Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses

Objective: The consequences of a low autopsy rate are not considered in determining the cause of death. Method: We have analyzed the Cause of Death Register of the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare since it started 1969 to and including 2016 to visualize the decline in the frequency of cl...

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Main Authors: Anders Rosendahl, Berit Mjörnheim, Lennart C Eriksson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-08-01
Series:SAGE Open Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121211037169
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spelling doaj-9a48880771ec4cbb8f80c7af8e11a5a52021-08-05T21:33:31ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medicine2050-31212021-08-01910.1177/20503121211037169Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnosesAnders RosendahlBerit MjörnheimLennart C ErikssonObjective: The consequences of a low autopsy rate are not considered in determining the cause of death. Method: We have analyzed the Cause of Death Register of the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare since it started 1969 to and including 2016 to visualize the decline in the frequency of clinical autopsies over time and evaluated the effect on the quality of the cause of death diagnoses. Results: Over the five decades studied, the frequency of clinical autopsies declined from almost 40% to less than 5%. The rate of decline was not even. Political decisions and changes of healthcare organization in Sweden affected the slope of decline of autopsies superimposed on a linear decline over time reflecting changes in clinical routines. A request of clinical autopsies was highly dependent on the level of care at the time of death, with the lowest number of requests for persons who died in nursing homes. The age at the time of death was a major factor affecting the number of autopsies, resulting in an autopsy rate of less than 1% in the ages where most persons die. Although men were autopsied more often than women, a gender-specific difference was not seen after correction for the age of death. We also found a higher rate of unspecific and irrelevant diagnosis in the cases not autopsied and we know from earlier studies by us and other authors that the cause of death diagnoses were missed in between 30% and 50% of the cases not autopsied. Conclusion: The decline in the clinical autopsy rate reduced the value of the death certificate register. An increase in the number of autopsies performed will improve the understanding of disease and cause of death, as well as to better inform next of kin.https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121211037169
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anders Rosendahl
Berit Mjörnheim
Lennart C Eriksson
spellingShingle Anders Rosendahl
Berit Mjörnheim
Lennart C Eriksson
Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
SAGE Open Medicine
author_facet Anders Rosendahl
Berit Mjörnheim
Lennart C Eriksson
author_sort Anders Rosendahl
title Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
title_short Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
title_full Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
title_fullStr Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
title_full_unstemmed Autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
title_sort autopsies and quality of cause of death diagnoses
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Medicine
issn 2050-3121
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Objective: The consequences of a low autopsy rate are not considered in determining the cause of death. Method: We have analyzed the Cause of Death Register of the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare since it started 1969 to and including 2016 to visualize the decline in the frequency of clinical autopsies over time and evaluated the effect on the quality of the cause of death diagnoses. Results: Over the five decades studied, the frequency of clinical autopsies declined from almost 40% to less than 5%. The rate of decline was not even. Political decisions and changes of healthcare organization in Sweden affected the slope of decline of autopsies superimposed on a linear decline over time reflecting changes in clinical routines. A request of clinical autopsies was highly dependent on the level of care at the time of death, with the lowest number of requests for persons who died in nursing homes. The age at the time of death was a major factor affecting the number of autopsies, resulting in an autopsy rate of less than 1% in the ages where most persons die. Although men were autopsied more often than women, a gender-specific difference was not seen after correction for the age of death. We also found a higher rate of unspecific and irrelevant diagnosis in the cases not autopsied and we know from earlier studies by us and other authors that the cause of death diagnoses were missed in between 30% and 50% of the cases not autopsied. Conclusion: The decline in the clinical autopsy rate reduced the value of the death certificate register. An increase in the number of autopsies performed will improve the understanding of disease and cause of death, as well as to better inform next of kin.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121211037169
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