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Clinical Negligence Claims Up Motor Claims Down

Clinical Negligence Claims Up Motor Claims Down

Research published by the Law Gazette reveals how the increase in clinical negligence claims costs is due to an increase in injuries such as mesh implants.

The main points from the report are:

  • Claimant legal costs for clinical cases went up by 12.5% in 2019/20,
  • Claimant costs went up during year-on-year to £497.5m. Defence costs for clinical claims also rose, by 2.8% to £143.5m.
  • £21m related to general practice indemnity arrangements recognised for the first time, and the remainder related to a rise in interim payments.
  • In 2019/20, NHSR received 11,682 new clinical negligence claims and reported incidents, up 9.3% on the previous period.
  • New clinical negligence claims went up against a backdrop of increased NHS activity and increased numbers of incidents being reported to it, such as those arising from mesh implants.
  • Claims for serious injuries at birth have shown small declines for three successive years and are now at their lowest level for over 10 years.

NHS Resolution chief executive Helen Vernon said ‘Litigation has reduced for the fourth year running and mediation is now seen as mainstream. The pandemic has placed enormous pressure on our colleagues across the NHS and it has been encouraging to see remote mediations taking place to that cases can continue to be resolved.’

New government figures appear to suggest that motor claims continued to fall in 2019/20. The number of cases registered to the DWP’s Compensation Recovery Unit (CRU) was 653,052, down by 1%. In 2011/12 the number exceeded 828,000.

Matthew Maxwell Scott, executive director of the Association of Consumer Support Organisations, said all claims barring clinical negligence had fallen over the past 10 years.

‘That long term declining trend across most if not all classes of claim underlines our view that the UK is not in the grip of a rampant compensation culture, which some policymakers and corporate vested interests would have us believe,’ he said.

For the full article go to the Law Gazette News






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