Senate Vote Clarifies Course of Action

    0
    159

    Voting mostly along party lines, on July 9 the U.S. Senate refused to take up S. 11, the Patients First Act. Modeled after California’s legislation, the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act or MICRA, the bill would, among other things, cap noneconomic damages at $250,000 and establish expert witness standards in medical liability lawsuits.

    The vote was 49 to 48, 11 votes shy of the 60 needed. All Republicans but two voted “yea,” 45 Democrats and one Independent voted “nay,” and three Democrats did not vote. The U.S. House of Representatives passed its reform bill on March 13, and the Bush administration fully supports the House-passed version of the bill, H.R. 5, the Help Efficient, Accessible, Low-Cost, Timely Healthcare (HEALTH) Act of 2003. Therefore neurosurgery’s advocacy efforts now must focus on changing the votes of 11 senators. Senate leaders have vowed to bring medical liability legislation up for additional votes throughout the remainder of the 108th Congress, so neurosurgeons need to keep the pressure on those senators who blocked consideration of this critical legislation. The complete tally of the Senate vote is listed below.

    The fact that the first attempt at passage in the Senate failed is not necessarily bad news. First, the 49 “yea” votes for the bill is the highest number of senators ever to vote in favor of such comprehensive reform legislation. Second, the vote provided a clear picture of current standings that will allow precise targeting of public education and advocacy efforts.

    Further, the Republican leadership in the Senate has recently indicated its intention to pursue an incremental vote strategy. At press time, the expectation is that the Senate will vote on a medical liability reform bill that applies only to obstetric services sometime in October. The second bill, to be considered first thing next year, would apply MICRA-like protections to providers of emergency services, including neurosurgeons. The third and fourth bills likely will apply tort reforms to rural physicians and volunteer physicians. Finally, assuming the failure of all of these efforts, sometime before the 2004 elections the Senate will vote one last time on a comprehensive reform bill. It is possible, however, that Democrats will find it extremely difficult to vote against moms and babies, and should the first incremental bill pass the Senate, it could serve as the legislation that would be reconciled with the House-passed HEALTH Act.

    Neurosurgeons are encouraged to contact their senators and stress the need to pass medical reform legislation. Sample letters that can be edited and sent via e-mail are available at https://capwiz.com/noc/issues/alert/?alertid=2801021.

    AL

    Richard Shelby (R)

    Nay

     

    Jeff Sessions (R)

    Yea

    AK

    Ted Stevens (R)

    Yea

     

    Lisa Murkowski (R)

    Yea

    AZ

    John McCain (R)

    Yea

     

    Jon Kyl (R)

    Yea

    AR

    Blanche Lincoln (D)

    Nay

     

    Mark Pryor (D)

    Nay

    CA

    Dianne Feinstein (D)

    Nay

     

    Barbara Boxer (D)

    Nay

    CO

    Ben Nighthorse Campbell, (R)

    Yea

     

    Wayne Allard (R)

    Yea

    CT

    Christopher Dodd (D)

    Nay

     

    Joseph Lieberman (D)

    Nay

    DE

    Joseph Biden (D)

    Nay

     

    Thomas Carper (D)

    Nay

    FL

    Bob Graham (D)

    Not Voting

     

    Bill Nelson (D)

    Nay

    GA

    Zell Miller (D)

    Not Voting

     

    Saxby Chambliss (R)

    Yea

    HI

    Daniel Inouye (D)

    Nay

     

    Daniel Akaka (D)

    Nay

    ID

    Larry Craig (R)

    Yea

     

    Michael Crapo (R)

    Yea

    IL

    Richard Durbin (D)

    Nay

     

    Peter Fitzgerald (R)

    Yea

    IN

    Richard Lugar (R)

    Yea

     

    Evan Bayh (D)

    Nay

    IA

    Charles Grassley (R)

    Yea

     

    Tom Harkin (D)

    Nay

    KS

    Sam Brownback (R)

    Yea

     

    Pat Roberts (R)

    Yea

    KY

    Mitch McConnell (R)

    Yea

     

    Jim Bunning (R)

    Yea

    LA

    John Breaux (D)

    Nay

     

    Mary Landrieu (D)

    Nay

    ME

    Olympia Snowe (R)

    Yea

     

    Susan Collins (R)

    Yea

    MD

    Paul Sarbanes (D)

    Nay

     

    Barbara Mikulski (D)

    Nay

    MA

    Edward Kennedy (D)

    Nay

     

    John Kerry (D)

    Not Voting

    MI

    Carl Levin (D)

    Nay

     

    Debbie Stabenow (D)

    Nay

    MN

    Mark Dayton (D)

    Nay

     

    Norm Coleman (R)

    Yea

    MS

    Thad Cochran (R)

    Yea

     

    Trent Lott (R)

    Yea

    MO

    Christopher Bond (R)

    Yea

     

    Jim Talent (R)

    Yea

    MT

    Max Baucus (D)

    Nay

     

    Conrad Burns (R)

    Yea

    NE

    Chuck Hagel (R)

    Yea

     

    Ben Nelson (D)

    Nay

    NV

    Harry Reid (D)

    Nay

     

    John Ensign (R)

    Yea

    NH

    Judd Gregg (R)

    Yea

     

    Jon Sununu (R)

    Yea

    NJ

    Frank Lautenberg (D)

    Nay

     

    Jon Corzine (D)

    Nay

    NM

    Pete Domenici (R)

    Yea

     

    Jeff Bingaman (D)

    Nay

    NY

    Charles Schumer (D)

    Nay

     

    Hillary Rodham Clinton (D)

    Nay

    NC

    John Edwards (D)

    Nay

     

    Elizabeth Dole (R)

    Yea

    ND

    Kent Conrad (D)

    Nay

     

    Byron Dorgan (D)

    Nay

    OH

    Mike DeWine (R)

    Yea

     

    George Voinovich (R)

    Yea

    OK

    Don Nickles (R)

    Yea

     

    James Inhofe (R)

    Yea

    OR

    Ron Wyden (R)

    Nay

     

    Gordon Smith (R)

    Yea

    PA

    Arlen Specter (R)

    Yea

     

    Rick Santorum (R)

    Yea

    RI

    Jack Reed (D)

    Nay

     

    Lincoln Chafee (R)

    Yea

    SC

    Ernest Hollings (D)

    Nay

     

    Lindsey Graham (R)

    Nay

    SD

    Thomas Daschle (D)

    Nay

     

    Tim Johnson (D)

    Nay

    TN

    Bill Frist (R)

    Yea

     

    Lamar Alexander (R)

    Yea

    TX

    Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R)

    Yea

     

    John Cornyn (R)

    Yea

    UT

    Orrin Hatch (R)

    Yea

     

    Robert Bennett (R)

    Yea

    VT

    Patrick Leahy (D)

    Nay

     

    James Jeffords (I)

    Nay

    VA

    John Warner (R)

    Yea

     

    George Allen (R)

    Yea

    WA

    Patty Murray (D)

    Nay

     

    Maria Cantwell (D)

    Nay

    WV

    Robert Byrd (D)

    Nay

     

    John D. Rockefeller (D)

    Nay

    WI

    Herbert Kohl (D)

    Nay

     

    Russ Feingold (D)

    Nay

    WY

    Craig Thomas (R)

    Yea

     

    Michael Enzi (R)

    Yea

    Katie O. Orrico, JD, is director of the AANS/CNS Washington Office.

    ]]>

    + posts