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re: OT lawyers. ..Ever think about hanging it up?

Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:24 am to
Posted by Volt
Ascension Island, S Atlantic Ocean
Member since Nov 2009
2970 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:24 am to
(no message)
This post was edited on 8/20/14 at 10:48 pm
Posted by SlowFlowPro
Simple Solutions to Complex Probs
Member since Jan 2004
424659 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:26 am to
does Morris Bart handle many med mal cases?
Posted by Lakeboy7
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2011
23965 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:27 am to
quote:

I've said "Morris Bart runs this ER". Most of what I do now and for the rest of my career is being dictated by the potential for being sued.


Hyperbole, Morris wouldn't know medical malpractice if it kicked him in the arse. Oh and sorry you couldn't get in to law school.
Posted by McLemore
Member since Dec 2003
31583 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:28 am to
quote:

I think most lawyers need to hang it up.


i think it's interesting that people's perception of lawyers has anything to do with personal injury, morris bart, etc.

the closest i've come to a PI case even when i was more heavily into litigation was talking to a bank officer about a fat woman who broke a chair in the lobby. most of what i do is help people get where they need to go in the business world and protect their interests in a crazy complicated environment.

if people like me "hung it up," then all hell would break loose.

most lawyers don't advertise period, much less on billboards, busses and phonebook covers.
Posted by LoveThatMoney
Who knows where?
Member since Jan 2008
12268 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 10:52 am to
quote:

Patients often ask "why" something is being done or ordered, and I've said "Morris Bart runs this ER". Most of what I do now and for the rest of my career is being dictated by the potential for being sued. So I have to treat patients based on that instead of treating them based on my education and training.

It disgusts me


You know what disgusts me?

Doctors who frick up a patient's life by giving an incorrect dosage of anesthesia and act like a lawyer is the bad guy for trying to get money for said patient or said patient's family.

Med Mal works both ways. I hear you loud and clear and much has been done to address the abundance of medical malpractice cases. For instance, Louisiana has a cap on damages payable by the doctor. But the truth is, medical procedures are dangerous, doctors sometimes screw up, and when they screw up, it has dramatic consequences on their patients' lives.
Posted by specchaser
lafayette
Member since Feb 2008
2595 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 11:39 am to
seriously? I'm glad the medical field has painted the picture that lawyers are the only reason medical folks have to work w/ their hands tied. It has nothing to do w/ rogue doctors, money grubbing pharmacuetical companies, or insurance companies increasing premiums to make money. it's just money grubbing lawyers when 95% of them don't even practice med mal. Morris Bart doesn't even do med mal. pffffssssstttt.
Posted by reservoir_dawg
Member since Nov 2012
280 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 12:36 pm to
quote:

As a person that has worked in the medical field for 14 years, and will be practicing as an NP in less than 2 months, I think most lawyers need to hang it up. Patients often ask "why" something is being done or ordered, and I've said "Morris Bart runs this ER". Most of what I do now and for the rest of my career is being dictated by the potential for being sued. So I have to treat patients based on that instead of treating them based on my education and training. It disgusts me


I hope you never take care of myself or a loved one of mine with that type of attitude.

There are approximately 850,000 physicians in the United States. Last year, there were 9,205 payments made in medical malpractice cases across the United States. Although it's factually incorrect, we'll assume that those are all individual doctors that got sued - 9,205 different people. We know this isn't the case because sometimes medical malpractice cases are against nurses, sometimes they're against hospitals, etc. But to help your misplaced feelings, lets assume that the 9,205 number represents 9,205 individual doctors. That means that 1.08% of the profession had a malpractice claim paid on their behalf last year. That means that 840,000+, or 99%, doctors did not.

In Louisiana last year, there were 253 claims paid. That means Louisiana doctors/hospitals/nurses were responsible for about 2.7% of the malpractice claims paid. There are 4.6 million folks in Louisiana. Who knows how many total interactions with doctors or physicians, but when you account for folks that never go to the hospital and people that go once a week, you're probably looking at around 10 million+ interactions between citizens and the medical field. And only 253 claims paid.

And you think lawyers and med mal claims are rampant, why again? Who feeds that line? Oh, the insurance industry? Great move listening to those folks as they're clearly uninterested parties. Oh wait...

The vast majority of doctors are good folks who do a good job and never get sued. But they're not perfect and some of them aren't even good folks. Those people don't deserve any more protection than lawyers do in malpractice cases, or architects in malpractice cases, or insurance agents in errors and omissions cases, or anyone else that is open to suit due to the services they provide.
Posted by BrotherEsau
Member since Aug 2011
3506 posts
Posted on 8/20/14 at 1:42 pm to
quote:

As a person that has worked in the medical field for 14 years, and will be practicing as an NP in less than 2 months, I think most lawyers need to hang it up.

Patients often ask "why" something is being done or ordered, and I've said "Morris Bart runs this ER". Most of what I do now and for the rest of my career is being dictated by the potential for being sued. So I have to treat patients based on that instead of treating them based on my education and training.


Sorry you don't know what you are talking about.
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