Ms Anna Diamond > Kings Chambers > Birmingham, England > Barrister Profile
Kings Chambers Offices

EMBASSY HOUSE , 60 CHURCH STREET
BIRMINGHAM
B3 2DJ
England
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Ms Anna Diamond

Position
Anna has a busy practice specialising in clinical negligence and high value and complex personal injury cases. She utilises her medical background in her varied caseload which covers the full range of clinical disciplines, with a particular interest in oncology cases and gynaecology and obstetrics claims. Cases which include complex issues around causation are always particularly relished. Anna is regularly involved in brain injury cases including cerebral palsy claims and traumatic brain injuries acquired later in life.
Anna’s success is due in part to her ability to connect with clients and understand their practical and emotional needs. This, along with her collaborative approach with solicitors and experts, ensures the best outcome in the most difficult and challenging of cases.
Career
Awards:
Scholar of King’s College Cambridge
Karmel, Prince of Wales and Arden Scholar – Gray’s Inn
Judicial appointment: Deputy District Judge
Memberships
PIBA, PNBA
Education
Cambridge MA(Hons); CPE (York), BVC (ISCL)
Inn: Gray’s
Lawyer Rankings
Regional Bar > Midland Circuit > Clinical negligence
(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 2Anna Diamond –Kings Chambers ‘Anna is an excellent tactician. She is extremely bright, unflappable and remains calm during the most challenging of times. Anna prepares thoroughly for conferences and charms every client. She can always see the wood for the trees.’
Kings Chambers is well-known as ‘an excellent set with plenty of strength in depth’ when it comes to clinical negligence work. Satinder Hunjan KC handles complex and high-profile cases, standing out for ‘his mastery of the expert evidence’. Anna Diamond’s ‘knowledge of the issues of clinical practice and medicine is outstanding’. Nicholas Truelove has recently been instructed by a claimant in relation to a group litigation against the neurosurgery department of Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, concerning the systematic misplacement of brain stimulation devices used to treat symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.