Literature DB >> 16797900

Tasks of research in forensic medicine - different study types in clinical research and forensic medicine.

Burkhard Madea1, Pekka Saukko, Frank Musshoff.   

Abstract

In the last years the research output of forensic medicine has sometimes been regarded as insufficient and as of poor quality, especially when parameters as impact factors and external funding were taken into account. However, forensic medicine has different tasks compared to clinical medicine. The main difference between basic subjects, clinical and forensic medicine is not a lack of scientific efficiency in forensic medicine but is a result of the questions asked, the available methods and specific aims. In contrast to natural-scientific research, forensic science has furthermore important intersections with arts and socio-scientific disciplines. Etiologic and pathogenetic research is of only limited relevance in forensic medicine. Thus, forensic medicine is excluded from these research fields, which are mainly supported by external funding. In forensic medicine research mainly means applied research regarding findings, the probative value and reconstruction as well as examination at different points of intersection between medicine and law. Clinical types of research such as controlled randomised, prospective cross-sectional, cohort or case-control studies can only rarely be applied in forensic medicine due to the area specific research fields (e.g. thantatology, violent death, vitality, traffic medicine, analytical toxicology, hemogenetics and stain analysis). The types of studies which are successfully established in forensic medicine are comparison of methods, sensitivity studies, validation of methods, kinetic examinations etc. Tasks of research in forensic medicine and study types, which may be applied will be addressed.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16797900     DOI: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2006.05.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Forensic Sci Int        ISSN: 0379-0738            Impact factor:   2.395


  3 in total

1.  An international consensus on the forensic assessment of sleep-related violence and sexual behavior in sleep: if not now, when?

Authors:  Francesca Ingravallo; Francesca Poli; Emma V Gilmore; Fabio Pizza; Luca Vignatelli; Carlos H Schenck; Giuseppe Plazzi
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2014-11-15       Impact factor: 4.062

2.  Image analysis on corneal opacity: a novel method to estimate postmortem interval in rabbits.

Authors:  Lan Zhou; Yan Liu; Liang Liu; Luo Zhuo; Man Liang; Fan Yang; Liang Ren; Shaohua Zhu
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2010-04-21

3.  HMGB1: A new marker for estimation of the postmortem interval.

Authors:  Kiyoshi Kikuchi; Ko-Ichi Kawahara; Kamal Krishna Biswas; Takashi Ito; Salunya Tancharoen; Naoto Shiomi; Yoshiro Koda; Fumiyo Matsuda; Yoko Morimoto; Yoko Oyama; Kazunori Takenouchi; Naoki Miura; Noboru Arimura; Yuko Nawa; Shinichiro Arimura; Meng Xiao Jie; Binita Shrestha; Masahiro Iwata; Kentaro Mera; Hisayo Sameshima; Yoshiko Ohno; Ryuichi Maenosono; Yutaka Tajima; Hisaaki Uchikado; Terukazu Kuramoto; Kenji Nakayama; Minoru Shigemori; Yoshihiro Yoshida; Teruto Hashiguchi; Ikuro Maruyama
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2010-01-01       Impact factor: 2.447

  3 in total

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