Requesting toxicological specimens from tissue procurement organizations
Autor: | Genevieve Penn, Jeff Jentzen, Robert S. Trim |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Tissue and Organ Procurement
media_common.quotation_subject Health Personnel Tissue Banks Urine Tissue procurement Pathology and Forensic Medicine Specimen Handling Forensic Toxicology Professional Competence parasitic diseases medicine Forensic engineering Photography Humans Quality (business) media_common business.industry Medical examiner Eye bank medicine.disease Postmortem toxicology Organizational Policy Vitreous Body Medical emergency business Blood Chemical Analysis Coroners and Medical Examiners Chain of custody |
Zdroj: | The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology. 34(4) |
ISSN: | 1533-404X |
Popis: | Opinions based on toxicology results are dependent, in part, upon the quality of the specimen's acquisition, storage, and chain of custody. The responsibility for these factors is often delegated to tissue and eye bank technicians. These technicians are not employees of the medical examiner (ME)'s office and may have no documented training related to the proper acquisition and handling of retained toxicology specimens. Medical examiners and coroners often request tissue recovery technicians to provide them with these toxicology samples when the tissue recovery is performed before autopsy. This practice helps facilitate donation and is convenient for the ME, but there may be unexpected implications for both the technicians and the ME that deserve further consideration. This article highlights the relevant issues in the postmortem recovery of biological samples for toxicology analysis and makes recommendations for the practice. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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