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Section 3From Mental Health Professional to Expert Witness: Testifying in Court
  |  |  From mental health professional to expert witness: testifying in court. Our democratic  principles rest on the belief that truth is discovered through the fair and  open combat of ideas in a court of law. When mental health professionals  participate in this adversary process as expert witnesses, it is essential for  them to understand that attorneys will attempt to impeach their credibility.Mental health  professionals who appreciate the spirit and mechanics  of courtroom communication will be best prepared to protect the integrity of their testimony. The courtroom communications model provides experts with a conceptual  framework utilizing three components: the speaker is the expert,  the message   is testimony, and the audience  is the judge or jury. Within the structure of this model, communication principles from  social psychology can be used to enhance the clarity of testimony and to prevent  attorneys from distorting the expert's  opinions. First and foremost, expert  witness testimony must be formulated upon accepted  scholarly and ethical standards. To establish credibility, experts must appear  knowledgeable and trustworthy to the judge and jury. The expert must come to court prepared for both direct  examination and crossexamination; know when to  emphasize logic or emotion, tailor speech  in order to reach the maximum number of jurors, and remain nondefensive by projecting the same  demeanor regardless  of which side is conducting the  examination. The role of the expert  witness is   forever changing because the  judicial systemlike the mental health fieldcontinues to evolve. Although the adversary process has undergone dramatic changes over  the past eight hundred years, historical vestiges continue to echo throughout  our courtrooms. Today, expert witnesses are the champions  of victims and the accused. Legal disputes are increasingly  being decided by the battle of the experts who must undergo the ordeal of  crossexamination. When you consider the brutality of ancient  ordeals, responding to attorneys  armed with questions may not seem so  daunting.
 - Center for Forensic Psychiatry. (1996). New Dir Ment Health Serv, 69(5-14).
 Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Baillie, P. (2015). Review of Clinicians in court: A guide to subpoenas, depositions, testifying, and everything else you need to know (2nd ed.) [Review of the book Clinicians in court: A guide to subpoenas, depositions, testifying, and everything else you need to know (2nd ed.), by A. E. Barsky]. Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne, 56(2), 267–268.
 
 Cook, A. N., Dvorakova, E., & Storey, J. E. (2020). Judicial decisions regarding expert evidence on violence risk assessment. Journal of Threat Assessment and Management, 7(3-4), 214–229.
 
 Edwards, E. R., Sissoko, D. R. G., Abrams, D., Samost, D., La Gamma, S., & Geraci, J. (2020). Connecting mental health court participants with services: Process, challenges, and recommendations. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 26(4), 463–475.
 
 Williger, S. D. (1995). A trial lawyer's perspective on mental health professionals as expert witnesses. Consulting Psychology Journal: Practice and Research, 47(3), 141–149.
 
 Yuan, Y., & Capriotti, M. R. (2019). The impact of mental health court: A Sacramento case study. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 37(4), 452–467.
 
 QUESTION 3
 What are the three components utilize when the courtroom communications model provides experts with a conceptual framework? To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
 
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