United States citizens spent $5267 per capita on health care in 2002, nearly $2000 more than any other country, with annual spending reaching $1.6 trillion. Yet quality and availability of medical care continue to be concerns, and medical malpractice litigation is frequently blamed for rising consumer costs and skyrocketing physicians\u27 malpractice premiums. With physicians abandoning medical specialties with high malpractice premiums like neurosurgery, and obstetrics-gynecology residencies reaching only 65% capacity for the medical school class of 2004, there is a growing consensus within the medical community that current efforts to resolve the medical malpractice crisis are failing. The debate has spawned a variety of actions, includ...