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Article Excerpt Surviving the gauntlet of a hostile expert medical witness is an essential skill for any trial lawyer who litigates medical negligence and other types of personal injury actions. However, presenting your own expert as a credible authority is also crucial to prevailing on a contested issue of medicine. In a close case, winning this "battle of the experts" during trial can catapult your client to a successful outcome. The purpose of this article is to examine Florida law relating to the use of medical literature during direct examination of the medical expert at trial, and to suggest ways of maximizing the chances of getting this information before a jury.
Using Medical Literature
In the age of the Internet, lawyers and laymen alike have ready access to medical literature. There are free search engines (1) as well as paid Web sites (2) that make a vast body of medical literature available upon request. Additionally, various medical societies and subdivisions of the medical profession maintain Web sites, (3) many of which publish standards of practice, guidelines for care, and ethics codes. (4) These sources may be extremely helpful in understanding whether a client's case is supported by medical science. However, what use is all this information in court? Can you get it into evidence? The answers to these questions will be governed by the Florida Evidence Code.
The Florida Evidence Code
The use of medical literature at trial is governed primarily by two provisions of the Florida Evidence Code, [subsection] 90.704 and 90.706. Section 90.704 defines what an expert witness may rely upon to offer an opinion in court:
Basis for opinion by experts
The facts or data upon which an expert bases an opinion or inference may be those perceived by, or made known to the expert at or before the trial. If the facts or data are a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the subject to support the opinion expressed, the facts or data need not be admissible in evidence. (5)
This section provides the platform for direct examination. Simply put, the expert can use any information to formulate an opinion to be offered at trial, provided that the information is "of a type reasonably relied upon" by experts in the field. Inadmissibility of the information does not prevent the expert from expressing the opinion, provided this standard is satisfied. (6)
The purpose of this section, as discussed by the advisory committee note, is to permit experts to base their opinions on the same data they would ordinarily rely upon while rendering opinions in the course of their work. (7) Although [section] 90.704 permits the expert to base an opinion on inadmissible evidence, it is silent as to what, other than the opinion expressed, an expert may actually testify to at trial. As discussed below, the courts have imposed some limitations on the scope of testimony that the expert may offer at trial.
Section 90.706 of the evidence code addresses the use of medical literature in the context of cross-examination:
Authoritativeness of literature for use in cross-examination
Statement of facts or opinions on a subject of science, art or specialized knowledge contained in a published treatise, periodical, book, dissertation, pamphlet, or other writing may be used in cross-examination of an expert witness if the expert witness recognizes the author or the treatise, periodical, book dissertation, pamphlet, or other writing to be authoritative, or, notwithstanding non-recognition by the expert witness, if the trial court finds the author or the treatise, periodical, book, dissertation, pamphlet, or other writing to be...
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