Capping Non-Economic Awards in Medical Malpractice Trials
California Jury Verdicts Under MICRA
ResearchPublished Dec 17, 2004
California Jury Verdicts Under MICRA
ResearchPublished Dec 17, 2004
Concerns over the price and availability of medical malpractice insurance have sparked a vigorous national debate over proposed federal legislation calling for limits on trial awards and attorneys’ fees in medical malpractice cases. A model for such limits is the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), a law enacted in California in 1975 in the hope of controlling soaring medical malpractice insurance premiums and ensuring the continuing availability of malpractice insurance coverage. MICRA caps awards for non-economic losses, such as pain or suffering, at $250,000 and limits plaintiffs’ attorney fees. The authors studied the effects of MICRA on plaintiffs’ awards and on defendants’ liabilities and in doing so addressed a number of questions: How have MICRA’s caps on non-economic damages affected the final judgments in California jury trials? What types of cases and claims are most likely to have an award cap imposed following trial? What have been the effects of MICRA on plaintiffs’ attorney fees and net recoveries? If the MICRA cap had been adjusted for inflation, what would have been the effect on plaintiffs’ final awards?
The research described in this report was conducted by the RAND Institute for Civil Justice and supported by Institute for Civil Justice core funds.
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