Dying “from” or “with” COVID-19 during the Pandemic: Medico-Legal Issues According to a Population Perspective

Author:

De-Giorgio FabioORCID,Grassi Vincenzo M.ORCID,Bergamin Eva,Cina AlessandroORCID,Del Nonno Franca,Colombo Daniele,Nardacci RobertaORCID,Falasca LauraORCID,Conte Celeste,d’Aloja ErnestoORCID,Damiani GianfrancoORCID,Vetrugno Giuseppe

Abstract

There is still a lack of knowledge concerning the pathophysiology of death among COVID-19-deceased patients, and the question of whether a patient has died with or due to COVID-19 is still very much debated. In Italy, all deaths of patients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 are defined as COVID-19-related, without considering pre-existing diseases that may either contribute to or even cause death. Our study included nine subjects from two different nursing homes (Cases 1–4, Group A; Cases 5–9, Group B). The latter included patients who presumably died from CO poisoning due to a heating system malfunction. All subjects tested positive for COVID-19 both ante- and post-mortem and were examined using post-mortem computed tomography prior to autopsy. COVID-19 was determined to be a contributing cause in the deaths of four out of nine subjects (death due to COVID-19; i.e., pneumonia and sudden cardiac death). In the other five cases, for which CO poisoning was identified as the cause of death, the infection presumably had no role in exitus (death with COVID-19). In our attempt to classify our patients as dying with or due to COVID-19, we found the use of complete assessments (both histological analyses and computed tomography examination) fundamental.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference51 articles.

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