The Changing Face of Body Language

By |2013-05-14T22:35:45-04:00May 14th, 2013|Blog|

As the daughter of an Army Drill Sergeant, I grew up around Fort Jackson, SC. We shopped at the PX, attended the Roman Catholic church on base, bought 29 cent gasoline and went to the movies for a quarter. But the place I seemed to spend most of my time was in the outpatient infirmary. [...]

Grammar & Composition 101

By |2013-04-25T07:32:02-04:00April 25th, 2013|Blog|

I have read a number of first time reports sent to me for review by new LNCs. In the strictest sense, all of these reports were accurate representations of fact. In the literary sense, some were disasters. When you compose a consultative report for an attorney, assume your reader is someone with no medical knowledge of the disease/injury/event/terminology. This is not true but it will help you write more clearly and avoid the use of medical abbreviations that are clear to healthcare personnel and no one else. Many attorneys, particularly those who specialize in niche areas, are quite well informed about their client

Do I Have your Attention?

By |2013-04-25T07:31:02-04:00April 25th, 2013|Blog|

I don’t know – do you have mine? I was strolling through Costco a few days ago (if I miss a week the staff becomes anxious) when I overheard a young man speaking at a moderate volume into his earphone. He was speaking, but he was not listening. He was providing IT support to a [...]

Deadlines and commitments

By |2013-02-28T15:33:36-05:00February 28th, 2013|Blog|

I know the legal theory behind the statute of limitations, but I wonder if there is a non-legal reason for this limitation. I think it has to do with human nature. People procrastinate. Given the option of infinity, how long do you think some people would wait to file a claim? Just count the number [...]

I’ll take jurors for 100, Alex

By |2013-02-14T14:39:06-05:00February 14th, 2013|Blog|

Jurors are called upon to make incredibly important decisions, and while they may be instructed to “stick to the facts”, those facts can be difficult to parse out. Both sides will argue for their client, and they will use every weapon from accusation to rationalization to “make their case”. A good trial attorney knows that [...]

Sleep is good.

By |2013-02-05T20:12:59-05:00February 5th, 2013|Blog|

Sleep and work. We spend more time doing these two activities than anything else in life. The need for a good night’s sleep is evident in the number of medications, therapies and sleep aids that promulgate the market. But we do not need advertising to tell us what we already know – a bad night’s [...]

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