Bill113th Congress

S. 44

MCAP Act

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Introduced
Jan 22, 2013
Origin Chamber
Senate
Policy Area
Law
Latest Action
Jan 22, 2013

Sponsor

Sen. Portman, Rob [R-OH]

Republican·OH
Bioguide ID: P000449
First Name: Rob
Last Name: Portman
By Request: N
2
Cosponsors
1
Committees
2
Actions
0
Amendments
2
Related Bills
11
Subjects
1
Summaries
4
Titles
1
Text Versions

Bill Details

Update Date
Feb 10, 2020
Origin Chamber
Senate
Bill Type
S
Bill Number
44
Congress
113
Introduced Date
Jan 22, 2013
Policy Area
Law
Is Law
No
Jan 22, 2013IntroReferral

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.

Source: Senate

Jan 22, 2013IntroReferral10000

Introduced in Senate

Source: Library of Congress

Introduced in Senate· Jan 22, 20130

Medical Care Access Protection Act of 2013 or MCAP Act - Prescribes requirements for lawsuits for health care liability claims related to the provision of health care services.

Sets a statute of limitations of three years after the date of manifestation of injury or one year after the claimant discovers the injury, with certain exceptions.

Requires a court to impose sanctions for the filing of frivolous lawsuits.

Limits noneconomic damages to $250,000 from the provider or health care institution, but no more than $500,000 from multiple health care institutions. Makes each party liable only for the amount of damages directly proportional to its percentage of responsibility.

Allows the court to restrict the payment of attorney contingency fees. Limits the fees to a decreasing percentage based on the increasing value of the amount awarded.

Prescribes qualifications for expert witnesses.

Requires the court to reduce damages received by the amount of collateral source benefits to which a claimant is entitled, unless the payor of such benefits has the right to reimbursement or subrogation under federal or state law.

Authorizes the award of punitive damages only where: (1) it is proven by clear and convincing evidence that a person acted with malicious intent to injure the claimant or deliberately failed to avoid unnecessary injury the claimant was substantially certain to suffer, and (2) compensatory damages are awarded. Limits punitive damages to the greater of two times the amount of economic damages or $250,000.

Prohibits a health care provider from being named as a party in a product liability or class action lawsuit for prescribing or dispensing a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved prescription drug, biological product, or medical device for an approved indication.

Provides for periodic payments of future damage awards.

Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee

Senate· Standing
Alternative dispute resolution, mediation, arbitrationCivil actions and liabilityDrug safety, medical device, and laboratory regulationEvidence and witnessesHealth care costs and insuranceHealth care coverage and accessHealth care qualityHealth personnelHealth technology, devices, suppliesLegal fees and court costsProduct safety and quality

Introduced in Senate

Jan 22, 2013

MCAP Act — Informed