- International Fees
International fees are typically 3.12 times the domestic tuition. Exact cost will be calculated upon completion of registration.
Course Overview
This course is intended for nurses interested in the role of a forensic nurse death investigator, or positions in hospital risk management, patient safety and quality improvement. This course will prepare students to apply the legal and scientific principles underlying the methods used in the investigation of death in in both clinical and community settings. Students will learn that causation in death investigation is something that is determined not observed. Students will analyze competing causal factors and apply forensic principles to arrive at accurate and reliable determinations that meet the scrutiny of medicolegal cases.
Prerequisite(s)
- 60% in FSCT 7810
Credits
3.0
- Not offered this term
- This course is not offered this term. Please check back next term or subscribe to receive notifications of future course offerings and other opportunities to learn more about this course and related programs.
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- Examine the role of coroner and medical examiner systems and their legal authority in death investigation.
- Compare and contrast the various classifications of death.
- Differentiate between cause and mechanism of death.
- Evaluate the nursing process and how it applies to death investigation
- Explain the process in planned home deaths and how complications can arise.
- Investigate the interrelationship between medical misadventures, risk management, patient safety and quality improvement and clinical death investigations.
- Differentiate the steps required for a successful death investigation, in both clinical and community settings from initial reporting to the scene, documentation, investigation, chain of custody and final body disposition.
- Assess post-mortem changes in the body and their relationship to the variables of time of death and describe body positional factors that might affect investigative pathways.
- Evaluate the potential for applying the death investigation skill set in non-traditional settings such as occupational health and safety, public health, disaster response and others..
- Contrast the difference between clinical and forensic autopsies and their relationship to causation.
- Analyze the nuances of the process of infant versus adult death investigation.
- Discuss the importance of collaboration with a multitude of other agencies in death investigations.
- Compare and contrast criminal and quasi-judicial proceedings such as a Coroners Inquest.
Effective as of Fall 2022
Related Programs
Clinical and Community Death Investigation (XFSC 7835) is offered as a part of the following programs:
- Indicates programs accepting international students.
- Indicates programs with a co-op option.
School of Computing and Academic Studies
- Forensic Nurse Death Investigator
Microcredential Part-time
Programs and courses are subject to change without notice.