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What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part III
Manage episode 446174612 series 1393051
What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part III
October 21, 2024
Nancy A. Meyer, M.A.
Life as a CEO or President
0:59:59
Comments Off on What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part III
Read More
https://wementor.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/WhatWeNeedtoKnowAboutForensicPsychiatrywithDr.MarkLevyPartIII_Episode384_mixdown.mp3
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
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Episode 383: What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part II
EPISODE NOTES
Dr. Mark Levy’s unwavering dedication to forensic psychiatry and the law is truly inspiring. After over 40 years in the field, his passion remains as strong as ever. What keeps him so engaged? It’s the intricate nuances of complex civil and criminal cases and building credibility through his unique team approach in the field.
This podcast conversation is relevant for every business owner. Since 1992, every business owner I’ve worked with has faced legal issues such as lease disputes, employee problems, partnership transitions, property damages, copyright infringements, embezzlement, economic downturns, natural disasters, and more. Business comes with its share of challenges, and the law is there to help us find solutions. The longer you’re in business, the more you realize that unexpected events can occur, and having the legal system to protect our interests and resolve disputes becomes essential.
Dr. Mark Levy provides relevant examples and answers each of the five questions below with prudent eloquence.
1, We began our first podcast conversation with Dr. Mark Levy, who gave us a working definition of forensic psychiatry. When we think of forensics, Dr. Levy mentioned we think of dead bodies and autopsies, but forensics means the law and forensic psychiatry is the interface of law and psychiatry. This means you understand legal terminology and medical terms. He can prescribe medication, monitor its effects on the brain and body, and track and test human behavior and how one thinks.
What would you like to add to this definition? Dr. Levy says, “Like the Forensic Pathologist or coroner whose task is to determine the cause of death, time of death, and sometimes information about the perpetrator, we are Psychopathologists trying to make evidence-based, accurate diagnoses, addressing in civil matters issues of “causation” and “damages.” In criminal matters, we mostly address issues of “capacity,” e.g., competency to stand trial, or to be sentenced, or NGRI (not guilty by reason of insanity – which is a legal, not a medical term).”
2. Can someone be both a treating psychiatrist and an independent forensic psychiatric expert for the same person, like someone who is a patient and a plaintiff or criminal defendant in a legal matter? If not, why not?
3. What kinds of questions are forensic psychiatrists asked to address by the attorneys who retain you and your team to help them educate and persuade the trier of fact both in Civil and Criminal litigation?
4. What is “mass torts” or “multi-plaintiff” litigation? How do forensic psychiatrists assist litigators who are trying or defending civil cases involving numbers of plaintiffs with similar complaints of emotional damages, for example, in sexual abuse cases like former USA Gymnastics team medical doctor Larry Nassar and journalist, author, and advice columnist E. Jean Carroll?
5. You also work in employment law as a forensic psychiatric consultant. Please tell us how you address wrongful termination and discrimination based on age, race, gender, ethnicity, retaliation, and failure to accommodate.
Episode Resources
-
1st Podcast Episode with Dr. Mark Levy
-
2nd Podcast Episode with Dr. Mark Levy
-
Dr. Mark Levy, Forensic Psychiatric Associates, L.P.
-
Test Your Resiliency
NEXT STEP: Challenge yourself and do the three Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring (C.A.L.M.) Activities, below.
Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring
After listening, do these three C.A.L.M. Activities:
1. Take this risk or do this adventurous task: What is your ethical duty in your lifework? A forensic psychiatric expert has a duty to the jury or judge, not to the attorney retaining the expert. A discrepancy arises when they don’t know their role.
2. Apply Self-Compassion: Vulnerability and resiliency are factored in when assessing emotional damages in criminal cases. Dr. Mark Levy described how our upbringing plays a part in our ability to be resilient. If you grew up in an unconditionally loving home with strong emotional support, you may heal more quickly when you are harmed than others. You can measure your resiliency by clicking on this link. How to Measure Resilience With These 8 Scales (+PDF)
3. Welcome Appreciation: “I appreciate Dr. Mark Levy’s artful flair for psychotherapy and forensic psychiatry. It truly has shone through in his explanations and profound insights, making each of our four podcast conversations feel both validating and enlightening. Each time I listen, I learn a bit more. Thank you, Mark, for taking the time to help us understand the connections between forensic psychiatry, our behavior, and the law.”
It’s your turn. Start with, “I appreciate what I heard from today’s Guest Mentor, Dr. Mark Levy…” “I appreciate this week’s adventurous task because….”
“Most of the problems in our lives and world are caused by relational dysfunction, a dysfunction in how we relate: as social groups, as individuals, to animals and the environment, and even to ourselves. Therefore, developing relational literacy—the understanding of and ability to practice healthy ways of relating—is essential for personal, social, and ecological transformation.” —Melanie Joy, psychologist, author, theorist, educator
When WeMentor… your life becomes more meaningful!!! Redefine how you lead while redesigning your business. Dual Innovation Leadership WORKS.
Guest Mentor
Mark Levy, MD, DLFAPA
Dr. Mark Levy attended Durham University, U.K. (1965-66), and is a graduate of Columbia College (A.B. 1967), the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons (M.D. 1971) in New York, and the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute (1984) in San Francisco. He currently practices clinical and forensic psychiatry and has been licensed as a Physician and Surgeon since 1972 by the State of California and since 2004 by the State of Hawaii.
He was certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in Psychiatry (1981) and Forensic Psychiatry (1999, recertified in 2009, 2019). In addition, he was certified by the National Board of Physicians and Surgeons in both Psychiatry and Forensic Psychiatry (2019).
He is currently an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, where he has been on the faculty since 1977 and has taught in the Law and Psychiatry Fellowship since 2000. He is also on the Faculty of the San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis. He is the Founder, former Chairman, and President of the San Francisco Foundation for Psychoanalysis, a community service outreach organization. He is now also an Adjunct Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine.
Since 1975, Dr. Levy has been in full-time private practice, originally in psychiatry and beginning in the 1980s in psychoanalysis and forensic psychiatry as well. He has been retained as a forensic psychiatric expert in more than 500 civil lawsuits and related matters. He has testified in State and Federal Court on 64 occasions. He has never been disqualified from testifying as an expert by any Court in any jurisdiction where he was retained.
As a result of his service and contribution to the profession, Dr. Levy was designated a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (“DLFAPA”) and has been an active member of numerous local, national, and international medical, psychoanalytic, psychiatric, and forensic psychiatric organizations, including The American Academy for Psychiatry and the Law. He has published numerous articles and presented countless talks, both in person and via webinars, to attorneys, physicians, and the general public on a wide range of forensic psychiatric topics. He has also been interviewed regularly as an expert by the print and broadcast media, discussing psychiatric and forensic psychiatric topics of general interest.
In January 2006, Dr. Levy established Forensic Psychiatric Associates Medical Corporation, of which he continues to serve as its medical director. In January 2020, together with his colleague, forensic psychiatrist Charles Saldanha, MD, Dr. Levy also established and serves as the medical director of Forensic Psychiatric Associates, L.P. (www.fpamed.com), a growing group of forensic psychiatrists and forensic psychologists that develop expert opinions for attorneys and Courts on behavioral issues within a broad range of civil and criminal matters. In addition, fpamed as a team specializes in assessing psychological injury claims from populations of litigants in mass tort and multi-plaintiff litigation. We have previously been retained in more than two dozen such cases.
Episode 383: What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part II
Podcast Categories, Archives, and Guest Mentors
Podcast Sponsor
Guest Mentors Sorted by First Name
Click to see all
Alan Wallner
Alison Cromie
Allison Hubel
Alvin Berger
The Amazing Hondo
Amy Bantham
Aneela Idnani
Ann Anderson
Annette Rondano
Arthur Fry
Barb Kobe
Barbara Winter
Bob Kabeya
Bobby Kabeya
Carolyn Porter
Cathy Hockert
Cedric Bryant
Cindy Banchy
Damaris Hollingsworth
Dan DeMuth
Daniel Libby
Dan Oshinsky
Daniel Prosser
Danielle Drevlow
David Mann
Dean Hyers
Deb Pitzrick
Domonique Jones
Dr. Amy Bantham
Dr Melanie Joy
Emily Baxter
Engel Jones
Fatoun Ali
Giscard Ayissi
Gita Mazumdar
Glen McClusky
Heather Boschke
Iman Aghay
Israel Sokeye
Jackie Menne
James Eder
James Conn
Jan Lehman
Jason Campbell
Jay Newton-Small
Jennifer Gilk
Jennifer Nelson
Jerry Pitzrick
Jim Conn
Joan Moser
JoAnne Funch
Jodi Standke
Joe Schmit
Joel Salomon
John Choi
John Fearing
John Hughes
John Patching
John Lee Dumas
John Munger
Julie Ann Segal
Karen Dodson
Karin McCabe
Kathy Flaminio
Kelli Johanson
Ken Suzan
Keren Shamay
Kim Albee
Kim Minert
Kit Welchlin
Koura Linda
Kristin Campbell
Lisa Fain
Laurie Healy
Larissa Uredi
Leah Seeger
Leslie Fahey
Lisa Najjar
Liza Atkinson
Lois Zachary
Mahi (Nagendar) Mahipathi
Mary Hayes Grieco
Marcy Nelson-Garrison
Marshall Davis
Matt Clark
Matt Mueller
Matthew Foli
Melanie Joy
Mickey Mikeworth
Mike Barrett
Mike Kabeya
Mike Marcellus
Monica Olson
Nancy Lindgren
Nancy Meyer
Nick DeMuth
Nicole Fenstad
Pat Dillon
Patricia McGinnis
Pete Machalek
Philip Mattison
Priscilla Vang
Rick Macias
Rosemary Wallner
Sally Doyle
Sameer Idnani
Sarah Becker
Scott Welle
Sharon Richards-Noel
Skip Thaler
Stephen Adams
Steven Berg
Stevie Ray’s Improv Company
Sue Davis
Suzula Bidon
Sylvie Kabeya
Ted Risdall
Terry Wu, Ph.D.
Tim Gilk
Tim Kletti
Tom Hubler
Tom O’Neill
Tony Buettner
Trahern Pollard
Troy Pongratz
Ursula Mentjes
Wendy Sullivan
Yvonne Ng
Redefine how you lead as you redesign your business. Dual Innovation Leadership works with a collaborative mentor!
HIRE A MENTOR
Our mission is to be part of the change you wish to make in the world.
We lead by expanding an entrepreneurial leader’s capacity to lead. We mentor by collaborating with you to co-create a plan. We role model equality, inclusion, healthy relating, resiliency, wealth creation, and accountability. We value compassion, courage, and connection.
When WeMentor, you design an integrated life and an interdependent future:
* As a Resilient Leader/Innovator,
* As a Competent Business Owner/Practitioner,
* As a Mentor/Role Model, and
* As a Spiritual Being and Self-Leadership Master!
11 episodes
Manage episode 446174612 series 1393051
What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part III
October 21, 2024
Nancy A. Meyer, M.A.
Life as a CEO or President
0:59:59
Comments Off on What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part III
Read More
https://wementor.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/WhatWeNeedtoKnowAboutForensicPsychiatrywithDr.MarkLevyPartIII_Episode384_mixdown.mp3
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | Android | iHeartRadio | Blubrry | Email | RSS
Episode 383: What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part II
EPISODE NOTES
Dr. Mark Levy’s unwavering dedication to forensic psychiatry and the law is truly inspiring. After over 40 years in the field, his passion remains as strong as ever. What keeps him so engaged? It’s the intricate nuances of complex civil and criminal cases and building credibility through his unique team approach in the field.
This podcast conversation is relevant for every business owner. Since 1992, every business owner I’ve worked with has faced legal issues such as lease disputes, employee problems, partnership transitions, property damages, copyright infringements, embezzlement, economic downturns, natural disasters, and more. Business comes with its share of challenges, and the law is there to help us find solutions. The longer you’re in business, the more you realize that unexpected events can occur, and having the legal system to protect our interests and resolve disputes becomes essential.
Dr. Mark Levy provides relevant examples and answers each of the five questions below with prudent eloquence.
1, We began our first podcast conversation with Dr. Mark Levy, who gave us a working definition of forensic psychiatry. When we think of forensics, Dr. Levy mentioned we think of dead bodies and autopsies, but forensics means the law and forensic psychiatry is the interface of law and psychiatry. This means you understand legal terminology and medical terms. He can prescribe medication, monitor its effects on the brain and body, and track and test human behavior and how one thinks.
What would you like to add to this definition? Dr. Levy says, “Like the Forensic Pathologist or coroner whose task is to determine the cause of death, time of death, and sometimes information about the perpetrator, we are Psychopathologists trying to make evidence-based, accurate diagnoses, addressing in civil matters issues of “causation” and “damages.” In criminal matters, we mostly address issues of “capacity,” e.g., competency to stand trial, or to be sentenced, or NGRI (not guilty by reason of insanity – which is a legal, not a medical term).”
2. Can someone be both a treating psychiatrist and an independent forensic psychiatric expert for the same person, like someone who is a patient and a plaintiff or criminal defendant in a legal matter? If not, why not?
3. What kinds of questions are forensic psychiatrists asked to address by the attorneys who retain you and your team to help them educate and persuade the trier of fact both in Civil and Criminal litigation?
4. What is “mass torts” or “multi-plaintiff” litigation? How do forensic psychiatrists assist litigators who are trying or defending civil cases involving numbers of plaintiffs with similar complaints of emotional damages, for example, in sexual abuse cases like former USA Gymnastics team medical doctor Larry Nassar and journalist, author, and advice columnist E. Jean Carroll?
5. You also work in employment law as a forensic psychiatric consultant. Please tell us how you address wrongful termination and discrimination based on age, race, gender, ethnicity, retaliation, and failure to accommodate.
Episode Resources
-
1st Podcast Episode with Dr. Mark Levy
-
2nd Podcast Episode with Dr. Mark Levy
-
Dr. Mark Levy, Forensic Psychiatric Associates, L.P.
-
Test Your Resiliency
NEXT STEP: Challenge yourself and do the three Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring (C.A.L.M.) Activities, below.
Conscious Attentive Leadership Mentoring
After listening, do these three C.A.L.M. Activities:
1. Take this risk or do this adventurous task: What is your ethical duty in your lifework? A forensic psychiatric expert has a duty to the jury or judge, not to the attorney retaining the expert. A discrepancy arises when they don’t know their role.
2. Apply Self-Compassion: Vulnerability and resiliency are factored in when assessing emotional damages in criminal cases. Dr. Mark Levy described how our upbringing plays a part in our ability to be resilient. If you grew up in an unconditionally loving home with strong emotional support, you may heal more quickly when you are harmed than others. You can measure your resiliency by clicking on this link. How to Measure Resilience With These 8 Scales (+PDF)
3. Welcome Appreciation: “I appreciate Dr. Mark Levy’s artful flair for psychotherapy and forensic psychiatry. It truly has shone through in his explanations and profound insights, making each of our four podcast conversations feel both validating and enlightening. Each time I listen, I learn a bit more. Thank you, Mark, for taking the time to help us understand the connections between forensic psychiatry, our behavior, and the law.”
It’s your turn. Start with, “I appreciate what I heard from today’s Guest Mentor, Dr. Mark Levy…” “I appreciate this week’s adventurous task because….”
“Most of the problems in our lives and world are caused by relational dysfunction, a dysfunction in how we relate: as social groups, as individuals, to animals and the environment, and even to ourselves. Therefore, developing relational literacy—the understanding of and ability to practice healthy ways of relating—is essential for personal, social, and ecological transformation.” —Melanie Joy, psychologist, author, theorist, educator
When WeMentor… your life becomes more meaningful!!! Redefine how you lead while redesigning your business. Dual Innovation Leadership WORKS.
Guest Mentor
Mark Levy, MD, DLFAPA
Dr. Mark Levy attended Durham University, U.K. (1965-66), and is a graduate of Columbia College (A.B. 1967), the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons (M.D. 1971) in New York, and the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute (1984) in San Francisco. He currently practices clinical and forensic psychiatry and has been licensed as a Physician and Surgeon since 1972 by the State of California and since 2004 by the State of Hawaii.
He was certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in Psychiatry (1981) and Forensic Psychiatry (1999, recertified in 2009, 2019). In addition, he was certified by the National Board of Physicians and Surgeons in both Psychiatry and Forensic Psychiatry (2019).
He is currently an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, where he has been on the faculty since 1977 and has taught in the Law and Psychiatry Fellowship since 2000. He is also on the Faculty of the San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis. He is the Founder, former Chairman, and President of the San Francisco Foundation for Psychoanalysis, a community service outreach organization. He is now also an Adjunct Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine.
Since 1975, Dr. Levy has been in full-time private practice, originally in psychiatry and beginning in the 1980s in psychoanalysis and forensic psychiatry as well. He has been retained as a forensic psychiatric expert in more than 500 civil lawsuits and related matters. He has testified in State and Federal Court on 64 occasions. He has never been disqualified from testifying as an expert by any Court in any jurisdiction where he was retained.
As a result of his service and contribution to the profession, Dr. Levy was designated a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (“DLFAPA”) and has been an active member of numerous local, national, and international medical, psychoanalytic, psychiatric, and forensic psychiatric organizations, including The American Academy for Psychiatry and the Law. He has published numerous articles and presented countless talks, both in person and via webinars, to attorneys, physicians, and the general public on a wide range of forensic psychiatric topics. He has also been interviewed regularly as an expert by the print and broadcast media, discussing psychiatric and forensic psychiatric topics of general interest.
In January 2006, Dr. Levy established Forensic Psychiatric Associates Medical Corporation, of which he continues to serve as its medical director. In January 2020, together with his colleague, forensic psychiatrist Charles Saldanha, MD, Dr. Levy also established and serves as the medical director of Forensic Psychiatric Associates, L.P. (www.fpamed.com), a growing group of forensic psychiatrists and forensic psychologists that develop expert opinions for attorneys and Courts on behavioral issues within a broad range of civil and criminal matters. In addition, fpamed as a team specializes in assessing psychological injury claims from populations of litigants in mass tort and multi-plaintiff litigation. We have previously been retained in more than two dozen such cases.
Episode 383: What We Need to Know About Forensic Psychiatry with Dr. Mark Levy, Part II
Podcast Categories, Archives, and Guest Mentors
Podcast Sponsor
Guest Mentors Sorted by First Name
Click to see all
Alan Wallner
Alison Cromie
Allison Hubel
Alvin Berger
The Amazing Hondo
Amy Bantham
Aneela Idnani
Ann Anderson
Annette Rondano
Arthur Fry
Barb Kobe
Barbara Winter
Bob Kabeya
Bobby Kabeya
Carolyn Porter
Cathy Hockert
Cedric Bryant
Cindy Banchy
Damaris Hollingsworth
Dan DeMuth
Daniel Libby
Dan Oshinsky
Daniel Prosser
Danielle Drevlow
David Mann
Dean Hyers
Deb Pitzrick
Domonique Jones
Dr. Amy Bantham
Dr Melanie Joy
Emily Baxter
Engel Jones
Fatoun Ali
Giscard Ayissi
Gita Mazumdar
Glen McClusky
Heather Boschke
Iman Aghay
Israel Sokeye
Jackie Menne
James Eder
James Conn
Jan Lehman
Jason Campbell
Jay Newton-Small
Jennifer Gilk
Jennifer Nelson
Jerry Pitzrick
Jim Conn
Joan Moser
JoAnne Funch
Jodi Standke
Joe Schmit
Joel Salomon
John Choi
John Fearing
John Hughes
John Patching
John Lee Dumas
John Munger
Julie Ann Segal
Karen Dodson
Karin McCabe
Kathy Flaminio
Kelli Johanson
Ken Suzan
Keren Shamay
Kim Albee
Kim Minert
Kit Welchlin
Koura Linda
Kristin Campbell
Lisa Fain
Laurie Healy
Larissa Uredi
Leah Seeger
Leslie Fahey
Lisa Najjar
Liza Atkinson
Lois Zachary
Mahi (Nagendar) Mahipathi
Mary Hayes Grieco
Marcy Nelson-Garrison
Marshall Davis
Matt Clark
Matt Mueller
Matthew Foli
Melanie Joy
Mickey Mikeworth
Mike Barrett
Mike Kabeya
Mike Marcellus
Monica Olson
Nancy Lindgren
Nancy Meyer
Nick DeMuth
Nicole Fenstad
Pat Dillon
Patricia McGinnis
Pete Machalek
Philip Mattison
Priscilla Vang
Rick Macias
Rosemary Wallner
Sally Doyle
Sameer Idnani
Sarah Becker
Scott Welle
Sharon Richards-Noel
Skip Thaler
Stephen Adams
Steven Berg
Stevie Ray’s Improv Company
Sue Davis
Suzula Bidon
Sylvie Kabeya
Ted Risdall
Terry Wu, Ph.D.
Tim Gilk
Tim Kletti
Tom Hubler
Tom O’Neill
Tony Buettner
Trahern Pollard
Troy Pongratz
Ursula Mentjes
Wendy Sullivan
Yvonne Ng
Redefine how you lead as you redesign your business. Dual Innovation Leadership works with a collaborative mentor!
HIRE A MENTOR
Our mission is to be part of the change you wish to make in the world.
We lead by expanding an entrepreneurial leader’s capacity to lead. We mentor by collaborating with you to co-create a plan. We role model equality, inclusion, healthy relating, resiliency, wealth creation, and accountability. We value compassion, courage, and connection.
When WeMentor, you design an integrated life and an interdependent future:
* As a Resilient Leader/Innovator,
* As a Competent Business Owner/Practitioner,
* As a Mentor/Role Model, and
* As a Spiritual Being and Self-Leadership Master!
11 episodes
All episodes
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