Paediatric medico-legal reports

Non-Accidental Injury and Child Abuse Claims: Expert Reports

Non-accidental injury cases turn on independent, careful expert evidence. We provide paediatric expert reports on suspected non-accidental injury, assessing whether the clinical and imaging findings are consistent with the accounts given. For non-accidental injury we use court-experienced consultants. 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.

  • Same-working-day quotation
  • CVs before you instruct
  • An expert allocated within 48 hours
Claim contextCare proceedings and criminal proceedings
Central questionsWhether findings are consistent with the account given
ReportsFindings and differential diagnosis, child-protection
ExpertsConsultant paediatrician, paediatric radiology

Overview

What non-accidental injury means in a case

Non-accidental injury describes injuries thought to have been inflicted rather than caused by an accident. The expert’s role is an independent assessment of the findings; whether injury was inflicted is a matter for the court.

Paediatric radiology of the kind reviewed when assessing whether findings are consistent with the account given
Fracture dating and skeletal survey interpretation are assessed independently alongside the clinical records.

Reports we produce

The reports a non-accidental injury case relies on

Experts who assess it

The specialists on a non-accidental injury case

A consultant paediatrician assesses the clinical picture and a paediatric radiologist provides fracture dating and skeletal survey interpretation.

Case-type context

Where these cases sit

These cases sit in family care proceedings and criminal proceedings, and occasionally in civil claims.

Consultant reviewing clinical records and imaging for an independent report
Every report is written to the expert’s CPR Part 35 duty to the court, for instructing solicitors on either side.

FAQ

Non-accidental injury: common questions

By assessing whether the pattern, ageing and mechanism of the injuries are consistent with the account given, and by considering alternative explanations.

Yes, an independent differential diagnosis is central to the expert’s role, considering medical explanations as well as inflicted injury.

The expert weighs medical explanations and accidental mechanisms as part of the differential diagnosis, not only inflicted injury.

Yes. Our court-experienced consultants report independently in family care proceedings and in criminal proceedings.

Yes. The assessment is independent, and whether injury was inflicted is a matter for the court.

Non-accidental injury claims

Instructing on a non-accidental injury case?

Send your case details and we will allocate a court-experienced consultant within 48 hours, with a same-working-day quotation and the CV before you instruct.