Washington Medical Malpractice Claims Decreasing

A medical malpractice report on closed claims data indicates that claims are down in Washington. This is the third medical malpractice closed claim report issued by state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler. It analyzes trends in medical malpractice claims for a 10-year period beginning July 1, 1997, and ending June 30, 2007.

“I’m not surprised by the findings in this year’s report,” Kreidler said. “The medical malpractice insurance market is cyclical by nature. The drop in claims revealed by this report bodes well for the health of the medical malpractice market in Washington.”

The participating insurers in this year’s report closed 7,134 medical malpractice claims that included a compensation payment, defense and cost containment expenses, or both types of payments over the 10-year period. Unlike previous reports, this year’s results do not include “zero dollar” claims or claims where no money was paid out.

Among the key findings:

As in the previous reports, this year’s data was collected from five admitted insurers. At the end of 2006, the market share of the five insurers had dropped from 67.2 percent to 58.3 percent. The surplus lines market acquired much of this business, with premiums rising from $4 million in 2000 to $63 million by 2006.

Surplus lines carriers, self-insurers and risk retention groups that provide malpractice coverage for physicians are not regulated by the commissioner’s office.

“Under the Health Care Liability Reform law, which takes effect Jan. 1, 2008, these entities will be required to report claims and settlement data to us annually, giving us a sharper view into what’s really going on in the market,” Kreidler said.

After Jan. 1, 2008, licensed and surplus lines insurers, self-insurers such as hospitals and large medical clinics, risk retention groups, and claimants must report medical malpractice closed claims to the Insurance Commissioner’s Office. Closed claims must be filed annually by March 1 of the following year and must include:

In addition, the Commissioner must use the collected data to produce an annual report showing trends in frequency and severity of claims, types of claims paid, a comparison of economic and non-economic damages, a distribution of allocated loss adjustment expenses, a loss ratio analysis for medical malpractice insurance, a profitability analysis for medical malpractice insurers, a comparison of loss ratios and profitability, and a summary of approved medical malpractice rate filings for the prior year, including analyzing the trend of losses compared to prior years. The first annual report will be available by June 30, 2010.

To view the report, visit www.insurance.wa.gov.