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Disputes over malpractice blame: Do allocations matter?


 

When the summons arrived, Nataly Minkina, MD, took one look at the lawsuit and fainted.

Nataly Minkina, MD, is suing her former medical malpractice insurer over an allocation of liability following a claim. Leonid Weinstein

Dr. Nataly Minkina

The Boston-area internist had treated the plaintiff just once while covering for the patient’s primary care physician. During a visit for an upper respiratory infection, the patient mentioned a lump in her breast, and Dr. Minkina confirmed a small thickening in the woman’s right breast. She sent the patient for a mammogram and ultrasound, the results of which the radiologist reported were normal, according to court documents.

Five years later, the patient claimed Dr. Minkina was one of several providers responsible for a missed breast cancer diagnosis.

Even worse than the lawsuit, however, was how her former insurer resolved the case, said Dr. Minkina, now an internist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Chestnut Hill, Mass. The claim was settled against the defendants for $500,000, and Dr. Minkina was alloted 30% of the liability. No fault was assigned to the other physicians named, while a nurse practitioner was alloted 10%, and the medical practice was alloted 60% liability, according to court documents.

“I was very upset,” Dr. Minkina said. “First of all, I was kept in the dark. Nobody ever talked to me. I did not get a single report or any document from my attorney in 12 months. When I asked why was I assigned the [30%] liability, they said the experts gave me bad evaluations, but they would not show reports to me. I was literally scapegoated.”

When the insurer refused to reconsider the allocation, Dr. Minkina took her complaint to court. The internist now has been embroiled in a legal challenge against Medical Professional Mutual Insurance Company (ProMutual) for 7 years. Dr. Minkina’s lawsuit alleges the insurer engaged in a bad faith allocation to serve its own economic interests by shifting fault for the claim from its insureds to its former client, Dr. Minkina. The insurance company contends the allocation was a careful and rational decision based on case evidence. In late July, the case went to trial in Dedham, Mass.

ProMutual declined comment on the case; the insurer also would not address general questions about its allocation policies.

“I started this fight because I felt violated and betrayed, not to make money,” Dr. Minkina said. “I am not rich by a long shot, and I wanted to clear my name because [a] good name is all I have. Additionally, having [a] record about malpractice payment in my physician profile makes me vulnerable.”

Liability experts say the case highlights the conflicts that can arise between physicians and insurers during malpractice lawsuits. The legal challenge also raises questions about allocations of liability by insurers, how the determinations are made, and what impact they have on doctors going forward.

The proportion of liability assigned after a settlement matters, said Jeffrey Segal, MD, JD, a neurosurgeon and founder of Medical Justice, a medicolegal consulting firm for physicians.

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“There’s a subtext that your piece of the pie – the part that is allocated to you – is your liability, your culpability, your guilt,” Dr. Segal said in an interview. “This has impact going down the road in terms of reputation, in terms of credibility, and potentially of your premiums going forward. There are some real-world economic consequences.”

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