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| Principal of firm established to provide independent investigation and expert testimony utilizing over 45 years of professional experience in mechanical and safety engineering, research, inspection and testing. Primarily involved with studying performance, determining defects, reconstructing accidents, evaluating construction, analyzing failures, discovering hazards, confirming intended use, misuse, abuse and/or safety violations in Consumer Products, Industrial Equipment, Construction Materials...
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| Qualified as an expert witness in civil and criminal courts.
Injury biomechanics in automotive crashes, aircraft crashes, elevator failures, sports impacts and slips and falls.
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| 20 years chemical engineering R&D, teachnical consulting and expert witness for attorneys. Expertise in applied chemistry, engineering, polymers, and chemical processes/products
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| Here's how you can stop from being cheated. We solve cases throughout the US. Contact us for a Free initial consultation concerning the authenticity of your documents.
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| Medical device accidents, patient injury or death involving medical
Devices, medical device use errors, medical device product liability,
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| EW #13769 specializes in biomechanical analysis, testing and design. He has many years of academic biomechanics experience and served as an expert witness in injury and medical device failure cases.
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| Gerald Spencer is a Registered Professional Mechanical and Electrical Engineer providing expert Engineering Design Services and/or Legal Expert Witness services related to HVAC; I have been a multidiscipline project manager for the past 30 years. I am also the Mechanical and Electrical designer and the engineer....
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| Qualified as an expert for medical devices and technology. Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering, Licensed Engineer and Certified Clinical Engineer.
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| Certified clinical engineer expertise: medical device safety, hospital accidents, and product liability.
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| EW #765 is able to provide expertise in the areas of Medical device accidents
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| 30 years experience - all aspects of medical devices; Broad range of products; 31 patents; PI, PL & IP; Landmark cases; Plaintiff/defense; Seasoned, successful, affable; Impeccable references.
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| Medical device injury analysis
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| 25 yrs experience w/medical equipment,Registered and Certified engineer. Director, Biomedical Engineering Dpt., Chairman technical standrads committees, Receipient FDA Commissioner Special Citation.
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| Thirty years in telecommunications, directed energy weapons, and related optical/electronic technologies; MEMS, optical medical sensors, optoelectronics, product development; eight patents
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| Bodycote Polymer is a materials technology consulting firm and laboratory specializing in failure analysis of plastic components and products, polymer analysis, and product development.
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| Solves difficult problems requiring chemical analysis and materials testing. 40 scientists, including 12 Ph.D.s, supervise testing, provide reports and are experienced as expert witnesses.
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| Cases invovling impact biomechanics and personal injury related to everyday objects. Analysis of medical devices. Safety assessments.
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| A highly experienced engineering consulting firm, we provide analysis services in a broad range of industries.
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| Specializes in cases involving technical and business matters related to intellectual property disputes as well as packaging and equipment failure causing personal injury and property damage
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| I.E.L. is an international business consulting, expert witness, and management education group with partners in Europe, Asia, and South America.
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| World-Class Plastic Scientists and an ISO-9000 certified state-of-the-art Testing Laboratory team up to provide Expert Witness and Failure Analysis services.
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| 35 years of international experience in safety, personal injury, products liability, warnings, human factors and manufacturing.
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| EW #13831 PhD, board certified Toxicologist, peer reviewer for NIH, EPA, Superfund, CDC, ATSDR, since 1984 an expert for attorneys in 14 states, specializing in complex, multidisciplinary cases.
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| Over 20 years experience in/with Internet, Computers, Programming, Data Processing, Dating and Social Networking, Community Portals, Engineering, Business Development.
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| New York City Based Forensic Audio/Video Examiner
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| Services relating to 911 and CAD event and dispatch creation for litigation. Specializes in large dispatch center event recreation and alanysis
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| Expert in Pharmaceutical and Device GMPs and sterilization.
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| Forty years designing and implementing telecommunications and computer technology for Wall St. and domestic & foreign banks.
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| 29 years of experience investigating and reconstructing highway vehicle collisions, and has been directly involved in over 4000 collision investigations, collision analysis and collision reconstructions....
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| Specializing in the review of product liability claims, identification, analysis and catagorizing hazards, misuses,misapplications of the product, the manufacturing process or the material involved.
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| InterCity is entering its 30th year as a provider of forensic engineering, consulting and expert testimony to thousands of law offices, insurance companies and government agencies.
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| Expert Witness Sales Account
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| Looking For An Expert Witness
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| 26 years experience as Emergency Medical Technician, including EMS instructor and chief of service. Consultant to state EMS agencies.
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| Medical Legal Consultants, Screening for Medical, Dental and Psychiatric Malpractice
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| Looking for a medical device engineering expert?
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Find Medical Device Engineering experts and consultants for Medical Device Engineering litigation support at www.expertwitness.com. Available to be Medical Device Engineering expert witnesses and provide Medical Device Engineering forensic consulting in Medical Device Engineering litigation, in addition prepare Medical Device Engineering expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
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Categories To Find "Medical Device Engineering" Experts:
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AUTO - AIR BAGS |
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An airbag, also known as a Supplementary/Secondary Restraint System (SRS) or as an Air Cushion Restraint System (ACRS), is a flexible membrane or envelope, inflatable to contain air or some other gas. Air bags are most commonly used for cushioning, in particular after very rapid inflation in the case of an automobile collision.
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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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BIOMATERIAL TOXICOLOGY |
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Biocompatible materials are intended to interface with biological systems to evaluate, treat, augment or replace any tissue, organ or function of the body
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BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING |
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Biomedical engineers use their expertise in biology, medicine, physics, mathematics, engineering science and communication to make the world a healthier place. The biomedical engineer is ideally trained to work at the intersection of science, medicine and mathematics to solve biological and medical problems.
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BIOMEDICAL PHYSICS |
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Biomedical physics involves thorough investigation of any matter related to the domain of living or biological systems. Usually biomedical denotes a greater stress on problems related to human health and diseases. Where some technology development is used, Biomedical engineering term is often used. Bioengineering has two wings: Biomedical Engineering (dealing more with the Biophysics), and Biotechnology (dealing more with the Biochemistry).
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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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DATA PROCESSING |
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Data processing is any computer process that converts data into information. The processing is usually assumed to be automated and running on an a mainframe, minicomputer, microcomputer, or personal computer. Because data are most useful when well-presented and actually informative, data-processing systems are often referred to as information systems to emphasize their practicality. Nevertheless, both terms are roughly synonymous, performing similar conversions; data-processing systems typically manipulate raw data into information, and likewise information systems typically take raw data as input to produce information as output.
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DUMBWAITER |
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A small elevator used to transport food or other items between floors of a building.
An elevator is a transport device used to move goods or people vertically. Outside North America, elevators are known more commonly as lifts, although the word elevator is familiar from American movies and television shows, just as some Americans are aware of lift from imported entertainment. Other languages may have loanwords based on either elevator (e.g. Japanese) or lift (e.g. Cantonese). Because of wheelchair access laws, elevators are often a requirement in new buildings with multiple floors.
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ECONOMIC ANALYSIS |
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Economic base analysis was developed by Robert Murray Haig in his work on the Regional Plan of New York in 1928. Briefly, activities in an area divide into two categories basic and non-basic. Basic industries are those exporting from the region; non-basic (or service) industries support basic industries. Because of data problems, it is not practical to study industry output and trade flows to and from a region. As an alternative, basic and non-basic concepts are operationalized using employment data.
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ELEVATOR |
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An elevator is a transport device used to move goods or people vertically. Outside North America, elevators are known more commonly as lifts, although the word elevator is familiar from American movies and television shows, just as some Americans are aware of lift from imported entertainment. Other languages may have loanwords based on either elevator (e.g. Japanese) or lift (e.g. Cantonese). Because of wheelchair access laws, elevators are often a requirement in new buildings with multiple floors.
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ENGINEERING - AUTOMATION |
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Automation (ancient Greek: = self dictated) or industrial automation or numerical control is the use of control systems such as computers to control industrial machinery and processes, replacing human operators. In the scope of industrialization, it is a step beyond mechanization, where human operators are provided with machinery to assist them with the physical requirements of work.
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ENGINEERING - CHEMICAL |
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Chemical engineering is the application of science, in particular chemistry, physics and mathematics, to the process of converting raw materials or chemicals into more useful or valuable forms.
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ENGINEERING - ELECTRICAL |
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Electrical engineering (sometimes referred to as electrical and electronics engineering) is a professional engineering discipline that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism. The field first became an identifiable occupation in the late nineteenth century with the commercialization of the electric telegraph and electrical power supply. The field now covers a range of sub-disciplines including those that deal with power, control systems, electronics and telecommunications.
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ENGINEERING - FORENSIC |
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Forensic engineering is the investigation of materials, products, structures or components that fail or do not operate/function as intended. A criminal aspect is possible in any investigation but is not always the case; civil cases are much more common. Generally the purpose of a forensic engineering investigation is to locate cause or causes of failure with a view to improve performance or life of a component. It can also involve investigation of intellectual property claims, especially patents. Methods used in forensic investigations include reverse engineering, inspection of witness statements, a working knowledge of current standards, as well as examination of the failed component itself. The fracture surface of a failed product can reveal much information on how the item failed and the loading pattern prior to failure.
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ERGONOMICS |
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Ergonomics (or human factors) is the scientific discipline concerned with the understanding of interactions among humans and other elements of a system, and the profession that applies theory, principles, data, and methods to design in order to optimize human well-being and overall system performance (definition adopted by the International Ergonomics Association in 2000).
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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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FIBER OPTICS |
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An optical fiber (or fibre) is a transparent thin fiber, usually made of glass or plastic, for transmitting light. Fiber optics is the branch of science and engineering concerned with such optical fibers.
Optical fibers are commonly used in telecommunication systems, as well as in illumination, sensors, and imaging optics.
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HEARING LOSS |
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A hearing impairment is a decrease in one's ability to hear (i.e. perceive auditory information). While some cases of hearing loss are reversible with medical treatment, many lead to a permanent disability (often called deafness).
If the hearing loss occurs at a young age, interference with the acquisition of spoken language and social development may occur. Hearing aids and cochlear implants may alleviate some of the problems caused by hearing impairment, but are often insufficient. People who have hearing impairments, especially those who develop a hearing problem later in life, often require support and technical adaptations as part of the rehabilitation process.
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HYDROLOGY |
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Hydrology (from Greek: Yδρoλoγια, Yδωρ+Λoγos, Hydrologia, the "study of water") is the study of the movement, distribution, and quality of water throughout the Earth, and thus addresses both the hydrologic cycle and water resources. A practitioner of hydrology is a hydrologist, working within the fields of either earth or environmental science, or civil and environmental engineering.
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INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION |
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Automation (ancient Greek: = self dictated) or industrial automation or numerical control is the use of control systems such as computers to control industrial machinery and processes, replacing human operators. In the scope of industrialization, it is a step beyond mechanization. Whereas mechanization provided human operators with machinery to assist them with the physical requirements of work, automation greatly reduces the need for human sensory and mental requirements as well.
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MACHINERY SAFEGUARDING |
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Crushed hands and arms, severed fingers, blindness -- the list of possible machinery-related injuries is as long as it is horrifying. There seem to be as many hazards created by moving machine parts as there are types of machines. Safeguards are essential for protecting workers from needless and preventable injuries.
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