Affiliation:
1. Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, 51000 Rijeka, Croatia
2. Pula General Hospital, 52000 Pula, Croatia
Abstract
Premortem clinical diagnoses and postmortem autopsy findings do not match historically. These clinicopathological discrepancies are expected to be higher during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic due to increased pressure on healthcare. At the same time, autopsies and clinicopathological discrepancies accurately display the quality of the healthcare system. To assess that, we examined the relevant works of literature according to the PRISMA-based protocol. As a discrepancy rate change-related antemortem scrutiny of medical care in the hospital, we also checked whether studies with patients from the intensive care unit (ICU) differed in discrepancies significantly. We found similar overall risk differences in “pre-COVID” and “during the pandemic” groups of studies. Based on this, we concluded that healthcare quality did not drop significantly during the pandemic. Be that as it may, the pandemic exposed some shortcomings in mortem healthcare regarding consensus to the autopsy, organ retention, burial, and the postponed burial or the digitalization of postmortem healthcare. All of these issues should be addressed in the future.
Reference114 articles.
1. The rise and fall of the autopsy;Taylor;Virchows Arch.,2013
2. Kurz, S.D., Sido, V., Herbst, H., Ulm, B., Salkic, E., Ruschinski, T.M., Buschmann, C.T., and Tsokos, M. (2021). Discrepancies between clinical diagnosis and hospital autopsy: A comparative retrospective analysis of 1,112 cases. PLoS ONE, 16.
3. The Importance of the Autopsy in Medicine: Perspectives of Pathology Colleagues;Buja;Acad. Pathol.,2019
4. Medical Malpractice and Diagnostic Errors in Japanese Emergency Departments;Miyagami;West. J. Emerg. Med.,2023
5. Reforming the coroner and death certification service;Hasleton;Curr. Diagn. Pathol.,2004