Medical Malpractice Reform, the Supply of Physicians, and Adverse Selection

Posted: 3 Dec 2013 Last revised: 21 Jun 2018

Date Written: December 2, 2013

Abstract

Malpractice reforms tend to reduce physician liability for harming patients. Because these reforms are passed at the state level, the costs of harming patients vary widely by geographic location. In this paper, I test whether malpractice reforms affect where physicians choose to practice and whether physicians who relocate in response to reforms are particularly prone to commit malpractice. Because a state's own reforms can not separately identify moral hazard from adverse selection and because those reforms are likely to have direct impacts on measures of malpractice via the legal market, I focus attention on neighboring states' reforms. I find that when a state's neighbor passes a cap on noneconomic damages, both the physician to population ratio and the malpractice rate fall. This suggests that physicians who relocate in response to noneconomic damages caps are more likely to commit malpractice.

Keywords: Health Care, Liability, Interjurisdictional Differentials

JEL Classification: I18, K13, H73

Suggested Citation

Lieber, Ethan, Medical Malpractice Reform, the Supply of Physicians, and Adverse Selection (December 2, 2013). Journal of Law and Economics 57(2), 502-527, 2014, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2362476

Ethan Lieber (Contact Author)

University of Notre Dame ( email )

3049 Jenkins Nanovic Halls
Notre Dame, IN 46556
United States

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