Journal article

Postmortem examinations of the corpse by emergency physicians. Special medico-legal, criminal and medical law aspects


Authors listVerhoff, M. A.; Risse, M.; Lasczkowski, G.; Dettmeyer, R.

Publication year2009

Pages293-29+

JournalNotfall and Rettungsmedizin

Volume number12

Issue number4

ISSN1434-6222

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10049-008-1120-y

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
The primary goal of an emergency medical mission is to save life. However, often only death can be determined or failed reanimation attempts have to be aborted. A carefully executed external postmortem examination makes demands that require a certain minimum amount of time. In particular, these demands cannot be fulfilled when an emergency physician must immediately be available for the next emergency situation. Several German federal states have introduced the option of issuing a provisional death certificate without, however, exempting the physician from any of the notification requirements pertaining to external postmortem examinations. Furthermore, attention should be paid to the numerous problems accompanying cases leading to potential death investigation proceedings and in dealing with the investigating authorities.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleVerhoff, M., Risse, M., Lasczkowski, G. and Dettmeyer, R. (2009) Postmortem examinations of the corpse by emergency physicians. Special medico-legal, criminal and medical law aspects, Notfall and Rettungsmedizin, 12(4), pp. 293-29+. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10049-008-1120-y

APA Citation styleVerhoff, M., Risse, M., Lasczkowski, G., & Dettmeyer, R. (2009). Postmortem examinations of the corpse by emergency physicians. Special medico-legal, criminal and medical law aspects. Notfall and Rettungsmedizin. 12(4), 293-29+. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10049-008-1120-y



Keywords


Death investigation proceedingsEMERGENCY PHYSICIANExternal postmortem examinationNotification requirementsProvisional death certificate

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 03:16