The Effect of Malpractice
Liability on the Delivery of Health Care Katherine Baicker (UCLA) and Amitabh Chandra
(Darthmouth)
ABSTRACT
The
growth of medical malpractice liability costs has the
potential to affect the delivery of health care in the U.S.
along two dimensions. If growth in malpractice payments
results in higher malpractice insurance premiums for
physicians, these premiums may affect the size and
composition of the physician workforce. The growth of
potential losses from malpractice liability might also
encourage physicians to practice "defensive medicine." We
use rich new data to examine the relationship between the
growth of malpractice costs and the delivery of health care
along both of these dimensions. We pose three questions.
First, are increases in payments responsible for increases
in medical malpractice premiums? Second, do increases in
malpractice liability drive physicians to close their
practices or not move to areas with high payments? Third, do
increases in malpractice liability change the way medicine
is practiced by increasing the use of certain procedures?
First, we find that increases in malpractice payments made
on behalf of physicians do not seem to be the driving force
behind increases in premiums. Second, increases in
malpractice costs (both premiums overall and the
subcomponent factors) do not seem to affect the overall size
of the physician workforce, although they may deter marginal
entry, increase marginal exit, and reduce the rural
physician workforce. Third, there is little evidence of
increased use of many treatments in response to malpractice
liability at the state level, although there may be some
increase in screening procedures such as mammography.