Gryphon, I don't think there is any doubt we are a litigious society. If someone "harms" us, anymore people's first instinct is not to "kick their ass", but to sue them. I would rather see a cap on a lawyer's fee than a cap on punitive damages. I think we do need some tort reform, but I wouldn't expect this to lower any costs associated with health care. Why? Past practices. When an American country moves their manufacturing plant overseas to cut costs, do we ever see those savings passed on to the consumer/customer? Why would anyone think it would be different with health care?
What should happen when a doctor amputates the wrong leg? It has happened. So now some person has no legs (after the second surgery amputated the correct leg) and the question is how should that person be compensated?
I know some of you here would just say, "tough shit, you're out of luck," but I GUARANTEE if that happened to them or a loved one, they would be filing a civil suit faster than Usain Bolt running a 100m dash at the Olympics.
The McDonald's case is pretty interesting though. Here is a link to the Wikipedia article about it. Now I am not an attorney, but I would have to assume this lawsuit is not the norm.
Liebeck v. McDonald's