Lindsay E. Stone
Legal Nurse Consultant
Phone
(585) 263-9528
Email
les@orblaw.com

Lindsay is a certified Family Nurse Practitioner who has been working at Strong Memorial Hospital since 2008. She started her career as a Registered Nurse working in various areas of the hospital including in patient neurosurgery, and across all adult critical care units as an ICU float nurse. She graduated with her Master’s Degree and began working as a Nurse Practitioner with the inpatient Hospital Medicine service in 2014, where she continues to practice now. She most recently graduated from St. John Fisher with a Doctorate in Nursing Practice in 2017, where she focused her studies on training Hospital Medicine providers on evaluation and management of hospital-induced delirium. Her clinical background is very diverse, and has provided a strong knowledge base to help the attorney’s work through medical malpractice and insurance defense cases since 2020.

Latest Post

The Third Department in Binghamton Precast & Supply Corp. v Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company holds that the defendant raised a triable issue of fact as to whether the plaintiff mitigated its losses relative to a business interruption policy.

The Court of Appeals’ decision in Rivera v Montefiore Medical Center (2016 NY Slip Op 06854 [October 20, 2016]) concerned the adequacy of defendant’s expert disclosure and the timeliness of plaintiff’s objection to the same.

On May 2, 2016, the Firm celebrated its centennial with a party at ORBs...

Osborn, Reed & Burke, LLP is pleased to announce that partner, Jennifer M. Schwartzott, Esq., was a winner of The Daily Record's Top Women in Law award for 2016 and associate, Jennifer B. Tarolli, Esq., was a winner of The Daily Record's Up & Coming Attorney award for 2016...

Osborn Reed & Burke, LLP is proud to announce that Aimee L. Koch, a partner at the firm, has been named by the Girl Scouts of Western New York (GSWNY) as a Woman of Distinction...

“‘A merry Christmas, Bob,’ said Scrooge, with an earnestness that could not be mistaken, as he clapped him on the back. ‘A merrier Christmas, Bob, my good fellow..."