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Journal Article

Citation

Lynch VA. J. Psychosoc. Nurs. Ment. Health Serv. 1993; 31(11): 7-14.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Healio)

DOI

10.3928/0279-3695-19931101-04

PMID

8308761

Abstract

Forensic nursing, as a professional discipline, originally defined its role as a medical examiner's investigator in the field of death investigation. However, with the evolution of a new area of clinical practice, the application of forensic science to nursing reveals a wider role in the investigation of crime and in the legal process. Forensic nursing, as a clinical subspecialty, fills a complementary role to clinical forensic medicine. As an emerging discipline, clinical forensic nursing recognizes that health care providers must assume a mutual responsibility with forensic scientists and the criminal justice system in concern for the survivor of violent crime and perpetrators of criminal acts. The registered nurse can be a great asset in the forensic sciences. Death has become a respectable field of inquiry, demanding answers to satisfy the public need and demand to determine the cause and manner of death. Nurses can bring empathy and compassion--as well as excellent observation, clinical, and communication skills--to death investigation.


Language: en

Keywords

Coroners and Medical Examiners; Curriculum; Death Certificates; Forensic Medicine; Forensic Psychiatry; Humans; Job Description; Models, Nursing; Prisons; Professional Practice; Rape; Specialties, Nursing; Suicide

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