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Death Certification and Registration Process Changes Of September 24

Posted: Wednesday, 24 July 2024 @ 13:39

Death Certification and Registration process changes, from 9th Sept 2024

When a person dies, one of the first steps for their representative(s) is to obtain a death certificate.  What is changing?

An overview of the current situation:

Depending on the reason for the person’s death, there will either be an investigation by a Coroner, or medical certification by a Medical Practitioner (often a GP).  

Although Medical Examiners (who have a separate, independent role from the Coroner or Medical Practitioner) have increasingly scrutinised the causes of death, this practice has not previously been mandatory. This is changing.

What will be different?

Signing off a cause of death will no longer be a GP-only situation. From 9 September 2024, all deaths will require an independent review (by either a Coroner or Medical Examiner) in England and Wales, without exception.

The role of the Medical Examiner, a senior medical practitioner providing independent scrutiny of causes of death, is now placed on a statutory footing.

Medical Examiners will review the cause of death proposed by the attending practitioner (e.g. a GP), who can complete a Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (MCCD) based on their knowledge and belief.

This simplifies the previous rules, which had required a referral to a coroner if the attending practitioner had not seen the patient within 28 days before the death or had not seen the patient in person after death.

New Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (MCCD): A revised MCCD will replace the existing certificate and will include details of the Medical Examiner and additional information regarding the person who has died. This will assist with local and national mortality data. If an attending practitioner is unavailable, the death will be referred to the senior Coroner.

Should the senior Coroner decide not to investigate, it will be possible for them to refer to a Medical Examiner to certify the death.

Registration and the 5-day rule:

It is a statutory requirement to register the death within five days. This timeframe will not start until the registrar receives notification of the cause of death from the medical examiner or a coroner. 

Once the cause of death is confirmed by the attending practitioner and the medical examiner, and the declarations of certification and scrutiny have been completed, the MCCD is sent to the registrar. 

This is the point at which it will be possible for the representative of the deceased (who will be notified) to arrange the registration of the death through the registry office.

The representative of the deceased should be aware of the cause of death before registration and should be able to raise any concerns with the medical examiner, or the coroner.

New categories of informants: The deceased’s partner or representative will be formally allowed to register the death, expanding the categories of informants.

Changes for cremation processes: The scrutiny previously conducted by a medical referee before a cremation will be transferred to the medical examiner, eliminating the need for an additional review by a medical referee.

Impact of the changes

It is an important and welcome change that all causes of death will be scrutinised by a medical examiner or coroner. The following matters may also impact on those involved in services for the deceased and their representatives.

Increased timescales for registering a death: It may take longer for deaths to be certified and registered due to the need for a medical examiner to complete an MCCD and for this to be sent to the registrar. This may be the case particularly in the initial months from September 2024, whilst the process beds in.

Notification of deceased’s representative: The deceased’s representative will be contacted to confirm the MCCD has been sent to the registrar and that they can now register the death.

Changes to death certificates: New death certificates will include some different information, such as the new categories of informant (deceased’s partner, and deceased’s representative).