Women Harmed By Medical Negligence Ask Planned Parenthood CEOs Not To Be Anti-Woman
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Aug. 15, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following is being released by Consumer Watchdog:
Fifteen women and mothers whose lives have been devastated by medical negligence wrote to the CEOs of Planned Parenthood today asking them to reverse a position that is devastating to women's health and access to justice in California. The letter asked the CEOs to reverse their position on a proposed ballot measure to change a law that has discriminated against women for the last 38 years.
Read the letter here: http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/ppltr.pdf
"We are women whose lives have been shattered by medical negligence," they wrote. "We take issue with Planned Parenthood's leading role in opposition to 'The Troy and Alana Pack Patient Safety Act,' a pending California ballot measure that would simply update for inflation the state's 38 year old cap on compensation in medical malpractice cases. The outdated cap is unfair to many who have suffered medical harm, regardless of gender. But it has a disproportionate impact on women."
"Planned Parenthood's opposition to the Troy and Alana Pack Patient Safety Act is against the interests of women in this state – your core constituency. The unfair, antiquated and sexist cap perpetuates an injustice against women that must be remedied. As a group that has been so deeply impacted by medical negligence and this outdated law, we would welcome the opportunity to meet with you in hopes you will reconsider your position on the ballot measure and support a reasonable index of the cap for inflation to bring California's patient safety laws and women's access to justice into the 21st century."
Read more about the medical negligence suffered by the 15 women and their families: http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/ppstories.pdf
The letter explained how the limits on patients' legal rights in medical negligence cases particularly harm women.
"In much the same way that the glass ceiling continues to undercut the income of working women, the malpractice cap on noneconomic damages means compensation for those harmed by medical negligence is largely determined by the income of the person who was injured. The calculus is simple and sexist."
"A stay-at-home parent with no income or a parent who works only part-time to be able to spend more time with the children will be treated very differently under the cap than someone who is working full-time at a high-paying job."
"A woman whose child was killed by medical negligence, or who lost her ability to have children due to medical negligence, or who underwent an unnecessary mastectomy due to medical negligence, is not likely to lose income. But she has clearly suffered a grievous injury. Her compensation for her loss is limited to an amount below what anyone would consider fair in 2013."
The Troy and Alana Pack Patient Safety Act will require 504,760 valid signatures of voters to qualify for the next general election ballot.
SOURCE Consumer Watchdog
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