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ABSTRACT Forensic medicine is the application of medical expertise to legal contexts and holds particular significance in the ED, where clinicians frequently encounter cases with medico‐legal implications. In Australia, Clinical Forensic Medicine is a stand‐alone specialty with an established fellowship pathway: the Fellowship of the Faculty of Clinical Forensic Medicine, Royal College of Pathologists Clinical Forensic Medicine. It is a unique medical discipline concerned with the provision of forensic medical services, primarily to the living. This article outlines the scope of clinical forensic medicine, with a focus on sexual assault assessment, forensic specimen collection and injury interpretation. It must be acknowledged, however, that the full scope of the discipline is much broader. This commentary briefly considers other forensically based medico‐legal obligations, and the importance of balancing patient care with evidentiary integrity. Emergency clinicians require not only clinical acumen but also familiarity with legal frameworks to ensure their practice supports both medical and judicial outcomes.
Cunningham et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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