The best way to reduce medical malpractice lawsuits

The best way to reduce medical malpractice lawsuits

 The North Carolina Medical Board has made positive steps in the past few years to better regulate and discipline doctors in the state.  However, a new bill in the North Carolina Senate is making it harder for the Medical Board to regulate licensed medical doctors.  Among other things, it requires a panel, rather than a single board member to start an investigation; requires two experts rather than one to testify for the Board at a hearing; and allows only one non-physician to sit on the hearing committee.  The Medical Board attorney calls the changes “catastrophic” and some say it amounts to "Legislative Malpractice."

While some doctors may view this as the same fight they have against “frivolous malpractice lawsuits,” in my opinion, the more the Medical Board protects the patients of North Carolina and disciplines and removes bad doctors, the less malpractice lawsuits will occur.  When the Board doesn’t do its job, civil law and medical malpractice lawsuits fill the vacuum.  In fact, the Medical Board, if given enough power and a strong mission, is better suited to govern doctors than the court system.  I turn down medical malpractice cases every month, not because there was not bad, or even horrific, medical care, but just because the patient was lucky enough not to be permanently damaged.  The Medical Board can stop bad behavior from bad doctors, before it causes a future patient permanent damage. 

–Bradley A. Coxe is a practicing attorney in Wilmington, NC who specializes in Personal Injury, Medical Malpractice, Contract and Real Estate disputes and all forms of Civil Litigation.  Please contact him at (910) 772-1678.  

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