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When can You Expect Your Settlement Check

Once you have settled your accident or medical malpractice case, you will want to know when you will be getting your settlement check. All victims will have this question in mind when they settle their case. They would want to receive the check as quickly as possible.

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Why are TV Ads of Lawyers Unreliable

Many attorneys put commercials on TV to market their services and their firm’s capabilities. However, can you depend on the content of these ads to make a decision about which lawyer to choose? The answer is definitely not, because these commercials do not give any useful information. All these TV commercials about attorneys advertising say the same thing. They all say that if you have been injured, you should call me, as we have been in this business for a long time. However, these ads fail to tell you why you should choose them, or why they are different from any other lawyers.

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Why the Judge Wants the Two Lawyers to Agree on Certain Facts

Did you know that before a medical malpractice trial can actually start the judge would want the two lawyers to stipulate to a set of facts that are already agreed to? In every single case, a certain set of facts are clearly agreed to. For instance, in a medical malpractice case, the two sides will agree when the incident in question took place, where it took place, and so on. Hence, there are certain facts that are clearly agreed to and stipulated.

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Will Aggressive Cross Examination Work Every Time

Sometimes an aggressive line of cross-examination by the plaintiff’s attorney could backfire in a medical malpractice case. At trial, when the lawyer is cross-examining the doctor or a medical expert of the defense aggressively, it might backfire and harm the case if the lawyer is considering to be badgering the witness. However, if the doctor is combative, repeatedly refuses to answer the questions in simple yes or no, and fights with the attorney for every little word and semantics, then an aggressive cross-examination may not backfire.

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Representing surgical malpractice claims in New York

Everyone knows that surgical procedures have inherent risks, but many patients don’t realize that one of the major risks they face during surgery is medical negligence. Each year, 98,000 patients die as a direct result of some form of medical malpractice, according to an Institute of Medicine study.

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What happens when a Doctor Intentionally Causes Harm

If a doctor intentionally causes you harm in New York, then his insurance company will most likely not provide him with the coverage. Every doctor in New York is required to carry medical malpractice insurance. They do that for the key reason that if the patient suffers harm because of the doctor’s carelessness, the patient has the ability to be compensated by the doctor’s insurance company.

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While the Jury Deliberates

What should you do when the jury is deliberating? You have filed a medical malpractice lawsuit, it has gone all the way to trial, and at the end, the jury has moved on to deliberate. What do you do in the mean time? The jury could deliberate the case for a few minutes or they could take many hours or longer, for them to reach a verdict.

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Can the Doctors School Grades be Subpoenaed

When you have filed a medical malpractice case in New York, is it possible to subpoena the medical school grades of the doctor you are suing, to show that he was not a solid or respectable student? One of the aspects your lawyer will want to find out is how the doctor in question, did in medical school. You might think that if we are able to show to the jury that he was a pitiful student, then it would be easy to establish that he did not know what he was doing while treating you.

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Can Witnesses be Taken Out of Order

Usually in a medical malpractice trial, witnesses are presented in a certain order. However, witnesses can be taken out of order as well, and for doing that, permission has to be issued from the court.

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Defining a Prep Session for a Deposition

There is a preparation session to get you ready for your pretrial session, which is a question and answer session called a deposition. You have filed a medical malpractice lawsuit for the injuries and losses you have suffered due to the negligence of a doctor or a hospital. Before the trial begins, there is the deposition, where you will be asked questions by the defense attorney. Your lawyer will want to prepare you before you actually face this session in actuality.

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