| Eva Carneiro has yet to return to her role as first-team doctor at Chelsea |
Chelsea are refusing to comment on the situation in which Carneiro and Fearn were described as "impulsive and naive" by an infuriated Mourinho.
Carneiro has missed the subsequent matches with Manchester City, West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace and remains in discussions with her lawyers as she plans her next move.
FIFA is set to discuss the matter on Friday, but it remains unclear what jurisdiction it can have on the situation.
Mary O'Rouke QC of the Football Medical Association insists the 41-year-old Gibraltarian has "done nothing wrong" and should be able to return to her role at Chelsea, if she still wants to resume her duties at the club.
| Referee Michael Oliver (right) summoned Jon Fearn and Carneiro on to the pitch to treat Eden Hazard at the player's request |
"I think you will find FIFA on Friday saying the same thing that they did nothing wrong because their duty was to the player as their patient, the referee, the FA and actually their job in the club is to look after the players not to run the team and not to be tactically aware.
"Much though one understands the passion of the manager or coach you [as a medical professional] have to prioritise the player because, apart from anything else, if a player sues he doesn't sue the manager he sues the doctor, physio or the club.
| Carneiro and Jose Mourinho clashed on the touchline after Hazard received treatment against Swansea |
O'Rourke, who insists Carneiro taking legal instruction does not mean she will be suing Chelsea in the future, added: "You don't just engage a lawyer to go to court, you engage them to give you your legal rights whether it be to return to work or negotiate a new deal or contract.
"You put yourself into their position. They must be in their dream jobs so would you want to lose that job?"
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