Archive for March, 2011

In U.S. Supreme Court case, Dukes v. Wal-Mart, the court is considering whether thousands of employees can join together in a single case to sue their employer for discrimination.

Though the Supreme Court may not reach a decision on the Dukes until the end of June, plaintiff Betty Dukes has already seen some positive change since she brought her claim to court, alleging that Wal-Mart is guilty of sex discrimination in pay, promotion opportunities and hiring practices for female employees.

“I have personally been thanked by women who have been promoted,” Dukes said to The Nation in a March 30 article. Dukes, who is still a Wal-Mart employee, also said that the suit has brought much scrutiny to Wal-Mart’s institutional practices and that the corporation has made information regarding promotions more available to women and integrated women into its management personnel.

The Supreme Court is not being asked to consider whether Wal-Mart was guilty of sex discrimination. Rather, the question before the court is whether Dukes can pursue her case as a class-action lawsuit.

Continue Reading

Every year, 100,000 people die and hundreds of thousands more suffer devastating injuries thanks to medical errors. Yet instead of focusing on how to reduce the number of deaths and injuries in America, many members of Congress like Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) have been making wild claims about “defensive medicine,”  a term for doctors performing unnecessary tests and procedures due to the fear of litigation. Proponents like Speaker Boehner have blamed  “defensive medicine” for rising health care costs and, in turn, attempted to bolster their case for passing legislation that would limit patients rights to sue.

Public Citizen decided it was time to take a hard look at this issue.  The end result is a report, over

"medical errors" "defensive medicine" "rising healthcare costs" "Rep. Gingrey"

Caroline Palmer from Georgia had to have both arms amputated following a medical error.

one year in the making, that examines the twelve most preeminent studies on “defensive medicine” and health care costs. Taylor Lincoln, research director for Public Citizen’s Congress Watch division,  headed up this effort, putting in hundreds upon hundreds of hours with Public Citizen colleagues.

Key findings of our just released report on “Defensive Medicine: The Doctored Crisis” are:

• The most empirically sound, evidence-based studies show that liability concerns have no more than a minimal effect on health care costs;
• Doctor surveys are unreliable and provide fodder for most of the alarmist claims on defensive medicine;
• Many of the tests and procedures that some attribute to defensive medicine are the same ones that come with financial incentives for the provider; and
• Reducing litigation does not reduce health care spending because fear of litigation is unrelated to the actual risk of litigation. Litigation has declined over the past decade, while health care costs have skyrocketed.

For more, check out our press release on the report and read Andis Robeznieks piece entitled, “Consumer group goes on offense about defensive medicine.”

As  congressional Republicans and President Barack Obama are both calling for new policies on medical liability, people like Caroline Palmer hope they will keep in mind her case. In 2007, Caroline Palmer had to have both of her arms amputated due to medical errors. Recently, Palmer was upset to learn that Phil Gingrey (R-Georgia), her representative in Congress, is currently leading the push for passage of the “Help Efficient Accessible, Low-cost, Timely Healthcare Act of 2011, or H.R. 5,” a bill that would let all the players in the medical industry – doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, nursing home providers and the medical device industry – off the hook when they injure or kill people with recklessness.  Find out why Ms. Palmer and Public Citizen find it ironic that Representative Gingrey wants to limit patients rights to sue.

Ready to take action? Please call the Capitol Switchboard at (202)224-3121 and ask for your senators’ and/or representative’s office and tell them to oppose H.R. 5 and to stop using “defensive medicine” rationale to explain health care cost increases and justify limiting patients right to sue.

Last week we reported about a high-profile case Public Citizen is arguing. Jermaine Hall, editor of Vibe magazine,  and his wife are attempting to force the online message board Lipstick Alley to reveal the identity of an anonymous poster who, under the screen name BETonBlack, posted comments that the Halls found offensive.

The reality is, as blogger Charing Ball aptly pointed out the Halls:

. . . might be making mountains out of a molehill because prior to lawsuit, most users probably never heard of BETonBlack or his or her comments.  Now it’s a guarantee that folks will be actively seeking them out.

Ball writes of her own experiences being a blogger,

As a writer, particularly one who publishes their work online, you will learn to develop a thicker skin over time to deal with attacks from those whose sole purpose is to provoke an emotional-based response. As infuriating it is and can be at times, consider the trolls as a not-so-pleasant consequence that comes with the privilege of participating in the last bastion of free speech also known as the Internet.

Words can hurt. This we do not deny. Every day people say things that we don’t agree with but when it comes to revealing the identity of those that say them online, not liking what someone says is not enough to force a company to unmask the identity of a commenter. In the brief filed on the case last week by Public Citizen attorney Paul Levy, Public Citizen says that the Halls have yet to even allege that the comments were made with actual malice, a higher standard of proof which must be used when public figures like Jermaine Hall are involved.  Imagine a world where every time someone said something negative in an online forum about the editor of the New York Times the New York Times Company went to court. If you think the U.S. judicial system is slow now . . . hard to imagine, right?

What is even harder to imagine is a world where anonymous online speech is not protected. This is the world that Paul Levy and Public Citizen have been fighting to protect for years. Charing Ball writes,

These sorts of lawsuits could be troubling for some people because it could result in a much harder time using the Internet if real names and/or addresses are revealed. Corporate whistleblowers, human rights workers and organizers, and victims of domestic violence all benefit from the anonymity of the Internet.

Public Citizen is a leader in Internet freedom of speech. Our work has helped courts define standards that protect your first amendment rights online. Please visit our website for more information on this issue.

President Barack Obama should rethink his definition and strategy of energy security.

While Obama touted lofty goals about cutting our dependence on foreign oil in his address today, he missed the point.

Energy security is not just about reducing oil imports. It’s also about addressing how we get energy here at home. The crisis following last year’s BP oil spill showed us that domestic drilling is not a pathway for security. It shut down the Gulf economy for months, and the fishing industry may never rebound. Energy security starts and ends with curbing our oil addiction – period – not just cutting off oil imports.

Continue Reading

As America recovers from the wreckage wrought by the Wall Street collapse, House Republicans must stop their ambush on the new reform law intended to prevent another such disaster. In another attack on financial reform, the House Financial Services Committee’s subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations will hold a hearing today called, “The Costs of Implementing the Dodd-Frank Act: Budgetary and Economic.”

We hope the committee will realize that the real effect of Dodd-Frank will be to make it harder for Wall Street to pilfer Main Street.

The hearing will include a focus on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), but Chairman Gary Gensler was not invited to testify.

Continue Reading

© Copyright . All Rights Reserved.