Paediatric medico-legal reports
Causation and Prognosis Reports
A claim often turns on causation, whether a failure in care actually caused the child’s injury. We provide independent paediatric causation and prognosis reports addressing what caused the injury and what it means for the child’s future. You see the expert’s CV before you instruct. The report is written to the expert’s CPR Part 35 duty to the court. We act for instructing solicitors on either side.
Overview
What a causation and prognosis report is
A causation report addresses whether, on the balance of probabilities, the injury was caused or materially contributed to by the care in question. A prognosis addresses the child’s likely course and outcome.
Why it matters legally
When a causation and prognosis report is commissioned
It is commissioned in clinical negligence and personal injury claims once breach of duty is in issue, and wherever the defence disputes that the failing changed the outcome.
What the report covers
The questions a causation and prognosis report answers
Who produces it
The specialist depends on the injury
The relevant specialist produces the report: a neonatologist, paediatric neurologist, paediatric neuroradiologist or consultant paediatrician, depending on the injury.
Where it is used
Claims that rely on this report
Causation and prognosis reports support cerebral palsy and HIE and hypoxic brain injury claims, and clinical negligence and birth injury proceedings more broadly.
FAQ
Causation and prognosis reports: common questions
Factual causation asks whether the failing caused the injury in fact; the legal test is applied by the court to those findings.
Yes, where the injury has more than one cause, the expert can address whether the failing made a material contribution.
In clinical negligence and personal injury claims once breach of duty is in issue, and wherever the defence disputes that the failing changed the outcome.
Yes. Where the parties agree, our experts can act as a single joint expert; otherwise as a party-appointed expert. Either way, the duty is to the court.
Within 48 hours of your enquiry, with the CV sent for review before you instruct.
Instructing on a causation report?
Send your case details and we will allocate the right specialist within 48 hours, with a same-working-day quotation and the CV before you instruct.