..

பொது பயிற்சி இதழ்

ஐ.எஸ்.எஸ்.என்: 2329-9126

திறந்த அணுகல்
கையெழுத்துப் பிரதியை சமர்ப்பிக்கவும் arrow_forward arrow_forward ..

The role of the general practitioner in the Dutch system of post-mortem investigations

Abstract

Cecile M. Woudenberg-Van Den Broek *, Henriette F Treurniet , Koos Van Der Velden and Wilma L.J.M. Duijst-Heesters

Objective: General Practitioners (GPs) have an important role in the Dutch system of external post-mortem examination (E-PM). They perform at least 50% of the E-PMs. This research aims to study the competence of the GPs in the Netherlands in performing E-PMs. To achieve this, a survey was performed amongst GPs. The study analysed if GPs felt competent to perform E-PMs, if they had knowledge of and acted according to the Dutch Burial Act and if they were consistent in their acts and thoughts.

Methods: An online survey conducted amongst GPs resulted in 225 datasets, after excluding 36 surveys for various reasons.

Results: There was no significant difference in the feeling of competence between GPs (79.47%) and GP registrars (86.49%). Of all the respondents 40.89% were consistent in their acts and thoughts on the matter of E-PMs and 33.78% of respondents scored a 100% on legal knowledge? Of all the respondents that felt competent 47.28% showed inconsistency in acts and thoughts as well as lack of legal knowledge.

Conclusion: Although every physician in the Netherlands is qualified to perform E-PMs, this research shows this does not automatically imply they are competent to do so. The inconsistency in acts and thoughts and/or the lack of legal knowledge in the matter of E-PMs undermines the current Dutch system of death investigations.

மறுப்பு: இந்த சுருக்கமானது செயற்கை நுண்ணறிவு கருவிகளைப் பயன்படுத்தி மொழிபெயர்க்கப்பட்டது மற்றும் இன்னும் மதிப்பாய்வு செய்யப்படவில்லை அல்லது சரிபார்க்கப்படவில்லை

இந்தக் கட்டுரையைப் பகிரவும்

குறியிடப்பட்டது

arrow_upward arrow_upward