DD, I was asking if it was a VA hospital because if so, I don't believe they are excluded from medical malpractice lawsuits.
What would you think is acceptable if you had your leg mistakenly amputated?
"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?"Unfortunately, caps on damages don't really have any effect on health care costs. Most malpractice lawsuits aren't for millions of dollars; they're more in the $50,000-$500,000 "nuisance" range. No one argues that a clear case of malpractice like amputating the wrong leg (or amputating the leg from the wrong patient!) should not be compensated, and disciplinary action taken against the doctor who did it. But most cases aren't that clear cut; they generally involve delay in diagnosis ("You should have found this cancer when I had that pneumonia 2 years ago") or an unexpectedly bad outcome to an illness or injury ("It's someone's fault that my husband died after nearly blowing his face off by trying to boil gasoline in the garage.") For tort reform to work, it would have to weed out the nuisance cases before lawyers ever got involved.
No one is saying that there should not be some compensation, tort reform does not eliminate compensation or punitive damages, it only limits the amount of the damage, so you don't end of with 300 million dollar verdicts. Originally Posted by dirty dog