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  Consumers for Quality Care

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Date: 1/13/2000

New Legislation Introduced To Ban Predispute Binding Arbitration At HMOs

Assembly Member Sheila Kuehl and the Foundation
for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights (FTCR) announced
new California legislation requiring that HMOs
cannot force patients into pre-dispute binding
arbitration as a condition of health coverage.

The bill, authored by Kuehl and sponsored by FTCR,
guarantees that HMO arbitration be voluntary
entered into only after a dispute arises. Under
state HMO liability legislation, passed in 1999
and to take effect in 2001, patients will be able
to recover damages from an HMO that interferes
with the quality of their care. But an HMO
enrollment contract can still force patients into
a private arbitration system controlled by private
lawyers, rather than by a judge or jury.

In 1998, a joint commission of the American Bar
Association, American Medical Association, and
American Arbitration Association concluded "In
disputes involving patients, binding forms of
dispute resolution should be used only where
parties agree to do so after a dispute arises."

"Patients should not have to sign away their right
to a court trial simply because they join an HMO,"
said Jamie Court, FTCR’s advocacy director. "HMOs
must know that they will face the eyes of jurors
when they deny and delay medically necessary
treatment and serious harm results. Repeated
quality of care violations at HMOs should not be
hidden behind the curtain of mandatory
arbitration. Standards agreed to by the American
Bar Association, American Medical Association and
American Arbitration Association should be good
enough for Californians."

Forced arbitration can be lengthy, costly,
unfair, and conceals quality of care violations
from public scrutiny.

o Arbitrators often depend on repeat business from
HMO corporations
and are more likely to rule in their favor.
o Patients complain of abuse and delays by
attorneys who are not subject to discipline by
judges.
o Arbitrators generally charge $100-$400 per hour,
compared to $350 per
day generally for court costs.
o None of the abuses or documents uncovered in the
process can be made
public.
o There is no media scrutiny, publicly accountable
judge, or jury of one’s
peers.
o There is judicial review only in cases of
outright fraud, not judicial
error.

Assembly Member Kuehl said, "I was thrilled with
Governor Davis' leadership and vision in granting
Californians the right to finally have their
disputes with their HMOs heard by a jury of their
peers. HMOs must not be allowed to subvert the
Governor's and the Legislature's patient
protections in this area. Private arbitration is
just that: private. My bill will protect patients
and make sure that HMOs can finally be held
accountable to the patients and the public."

Aina Engalla Konold, daughter of a Kaiser lung
cancer patient who faced gross delays in the
Kaiser arbitration system that were condemned by
the California Supreme Court, said, "My dad had
hoped to have his day in court. Kaiser knew he was
dying. He was their patient and he was on oxygen
when they took his deposition. But Kaiser only
stalled and made us wait until after my father had
died. He never got to tell his story or see the
result of his case."

FTCR filed a "friend of the court" brief in the
landmark 1997 California Supreme Court decision,
Engalla vs. Permanente Medical Group, where the
Court sided with FTCR and found that Kaiser, the
nation's largest HMO, "established a
self-administered arbitration system in which
delay for their benefit and convenience was an
inherent part, despite express and implied
contractual representations to the contrary."

The Engalla family claimed that Kaiser had failed
to diagnose 51 year old Wilfredo Engalla's lung
cancer until it became inoperable, and then, to
avoid liability, intentionally stalled the case
until after Wilfredo's death – when his family
could recover no compensation for Wilfredo’s pain
and suffering. Data produced during the court case
showed that while Kaiser promised an arbitrator
would be appointed within sixty days, it

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