1 / 17

Death Certification

Death Certification. Dr. Judy Melinek Assistant Medical Examiner San Francisco. San Francisco Medical Examiner. We get called when someone dies at home or if the death is violent or unexpected. We have INVESTIGATORS who collect the dead body and talk to the family.

nia
Télécharger la présentation

Death Certification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Death Certification Dr. Judy Melinek Assistant Medical Examiner San Francisco

  2. San Francisco Medical Examiner • We get called when someone dies at home or if the death is violent or unexpected. • We have INVESTIGATORS who collect the dead body and talk to the family. • We have DOCTORS who do an AUTOPSY to find out why the person died.

  3. Coroner vs. Medical Examiner • Citizen • Training varies by jurisdiction • Administrator or Law enforcement • Elected or appointed • Predominantly rural • Physician • Usually forensic board certified • Public health officer • Independent agency • Usually appointed • Predominantly urban

  4. REPORTABLE DEATHSDefined by CA H&S Code 10250 and Gov Code 27491 • Violent, sudden, unusual, or unexpected. • Unattended by physician (20 days) or no medical history. • Related to accident or injury, either old or recent. • Acute intoxication, Falls, Motor vehicle collisions... • Time elapsed is of little relevance • Homicide, suicide, or suspicious: criminal acts. • Public health concern: infectious diseases

  5. DEATH CERTIFICATIONReporting Requirements • The ME/C must be notified for those types of death specified in CA Gov Code 27491. • The only requirement is for the ME/C to investigate. • The ME/Coroner has a right to the medical record (HIPPA exempt). • Permission of next of kin NOT required for ME/C autopsy. • Hospital physicians can only certify NATURAL deaths (due to disease/old age) before allowing a hospital autopsy.

  6. My patient died: What next? • Nurse will give you a “morgue pack”: checklist  • You will fill out the Death Certificate Worksheet • Do not write “See dictated note”! • Some time later Attending will sign Death Certificate: what you tell the Medical Examiner and what the attending signs has to match! • Body will be released from the hospital to funeral home for burial: funeral home checks in with ME.

  7. What can go wrong? • You forget to call the ME/Coroner’s office on a reportable case. • You sign out a death certificate that does not have an acceptable cause of death. • You omit to mention trauma or surgery on the death certificate yet the patient clearly has trauma or surgical interventions.

  8. So I made a mistake: who cares? • Family of deceased • Decedent affairs • Funeral Home staff • Medical Examiner/Coroner’s Office • Risk Management at the hospital • Other housestaff/attending who have to deal with fixing the DC & placating the above.

  9. Typical CA Death Certificate Death reported to ME: YES/NO LEGAL STANDARD: REASONABLE MEDICAL CERTAINTY

  10. Cause of Death The etiologically specific disease or injury which starts the lethal sequence of events without sufficient intervening causes.

  11. Mechanism of Death A description of the physiologic derangement (set in motion by the cause of death) that results in the cessation of: the pumping of the heart breathing cellular energy metabolism.

  12. Good Natural Causes of Death • Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. • Myocardial infarct due to CHF due to HTN. • Hypertensive stroke. • Ruptured cerebral aneurysm. • Chronic alcoholism. • Complications of diabetes mellitus. • Infectious complications of chronic substance abuse.

  13. NOT GOOD AT ALL! • Cardiorespiratory arrest • Cardiac arrhythmia • Respiratory failure • End stage liver /kidney disease • Pneumonia • Multi-organ system failure • Sepsis

  14. BETTER! • Cardiac arrhythmia DUE TO Rheumatic valve disease • Respiratory failure DUE TO asthma/COPD • ESLD DUE TO Chronic alcoholism • ESRD DUE TO Diabetes/HCVD • Pneumonia DUE TO Alzheimer’s dementia. • Sepsis DUE TO complications of DM.

  15. Evaluating Remote Injuries • First you gotta ask! • Did the injury compromise this person’s baseline? • Immobility: they never walked again. • Debility: they became a vegetable. • It was a downhill course from their injury until their death. • It’s a judgment call!

  16. Therapeutic Complications • Must be reported: Natural or Accident? • Need to know: • Dates of procedures. • Indications for procedures. • Co-morbidities and risk factors (including abnormal anatomy that made the complication more likely). • Is this an expected or common complication of this procedure? (complications listed on consent form are not necessarily either!)

  17. Patient Relations: 353-1936 or 353-1729 M-F 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Hospital Supervisor at all other times: Pager # 443-4989. Pathology: 353-1629 autopsy. Death of Patient Policy, on Medical Center Manuals web site contains an explanation of the morgue pack paperwork and how to fill it out. Service Excellence Intranet Web page has updates and explanations of new rules and regulations, forms & info.

More Related