Korean J Leg Med Search

CLOSE


Korean J Leg Med > Volume 40(3); 2016 > Article
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2016;40(3):65-71.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7580/kjlm.2016.40.3.65    Published online August 31, 2016.
The Predictive Ratios of Intoxicated Deaths by Police's Death Scene Investigation and Doctor's Death Certificates in South Korea.
Kyung Moo Yang, Bong Woo Lee, Jeong Woo Park, Sookyung Lee, Woong Jae Yun, Sohyung Park, Min Je Lee, Han Young Lee, Young Shik Choi, Nak Eun Chung, Yu Hoon Kim, Seong Ho Yoo, Jang Han Kim
1Medical Examiner's Office, National Forensic Service, Wonju, Korea.
2Sewon Forensic Medical Services, Seoul, Korea.
3Department of Forensic Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
4Department of Medical Humanities & Social Sciences, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. jhk@amc.seoul.kr
Abstract
Forensic autopsies were performed on 1,821 cases in 2014 and 2,024 cases in 2015 at the National Forensic Service Seoul Institute. Based on the autopsy reports, 103 cases (5.7%) in 2014 and 130 cases (6.4%) in 2015 were selected as unnatural deaths caused by fatal intoxication. The cases were divided into five groups. The first group had ethanol intoxication, the second had drug intoxication, the third had agrochemical intoxication, the fourth had cyanide intoxication, and the fifth had miscellaneous intoxications. Of the 233 cases, 202 had death certificates. Of these 202 cases, 169 (83.7%) had an undetermined manner of death (MOD); 17 (8.4%) had an unnatrual MOD and intoxication was the cause of death (COD); nine (4.5%) had an unnatural MOD, but the COD was not intoxication; seven (3.5%) had a natural MOD and disease as a COD. The predictive ratios of intoxication as a COD were compared with the death certificates and the police death scene investigation results. The death certificates and the police investigation results showed predictive ratios of 8.4% and 55.2%, respectively, for intoxication as a COD. The discrepance in these predictive ratios and relatively low predictive ratio of police investigation results mean that intoxicated deaths have been underevaluated; thus, some homicides or intentional deaths were probably missed under South Korea's death investigation system. Doctors who specialize in forensic medicine need to supervise the entire postmortem examination process and emergency blood toxicological analysis should be performed in South Korea.
Key Words: Lethal intoxication, Predictive ratio, Death certificates, Death investigation
TOOLS
Share :
Facebook Twitter Linked In Google+ Line it
METRICS Graph View
  • 5 Crossref
  •    
  • 903 View
  • 24 Download
Related articles in Korean J Leg Med


ABOUT
ARTICLE CATEGORY

Browse all articles >

BROWSE ARTICLES
EDITORIAL POLICY
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Editorial Office
Department of Forensic Medicine, Pusan National University School of Medicine,
49 Busandaehak-ro, Mulgeum-eup, Yangsan 50612, Korea
Tel: +82-51-510-8051    Fax: +82-55-360-1865    E-mail: pdrdream@gmail.com                

Copyright © 2024 by The Korean Society for Legal Medicine.

Developed in M2PI

Close layer
prev next