Services

Medicolegal reporting is the process of providing a formal medical opinion based on clinical evidence for legal purposes. It bridges medicine and law by documenting injuries, illnesses, or disability in a way that can be used in civil litigation, criminal cases, insurance claims, or compensation assessments. Read more….

The remit of medicolegal reporting typically includes:

  • Assessment of injury or illness and its severity
  • Determination of causation (how and when the injury occurred)
  • Evaluation of functional impairment and prognosis
  • Review of treatment received and future treatment needs
  • Estimation of long-term disability or impact on work and daily life
  • Preparation of objective expert reports for court or legal parties

The medicolegal expert does not act as a treating clinician but as an independent expert witness.

Benefits of Medicolegal Reporting

For claimants:

  • Supports access to fair compensation
  • Provides independent validation of injury and disability
  • Helps document long-term health impact

For defendants (e.g., insurers, employers, NHS bodies):

  • Provides objective assessment of extent of liability
  • Helps prevent fraudulent or exaggerated claims
  • Assists in fair settlement decisions

For the legal system:

  • Provides expert medical evidence
  • Aids courts in reaching informed decisions
  • Ensures consistency and objectivity in injury evaluation


I offer expert medicolegal services in preparing full ports for the solicitors and agencies. I also offer enhanced consultation and prepare extended clinic letter (client self-initiative ) which can support litigation proceedings but will not replace the requirement of full medicolegal report.

1. Claimant Reports

  • Prepared on behalf of the injured party
  • Focus on documenting injury impact and prognosis
  • Used to support compensation claims
  • Example: personal injury claims, medical negligence claims

2. Defendant Reports

  • Prepared on behalf of the defending party (e.g., insurer, employer, NHS trust)
  • Focus on assessing validity, extent, and causation of injury
  • May challenge severity, duration, or causal link


3. Joint Expert Reports

  • Agreed expert acting for both sides
  • Increasingly preferred in civil litigation
  • Reduces conflict between opposing expert opinions


4. Court-Appointed Expert Reports

  • Independent expert appointed by the court
  • Provides neutral opinion to assist judicial decision-making