Ash
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Nearly all of the witnesses were asked if they believed ME was a physical or psychological illness.
They all replied that they believed ME was a real illness.
Some of them then went on to say there was no known aetiology. But none of them were then presented with the next question which would have directed them back to whether they thought it was physical or psychological.
So they each managed to side step the question and nothing more was said. It seemed a glaring issue to me but the coroner was obviously satisfied with what she had been told.
In another article discussing how coroners courts work it stood out to me that the people who are essentially defending themselves are also being used as the expert witnesses. There are no attempts to use independent experts to give an alternative viewpoint.
(Dr Weir was not there as as expert but to give evidence about his involvement in the case)
If the hospital doctors were asked if they thought the thing was one kind of thing or the other, and they answered yes to neither, but said it was another kind of thing altogether which it may or may not be depending on Philosophy, but that wasn’t a medical thing and they were being asked to name the thing in relation to medicine and medical terminology which they failed to do with this answer, thusly meaning that they didn’t answer the question, that is something that a lawyer would notice. No medical knowledge required.
So I didn’t hear testimony but if that’s how it went down, it’s not lack of specialist knowledge in this area that stopped the coroner asking further questions. She wasn’t tricked here unless you’d have reason to believe she doesn’t possess the skills to basic requirements of legal training.