BMJ 2002;324:749-750 ( 30 March )

Editorials

Falling neonatal autopsy rates

Neonatologists, pathologists, and relatives need to boost neonatal pathology

Papers p 761

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

The provision of perinatal and paediatric pathology services is a sign of an enlightened society. It symbolises the care that society attaches to the wellbeing of its young by trying to find out what makes each pregnancy and infancy go well or badly. Yet in their audit of neonatal autopsies in a tertiary referral centre published in this week's BMJ, Brodlie and colleagues found a general fall in autopsy rates over the past decade (p 761).1 This occurred despite a senior clinician always asking relatives for permission for autopsies and the availability of a dedicated paediatric and perinatal autopsy service. What are we as clinicians and as the lay public to make of this?

Geographical differences may exist in requests for neonatal autopsies. Directors of British neonatal units may have reservations about requesting an autopsy in some cases,2 but Australian neonatologists do not seem to share these.3 Nurses' . . . [Full text of this article]


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Relevant Article

Ten years of neonatal autopsies in tertiary referral centre: retrospective study
Malcolm Brodlie, Ian A Laing, Jean W Keeling, and Kathryn J McKenzie
BMJ 2002 324: 761-763. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

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  • Boyd, P A, Tondi, F, Hicks, N R, Chamberlain, P F (2004). Autopsy after termination of pregnancy for fetal anomaly: retrospective cohort study. BMJ 328: 137- [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Sheehan, K M, McDonnell, M, Doyle, E M, Matthews, T, Devaney, D M (2003). The quality and value of sudden infant death necropsy reporting in Ireland. J. Clin. Pathol. 56: 753-757 [Abstract] [Full text]  
  • Battaglia, J. D. (2003). Paying Our Last Respects: The Neonatal Autopsy as Continuing Care and Ethical Obligation. NeoReviews 4: e207-211 [Full text]  



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