DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
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
Last reviewed: 2023-10-01