Are Doctors Really Mistreated by Juries?

Here is a link to an interesting article published by the Michigan Law Review. www.michiganlawreview.org/archive/105/7/peters.pdf   This article explores the widely held public view that jury verdicts in medical malpractice cases are unfair to doctors.  Interestingly, research conducted over the last three decades indicates that just the opposite is true, juries tend to side with doctors even when the Plaintiff should win.

This article discusses in depth research conducted over the last 30 years in malpractice litigation.  What is interesting is that even when a panel of medical experts agrees that malpractice has been committed and that the Plaintiff should prevail, juries tend to find in favor of the doctors about 50% of the time.  In those cases that the panel of medical experts determines that no malpractice was committed, the research show the jury virtually always finds in favor of the doctor.

This article confirms what trial lawyers have known intuitively for years, ie. that juries in medical malpractice cases tend to bend over backwards to find in favor of the doctor.  The popular idea that doctors are somehow being mistreated by runaway juries is not supported by the research. 

Dwayne Newton is Elected to Membership in ABOTA

We are pleased and proud to announce that Dwayne Newton has been elected to membership in the American Board of Trial Advocates.  Membership in ABOTA is extended by invitation only in recognition of an individuals high personal character, honorable reputation and proficiency as a trial lawyer.  After meeting stringent practice requirements, an invitation to membership requires a nomination from an ABOTA member along with an affirmative vote of 75% of the membership of the local chapter.

The mission of ABOTA is the preservation of the 7th Amendment right to trial by jury and to foster improvement in the ethical and technical standards of practice in the field of advocacy to the end that individual litigants may receive more effective representation and the general public be benefited by more efficient administration of justice consistent with time-tested and traditional principles of litigation.  For more information on the purpose and missions of ABOTA go to www.abota.org.

Congratulations, Dwayne