In a landmark
ruling, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled on May 18 that health
maintenance organizations (HMOs) can be held liable for negligence
involving a patient's medical care.
The decision
is seen as a blow to the managed-care industry, which is actively
working to protect themselves from accountability for medical
malpractice in Congress and statehouses across the country.
Illinois'
Supreme Court is believed to be the first to address the issue
of "institutional negligence," or HMO responsibility for care
provided by doctors in their networks. HMOs in the past have enjoyed
presumed legal protections against malpractice suits.
But the high
court's ruling is expected to result in managed-care plans defending
themselves by simply approving more medical services as a defense
against future litigation, industry experts said.
"This ruling
means patients can now proceed directly against the HMO for the
HMO's carelessness or negligence for causing an injury," said
A. Denison Weaver, a Chicago attorney who successfully brought
the action against Chicago HMO, a Medicaid managed-care plan now
operated by United HealthCare of Illinois Inc. "HMOs can't hide
behind the skirts of the doctor," he said.
The case involved
Sheila Jones, who called her Chicago physician's office in January
of 1991 about her ill infant daughter. After she insisted on speaking
to Dr. Robert A. Jordan, the physician advised Jones to give her
daughter castor oil, according to documents filed in the case.
But 3-month-old Shawndale Jones was later found to have bacterial
meningitis, which allegedly had been misdiagnosed because Dr.
Jordan had been overloaded by Chicago HMO -- he reportedly had
6,000 patients.
As a result
of the HMO's contracts with Dr. Jordan, Jones' lawyer said, Shawndale
became severely and permanently disabled. The now 9-year-old girl,
who lives with her mother and six siblings in south suburban Chicago
Heights, suffers regular seizures, is unable to feed herself and
weighs just 45 pounds.
In overturning
an appellate court ruling that had sided with Chicago HMO, Justice
Michael Bilandic wrote that Jones' claim about whether the HMO
was negligent "falls within the purview of institutional negligence,"
and therefore the case is now headed for a trial.
"We hold that
Chicago HMO had a duty to its enrollees to refrain from assigning
an excessive number of patients to Dr. Jordan," the court said.
"HMOs contract with primary care physicians in order to provide
and arrange for medical care for their enrollees. It is thus reasonably
foreseeable that assigning an excessive number of patients to
a primary care physician could result in injury, as that care
may not be provided."
The Supreme
Court's action carries no verdict of innocence or guilt. Those
issues are to be decided at separate legal proceedings in Cook
County Circuit Court.
This information
was compiled from reports in the Chicago
Tribune. More articles about this case and its impact can
be found on the Chicago
Tribune Web site.