Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
Autopsy disclosures are governed by state law. What is law in Pennsylvania is not law in California and so on.So a coroner couldn't, for example, tell the media how a person died? Because how a person dies is a medical diagnosis and patient confidentiality does not cease being confidential at death?
Coroners are not involved in all death reports. Physicians and in some states like WA, nurse practitioners can also pronounce death and sign death certificates. Death certificates are public record in some sates, but in others they are treated like birth certificates, only certain people can request them.
Whether a coroner or ME can release details of a death to the media depends on state law and in some cases it depends on the cause of death. Homicide, accidental death and death by abuse, are often public records. But if you died from cancer, no, your doctor cannot always just disclose that information to anyone who asks.
But all this discussion does not go to the question at hand. Did this morgue have a duty to not let high school students see their friend's name on a brain in a jar during their field trip? Should the ME or coroner have kept names on bodies or body parts confidential from the students?
I cannot imagine any medical ethicists who would say it was tough cookies these kids knew the deceased and all due care was taken. That is absurd!