Certified Legal Nurse Consultant's Pain and Suffering Analysis
Spurs Record Settlement
When an attorney takes on a medical-related lawsuit, the
attorney is confronted with enormous volumes of medical records
crammed with esoteric terminology, inexplicable shorthand and
indecipherable handwriting. Yet his client's (plaintiff or
defense) future depends on the attorney understanding those
records and using them to support the case effectively. That's
why being a Certified Legal Nurse Consultant is the healthiest
thing that will ever happen to your attorney-client's practice.
On a sunny Virginia morning, meter maid Beverly Adams was
severely burned over 50% of her body when her three-wheeled
motorcycle turned over and caught fire. "She was making a slight
turn on dry pavement," says her attorney, Rob Walker of Robert
Walker and Associates, Richmond. "The vehicle was defectively
designed with the driver sitting right on top of the gas tank."
That arrangement almost proved lethal for Adams.
"Under Virginia law," continues Walker, "you can't sue an
employer for an on-the-job injury that takes place in the course
of employment. Instead, we took on the engineering firm and the
foreign corporation that designed and distributed the vehicle."
According to Walker, his 42-year-old nonsmoking client sang in
her church choir and was a 15-year veteran of the police force.
Adams had a reputation for going by the book and writing more
tickets than most of her peers. "She was the perfect plaintiff,"
he says.
The accident changed Adams' life completely and permanently. "In
addition to her severe burns," says Walker, "she lost four
fingers on one hand, lost her eyelids, ears, nose and most of
her hair. She spent three months in the hospital, almost a year
in rehab, and needed 32 reconstructive surgeries and other
surgical procedures. For the rest of her life she'll have to use
prosthetic devices and special creams for her damaged skin."
How does the attorney make sense of a year's worth of
complicated medical records describing such devastating
injuries? How does he even begin to grasp the pain and suffering
Adams endured, much less make it real for a jury? Walker's
answer is simple: He doesn't. He calls in an expert. His expert
of choice was Sharon Scott, RN, CLNC.
The Certified Legal Nurse Consultant Is the Key to Understanding
the Medical Issues
For the Adams case, Scott tapped both her 19 years of nursing
experience and her extensive training as a Certified Legal Nurse
Consultant. "I developed a detailed chronology of the case and
explained all the medical procedures in lay terms," she says.
"My services included indexing the records and explaining the
difference between second and third degree burns. I also pulled
out every recorded instance of Adam's pain and suffering and
prepared a chart listing all the pain medications, sedatives,
etc., she took."
Walker explains the value of Scott's Certified Legal Nurse
Consultant services. "I had no idea what was being done to the
plaintiff because much of it was in medical shorthand. Sharon
indexed the records so we could find what we were looking for.
Then on a daily basis she summarized Adams' condition,
treatments, surgeries, medications and outcome." This detailed
summary made it easier for Walker to answer defense
interrogatories and to decide which witnesses to call.
"We were most concerned about Adams' pain and suffering," he
continues. "We needed a handle on that. Sharon put all the
procedures and surgeries into words we could understand. For
example, debridement is just a medical term to me. Sharon
explained that meant scrubbing off the dead skin. When you see
how often they did that, you understand how much my client
suffered."
Scott's next step was to make the actual amount of painkiller
Adams received real for people. Walker explains, "Sharon tallied
all the dosages for the first six weeks of treatment, then
concluded by saying my client had received enough medicine to
relieve the pain of 850 heart attacks or 1,700-3,400 hours of
labor. That vivid picture of what Adams went through gave us an
advantage over the defense attorney when we started talking
about damages."
Although the case was pending in federal court, local rules
required Walker and the defense to attempt a good-faith
settlement. "Both sides chose mediation," he says, "and we
settled in about a day. Sharon's summary made the damages so
evident, we never had to discuss them. This made for a cleaner
conference focused on the liability issues."
The result was a $14,000,000 settlement, at that time (2000) one
of the largest out-of-court settlements ever reached for a
personal injury case in Virginia. "One reason we got this
settlement," Walker acknowledges, "was the understanding of the
medical records Sharon gave us." An indirect result of this case
was that the vehicle in which Adams nearly died has been
redesigned to move the gas tank and its opening to the back.
Certified Legal Nurse Consultants Save Attorneys Time and Money
I have a small office," Walker says. "I can't read 4,000 pages
of medical records. Having the services of someone like Sharon
allows me to take on complex cases that I could not handle
otherwise."
Scott's status as an independent Certified Legal Nurse
Consultant in private practice is an advantage for Walker. "I
trust her judgment and her opinions more than I would a nurse
working in my own office. An independent consultant doesn't have
an ax to grind with you. If you get a case of questionable
merit, Sharon will tell you not to pursue it."
Another benefit of working with a Certified Legal Nurse
Consultant is cost savings. "You can lose a lot of money on
cases with complex medical issues if you're not on firm ground,"
says Walker. "My out-of-pocket expenses on the Adams case were
around $240,000. Sharon can quickly and economically identify
whether you have a case, and she can cut down on your staff time
going through medical records. If you're in a small or
medium-sized firm and you need help indexing records or
understanding complex medical issues, a Certified Legal Nurse
Consultant is indispensable."
Inc. Top 10 Entrepreneur Vickie L. Milazzo, RN, MSN, JD is the
founder and president of Vickie Milazzo Institute. She is
credited by The New York Times with creating the legal nurse consulting
profession in 1982. She is the recipient of the Nursing
Excellence Award for Advancing the Profession and the Stevie
Award (business's Oscar) as Mentor of the Year. Vickie has
revolutionized the careers of thousands of RNs. She is the
author of Inside Every Woman: Using the 10 Strengths You
Didn't Know You Had to Get the Career and Life You Want Now,
coming March 2006 from John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Preorder this
anticipated bestseller now at www.Amazon.com Reprinting
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