N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 10, § 1000.3
(1) date of each award, judgment or settlement, determined as follows:
(5) any other information deemed necessary by the department to implement the provisions of this subdivision.
(b) Public dissemination.
(1) The department shall make available to the public information collected in accordance with subdivision (a) of this section regarding:
(2) In the case where the total number of malpractice settlements is two or fewer, the department shall make available to the public information collected in accordance with subdivision (a) of this section in those cases where it is alleged that a malpractice event resulted in death or permanent injury, and where the department has considered any information submitted in accordance with subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph.
(i) Permanent injury shall include, but not be limited to, the following: For purposes of this subparagraph, the Department of Health may use information collected in accordance with section 315 of the Insurance Law, including information relating to death or the seriousness of injury, or self-reported by physicians as required by subdivision (3) of section 2995-a of the Public Health Law.
(q) death.
(ii)
(b) Additional clinical information provided by a physician must be received by the department postmarked within 30 days of the date of the letter transmitting the physician's medical malpractice review copy as specified in section 1000.4(c) of this Part. Requests for an extension of the 30-day period will be considered only if they: This clause does not obligate the department to grant extensions. Further, the department may deny any request received beyond the required time frames or missing information required by subclauses (1)-(3) of this clause. Public dissemination of medical malpractice settlement information will be suspended while the department is reviewing the request for an extension. The department will notify the physician in writing of its decision to either grant or deny an extension.
(3) Public dissemination of information regarding medical malpractice judgments, arbitration awards, and settlements under this section shall be made in graduated categories indicating whether the payment award is average, above average or below average, as set forth in subparagraph (i) of this paragraph, in comparison to other payment awards made to complaining parties within the same specialty. For purposes of this paragraph, specialty shall mean a specified area of medical practice including, but not limited to, anesthesiology, family practice, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, physical medicine and rehabilitation, psychiatry, radiology and general surgery. For purposes of comparing payment awards, the department may calculate average, above average and below average amounts, and periodically update them, at least annually, based upon the most recent malpractice payment award information submitted to the department by medical malpractice insurance companies or hospitals self-insured for professional medical malpractice in accordance with section 315 of the Insurance Law, consistent with geographic areas of the State used by the Insurance Department to establish medical malpractice insurance premiums, as set forth in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph. Average, above average, and below average amounts are based upon quartiles. Quartiles are developed by taking all claims for doctors within a certain specialty in a certain geographic region and dividing them, lowest to highest, into four groups (quartiles) of equal numbers.
(c) An above average payment award means a payment award amount in the highest quartile of payment award amounts for a certain specialty in a certain geographic region.
(ii)
(a) If there are at least eight claims in each of four regions, quartiles will be developed for each of four regions for a particular specialty as follows:
Region A = New York, Orange, Rockland, Sullivan, Westchester, Bronx, Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau and Suffolk Counties
Region B = Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Putnam and Ulster Counties
Region C = Erie and Niagara Counties
Region D = All Other Counties
(b) If there are an insufficient number of claims to develop quartiles for each of four regions as specified in clause (a) of this subparagraph, then quartiles will be developed for each of two regions for a specialty if there are at least eight claims in each of two regions as follows:
Downstate = Region A
Upstate = Combined Regions B, C, and D
(i)
(a) Collection.
The department shall collect and physicians shall submit, if applicable, the following information regarding all medical malpractice court judgments, arbitration awards and malpractice settlements within the most recent 10 years in which a payment has been awarded or made to a complaining party: