Death Investigation Flashcards

1
Q

Define Death

A

Death is a process not an event
Time of death is recorded as an event
No legal definition
- when doctor records it

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2
Q

Define taphophobia

A

Fear of being berried alive
Many “genuine” published accounts of premature burial
Fear peaked during cholera epidemics of 18th and 19th centenary

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3
Q

Features of safety coffins

A
Ropes of levers inside
- to bell, flags or pyrotechnics
Rope to church bells
Window in coffin
Trumpet tube
Hatched with key inside
Air/feeding tubes
Food and water supply
Shovel
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4
Q

Types of safety coffins

A

Portable death chamber
- chamber with bell and window and placed over empty grave
- watchman checked for signs of life or putrefaction over a few days
- floor opened to grave and chamber reused
Taberger Coffin design
- strings to head, hands and feet of corpse
- attached via tube to bell above ground
- housing prevented accidental ringing
- netting prevented insects entering coffin

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5
Q

Types of death

A
Apparent death 
- collapse, no pulse
- opportunity for resuscitation
- cardiac arrest, LOC
Brain death
- cerebral cortex - 1st
- brain stem - 2nd
- whole brain
Somatic (clinical) death of person as whole
Cellular/molecular death
Putrefaction
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6
Q

Define resusciation

A

To bring someone or something back to life or consciousness
To revive from unconscious
Make active or vigorous again

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7
Q

Types of cardio-pulmonary resuscitation

A
Mouth to mouth resuscitation
External cardiac massage
Defibrillation 
Drugs - adrenaline and atropine
Intubation and ventilation
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8
Q

Features of apparent death (suspended animation)

A
No or minimal signs of life
Responsive to prolonged resuscitation
Recognised in certain situations
- electrocution
- drowning
- drug overdose
- hypothermia
- cardiac arrest in children
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9
Q

Clinical assessment of death

A
History and circumstances
Signs
- collapse with LOC and muscle flaccidity
- cessation of heartbeat
- cessation of breathing
- dilated fixed pupils
Physical examination
Resuscitate if in doubt
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10
Q

Clinical triad of death

A
Triad of Bichat
Failure of body as integrated system associated with irreversible loss of
- circulation
- respiration
- innervation - consciousness
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11
Q

Stages of natural cardiac death

A
Disease or injury
- MI
Primary cardiac arrest
Cerebral hypoxia
- cortex in 2-3 mins
- brainstem in > 4 mins
- whole brain
Secondary respiratory arrest
- brainstem controls breathing
Somatic death
Cellular death
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12
Q

Stages of natural respiratory arrest

A
Disease of injury
- COPD, asthma, PE
Primary respiratory arrest
Cerebral hypoxia
- cortex in 2-3 mins
- brainstem in > 4 mins
- whole brain
Secondary cardiac arrest
Somatic death
Cellular death
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13
Q

Causes of brain death

A
Cardiac arrest
Other hypoxia
Haemorrhage
Stroke
Poisoning
Hypoglycaemia
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14
Q

Function of brain sections

A
Cortical
- higher functions
- emotions
- sensation
- movement
Brainstem
- consciousness (RAS)
- respiratory centre
- vasomotor centre - pulse and BP
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15
Q

Define whole brain death

A
No legal definition
Brain death is nearest equivalent
Necessary component is brainstem death
- innervation
- spontaneous respiration
- heartbeat
Bedside clinical diagnosis
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16
Q

Define persistent vegetative state

A

Cortical damage
- cardiac arrest, hypoxia, trauma, poisoning, hypoglycaemia
Brainstem intact
- spontaneous breathing and heartbeat
- eyes open/close cyclically, swallow, grimace intact
Awake but unaware of self or environment
No speech or purposeful movement
May live many years with nutritional support

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17
Q

Diagnosis of PVS

A

Brain damage
No awareness of self or environment
No reversible causes
Duration > 6 months
Assessment includes
- no spontaneous meaningful motor response including voice
- no language comprehension or expression
- no sustained, reproducible, purposeful or voluntary behavioural response to normal or noxious visual, auditory or tactile stimulus
Cortical death seen post-mortem

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18
Q

PVS vs BS Death

A
PVS
- cortex dead
- awake but unaware
- spontaneous breathing
- spontaneous heartbeat
- moral dilemma - should they be allowed to die as no way back for higher functions
BS Death
- BS destroyed
- unconscious
- artificial ventilation
- spontaneous heartbeat
- no moral dilemma - stop ventilating corpse
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19
Q

Brainstem functions

A
Maintains consciousness
- reticular activating system
Initiates every breath
- respiratory centre
Controls heart rate and BP
- vasomotor centre
All sensory input from whole body to cortex passes through brainstem - apart from smell and vision
All motor output from cortex passes through BS
Medicates cranial nerve reflexes
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20
Q

Cranial nerves

A
Olfactory - smell
Optic - sight
Oculomotor - eye movement
Trochlear - eye movement
Trigeminal - face sensory
Abducens- eye movement
Facial - muscular control of face
Vestibulo-cochlear - balance and hearing
Glossopharyngeal - swallow, breathing
Vagus - swallow, breathing, heart rate, intestines
Accessory - muscles of shoulders
Hypoglossal - muscles of tongue
2-10 can be tested at the bedside
- 1, 11 and 12 cannot
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21
Q

Brainstem death UK code

A

Tests performed by 2 senior Drs (>5yrs)
Appropriate specialist
Tests repeated

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22
Q

Signs of BS activity

A
Epileptic fit
- sign of cortical activity
- motor nerves intact
Decorticate rigidity
Doll's eye reflex
- eyes remain fixed on moving head
23
Q

Diagnosis of BS Death

A
Preconditions
- deeply comatosed, requiring artificial ventilation
- cause of coma known
- reversible causes excluded 
     - drugs
     - alcohol
     - hypothermia
     - diabetes
     - hypothyroidism
     - hypoxia
     - hypotension
     - SOL
Clinical tests
- pupils do not react to light - 2,3
- no corneal reflex - 3,5,7
- no nystagmus upon ear irrigation - 3,4,6,8
- no grimace to pain - 5,7
- no gag reflex - 9,10
24
Q

Features of the apnoea test

A

100% O2 for 10 mins
5% CO2 for 5 mins
Disconnect from ventilator for 10 mins
Rising CO2 fails to stimulate spontaneous breathing

25
Q

Features of cellular death

A
Selective vulnerability to cessation of circulation
- CNS - 4 mins
- peripheral NS - 5 mins
- muscle - 3 hours
- blood cells - 6 hours
- skin - 24 hours
- bone, cornea - 48 hours
Cells die and degenerate due to autolysis
- by intracellular enzymes
26
Q

Pros/cons of organ transplants

A
Better than mechanical devices
Rejection
- host antibody attacks donor antigens
Tissue typing for compatibility
Immuno-suppression
- rejection vs infection
27
Q

Types of transplant

A
Homologous - same patient
- skin graft
- bone graft
- own blood
Live donor
- blood
- bone marrow
- kidney
- part liver
Cadaveric
- heart and lungs
- kidneys, liver
- cornea
- bone
- sources - BS death due to RTA, SAH
28
Q

Key points of the Human Tissue Act 2004

A

Regulates removal, storage and use of human tissue
Creates new offense of DNA theft
Makes it lawful to preserve organs of deceased for transplantation
Authorises museums to move human remains

29
Q

Key points of Human Tissue (Scotland ) Act 2004

A

Transplantation
- use of parts of deceased body for transplantation, research etc
- prohibits commercial dealings in human body parts for transplantation
Post-mortem examinations
- allows for authorisation of hospital post-mortems when alive or by family - non-legal cases for medical interest
Tissue or organs no longer required for Procurator Fiscal purposes
Defines nearest relative

30
Q

Key features of Anatomy Act 1832

A

Passed to stamp out body-snatching
Anatomists needed a licence - issued by Home Secretary
Responsibility for the proper treatment of all bodies dissected in the building
Med schools had legal access to unclaimed bodies - deaths in prison and workhouses

31
Q

Purposes of Death Certificate

A

Information
- relatives, statistics, epidemiology, research
Disposal of body
- official recognition, registration and funeral
Proof of death
- grieving, insurance, litigation, benefits

32
Q

Death certification in Scotland

A
Any Dr who knows cause of death
Need not have attended in last illness
Need not view body after death
Whole death certificate given to informant (relative)
7 days to register death
33
Q

Death certification in England and Wales

A

Dr who attended during last illness (<14 days) or Dr who attended regularly during last illness and have viewed body
Dr seeing body for first time may not certify
Slip given to informant
5 days to register death

34
Q

Key points for completion of death certification

A
Use precise pathological terms
- infarction, atherosclerosis, carcinoma
Avoid imprecise terms
- cardiorespiratory arrest, failure, come, old age
Avoid abbreviations
No need to fill every line
1a = immediate cause, due to
1b = antecedent cause due to
1c = antecedent cause due to
1d = underlying cause
2 = other influencing factors
35
Q

Define stillbirth

A

A child that has issued forth from its mother after 20th week of pregnancy and which did not at any time after being completely expelled from its mother breath or show any signs of life
Less than 20 weeks = miscarriage and does not need a death certificate

36
Q

Things need to dispose of body

A
Death certificate
Death registered
Issued certificate of disposal 
Funeral arrangements - burial cremation
Notification of disposal back to registrar
37
Q

Cremation forms needed

A
Application for cremation
- issued by funeral directors
- completed by relative in charge
- countersigned by person in authority
Medical certificate
- completed by dr who issued death certificate
Confirmatory medical certificate
- completed by doctor registered > 5 years
Authority from registrar
Authority form PF/coroner
Authority to cremate
- issued by medical referee to crematorium
38
Q

Death investigation purposes

A

Detection of homicide
Investigation of other unnatural deaths
Protection of citizen’s rights
Statistics and audit

39
Q

Death investigation principles

A
Expedient
Thorough
Impartial
Respectful of relative's rights
E&W 
- 20% population autopsy rate
- 33% of deaths referred
- 60% have autopsy
Scotland
- 10% population autopsy rate
- 24% deaths referred
- 40% have autopsy
40
Q

Key features of Scottish Legal System

A

Developed independently of E&W until union in 1707 then developed in parallel
Duty of PF to inquire into sudden, suspicious, accidental, unexpected and unexplained death occurring in their jurisdiction
In pursuance of public interest to eradicate dangers to health and life, allay public anxiety and ensure full and accurate statistics

41
Q

Decision to issue DC or refer to PF

A
Was death primarily natural or unnatural
Any unnatural factors
- assault
- RTC
- accident
- fall
Do not refer to PF because relative refuse permission for hospital autopsy
42
Q

Deaths to refer to PF

A
Uncertified death
Outdoor death, residence unknown
Violent, suspicious or unexplained
Sudden and unexpected
Accident involving a vehicle
Any other accident
Death at work
Industrial accident, disease or poisoning
Circumstances suggest suicide
Poisoning - accidental or deliberate
Death under medical care
Defect in medicinal product
Food poisoning or infectious disease
Neglect or fault of another
Abortion/attempted abortion
Newborn child whose body is found
Cot death - SIDS
Suffocation or overlaying
Death of foster child
Death in legal custody - prison, police custody
Drowning
Fire, explosion, burns or scalds
43
Q

Features of referred deaths under medical care

A
Clinically unexplained
Unexpected with regard to condition
Attributable to diagnostic or therapeutic hazard
Negligence suggested
Death during anaesthesia
Complication of anaesthetic or surgery
44
Q

Features/investigations of deaths under medical care PF specific interest

A

Was patient properly examined
Were all due precautions followed
Were there any special risks which should have been discovered

45
Q

Deaths PF primary interests

A
Criminal involvement
- assault
- RTA
Unnatural
- suicide
- homicide
- accident
Medical mishap
- accident
- negligence
46
Q

Types of medical mishap

A
Delay in treatment
Breakdown in communication
Inappropriate medication
Equipment failure
Surgical mishap
- accident
- unusual difficulties
47
Q

Define negligence

A

Breach of duty of care as a result of which there is damage to another
Legal duty of care owed
Breach of duty by omission or commission
Provable causal link between action and harm
Appropriate standard of care judged against body of opinion in filed

48
Q

Types of authority for autopsy from PF

A
2 doctor autopsy
- homicide
- suspicious
- RTA
1 doctor autopsy
- suicide
- accident
- some natural disease
1 doctor or view and grant
- natural
View and grant preferred
- family objection
All can be +/- toxicology
49
Q

PF further options

A
Make further inquires and precognition
Involve other offices
- health and safety executives
- public health 
Close case on own authority
Refer to Crown Office
50
Q

Deaths PF must refer to Crown Office

A
Suspicious death
Criminality involved
Suicide
Represents danger to public safety
Medical mishap
Where FAI (fatal accident inquiry) is mandatory
- fatal accident at work
- death in custody
Where FAI have been requested by family
Death of police officer
Death due to fire or explosion
Any other death causing concern
51
Q

Features of fatal accident inquiry

A
Mandatory under 1976 act
- fatal accident in course of employment
- death in legal custody
At discretion of LA
- gives rise to public concern
- hospital negligence
- public transport accident
Determines who, when, where, how and why death occurred
Does not apportion blame
52
Q

Deaths requiring coroners inquest in E&W

A
Death in prison
Death in police custody
Death notifiable to government department
Circumstances prejudicial to public
Some RTAs
53
Q

Coroners inquests are adjourned for

A
Murder
Manslaughter
Infanticide
Death by dangerous driving
Suicide with abetment
May resume after clinical proceedings
54
Q

Coroner inquest verdicts

A

Died from natural causes
Died from industrial disease
Died from dependence on drugs / non-dependent abuse of drugs
Killed themselves - whilst in the balance of mind was disturbed
Died as a result of accident/misadventure
Was killed lawfully
Was killed unlawfully - murder, manslaughter, infanticide
Died as a result of attempted/self-induced abortion
Was stillborn
Died from want of attention at birth
Open verdict