Medical records as screening tools for child death review in Japan

Author:

Numaguchi Atsushi12ORCID,Ishii Akira3,Natsume Jun24ORCID,Saitoh Shinji5ORCID,Aoki Yasuhiro6,Yoshikawa Tetsushi7ORCID,Isobe Ichiro8,Okumura Akihisa9ORCID,Seno Hiroshi10,Takahashi Yoshiyuki2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine Nagoya University Hospital Nagoya Japan

2. Department of Pediatrics Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

3. Department of Legal Medicine and Bioethics Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

4. Department of Developmental Disability Medicine Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

5. Department of Pediatrics and Neonatology Graduate School of Medical Science, Nagoya City University Nagoya Japan

6. Department of Forensic Medicine Graduate School of Medical Science, Nagoya City University Nagoya Japan

7. Department of Pediatrics Graduate School of Medicine, Fujita Medical University Toyoake Japan

8. Department of Legal Medicine Graduate School of Medicine, Fujita Medical University Toyoake Japan

9. Department of Pediatrics Graduate School of Medicine, Aichi Medical University Nagakute Japan

10. Department of Legal Medicine School of Medicine, Aichi Medical University Nagakute Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlthough many child death review (CDR) systems have been developed in Japan, the optimal system is still being identified. The aim of this study is to identify the etiologies of child deaths and to propose a screening method for initiating the CDR process in Japan.MethodsClinical medical records (CMRs) in hospitals and autopsy records were surveyed for cases of deaths of children aged less than 15 years between 2014 and 2016 in Aichi Prefecture, Japan. The data were analyzed in three steps, and the findings were compared with the vital statistics.ResultsOf the 695 children whose death certificates were submitted to Aichi Prefecture, 590 could be traced to pediatric care hospitals. The distribution of causes of death was slightly different from the vital statistics, with 11.5% dying of extrinsic causes and 19.7% dying of unknown causes. Maltreatment was suspected in 64 cases, which was much higher than that in government statistics. Overall, 158 (26.8%) deaths were considered preventable. The number of unnatural deaths, which might be screened in, was calculated as 172 (29.2%) in the vital statistics, whereas the survey of CMRs revealed that 241 (40.8%) to 282 (47.8%) should be screened in.ConclusionsSurveying CMRs in hospitals may be a suitable method to detect and screen deaths to start the CDR process in Japan.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference18 articles.

1. Child and Adolescent Health From 1990 to 2015

2. Statistics of the Japanese Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare. [cited 15 Mar2022]. Available from:https://www.e‐stat.go.jp/(in Japanese).

3. Child death review statutory and operational guidance: maximising learning from child deaths

4. Learning from child death review in the USA, England, Australia, and New Zealand

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