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Impact of Malpractice Reforms on the Supply of Physician Services
Daniel P. Kessler, PhD, JD;
William M. Sage, MD, JD;
David J. Becker, BA
JAMA. 2005;293:2618-2625.
Context Proponents of restrictions on malpractice lawsuits claim that tort reform will improve access to medical care.
Objective To estimate the effects of changes in state malpractice law on the supply of physicians.
Design Differences-in-differences regression analysis that matched data on the number of physicians in each state between 1985 and 2001 from the American Medical Associations Physician Masterfile with data on state tort laws and state demographic, political, population, and health care market characteristics.
Main Outcome Measure Effect on physician supply of "direct" malpractice reforms that reduce the size of awards (eg, caps on damages).
Results The adoption of "direct" malpractice reforms led to greater growth in the overall supply of physicians. Three years after adoption, direct reforms increased physician supply by 3.3%, controlling for fixed differences across states, population, states health care market and political characteristics, and other differences in malpractice law. Direct reforms had a larger effect on the supply of nongroup vs group physicians, on the supply of most (but not all) specialties with high malpractice insurance premiums, on states with high levels of managed care, and on supply through retirements and entries than through the propensity of physicians to move between states. Direct reforms had similar effects on less experienced and more experienced physicians.
Conclusion Tort reform increased physician supply. Further research is needed to determine whether reform-induced increases in physician supply benefited patients.
Author Affiliations: Stanford University Graduate School of Business, Hoover Institution, and the National Bureau of Economic Research, Stanford, Calif (Dr Kessler); Columbia Law School, New York, NY (Dr Sage); and Department of Economics, University of California, Berkeley (Mr Becker).
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