Affiliation:
1. Forensic Pathologist at The Medical Foundation in South Bend, IN, and a Professor of Pathology at Indiana University School of Medicine-South Bend.
Abstract
The investigation of deaths involving chronically disabled and/or institutionalized persons represents an important challenge to the medicolegal death investigation community. For the purposes of this review, the chronically disabled and/or institutionalized are considered to include three non-mutually exclusive subcategories: the disabled elderly, the severely disabled, and psychiatric patients. Because deaths within certain of these populations tend to be common and expected, a very important goal when such deaths occur is the appropriate referral of cases to the medical examiner/coroner. Although each subcategory has distinct issues of importance regarding death investigation, there is also a reasonable amount of overlap between the three groups. This review provides an overview of the three subcategories, the reasons such persons may be at risk for premature, unexpected, or unnatural death, the many important issues of concern when investigating deaths within these vulnerable populations, and important preventative strategies within each group.
Subject
Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
5 articles.
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