Volume 53 | Number 4 | August 2018

Abstract List

Christine Piette Durrance Ph.D., Scott Hankins


Objective

This study examines the effect of physician medical malpractice liability exposure on primary Cesarean and vaginal births after Cesarean (s).


Data Sources/Study Setting

Secondary data on hospital births from Florida Hospital Inpatient File, physician characteristics from American Medical Association Physician Masterfile, and physician malpractice claim history from Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.


Study Design

Our study estimates the effects of physician malpractice liability exposure on Cesareans and s using panel data and a multivariate, fixed effects model.


Data Collection

We merge three secondary data sources based on unique physician license numbers between 1994 and 2010.


Principal Findings

We find no evidence that the first malpractice claim affects primary Cesarean deliveries. We find, however, that the first malpractice claim decreases the likelihood of a (conditional on a prior Cesarean delivery) by 1.2–1.9 percentage points (approximately 10 percent relative to mean incidence). This finding is robust to focusing on obstetrics‐related malpractice claims, as well as to considering different malpractice claims (first report, first severe report, and first lawsuit).


Conclusions

Given the increase in both primary and repeat Cesarean deliveries, our results suggest that physician malpractice liability exposure is responsible for a relatively small share of the decrease.