IME Report Critical Analysis
Produces a plaintiff-side memorandum dissecting a defense IME report: findings summary, treating-physician comparison, bias indicators, and cross-examination priorities.
Prerequisites
- IME report — complete defense expert report (PDF or text)
- Treating physician records — office notes, operative reports, discharge summaries
- Diagnostic records — imaging (MRI, X-ray, CT), EMG/NCS, lab results
- Therapy records — PT, OT, chiropractic notes with functional progress
- Prior medical records — pre-incident history relevant to claimed injuries
Output Structure
1. IME Report Header
| Field | Detail | |---|---| | Examiner name & credentials | | | Referring party (defense counsel / carrier) | | | Examination date & location | | | Questions posed to examiner | | | Records examiner claims to have reviewed | |
2. Records Gap Analysis
- List every record the examiner reviewed
- Cross-reference against the complete medical file
- Flag omissions — records not reviewed are a primary bias indicator
3. Examinee Profile
- Demographics, incident mechanism, chief complaints at IME
- Treatment timeline and providers
- Functional limitations: treating doctor notes vs. IME history section
4. IME Findings Summary
Summarize the examiner's opinions on:
- Diagnoses and causation
- MMI determination
- Permanent impairment rating (note AMA Guides edition — 5th vs. 6th produces materially different ratings)
- Future care recommendations
- Work restrictions / disability
5. Treating Physician Comparison
| Issue | IME Opinion | Treating Physician(s) | Source | |---|---|---|---| | Primary diagnosis | | | | | Causation | | | | | MMI status | | | | | Impairment rating | | | | | Future medical needs | | | | | Work restrictions | | | |
Flag every divergence. Extract direct quotes for contradictions.
6. Bias & Impeachment Indicators
Check each applicable red flag:
- [ ] Minimizes subjective complaints without objective basis
- [ ] Selectively cites records favoring defense; ignores contrary evidence
- [ ] Uses outdated or non-standard diagnostic criteria
- [ ] Causation opinions exceed examiner's stated specialty
- [ ] Examination cursory relative to treating exam scope
- [ ] IME history contradicts treating notes on same complaints
- [ ] Substantial income from defense medical-legal work
- [ ] High defense-to-plaintiff testimony ratio
- [ ] Disciplinary actions or published methodology criticisms
- [ ] Financial or referral relationship with referring carrier
7. Medical Authority Analysis
Where IME deviates from treating physicians, cite:
- AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment (note edition)
- Specialty-specific guidelines (AAOS, AAN, ACOEM)
- Peer-reviewed literature contradicting examiner's methodology
Mark unverified citations as [VERIFY].
8. Cross-Examination Priorities
Identify 3–5 highest-value vulnerabilities:
| Vulnerability | Supporting Evidence | Suggested Question Areas | |---|---|---| | | | |
Focus on:
- Record omissions the examiner cannot explain
- Internal inconsistencies (exam findings ≠ written conclusions)
- Opinions lacking foundation in the examination itself
- Credential or specialty gaps for opinions rendered
9. Strategic Recommendations
- Rebuttal experts — specialties needed to counter IME opinions
- Supplemental discovery — prior testimony, financial disclosure, examiner publications
- Case valuation impact — whether IME materially shifts settlement leverage
- Motion practice — Daubert/Frye challenge grounds if methodology is non-standard
Guidelines
- Cite page/paragraph references from IME and medical records for every assertion
- Do not characterize examiner as biased without documentary support — let the record speak
- Flag jurisdiction-specific IME rules (scope and obligations vary between state tort and workers' comp)
- Note whether IME was under a compulsory exam order with scope limitations
- Label output as attorney work product
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