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Tanoy Bose   16 August 2015

doctor as a legal advisor

Hallo experts, Let me introduce myself as a practising consultant physician with MBBS,MD medicine as qualification practising at Kolkata. I want to know whether can I serve as a medicolegal advisor in medicolegal cases regarding cases of medical negligence. Do I need to be an LLB for this purpose? How can I put some valuable light or opinion in these cases of medical negligence where I consider that I am more knowledgeable than noon medical persons in finding possible loopholes in healthcare which in fact of full of loopholes Regards


 1 Replies

SAINATH DEVALLA (LEGAL CONSULTANT)     17 August 2015

 
Medical Jurisprudence: An Indian Law Perspective
"Medicolegal" is the term, which incorporates the basics of two sister professions i.e. Medicine and Law. Everybody talks about the law but few, aside from lawyers, judges and law teachers, have more than the vaguest notion of what constitutes law. The average layman often has about as much accurate information about the law as he has about medicine-or life on Venus. And, unfortunately, two professional groups suffer from more ignorance of law and medicine than is good for them:

Those lawyers, who do not constantly deal with medical issues in their legal practice, know very little about the medical profession and its problems; physicians frequently comprehend too little about the law and how it affects them in the practice of their profession. Medico legal experts can provide a link between these two professions for their smooth & effective functioning in a scientific manner. The physician meets the law at every turn. He confronts it when, as the treating doctor, he is subpoenaed as a witness in a personal injury lawsuit; he meets it when his aid is sought as an expert in connection with a claim that another member of his profession has been negligent and when he is faced in his office or clinic by a narcotic addict, a man with a gunshot wound, or a young couple seeking a blood test. He is face-to-face with the law when he is required to render an aggravating array of governmental reports or to preserve physical evidence for the benefit of a law enforcement agency. The physician, in fact, finds a great deal of the law intensely irritating, often because he is not absolutely clear as to its purpose.

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