Interactive Transcript
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When you are at deposition
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or in trial, I think that there are some tips that Kelly
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and I will impart to you from the standpoint of
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my, my own opinion.
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Um, this is the time to, as with the defendant,
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dress conservatively, maintain eye contact,
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and the eye contact is not with
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your counsel or opposing counsel.
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I try to make eye contact with the jury so
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that way they connect with me in a, in a better way.
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Um, humor hu hu humble humor.
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I think at best I think it's important
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that you use people's names, both the defendant
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and other doctors, so that way you're identifying
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that you're paying attention to the details
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and be comfortable with those facts.
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Sometimes the lawyers will say, um, Dr.
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Usam, do you recall that the patient came into the hospital
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with complaints of a headache?
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And frankly, I don't recall.
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I simply asked for the medical record.
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I, I don't wanna rely totally on my memory of things,
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particularly if it's an important point.
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I'll say, uh, I don't recall what the indication was
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for the patient coming to the e emergency room.
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Can you provide the medical record so I can see it?
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Um, this is not a memory test,
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and if you, if it becomes a memory test
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and you fail on the memory part of it,
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then the jury may be influenced that about your opinions,
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even if it's unrelated to re memorizing the clinical history
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or the specific potassium level, for example.
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So I try not to, um,
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have this become an issue about whether
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or not I remember the medical record as opposed to being
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provided with the me medical record.
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As a radiologist, I think it's important that you work
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with the clinical team to have a beautiful display
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with arrows on the abnormality so that way the jury is able
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to see something, not perceive it based on your description.
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So use adequate display set up.
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And sometimes it's, it's a, it's okay to admit
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that you don't know something if someone asks you a specific
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question, you know, what percentage
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of vestibular schwannomas have hemorrhage?
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And you don't know that, say, I don't know that,
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but I know where in the literature to find
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that out if it's an irrelevant, if it's a
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relevant point to this case.
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And, uh, again, I think drinking liquids is useful for
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allowing you to have time to think
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and also not have a dry mouth when you're testifying.
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Um, additional tips don't stray from your expertise.
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You're not an endoscopist, you're not a surgeon.
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You can admit that if your
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expertise is in interpreting postoperative images,
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You say no, although I've never performed the surgery.
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I have looked at hundreds of post-op craniotomies
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and I know what it looks like
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and should look like on a post-op MRI scan.
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And this is abnormal.
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That's how you refer to it,
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that you're not the neurosurgeon,
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but you have expertise in reviewing neurosurgical cases.
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For example, you should know your past history,
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your past publications,
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and make sure that your testimony is not in variance to
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what you have said in the literature,
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because surprisingly, the lawyers are pretty sharp
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and they will go into the literature
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and try to dispute your credibility by quoting you
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to you, um, know your expert opinion
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and know your expert opinions in the past.
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Because if your current opinion
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differs from your opinion in the past, you're gonna have
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to explain that because once again,
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the lawyers are gonna look at your past testimony
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and use that to impugn your credibility.