Literature DB >> 19537447

Increasing the information available to coroners: the effect on autopsy decision-making.

Belinda Carpenter1, Gordon Tait, Michael Barnes, Glenda Adkins, Charles Naylor, Nelufa Begum.   

Abstract

This paper details research completed in 2007 which investigated autopsy decision-making in a death investigation. The data was gathered during the first year of operation in Queensland, Australia, of a new Coroners Act which changed the process of death investigation in three ways which are important to this paper. First, it required a greater amount of information to be gathered at the scene by police: this included a thorough investigation of the circumstances of the death, including statements from witnesses, friends and family, as well as evidence gathering at the scene. Second, it required coroners, for the first time, to determine the level of invasiveness required in the autopsy to complete the death investigation. Third, it enabled any genuine family concerns to be communicated to the coroner. The outcome of such information was threefold: (i) a greater amount of information offered to the coroner led to a decrease in the number of full internal autopsies ordered, but an increase in the number of partial internal autopsies ordered; (ii) this shift in autopsy decision-making by coroners saw certain factors given greater importance than others in decisions to order full internal, or external only, autopsies; (iii) a raised family concern had a significant impact on autopsy decision-making and tended to decrease the invasiveness of the autopsy ordered by the coroner.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19537447     DOI: 10.1258/rsmmsl.49.2.101

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Sci Law        ISSN: 0025-8024            Impact factor:   1.266


  3 in total

1.  Turnaround time data for Coronial autopsies - time to complete forensic post-mortem examination reports and influencing factors for Australia and New Zealand in 2015 and 2010.

Authors:  Neil E I Langlois; Claire J Sully; Suzanne Edwards
Journal:  Forensic Sci Med Pathol       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 2.007

2.  Method overtness, forensic autopsy, and the evidentiary suicide note: A multilevel National Violent Death Reporting System analysis.

Authors:  Ian R H Rockett; Eric D Caine; Steven Stack; Hilary S Connery; Kurt B Nolte; Christa L Lilly; Ted R Miller; Lewis S Nelson; Sandra L Putnam; Paul S Nestadt; Haomiao Jia
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-05-22       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Diagnostic assessment of foetal brain malformations with intra-uterine MRI versus perinatal post-mortem MRI.

Authors:  Stacy K Goergen; Ekaterina Alibrahim; Nishentha Govender; Alexandra Stanislavsky; Christian Abel; Stacey Prystupa; Jacquelene Collett; Susan C Shelmerdine; Owen J Arthurs
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  2019-05-10       Impact factor: 2.804

  3 in total

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