Manner of death

In many legal jurisdictions, the manner of death is a determination, typically made by the coroner, medical examiner, police, or similar officials, and recorded as a vital statistic. Within the United States and the United Kingdom, a distinction is made between the cause of death (sometimes referred to as the "mechanism of death"), which is a specific disease or injury, versus manner of death, which is primarily a legal determination. Different categories are used in different jurisdictions, but manner of death determinations include everything from very broad categories like "natural" and "homicide" to specific manners like "traffic accident" or "attempted or self-induced abortion". In some cases an autopsy is performed, either due to general legal requirements, because the medical cause of death is uncertain, upon the request of family members or guardians, or because the circumstances of death were suspicious.

International Classification of Disease (ICD) codes can be used to record manner and cause of death in a systematic way that makes it easy to compile statistics and more feasible to compare events across jurisdictions.[1]

Terminology

A death by natural causes results from an illness or an internal malfunction of the body not directly caused by external forces. For example, a person dying from complications from influenza (an infection), a heart attack (an internal body malfunction), or sudden heart failure would most likely be listed as having died from natural causes. "Death by natural causes" is sometimes used as a euphemism for "dying of old age", which is considered problematic as a cause of death (as opposed to a specific age-related disease); there are also many non-age-related causes of "natural" death, for legal manner-of-death purposes. (See Cause of death § Age)

An unnatural death results from an external cause, typically including homicides, suicides, accidents, medical errors, drug overdoses.[2][3] Jurisdictions differ in how they categorize and report unnatural deaths, including level of detail and whether they are considered a single category with subcategories, or separate top-level categories.[4][5] There is no international standard on whether or how to classify a death as natural vs. unnatural.[6]

"Mechanism of death" is sometimes used to refer to the proximate cause of death, which might differ than the cause that is used to classify the manner of death. For example, the proximate cause or mechanism of death might be brain ischemia (lack of blood flow to the brain), caused by a malignant neoplasm (cancer), in turn caused by a dose of ionizing radiation administered by a person with intent to kill or injure, leading to certification of the manner of death as "homicide".

The manner of death can be recorded as "undetermined" if there is not enough evidence to reach a firm conclusion.[7] For example, the discovery of a partial human skeleton indicates a death, but might not provide enough evidence to determine a cause.[8]

Categories by jurisdiction

United States

In the United States, a manner of death is expressed as belonging to one classification of a group of six possible:[9][4][8]

  • Natural
  • Accident
  • Suicide
  • Homicide
  • Undetermined
  • Pending

In some jurisdictions, some more detailed manners may be reported in numbers broken out from the main four or five. For example:

  • Legal intervention (e.g. capital punishment)[1]
  • Act of war[1]
  • Automobile accidents[8]
  • Deaths of prison inmates by acute intoxication[10]

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, when people die, either a doctor writes an acceptable natural cause of death medical certificate, or a coroner (procurator fiscal in Scotland) investigates the case.[6] Coroners are independent judicial officers who investigate deaths reported to them, and subsequently whatever inquiries are necessary to discover the cause of death, this includes ordering a post-mortem examination, obtaining witness statements and medical records, or holding an inquest.[11] In the unified legal jurisdiction of England and Wales, most deaths are certified by doctors without autopsy or coroner involvement. Almost all deaths certified by the coroner involve an autopsy but most do not involve a formal inquest.[12]

In England and Wales, a specific list of choices for verdicts is not mandated, and "narrative verdicts" are allowed, which are not specifically classified. The verdicts aggregated by the Ministry of Justice are:[13]

  • Homicide
    • Killed unlawfully
    • Killed lawfully
  • Suicide
  • Attempted or self-induced abortion
  • Cause of death aggravated by lack of care, or self-neglect
  • Dependence on drugs
  • Non-dependent abuse of drugs
  • Want of attention at birth
  • Death from industrial diseases
  • Death by accident or misadventure
  • Stillborn
  • Death from natural causes
  • Open verdict
  • Disaster

Other jurisdictions

Some jurisdictions place deaths in absentia, such as deaths at sea and missing persons declared dead in a court of law, in the "Undetermined" category on the grounds that due to the fact-finder's lack of ability to examine the body, the examiner has no personal knowledge of the manner of (assumed) death; others classify such deaths in an additional category "Other," reserving "Undetermined" for deaths in which the fact-finder has access to the body, but the information provided by the body and examination of it is insufficient to provide sufficient grounds for a determination.

The Norwegian Medical Association classifies what other jurisdictions might call "undetermined" as "unnatural":[5]

  • Sudden and unexpected death of an unknown cause
  • Deaths in prison or while in civilian or military detention

A death ruled as homicide or unlawful killing is typically referred to police or prosecutor or equivalent official for investigation and criminal charges if warranted. Deaths caused by capital punishment, though homicides, are generally assumed to be lawful and are not prosecuted. Most deaths due to war are not prosecuted, unless there is evidence of a war crime, in which case troops on foreign territory might be prosecuted by the military justice system, domestic law enforcement, or the International Criminal Court.

Some insurance contracts, such as life insurance policies, have special rules for certain manners of death. Suicide, for example, may invalidate claims under terms of such a contract.

See also

References

  1. National Center for Health Statistics - Classification of Death and Injury Resulting from Terrorism - How are external cause of injury codes assigned?, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. retrieved July 7 2019
  2. External causes of death, University of Melbourne, retrieved April 25, 2019
  3. Zeegers, Maurice (2016-05-18). Forensic Epidemiology: Principles and Practice. ISBN 9780124045842.
  4. Bryant, Clifton D. (2003). Handbook of death & dying. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications. p. 968. ISBN 0-7619-2514-7.
  5. Alfsen, G. Cecilie (2013). "Medical autopsies after deaths outside hospital". Tidsskriftet : The Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association. 133: 756. doi:10.4045/tidsskr.12.1081.
  6. Harris, A. (2017). "'Natural' and 'Unnatural' medical deaths and coronial law: A UK and international review of the medical literature on natural and unnatural death and how it applies to medical death certification and reporting deaths to coroners: Natural/Unnatural death: A Scientific Review". Med Sci Law. 57 (3): 105–114. doi:10.1177/0025802417708948. PMID 28669276.
  7. Palmer, Brian (21 December 2009). "What, Exactly, Are "Natural Causes"?". Slate.com.
  8. Snohomish County Government, Washington Cause & Manner of Death retrieved April 27, 2019
  9. The Crime Museum - Cause, Mechanism, and Manner of Death retrieved April 27, 2019
  10. Stark, Martha (2000). A physician's guide to clinical forensic medicine. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. p. 225. ISBN 0-89603-742-8.
  11. Coroners, post-mortems and inquests, nidirect retrieved April 27, 2019
  12. - Figure 1, page 16
  13. "Statistics on deaths reported to coroners England and Wales, 2008" (PDF). Ministry of Justice Statistics bulletin. 7 May 2009. p. 17. - Table 6: Inquest verdicts returned, 1994-2008

Further reading

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