January 14th, 2008

Doctor Flea Speaks Out

It’s been six months since I’ve mentioned the experience of “Flea,” the pediatrician who was not only an award winning blogger, but also decided to live blog his own medical malpractice trial under his pseudonym. He got busted on the witness stand by opposing counsel and the trial settled the next day. Two weeks later, it was on the front page of The Boston Globe (See: Doctor “Flea” Settles Malpractice Suit After Blog Exposed In Court.)

Flea has now given, it seems, his first interview on the subject. It comes in the National Review of Medicine (“Check my blog and call me in the morning“), a Canadian publication.

What does he have to say? From the article:

“No wonder when doctors write, they write namby-pamby noncommittal crap,” says Dr Lindeman, “it might get you in trouble someday.” His advice? “Don’t blog anonymously. For physicians, writing is dangerous. There is something really messed up about that.”

And, he adds, don’t write about your malpractice trial.

 

January 11th, 2008

Blawg Review of the Year Nominations To Close Soon

The race for Blawg Review of the Year will end soon, with the time to nominate ending on January 14. (Fortunately, I already had a handy graphic for this race.)

According to the anonymous Editor, the rules for nominating are:

This year, the award for Blawg Review of the Year will be given to that issue of Blawg Review, from #89 to #140 inclusive, that is nominated by the greatest number of those who have hosted an issue of Blawg Review from #1 through #140. Each of those hosts may nominate for Blawg Review of the Year 2007 as many issues, from #89 to #140 inclusive, as they wish to recognize for excellence by linking such nomination(s) on their blogs in a post dated not later than January 14, 2008, titled “Blawg Review Nominations” linking to the issue(s) nominated for Blawg Review of the Year. If you haven’t hosted Blawg Review yet, but are scheduled to host an upcoming issue of Blawg Review, your nominations will be counted as well. Just send an email to the editor, including a link to your post, to ensure that your nominations are counted. Nominations for one’s own presentation of Blawg Review, however excellent, will not be counted as a peer-reviewed nomination.

In this particular case, telling you to vote early and vote often won’t help.

A list of nominees to date can be found here.

 

January 10th, 2008

Should I Sue My Doctor?

That headline above is the title of a story currently running on CNN’s web site. It comes out of Atlanta about a patient that believes malpractice was committed on her during the course of a hysterectomy, and has necessitated three additional corrective procedures. Her allegation is that the surgeon erred by nicking a ureter, causing urine to accumulate in her abdomen. The patient, as it happens, is also a physician.

But when the doctor-patient tried to find an attorney to handle her case, she struck out. Why? Because the difficulty and expense of medical malpractice litigation results in de facto immunity for the medical profession in a great many cases. Without a catastrophic injury, it becomes very difficult when looking at the costs and benefits to undertake representation. The story is remarkably similar to one I wrote about the other day, about a California doctor seeking out a medical malpractice attorney (see: Another Tort “Reformer” Sees The Light).

The two stories point to a brutal reality of medical malpractice litigation and the contingency fee system. As a business model, it sucks. Big time. An attorney must lay out many thousands of dollars for years on end, while still paying the overhead of an office (not to mention the mortgage, car, kids, etc.) for a risky endeavor. Perhaps many such risky endeavors. Calling this a significant cash flow problem is an understatement. Then, if the case is won or settled favorably, you have to listen to people who are ignorant of the economic realities pretend that the legal fee is some kind of easily made gravy. One thing is for sure, it is not the road to any kind of economic security. I wrote about this months ago in Medical Malpractice Economics.

And so, the lawyers that get the inquiry of the type you see in this CNN story are faced with the same kind of decision those of us in the profession deal with every day. Turning away inquiries at a rate, if their experience is like mine, of probably 95-98%. Most won’t make it past the telephone interview, and if they do, past the office interview. I wrote about the mechanics of vetting the medical malpractice case back in May.

So these stories make headlines every so often. But for those that deal with this stuff, they come as no surprise at all.

The other day Susan Cartier Liebel made a request for stories about starting up your own practice, in a type of Letter to A New Lawyer. So here’s my advice. Think twice about any field where you spend your own money for years on end for a future result with no current cash flow. Line up your financial resources in advance. Start a line of credit with a bank now. Don’t wait for the time when you actually need it. Banks only want to lend money to people who already have money, not to those that are cash-strapped.

And I’m willing to bet that not a word of this was taught in your law school.

 

January 10th, 2008

What to Wear To Court — Dress Up or Down?

A story making the rounds the last few days involves a judge that delayed a sentencing for hours because a prosecutor was wearing an ascot instead of a tie. You can find various opinions on the subject at the WSJ Blog and Above the Law along with a host of others. But it was Anne Reed who posted on “What Not to Wear” that caught my attention.

Because the issue of what not to wear to court begs the question of what a lawyer should wear. I’ve seen everything from schlumpy sport coats to silk pocket hankies with folks dressed to the nines.

So if you are appearing in the well of the courtroom, do you dress down with modest clothes or up with your best? I once tried a case in the Bronx with a guy whose collars were always bent out of shape because there were no collar stays. I mentioned it to him in passing and he told me, “I do it on purpose.”

So here’s my take: I dress boring. Neat and clean blue and gray suits. Modest ties. No French cuffs, pocket squares or spit-shined shoes. My goal is simple: I don’t want the jury to even notice what I’m wearing. I don’t want them distracted from the story that I think needs telling, or the cross-exam I’m undertaking.

I’m in the courthouse to do a job, and that is to effectively communicate the case. And dressing either up or down will make me stand out in some fashion and that is a distraction that takes away from the case. Of course, since I’m representing the plaintiff, I can’t afford to have any juror take offense or be distracted. Defense lawyers, especially criminal defense, may feel like they can get more yardage out of a little schtick. They only have to convince one person, after all.

Your mileage may vary.