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Expert Omissions Analysis

Analyzes expert witness reports against complete medical record sets to identify omissions, bias patterns, and methodology gaps. Generates impeachment-ready reports with pin-cited findings and strategic recommendations. Triggers when the user needs to review opposing expert reports, prepare cross-examination, support Daubert/Frye motions, or retain rebuttal experts in personal injury or medical malpractice litigation.

ID: us.personal-injury.expert-omissions-analysis Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Expert Omissions Analysis

Cross-references expert materials against the full medical record set to surface omitted records, classify their impact, and produce a structured impeachment report.

Prerequisites

  • Complete medical record set — Bates-stamped or indexed, all discovery-produced records
  • Expert materials — report(s), deposition transcript(s), CV, supplemental declarations
  • Expert's materials-reviewed list — extracted from report or deposition
  • Case chronology — treatment timeline, injuries, key medical events

Workflow

1. Inventory and Cross-Reference

Build a comparison matrix with columns: Record ID/Bates range, date of service, provider/facility, record type, cited by expert (Yes/No/Partial), and expert cite location (report page or depo page:line).

Flag every record where cited = No or Partial.

2. Classify Omissions

Assign priority to each flagged record:

Priority Criteria
Critical Contradicts opinion, shows alternative causation, or reveals undisclosed pre-existing condition
High Fills chronology gap or documents unaddressed treatment decisions
Moderate Qualifies or weakens conclusions
Low Cumulative or unlikely to affect opinion foundation

3. Evaluate Methodology

Assess the expert's review process:

  • Did the expert provide a complete materials-reviewed list?
  • Does the expert's chronology match the actual medical timeline?
  • Are factual assertions contradicted by records the expert claims to have reviewed?
  • Did the expert acknowledge and explain gaps?
  • Does the methodology satisfy Daubert/Frye reliability factors?

4. Identify Bias Patterns

Flag systematic omission patterns:

  • Omissions cluster around records supporting opposing theory
  • Pre-existing conditions consistently excluded
  • Unfavorable imaging/labs ignored while favorable ones cited
  • Selective quotation (partial citation)
  • Temporal gaps obscuring intervening causes

5. Generate Report

Structure output as:

I. Executive Summary — total records, count not cited, critical/high omission count, key finding (1–2 sentences)

II. Omissions Table — matrix from Step 1 filtered to omitted records, sorted by priority

III. Critical Omissions Detail — for each Critical/High item: omitted record ID, content summary, expert's statement (quote + cite), impact on opinion foundation

IV. Methodology Deficiencies — Step 3 findings with supporting citations

V. Bias Pattern Analysis — Step 4 patterns with statistical support where available

VI. Strategic Recommendations — cross-examination questions (numbered, pin-cited), Daubert/Frye challenge points, rebuttal expert focus areas, deposition follow-up topics if discovery is ongoing

Pitfalls and Checks

  • Pin-cite everything — every assertion references a Bates number, depo page:line, or report page
  • Do not overstate minor gaps — flag low-priority items but distinguish them from genuine impeachment material
  • Note defensible omissions — record may be cumulative or irrelevant to the specific opinion rendered
  • Daubert factors: testability, peer review, error rate, general acceptance, fit to facts [VERIFY: Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, 509 U.S. 579 (1993)]
  • Frye jurisdictions: standard is general acceptance only; flag when applicable [VERIFY: Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923)]
  • Adapt for either side — plaintiff (challenging defense IME expert) or defense (challenging treating physician or plaintiff's retained expert)
  • Do not render medical opinions — identify what records say and what the expert missed, not whether the medical conclusion is correct

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