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“Current Trends in Forensic Science”

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1 “Current Trends in Forensic Science”
FORENSICS In Nursing “Current Trends in Forensic Science”

2 References Cherry, B. & Jacobs, S. (2008). Contemporary nursing: Issues, trends, and management. (4th ed.) St. Louis: Mosby. Martin, N. (2009). Forensic nursing: What, who, where. The Kansas Nurse, 84(3), 3-5. Pyrek, K. (2009). Forensic nursing pioneers ponder the future. Retrieved from (2009). Forensic nurse: Job outlook for forensic nursing. Retrieved from portal.com/articles/Forensic_Nurse:_Job_Outlook_for_Forensic_Nursing.htm l (2009). Forensic nursing. Retrieved from (2009). The forensic nurse. Retrieved from

3 What is Forensic Nursing?
Nursing science applied to the law Investigation/treatment of: Violence Abuse Criminal activity Traumatic accidents Forensic nursing applies science to the law. It includes the investigation and treatment of: (read slide).

4 The Forensic Nurse A nurse (RN) with specialized training in:
Forensic evidence collection Criminal procedures Legal testimony expertise Specialty Roles: Clinical forensic nurse (CFN) Sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) Legal nurse consultant Forensic psychiatric nurse Forensic correctional nurse Forensic gerontology nurse Nurse attorney Death investigator/Forensic nurse investigator Forensic nurse educator A forensic nurse is a registered nurse with specialized training in (read slide). There are many different career specialties to choose from. I will talk about a couple of them. The sexual assault nurse examiner (or SANE) responds to reported cases of sexual assault. The SANE will obtain history, conduct an interview and physical exam, and will also perform a pelvic exam for collection of evidence. The SANE also educated the victim on sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy risks. The victim will be provided with referrals for follow-up care. The majority of forensic nursing takes place with sexual assault victims. A death investigator or forensic nurse investigator is the first person at the crime scene with a forensic background. This person really has to know forensics to make an accurate call on time of death. Forensic nurse investigators work with detectives, collect evidence, examine the body, collect tissue and blood samples, and photograph the body and crime scene. Some people may think that forensic nurses have to work with dead bodies, but they don’t. It is just one of the options available for forensic nurses.

5 History 1992-1st national convention of sexual assault nurses
International Association of Forensic Nurses (IAFN) 1996-American Association of Nurses The first national convention of sexual assault nurses took place in 1992 in Minnesota. Seventy nurses attended this convention. Shortly after the convention the International Association of Forensic Nurses was developed. It wasn’t until 1996 that the American Association of Nurses recognized forensic nurses.

6 Current Status of Forensic Nursing
New specialty area of interest Education continuing to evolve Colleges and universities Healthcare facilities, correctional facilities, county prosecutors, coroner’s offices, medical examiner’s offices, insurance companies, psychiatric facilities Disaster and emergency management Forensic nursing is one of the fastest growing specialty areas. This is most likely because violence is increasing and resulting in more traumatic cases. Colleges and universities recently added programs. Forensic nurses practice in a variety of different areas including (read slide). They have expanded their role to include disaster and emergency management. Disaster preparedness includes forensic issues such as sexual assault, mass fatality, disposal of human remains, and critical incident stress.

7 Challenging and exciting Different specialty areas Make a difference
Advantages Disadvantages Important resource Challenging and exciting Different specialty areas Make a difference Demanding hrs Challenging Emotional cases Forensic nurses are an important resource to health care and justice systems. The job is challenging which could be an advantage or disadvantage. A couple of disadvantages are demanding hours and emotional cases. One advantage that might outweigh the disadvantages is that forensic nurses make a difference in the lives of victims of sexual assault.

8 Future Trends Forensic nursing will continue to advance and evolve
New roles and opportunities (increase in the next ten years) Increasing crime rates As crime rates continue to increase, forensic nursing will continue to advance. Their will be new roles and opportunities for nurses in forensics. Opportunities are expected to increase quickly in the next ten years. Police forces want to strengthen their cases against criminals and forensic nurses are able to collect evidence and testify in court.

9 Forensics: Pertaining to the Law
Forensic Nursing: Application of Nursing to the Law

10 Forensics is not about Dead People IT's about the LAW

11 Living Victims Deserve A Forensic Specialist

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13 What is Forensic Nursing?
The application of forensic science, combined with clinical nursing practice as they are applied to public or legal proceedings in the law enforcement arena. It is the application of forensic aspects of health care combined with biopsychosocial education of the registered nurse in the scientific investigation and treatment of trauma, death, violent or criminal activity, and traumatic accidents within the clinical or community institution (Lynch, 1991).

14 Forensic Nurses Trauma/ER SANE
Nurse Coroners/Forensic Nurse Death Investigators Nurse Attorneys/Legal Nurse Consultants Psychiatric & Mental Health Correctional Health Domestic Violence

15 1. ER/Trauma

16 ER/Trauma Why are they needed Identification Care for the Survivor
Care for the Perpetrator Identification & Collection of evidence Clothes Injury and patterns of injury

17 ER/Trauma Documentation What we do v. the crime committed
Chain of custody Measurements in centimeters Location Description Photography

18 2. SANE

19 SANE A registered nurse who has been specially trained to provide comprehensive care to sexual assault patients, who demonstrates competency in conducting a forensic exam and the ability to be an expert witness.

20 Benefits of a SANE TEAM Willingness Specialty training
Comprehensive care Fact based documentation (drop all opinions) Forensic issue evidence collection chain of custody courtroom testimony

21 SART-Sexual Assault Response Team
Law Enforcement Rape Crisis Medical Response SANE/RN Physician ANP Crime Lab Counseling Services Forensic Scientist Prosecution

22 Together Everyone Accomplishes More
Don’t tell other members of the TEAM how to do their jobs. Together we can make offenders want to relocate.

23 SART (sexual assault response team)
Provide victim centered services Provide compassionate care Provide community awareness Where to come How we will treat you Encourage reporting of Sexual Assaults Aid in the identifying of false reporting

24 Sexual Assault Every 45 seconds a women is Sexual Assaulted. 1:5 Women
Screen ALL Trauma Patients (LOC, clothing)

25 Sexual Assault Exam Sexual Assault is rarely suspected
History from Patient (to diagnosis & treat) Head-to-toe Assessment Detailed Genital Exam Collection of forensic evidence Treatment for injuries, STD’s & pregnancy

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28 Drug based sexual assaults
1/3 offenders convicted-alcohol 40% of 2,366 survivors urine-alcohol Multiple drugs: Ethanol, Benzo’s (valium, xanax, restoril, klonopin, rohypnol) Barbiturates, GHB, Ketamine, Chloral Hydrate, Muscle Relaxants, Opiates, Sedative Antidepressants Challenges: Drugs uses Reporting Collection of evidence Lab methodologies Dosages

29 1 hour 80 Women

30 3. Nurse Coroners/ Forensic Nurse Death Investigators

31 Nurse Coroner/Death Investigation
The coroner is a public official who is primarily charged with the duty of determining how and why people under the coroner’s jurisdiction die (these jurisdictions vary form state to state, but typically include sudden, unexpected, unexplained, or traumatic death).

32 Nurse Coroner/Death Investigation
A licensed nurse who carries out the duties of a death investigator in accordance with the performance standards and procedures established under the medical examiner or coroner’s system of death investigating and the jurisdictional standards of practice.

33 Nurse Coroner/Death Investigation
Nurses have the educational background to understand exactly what causes death and what happens to a body after death occurs. Death may be a criminal event, but it is always a medical event. Unlike law enforcement who look at the deceased and want to know, “Who killed you?” nurses look at a dead body and ask, “Why are you dead?” If it is determined that the death was due to criminal cause then it is law enforcement’s job to determine who. Who better to determine the manner of death than medical personnel?

34 Nurse Coroner/Death Investigation
Manner of death is the circumstances in which the cause of death arose, i.e. natural, accident, homicide, suicide, and undetermined. In some cases manner of death may be difficult to determine and may appear accidental (i.e. in a suicide without a note). Forensic nurses possess the skills necessary to complete a psychological autopsy and interpret the subtle nuances of medications, health history and circumstances surrounding suspicious deaths.

35 Nurse Coroner/Death Investigation
Mechanism of death is the physiologic derangement or biochemical disturbance incompatible with life, which is initiated by the cause of death, e.g. cardiac arrest. Forensic nurses are well educated in physiology and are therefore prepared to accurately distinguish between the cause and the physiologic mechanism of death.

36 4. Nurse Attorneys/ Legal Nurse Consultants

37 Goals To establish a leadership role in health care policy making.
To influence health care social policy, health care legislation and nursing practice acts. To educate the public about health law issues. To educate the public about nurse attorneys. To educate nurses about the legal system. To represent the public; client advocate.

38 Nurse Attorneys/Legal Nurse Consultants
Nurses want to make fundamental change in the way healthcare is delivered, and recognizing that it needs to occur through legislation and political process is a big piece of it. Like nurses, attorneys must interact with people who are vulnerable, who have been injured or traumatized, and who need assistance to regain their wholeness. Client advocacy is the skill nurses bring to the profession.

39 5. Psychiatric and Mental Health

40 Issues and Goals The enhancement of appropriate care for the severe and persistently mentally ill. The integration of psychiatric and addictions treatment. Strategies for promotion of mental health and prevention of psychiatric disorders. The provision of appropriate care within the criminal justice system. The equitable provision of care for children and adolescents.

41 Issues and Goals Ensuring access to care for older adults and members of minority groups. Advocacy for access to psychiatric-mental health services as readily as access to medical services. The development of an evidence-based approach to teaching nursing students about psychiatric-mental health nursing, at both the undergraduate and the graduate levels of education.

42 6. Correctional Health

43 Correctional Health Nurses
Correctional healthcare is a unique specialty area. Goals: Facilitate an improved working relationship between the private sector and the correctional staff in jails, adult and juvenile detention centers, prisons to meet the needs of the inmate patient. Promote correctional healthcare as part of the public health continuum.

44 7. Domestic Violence

45 Intimate Partner Violence is an Epidemic

46 The Surgeon General of the United States recently declared:
“Domestic Violence is the number one health issue facing the country today”

47 Domestic Violence DV is the leading cause of injury to women in the world. DV is the leading nonobstetric cause of death to pregnant women. Every 9 seconds a women is battered. 1:3 women are a victim of domestic violence

48 Cycle of Violence Intensity Frequency Physicial Assault Severity Abuse
Emotional Abuse

49 Eva’s Top 5 Domestic Violence Myths/Facts
Poor/unemployed The victim spends a lot of time running to the doctor He would never hurt the children He only does this when he drinks He wouldn’t kill her FACTS <15% unemployed Only 2/3 will seek medical assistance There is an increased incidence of child abuse 67% report alcohol abuse only 1/5 drinking at the time of abuse 2 women die each week at the hands of their husbands/Texas

50 3-10 Million Children Witness DV Violence in Their Homes Each Year

51 63% of Young Men Ages 11 to 20 Who Are Serving Time for Homicide Have Killed Their Mothers’ Abusers

52 The Leading Cause of Injury to 14 Year Old Boys

53 More Facts.. DV kills as many women every 5 years as the total number of Americans killed in the Vietnam War…54,000 Approximately 50% of all homeless women and children in the U.S. are fleeing DV. There are 7 animal shelters for every 1 DV shelter.

54 DV & Healthcare Costs 3-5 billion dollars in health care claims
100 million dollars in absenteeism, high turnover and lost productivity Employee’s miss 1,175,000 days of work per year because of DV alone DV in the US costs an estimated $67 billion/year 13,000 acts of DV against women occur in the workplace every year Up to 52% of victims of DV have lost their jobs because batterers typically engage in behavior that makes it difficult to work

55 Types of Abuse Physical Emotional/psychological Financial
Hitting, kicking, strangulation, weapons Emotional/psychological Threats, destruction of self worth, isolation Financial Work, advancement, access to finances, credit,

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60 Lack of identifying victims of Domestic Violence is consistent in community hospitals and trauma centers.

61 1 hour 400 women

62 8. The Role of the Forensic Nurse in the Medico-legal Death Investigation

63 Death Investigation Systems in the United States

64 Three Types Medical Examiner Coroner Mixed DiMaio, (2001), p. 9-18

65 Medical Examiner vs. Coroner
A licensed physician in the state in which she/he practices forensic pathology and has been hired by the jurisdiction to investigate sudden and unexpected deaths Coroner An elected official in the jurisdiction who investigates sudden and unexpected deaths. May or may not be a physician DiMaio, (2001), p. 9-18

66 What is Forensic Nursing?

67 Forensic Nursing Application of the nursing process to public or legal proceedings Application of the forensic aspects of health care to the scientific investigation of trauma and/or death related to medicolegal issues Lynch, (1993)

68 Roles within Forensic Nursing
Clinical Forensic Nurse Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) Pediatric Forensic Nurse Forensic Psychiatric Nurse Nurse Death Investigator/Coroner Correctional Nurse Legal Nurse Consultant Nurse Attorney Lynch, (1993)

69 The Forensic Nurse Death Investigator

70 What is a Forensic Nurse Death Investigator?
A Registered Nurse who: applies the nursing process to death investigation across the life span collaborates with interdisciplinary agencies identifies trends conducts and/or participates in research promotes health and safety through community education. IAFN, FNDI Standards of Practice, 2004, (draft)

71 What can a nurse add to the death investigation?
Apply nursing knowledge which includes anatomy, physiology, pharmacology and family interaction Questions are formulated based on a medical knowledge base Aid families and survivors in terms of the grieving process Vessier-Batchen, (2003)

72 Role of the Forensic Nurse Death Investigator at the Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office

73 Role in the ME Office Obtain death reports per state code
Augment the natural death and infant/child death investigation Conduct post mortem sexual assault/child abuse examinations Provide case management for pathologists Collaborate with organ/tissue procurement agencies Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office, (2004)

74 Role in the ME Office Provide link between pathologists and lay investigative staff Communicate COD and MOD with families Educate the community regarding death investigation and forensic issues Assist with external examinations Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office, (2004)

75 Augmenting the Natural Death Investigation
Normally, only uniformed officers attend the natural death scene Other types of death may present as a natural death Conduct a more thorough investigation Understand subtle signs of abuse and neglect

76 Case Management Collaborate with pathologist to determine the appropriate medical records Review medical records once received Obtain follow-up information Organize interagency meetings as necessary

77 External Examinations
Thorough physical examination Review of medical records Description via diagrams and dictation Document pathological findings

78 Evolution of the Forensic Nursing Program at the Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office

79 Prior to Forensic Nursing
In 2002, 80% of deaths that were reported were natural deaths Investigators had limited medical knowledge 80% of cases brought in to HCME were autopsied Requests/receipt of medical records were inconsistent

80 Prior to Forensic Nursing
Incomplete records were received and multiple requests had to be made Medication lists often did not correlate with the medical history Few inquiries into circumstances that lead up to the death Information between pathologists and investigators was fragmented at times

81 Forensic Nursing Integrated in Harris County, Texas
After extensive lobbying by Dr. Joye Carter, the Harris County Commissioner’s Court approved 1 Forensic Nurse position Job description: Adjunct to pathologists and investigative staff Oversee medical record aspect of the medicolegal examination Member of Child Fatality Review Team

82 Community Focus Improve the natural and infant/child death investigations with better history gathering and assessments Contact family members in order to provide information on cause and manner of death Discuss medical and familial implications of cause of death, if applicable Provide education regarding the medicolegal death investigation

83 Role Begins to Expand Three positions approved by Commissioner’s Court at the end of 2002 Expand coverage of nursing services to evening and night shift Assist with review of organ/tissue procurement recovery requests with the pathologist Assist with natural death and infant/child death scene investigation

84 Expanding Role Provide case management for infant/child deaths
Respond to scenes and take reports Conduct the forensic gynecological examination and evidence collection Community education

85 Increasing Nursing Staff
By end of 2003, identified that additional positions were necessary Conducted survey of selected medical examiner/ coroner offices throughout the United States regarding use of nurses in this setting Proposal developed to justify additional positions

86 New Positions Are Granted
In September 2003, Commissioner’s Court authorized nine (9) new nursing positions! Once all positions are filled, there will be twelve (12) nurses!

87 References Centers for Disease Control. (2004). Medical Examiner and Coroner Jurisdictions in the United States. Found at: DiMaio, V.M. (2001). Forensic Pathology. (2nd ed). Boca Raton: CRC Press. Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office. (2004). Forensic nurse/ Physician assistant investigator II. Job description. Found at

88 References International Association of Forensic Nurses. (2004). Forensic Nurse Death Investigator Standards of Practice. Draft copy. Lynch, V. (1993). Forensic nursing: Diversity in education and practice. Journal of Psychosocial Nursing, 31(11), p Vessier-Batchen, M. (2003). Forensic nurse death investigators. The Web Mystery Magazine. Found at:

89 “Justice will only be achieved when those who are not injured are just as indignant as those who are.” King Solomon

90 Thank you !


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