Tennessee health professionals facing a board complaint or investigation know how much is at stake: your career, reputation, and ability to practice. Before you trust anyone with that, it helps to ask the right questions. While laws and processes can change, below are ten smart questions to ask before you hire a medical license defense lawyer in Tennessee, plus why the answers matter.
Because this is general information, it is not legal advice for your specific situation.
1. Do you regularly handle Tennessee medical and professional license cases?
License defense is its own world. You want someone who regularly handles:
Ask for concrete examples: recent board matters, the types of professionals they represent, and how often they appear in these forums. A lawyer who knows the Tennessee boards’ procedures and personalities can often spot issues and opportunities early that others miss.
2. Have you represented professionals in my field?
A physician’s case looks different from a nurse’s, pharmacist’s, or therapist’s case. Standards of care, common pitfalls, and board expectations vary by license.
Good follow‑ups:
An attorney with experience in your specific profession can better anticipate how your board views certain conduct and what mitigation will resonate.
3. What is your experience with Tennessee board investigations (not just hearings)?
Many cases are won or lost long before a formal hearing is scheduled. The early investigative stage is critical: how you respond to that first letter or phone call can shape everything that comes after.
Ask:
You want a lawyer who focuses on early damage control and knows when a detailed explanation helps—and when silence or a limited response is safer.
4. What is your approach to written responses and interviews with investigators?
Some lawyers tell clients to “just cooperate” and talk. Others never want the client to speak. The best answer is usually in between.
Questions to ask:
Look for someone who will carefully shape your story, protect against unintentional admissions, and insist on proper boundaries with investigators.
5. How does your nursing background (or healthcare experience) help in these cases?
If the firm has an attorney who worked as a nurse before becoming a lawyer, that is a real advantage. A lawyer with bedside experience understands:
Ask specifically:
You want someone who can translate your day‑to‑day reality into terms regulators can understand and respect.
6. What outcomes have you achieved in cases like mine?
Ethical attorneys will not promise results but they can describe past outcomes and the range of possibilities:
Ask:
This helps you understand both the lawyer’s experience and their philosophy: cautious and settlement‑oriented, aggressive and hearing‑oriented, or balanced.
7. How do you handle collateral consequences (NPDB, employment, credentialing)?
Board action is only part of the story. You also have to think about:
Ask:
A good license defense lawyer is thinking beyond “Can we close this case?” and looking at “What will this look like on your record five years from now?”
8. What is your strategy for settlement vs. hearing?
Many Tennessee board cases resolve through consent orders or informal processes; relatively few go all the way to a contested hearing. Your lawyer should have a clear idea of how to navigate that spectrum.
Ask:
You want someone who will not pressure you into a quick deal just to close the file—but also will not push you into a risky hearing without a clear plan and frank risk‑benefit discussion.
9. How will we communicate and who will be working on my case?
License matters are stressful and often slow. Clear communication can reduce anxiety and help you make good decisions.
Clarify:
Especially for healthcare professionals used to fast‑paced environments, knowing when to expect answers can make the process more manageable.
10. How do you structure fees for medical license defense?
Cost matters, and you deserve transparency up front. Medical license defense can involve:
Ask:
A good lawyer will be straightforward about fees and help you prioritize the work that makes the most difference for your case and your budget.
If your Tennessee medical license—or any healthcare license—is under investigation or you’ve received a board complaint, do not wait to get help. The sooner an experienced lawyer steps in, the more options you may have to protect your license, your career, and your reputation.
Contact Hagar & Phillips today to schedule a confidential consultation and get clear, practical guidance tailored to your situation. Call our office at 615-784-4588 and let our team, including an attorney with real nursing experience, help you navigate the board process and fight for your future.