      Morgan v. Southeast Jurisdictional Admin.
      Council, Inc.
      (Wake Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1988) 14-year-old girl rendered quadriplegic from neck injury resulting from improperly supervised dive into shallow end of defendants' pool. Premises
      Liability $875K
      settlement



      Griffin v. Teague, et al.
      (Mecklenburg Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1997) Application of abdominal pressure and delay in performing c-section caused brain damage to infant and resulted in child having cerebral palsy and spastic quadriplegia. Verdict set record for malpractice award. Medical Malpractice $23.25M
      verdict

      Campbell v. Pitt County Memorial Hosp.
      (Pitt County, NC, 1985) Infant born with cerebral palsy after breech birth via vaginal delivery, rather than cesarean. Established North Carolina precedent of physician and hospital liability for failing to determine if patient understood risks of particular procedure. Medical
      Malpractice $5.75M
      settlement

      Wiggs v. Glover, et al. Plaintiff alleged infant's severe cerebral palsy was caused by negligent administration of pitocin, failure to use fetal monitor, or timely intervening in baby's fetal distress. Medical
      Malpractice 2.5M
      settlement

      Cooper v. Craven Regional Med. Ctr., et al. Infant suffered severe brain damage after obstetrician failed to moderate use of Picotin after baby displayed clear fetal distress. Medical
      Malpractice $2.5M
      settlement

      Dixon v. Pitt County Memorial Hospital
      (Pitt County, NC) Birth-related injuries including cerebral palsy and mental retardation allegedly caused by obstetrician's failure to diagnose fetal distress, including umbilical cord wrapped around baby's neck prior to delivery. Medical
      Malpractice 2.4M
      settlement

      Sawyer v. St. Joseph's Hospital Doctor prescribed drug overdose of anti-alcoholism drug Antabuse, resulting in permanent brain and nerve damage. Medical
      Malpractice $3.7M
      verdict

      Estate of Fuller v. Mazzaglia 38-year-old female committed suicide after psychiatrist discontinued suicide watch. Medical
      Malpractice $2.3M
      verdict

      Allen v. Bostic
      (Forsyth Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1991) Doctor's delay and failure to properrly treat 45-year-old's severely lacerated foot ultimately required amputation of foot three years later. Medical
      Malpractice $.6M
      settlement


      MOTOR VEHICLE INJURY CASES
      Another specialty Edwards developed was in motor vehicle accident and injury cases involving tractor-trailers.
      Howard v. Collins & Aikman Corp.
      (NC Superior Ct., 1990) Suit against trucking company by estate of man killed by company driver, arguing that company acted recklessly in paying drivers by the mile, thereby encouraging unsafe conduct. Truck
      Accident $6.5M
      verdict

      Kim v. Poling & Bacon Construction Co., Inc.
      (Wake Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1992) Head-on car-truck collision injured 5 in car, including 7-year-old who suffered fractured skull and massive brain injury Truck
      Accident $5.9M
      settlement

      Casey, et al. v. Fredrickson Motor Exp. Corp.
      (Buncombe Co. Superior Ct., NC, 1991) Part-time employee suffered severe brain damage after vehicle collided with defendant's semi-truck. Truck
      Accident $4.5M
      verdict
      ~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
      ~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by mommax3
        I know someone is going to say that Bush lied about the WMD.....save it, because I think he got bad intelligence, as did Kerry, who ALSO voted to go to war.
        Go Sally Go!



        kris
        ~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
        ~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss

        Comment


        • #5
          Ha! PMS, anyone?

          Sally
          Wife of an OB/Gyn, mom to three boys, middle school choir teacher.

          "I don't know when Dad will be home."

          Comment


          • #6
            I swore I would jump into the middle of this one but with my husband being in one of the worst specialties for this I feel I have to. 99% of the doctors my husband works with have said there is no way they'll vote for Kerry b/c he put Edwards on the ticket. All of those cases that are listed that are for faulty products deserve to be filed and won - but suing doctors for the things listed in this article are proposterous and we all know it. Negligence is one thing, nature is something completely different!
            Wife to NSG out of training, mom to 2, 10 & 8, and a beagle with wings.

            Comment


            • #7
              That should say wouldn't jump into this!
              Wife to NSG out of training, mom to 2, 10 & 8, and a beagle with wings.

              Comment


              • #8
                I'm not crazy about Edwards either....but I guess the biggest healthcare issue that I am concerned about is the fact that so many people are uninsured (which is not the fault of just trial lawyers). I also believe that people should (when it is justified of course) be allowed to sue for negligence. I agree that there are frivilous lawsuits and that should be stopped. Back when Edwards tried the CP cases though the 'science' of the time said that CP was a birth-related injury....now we know that to be 'junk'. Like I said..hindsight is 20/20. We can say it is preposterous now because we have new information.

                It's like those breast implants...remember the huge lawsuits filed and damages awarded for the silicone? It turns out that that was all bogus too....

                In many ways though, I think our system forces people to sue for things...We had a speaker from the United Way at my daughter's brownie meeting...we are going to be 'adopting' a family that needs help. The family has two children and one was born with 'questionable' birth injuries...who knows what the truth is on that. They have health insurance, but like many health insurance companies it only covers a small percentage of the costs. The little girl is brain injured and needs round-the-clock care. The mom is soley responsible for this because they can't afford the care. Their insurance company would only pay for a small part....and they don't have the money. For the first couple of years of their daughter's life, they were helped out by donations from the community and the United Way...but now the donations have all but stopped (the girl is 4).

                Their options are:

                1. remove child from the ventilator and stop the tube feedings and allow her to die

                2. Make their daughter a ward of the state and relinquish parental rights.

                3. Sue someone/anyone for damages to help pay for their daughter's care.

                As it is, the mom cares for that child 24 hours a day..suctioning her vent, changing her diapers, etc.

                I am going to go out on a limb here and suggest that if this was a birth defect that had been discovered while she was pregnant that no conservatives would have supported abortion...it's murder, right? (I'm pro-life,btw, so we don't need to go down that road.) No one would want to see this child's tube feedings removed, etc (there would be outrage). At the same time, the 'moral' right does not want to have to pay for this child...they don't want any type of healthcare available for people who lose their jobs, have jobs that don't offer healthcare benefits, or for devastating illnesses like this.

                I don't get it.

                Why not focus on the real healthcare issues instead of on John Edwards...Yes, he's a trial lawyer, yes, that is not great for the ticket. What are the republican candidates offering up in terms of healthcare choices for people? A prescription drug benefit that gives big pharma a blank check? The problem I have with the current administration is that they seem not to care about the healthcare problems for poor people.



                But that's just me...I can't wait until the election is over...we've had so much time to get all riled up about our positions that it feels negative and unpleasant. Part of me wants to completely ignore the issues altogether and the other part of me can't stop talking about my feelings.

                In any case, Thank Goodness we do live in a country where we are free to disagree with our leaders, to debate our opinions and to disagree with each other....we are fortunate.

                kris
                ~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
                ~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss

                Comment


                • #9
                  I think Edward's record with relation to doctors is horrible but it's not a one issue election in my book, despite that particular issue hitting so close to home.

                  I could never vote for Bush PERIOD. No iffs ands or buts about it.

                  I am not a fan of his politics surrounding:
                  abortion
                  stem cell research
                  education (Can you say "no child left behind was a horrific failure?")
                  wanting an ammendment to the constitution pertaining to marriage
                  the war in Iraq
                  his idea of who should get tax breaks

                  I know I am forgetting some here but I have to make this quick...

                  I think Kerry is annoying and comes across as pompus and pedantic but there are worse characteristics. Bush is a likable guy and I like Laura but I just don't think he's very smart as a whole.
                  Flynn

                  Wife to post training CT surgeon; mother of three kids ages 17, 15, and 11.

                  “It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.” —Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets " Albus Dumbledore

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    It's a "non-issue" for me as well. It is disturbing, and I think Kerry could have picked a better running mate, but it isn't a deal breaker for me. There are too many things about Bush that just make me cringe at the thought of another 4 years with him as our president.
                    Awake is the new sleep!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      The entire Edwards being a trial lawyer thing is really not an issue for me either. I am more concerned with fetucide, the destruction of the institution of marriage, the possibility of errosion of U.S. sovereignty to foreign institutions/leaders, and a myriad of other socially/civically destructive issues that are involved with this particular presidential election.

                      Jennifer
                      Who uses a machete to cut through red tape
                      With fingernails that shine like justice
                      And a voice that is dark like tinted glass

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Sort of off the subject, but breaking the "debate" cycle. Go to miniclip.com if you have not already!!!

                        Comment

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