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CNN Live Event/Special

Bush Addresses Malpractice Proposal

Aired January 16, 2003 - 12:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


WOLF BLITZER, CNN ANCHOR: Momentarily, we are expecting to hear from the president. Indeed, he is being introduced right now by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson. We are expecting the president to be delivering a major address on the whole issue of medical malpractice reform in the law.
Indeed, the president is about to speak. We'll go to the president once he begins speaking. The president introduced by Tommy Thompson in Scranton. Indeed, let's listen in as the president begins his remarks.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Thank you very much. Thank you all for coming. Thank you. Thank you all. Please, be seated. Thanks for coming and thanks for the warm welcome. Inside.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: It's great to be back in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

(APPLAUSE)

Home of a lot of really fine people and a great university. And I want to thank the University of Scranton for...

(APPLAUSE)

I want to thank the University of Scranton for the hospitality. I want to thank Father Joe McShane (ph) for opening up this wonderful facility for me and a lot of members of the congressional delegation who have come and the great secretary of health and human services, Tommy Thompson.

I appreciate you all...

(APPLAUSE)

I appreciate you all putting up with us...

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: ... and giving me a chance to talk about a significant problem which faces America. And that problem is the fact that our medical liability system is broken and therefore a lot of Americans don't have access to affordable health care.

And I'm here to declare in Pennsylvania, I intend to work with Congress to do something about it and fix the problem. (APPLAUSE)

And we're going to need your help. Democracy can respond. People in Washington tend to respond when the people speak.

So I want to spend a little time today encouraging you and those who may be watching on TV to start speaking on your behalf to make sure that you can afford health care in America.

(APPLAUSE)

I'm traveling today with some mighty fine folks. One person decided to go back to Washington to represent Pennsylvania's interest on the Senate floor. He flew up with me. I talked to him about this issue. And that's Senator Arlen Specter. I want to thank him for his friendship.

(APPLAUSE)

Looks like they're finally getting organized in the United States Senate.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: (APPLAUSE)

And they might start voting on the appropriations bill for '03, which would be helpful.

I also was traveling with Jim Greenwood. I'm honored that Jim was on the plane. Jim was the sponsor in the House of Representatives of the legislation which I'm going to talk to you about today, and which I hope I'm able to sign into law this year to help the doctors and patients in the state of Pennsylvania.

(APPLAUSE)

I appreciate you.

Paul Kanjorski is here, as well, member of the United States House of Representatives.

Paul, I'm honored you are here.

The issue we're talking today about is not a Republican issue. It's not a Democrat issue. It's an issue which affects people from all walks of life and it's an issue which must be solved.

(APPLAUSE)

A man who used to represent Scranton is Don Sherwood. I appreciate Don and his friendship.

Thank you for coming.

(APPLAUSE) With us, as well, is two other fine members of the congressional delegation from Pennsylvania, Todd Platts and Pat Toomey.

And I want to thank you guys for being here today.

(APPLAUSE)

I'm honored that the mayor of Scranton, Chris Doherty, is here with us.

Mr. Mayor, thank you.

(APPLAUSE)

He was standing out there in the cold, waiting for Air Force One. That's beyond the call of duty, I want you to know.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: But thank you, sir.

I appreciate so very much the attorney general of the state of Pennsylvania, my friend Mike Fisher. I'm glad you're here Mike.

(APPLAUSE)

John Perzell (ph) is here representing the House of Delegates, along with the senators and members of the House from this part of Pennsylvania. I'm honored you guys are here. Thank you for coming. Thank you for your interest in this issue.

(APPLAUSE)

Today when I arrived, I met Ed Gilmartin (ph). He's what we call a USA Freedom Corps greeter. He is a volunteer with the Goodwill Industries of Northeastern Pennsylvania. I want to thank Ed for coming. I want to thank him for working with Goodwill.

He is a reminder that while one of us can't do everything to help heal the hurt of America, each of us can do something to help make somebody's life in your community a better place.

(APPLAUSE)

And that as we continue our struggle against people who are evil, who would want to hurt America, that we can do so not only through the use of our great military, but we can do so by doing some good in our communities in order to fight evil.

Each of us can do some good by loving a neighbor just like you'd like to be loved yourself.

See, we have some big problems in this country. I'm here to talk about one problem, but we've got some others. One is how best to secure the peace. And one way to secure the peace is never to forget what happened to us on September the 11th and hunt the killers down one by one and bring them to justice, which is what America is going to do.

(APPLAUSE)

We will continue to confront problems before they become acute. We understand that the world has changed on September 11. Oceans no longer protect us from threats that may mass overseas.

And that's why I've been clear about my desire to keep the peace by confronting Mr. Saddam Hussein. It's his choice to make. It's up to Mr. Saddam Hussein to do what the entire world has asked him to do. The world, overwhelmingly, through the U.N. Security Council, said, "Mr. Saddam Hussein, disarm for the name of peace." It's his choice to make.

So far the evidence hasn't been very good that he is disarming.

And time is running out. At some point in time, the United States' patience will run out. In the name of peace, if he does not disarm, I will lead a coalition of the willing to disarm Saddam Hussein.

(APPLAUSE)

We will deal with those problems overseas. And we will deal with the problems we have at home as well. We've got an economy that's not as strong as it should be. And therefore I proposed to Congress ways to strengthen the economy, starting with this principle: It is best to let Americans have more of their own money if you're worried about economic vitality.

(APPLAUSE)

If you want people to find work, if you're worried about somebody looking for a job like I am, the best way to encourage economic growth is to let people have more of their own money.

And one of the lessons that I keep trying to explain to Washington -- and of course these members don't need to hear it -- is that the money we spend in Washington is not the government's money. It's the peoples' money.

(APPLAUSE)

I look forward to working with Congress, I look forward to working with Congress to create an environment in which the small businesses grow to be big businesses, in which the entrepreneurial spirit is strong, and most importantly, in which people who are looking for a job can find work.

(APPLAUSE)

But the problem I want to talk today is a problem with our health care system.

I hope you're as proud of our health care system as I am. I mean, we're great at what we do. (APPLAUSE)

We got great doctors in America.

(APPLAUSE)

Incredibly skilled, well-trained, compassionate people who care deeply for their patients.

We got great nurses in America, people who love their patients.

(APPLAUSE)

We got fine hospitals, fine researchers. We're on the leading edge of technological change in this country. We make new discoveries all the time. We develop new cures, and therefore we develop new hopes for people who are sick. We're good at what we do. And I'm proud of the health care system of America.

(APPLAUSE)

But we got some problems. And one of my jobs is to talk plainly about the problems and encourage people to find solutions to the problems and then get them to act. We got a problem because too many of our citizens go without health care. That's why I proposed refundable tax credits to empower people to be able to have the capacity to get into the marketplace to purchase health care.

We got a lot of people who, you know, go to emergency rooms for primary care, which strains our emergency rooms.

It makes it hard on the community hospitals. That's why I'm for community health centers -- realistic, smart ways to make sure people can get primary health care who don't have it.

Our seniors need to have a reformed Medicare plan which includes prescription drugs.

(APPLAUSE)

We got a system that's stuck in the past. Medicare's stuck. Medicine has become modern and Medicare hadn't.

And it seems like to me a good place for Congress to start is to take a look at their own health care system. You know, they got choice in the system. Congressmen and senators and their staffs can pick and choose the plan that meets them best. It seems to me a good principle for our seniors, to trust our seniors to make the right decisions for them.

(APPLAUSE)

And medical care is expensive. Out of $100 spent in this country, $11 goes to pay for health care. The costs are rising at the fastest rate in nearly a decade. That's a problem. Most costs in our economy are pretty well under control. Inflation is low. But that's not the case in health care, and we need to do something about it before people get hurt.

Health care costs rise for a lot of reasons. Research is costly. Technologies cost money, and they're expensive. And some of the costs are necessary, but there are some costs that are unnecessary, as far as I'm concerned.

And the problem of those unnecessary costs don't start in the waiting room or the operating room. They're in the courtroom.

(APPLAUSE)

We're a litigious society. Everybody's suing, it seems like. There are too many lawsuits in America, and there are too many lawsuits filed against doctors and hospitals without merit.

(APPLAUSE)

And one thing the American people must understand, as even though the lawsuits are junk lawsuits and they have no basis, they're still expensive. They're expensive to fight. It costs money to fight off a junk lawsuit.

And oftentimes, in order to avoid litigation, and oftentimes to cut their costs, docs, and therefore the companies that insure them, just settle. See? So even though there's no merit, in order just to get rid of the thing, they just say, "OK, let's just pay you. We'll get you out of the way."

Instead of maybe suffering the consequences of a lousy jury and a lousy verdict, just pay them off. That is expensive to the system when it happens time and time and time again, like it's happening in America today.

(APPLAUSE)

And what's happening is, these rates for insurance are going out of sight, and doctors need insurance to practice.

Today I met with a lot of great health givers and healers, decent people, compassionate Americans who love their patients; these are docs. I met with some patients, as well, talking about the effects of this litigious society we have. And I heard stories about people not being able to pay their premiums.

See, that means that health care is no longer accessible to too many of our citizens. When a doc can't pay the premiums and therefore can't practice, somebody is going without health care. It strains the system.

So what happens is, doctors say, "Well, gosh, I can't afford it here in Pennsylvania. I'm moving. I'll just take my heart and my skills to another community where I can afford it." But when that happens, somebody hurts, somebody doesn't have the care, some mom fixing to have a baby wonders out loud -- when she wonders out loud whether or not the doc is going to be there to deliver the baby it's a -- we heard a story, by the way, today about that -- it's a sad situation. There's a lot of uncertainty in our society.

Lawsuits run up the costs for you, the patient. But they also create a sense of uncertainty in America for people who need the stability of good care.

I had a chance to, when I talked to the docs, to talk about people who literally had tears in their eyes when they described their situation. Deborah D'Angelo (ph) and her husband are leaving Scranton to go to Hershey. They wanted to stay here in Scranton. They were raised in Scranton. I met one of Deborah's (ph) patients who really needs her to be in Scranton.

They chose so because they can get their insurance there and they can't here.

This insurance issue is creating a problem in our communities all across America. People are having to move. People who don't want to move have to move in order to stay in business, to be able to do their job.

Jack Brooks (ph) is a respected pathologist at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He was there today. He went to Buffalo. He moved back to his state, but he was turned down by three insurers when he came back to Pennsylvania. The fourth insurer's quote was just too high; he couldn't afford it.

Jack Brooks (ph) has never had a claim filed against him. He's one of your leading docs here in the state of Pennsylvania. He's one of your best assets. He's never been to the courthouse, And yet, because the system is broken, he couldn't afford to be in Pennsylvania. Fortunately, he got some insurance through a hospital, but he couldn't do it on his own. You got a problem here in this state.

(APPLAUSE)

Greg Shabilski (ph) was here, the brain doctor. He has been moving, from Pennsylvania to Illinois to New Jersey, because the costs were too high. He can't stay in business. He can't do what he was trained to do and loves to do, which is to treat patients.

He talked about, when he was living in Chicago, he talked about a patient of his who had incredible complications. The guy couldn't find help in Pennsylvania, so the man drove all the way out to Chicago to be treated by Greg (ph).

That says a lot about Greg (ph). It says a lot about his patients. And unfortunately, it says something bad about the health care system when liability costs are such that you can't get the kind of care that you need in Pennsylvania. You're not alone, though. It's not just your state that's got a problem. We heard from an OB-GYN in the state of Florida about how she couldn't get insured.

In Nevada, pregnant women sometimes have to leave the state to find a doctor. One woman called more than 50 local doctors and couldn't find one to serve her. So she's going to go to Utah to have her baby.

I was down in Mississippi recently to talk about this issue. There's a doc and his wife, who is also a doctor, who came from up north down to Mississippi in the delta region of that state. And the delta region has got a lot of people who hurt, a lot of people who are needy, a lot of people who need health care.

And they went not to, you know, build a giant portfolio of wealth. They went because they've got great hearts. They heard a calling. They heard a -- he would have attributed it to the Almighty. Having watched him, I would have attributed it tot he Almighty, too. He's got a fantastic heart to him. I could see that he was inspired.

He told me he's leaving the delta because the trial lawyers ran him out. Couldn't practice medicine without getting sued.

Something's wrong with the system. And a broken system like that first and foremost hurts the patients and the people of America.

(APPLAUSE)

Twenty percent of hospitals nationwide have had to cut down on certain services, on delivering babies, on neurosurgery or cardiovascular surgery or orthopedic surgery. That's a fact. So it's a problem that's not only for Pennsylvania. It's a problem for our country.

And there's another cost driver. And if you're worried about getting sued all the time, then there is the natural tendency to practice what they call defensive medicine. In other words, you order tests that someone may not need to protect yourself in a court of law, and that's costly. And that's one of the main reasons why costs are going up.

These lawsuits have got a lot of effects on our country, and we just got to understand that.

This is an incredibly important issue for states. I obviously hope the state of Pennsylvania is able to address it. That can happen in the statehouse.

When I got to Washington I said, "That's an important issue for the states." And then it didn't take me long to realize this is an important issue for the federal government, too. And I'll tell you why.

(APPLAUSE) The direct cost of malpractice insurance and the indirect costs from defensive medicine raise the federal government's health care costs by at least $28 billion a year. Malpractice, defensive practice of medicine affects Medicare, Medicaid, veterans health, government employee costs. It affects the federal government, therefore it is a federal issue.

(APPLAUSE)

It is a national problem that needs a national solution.

(APPLAUSE)

And here it is. First, let me just say this as clearly as I can: We want our judicial system to work. People who've got a claim, a legitimate claim, must have a hearing in our courts. Somebody who has suffered at the hands of a lousy doc must be protected, and they deserve a court that is uncluttered by frivolous and junk lawsuits.

If they prove damages, they should be able to recover the cost of their care and recovery and lost wages and economic losses for the rest of their life. That's fair. That is reasonable. And that is necessary for us to have confidence in the medical system and in the judicial system.

(APPLAUSE)

Yet for the sake of affordable and accessible health care in America, we must have a limit on what they call non-economic damages.

(APPLAUSE)

And I propose a cap of $250,000.

(APPLAUSE)

Otherwise, if not, excessive jury awards like those in Pennsylvania and those I was -- one was just described to me today. A guy held up a full page ad in your newspaper, paid for by the excessive jury award.

(APPLAUSE)

Excessive jury awards will continue to drive up insurance costs, will put good doctors out of business or run them out of your community, and will hurt communities like Scranton, Pennsylvania. That's a fact.

(APPLAUSE)

And that's why we need a cap on non-economic damages. And that's why we need a cap on punitive damages as well.

(APPLAUSE)

As I mentioned to you, and it's important for our citizens to understand, it is the fear of unlimited non-economic damages and punitive damages that cause docs and the insurance carriers to unnecessarily settle these cases.

See, you can pretty well blackmail a doctor into settlement if you continue to throw lawsuit after lawsuit. And the system looks like a giant lottery.

(APPLAUSE)

Thank you.

(APPLAUSE)

There needs to be other reforms, as well. A lot of times these lawyers will sue everybody in sight in order to try to get something. In cases where more than one person is responsible for a patient's injuries, we need to assign blame fairly. We need joint and severable (ph) liability reform in our medical liability system.

(APPLAUSE)

We need to make sure that doctors can take care of their patients without fear that their advice will be used against them some day. It's hard to believe a system...

(APPLAUSE)

You hear a lot about the doctor-patient relationship. It's an incredibly important relationship in order to make sure we have a health care system which functions well. And yet imagine a system where docs can't share information amongst each other, much less talk to your patient for fear that what they say will be used them in court one day.

The system is not balanced if that's the case. The system is not fair. The system doesn't need to have a relationship with the doc and the patient for fear of what is said will be used by a lawyer to sue them. That's why we need these reforms, for the good of the country.

We got the bill passed out of the House, thanks to Jim and members of the delegation here.

And I want to thank you for your leadership and your vote.

(APPLAUSE)

And the Senate didn't act on it, so we got to start over. And I'm ready to start over.

(APPLAUSE)

And the time is getting worse. That's what people have got to understand up there in Washington -- or over there in Washington or down there in Washington, wherever.

(LAUGHTER) BUSH: I thought I was in Crawford for a minute.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: (APPLAUSE)

And this is -- I repeat -- this is a national problem, and we just cannot allow a bunch of needless partisanship to prevent a good, solid solution from going forward. It is...

(APPLAUSE)

And let me say one other thing. This problem won't be solved by just throwing money at the problem. This problem will be solved by getting at the source of the problem, which are the frivolous lawsuits.

(APPLAUSE)

If you're looking for solutions in Pennsylvania, look at states which have done a good job of helping the patient out. California is one example. More than 25 years ago, they passed a law that caps damages from malpractice suits, and the law has worked.

I'm going to tell you a startling statistic. Reports from Philadelphia say that juries there have awarded more in malpractice damages than the entire state of California did over the last three years. That says two things: California's law is what the people in your statehouse ought to look at, and you got a problem in Pennsylvania.

(APPLAUSE)

There was a good-news story in Mississippi. I went down there and the people -- wasn't because of me, it was because of the doctors and the citizens understand the cost of a trial system gone awry, and they got themselves a law, and they got a medical liability law. They put caps, real caps.

Guess what happened? In some counties the malpractice claims rose dramatically before the law came into effect.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: Now, what's that tell you about the system? It tells you the system is less about justice and more about something that looks like the lottery, is what it looks like to me.

(APPLAUSE)

And with the plaintiffs bar getting as much as 40 percent of any verdict, sometimes there's only one winner in the lottery.

(APPLAUSE)

We need reform. You need reform in Pennsylvania and we need reform all across America. And we need a law coming out of the United States Congress.

(APPLAUSE)

It's a law that recognizes the centerpiece of good health care is to worry about your patient, the American people. It's a law that'll recognize that an affordable and accessible health care system can best be had if we limit the caps, put caps on non-economic and punitive damages.

That's what it understands.

(APPLAUSE)

Congress needs to act on this law. Congress needs to listen to the people and not make excuses as to why they can't get something done.

I believe we'll get something out of the House. I believe we'll get us a good law out of the House. And then the Senate must not fail its responsibilities to the American people again.

(APPLAUSE)

And you can help. Every state's got them a couple of senators.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: And they need to hear from you. (UNINTELLIGIBLE) every state, people who are concerned in every state about whether or not they're going to have affordable health care, or health care at all, need to contact the people that represent them. See, democracy can work. Democracy makes a difference. When the people speak, the folks in Washington, D.C., listen. And I'm here to ask you...

(APPLAUSE)

I'm here to ask you to join in this important cause. For the sake of people you care about, your loved ones and your neighbors and the people in your communities.

No, we got a lot of problems facing America. Got the responsibility to make the world more peaceful. We have the responsibility to make sure our homeland is secure. We've got the responsibility to make sure every child is educated. We have a responsibility to make sure our health care systems work. We got a lot of problems.

But I'm going to tell you something about this country. In my mind there is no doubt that we won't solve these problems, because this is the greatest nation, full of the finest people on the face of the Earth.

(APPLAUSE)

Thank you for coming. May God bless. Thank you all. BLITZER: President Bush outlining plans to reform medical malpractice lawsuits in the United States, joined by Tommy Thompson, the secretary of Health and Human Services, speaking in Scranton, Pennsylvania, outlining a detailed legislative proposal, hoping to get House and Senate approval in the coming weeks. Dramatic changes, clearly opposed by many trial lawyers in the United States and others who think that the problem is not necessarily with the lawyers, as much as it is with the insurance companies.

Let's get a Democratic Party perspective. Joining us now live from Capitol Hill, Senator Dianne Feinstein. She is a key legislator, active on this issue. What do you think of the president's proposals, senator?

SEN. DIANNE FEINSTEIN (D), CALIFORNIA: Well, I agree with some of the president's proposals. There's no question about malpractice.

Before 1975, California had one of the highest malpractice premium rates in America. We now have one of the lowest. So the Medical Insurance Compensation Reform Act, known as MICRA, is a balanced act.

It's been tested in California. It works. It is solidly supported by the medical profession. I will introduce legislation to expand that act nationally. The problem with the Greenwood bill was it was what I call MICRA-plus, and the "plus" got into a lot of trouble in the Senate.

The California way of doing this has a cap on noneconomic damages. That's what the president spoke to. It allows for economic damages. That's what the president spoke to. And it handles punitive damages in this way: that there has to be clear and convincing evidence of what's called oppression, fraud, and malice. So within this balance, and the fact that it's been tested now and works for more than a quarter of a century in the largest state in the union, I think there is a formula which deserves national attention. .

BLITZER: As you know, some of your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, Senator Edwards, Senator Kennedy, Senator Durbin, and others are suggesting that the president's plan is way, way wrong, that they're not as open to his ideas as you are.

What are the prospects, politically speaking, for the so-called Greenwood bill that passed the House of Representatives, got stalled in the Senate, What's the prospect for what the president wants to get passed, not only in the House of Representatives this session, but in the Senate as well?

FEINSTEIN: Well, the president kind of mixed it up, because he spoke to the California bill, but then he called it the Greenwood bill. And he really -- the specifics he gave were really out of the California MICRA. And I think we can get the California MICRA passed in the Senate and expanded because it stood the test of time. It's workable. It's balanced. It has provided a substantial level of satisfaction. Now, what's happened, for example, in the state of Nevada, directly adjacent to California, OB/GYNs are leaving the state because of the cost of malpractice insurance.

So each year, more states that do not have a balanced plan like MICRA are finding that they're losing their physicians. So I think the dynamic is changing in the Senate. The problem is, you can't have overkill. You do have to protect against abuse in the system because there is such a thing as abuse in the system. But I think putting a cap on noneconomic damages, leaving economic damages, rehabilitation, economic losses, salaries uncapped, and then making punitives -- really, really punitives, not what anybody may think they are, works.

BLITZER: Do you think there should be -- you obviously agree with the president if I'm hearing you correctly, that there should be that $250,000 cap on what he calls noneconomic damages. But when it comes to punitive damages, he also spoke of a cap. What is your cap that you would support?

FEINSTEIN: Well, there are a couple of things in the California law. One, there's a statute of limitations, which prevents misuse of malpractice, because it limits specifically the time you have to bring a suit. I think having to show before a jury the high standard of clear and convincing evidence, that there is fraud, there's malice, or there's oppression, is a good standard for punitive damages.

I think that noneconomic damages should be capped. Now, the California cap of $250,000, which was still in existence, was set in 1975. California is a high cost state. And yet, it still works in 1975. There was an effort in 1999 to change MICRA in the state legislature, and that effort failed. So I think you could say that the medical profession, across the board in California, is well satisfied with MICRA. I think the time has come to expand it nationally.

BLITZER: An important issue discussed here during this past hour. Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, thanks very much...

FEINSTEIN: Thanks, Wolf.

BLITZER: ... for weighing in on this issue. We'll be hearing a lot more about it, of course, in the days, weeks and months to come.

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Aired January 16, 2003 - 12:00   ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
WOLF BLITZER, CNN ANCHOR: Momentarily, we are expecting to hear from the president. Indeed, he is being introduced right now by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson. We are expecting the president to be delivering a major address on the whole issue of medical malpractice reform in the law.
Indeed, the president is about to speak. We'll go to the president once he begins speaking. The president introduced by Tommy Thompson in Scranton. Indeed, let's listen in as the president begins his remarks.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Thank you very much. Thank you all for coming. Thank you. Thank you all. Please, be seated. Thanks for coming and thanks for the warm welcome. Inside.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: It's great to be back in Scranton, Pennsylvania.

(APPLAUSE)

Home of a lot of really fine people and a great university. And I want to thank the University of Scranton for...

(APPLAUSE)

I want to thank the University of Scranton for the hospitality. I want to thank Father Joe McShane (ph) for opening up this wonderful facility for me and a lot of members of the congressional delegation who have come and the great secretary of health and human services, Tommy Thompson.

I appreciate you all...

(APPLAUSE)

I appreciate you all putting up with us...

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: ... and giving me a chance to talk about a significant problem which faces America. And that problem is the fact that our medical liability system is broken and therefore a lot of Americans don't have access to affordable health care.

And I'm here to declare in Pennsylvania, I intend to work with Congress to do something about it and fix the problem. (APPLAUSE)

And we're going to need your help. Democracy can respond. People in Washington tend to respond when the people speak.

So I want to spend a little time today encouraging you and those who may be watching on TV to start speaking on your behalf to make sure that you can afford health care in America.

(APPLAUSE)

I'm traveling today with some mighty fine folks. One person decided to go back to Washington to represent Pennsylvania's interest on the Senate floor. He flew up with me. I talked to him about this issue. And that's Senator Arlen Specter. I want to thank him for his friendship.

(APPLAUSE)

Looks like they're finally getting organized in the United States Senate.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: (APPLAUSE)

And they might start voting on the appropriations bill for '03, which would be helpful.

I also was traveling with Jim Greenwood. I'm honored that Jim was on the plane. Jim was the sponsor in the House of Representatives of the legislation which I'm going to talk to you about today, and which I hope I'm able to sign into law this year to help the doctors and patients in the state of Pennsylvania.

(APPLAUSE)

I appreciate you.

Paul Kanjorski is here, as well, member of the United States House of Representatives.

Paul, I'm honored you are here.

The issue we're talking today about is not a Republican issue. It's not a Democrat issue. It's an issue which affects people from all walks of life and it's an issue which must be solved.

(APPLAUSE)

A man who used to represent Scranton is Don Sherwood. I appreciate Don and his friendship.

Thank you for coming.

(APPLAUSE) With us, as well, is two other fine members of the congressional delegation from Pennsylvania, Todd Platts and Pat Toomey.

And I want to thank you guys for being here today.

(APPLAUSE)

I'm honored that the mayor of Scranton, Chris Doherty, is here with us.

Mr. Mayor, thank you.

(APPLAUSE)

He was standing out there in the cold, waiting for Air Force One. That's beyond the call of duty, I want you to know.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: But thank you, sir.

I appreciate so very much the attorney general of the state of Pennsylvania, my friend Mike Fisher. I'm glad you're here Mike.

(APPLAUSE)

John Perzell (ph) is here representing the House of Delegates, along with the senators and members of the House from this part of Pennsylvania. I'm honored you guys are here. Thank you for coming. Thank you for your interest in this issue.

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Today when I arrived, I met Ed Gilmartin (ph). He's what we call a USA Freedom Corps greeter. He is a volunteer with the Goodwill Industries of Northeastern Pennsylvania. I want to thank Ed for coming. I want to thank him for working with Goodwill.

He is a reminder that while one of us can't do everything to help heal the hurt of America, each of us can do something to help make somebody's life in your community a better place.

(APPLAUSE)

And that as we continue our struggle against people who are evil, who would want to hurt America, that we can do so not only through the use of our great military, but we can do so by doing some good in our communities in order to fight evil.

Each of us can do some good by loving a neighbor just like you'd like to be loved yourself.

See, we have some big problems in this country. I'm here to talk about one problem, but we've got some others. One is how best to secure the peace. And one way to secure the peace is never to forget what happened to us on September the 11th and hunt the killers down one by one and bring them to justice, which is what America is going to do.

(APPLAUSE)

We will continue to confront problems before they become acute. We understand that the world has changed on September 11. Oceans no longer protect us from threats that may mass overseas.

And that's why I've been clear about my desire to keep the peace by confronting Mr. Saddam Hussein. It's his choice to make. It's up to Mr. Saddam Hussein to do what the entire world has asked him to do. The world, overwhelmingly, through the U.N. Security Council, said, "Mr. Saddam Hussein, disarm for the name of peace." It's his choice to make.

So far the evidence hasn't been very good that he is disarming.

And time is running out. At some point in time, the United States' patience will run out. In the name of peace, if he does not disarm, I will lead a coalition of the willing to disarm Saddam Hussein.

(APPLAUSE)

We will deal with those problems overseas. And we will deal with the problems we have at home as well. We've got an economy that's not as strong as it should be. And therefore I proposed to Congress ways to strengthen the economy, starting with this principle: It is best to let Americans have more of their own money if you're worried about economic vitality.

(APPLAUSE)

If you want people to find work, if you're worried about somebody looking for a job like I am, the best way to encourage economic growth is to let people have more of their own money.

And one of the lessons that I keep trying to explain to Washington -- and of course these members don't need to hear it -- is that the money we spend in Washington is not the government's money. It's the peoples' money.

(APPLAUSE)

I look forward to working with Congress, I look forward to working with Congress to create an environment in which the small businesses grow to be big businesses, in which the entrepreneurial spirit is strong, and most importantly, in which people who are looking for a job can find work.

(APPLAUSE)

But the problem I want to talk today is a problem with our health care system.

I hope you're as proud of our health care system as I am. I mean, we're great at what we do. (APPLAUSE)

We got great doctors in America.

(APPLAUSE)

Incredibly skilled, well-trained, compassionate people who care deeply for their patients.

We got great nurses in America, people who love their patients.

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We got fine hospitals, fine researchers. We're on the leading edge of technological change in this country. We make new discoveries all the time. We develop new cures, and therefore we develop new hopes for people who are sick. We're good at what we do. And I'm proud of the health care system of America.

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But we got some problems. And one of my jobs is to talk plainly about the problems and encourage people to find solutions to the problems and then get them to act. We got a problem because too many of our citizens go without health care. That's why I proposed refundable tax credits to empower people to be able to have the capacity to get into the marketplace to purchase health care.

We got a lot of people who, you know, go to emergency rooms for primary care, which strains our emergency rooms.

It makes it hard on the community hospitals. That's why I'm for community health centers -- realistic, smart ways to make sure people can get primary health care who don't have it.

Our seniors need to have a reformed Medicare plan which includes prescription drugs.

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We got a system that's stuck in the past. Medicare's stuck. Medicine has become modern and Medicare hadn't.

And it seems like to me a good place for Congress to start is to take a look at their own health care system. You know, they got choice in the system. Congressmen and senators and their staffs can pick and choose the plan that meets them best. It seems to me a good principle for our seniors, to trust our seniors to make the right decisions for them.

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And medical care is expensive. Out of $100 spent in this country, $11 goes to pay for health care. The costs are rising at the fastest rate in nearly a decade. That's a problem. Most costs in our economy are pretty well under control. Inflation is low. But that's not the case in health care, and we need to do something about it before people get hurt.

Health care costs rise for a lot of reasons. Research is costly. Technologies cost money, and they're expensive. And some of the costs are necessary, but there are some costs that are unnecessary, as far as I'm concerned.

And the problem of those unnecessary costs don't start in the waiting room or the operating room. They're in the courtroom.

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We're a litigious society. Everybody's suing, it seems like. There are too many lawsuits in America, and there are too many lawsuits filed against doctors and hospitals without merit.

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And one thing the American people must understand, as even though the lawsuits are junk lawsuits and they have no basis, they're still expensive. They're expensive to fight. It costs money to fight off a junk lawsuit.

And oftentimes, in order to avoid litigation, and oftentimes to cut their costs, docs, and therefore the companies that insure them, just settle. See? So even though there's no merit, in order just to get rid of the thing, they just say, "OK, let's just pay you. We'll get you out of the way."

Instead of maybe suffering the consequences of a lousy jury and a lousy verdict, just pay them off. That is expensive to the system when it happens time and time and time again, like it's happening in America today.

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And what's happening is, these rates for insurance are going out of sight, and doctors need insurance to practice.

Today I met with a lot of great health givers and healers, decent people, compassionate Americans who love their patients; these are docs. I met with some patients, as well, talking about the effects of this litigious society we have. And I heard stories about people not being able to pay their premiums.

See, that means that health care is no longer accessible to too many of our citizens. When a doc can't pay the premiums and therefore can't practice, somebody is going without health care. It strains the system.

So what happens is, doctors say, "Well, gosh, I can't afford it here in Pennsylvania. I'm moving. I'll just take my heart and my skills to another community where I can afford it." But when that happens, somebody hurts, somebody doesn't have the care, some mom fixing to have a baby wonders out loud -- when she wonders out loud whether or not the doc is going to be there to deliver the baby it's a -- we heard a story, by the way, today about that -- it's a sad situation. There's a lot of uncertainty in our society.

Lawsuits run up the costs for you, the patient. But they also create a sense of uncertainty in America for people who need the stability of good care.

I had a chance to, when I talked to the docs, to talk about people who literally had tears in their eyes when they described their situation. Deborah D'Angelo (ph) and her husband are leaving Scranton to go to Hershey. They wanted to stay here in Scranton. They were raised in Scranton. I met one of Deborah's (ph) patients who really needs her to be in Scranton.

They chose so because they can get their insurance there and they can't here.

This insurance issue is creating a problem in our communities all across America. People are having to move. People who don't want to move have to move in order to stay in business, to be able to do their job.

Jack Brooks (ph) is a respected pathologist at the University of Pennsylvania Hospital. He was there today. He went to Buffalo. He moved back to his state, but he was turned down by three insurers when he came back to Pennsylvania. The fourth insurer's quote was just too high; he couldn't afford it.

Jack Brooks (ph) has never had a claim filed against him. He's one of your leading docs here in the state of Pennsylvania. He's one of your best assets. He's never been to the courthouse, And yet, because the system is broken, he couldn't afford to be in Pennsylvania. Fortunately, he got some insurance through a hospital, but he couldn't do it on his own. You got a problem here in this state.

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Greg Shabilski (ph) was here, the brain doctor. He has been moving, from Pennsylvania to Illinois to New Jersey, because the costs were too high. He can't stay in business. He can't do what he was trained to do and loves to do, which is to treat patients.

He talked about, when he was living in Chicago, he talked about a patient of his who had incredible complications. The guy couldn't find help in Pennsylvania, so the man drove all the way out to Chicago to be treated by Greg (ph).

That says a lot about Greg (ph). It says a lot about his patients. And unfortunately, it says something bad about the health care system when liability costs are such that you can't get the kind of care that you need in Pennsylvania. You're not alone, though. It's not just your state that's got a problem. We heard from an OB-GYN in the state of Florida about how she couldn't get insured.

In Nevada, pregnant women sometimes have to leave the state to find a doctor. One woman called more than 50 local doctors and couldn't find one to serve her. So she's going to go to Utah to have her baby.

I was down in Mississippi recently to talk about this issue. There's a doc and his wife, who is also a doctor, who came from up north down to Mississippi in the delta region of that state. And the delta region has got a lot of people who hurt, a lot of people who are needy, a lot of people who need health care.

And they went not to, you know, build a giant portfolio of wealth. They went because they've got great hearts. They heard a calling. They heard a -- he would have attributed it to the Almighty. Having watched him, I would have attributed it tot he Almighty, too. He's got a fantastic heart to him. I could see that he was inspired.

He told me he's leaving the delta because the trial lawyers ran him out. Couldn't practice medicine without getting sued.

Something's wrong with the system. And a broken system like that first and foremost hurts the patients and the people of America.

(APPLAUSE)

Twenty percent of hospitals nationwide have had to cut down on certain services, on delivering babies, on neurosurgery or cardiovascular surgery or orthopedic surgery. That's a fact. So it's a problem that's not only for Pennsylvania. It's a problem for our country.

And there's another cost driver. And if you're worried about getting sued all the time, then there is the natural tendency to practice what they call defensive medicine. In other words, you order tests that someone may not need to protect yourself in a court of law, and that's costly. And that's one of the main reasons why costs are going up.

These lawsuits have got a lot of effects on our country, and we just got to understand that.

This is an incredibly important issue for states. I obviously hope the state of Pennsylvania is able to address it. That can happen in the statehouse.

When I got to Washington I said, "That's an important issue for the states." And then it didn't take me long to realize this is an important issue for the federal government, too. And I'll tell you why.

(APPLAUSE) The direct cost of malpractice insurance and the indirect costs from defensive medicine raise the federal government's health care costs by at least $28 billion a year. Malpractice, defensive practice of medicine affects Medicare, Medicaid, veterans health, government employee costs. It affects the federal government, therefore it is a federal issue.

(APPLAUSE)

It is a national problem that needs a national solution.

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And here it is. First, let me just say this as clearly as I can: We want our judicial system to work. People who've got a claim, a legitimate claim, must have a hearing in our courts. Somebody who has suffered at the hands of a lousy doc must be protected, and they deserve a court that is uncluttered by frivolous and junk lawsuits.

If they prove damages, they should be able to recover the cost of their care and recovery and lost wages and economic losses for the rest of their life. That's fair. That is reasonable. And that is necessary for us to have confidence in the medical system and in the judicial system.

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Yet for the sake of affordable and accessible health care in America, we must have a limit on what they call non-economic damages.

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And I propose a cap of $250,000.

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Otherwise, if not, excessive jury awards like those in Pennsylvania and those I was -- one was just described to me today. A guy held up a full page ad in your newspaper, paid for by the excessive jury award.

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Excessive jury awards will continue to drive up insurance costs, will put good doctors out of business or run them out of your community, and will hurt communities like Scranton, Pennsylvania. That's a fact.

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And that's why we need a cap on non-economic damages. And that's why we need a cap on punitive damages as well.

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As I mentioned to you, and it's important for our citizens to understand, it is the fear of unlimited non-economic damages and punitive damages that cause docs and the insurance carriers to unnecessarily settle these cases.

See, you can pretty well blackmail a doctor into settlement if you continue to throw lawsuit after lawsuit. And the system looks like a giant lottery.

(APPLAUSE)

Thank you.

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There needs to be other reforms, as well. A lot of times these lawyers will sue everybody in sight in order to try to get something. In cases where more than one person is responsible for a patient's injuries, we need to assign blame fairly. We need joint and severable (ph) liability reform in our medical liability system.

(APPLAUSE)

We need to make sure that doctors can take care of their patients without fear that their advice will be used against them some day. It's hard to believe a system...

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You hear a lot about the doctor-patient relationship. It's an incredibly important relationship in order to make sure we have a health care system which functions well. And yet imagine a system where docs can't share information amongst each other, much less talk to your patient for fear that what they say will be used them in court one day.

The system is not balanced if that's the case. The system is not fair. The system doesn't need to have a relationship with the doc and the patient for fear of what is said will be used by a lawyer to sue them. That's why we need these reforms, for the good of the country.

We got the bill passed out of the House, thanks to Jim and members of the delegation here.

And I want to thank you for your leadership and your vote.

(APPLAUSE)

And the Senate didn't act on it, so we got to start over. And I'm ready to start over.

(APPLAUSE)

And the time is getting worse. That's what people have got to understand up there in Washington -- or over there in Washington or down there in Washington, wherever.

(LAUGHTER) BUSH: I thought I was in Crawford for a minute.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: (APPLAUSE)

And this is -- I repeat -- this is a national problem, and we just cannot allow a bunch of needless partisanship to prevent a good, solid solution from going forward. It is...

(APPLAUSE)

And let me say one other thing. This problem won't be solved by just throwing money at the problem. This problem will be solved by getting at the source of the problem, which are the frivolous lawsuits.

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If you're looking for solutions in Pennsylvania, look at states which have done a good job of helping the patient out. California is one example. More than 25 years ago, they passed a law that caps damages from malpractice suits, and the law has worked.

I'm going to tell you a startling statistic. Reports from Philadelphia say that juries there have awarded more in malpractice damages than the entire state of California did over the last three years. That says two things: California's law is what the people in your statehouse ought to look at, and you got a problem in Pennsylvania.

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There was a good-news story in Mississippi. I went down there and the people -- wasn't because of me, it was because of the doctors and the citizens understand the cost of a trial system gone awry, and they got themselves a law, and they got a medical liability law. They put caps, real caps.

Guess what happened? In some counties the malpractice claims rose dramatically before the law came into effect.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: Now, what's that tell you about the system? It tells you the system is less about justice and more about something that looks like the lottery, is what it looks like to me.

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And with the plaintiffs bar getting as much as 40 percent of any verdict, sometimes there's only one winner in the lottery.

(APPLAUSE)

We need reform. You need reform in Pennsylvania and we need reform all across America. And we need a law coming out of the United States Congress.

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It's a law that recognizes the centerpiece of good health care is to worry about your patient, the American people. It's a law that'll recognize that an affordable and accessible health care system can best be had if we limit the caps, put caps on non-economic and punitive damages.

That's what it understands.

(APPLAUSE)

Congress needs to act on this law. Congress needs to listen to the people and not make excuses as to why they can't get something done.

I believe we'll get something out of the House. I believe we'll get us a good law out of the House. And then the Senate must not fail its responsibilities to the American people again.

(APPLAUSE)

And you can help. Every state's got them a couple of senators.

(LAUGHTER)

BUSH: And they need to hear from you. (UNINTELLIGIBLE) every state, people who are concerned in every state about whether or not they're going to have affordable health care, or health care at all, need to contact the people that represent them. See, democracy can work. Democracy makes a difference. When the people speak, the folks in Washington, D.C., listen. And I'm here to ask you...

(APPLAUSE)

I'm here to ask you to join in this important cause. For the sake of people you care about, your loved ones and your neighbors and the people in your communities.

No, we got a lot of problems facing America. Got the responsibility to make the world more peaceful. We have the responsibility to make sure our homeland is secure. We've got the responsibility to make sure every child is educated. We have a responsibility to make sure our health care systems work. We got a lot of problems.

But I'm going to tell you something about this country. In my mind there is no doubt that we won't solve these problems, because this is the greatest nation, full of the finest people on the face of the Earth.

(APPLAUSE)

Thank you for coming. May God bless. Thank you all. BLITZER: President Bush outlining plans to reform medical malpractice lawsuits in the United States, joined by Tommy Thompson, the secretary of Health and Human Services, speaking in Scranton, Pennsylvania, outlining a detailed legislative proposal, hoping to get House and Senate approval in the coming weeks. Dramatic changes, clearly opposed by many trial lawyers in the United States and others who think that the problem is not necessarily with the lawyers, as much as it is with the insurance companies.

Let's get a Democratic Party perspective. Joining us now live from Capitol Hill, Senator Dianne Feinstein. She is a key legislator, active on this issue. What do you think of the president's proposals, senator?

SEN. DIANNE FEINSTEIN (D), CALIFORNIA: Well, I agree with some of the president's proposals. There's no question about malpractice.

Before 1975, California had one of the highest malpractice premium rates in America. We now have one of the lowest. So the Medical Insurance Compensation Reform Act, known as MICRA, is a balanced act.

It's been tested in California. It works. It is solidly supported by the medical profession. I will introduce legislation to expand that act nationally. The problem with the Greenwood bill was it was what I call MICRA-plus, and the "plus" got into a lot of trouble in the Senate.

The California way of doing this has a cap on noneconomic damages. That's what the president spoke to. It allows for economic damages. That's what the president spoke to. And it handles punitive damages in this way: that there has to be clear and convincing evidence of what's called oppression, fraud, and malice. So within this balance, and the fact that it's been tested now and works for more than a quarter of a century in the largest state in the union, I think there is a formula which deserves national attention. .

BLITZER: As you know, some of your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, Senator Edwards, Senator Kennedy, Senator Durbin, and others are suggesting that the president's plan is way, way wrong, that they're not as open to his ideas as you are.

What are the prospects, politically speaking, for the so-called Greenwood bill that passed the House of Representatives, got stalled in the Senate, What's the prospect for what the president wants to get passed, not only in the House of Representatives this session, but in the Senate as well?

FEINSTEIN: Well, the president kind of mixed it up, because he spoke to the California bill, but then he called it the Greenwood bill. And he really -- the specifics he gave were really out of the California MICRA. And I think we can get the California MICRA passed in the Senate and expanded because it stood the test of time. It's workable. It's balanced. It has provided a substantial level of satisfaction. Now, what's happened, for example, in the state of Nevada, directly adjacent to California, OB/GYNs are leaving the state because of the cost of malpractice insurance.

So each year, more states that do not have a balanced plan like MICRA are finding that they're losing their physicians. So I think the dynamic is changing in the Senate. The problem is, you can't have overkill. You do have to protect against abuse in the system because there is such a thing as abuse in the system. But I think putting a cap on noneconomic damages, leaving economic damages, rehabilitation, economic losses, salaries uncapped, and then making punitives -- really, really punitives, not what anybody may think they are, works.

BLITZER: Do you think there should be -- you obviously agree with the president if I'm hearing you correctly, that there should be that $250,000 cap on what he calls noneconomic damages. But when it comes to punitive damages, he also spoke of a cap. What is your cap that you would support?

FEINSTEIN: Well, there are a couple of things in the California law. One, there's a statute of limitations, which prevents misuse of malpractice, because it limits specifically the time you have to bring a suit. I think having to show before a jury the high standard of clear and convincing evidence, that there is fraud, there's malice, or there's oppression, is a good standard for punitive damages.

I think that noneconomic damages should be capped. Now, the California cap of $250,000, which was still in existence, was set in 1975. California is a high cost state. And yet, it still works in 1975. There was an effort in 1999 to change MICRA in the state legislature, and that effort failed. So I think you could say that the medical profession, across the board in California, is well satisfied with MICRA. I think the time has come to expand it nationally.

BLITZER: An important issue discussed here during this past hour. Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, thanks very much...

FEINSTEIN: Thanks, Wolf.

BLITZER: ... for weighing in on this issue. We'll be hearing a lot more about it, of course, in the days, weeks and months to come.

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