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Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

February 9, 2021/in Florida Politics

 

Fla Pol

COVID gavel

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect.

By News Service Of Florida on February 9, 2021

Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health-care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-health care businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health-care industry.

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed.

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health-care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health-care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability.

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines — that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and CEO of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing-home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 Legislative Session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health-care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland, a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups, said both the House and Senate bills take steps to protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic.

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute president William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

___

Republished with permission from the News Service of Florida.

https://floridapolitics.com/archives/402147-house-senate-diverge-on-health-lawsuit-bills

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-09 15:50:032024-11-25 08:31:37House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate Diverge of Health Lawsuit Bills

February 9, 2021/in Florida Orthopaedic Society

 

FSO

House, Senate Diverge of Health Lawsuit Bills
Tuesday, February 9, 2021 
Posted by: Diane Berg

Christine Sexton/News Service Florida

TALLAHASSEE — Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health-care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-health care businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health-care industry.

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed.

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health-care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health-care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability.

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines — that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and chief executive officer of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing-home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 legislative session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health-care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland , a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups, said both the House and Senate bills take steps to protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic.

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,.” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

https://www.floridaorthopediccommunity.com/news/551197/House-Senate-Diverge-of-Health-Lawsuit-Bills.htm 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-09 15:50:032024-11-25 08:32:51House, Senate Diverge of Health Lawsuit Bills
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

February 8, 2021/in Duval County Medicial Society

 

Duval County Medical Society

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

Monday, February 8, 2021 

The News Service of Florida
By Christine Sexton

TALLAHASSEE — Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health-care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-health care businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health-care industry.

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed. 

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health-care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health-care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability. 

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines —  that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and chief executive officer of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing-home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 legislative session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health-care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland , a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups,  said both the House and Senate bills take steps to  protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic. 

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a  COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,.” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

https://www.dcmsonline.org/news/551173/House-Senate-diverge-on-health-lawsuit-bills.htm 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-08 15:49:572024-11-25 08:35:23House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

February 8, 2021/in MyPanhandle.com

 

MyPanhandle

FLORIDA CORONAVIRUS NEWS

House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills

COVID Patient FILE – In this April 20, 2020, file photo, resident physician Leslie Bottrell stands outside a room at an Intensive Care Unit as a nurse suctions the lungs of a COVID-19 patient at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, N.Y. A U.S. government report says death rates are 12 times higher for coronavirus patients with chronic illnesses than for others who become infected. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report Monday, June 15 highlights the dangers posed by these conditions. They include heart disease, diabetes and chronic lung ailments, such as asthma or emphysema. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

Posted: Feb 8, 2021 / 05:37 PM CST / Updated: Feb 8, 2021 / 05:37 PM CST

 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (The News Service of Florida) — Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health-care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-healthcare businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health-care industry.

Chief among the differences is how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed. 

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health-care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health-care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability. 

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines —  that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and chief executive officer of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing-home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 legislative session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health-care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland , a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups,  said both the House and Senate bills take steps to  protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic. 

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a  COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,.” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

https://www.mypanhandle.com/health/coronavirus/house-senate-diverge-on-health-lawsuit-bills/

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-08 15:49:572024-11-25 08:34:18House, Senate diverge on health lawsuit bills
Florida Justice Reform Institute

HOUSE, SENATE DIVERGE ON HEALTH LAWSUIT BILLS

February 8, 2021/in News Service of Florida

 

News Service of FL

HOUSE, SENATE DIVERGE ON HEALTH LAWSUIT BILLS       

2/8/2021 Christine Sexton

TALLAHASSEE — Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health-care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-health care businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health-care industry.

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed. 

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health-care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health-care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability. 

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines —  that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and chief executive officer of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing-home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 legislative session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health-care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland , a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups,  said both the House and Senate bills take steps to  protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic. 

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a  COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,.” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

https://new.newsserviceflorida.com/app/post.html?postID=39748 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-08 15:49:552024-11-25 08:36:13HOUSE, SENATE DIVERGE ON HEALTH LAWSUIT BILLS
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House panel backs Covid-19 business legal shield

February 4, 2021/in Orlando Business Journal

 

Orlando Business Journal

House panel backs Covid-19 business legal shield

February 4, 2021

The measure, which has broad support from business organizations, would make it harder to file coronavirus-related lawsuits against businesses and to win such lawsuits.
The Republican-controlled Legislature continues to fast-track a proposal that would shield Florida businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, positioning the measure to be among the first bills passed after the 2021 session starts next month.

Members of the House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee voted 11-6 Wednesday to advance the House version of the bill (HB 7), filed by Rep. Lawrence McClure, R-Dover.

“It’s a one-in-100-year pandemic,” McClure told the committee in explaining why he thinks the legislation is needed.

The measure, which has broad support from business organizations, would make it harder to file coronavirus-related lawsuits against businesses and to win such lawsuits.

Republicans, who comprise the majority of committee members, beat back attempts Wednesday to change the proposal. Rep. Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, filed an amendment that would have altered part of the bill that would require state-licensed physicians to submit affidavits saying that plaintiffs’ deaths or injuries were a result of “acts or omissions” by defendants.

Driskell’s proposed amendment would have changed that to requiring a “medical expert” to file an affidavit confirming that the person was infected with COVID-19 during the relevant time period. Driskell argued a physician couldn’t make the determination required in the bill without having additional information that would become available through what is known as discovery, a process when attorneys seek documents or information ahead of trials.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large, however, contended the requirement in the proposed bill was similar to one already in place in medical malpractice cases.

“If it was done in medical malpractice, it can be done in cases like this,” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

Driskel’s amendment failed in an 11-6 party-line vote.

The legislative session will start March 2, and Replublcan leaders have made lawsuit protections for businesses a top priority.

The bill is slated next to be considered by the House Judiciary Committee and then could be ready to go to the full House.

The Senate version (SB 72), filed by Sen. Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, has been approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee and is headed to the Commerce and Tourism Committee.

By News Service of Florida Staff

https://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/news/2021/02/04/house-panel-backs-covid-19-business-legal-shield.html 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-04 15:49:582024-11-25 08:37:16House panel backs Covid-19 business legal shield
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House Panel Backs COVID-19 Legal Shield For Florida Businesses

February 4, 2021/in WUSF

 

WUSF

House Panel Backs COVID-19 Legal Shield For Florida Businesses

February 04, 2021 08:48 AM

Rep McClure  State Rep. Lawrence McClure of Dover Florida House of Representatives (2018)

The Republican-controlled Legislature continues to fast-track a proposal that would shield Florida businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, positioning the measure to be among the first bills passed after the 2021 session starts next month.

Members of the House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee voted 11-6 Wednesday to advance the House version of the bill (HB 7), filed by Rep. Lawrence McClure, R-Dover.

“It’s a one-in-100-year pandemic,” McClure told the committee in explaining why he thinks the legislation is needed.

The measure, which has broad support from business organizations, would make it harder to file coronavirus-related lawsuits against businesses and to win such lawsuits.

Republicans, who comprise the majority of committee members, beat back attempts Wednesday to change the proposal. Rep. Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, filed an amendment that would have altered part of the bill that would require state-licensed physicians to submit affidavits saying that plaintiffs’ deaths or injuries were a result of “acts or omissions” by defendants.

Driskell’s proposed amendment would have changed that to requiring a “medical expert” to file an affidavit confirming that the person was infected with COVID-19 during the relevant time period. Driskell argued a physician couldn’t make the determination required in the bill without having additional information that would become available through what is known as discovery, a process when attorneys seek documents or information ahead of trials.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large, however, contended the requirement in the proposed bill was similar to one already in place in medical malpractice cases.

“If it was done in medical malpractice, it can be done in cases like this,” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

Driskel’s amendment failed in an 11-6 party-line vote.

The legislative session will start March 2, and Replublcan leaders have made lawsuit protections for businesses a top priority.

The bill is slated next to be considered by the House Judiciary Committee and then could be ready to go to the full House.

The Senate version (SB 72), filed by Sen. Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, has been approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee and is headed to the Commerce and Tourism Committee.

https://wusf.org/house-panel-backs-covid-19-legal-shield-for-florida-businesses/ 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-04 15:49:562024-12-11 13:09:56House Panel Backs COVID-19 Legal Shield For Florida Businesses
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