Earlier this month, the Florida Supreme
Court declined to adopt a rule into the state's Evidence Code that
would have limited which doctors could testify as expert witnesses in
a medical malpractice case. The new rule was part of SB
1792, a pro-doctor medical malpractice bill passed into law
earlier this year.
Medical experts are a critical part of
any medical malpractice case. In order to be successful, an injured
plaintiff must provide an expert who can testify as to what the
appropriate standard of care was in the particular situation and also
deliver an opinion that the defendant doctor violated that standard
of care. Under Florida law currently, a plaintiff's medical expert
can be a doctor practicing in the same specialty or a similar
specialty that involves the same medical condition. The judge in a
medical malpractice case decides whether or not a proposed expert is
qualified before the doctor is permitted to serve as an expert
witness.
Under the new rule, which modifies
Florida Statute 766.102,
a plaintiff's expert must practice the exact same kind of medicine as
the defendant doctor. The law also limits the ability of judges to
decide whether a proposed doctor is qualified or disqualified from
serving as an expert witness.
Both sides of the issue disagree as to
the effect of the court's decision not to amend the Florida
Evidence Code to incorporate the change in the law. Proponents of
the law say that even though the court declined to integrate the rule
into the Evidence Code, it did not strike down the law as
unconstitutional. Opponents of the law say that the court did exactly
that. You
can read the court's decision here. Medical malpractice lawyers
in the state agree with the Board of Governors of the Florida Bar
that to impose the rule would have a chilling effect on the ability
to obtain expert witnesses and would be prejudicial to the
administration of justice.
Florida Law More Restrictive than
Colorado
Colorado statute 13-64-401
allows a doctor to testify as an expert witness so long as the doctor
is a licensed physician who can demonstrate training, education,
knowledge and experience in the evaluation, diagnosis and treatment
of the subject disease or injury, and is substantially familiar with
the applicable standards of care and practice related to the
incident. Also under the law, a doctor who is an expert in one
medical subspecialty cannot testify against a physician in another
medical subspecialty, unless the standards of care and practice in
the two fields are similar. This law arguably is more flexible than
the rule in Florida even before the law was changed.
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