17 June 2025 Keith Rix 20 Case Updates The diagnosis hang-up and cardiological manifestations of PTSD byKeith Rix Commentary In this road traffic accident case where there was a claim for psychiatric injury, the two psychiatric experts produced between them 14 reports, including addenda and other admissible communications. The fundamental disagreement was the diagnosis: PTSD or adjustment disorder. It appears that four of the reports by the defendant’s expert were in rebuttal of the opinion of the plaintiff’s expert. This summary does not reflect the considerable extent to which the court had to analyse the evidence as to diagnosis. In the court’s judgment diagnosis hardly mattered. The judge said that more important, in his view, was the impact that the condition had on the plaintiff’s everyday functioning and lifestyle. Then when awarding damages, he said that the psychiatric damage suffered by the plaintiff attributable to the accident could be described as moderately severe whether that be under a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder or psychiatric damage generally. Although hyper-arousal is a feature of PTSD that is often part of the evidence in psychiatric injury cases, this is, as far as I know, the first time that there has been a claim for cardiological injury. This element of the claim was not successful but the reason was that the court found no evidence of cardiac symptoms contemporaneous with the aftermath of the accident. Learning points: Psychiatry and psychology In cases of alleged psychiatric injury, the diagnosis is not as important as the damage, in particular the impact of the condition on everyday functioning and lifestyle. Beware unduly focusing on a particular point and ignoring other evidence which is inconsistent with the point being made. To continue reading you must be an EWI member, become a member and access exclusive content. Already a member? Login More links Link to the Judgment Share Print Tags Psychiatry11. Report WritingNorthern IrelandCardiology Related articles Expert suggests Google would probably give the court a better answer than him A Day in the Life of a Plastic, Aesthetic and Hair transplant Surgeon and Expert Witness Disability and exclusion from school Philipa Hodgson v Dr Daniel Hammond & Anor [2025] EWHC 1261 (KB) Unresponsive episodes in a child and the role of chloral hydrate Switch article Podcast Episode 13: Long-Standing Policy Issues Previous Article Comments are only visible to subscribers.