Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB3039
Illinois General Assembly

Previous General Assemblies

Full Text of SB3039  93rd General Assembly

SB3039 93RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY


 


 
93RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2003 and 2004
SB3039

 

Introduced 2/6/2004, by David Luechtefeld, Frank C. Watson, Kirk W. Dillard, John O. Jones

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
735 ILCS 5/2-1706.5 new

    Amends the Code of Civil Procedure. Provides standards for determining economic and non-economic damages in medical malpractice actions. Effective July 1, 2004.


LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB3039 LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

1     AN ACT concerning civil procedure.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4     Section 1. Legislative findings. The General Assembly
5 finds that:
6     (1) Illinois is in the midst of a medical malpractice
7 insurance crisis of unprecedented magnitude.
8     (2) Illinois is among the states with the highest medical
9 malpractice insurance premiums in the nation.
10     (3) Medical malpractice insurance in Illinois is
11 unavailable or unaffordable for many hospitals and physicians.
12     (4) The high and increasing cost of medical malpractice
13 insurance in Illinois is causing health care providers to
14 eliminate or reduce the provision of medical care throughout
15 the State.
16     (5) The crisis is discouraging medical students from
17 choosing Illinois as the place they will receive their medical
18 education and practice medicine.
19     (6) The increase in medical malpractice liability
20 insurance rates is forcing physicians to practice medicine
21 without professional liability insurance, to leave Illinois,
22 to not perform high-risk procedures, or to retire early from
23 the practice of medicine.
24     (7) The high and increasing cost of medical malpractice
25 insurance is due in large part to the inefficiency and
26 unpredictably of adjudicating claims.
27     (8) Much of this inefficiency stems from the time and
28 resources needlessly spent on valuing uncertain and
29 unpredictable claims of medical negligence.
30     (9) Individuals bringing malpractice claims would benefit
31 if the parties spent less time assessing the value of the
32 claimed injury.
33     (10) The public would benefit by making medical liability

 

 

SB3039 - 2 - LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

1 coverage for hospitals and physicians more affordable, which
2 would make health care more available.
3     (11) The public would benefit from creating incentives for
4 hospitals to ensure that certain unacceptable events never
5 occur in hospitals.
6     (12) A fair and reasonable range for awarding non-economic
7 damages should be used to create an incentive for hospitals to
8 encourage safer hospital practice and to avoid extensively
9 debating the value of the claim of medical negligence.
10     (13) A fair and reasonable range for awarding non-economic
11 damages should account for differences in the non-economic
12 losses the plaintiff may suffer based on the type of harm or
13 medical outcome of medical negligence.
 
14     Section 5. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by adding
15 Sections 2-1706.5 and 2-1706.7 as follows:
 
16     (735 ILCS 5/2-1706.5 new)
17     Sec. 2-1706.5. Standards for economic and non-economic
18 damages.
19     (a) In any medical malpractice action in which economic and
20 non-economic damages may be awarded, the following standards
21 shall apply:
22         (1) In a case where the hospital's care of the patient
23     caused the patient's death, the total amount of
24     non-economic damages shall not exceed $1,500,000 for each
25     hospital defendant and awarded to each plaintiff in any
26     civil action arising out of the care.
27         (2) In a case where the hospital's care of the patient
28     caused the patient's catastrophic injury, the total amount
29     of non-economic damages recovered shall not exceed
30     $2,000,000 for each hospital defendant and awarded to each
31     plaintiff in any civil action arising out of the care.
32         (3) Notwithstanding subdivisions (1) and (2) of this
33     subsection, in a case where the hospital's care of the
34     patient caused the patient's death or catastrophic injury

 

 

SB3039 - 3 - LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

1     and the hospital is found liable under the doctrine of "res
2     ipsa loquitur", as defined by Section 2-1113 of the Code of
3     Civil Procedure, the total amount of non-economic damages
4     shall not exceed $3,000,000 for each hospital defendant and
5     awarded to each plaintiff in any civil action arising out
6     of the care.
7         (4) In any case not covered by subdivision (1), (2), or
8     (3) of this subsection, the total amount of non-economic
9     damages shall not exceed $1,000,000 for each hospital
10     defendant and awarded to each plaintiff in any civil action
11     arising out of care that caused harm to the plaintiff.
12         (5) In a case where the physician's care of the patient
13     caused the patient's death or other injury, the total
14     amount of non-economic damages shall not exceed $500,000
15     for each physician defendant and awarded to each plaintiff
16     in any civil action arising out of the care.
17         (6) In awarding damages in a medical malpractice case,
18     the finder of fact shall render verdicts with specific
19     award of damages for economic loss, if any, and specific
20     award of damages for non-economic loss, if any.
21         (7) In any medical malpractice action where an
22     individual plaintiff earns less than the annual average
23     weekly wage, as determined by the Industrial Commission, at
24     the time the action is filed, any award for economic and
25     non-economic damages must include an amount equal to this
26     wage amount multiplied by the plaintiff's life expectancy
27     in total weeks as if the plaintiff was earning this wage at
28     the time of the injury that gave rise to the action.
29         (8) Any party in a medical malpractice case may
30     introduce annuity evidence to inform the fact finder about
31     the time value of an award and its ability to cover the
32     plaintiff's damages over time.
33         (9) The finder of fact shall take into account and be
34     aware of the extent to which the award is subject to
35     federal and State income tax laws.
36     (b) As used in this Section, the following terms have the

 

 

SB3039 - 4 - LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

1 meanings ascribed to them as follows:
2     "Birth-related injury" means any permanent, disabling
3 damage to the brain or spine caused by oxygen deprivation or
4 mechanical injury to an infant during labor, delivery, or
5 resuscitation.
6     "Catastrophic injury" means one of the following outcomes
7 caused by negligence in a hospital:
8         (1) the patient is hemiplegic, paraplegic, or
9     quadriplegic resulting in a total permanent functional
10     loss of one or more limbs caused by injury to the brain or
11     spinal cord or both;
12         (2) the patient has total permanent functional loss of
13     sight, hearing, or one or more limbs unrelated to the
14     natural course of the patient's illness or underlying
15     condition;
16         (3) the patient has permanently impaired cognitive
17     capacity rendering him or her incapable of making
18     independent, responsible life decisions and permanently
19     incapable of independently performing the activities of
20     normal daily living;
21         (4) the patient's reproductive organ has been
22     permanently damaged resulting in an inability to
23     procreate; or
24         (5) a birth-related injury.
25     "Economic damages" means all damages that are tangible,
26     such as damages for past and future medical expenses and loss
27     of income or earnings.
28     "Hospital" means a hospital licensed under the Hospital
29     Licensing Act and all of its corporate affiliates, employees,
30     agents, and apparent agents and a hospital licensed under the
31     University of Illinois Hospital Act and all of its employees,
32     agents, and apparent agents.
33     "Medical malpractice action" means any civil action in
34     tort, contract, or otherwise, in which the plaintiff seeks
35     damages for injuries or death arising out of the action or
36     inaction of a hospital in rendering health care services to a

 

 

SB3039 - 5 - LRB093 21102 LCB 47151 b

1     patient inside the hospital or arising out of the action or
2     inaction of a physician.
3     "Non-economic damages" mean subjective, non-pecuniary
4     damages arising from death, pain, suffering, disfigurement,
5     inconvenience, mental anguish, worry, emotional distress, loss
6     of society and companionship, loss of consortium, physical
7     impairment, injury to reputation, humiliation, embarrassment,
8     loss of enjoyment if life, hedonic damages, increased risk of
9     future injury, other non-pecuniary damages, and any other
10     theory of damages such as fear of loss, illness, injury, or
11     future loss.
12     "Physician" means a physician licensed to practice
13     medicine in all of its branches under the Medical Practice Act
14     of 1987 and any physician-owned legal entity.
15     (c) This amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly
16     applies to causes of action accruing on or after its effective
17     date.
 
18     Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
19 2004.