Problems arise, however, when someone who has no
physician dies and thus, no one who can sign the death certificate.
Likewise, when death occurs under suspicious circumstances or as
a result of violence, the medical examiner system becomes involved.
Societies have a special interest in violent, unnatural deaths and
have evolved mechanisms to see that they are properly investigated.
The problem of unattended deaths must also be solved since there
is always, in the absence of confirmed medical history, the possibility
that these deaths might be due to violence or external causes.
Deaths in North Carolina that are unattended, suspicious,
or the result of violence (homicide, suicide, and accident) are
investigated and certified by our State Medical Examiner System.
Despite several attempts to improve the quality of medicolegal death
investigation, prior to the passage of legislation in 1967, these
deaths were, for the most part, investigated by an elected lay coroner.
These county officials often lacked medical expertise and worked
in isolation, dependent solely upon the resources within their individual
counties to obtain medical input into death investigations.
In 1955, the North Carolina General Assembly passed
legislation to allow individual counties to appoint medical examiners
and to identify pathologists who were willing and able to perform
autopsies when the medical examiners or coroners needed them. Legislation
passed in 1965 allowed individual counties to abolish the office
of coroner and to appoint a medical doctor to investigate deaths
within their counties. Only a few counties acted upon these bills.
The Statewide Medical Examiner Act of 1967 however, insured that
medical input into death investigations would be occur and by 1972,
all the counties of the state either had physicians acting as county
medical examiners or the coroner had been appointed acting medical
examiner (and operated under the medical examiner statute with assistance
and medical input from the Chief Medical Examiner's Office). Since
that time, the medical examiner system has annually certified approximately
1/6 of all deaths that occur in North Carolina.
The North Carolina Medical Examiner System is a
network of over 600 medical doctors throughout North Carolina who
voluntarily devote their time, energy, and medical expertise to
see that deaths of a suspicious, unusual or unnatural nature are
adequately investigated. At the county level, medical practitioners
are appointed by the Chief Medical Examiner for three-year terms
as county medical examiners. In counties where there are no physicians
willing or able to serve, non-physicians may be appointed to serve
as acting medical examiners. By law, medical examiners must be notified
when a death occurs in their county that falls within the statutorily
defined categories. The county medical examiners take charge of
the body of the deceased and conduct such examination as is necessary
to properly determine the cause and manner of death. These duties
are all in addition to their normal roles as private practitioners.
In evaluating a case, they must consult with law
enforcement officers, relatives, and/or other individuals who may
have knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the death. They
conduct a physical examination of the body to detect or rule out
signs of violence. On many occasions, they visit the place where
the death occurred or where the body was found in order to gather
more data. In some instances, in order to properly complete their
investigation, they may decide that an autopsy is necessary. The
law gives them the authority to order an autopsy should they deem
it advisable. Such an autopsy is performed by a pathologist who
has been designated by the Chief Medical Examiner as competent and
capable of performing the examination. Most of these pathologists
are in private practice, like the medical examiners, and participate
on a voluntary basis. They report their findings to the county medical
examiners, who must consider them when they render their opinion
as to the cause and manner of death. Twenty-four pathology groups
around the state perform such medicolegal autopsies in addition
to the OCME and the Mecklenburg medical examinersÆ office.
Specimens for toxicological testing obtained by
the medical examiners and the pathologists are all sent to the Office
of the Chief Medical Examiner, where the toxicology laboratory performs
a wide variety of analyses. In most instances, the medical examiners
and pathologists have the results of toxicology tests within a few
days after the death occurs, although in cases where more complex
analyses are required, some delay is common.
All reports generated by the medical examiners
and regional pathologists are forwarded to the Office of the Chief
Medical Examiner, where they are assembled and kept on file. Much
of the material on file is computerized and can be retrieved for
epidemiological studies. A great strength of the NC medical examiner
system is the assemblage of data that allows surveillance of deaths
in the state, often leading to the discovery of existing and potential
public health hazards.
One significant difference between the old coroner
system and the modern medical examiner system is that the latter
has a much broader charge in regard to death investigation. The
coroner's main concern was to "rule out foul play." This was usually
construed to mean homicide. Medical Examiners are charged to uncover
all forms of violence or trauma, homicidal or otherwise, and to
be alert for all public health hazards.
Within the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner,
five pathologists perform medicolegal autopsies for counties surrounding
Chapel Hill and counties that have no regional pathologists. Cases
are also referred to the central office when field pathologists
are not available to do an autopsy or when additional expertise
is required to assess a case. As a result, more than one fourth
of all autopsies in the medical examiner system are performed at
the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Each of the five pathologists
is also responsible for providing consultation to county medical
examiners and field pathologists as well as reviewing medical examiner
investigative reports for a region within the state.
Beyond the pathology and toxicology staff, the
central office has an administrative section which assembles information
from multiple sources, performs the mechanical aspects of filing
and generating reports, and coordinates the numerous other activities
involved in operating the system across the state. For example,
each medical examiner investigation generates a number of documents.
These public documents are regularly requested by law enforcement,
insurance, and other agencies. The office mails an average of four
copies of the medical examinerÆs report (including toxicological
and autopsy results, if done) per case.
The central office is responsible for a number
of activities related to death investigation, including payment
for the transportation of deceased individuals throughout the state
when such transportation is ordered by the medical examiners and
pathologists. Hundreds of individual transporters--funeral homes,
rescue squads, and independent transporters--aid the Medical Examiner
System and the citizens of North Carolina by providing this service.
In addition to case investigation and management,
the central office has a broad educational function. The medical
examiners and regional pathologists must be kept abreast of happenings
within the system, requiring continuing medical education sessions.
Education of law enforcement personnel for optimal interaction between
the medical examiner and law enforcement systems is also an ongoing
concern. Located within the UNC Medical School complex, the central
office staff also instructs medical and dental students and participates
in programs and courses with the N.C. Justice Academy, State Bureau
of Investigation, and many other institutions.
An efficiently functioning Medical Examiner System
helps to insure that all suspicious deaths are adequately investigated
and that the actual illness or injury that caused death is identified.
This protects innocent individuals from prosecution and aids in
the conviction of the guilty. It allows the speedy settlement of
insurance claims and other survivor benefits. By bringing public
attention to many cases of death that are in theory preventable,
the toll of such premature deaths may be decreased.