Heart Failure & Transplantation Expert Witness
Heart failure with reduced and preserved ejection fraction, advanced therapies, and the clinical decisions that determine prognosis and capacity. The consultants instructed on these cases are practising heart failure cardiologists, verified against the GMC specialist register before allocation.
- HFrEF
- HFpEF
- Advanced therapies
- Prognostic decisions
- Inquests
The clinical trajectory of heart failure.
Most medico-legal work in this subspecialty turns on the clinical trajectory: whether the diagnosis was timely, whether management followed accepted guidance, whether escalation to device or advanced therapy was appropriate, and whether the deterioration that followed was foreseeable.
Accepted UK practice is set by the British Society for Heart Failure, the European Society of Cardiology, and NICE NG106 on chronic heart failure, against which a report is tested. Each consultant is verified on the GMC Specialist Register with a heart failure annotation before allocation.
Six dimensions of heart failure.
The six dimensions below cover the medico-legal ground most heart failure cases sit within.
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HFrEF & HFpEF
Heart failure with reduced and preserved ejection fraction — diagnostic criteria, echocardiographic findings, and the distinction between systolic and diastolic dysfunction, against NICE NG106.
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Pharmacological management
Beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, ARNI, SGLT2 inhibitors and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists — whether the regimen was optimised and contraindications respected.
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Device therapy
ICD, CRT-P and CRT-D implantation — indications, timing, and whether the decision to implant or defer was consistent with ESC guidance.
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Advanced therapies
LVAD, heart transplantation and palliative inotropes — whether escalation was timely and whether the decision to withhold advanced therapy was clinically justified.
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Prognostic decisions
Life expectancy, functional capacity, and the clinical decisions that determine fitness to work or drive — the foundation for the quantum discussion.
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Decompensation & acute care
Admissions for acute decompensated heart failure — whether the admission was avoidable, whether diuresis was appropriate, and whether discharge was premature.
Where heart failure opinion is instructed.
Heart failure evidence is most often required in clinical negligence work. The subspecialty is also instructed in personal injury, coronial, criminal and regulatory matters where cardiac prognosis or management is in dispute.
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Clinical negligence
Missed or delayed diagnosis, suboptimal pharmacological management, failure to escalate to device or advanced therapy, and premature discharge from acute care. Tested against NICE NG106 and ESC guidance.
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Personal injury
Aggravation of pre-existing heart failure following trauma, cardiac sequelae of non-cardiac injury, and the impact of heart failure on functional capacity for quantum.
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Inquest & coronial
Sudden cardiac death in known heart failure, deaths following acute decompensation, and Article 2 inquests where systemic failures in the heart failure pathway are alleged.
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Criminal & regulatory
Causation of death where heart failure management is the disputed evidence, and GMC fitness-to-practise proceedings concerning a heart failure specialist’s clinical conduct.
Typical reports in this subspecialty.
Five report types cover the bulk of heart failure instructions. Each is prepared to the same CPR Part 35 framework and signed by a heart failure cardiologist.
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Screening & Merits
Early-stage view on whether the heart failure management fell outside accepted practice, and whether the case has prospects worth pursuing.
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Breach of Duty
Full liability opinion on the diagnostic and management decisions in heart failure, tested against NICE NG106 and ESC guidance.
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Causation
Whether the breach caused or materially contributed to the cardiac outcome, addressing both but-for and material contribution where the medicine permits.
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Condition & Prognosis
Post-event cardiac status, functional capacity, life expectancy and the likely future course of heart failure — the foundation for the quantum discussion.
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Critique & Rebuttal
Independent read of an opposing heart failure cardiologist’s report — methodology, references, reasoning and conclusions tested before joint discussion or trial.
For the full report catalogue, see reports.
Four reasons to insist on the subspecialty match.
A general cardiology opinion on a heart failure case is rarely enough. Four practical reasons the match matters at the point of instruction.
Active heart failure practice.
Each consultant continues to manage heart failure patients in current NHS practice, including advanced therapies and prognostic decision-making, so the opinion reflects current practice rather than recollection.
Current evidence base.
Opinions are referenced to current NICE NG106 and ESC guidance — not how heart failure was managed a decade ago.
Prognostic decision-making.
The prognostic decisions a case turns on — life expectancy, capacity, fitness to work — are assessed by consultants who make them every week.
Subspecialty indemnity.
Each consultant holds medico-legal indemnity covering heart failure expert witness work specifically. Indemnity is verified before the instruction is allocated.
Instruct a heart failure expert.
Send the records bundle with a brief outline of the heart failure issues in dispute. Scope, quotation and named consultant returned the same working day. Fast-track available where the trial window or limitation deadline requires it.
Active heart failure practice NICE NG106-aligned Same-day allocation
