🩺 For practising doctors

Medico-legal protection for your practice.

Reply to patient notices, harden your LAMA / consent / discharge documentation, review your indemnity policy, and keep an empanelled advocate on retainer — all through a compliant legal-technology platform. Priced for professional practice.

This is legal information, not legal advice. Every binding document is reviewed and signed by one of our independent, empanelled advocates before dispatch — no single advocate is being advertised or solicited on this platform (Advocates Act 1961 · BCI Rule 36).

Patient side (for the patient)

Notice to hospital / doctor, Consumer Forum complaint, records demand, and consultations — for the aggrieved patient or next-of-kin.

Doctor side (this page)

Reply to patient / consumer notice, LAMA & consent compliance pack, indemnity review, and retainer consultations — for the doctor and clinic.

Advocate's role vs digital

Drafting, secure vault and dispatch are digital. Independent review, signature and any court appearance are handled by empanelled advocates — disclosed on every service page.

Services for doctors

Four core services covering defence, compliance, indemnity and retainer advice.

✦ Prices shown are indicative totals combining a platform technology fee (payable to Dare to Law) and advocates' professional fees (payable directly to the independently engaged advocate assigned from our panel of empanelled advocates). The fee split is disclosed before payment. Court filing fees are quoted directly by the assigned advocate and are not sold by the platform. Dare to Law is a technology intermediary under IT Act 2000 § 2(1)(w), not a law firm and not any individual advocate's practice — how our fees work →

Why doctor-tier pricing is higher

Doctor-side services carry higher indicative platform fees than the equivalent patient-side service (typically ~10×). The reason: a defence file has to hold up simultaneously in the Consumer Forum, the NMC / State Medical Council, potentially a criminal court under BNS §106, and before your indemnity insurer's panel counsel. That review depth — plus indemnity coordination and NMC-preparedness — is not comparable to a single-forum patient notice.

Every fee is disclosed as a platform component + independent advocates' professional fee, per the Advocates Act 1961 and BCI Rule 36. Dare to Law is a legal-technology platform, not a law firm.