Medical examiner
A medical examiner is a special kind of doctor who investigates deaths. Their job is to find out how and why someone died, especially when the death is sudden, unexpected, or might be due to crime.[1]
What Medical Examiners Do
[change | change source]Examine bodies
[change | change source]They look closely at dead bodies to find clues about how the person died.
Perform autopsies
[change | change source]This is when they carefully open and study the body to learn more.
Collect evidence
[change | change source]They take samples like blood or tissue to test in a lab.
Study medical records
[change | change source]They look at the person's health history to see if it explains the death.
Work with police
[change | change source]In cases where a crime might have happened, they help the police understand what happened to the body.
Write reports
[change | change source]They explain their findings in official documents.
Testify in court
[change | change source]Sometimes they have to explain their work to judges and juries.
Why medical examiners are important
[change | change source]- They help solve crimes by finding evidence on bodies.
- They can spot new diseases or health dangers that might affect other people.
- They give families answers about why their loved ones died.
- They help make sure death certificates are accurate.
Training
[change | change source]To become a medical examiner, a person must:
- Finish medical school and become a doctor
- Get special training in pathology (the study of diseases)
- Learn extra skills for investigating deaths
Medical examiners work in government offices, usually for cities or counties. They play a crucial role in the legal and healthcare systems by explaining deaths that might otherwise remain mysteries.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Spitz, Werner U (2006). Spitz and Fisher's medicolegal investigation of death: guidelines for the application of pathology to crime investigation. Springfield: Charles C Thomas Publisher, LTD. ISBN 9780398084813.