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Post-mortem computed tomography in adult non-suspicious death investigation—evaluation of an NHS based service
Author(s) -
Claire Robinson,
Aparna Deshpande,
Cathy Richards,
Guy N. Rutty,
Catherine Mason,
Bruno Morgan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
bjr|open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2513-9878
DOI - 10.1259/bjro.20190017
Subject(s) - coroner , medicine , service (business) , demographics , autopsy , cause of death , medical emergency , retrospective cohort study , service delivery framework , family medicine , pediatrics , general surgery , surgery , demography , business , poison control , injury prevention , disease , marketing , sociology
Objective: Post-mortem CT (PMCT) can replace autopsy in many cases of non-suspicious death. A purely NHS-based service to replace autopsy with PMCT was launched, with the cost met by the family from 2015 to 2017, and subsequently “free at the point of delivery” after local authority funding was secured. The aim of the service was to improve the experience for the families. This report describes and evaluates the service against local standards of (1) less than four day turn around, (2) cause of death given in >90% and (3) less than 10% require autopsy. Methods: A retrospective review of reports, records and emails was undertaken to collate demographics, times of different stages of the process, the outcome and comments from service users. Results: Between July 2015 and July 2018, 279 patients had PMCT scans, 67 (24.0%) in the family-funded service and 212 (76%) in the current service. 97.1% ( n = 271/279) of cases had the radiology report issued by day 3 (96.8% vs 98.6% for the family funded and local authority-funded services respectively). A cause of death was given in 97.2% of scans. 2.8% of patients required autopsy. Feedback from families, coroner’s officers and undertakers has been overwhelmingly positive. Conclusion: The services exceeded local standards and met the needs of the Coroner and the families based on the feedback received. This model could be employed for similar services, but the change to the logistics and financial structures required to initiate such services remains a significant hurdle. Advances in knowledge: This is the first report of a fully NHS-based PMCT service.

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