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I had a law firm reach out to me and ask if I could eval a patient and fill out a form describing their level of functionality. I'm curious to know what the risks are if I do this.
I have completed a few of these for young adults (or late adolescents) with schizophrenia. It was actually pretty chill? I never got any pushback and don't have any forensic training. I felt it was the right thing to do and didn't charge for it, although I was salaried anyway at that job and not RVU based.I think we're all assuming that there is some sort of litigation going on. The OP isn't clear on that at all. This may be a SSDI request. Some people waste their money on retaining lawyers for that. That does not typically involve forensic level write-ups or assessments and I'd be very surprised if any of them have any psychometric testing behind them.
I had a law firm reach out to me and ask if I could eval a patient and fill out a form describing their level of functionality. I'm curious to know what the risks are if I do this.
yesThank you for your responses everyone. I wanted to provide more info on the form they want me to fill out. It is summarized as: "The “Report of Physician” is used to provide the court with a medical evaluation of an individual (often called the respondent) in cases involving guardianship of a person who may be disabled or incapacitated. It helps the judge determine whether a guardian should be appointed." As someone who is not knowledgeable about forensics, it is risky for me to proceed without guidance?
Absolutely should be. Exposure to civil cases and mentorship in those areas is something that sets a lot of the stronger forensics programs apart. Frankly, the basics of guardianship and/or conservatorship (if the state defines them differently) should be core for any decent general residency imo. Understanding what guardianship is and how it is established is essential when working with SPMI patients, that’s well within general psychiatry. I filled out a few of these in residency and several since. I’d actually argue that outpatient docs should be filling these out more often than inpatient as they’re the ones who treat patients longitudinally and can speak to their level of debility and actual need for ongoing, long-term lack of ability to care for themselves. Depending on the state this can be pretty straightforward in terms of what we actually fill out.I'm genuinely ignorant of this, do forensic fellowships have any focus on civil conservatorships?
Oh, that is way different. This is a guardianship evaluation. Your specific state will have a form about WHICH capacities are impaired, and to what degree. There are different types of capacities that you'll be asked to determine (e.g., capacity to consent to medical treatment, to consent to sexual relationships, enter into contracts, decide where to live, vote, "testamentary capacity, etc). There's multiple areas here, and each has a specific legal standard about what makes a "rational" decision. Most of what I said remains true, although your civil liability is probably lower.Thank you for your responses everyone. I wanted to provide more info on the form they want me to fill out. It is summarized as: "The “Report of Physician” is used to provide the court with a medical evaluation of an individual (often called the respondent) in cases involving guardianship of a person who may be disabled or incapacitated. It helps the judge determine whether a guardian should be appointed." As someone who is not knowledgeable about forensics, it is risky for me to proceed without guidance?
I wouldn't say focus, but it was a small part of my forensic fellowship. But all the fellows in my class did a ton more of basically the same thing during residency. I testified in court like 10 times during residency regarding conservatorship and/or contested involuntary holds, involuntary meds etc.I'm genuinely ignorant of this, do forensic fellowships have any focus on civil conservatorships?