
In 2014 then-Chief Medical Examiner Amy Hart stepped down from the top position after families complained of having to wait six months for the final results of autopsies on their loved ones. Dr. Hart is now the acting chief, since her boss took a job in another county.
Bill Barnes with the San Francisco City Administrator’s Office, said the cases pending now should not be considered a backlog.
“To the extent that in the past, the medical examiner had a fairly extensive backlog in services, I don't think this shows that,” Barnes said. “What it shows is that there are lots of cases that are actively being investigated.” Barnes said most of the pending cases are waiting on lab tests, which can take weeks to complete.
“You have a situation where the toxicologist has to review it, sign off on it, and then the forensic pathologist, a medical doctor has to review it,” Barnes explained. “People rely on the final cause of death to settle their family's affairs and so it's important that the final report be correct.”
Supervisor Peskin thinks that shouldn’t preclude the medical examiner from providing details about the pending cases. He said sharing information about the kinds of people who died, and the kinds of places they lived, could help San Francisco officials better respond to the pandemic.
“Were they people from congregate settings — be they nursing homes or S.R.O's (Single-Room Occupancy Hotels) — from the streets of San Francisco or other places?” Peskin asked. “The public has a right to know.”
At the start of the pandemic, the medical examiner’s office had to send tissue samples to the overwhelmed Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in order to find out if a person who died had COVID-19. But in March, officials began testing post mortem samples at the county’s own lab, which allowed for quicker results.
The San Francisco Department of Public Health is compiling the complete list of COVID-19 deaths, including those reported by hospitals and funeral homes, as well as those cases that are handled by the medical examiner, whose job is to investigate violent, sudden and unexplained deaths.
The first San Francisco resident confirmed to have died from the virus — on March 27 — was identified by the medical examiner. But most coronavirus deaths have been reported by doctors.
As of Thursday, the medical examiner had submitted 40 specimens for COVID-19 testing and four had come back positive, according to a spokeswoman for the city’s Department of Public Health.
One of those four cases is not being counted as a COVID-19 death because the person died of another cause, according to Barnes.
"complete" - Google News
May 23, 2020 at 08:19PM
https://ift.tt/3gbmV7X
Is SF's COVID-19 Death Count the Complete Picture? - KQED
"complete" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2Fvz4Dj
https://ift.tt/2YviVIP
No comments:
Post a Comment