Weekend Herald

Black Widow murder a case of clues picked up by coroner

Forensic pathologis­ts worried by proposed law changes

- Natalie Akoorie Open Justice

Murders, suicides, medical negligence and deaths that should trigger public health warnings could be missed if proposed law changes go ahead, experts say.

The Coroners Amendment Bill aims to reduce the time it takes for certain types of cases to move through the coronial process, says Courts Minister Aupito William Sio.

“By making these targeted changes to the Coroners Act 2006, we will create more efficient processes to clear the backlog, and help many families and wha¯nau who are experienci­ng unnecessar­y distress.”

Four amendments include establishi­ng associate coroners to perform most functions of a coroner except inquests, giving coroners powers to decide not to hold an inquest, and allowing written findings to be issued with the cause of death only if the broader circumstan­ces are not considered to be of public interest.

However, it’s the proposal to allow the cause of death to be recorded as “unascertai­ned natural causes”, with no need for an autopsy or further investigat­ion, that has forensic pathologis­ts worried.

Northern Forensic Pathology Service clinical director Dr Simon Stables told the justice select committee in October the amendment was “flawed” and would not make any difference to the workflow of coroners.

“It is true some deaths cannot be determined, in terms of cause of death and that’s even after a full postmortem. Those deaths are well less than 5 per cent of all deaths.

“To institute a policy or especially legislatio­n that allows a non-medical person — that is, a coroner — to determine the cause of death without adequate death investigat­ion, without a post-mortem, just because on the surface it seems as if the person died of natural causes, I think is a very slippery slope down.”

In his 27 years of experience as a forensic pathologis­t, Stables said many deaths that appeared to be from natural causes turned out to be from trauma or drug toxicity, either suicide or accidental.

“You cannot determine that, at that very limited investigat­ion at that duty coroner stage. If we’re going to write deaths off then, I think we’re not serving the public, we’re not serving families and we’re not serving wha¯nau.”

Police are called to sudden deaths and investigat­e on behalf of the coroner if the coroner accepts jurisdicti­on.

A duty coroner is informed of the death if it is unexpected, violent, or suspicious, or happens in official care or custody.

A coroner can determine a death “on the papers” or call an inquest, making recommenda­tions to help reduce the chances of similar deaths in the future.

The huge backlog in the system means some families wait years for answers over their loved one’s death.

Stables said it was not just the cause of death, but the manner of death that was important, and a limited investigat­ion could miss vital clues that point to this.

The Law Society said in a letter to the Ministry of Justice last year there was a risk in issuing a death certificat­e citing natural causes too hastily, because the early closure of the case could potentiall­y thwart the opportunit­y to gather crucial evidence, such as bodily samples.

In its recommenda­tions to the justice select committee, it said the Bill should provide that a coroner can only record the cause of death as unascertai­ned natural causes after obtaining a certificat­e or letter from a pathologis­t.

It also wanted the Bill to require coroners to have regard for the desires of wider family members when deciding whether to open and conduct an inquiry into a death.

In its letter last November the Law Society highlighte­d the murder of Christchur­ch truck driver Phil Nisbet who was poisoned by his wife Helen Milner, but who police believed died by suicide after Milner produced a fake suicide note.

It was only when Nisbet’s sister Lee-Anne Cartier challenged the evidence over the cause of death supplied by Milner, the designated next of kin, that the coroner was able to find enough doubt for police to open an investigat­ion.

Milner was charged and eventually convicted of murder.

Forensic Pathology South Island clinical director Dr Leslie Anderson said coroners had no medical training and should not alone be determinin­g which deaths were from natural causes.

“Having them make those decisions without medical advice would continue to result in unnecessar­y cases being accepted into jurisdicti­on and could also result in subtle accidents, suicides and even homicides being missed and released as natural causes.”

Anderson said listing a death as “unascertai­ned natural causes” was an inappropri­ate and unnecessar­y approach to death certificat­ion.

“It compromise­s death statistics, it undermines the integrity of the death investigat­ion system, and it misleading­ly communicat­es that an investigat­ion has been done.”

Former coroner Wallace Bain said he signed off some deaths as “unascertai­ned” during his 28 years as a coroner.

He said many Ma¯ori families did not want a post-mortem because of the interferen­ce with the body and the time it took.

Bain said he always explained the advantages of having post-mortem results, particular­ly if there was a genetic condition, and in the early 1990s he directed urgent autopsies to allow a body to be returned to the marae as quickly as possible.

Meanwhile, the whistleblo­wer doctor who campaigned for more than a decade for an inquest into the death of a Waikato Hospital patient believes ruling a death as natural causes too early could lead to medical mistakes being missed.

“It would be a step too far given there is already enough room in the system for a death like Carmen Walker’s to be missed,” Adam Greenbaum said.

Last year the Solicitor-General ordered a new inquiry into the 2010 death of 78-year-old Walker following cancer treatment at Waikato Hospital, after the pathologis­t who conducted the autopsy changed his conclusion on the cause of her death.

Following an inquiry Coroner Alexander Ho ordered an inquest, expected to take place next year.

Walker had Stage 4 melanoma but was otherwise well and active when she opted for a palliative melanoma treatment called an isolated limb infusion (ILI), where high doses of chemothera­py were washed through the lower leg to treat cancer that had spread from her right ankle.

The treatment was supposed to extend the Whanganui woman’s life but instead she died in the intensive care unit that night.

Pathologis­t Dr Ian Beer initially concluded Walker had died of cardigenic shock, where the heart suddenly can’t pump enough blood around the body, often caused by a severe heart attack.

Former Coroner Gordon Matenga based his April 2011 findings made “on the papers” for Walker’s death on Beer’s autopsy and the surgeon’s notes, listing cardiogeni­c shock as the cause of death.

But last May Beer took the unusual step of writing to then Chief Coroner Judge Deborah Marshall, telling her he wanted to change his finding to hypovolaem­ic shock due to blood loss and asked that a coronial inquest be opened.

Hypovolaem­ic shock was the cause concluded by an expert in the Health and Disability Commission­er’s 2013 investigat­ion but Beer only discovered that last year.

Greenbaum, who was observing the procedure, alleged systemic failures at the then Waikato District Health Board contribute­d to Walker’s death and were “covered up”.

He believed Walker’s death was avoidable and maintained the failings needed to be recognised so that the mistakes could be learned from, and to give closure to Walker’s family.

The plastic surgeon said Walker’s death in hospital care was a mandatory coronial referral “and yet it took 10 years of campaignin­g to get her the inquest that she most definitely needed”.

In a submission to the health select committee after he petitioned Parliament for a full inquiry, Greenbaum has suggested medical examiners be set up in New Zealand to look at every hospital death as is the case in England.

Greenbaum said the doctors would be senior specialist­s with a background in hospital medicine who give a portion of their time to inquire into each death “as a safety net”, liaising with the coroner and families.

“I firmly believe that if this were instituted in New Zealand, none of the deaths like that of Carmen Walker could ever be missed.”

It is true some deaths cannot be determined, in terms of cause of death and that’s even after a full post-mortem. Those deaths are well less than 5 per cent of all deaths.

Dr Simon Stables

 ?? ?? Simon Stables
Simon Stables
 ?? ?? Phil Nisbet
Phil Nisbet

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