DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
PROCEDURE
- Assess patient's condition against following criteria:
- no heart beat heard and no carotid pulse felt for full 5 min simultaneously
- no breath sounds heard and no chest movement seen for full 5 min simultaneously
- pupils fixed and dilated
- corneal reflex absent
Information to be recorded
- Confirm identify of the patient, cross reference with notes and wrist band, and document
- date and time of examination of body
- Entry stating that:
- last observed breath (date/time) by whom (person’s full name)
- no heart beat heard and no carotid pulse felt for full 5 min
- no breath sounds heard and no chest movement seen for full 5 min
- pupils fixed and dilated
- corneal reflex absent
- Patient verified as dead
- Signature, name, designation and contact number of verifier
LEGAL ISSUES
Issuing death certificate
- A doctor who has attended a deceased person during his/her last illness is required to issue a medical certificate stating cause of death ‘to the best of his/her knowledge and belief'
- To issue a certificate, doctor is not obliged to view the body
- good practice requires that, if they have any doubt about fact of death, they should satisfy himself/herself by viewing the body
- As the doctor is not obliged in law to see the body in order to issue a certificate, appropriately trained nurses may expand their role into verification of expected death
Death in hospital
- It is the hospital doctor's responsibility to:
- inform the Coroner where necessary
- issue death certificate
- inform deceased's GP
THE CORONER
- When registering the death at the registration office, ask whether Coroner must be informed
- the registrar is regularly updated with Coroner's requirements
- Discuss with the Coroner any case where there is doubt
Old age
- If no specific medical cause of death in a person aged ≥80 yr, report old age as it is an acceptable cause
- best to include co-morbidities in part 2
Inform Coroner if:
Unknown cause
- Cause of death is unknown
Unnatural causes
- It cannot readily be certified that death is due to natural causes
No medical attendance
- Not attended by a doctor during their last illness
- Not seen by a doctor within the last 14 days
Suspicious/violent
- Suspicious circumstances or a history of violence
Accident
- Death due to some form of accident
- e.g. fall, road traffic collision, incident at work or in the home
- consider whether an old injury may have caused/contributed to death years later
Self-neglect/neglect by others
- Any suggestion of self-neglect/neglect by others
- including lack of medical care e.g. bed sores not properly treated
- level 1 or 2 bed sores do not need reporting unless other reasons for doing so
Prison/police custody
- Death occurred during/shortly after release from prison, young offenders' institution or police custody
- even if cause of death due to natural causes
Mental Health Act 1983
- Deceased detained under the Mental Health Act
- no requirement to report deaths of persons who were subject of a DoLS
Abortion
- Maternal deaths
- Infant deaths where infant has drawn breath
- even if abortion legally performed under the Abortion Act
- stillbirths do not need to be reported if doctor satisfied that infant has not drawn breath
Self-harm
- Death may have been due to the actions of the deceased
- e.g. overdose, solvent abuse, alcohol related deaths, self-injury
Industrial disease
- Give details if the deceased had industrial/disability/war pensions
- pneumoconiosis/pulmonary fibrosis (including Farmer's Lung)/mesothelioma/asbestosis
- only if a history of coal mining, report COPD
- give details of any known employment and smoking history
- pensions for white finger and hearing loss do not qualify under this section
Recent operations/procedures/medicines
- Deaths suspected to be due to/exacerbated by medical intervention/medicines e.g.
- GI bleeds due to warfarin, aspirin, NSAIDs
- pseudomembranous colitis due to antibiotics
- attributable to chemotherapy, immunosuppressive drugs, steroids
- Surgery under general anaesthesia within 12 months of death
- report surgery more than 12 months ago if it has led to the death
- do not report minor surgical procedures (e.g. gastroscopies, endoscopies, biopsies, cataracts etc.) unless complications arose from procedure
- Any death where there is an allegation of medical mismanagement
Admission within 24 hr
- Death occurs within 24 hr of admission to hospital except admission for terminal care
Falls, fractures
- Any fractured limbs within 12 months of death
- do not report falls without serious injury which did not contribute to death
Cerebral haemorrhage, CVA, CVD
- Unless satisfied that haemorrhage entirely non-traumatic e.g. CVA, CVD, report cerebral, subdural or extradural haemorrhage
- Report if a bleed due to/exacerbated by drugs e.g. warfarin, heparin
Cancer related deaths
- Bladder cancer in a person born before 1935 especially if any suggested link with Michelin or where dye works may be implicated
- Carcinomatosis with unknown primary
- Neutropenic sepsis due to chemotherapy
Non-specific causes
- Report if unable to qualify (be more specific) terms such as:
- cardiac arrest, brain hypoxia
- organ failure, congestive cardiac failure
- obstruction (e.g. bowel)
- bronchopneumonia, sepsis and peritonitis
Unusual or disturbing features
- Report the features