4.4 Review

Ethics in clinical autopsy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 6, Pages 339-343

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jclinpath-2020-206793

Keywords

autopsy; ethics; pathology department; hospital

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC Regional grant) [6421]
  2. Italian Health Ministry's research programme: 'Performance evaluation and value assessment for cardiovascular and oncological care path in a regional network context: challenges and opportunities' [NET-2016-02363853]

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The manuscript discusses the ethical aspects of the clinical autopsy procedure, including issues related to religious beliefs, cultural traditions, and ethical implications of regulations and procedures. It emphasizes the importance of endorsing educational efforts to promote ethical management of autopsy procedures in order to preserve the teaching and scientific value of autopsies for future generations in today's globalized cultural domain.
This manuscript concerns the ethical aspects of the clinical autopsy procedure. Much of the literature on this topic addresses some of the multifaceted issues potentially involved: religious beliefs and/or cultural traditions coming to bear on the management of autopsies, relations between families and healthcare personnel (physicians and technicians) involved in conducting an autopsy, ethical implications of regulations to follow and procedures for obtaining biological samples for further diagnostics or research. All these issues have ethical implications, particularly in today's globalised cultural domain. To preserve for future generations the teaching and scientific value of the clinical autopsy, scientific societies and academic institutions should endorse educational efforts to promote the ethical management of autopsy procedures.

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