Sunderland Echo

When a loved one dies in hospital

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An ageing population and changes in family life have come to mean increasing­ly that death takes place in a hospital or residentia­l care facility, rather than in the home.

Also, if the death is caused by an accident, or follows a sudden, severe illness, a hospital is the most likely location.

As soon as possible after death, there should be a formal identifica­tion which is normally carried out by the next of kin.

If the death was sudden and its cause has to be sought or confirmed, permission may be asked for a hospital post-mortem.

Where the coroner is involved, a post-mortem may be carried out without consent.

If no post-mortem is necessary, or afterwards if one is carried out, the body will be laid out by trained staff, and kept in the hospital mortuary.

Any possession­s will be kept safe until the person administer­ing the estate arranges for their collection.

A doctor will provide a medical certificat­e showing the cause of death, in a sealed envelope addressed to the Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages.

Staff can offer informatio­n on how to register the death.

It is then up to the family to arrange for the body to be collected by funeral directors.

If the body is to be cre- mated, two doctors will sign the medical certificat­e, and there may be a small charge.

If the death is referred to the coroner, until his or her enquiries are complete no certificat­e can be issued and the death cannot be registered

If the deceased person has left his or her body to medical science, a document to this effect will have been prepared. Occasional­ly a body will not be accepted; for example, if there has been a post-mortem examinatio­n or if organs have been removed.

If he or she was on the NHS Organ Donor Register, carried a donor card or had expressed a desire to donate organs, hospital or care home staff should be informed promptly; they will have their own policies for dealing with this.

Even if there are no such instructio­ns, the family may be approached if others could be helped through organ donation, especially if the person died while on a ventilator in a hospital intensive care unit. Be assured, though, that organs are never taken without permission.

A death in the family is never an easy time, but in some ways a hospital environmen­t can make things a little less difficult.

The hospital or care home staff who have been caring for the person who has died will know what to do, and will be able to provide grieving family and friends with emotional and practical support.

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