Lately I have gotten a number of referrals for a type of evaluation that I do not offer, so I thought I would talk a bit about what makes these types of evaluations unique to help readers identify the right provider. Today I will share with you what it means to receive an assessment that is court ordered, recommended, or otherwise needed for a legal reason.
A psychological evaluation might be court ordered for a number of reasons:
Regardless of the reason for a court evaluation, you want to work with a provider who has experience and competency with forensic work, someone who knows what information the court needs and how to provide that specific answer.
If you have not been ordered to complete an evaluation but your lawyer has suggested you seek out an assessment pre-emptively, the provider still needs these qualifications in order to complete the assessment.
Although a judge could order a non-forensically-trained professional to release a report that they completed or have that professional testify, the results will generally not be helpful. For example, I occasionally get called into court for custody hearings because I work with children, but because I am not trained in custody evaluations, I cannot make a recommendation about custody to the court. If asked, I have to say, “It is not within my role or scope of practice to make a specific custody recommendation.”
Similarly, if someone pre-emptively requests an evaluation with me and then a judge orders me to release that report to determine competency, I would have to say that I do not have the expertise to make that recommendation. So, that client would be out the time and expense of the assessment and will still not have information about whether or not they are competent to stand trial.
It is vital, if you are seeking an assessment to be used in a court case, that the evaluator be trained in this type of evaluation and able to make the specific type of recommendation you need. (You cannot pay a psychologist to say that you should get custody of your child – they will make the recommendation based on their clinical judgment – but you need someone who can make that type of recommendation.)
When setting up this type of evaluation, be up front with the provider about what you need and why you need it. If they cannot make the kind of determination necessary, they should be able to provide information about someone who does offer that kind of assessment.
Court is stressful, and it’s scary to hear that you’re being ordered to get an evaluation. Finding a provider who can do the appropriate evaluation and give the type of recommendation needed is the first step in a difficult process, and ensuring that the provider is competent in the kind of evaluation you need can smooth out the process significantly.