New Mexico Administrative Code
Title 7 - HEALTH
Chapter 3 - STATE MEDICAL INVESTIGATOR'S OFFICE
Part 2 - POLICIES OF THE OFFICE OF THE MEDICAL INVESTIGATOR
Section 7.3.2.12 - INVESTIGATION - EXAMINATION
Universal Citation: 7 NM Admin Code 7.3.2.12
Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. Citations and Regulations:
(1)
24-11-7
NMSA 1978: If the deceased is unidentified, the state, district or deputy
medical investigator may order the body fingerprinted and photographed. When
the state, district or deputy medical investigator suspects a death was caused
by a criminal act or omission or if the cause of death is obscure, he shall
order an autopsy performed by a qualified pathologist certified by the state
board of medical examiners who shall record every fact found in the examination
tending to show the identity and condition of the body and the time, manner and
cause of death. The pathologist shall sign the report under oath and deliver it
to the state, district or deputy medical investigator within a reasonable time.
The state, district or deputy medical investigator may take the testimony of
the pathologist and any other persons, and this testimony, combined with the
written report of the pathologist, constitutes an inquest.
(2)
24-12-4
NMSA 1978:
(a) An autopsy or postmortem
examination may be performed on the body of a deceased person by a physician or
surgeon whenever consent to the procedure has been given:
(i) by written authorization signed by the
deceased during his lifetime;
(ii)
by authorization of any person or on behalf of any entity whom the deceased
designated in writing during his lifetime to take charge of his body for burial
or other purposes;
(iii) by
authorization of the deceased's surviving spouse;
(iv) by authorization of an adult child,
parent or adult brother or sister of the deceased if there is no surviving
spouse or if the surviving spouse is unavailable, incompetent or has not
claimed the body for burial after notification of the death of the
decedent.
(v) by authorization of
any other relative of the deceased if none of the persons enumerated in
Paragraphs 2 through 4 [now (ii) through (iv) of Subparagraph (a) or Paragraph
(2) of Subsection A of 7.3.2.12 NMAC] of this subsection are available or
competent to give authorization; or
(vi) by authorization of the public official,
agency or person having custody of the body for burial if none of the persons
enumerated in Paragraphs 2 through 5 [now (ii) through (v) of Subparagraph (a)
or Paragraph (2) of Subsection A of 7.3.2.12 NMAC] of this subsection are
available or competent to give authorization.
(b) An autopsy or postmortem examination
shall not be performed under authorization given under the provisions of
Paragraph 4 of Subsection A [now (iv) of Subparagraph (a) or Paragraph (2) of
Subsection A of 7.3.2.12 NMAC] of this section by any one of the persons
enumerated if, before the procedure is performed, any one of the other persons
enumerated objects in writing to the physician or surgeon by whom the procedure
is to be performed.
(c) An autopsy
or postmortem examination may be performed by a pathologist at the written
direction of the district attorney or his authorized representative in any case
in which the district attorney is conducting a criminal
investigation.
(d) An autopsy or
postmortem examination may be performed by a pathologist at the direction of
the state, district or deputy medical investigator when he suspects the death
was caused by a criminal act or omission or if the cause of death is
obscure.
B. Policy: The examination of the body is external only, or both external and internal.
(1) Criteria for examination: In
cases where the office of the medical investigator has assumed jurisdiction,
the representative of the OMI shall present the results of his initial
investigation to the central office to determine whether further investigation
is required in determining a cause and manner of death. In all cases where the
OMI assumes jurisdiction, regardless of whether or not an autopsy is to be
performed, the viewing of the body and taking custody of the body sustains the
validity and legality of any report generated by that individual representative
of the OMI. In cases where it is determined that an autopsy is to be performed,
all the documents produced by the representative of the OMI must accompany the
body to the location of the autopsy. These documents, in particular the report
of death, provide the authorization for the assigned pathologist to perform the
autopsy. Reasons for which medicolegal autopsies are conducted include the
following:
(a) determination of the cause and
manner of death;
(b) establishment
of the identity of the deceased;
(c) to aid in the discovery and prosecution
of crime;
(d) protection of
innocent persons accused of crime;
(e) disclosure of possible hazards to public
health such as:
(i) dangerous drugs,
chemicals, food;
(ii) communicable,
contagious or infectious disease;
(iii) occupational disease,
(iv) environmental hazards.
(f) to aid in the administration
of civil justice including:
(i) life and
accident insurance questions;
(ii)
worker's compensation liability;
(iii) other problems involving questions of
civil liability.
(2) Authorization for autopsy: An autopsy
under the jurisdiction of the OMI may be authorized by the state medical
investigator or the district attorney. No other authorization or consent is
required. Family objections will be considered but will not preclude an autopsy
when it is clearly required to fulfill the OMI's legal responsibility. In OMI
jurisdiction cases where an autopsy is not required to determine cause and
manner of death, the attending physician or family may request that an autopsy
be performed. In these cases, the autopsy may be performed at the direction of
the attending physician after the family has signed the "Consent to Autopsy." A
copy of the findings shall be supplied to the OMI.
(3) Autopsy not required: In cases where the
investigator supplies adequate information indicating an autopsy is not
required, the district or deputy medical investigator will be advised by the
OMI central office of the specific examination procedures to perform upon the
body. Termed the "External Examination," the OMI investigator will observe the
conditions of the body, document the findings with narrative, drawings and
appropriate photographs, and extract from the body the specimens required to
ultimately document a cause and manner of death. Specific step-by-step
guidelines to this exam are included under "Examination" in the procedures
manual.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. New Mexico may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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