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Why Patients Sue Doctors: The Japanese Experience

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Extract

The cost of health care, its growing share of the gross domestic product (GDP), and dire predictions about the future are a major political and economic issue in the U.S. The American legal system is commonly viewed as a significant part of the problem, particularly by those who believe that medical providers engage in defensive medicine in an effort to avoid malpractice litigation. Yet scholars and commentators in the U.S. have shown relatively little interest in how other nations manage legal conflict over health care and whether they might learn something from abroad about the relationship between malpractice litigation and the health care system more generally.

To that end, this article analyzes the Japanese health care experience, specifically the management of what are variously called adverse outcomes, medical accidents, and medical malpractice. How frequently do Japanese patients sue their doctors? Are medical malpractice litigation rates in Japan rising? If so, what is being done to control the increase and its impact on medical care? How well is Japan doing when it comes to balancing the needs of patients who believe they are victims of medical negligence with those of providers who think they are being unfairly accused? These are the questions, about Japan (and elsewhere), that need to be asked by those interested in the nexus of law and health care in the U.S.

Type
Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2009

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References

In fact, the debate over malpractice litigation in the U.S. is extremely polarized, with little consensus about which features of the legal system are problematic (does it promote too much litigation or too little?), how to rate the relative significance of the problematic features (should we worry more about the inconsistency of damage awards or the system of expert witnesses?), or what steps should be taken to improve the system (should pain and suffering damages be capped, should juries be eliminated?). See, for example, Baker, T., The Medical Malpractice Myth (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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