Abstract

The scope, roles, and tasks of forensic medicine and forensic medical experts currently vary widely between countries and legal systems, which has resulted in barriers to organization, standard setting, and quality assurance for practice in forensic medicine, including for reporting. The legal fact finder is thus confronted with variability in the quality, structure, and content of forensic medical reports. We sought to define and categorize the scope, methods, and practices that fall under the description of forensic medicine, the various issues encountered in current forensic medical practice, and the potential role of evidence-based practice in forensic medicine. We searched electronic databases and reviewed relevant articles, as well as conducting personal correspondences with forensic medical practitioners around the world, to obtain a description of current forensic medical practice. The terms forensic medicine, legal medicine, medical jurisprudence, medico-legal services, forensic pathology, and clinical forensic medicine are used with mixed interpretations in different countries. The systems and services rendered are not uniform either. The methods used by forensic medical practitioners are not always evidence-based, or based on standardized methods, and vary greatly between experts and centers. There are also no universally accepted guidelines to prepare a standard and admissible report. The lack of a uniform system in forensic medicine creates difficulties in assessing the development and performance of forensic medicine as a distinct discipline. To prepare evidence-based forensic medical reports, generally accepted guidelines are necessary.

Highlights

  • Forensic medicine is a nonspecific term used to describe a broad area of medical practice that is concerned with the intersection between medicine and the law

  • In the United States, for example, forensic medicine is synonymous with the practice of forensic pathology [2,3,4,5,6,7], which largely consists of autopsies conducted in cases of suspicious or unobserved deaths

  • The term forensic medicine is employed in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran, Bangladesh, Japan, China, Indonesia, and Australia [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

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Summary

Introduction

Forensic medicine is a nonspecific term used to describe a broad area of medical practice that is concerned with the intersection between medicine and the law. It comprises of the expert application of medical knowledge, technology, and analysis to assist legal proceedings. Forensic as a word is thought to have its origin from the Latin word forensis, meaning “of or before the forum” Depending on where it is practiced, forensic medicine is known variously as legal medicine, medical jurisprudence, and medico-legal practice. In European countries and the United Kingdom, forensic medicine has a far broader scope and includes investigation of sexual assault, medical negligence, police practices, and other matters in which medicine and the law cross paths [8]

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