Liability insurance rates stabilize in Illinois

side note: ISMIE, Illinois’ largest medical malpractice insurance carrier, announced it will not be changing its liability insurance rates for the third year in a row. This is welcome news for a state that consistently ranks as having some of the country’s highest premiums.

By Amy Lynn Sorrel
American Medical News
amednews.com
But physicians warn that security could disappear if the state’s noneconomic damage cap is overturned in a case pending before the state Supreme Court.

Thousands of Illinois physicians will see their medical liability insurance premiums hold steady again in the 2009-10 policy year after the state’s largest carrier announced it would not change base liability insurance rates for the third year in a row.

In addition, ISMIE Mutual Insurance Co. will continue to issue credits, totaling about $21 million, to eligible policyholders.

The physician-owned insurer credited the stabilizing liability climate to an overall drop in claims filings after the state Legislature enacted tort reforms in 2005. But ISMIE executives warned that high jury verdicts still plague the court system, and recent rate improvements could disappear if the state’s $500,000 cap on noneconomic damages is overturned by a constitutional challenge pending in the Illinois Supreme Court.

“We must remain cautiously alert,” ISMIE Chair Harold L. Jensen, MD, said in a statement. “Until the Illinois Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of the reforms, severity will continue to be an issue for Illinois doctors and their patients’ access to care.”

In November 2008, the high court heard oral arguments in the case after a trial court found that the cap violated the separation of powers between the Legislature and the judiciary. The Illinois State Medical Society and the Litigation Center of the American Medical Association and State Medical Societies filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the case. They urged the high court to uphold the award limit, which physicians say has helped temper medical liability costs and bring much-needed specialists to the state.

Read the rest about ISMIE and Illinois rates over at AMedNews

You may also like

Legislative panel approves medical malpractice bill
Read more
Urgent-care centers: Illinois numbers grow as time-pressed families seek low-cost option to ERs
Read more
Global Center for Medical Innovation launches
Read more

Recent Posts

U.S. District Court Sets Aside Record Noneconomic Damage Award

Curi Holdings, Constellation Complete Merger to Offer Scale the Modern Healthcare Delivery System Requires

Connecticut Supreme Court Narrows Scope of Physicians’ Immunity from Civil Liability During COVID

Popular Posts

PIAA 2017: Current Trends & Future Concerns

2022 Medical Malpractice Insurance Rates: What the data tells us

Global Center for Medical Innovation launches

Start Your Custom Quote Process™

Request a free quote