Neuropsychological Aspects of Brain Injury Litigation A Medicolegal Handbook for Lawyers and Clinicians
This accessible handbook focuses on the importance of neuropsychological evidence and the role of the neuropsychologist as expert witness in brain injury litigation.
This thorough, evidence-based resource fosters discussion between the legal profession and expert neuropsychological witnesses. The chapters reflect collaborations between leading personal injury lawyers and neuropsychologists in the UK. Key issues in brain injury litigation are addressed that are essential to an understanding of the role of the neuropsychologist as expert witness and of neuropsychological evidence for the courts. These include neuropsychological testing, assessment of quantum, vocational rehabilitation, mental capacity, forensic outcomes, the frontal paradox, mild traumatic brain injury and more.
Combining the scientific and legal background with practical tips and case examples, this book is valuable reading for legal professionals, particularly those working in personal injury and clinical negligence, as well as trainees, students and clinicians in the field of neuropsychology, neurorehabilitation and clinical psychology.
- Introduction
- Legal Principles in Litigation
- Premorbid Abilities: Cognition, Emotion and Behaviour
- Neuropsychological Testing in Brain Injury Litigation: A Critical Part of the Expert Neuropsychological Examination
- Paediatric Outcomes after Traumatic Brain Injury: Social and Forensic Risk Management in Multidisciplinary Treatment Approaches
- Effort Testing, Performance Validity, and the Importance of Context and Consistency
- Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Persistent Neuropsychological Symptoms
- The Frontal Lobe Paradox
- Assessing Mental Capacity in Brain Injury Litigation
- Legal Principles of Quantum
- Practical Applications of Quantum Principles
- Conclusion: Formulating Neuropsychological Opinion in Brain Injury
Phil S. Moore, Shereen Brifcani and Andrew Worthington
Henry F Charles and Ruth Johnson
Part 1: ‘But For’ The Brain Injury and Causation
Martin Bunnage with Marc Willems
Andrew Worthington and Phil S Moore
Hope Kent, James Tonks and Huw Williams with Ian Brownhill
Part 2: Current Condition
Simon Gerhand, Chris A. Jones and David Hacker
Andrew Worthington and Phil S Moore
Sam Fisher-Hicks, Rodger Ll Wood and Bill Braithwaite
Ian Brownhill
Part 3: Loss, Disability, and Impact
William Latimer-Sayer
Andrew Worthington, William Latimer-Sayer and Andy Tyerman
Phil S. Moore, Shereen Brifcani and Andrew Worthington
Phil S. Moore is a HCPC registered Consultant Neuropsychologist & Clinical Psychologist and Director of Medicolegal-Psychology-Neuropsychology Ltd. He has over twenty years’ experience of working clinically and previously worked for 15 years within the NHS. He has had over ten years’ experience of completing medicolegal expert witness work in brain injury.
Shereen Brifcani is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist, who has worked in the NHS and private sector healthcare since 2003. She continues to work clinically with people with various neurological conditions, has conducted medicolegal assessments since 2013, and provides psychological intervention for claimants with acquired brain injury.
Andrew Worthington is a Consultant Clinical Neuropsychologist and Clinical Psychologist with over 30 years’ experience in brain injury. He is honorary Professor in the Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Science, Swansea University, UK. An internationally recognized expert in neuropsychological rehabilitation, he has provided medicolegal services since 1995.
Date de parution : 12-2021
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 12-2021
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes de Neuropsychological Aspects of Brain Injury Litigation :
Mots-clés :
Brain injury; personal injury; catastrophic injury; clinical negligence; litigation; medicolegal neuropsychology; neuropsychology; neuropsychological assessment; neuropsychological evaluation; neuropsychological training; neuropsychological disorders; behavioral observation; clinical neuropsychology; neuropsychological rehabilitation; Mild TBI; Acquired Brain Injury; Severe TBI; Head Injury; Paediatric TBI; Mild Complicated TBI; Brain Injury Cases; Neuropsychological Tests; PVT Failure; Medico Legal Assessment; Multiple PVTs; Single PVT; Invalid Responding; PVTs; Brain Injury Sequelae; PVT Failure Rate; Embedded Validity Measures; Factitious Disorder; Childhood TBI; WMS III; Post-concussion Symptoms; PCS