A measure to reinstate limits on lawsuit awards for pain and suffering in medical malpractice cases is heading to Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon’s desk three years after the state Supreme Court overturned lower caps.
The Missouri House voted 125-27 to approve a measure that limits noneconomic damages in malpractice cases. The state’s high court eliminated the previous caps in a 2012 decision that hospital and doctor’s groups warned would increase insurance costs, stall expansions of hospitals and deter doctors from practicing in the state.
The measure, a compromise reached by Senate Democrats and Republicans, would cap most noneconomic awards – which do not include lost wages, medical costs or other measurable economic damages – at $400,000. In catastrophic cases defined in the bill the cap would be $700,000.
SB 239 also raises an existing $350,000 cap on noneconomic damages in wrongful death cases to $700,000. The caps would rise by 1.7 percent each year under the measure.
Topics Missouri
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

Mustard Maker Caught Pumping Pollutants Into River for Years and Lying About It
Nationwide: Consumers Say Insurance Should Evolve for Micromobility Vehicles
Marsh Aims to Be ‘AI Winner’ by Focusing on Gains in Growth, Productivity, Efficiency
Three Sentenced in Bear-Suit Attacks Insurance Fraud Case 


