To Jim Noyes, hurting his dog is like hurting one of his family
members.
He adopted the black Labrador and German shepherd mixed-breed dog,
Missy, when he lived in St. Charles several years ago.
Missy has leg problems, Noyes said, and several surgeries trying to
repair them ended disastrously. The dog eventually lost her left hind
leg.
Noyes, who now lives in Prairie Grove near Crystal Lake, said Missy is
confined to the kitchen. The large, old dog can't hobble very far.
He will go to trial in May with the Buffalo Grove veterinarian who
performed the procedures, trying to recoup money he spent on
veterinary bills.
But because Noyes said he feels a special tie to Missy, he and his
wife also are seeking more than $50,000 in damages to cover the
emotional distress the dog's suffering caused them.
"It was incredibly stressful seeing her suffer so much," he said. "It
certainly created a tremendous amount of pain and stress in our
lives."
The notion of Noyes and other pet owners winning large malpractice
awards is also causing discomfort among veterinarians.
They fear that if such awards become common, basic veterinary care
will become too expensive for average people.
Less care?
Large veterinary malpractice awards have been handed out several times
in the last decade. In those cases, owners have received more than
$30,000 for the tragic loss of a pet.
Some veterinarians say if more people are successful in recovering
money beyond the veterinary bills, the cost of basic animal care may
skyrocket.
The American Veterinary Medical Association has studied the issue at
length and has made materials available to state organizations in case
they need to fight local legislation that calls for increased awards.
Illinois veterinary leaders say they're closely watching the situation
here, although no trends have developed.
American Veterinary Medical Association spokesman Adrian Hochstadt
said the special bond between pet and owner is undeniable, but
allowing for more lawsuits will cause problems for everyone.
"A lot of bad things are likely to happen, none of which will benefit
animals," he said.
More awards will lead to higher malpractice insurance rates for
veterinarians, he added. Now, a typical vet pays about $300 a year for
insurance.
Premium costs for vets are typically low because malpractice cases are
rare and awards are small.
As the universally small lawsuit awards indicate, courts widely regard
pets as property, not family. So if they're hurt in cases of
malpractice, owners usually can recover money only to cover the pet's
market value.
A young, purebred puppy would be worth more than an aging mutt, much
in the same way a new car is worth more than a well-worn clunker -- no
matter its sentimental value to the owner.
If lawsuits become more common, Hochstadt said, that added cost will
be passed on to pet owners who might choose not to pay it.
"Unlike human medicine, the service is much more elastic," he said.
Money might not be an object when someone is seeking medical care for
a sick family member, but most people have a limit to how much they'll
spend on a pet.
And, people are already spending more to care for their pets these
days.
Allan Paul, an associate dean at the University of Illinois College of
Veterinary Medicine, says advances in animal care have followed
similar rates as those in humans. For example, pets can be treated for
cancer with chemotherapy and receive heart transplants.
Those higher prices could also be a driving motivation behind
lawsuits. When people pay more for a service, the stakes are almost
certainly higher.
A sonogram for a pet could cost up to $200. Having a dog's spleen
removed could cost $300.
Today, people are more likely to pay for those complex procedures,
especially in wealthy areas like Chicago's suburbs.
Sandy Wisniewski said that wasn't how it was when she was growing up.
"You didn't have your dog's teeth cleaned unless they were falling
out," said Wisniewski, president of Libertyville's Animal Education
and Rescue.
Just like people
When vets say increased insurance rates could make medical care hard
to afford, their argument echoes those made in the debate over human
malpractice that has raged in Illinois in recent years.
Last spring, Illinois doctors were successful in pushing for
legislation that limits how much victims can recover in cases of human
malpractice.
Echoing trial lawyers from the debate over humans, Chicago lawyer Amy
Breyer, who specializes in animal law and is representing the Noyes
family, said veterinary insurance is low enough that increased costs
would be manageable.
She hopes compensation for distressed owners becomes more common.
That can happen, she said, if owners stick with it.
"This is different nowadays because clients come in willing to pay
money to hire savvy lawyers to litigate these cases as forcefully as
they would for any other interest," Breyer said. "At the very least,
they're getting more attention because they're being litigated more
aggressively."
That could be good news for pet owners who lose the companionship of
man's best friend at the hands of someone who was supposed to help.
"When they're sick, we take them to the doctor," Noyes said. "We treat
them absolutely as family."
 
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