Defining:

A. Physicians

                         i.  Attending Physician

                         ii. Certifying Physician

 

B. Causes of Death

                         i.   Underlying

                         ii.  Immediate

                         iii. Antecedent/Intermediate

 

A. Physicians

 

  i. Attending Physician

    

 

 

  ii. Certifying Physician

 

 

  • Physician attending to the patient prior to death or during the course of the terminal illness
  • Physician completing Cause of Death statement on death certificate (may be the attending physician or not)

Death should preferably be certified by the attending physician; that is, the attending physician and the certifying physician should be one and the same.

 

However, in several instances, this may not be possible – the certifying physician does not have recourse to all the medical details of the patient whose death she/he is certifying – in these instances, best clinical judgment is to be made use of.

B. Causes of Death

 

                          i.   Underlying

                          ii.  Immediate

                         iii.  Antecedent

Underlying cause of death The condition that triggered the chain of events leading to death; temporally, the most remote condition; etiologically specific
Antecedent (or intermediate) cause of death  A disease or condition that occurred as a result of the underlying cause of death but was not the final complication or immediate cause of death 
Immediate cause of death The final complication resulting from the underlying  cause of death, occurring closest to the time of death and directly causing death
 Term Definition


 









 
Underlying cause of death The condition that triggered the chain of events leading to death; temporally, the most remote condition; etiologically specific
Antecedent/ Intermediate cause of death A disease or condition that occurred as a result of the underlying cause of death but was not the final complication or immediate cause of death 
Immediate cause of death The final complication resulting from the underlying  cause of death, occurring closest to the time of death and directly causing death

In India, according to hospital death certificates,

the most common cause of death is,

“Cardio-respiratory arrest”

This is not a cause of death but a

Mode/Mechanism of death

Mode or mechanism of death

For all disease conditions, the end-point of death is because of the heart or lungs or both ceasing to function in an individual.

Therefore cardiac arrest or cardio-respiratory arrest are the final mechanism/mode of death and is not to be coded as the underlying cause of death (uCoD).

Cause vs Mode of death

   The sequence of events leading to death is likely to be:

Disease
Complication
 
Cardio-respiratory arrest
Death

   In this case:

  • the disease should be coded as the underlying CoD

  • and cardiorespiratory arrest is called the final mechanism/mode of death

 

  • the complication should be identified as the immediate CoD

Cause vs Mode of death

Disease
Complication
Cardio-respiratory arrest
Death

Some common conditions that

                                          are not causes of death​ 

 Term Definition
Mode or Mechanism of death A derangement or disturbance by which a cause of death exerts its lethal effect (e.g., cardiac arrest, respiratory arrest, cardio-respiratory arrest); must not be used as an underlying cause of death
 Term Definition
Non-specific condition  A derangement or disturbance that has more than one possible cause (e.g., sepsis, hemorrhage, heart failure, renal failure, multi-organ failure) must not be used as an underlying cause of death
  • Non-specific conditions such as septicemia, renal failure or respiratory failure must not be identified as the underlying cause of death

  • They are the consequence of some other disease entities and therefore they may, at the most be coded as the immediate cause of death; in all such cases, a causal pathway must be constructed to identify the disease that led to these end-processes

 Term Definition
Risk factors Underlying determinants but not cause of death (eg. smoking, alcoholism, etc.) must not be used as an underlying cause of death
  • Though smoking or alcoholism may have been underlying risk factors for the development of diseases subsequently, these behaviors are identified as risk factors and not as the underlying causes of death

  • The biological abnormality (eg, cancer, ischemic heart disease, alcoholic liver disease, etc.) arising as a consequence of the risk behavior should be identified as the underlying cause of death

World Health Organisation (W.H.O.) also makes the suggestion on the following conditions not being preferred as underlying causes of death but to be considered as risk factors.

i. For newborns :

1. Prematurity

2. Low Birth Weight

ii. For children :

1. Malnutrition

iii. For adults :

1. Hypertension

2. Diabetes

  • This means that in a person with a long-standing illness such as diabetes, the complication that triggered the sequence of events leading to death (such as diabetic nephropathy) should be listed as the underlying CoD rather than the diabetes per se

  • Similarly in children, the illness arising in a child with malnutrition (for eg. diarrhea or pneumonia) should be coded as the UCoD rather than the malnutrition

​The above conditions may be used only in those instances when no other complications/sequelae are known to have occurred in the particular individual.

This reasoning is based on the fact that the above conditions are so common that they would virtually then be listed as the UCoD in almost all of the adults/children/newborns.

e-MCCD M1U2S3 final

By drkavya1

e-MCCD M1U2S3 final

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