%0 Journal Article %T The age profile of court-appointed physicians in Poland. Status at the end of 2021 %A Smędra, Anna %A Berent, Jarosław %J Archives of Forensic Medicine and Criminology %V 2022 %R 10.4467/16891716AMSIK.22.021.17621 %N Vol. 72 (4) %P 183-199 %K court-appointed experts, age profile, specialized knowledge, generational differences %@ 0324-8267 %D 2023 %U https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/amsik/article/profil-wiekowy-lekarzy-bieglych-sadowych-w-polsce-stan-na-koniec-2021-the-age-profile-of-court-appointed-physicians-in-poland-status-at-the-end-of-2021 %X The problems with obtaining expert opinions from court-appointed physicians in Poland have been known for a long time and are well-diagnosed. The reasons for this state of affairs are: an overall insufficient number of physicians compared to the general needs, uncompetitive remuneration levels, and the difficulty of reconciling professional and court-appointed expert duties, while taking into consideration the availability expected of experts. The ongoing generational transition may further exacerbate these problems. The purpose of this study was to investigate the latter phenomenon by comparing the age profile of court-appointed physicians with that of physicians in general. Information on the age of court-appointed physicians was obtained from the presidents of regional courts and the Central Register of Physicians, while general statistics on physicians were also acquired from the latter. Research allowed us to formulate the following conclusions: only 0.8% of all physicians in Poland serve a court-appointed expert function. Almost two-thirds of court-appointed physicians belong to the Baby Boomer generation (born in 1946-1964), nearly one-third to Generation X (1965-1980), and only one-sixteenth (6.10%) to Generation Y (1981-1996), or Millennials. The results obtained, as well as data from the literature, suggest that the current bad state of affairs regarding access to the opinions of court-appointed physicians will further deteriorate in the coming years due to generational changes, i.e., the replacement of Baby Boomers and Generation X, currently dominant among court-appointed experts, by Generation Y, i.e., Millennials, with a different attitude to life.