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Draft Legislative Programme 2008/09

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Coroners and Death Certification Bill

The purpose of the Bill is: to deliver an improved system of death investigation for families so that they can be assured that the cause of death of their relative has been properly established and that, where possible, lessons can be learned to prevent future deaths.

The main elements of the Bill are to:

• Create a new national coroner service, moving towards whole time coroners working to national minimum standards (funding responsibility will remain with local authorities);

• Create a new system of secondary certification of deaths that are not referred to the coroner, covering both burials and cremations;

• Establish a new group of medical examiners to scrutinise independently the causes of death given by doctors on death certificates;

• Introduce new powers of investigation for coroners, including improved procedures for post mortems and inquests;

• Establish a new Chief Coroner as head of the coroner service, improve arrangements for coroner appointments and training, and provide for independent inspection of coroners;

• Create new flexible boundaries between coroner areas to enable services to be delivered to families more effectively, and with powers for the Chief Coroner to reallocate work to prevent backlogs of work developing;

• Establish new and accessible rights of appeal for bereaved people against coroners’ decisions;

• Introduce a Charter for the Bereaved outlining a full range of rights for bereaved people to be informed and consulted about case progress by coroners.

The main benefits of the Bill are:

• The needs of bereaved families will be placed at the heart of the coroner and death certification systems;

• Those who are suddenly or unexpectedly bereaved will in future be given opportunities to participate in coroners’ investigations, including rights to information and access to a straightforward appeals system;

• All those who are bereaved will have reassurance that there is independent checking of the causes of death given on death certificates;

• There will be improved information for clinical governance and local public health monitoring, which will help to prevent future deaths.

• More full-time coroners who will be more immediately available – to bereaved families, and to the police and medical professionals – than in the current predominantly part-time system;

• Improved investigative powers for coroners will ensure they are better able to get information to establish the causes of a violent or unexpected death;

• An improved service for families through further steps to ensure that coroners are properly resourced.

The public consultation on the draft legislative programme ended on 6 August 2008. Thank you to everyone who responded to the consultation.

Comments on this bill (14 comments)
Bob (13:10 : 05/08/2008)
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ONE of the most important items overlooked at the time of a persons death is the full information that should be given by local authorities etc pertaining as to the rights of the family in disposing of the body, i.e. the family do not require the services of a funeral director but can simply ask the crematorium to dispose of the body once a death certificate has been issued thereby lowering the overall cost of the disposal.

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Territorial Extent
England and Wales
Northern Ireland only
Theme
Personalisation and Improvement of Public Services
Consultation

The coroners’ section of the Bill has already been published in draft and subject to extensive consultation, including by the Justice Select Committee. The Government set out the key changes to these proposals, resulting from the consultation process, in March 2008.  The Government will be publishing shortly its response to the consultation on death certification policy and new clauses will be added to the Bill to reflect the agreed approach.


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Draft Programme 2008/9
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