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Dealing with Death: A Handbook of Practices, Procedures and the Law 2ed

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Michael Green is Emeritus Professor of forensic pathology at the University of Sheffield. He was a Home Office pathologist and is now an independent consulting forensic pathologist.
Preface. Acknowledgements to the First Edition. Acknowledgements to the Second Edition. PART I: Legal and Technical Aspects. 1. Customs and Laws. 2. Certification of Cause of Death. 3. Registration of Death. 4. Coroners and Coroner's Inquiries. 5. Fetal Loss, Stillbirth, Neonatal Death and Sudden Death in Infancy. 6. The Autopsy and Mortuary Practice. 7. Funeral Direction and Disposal by Burial. 8. Disposal by Cremation. 9. Organ Donation, Transplantation and Anatomical Dissection (''Leaving my Body to Science''). 10. The Law and Practice of Exhumation. 11. Major Disasters. PART II: Considerations for the Living, Care of the Dying, and Death with Dignity. 12. Palliative Care. 13. Medico-legal Issues at the End of Life. 14. Last Offices. 15. Bereavement. 16. The Control of Infection in Life and in Death. PART III: Religious, Ethnic and Cultural Aspects of Dying and Death. 17. Christianity and the Sacraments. 18. The Anglican Church (The Church in Wales, the Church in Ireland, the Episcopalian Church in Scotland). 19. The Roman Catholic Church. 20. Free Churches and Other Churches. 21. Jehovah's Witnesses. 22. The Mormon Church. 23. Christian Science. 24. The African-Caribbean Community. 25. Rastafarianism. 26. The Jewish Faith. 27. Buddhism. 28. The Baha'i Faith. 29. Islam. 30. Hinduism. 31. Sikhism. 32. Zoroastrians (Parsees). 33. AIDS. Appendix 1. Organisations which may be able to offer help with various aspects of death. Appendix 2. UK departments of forensic medicine and pathology. Appendix 3. Bibliography. Index.
'This handbook forms a very comprehensive study of dealing with death, which will be of use to all those involved in end of life care.' - Lucy Sutton, National Council for Palliative Care
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