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Private Research Group Sees Alarming Trend in New Legal Threats to Epidemiologists

Professional Liability Insurance and/or Indemnification May Be Good Ideas

Believe it or not, some of your colleagues are now suggesting that epidemiologists add professional liability insurance to their insurance portfolios along with the more commonly held life, health, automobile and homeowners insurance policies. Why the concern? In a draft manuscript shared with the Epi Monitor, George Carlo and Rebecca Steffens and their colleagues at the Health and Environmental Sciences Group in Washington, DC have spotted what they consider an early and alarming trend. As epidemiologists and epidemiological research have become increasingly integral to tort litigation, the authors report that epidemiologists have themselves become targets of onerous subpoenas and lawsuits. “It’s a new ball game,” Carlo told the Epi Monitor. “In the past, there were always attacks but they took place within the arena of peer review. What’s new is that opponents are now making the epidemiologists personally liable. It is the ultimate intimidation. When a person’s professional and personal livelihood are at stake, it impacts them and it’s not business as usual. It will cost $200,000 - 300,000 to defend yourself. Some will quit,” he said.

In support of his observations about the changing climate for epidemiologists, Carlo pointed to the plenary session on “The Battered Investigator Syndrome” held recently at the American College of Epidemiology meeting in Boston. In that session, investigators involved with breast implants, gulf war syndrome, electromagnetic fields, and induced abortion and breast cancer discussed the difficulties they faced in working in these controversial areas. According to Dale Sandler, NIEHS epidemiologist and a member of the program committee who attended the session, it highlighted the difficulties of addressing research questions which have advocates on both sides of an issue. Her sense is that these problems are not really new, but that there are more lawyers involved nowadays and people are more clever about the research being done. Sometimes there are lawsuits filed on matters that are not the central issue of the research, and these can have a derailing effect. Epidemiolgists can be naive about these matters, according to Sandler, because it is not part of their training for doing research. You have to learn the hard way through experience. Sometimes the problem stems from the lack of clarity about the exposures or the diseases or syndromes being studied.

Other examples cited by Carlo include two lawsuits which he has been involved with at a cost of $700,000 to defend. One cost $100,000 simply to get it dismissed. In his situation, the legal costs were borne by Wireless Technology Research, a group he is affiliated with. However, he knows of another suit in which the epidemiologist was sued personally for the way in which he defined a cohort for his study. In that situation, his employer reportedly refused to pay his defense costs. In another situation, an epidemiologist who had already conducted research was reportedly forced to discontinue doing research on this particular topic because her employer considered the liability too high. According to Carlo, when you get subpoenas it can take months to prepare a deposition. This wastes a lot of time and money and keeps you away from your regular work. Others are defining your priorities. In the legal arena, the trend is to do whatever you need to do to win. In the legal framework, that is fair game, according to Carlo.

Besides the professional liability insurance, another safeguard suggested in the paper is the inclusion of indemnification language in research contracts. “Such a clause would ensure that the sponsor of the research is responsible for the costs of litigation, including attorneys’ fees and any potential liabilities or judgements,” according to the paper. Finally, professional associations should become active in monitoring for adverse trends and in organizing interventions at an early stage. “It cannot be assumed that the field of epidemiology is above the fray—where billions of dollars in claims, legal fees, and awards are involved, all bets are off,” conclude the authors.

Published October 1997  v

 

 
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