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North Carolina Medical Examiner System
and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner
Deborah Radisch, MD, MPHJanuary 24, 2014
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Organization of Death Investigation Systems in the US
• Coroner – elected, usually lay official. County centered and funded. A few jurisdictions require that candidates be physicians and/or provide sufficient funding to obtain medical expertise. May hire pathologists to conduct exams but final decisions about/certification of cause and manner of death in individual cases may be made by the coroner.
• Medical Examiner – appointed, physician / medical knowledge. May have county or statewide jurisdiction. May be a forensic pathologist or not. County centered systems, county systems with central oversight, district systems.
• Justice of the peace, district attorney• Systems can be mixed and vary from state to state and in some states from
county to county
THERE IS NO STANDARDIZED NATIONAL DEATH INVESTIGATION SYSTEM
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North Carolina ME System
• Based on model legislation similar to that already in place in Maryland and Virginia. It was intended to utilize the pre-existing facilities and personnel that comprised the medical health care delivery system, local hospitals and physicians, to provide county medicolegal death investigation services
• Central oversight and professional support for the local MEs would be provided by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner which would be a state function
• While it was originally intended that only MDs would serve as MEs the original statute allowed the coroner to serve as “acting” ME until a physician could be found and over the years PAs and RNs have also served as “acting” MEs
• It can be seen as a public/private cooperative enterprise with the current funding ~ 60% state dollars and 40% county
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Major Program Areas
• Medicolegal Death Investigation– State
• County Medical Examiners• “de facto” Regional Centers /Pathologists
– Central Office• Administrative • Support• Pathologists• Toxicologists• IT• Child Fatality Prevention Team
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ME Cases in NC
• ~ 11,000 cases investigated per year• Of those, ~ 4500 are autopsied• 2013 estimate:– OCME1175 autopsies– OCME 779 externals
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Deaths Requiring Medicolegal Investigation
Unattended natural deaths• No physician• Physician but no life-threatening illness• Break in medical care, but no specific time limit since last visit• Visitors to NC, stranger from afar, non attendance by virtue of geography
Sudden, unexpected, apparently natural deaths
Deaths due to external causes = unnatural• Manner: accident, suicide, homicide, undetermined• Injury can be due to physical, chemical, thermal, electrical forces or radiation• The injury may be the sole cause of death or contributory• There is no time limit between the time of injury and death as long as the
two can be linked causally, even if years have passed (proximate cause)
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Deaths Requiring Medicolegal Investigation
Other CasesDeaths possibly due to contagious disease – public health threatwhen a diagnosis must be established in order to determine whether others have been exposed and might need prophylactic treatmentBioterrorismDeaths in jail, prison or other correctional facility, under police custody or controlSuspicious deathsDeaths in certain state institutions (Divisions of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services)
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County Medical Examiners
• Physicians• Physician Extenders (PA, FNP)• Nurses• EMT-Paramedics• Lay
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ME Records and Payments
• ME Report of Investigation– Must be sent to the OCME within 14 days– Serves as an invoice ($100)
• ME Death Certificate - medical certification must be completed within 3 days and the DC filed with the health department within 5 days. The health dept. sends a copy to the OCME
• Autopsy Report – To the OCME by 180 days – $1250
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ME Records
• ME Reports, ME Autopsy Reports, and results of toxicology tests become public records available to any requester after receipt and review at the OCME
www.ocme.unc.edu
• Death Certificates are also public records, but copies must be obtained through vital records at the state or county level
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OCME as Medical Examiner
• OCME serves as the primary medical examiner for Wake, Franklin, and Durham counties, regular back-up for several close-by counties, and potential back-up for any county or regional pathology center
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Death Investigation Realities
• CONTRARY TO THE PUBLIC IMPRESSION OF HOW DEATH INVESTIGATIONS ARE CONDUCTED – the “CSI EFFECT”
• Crime scene processing is conducted by crime scene technicians• Evidence is analyzed by crime lab technicians• Crimes are investigated by law enforcement officers and they
identify interrogate and arrest suspects• The court system decides matters of guilt and innocence• The role of the Medical Examiner in criminal matters is to
provide sound, medically based evidence in regard to the cause (and manner) of death of the victim
The role of the ME is to determine WHAT DID IT, NOT WHO
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Case Flow
Law Enforcement, first responders (EMS, Rescue, Fire Departments), medical personnel
County Medical Examiners
Regional Pathologists
OCME
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Regional Centers
• Brody School of Medicine-Greenville– 4 Forensic Pathologists
• WFU School of Medicine-Winston-Salem– 3 Forensic Pathologists
• Mecklenburg County-Charlotte– 3 Forensic Pathologists
• Other– Jacksonville*, Clinton, Hickory, Sylva, Lumberton
(no ABP certified FPs)
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Current centersCurrent pathologistsFuture regional offices ??
Medical Examiner Autopsies in North Carolina
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Medicolegal Autopsy
• Not every death that comes under medical examiner jurisdiction requires an autopsy
• An autopsy is “ordered” when it is deemed “advisable and in the public interest” as defined by guidelines promulgated by the OCME
• ME autopsies do not require the consent of the next of kin and an objection by the NOK is not a bar to the exam
• All ME autopsies are complete autopsies• Medicolegal autopsies are performed by designated regional pathologists
or by the OCME Pathology Branch• A little over 40% of ME cases in NC are autopsied. Not all trauma deaths
have an autopsy
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Medicolegal Autopsy
Purposes :• Identification• Collect evidence• Document injuries and natural disease• Collect samples for special testing• Try to narrow down where and when injured/died • Opinion as to cause and manner of death
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Central Office Functions
• Administrative – Case Management
• Assemble case files for all ME cases in NC except Mecklenburg county
• Public interface• Subpoena management• Case coding and data entry
• Budget• Purchasing• IT
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Central Office Functions
• Pathology Support– Transcription– Histology: includes Mecklenburg, for ~2000 cases per year, average
of 6 glass slides per case– Morgue technician staff– Radiology– Photography– Investigation– Ancillary:
• Anthropology• Odontology• Neuropathology• Laboratory
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Central Office Functions
• Six forensic pathologists and one fellow (training)– Autopsies– Review all ME cases in NC = QA, before public
record– Consultation– Testify– Teaching– Mass fatality planning and management
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Central Office Functions
Court Testimony• In 2011, OCME pathologists testified in court
39 times, a fraction of the subpoenas they received and for which they were on telephone stand-by. The total time, travel and court (testimony and waiting), was 190 hours.
• Toxicologists are being subpoenaed to appear more frequently (Melendez-Diaz).
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Central Office Functions
• Teaching– Forensic Pathology Fellowship• Program Director
– Pathology Residents (1 month required)• UNC, Duke
– Medical Students• Second year (all) and elective rotation
– Pathology Assistant Students (Duke)– Miscellaneous presentations
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Central Office Functions
• Toxicology– All ME testing in NC– More than 10,000 cases per year, with more than
twice that many analyses– Screen, then confirm and quantitate
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Central Office Functions
• Child Fatality Prevention Team– 2 (-1)– Investigator/Trainer– Researcher
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Funding
• Appropriations 63%• Receipts 23%• Grants 14%
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Major Stakeholders
• Families• Law Enforcement• District attorneys, defense attorneys, plaintiff’s attorneys• Vital Records• Funeral Directors• Legislators• EMS• Medical practitioners, including VA• Public Health professionals• Transporters• Media
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Statutes, Rules, and Guidelines
•NC OCME Guidelines, Rules, and Statutes– http://www.ocme.unc.edu/rules/index.shtml• Administrative Code • General Statutes • Guidelines for Medical Examiners
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Priorities
• National accreditation• Medical Examiner training• Improved communication• Appropriate death certification• Regionalization
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Mission Statement
The North Carolina Office of the Chief Medical Examiner will ensure consistent and
competent medicolegal death investigation by utilizing training, consultation, quality assurance, and the appropriate use of
resources.