Paediatric medico-legal reports

Screening and Preliminary Opinions

Before committing to a full report, a short independent view can tell you whether a claim is worth pursuing. We provide screening reports and preliminary opinions on the medical merits. You see the expert’s CV before you instruct, and can commission a full report once you decide to proceed. We act for instructing solicitors on either side.

  • Same-working-day quotation
  • CVs before you instruct
  • An expert allocated within 48 hours
Claim contextClinical negligence and personal injury, before full instruction
Central questionIs there a case to answer on the medical evidence
Report coversAn initial view on breach and causation, and what a full report needs
ExpertsThe relevant specialist for the injury

Overview

What a screening or preliminary opinion is

A screening or preliminary opinion is a concise, early opinion on whether there is a case to answer on the medical evidence.

Paediatric records of the kind reviewed when giving an early view on the medical merits of a claim
An early view is formed from the medical records to help you decide whether to proceed.

What the report covers

The ground a screening opinion covers

Initial view on breach and causation An early view on whether there is a case to answer on the medical evidence.
What a full report would address The questions a full CPR Part 35 report would need to cover if you proceed.

Who produces it

The relevant specialist for the injury

The opinion is produced by the relevant specialist for the injury. In clinical negligence this is often a consultant paediatrician, a neonatologist or a paediatric neurologist, depending on the question.

Where it is used

Claims that begin with a screening opinion

A screening opinion often precedes a full report in paediatric sepsis and clinical negligence and birth injury claims, where merits and funding need an early view.

Consultant paediatrician reviewing medical records to give an early independent view on a claim
Every report is written to the expert’s CPR Part 35 duty to the court, for instructing solicitors on either side.

FAQ

Screening and preliminary opinions: common questions

No, it informs your decision; a full CPR Part 35 report follows if you proceed.

An initial view on breach and causation, and what a full report would need to address.

At the outset, to help you decide on merits and funding before a full report.

The relevant specialist for the injury, often a consultant paediatrician, a neonatologist or a paediatric neurologist.

Within 48 hours of your enquiry, with the CV sent for review before you instruct.

Screening and preliminary opinions

Instructing on a preliminary opinion?

Send your case details and we will turn a preliminary opinion around quickly, with a same-working-day quotation and the CV before you instruct.