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| EW #13617 is a full-time ER doctor with over 46,000 hours of ER experience, and an experienced expert witness, having testified for both sides in civil and criminal cases since 1990.
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| National Chairman, Ethics Committee of the American College of Medical Quality, Emergency Medicine and Medical Consulting Services.
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| Board Certified Emergency Medicine and Internal Medicine malpractice/negligence review and testimony, plaintiff and defense. Hospital attending staff physician, university assistant clinical professor
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| Nursing: 25 years - Acute and Managed Care settings; Telephone Triage; e-Health interactive services
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| EW #14310 is an Assistant Professor at McGill University and member of the Quebec Society of Medical Experts. Significant medicolegal experience in defending physicians and representing patients as plaintiffs....
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| an MD toxicologist published in 16 areas of medicine, exceptional comprehensive lab evaluations
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| Two decades of professional experience in the medical field. This experience includes, but not limited to Critical Care, Emergency Room, Respiratory Therapy and Discharge Planning.
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| Board certified academically published forensic neuropsychiatrist. Expertise in brain injury, stroke, neurotoxicology, acute/chronic pain, dementia, alcohol & substance abuse, gambling addiction.
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| Chiropractic Expert Medical Witness. Certified Expert Witness an has been providing chiropractic services for over 30 years. Has 3 degrees in medical field and 4 certifications..
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| Physician Assistant PA Expert Witness Jeff Nicholson PA-C, Ph.D. for all cases involving physician assistants. 48 hour PA Expert placement in any medical specialty nationwide through his PA Experts Network....
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| 25 years of expertise, Nationally Board Certified Physician Assistant in family practice, urgent care medicine and emergency medicine. Consulting Available Nationwide
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| Shelly has over 15 years experience in healthcare setting arena of emergency department, critical care and medical/surgical/pediatrics. Experience in medical records review, summaries and depositions
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| Thirty years experience treating persons with traumatic brain injury
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| Combining the highest level credential in respiratory care with 30 years experience will provide you with what I believe to be the most reliable expert witness in this field you can find.
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| EW # is a board certified internist by the ABIM who is ready to review your medical malpractice case.
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| - Medical malpractice
- Medical chart review and issue clarification
- Workers compensation
- Pharmaceutical product liability
- Health care law
- Nursing home negligence
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| 19 years of experience in serving clients, in over 35 states, with a professional focus on the financial and economic aspects of healthcare service sector entities.
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| Knowledgable in Family Practice and nurse triage including telephone guidelines usage. Retired from active medical practice after 20 years in 1998 due to back surgeries.
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| OBSTETRICIAN/GYNECOLOGIST Expert Witness. Harvard Trained. Former Harvard Faculty. Excellent credentials, pleasant appearance and very jury friendly
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| Pulmonary Internist/Chest Physician. 20+ years experience Medical Malpractice and Personal Insury. Retained 500+ times. 50+ trial appearances. Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine UCLA. Areas of expertise: Wrongful Death, Toxic Torts....
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| Legal Nurse Consulting provides unbiased, knowledgeable opinion on case merit, and provides an accurate, substantiated written opinion on the standard of nursing care provided.
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| EMLA, INC. IS A PHYSICIAN-BASED LITIGATION ANALYSIS COMPANY SPECIALIZING EXCLUSIVELY IN EMERGENCY MEDICINE MALPRACTICE.
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| Cardiothoracic Nurse with 27 years experience, legal nurse consultant.
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| Medical Expert in Infectious Disease and HIV/AIDS.
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| Pediatric Nurse Practitioner in the Cardiovascular Program Children's Hospital, Boston. 13 years experience in cardiovascular nursing, 17 years experience in pediatric nursing.
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| EW #13770 has been trained and board certified in both general pediatrics and pediatric critical care medicine. He has written a number of texts for physicians and health professionals.
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| Dr. Mayer is an academic epidemiologist and biostatistician trained in medicine, psychiatry and statistics. He divides his time between Baltimore and Phoenix. He has done expert witnessing for 30 years....
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| Board certified and residency trained in emergency medicine , more than 14,000 hours of clinical practice, licensed in NV & CA, medical malpractice expert, impecable record.
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| since 1990 and through 60,000 cases has provided exemplary in house case evaluation services and provisions of medical expert witnesses from our panel of over 6,200 specialists nationwide.
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| Medical Legal Consultants, Screening for Medical, Dental and Psychiatric Malpractice
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| Specialty: Family Practice, Sport Medicine
Board Certified: Family Practice; Fellow, Am. College Sports Medicine; Emergency medicine experience
Deposed/Testified Last 4 Yrs: 20
Years in Practice 20
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| Medical and Dental Malpractice U.S. and Canada: Case Evaluations and Expert Witnesses since 1978
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| Looking for a emergency care physician expert?
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Find Emergency Care Physician experts and consultants for Emergency Care Physician litigation support at www.expertwitness.com. Available to be Emergency Care Physician expert witnesses and provide Emergency Care Physician forensic consulting in Emergency Care Physician litigation, in addition prepare Emergency Care Physician expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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Categories To Find "Emergency Care Physician" Experts:
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ADDICTION MEDICINE |
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Addiction Medicine Experts are physicians from all medical specialties and subspecialties that can include Internal Medicine, Family Practice, Psychiatry, Pediatrics, Emergency Medicine, Anesthesiology, Obstetrics/Gynecology and others.
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AMBULANCE |
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An ambulance is a vehicle designated for the transport of sick or injured people. The first ambulances called by that name were horse ambulances used in the American Civil War. The first practical ambulances were created by Dominique Jean Larrey, a French surgeon (17661842), for use in the Napoleonic Wars. Modern-day ambulances are typically large automobiles on a van or light truck chassis.
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BICYCLE HELMETS |
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A bicycle helmet is designed to provide head protection for cyclists. Helmets are most suitable for preventing injury in straight falls, and for reducing friction related damage to the head. Modern bicycle helmets were first developed in the 1970s.
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CANCER - GENERAL |
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Cancer is a class of diseases or disorders characterized by uncontrolled division of cells and the ability of these cells to invade other tissues, either by direct growth into adjacent tissue through invasion or by implantation into distant sites by metastasis. This unregulated growth is caused by damage to DNA, resulting in mutations to genes that encode for proteins controlling cell division. Many mutation events may be required to transform a normal cell into a malignant cell. These mutations can be caused by chemicals or physical agents called carcinogens, by close exposure to radioactive materials, or by certain viruses that can insert their DNA into the human genome. Mutations occur spontaneously, or are passed down generations as a result of germ line mutations.
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CLAIMS |
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A claim is a legal action to obtain money, property or the enforcement of a right protected by law against another party.
Individuals and businesses purchase insurance policies to protect against monetary losses. In the event of a loss, policyholders submit claims, or requests for payment, seeking compensation for their loss. Adjusters, appraisers, examiners, and investigators work primarily for property and casualty insurance companies, for whom they handle a wide variety of claims alleging property damage, liability, or bodily injury. Their main role is to investigate the claims, negotiate settlements, and authorize payments to claimants, all the while mindful not to violate the claimants rights under Federal and State privacy laws. They must determine whether the customers insurance policy covers the loss and how much of the loss should be paid to the claimant. Although many adjusters, appraisers, examiners, and investigators have overlapping functions and may even perform the same job, the insurance industry generally assigns specific roles to each of these claims workers.
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CRITICAL CARE |
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Intensive Care Medicine or critical care medicine is concerned with providing greater than ordinary medical care and observation to people in a critical or unstable condition.
People requiring intensive care include those after major surgery, with severe head trauma, life-threatening acute illness, respiratory insufficiency, coma, haemodynamic insufficiency, severe fluid imbalance or with the failure of one or more of the major organ systems (life-critical systems or others).
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EMERGENCY MEDICAL SYSTEMS |
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The Emergency Medical Service system (known by the acronym "EMS" in the USA and Canada) is responsible for providing pre-hospital (or out-of-hospital) care by paramedics, emergency medical technicians (EMT's), and medical first responders (MFRs in US terminology). The goal of EMS is to provide early treatment to those in need of urgent medical care, and ultimately rapid transportation to an Emergency department. Stabilizing patients early (within the golden hour) significantly increases their chances of survival, particularly in the event of a heart attack, diabetic emergency, or severe physical trauma.
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EMERGENCY MEDICINE |
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EMERGENCY MEDICINE - The branch of medicine concerned with the provision of immediate treatment to the acutely ill or injured. Emergency medicine is a branch of medicine that is practiced in a hospital emergency department, in the field (in a modified form; see EMS), and other locations where initial medical treatment of illness takes place.
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EMS - Emergency Medical Service |
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The Emergency Medical Service system (known by the acronym "EMS" in the USA and Canada) is responsible for providing pre-hospital (or out-of-hospital) care by paramedics, emergency medical technicians (EMT's), and medical first responders (MFRs in US terminology). The goal of EMS is to provide early treatment to those in need of urgent medical care, and ultimately rapid transportation to an Emergency department. Stabilizing patients early (within the golden hour) significantly increases their chances of survival, particularly in the event of a heart attack, diabetic emergency, or severe physical trauma.
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EMT - emergency medical technician |
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An emergency medical technician (EMT) is an emergency responder trained to provide emergency medical services to the critically ill and injured.
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EXPERT WITNESS SALES |
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An expert witness is a witness, who by virtue of education, or profession, or experience, is believed to have special knowledge of his subject beyond that of the average person, sufficient that others may officially (and legally) rely upon his opinion.
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GENERAL PRACTICE |
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A general practitioner (GP) or family physician (FP) is a physician/medical doctor who provides primary care. A GP/FP treats acute and chronic illnesses, provides preventive care and health education for all ages and both sexes. Some also care for hospitalized patients, do minor surgery and/or obstetrics. The term general practitioner is common in the United Kingdom, where the word "physician" is only used for certain specialists and not for GPs.
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HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT |
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Managed care is a synonym for PPO, HMO, MCO, and POS.
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Managed care is a concept in U.S. health care which rose to dominance during the presidency of Ronald Reagan as a means to control Medicare payouts. As a major Medicare claims administrator, the Blue Cross-Blue Shield insurance firm was a major architect of managed care. It spread fairly quickly to the health insurance industry in the private sector.
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INFECTIOUS DISEASE |
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In medicine, infectious disease or communicable disease is disease caused by a biological agent such as by a virus, bacterium or parasite.
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MEDICAL |
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Medical - Having to do with or anything pertaining to Medical treatment, Medical Malpractice, Medical review, Medical Litigation.
Find MEDICAL experts and consultants for MEDICAL litigation support. Available to be MEDICAL expert witnesses and provide MEDICAL forensic consulting in MEDICAL litigation, in addition prepare MEDICAL expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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NURSING |
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Registered Nurses are professional nurses who often supervise the tasks performed by Licensed Practical Nurses, orderlies, medical assistants and nursing assistants. They provide direct care and make decisions regarding plans of care for individuals and groups of healthy, ill and injured people.
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OBSTETRICS |
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Obstetrics is the surgical specialty dealing with the care of a woman and her offspring during pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium (the period shortly after birth). Almost all modern obstetricians are also gynaecologists; see Obstetrics and gynaecology.
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PARALEGAL |
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A legal assistant or paralegal is a person, qualified by education, training or work experience who is employed or retained by a lawyer, law office, corporation, governmental agency or other entity and who performs specifically delegated substantive legal work for which a lawyer is responsible (ABA House of Delegates,1997).
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PARAMEDIC |
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A paramedic is a highly trained medical professional who responds to medical and trauma emergencies in the pre-hospital setting ("in-field") for the purpose of stabilizing a patient's condition before and during transportation to an appropriate medical facility, usually by ambulance.
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PREVENTATIVE MEDICINE |
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Generally speaking, preventive medicine (often mis-spelled and mis-pronounced "preventative medicine") is that part of medicine engaged with preventing disease rather than curing it. It can be contrasted not only with curative medicine, but also with public health methods (which work at the level of population health rather than individual health).
Professionals involved the public health aspect of this practice may be involved in entomology, pest control, and public health inspections. Public health inspections can include recreational waters, pools, beaches, food preparation and serving, and industrial hygiene inspections and surveys.
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PSYCHIATRY |
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Psychiatry is the branch of medicine that studies, diagnoses, and treats mental illness and behavioral disorders. While all physicians will encounter patients with mental illnesses and any of them may treat it, psychiatrists specialize in these areas. They are more extensively trained in the differential diagnosis (the distinguishing of various forms) and treatment of mental illness. Given the advantage of the preliminary medical training as well as further specialist training, psychiatry when practised properly offers a truly holistic approach to patient care. Many other professionals also provide mental health care, such as psychologists, nurse practitioners, counselors, physician assistants, and social workers. In general only doctors, nurse practitioners, or physician assistants may prescribe mental health medication in the United States[1]. In some countries, mental health medication may only be prescribed by medical doctors.
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STROKE |
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A stroke, also known as cerebrovascular accident (CVA), is an acute neurologic injury whereby the blood supply to a part of the brain is interrupted, either by a clot in the artery or if the artery bursts. The result is that the part of the brain perfused by that artery no longer can receive oxygen carried by the blood and it dies (becomes necrotic) with cessation of function from that part of the brain. In addition to tissue death, hemorrhages also cause damage from physical impingement of blood on the brain tissue. Stroke is a medical emergency and can cause permanent neurologic damage or even death if not promptly diagnosed and treated. It is the third leading cause of death and adult disability in the US and industrialized European nations (Jauch, 2005).
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URGENT / EMERGENCY CARE |
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Urgent care is the delivery of ambulatory care in a facility dedicated to the delivery of unscheduled, walk-in care outside of a hospital emergency department. The initial urgent care centers opened in the 1970s. Since then this sector of the healthcare industry has rapidly expanded to an approximately 17,000 centers. Many of these centers have been started by entrepreneurial physicians who have responded to the public need for convenient access to unscheduled medical care. Other centers have been opened by hospital systems, seeking to attract patients. Much of the growth of these centers has been fueled by the significant savings that urgent care centers provide over the care in a hospital emergency department. Many managed care organizations (MCOs) now encourage their customers to utilize the urgent care option.
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