
Matt Diaddigo
Articles
-
Sep 16, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | Kathleen O'Neill |John Golembesky |Matt Diaddigo |Joseph J. Lazzarotti
Skip to main content September 16, 2024 Volume XIV, Number 260 Legal Analysis. Expertly Written. Quickly Found.
-
Sep 16, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | Kathleen O'Neill |John Golembesky |Matt Diaddigo |Joseph J. Lazzarotti
Skip to main content September 16, 2024 Volume XIV, Number 260 Legal Analysis. Expertly Written. Quickly Found.
-
Sep 16, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | Kathleen O'Neill |John Golembesky |Matt Diaddigo |Joseph J. Lazzarotti
Skip to main content September 16, 2024 Volume XIV, Number 260 Legal Analysis. Expertly Written. Quickly Found.
-
Sep 16, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | Kathleen O'Neill |John Golembesky |Matt Diaddigo |Joseph J. Lazzarotti
This series explores legal issues related to physician burnout and potential solutions. Our first post addressed how healthcare organizations can foster the psychological safety and emotional wellbeing of their physicians. Clients regularly report that charting and documenting, and communicating with patients via EMR is a substantial contributor to physician burnout.
-
Sep 16, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | Matt Diaddigo
As a presentation technology consultant, I have been sitting in the hot seat for almost 25 years. I average one trial a month with about 75% being medical malpractice (med mal) cases. I work with both plaintiff and defense counsel, and I often serve as a one-person focus group by providing a juror’s perspective during witness prep and trial. As such, I have seen the good, the bad, and the ugly from expert witnesses in med mal cases. Below are five key observations based on my courtroom experience.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →