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To do a comprehensive adverse examination of a plaintiff's treating doctor, you need to start with a comprehensive deposition checklist. Our form for defense counsel is the basis for planning the defense deposition of the plaintiff's treating doctors. This legal form covers more than a dozen different areas you should ask about in the usual deposition of a plaintiff's doctor. It gets you organized quickly and surely.
Generally the defense gains an advantage in the deposition of a plaintiff’s treating doctor by making the examination, long, detailed, and boring. The long deposition submerges any flashes of good testimony for the plaintiff in a boring mass of detail. The long deposition usually makes the doctor being examined: feel anxious about getting to other promised tasks or duties for the day, believe that the length of time being spent indicates there is much good defense material in the case, and become nervous and uncertain, less likely to give powerful testimony or shade testimony in favor of the doctor's patient. The long deposition also does the job of turning over every stone to see if something useful to the defense lies there. Long depositions need thoughtful outlines. That is probably why you are exploring this page. | ||
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If you are a defense lawyer, here is what our deposition form Defendant's Deposition of Plaintiff's Doctor will do for you:
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