GEORGE FOLEY, Jr., Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff's Motion to Reconsider Future Damages and any Limitations of Treating Physicians' Testimony at Trial (#83) and the Proposed Order Regarding Scope of Trial Testimony of Plaintiff's Physicians (#114), filed on May 15, 2014. Also before the Court is Defendant Wal-Wart Stores, Inc.'s Motion to Strike Plaintiff's Untimely "Motion to Reconsider" (#85). The Court hereby orders as follows:
On April 11, 2014, the Court granted Plaintiff's motion to reopen discovery based on her claim that her pregnancy and child birth, which occurred after discovery closed in this action, aggravated her lumbar spine condition, requiring her to obtain additional medical treatment for her condition and potentially now making her a candidate for further surgery. Consistent with that order, Plaintiff may present evidence at trial relating to damages allegedly caused by the worsening of her lumbar spine condition due to her pregnancy and child. Plaintiff must of course also prove that her worsened lumbar spine condition as a result of her pregnancy and child birth is attributable, in whole or in part, to the injuries that she suffered in the subject slip and fall accident.
Plaintiff has not demonstrated that it adequately informed Defendant of these doctors as potential witnesses in this action prior to the previous close of discovery. They, therefore, are not o be called as witnesses at the time of trial.
The following medical providers, who provided treatment or care to the Plaintiff related to her alleged injuries, may testify at trial regarding the medical opinions they formed during the course of their treatment of Plaintiff, including the medical necessity for such treatment, the reasonableness of their charges for such treatment, and whether such treatment was causally related to the injuries Plaintiff allegedly sustained in the subject slip and fall accident based on the history provided to them by Plaintiff or other medical records they reviewed during the course of and relating to their treatment of Plaintiff. These physicians may not testify as to any separate or additional opinions that they were asked by Plaintiff to render outside the opinions they formed during the scope of their treatment of the Plaintiff:
Dr. Cash testified during his deposition that Plaintiff may need surgery in the future, possibly within 15 years. That opinion is not related to the alleged aggravation of Plaintiff's lumbar spine as a result of her pregnancy and child birth. Like the earlier opinion of Dr. Grover that Plaintiff may need future surgery at some point in her life, Dr. Cash's opinion is not admissible because Plaintiff failed to include it as part of a computation of a claim for future damages prior to the previous close of discovery.