Legal death

Legal death is the recognition under the law of a particular jurisdiction that a person is no longer alive.[1] In most cases, a doctor's declaration of death (variously called) or the identification of a corpse is a legal requirement for such recognition. A person who has been missing for a sufficiently long period of time (typically at least several years) may be presumed or declared legally dead, usually by a court. When a death has been registered in a civil registry, a death certificate may be issued.[2] Such death certificate may be required in a number of legal situations, such as applying for probate, claiming some benefits or making an insurance claim, etc.[3]

Medical declaration

Most legal determinations of death in the developed world are made by medical professionals who pronounce death when specific criteria are met.[4] Two categories of legal death are death determined by irreversible cessation of heartbeat and breathing (cardiopulmonary death), and death determined by irreversible cessation of functions of the brain (brain death). In the United States, each state has laws for determining these two categories of death that are modeled after the Uniform Determination of Death Act. States that do not recognize "irreversible cessation of all function of the entire brain, including the brainstem" to be death include Arizona, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, North Carolina, and Texas.[5][1]

Cardiopulmonary criteria for death are met when a physician determines that efforts to restart a stopped heart during cardiac arrest are futile, or that no attempt should be made to restart a stopped heart, such as when there is a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order. In the latter case, irreversible is understood to mean that heartbeat and breathing cannot return on their own and will not be restored by medical intervention.[6][7]

Brain death determinations are made in cases where breathing is supported by machines. Brain death is determined by there being no signs of brain function during neurological examination of a person with a beating heart.[8] Confirmatory tests document either no blood flow to the brain, or no brain electrical activity in absence of factors[9] known to produce reversible loss of brain function.[10] Unlike cardiopulmonary death which sometimes involves a decision not to resuscitate the heart, brain death is a determination that the brain biologically cannot be resuscitated.

If a clinically dead person has suffered injuries so severe that resuscitation is obviously impossible, then in some jurisdictions first responders may make a legal determination of cardiopulmonary death. Such a person is said to be dead on arrival (DOA) or dead at the scene.[11]

Presumption

In some cases, a person will be declared dead even without any remains or doctor's declaration. This is under one of two circumstances. First, if a person was known to be in mortal peril when last seen, they can often be declared dead shortly after.[12] Examples would be the passengers of the Titanic that were not rescued after the ship sank. Second, if a person has not been seen for a certain period of time and there has been no evidence that they are alive. The amount of time that has passed varies by jurisdiction, from as little as four years in the US state of Georgia to twenty years in Italy.[13]

False declarations

There are three general categories where people may be falsely declared dead: by mistake, because of fraud, or as punishment for a crime.[14]

Mistaken

Sometimes people who are declared dead return and are unable to be declared alive. One study estimated that every year, the U.S. Social Security Administration declares 12,200 alive citizens as dead.[15]

Donald E. Miller Jr., an Ohio man was declared legally dead in 1994. He resurfaced in 2013 and sued to be declared alive, but the court declined and ruled he was still legally dead because Ohio state law did not allow reversing legal declarations of death if more than three years had passed.[16]

Fraudulent

In some cases, a legal declaration of death is fraudulent. Several people have faked their own deaths for various reasons. The most common reasons for this are to collect insurance money, to avoid capture by police or to avoid paying debts.[17]

At times, people declare other people dead for some benefit to themselves. For example, Constantin Reliu, a Romanian man living in Turkey was declared dead by his wife so that she could remarry.[18][19] In India, several people have been fraudulently declared dead by family members wishing to steal land and other property. The best known is Lal Bihari, who was fraudulently declared dead by family members, and was legally dead between 1975 and 1994. Bihari founded the Association of Dead People to help others in similar situations.[20]

Despite being victims of fraud, it often takes many years to reverse a fraudulent death declaration, and at times it never happens. Bihari didn't get his declaration of death reversed until 1994, 19 years later,[20] and Reliu lost a court battle to be declared alive in 2018.[18][19]

Punitive

Historically, those who have committed crimes or other wrongs against the state have been declared legally dead despite being obviously alive. This is known as civil death. Such a person loses all rights normally granted a person. In jurisdictions that practiced civil death, it was legal to murder such a person, since they were not actually alive accordingly to the law, and therefore not actually killed.[21]

Investigation

Determining manner of death often has important legal implications. Governments elect a coroner or appoint a medical examiner, depending on jurisdiction, to both determine manner and cause of death, and if necessary, identify bodies when their identities are unknown. Manner of death is usually classified as natural, accidental, homicide, suicide, pending or undetermined. A soldier is often listed as killed in action if the death was during military service. There are legal implications to all of the classifications.

Estate

In nearly all jurisdictions, dead people do not have the right to own property. When a person dies, their property needs to be distributed to others in a process called probate. People can specify their wishes before they die by preparing a will and testament. If there is no will, the laws of their country determine how the property is distributed. In most cases, it would go to next of kin, such as a spouse or adult child. If the person who died is wealthy, often a portion of their property will be collected by an estate tax.

Bioethics

There are a few controversies surrounding the topic of legal death among health professionals and the general public. The main issues argued amongst bioethicist include but are not limited to; non-heart-beating organ donation, the criteria for determining death for adults versus infants, and whole-brain versus higher-brain versus brainstem death.[22]

Non-heart-beating organ donation

Non-heart-beating organ donation or NHBD is the procurement of organs after cardiac death. Cardiac death is determined after a patient has suffered cardiac arrest for two to five minutes.[23][24]

Whole-brain vs higher-brain vs brainstem criteria

Deciding on which criteria to follow for determining brain death is still heavily debated today.[25] Whole-brain criteria are the standard most countries follow including the United States. Under the whole-brain death criteria, all functions of the brain including the brainstem must be ceased. The brainstem criteria differs from the whole-brain formulation, in that only the brainstem function is ceased.[26] The brainstem is responsible for breathing and carrying out somatic regulatory functions.

References

  1. Lewis, Ariane (2017). "Shouldn't Dead Be Dead?: The Search for a Uniform Definition of Death". Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. 45 (1): 112–128. doi:10.1177/1073110517703105. PMID 28661278.
  2. Gorman, W. F. (January 1985). "Medical diagnosis versus legal determination of death". Journal of Forensic Sciences. 30 (1): 150–157. doi:10.1520/JFS10975J. ISSN 0022-1198. PMID 3981105.
  3. "Legal Death Law and Legal Definition | USLegal, Inc". definitions.uslegal.com. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  4. Dimond, Bridgit (2004). "The clinical definition of death and the legal implications for staff". British Journal of Nursing. 13 (7): 391–393. doi:10.12968/bjon.2004.13.7.12684. hdl:10822/991192. PMID 15150479.
  5. Haupt, W. F.; Höfling, W. (November 2002). "[The diagnosis of brain death: medical and legal aspects with special reference to the German Transplantation Law (TPG)]". Fortschritte der Neurologie-Psychiatrie. 70 (11): 583–590. doi:10.1055/s-2002-35178. ISSN 0720-4299. PMID 12410428.
  6. Sarbey, Ben (2016-11-20). "Definitions of death: brain death and what matters in a person". Journal of Law and the Biosciences. 3 (3): 743–752. doi:10.1093/jlb/lsw054. ISSN 2053-9711. PMC 5570697. PMID 28852554.
  7. Controversies in the Determination of Death: A White Paper by the President's Council on Bioethics. bioethics.gov. 2008. p. 84. ISBN 9781437921878. For this reason, many have argued that the word "irreversible" in this context should be understood to mean "cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions under conditions in which those functions cannot return on their own and will not be restored by medical interventions."
  8. van der Lugt A (November 2010). "Imaging tests in determination of brain death". Neuroradiology. 52 (11): 945–947. doi:10.1007/s00234-010-0765-7. PMC 2952109. PMID 20820765. There is uniform agreement on the clinical neurological examination to evaluate absence of brain function. This examination includes the assessment of coma, the absence of brain reflexes, and the assessment of apnea.
  9. Wilson, William C.; Grande, Christopher M.; Hoyt, David B. (2007). Trauma: Critical Care (1st ed.). CRC Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0824729202. However, barbiturate coma, metabolic dysfunction (e.g. hepatic encephalopathy), severe hypothermia (temperature < 18°C), and other confounding factors may also produce cerebral electric silence on EEG.
  10. van der Lugt A (November 2010). "Imaging tests in determination of brain death". Neuroradiology. 52 (11): 945–947. doi:10.1007/s00234-010-0765-7. PMC 2952109. PMID 20820765. Confirmatory tests can be classified into two categories: confirmation of loss of electrical activity (electroencephalography or somatosensory-evoked potentials) and demonstration of loss of cerebral blood flow (cerebral angiography, transcranial doppler ultrasonography, or cerebral scintigraphy).
  11. Gardiner, D.; Shemie, S.; Manara, A.; Opdam, H. (2012-01-01). "International perspective on the diagnosis of death". BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia. 108 (suppl_1): i14–i28. doi:10.1093/bja/aer397. ISSN 0007-0912. PMID 22194427.
  12. "Why Hospitals And Families Still Struggle To Define Death". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  13. "Presumption of Death Act". www.bclaws.ca. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  14. "Inside the World of Investigators Who Know You've Faked Your Death". MEL Magazine. 2019-08-26. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  15. "What It's Like to be Declared Dead by the Government".
  16. Schwartz, John (2013-10-11). "Declared Legally Dead, as He Sat Before the Judge". The New York Times.
  17. "Playing a risky game: people who fake death for big money". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  18. "A Romanian court has ruled that a man is dead, even though he's clearly alive – and the decision is final". 2018-03-18.
  19. "Man Says He's Not Dead. Court Doesn't Buy It".
  20. Bearak, Barry (2000-10-24). "Azamgarh Journal; Back to Life in India, Without Reincarnation". The New York Times.
  21. Chin, Gabriel J. (2012). "The New Civil Death: Rethinking Punishment in the Era of Mass Conviction". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 160 (6): 1789–1833. ISSN 0041-9907. JSTOR 41511317.
  22. "'A Duty to Die?' STS class ponders life-and-death bioethics – The Miscellany News". Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  23. ""Non-Heart-Beating," or "Cardiac Death," Organ Donation: Why We Should Care". Medscape. Retrieved 2019-10-04.
  24. Potts, Michael (2007). "Truthfulness in Transplantation: Non-heart-beating Organ Donation". Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine. 2: 17. doi:10.1186/1747-5341-2-17. PMC 2000872. PMID 17718917 via Gale Academic OneFile.
  25. Bernat, James L. (1998). "A Defense of the Whole-Brain Concept of Death". The Hastings Center Report. 28 (2): 14–23. doi:10.2307/3527567. ISSN 0093-0334. JSTOR 3527567. PMID 9589289.
  26. Bernat, James (Winter 2013). "Controversies in defining and determining death in critical care". Nature Reviews Neurology. 9 (3): 164–73. doi:10.1038/nrneurol.2013.12. PMID 23419370. S2CID 12296259 via Gale Academic OneFile.
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