Psychiatric and Neuropsychological Evidence in Civil Litigation 2017


Course Date: January 20, 2017

Total: 5h 44min

Introduction

Roles and Boundaries: Lawyers, Patients and Mental Health Professionals

  • qualifications and standards
  • professionalism/boundaries and ethics
  • engagement issues and the expert report
  • when and how to get expert assistance

Dr. Roy J. O’Shaughnessy Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, UBC, Vancouver

Unpacking Mental Disorders: Co-Morbidity and Causation

  • limitations in  medico-legal settings
  • common mental disorders
  • MTBI and PTSD
  • co-morbidity

Dr. Roy J. O’Shaughnessy Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, UBC, Vancouver

Networking Break

The Legal Framework for Psychiatric and Neuropsychological Evidence

  • the medical-legal nexus
  • causation and indivisible injuries
  • co-morbidity
  • prior history and vulnerability: thin skull and crumbling skull
  • the role of mitigation
  • assessing damages

Catherine L. Woods, QC Alexander Holburn Beaudin & Lang LLP, Vancouver
Albert Roos, QCSugden McFee Roos LLP, Vancouver

Neuropsychological Assessments

  • the training and qualifications of neuropsychologists
  • caveats with Canadian professional certification and US specialty boards
  • what kind of experience to look for
  • what is Neuropsychological Testing and what it brings to brain injury claims

Dr. Michael Joschko Consultant in Clinical Psychology and Clinical Neuropsychology,  Victoria

Networking Lunch with Featured Speaker

Appellate Review of Expert Medical Evidence
The Honourable Mr. Justice Peter M. WillcockBritish Columbia Court of Appeal, Vancouver

Neuropsychiatric Complication after Traumatic Brain Injury

  • overview of the taxonomy of TBI severity
  • become familiar with common psychiatric complications of TBI including depression and PTSD
  • appreciate common post-TBI neurological issues including headache, sleep problems, and dementia

Dr. William PanenkaAssistant Professor (Psychiatry), Faculty of Medicine, UBC, Vancouver

Chronic Pain: Understanding the Past, Moving into the Future

  • how we understand pain
  • assessment issues
  • treatment challenges and opportunities
  • implications for litigation

Dr. Stephen R. WisemanPsychiatrist, St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver

Networking Break

Psychiatric and Neuropsychological Evidence at Trial

  • what a good report should contain
  • the single expert approach — implications for psych issues (doctor and lawyer)
  • best practices for managing your expert pre-trial and at trial
  • practical tips and pointers

Moderator: Catherine L. Woods, QCAlexander Holburn Beaudin & Lang LLP, Vancouver
Carla L. Forth, QCGuild Yule LLP, Vancouver 
Dr. Michael JoschkoConsultant in Clinical Psychology and Clinical Neuropsychology, Victoria
Dr. Roy J. O’ShaughnessyClinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, UBC, Vancouver
Dr. William PanenkaAssistant Professor (Psychiatry), Faculty of Medicine, UBC , Vancouver
Dr. Stephen R. WisemanPsychiatrist, St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver

Concluding Remarks