Goodin J, Hanzlick R
Office of the Chief Medical Investigator, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, USA.
Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 1997 Sep;18(3):224-7. doi: 10.1097/00000433-199709000-00002.
More than 700 physician medical examiner/coroners (ME/Cs) were surveyed to assess differences in manner of death classifications for typical but often controversial death scenarios: 198 physicians participated by choosing the manner of death (homicide, suicide, accident, natural, undetermined) for 23 such scenarios. Sixteen questions related to death certificate training, work location, and manner of death issues were also asked. The classification of manner of death by ME/Cs was highly variable. For some challenging death scenarios, majority agreement was lacking. Agreement was > or = 80% for only 11 of the 23 scenarios and was 100% for only 1. Manner of death classification method was not influenced by forensic pathology board certification status, by whether or not the physician actually completed death certificates, or by previous threats of lawsuits over manner of death classification. However, there were some differences by state. No textbook or individual was widely recognized as authoritative on manner of death issues. Few ME/Cs had formal death certification training in medical school or residency. The data lend credence to the practice of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) of classifying manner of death for statistical purposes by using coding and classification rules and selection criteria rather than solely on the basis of the classification of manner chosen by ME/Cs. The data also indicate that caution is in order when one compares manner of death statistics of one ME/C with those of another Published guidelines and more uniform training are needed so that ME/Cs may become more consistent in their manner of death classifications. Further information is presented in Part I (history of manner of death classification) and in Part III (individual death scenarios and their analysis) companion articles in this issue of the Journal.
我们对700多名法医病理学家/验尸官(ME/Cs)进行了调查,以评估在典型但常存在争议的死亡场景中死亡方式分类的差异:198名医生参与其中,为23个此类场景选择死亡方式(他杀、自杀、意外、自然死亡、死因不明)。我们还询问了16个与死亡证明培训、工作地点和死亡方式问题相关的问题。ME/Cs对死亡方式的分类差异很大。对于一些具有挑战性的死亡场景,缺乏多数人一致的意见。在23个场景中,只有11个场景的一致率≥80%,只有1个场景的一致率为100%。死亡方式分类方法不受法医病理委员会认证状态、医生是否实际填写死亡证明或先前因死亡方式分类引发的诉讼威胁的影响。然而,不同州存在一些差异。在死亡方式问题上,没有任何教科书或个人被广泛认可为权威。很少有ME/Cs在医学院或住院医师培训期间接受过正式的死亡证明培训。这些数据支持了美国国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)为统计目的通过使用编码和分类规则及选择标准而非仅仅基于ME/Cs选择的死亡方式分类来对死亡方式进行分类的做法。数据还表明,当比较一名ME/C与另一名ME/C的死亡方式统计数据时需谨慎。需要发布指南并进行更统一的培训,以便ME/Cs在死亡方式分类上更加一致。更多信息在本期《期刊》的第一篇文章(死亡方式分类的历史)和第三篇文章(个体死亡场景及其分析)中呈现。