Even in this case, your father could have been pronounced after 12:00 AM by
an attending.  I don't think nurses can pronounce, so they may have waited
until an attending arrived.  This does happen.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Star
Sent: Monday, January 10, 2005 2:42 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Death Certificate

 Not in this case. He was in the hospital.  He died at 715pm January 10 but
for some reason, probably a typo, his death certificate said January 11
altho all other records say January 10, as well as the fact that when I went
to work that morning found that my office burned to the ground at NAS
Moffett Field, California the evening before and worked all day trying to
retrieve some of my records... Was quite a day.

Star

 

-------Original Message-------

 

From: [email protected]

Date: 01/09/05 14:45:59

To: [email protected]

Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Death Certificate

 

Was he "pronounced" dead on January 11th? I think this happens more

frequently than we think.

 

I have two recent cases like that. One died on Aug. 1, at home, of a heart

attack. It was discovered before 11:00 p.m. but by the time the coroner and

police arrived, it was well after midnight. His death certificate says he

died on Aug. 2.

Because his family knew when he died, his headstone and obituary both have

Aug. 1 as the death date.

 

Another case is where a daughter paid a visit to her father on Sunday, Feb.

29/04, and discovered he was very ill. He refused to go to the hospital,

and she had to fly home that afternoon. That evening and all day Monday she

phoned his place but there wasn't any answer. Tuesday, she had someone

check on him, only to discover he was dead, and in the same place she last

saw him.

She was told that he likely died that Sunday, however, since he was

pronounced dead on Tuesday, March 2/04, that's what his death certificate

says.

In this case, the family used the March 2 date on his obituary.

 

I often wonder about victims of violence whose bodies aren't discovered till

months or years later. What does their death certificate say?

 

About the only thing you can do is add it to your notes -- the person was

"pronounced" dead on such & such a date.

 

Kathy

 

---------------------

From: "Star"

 

> The death certificate may be fairly accurate but it too can be wrong. 
> My

> father died on January 10 but his death certificate says January 11. I

> have

> all my records correct, the newspapers reported his death date correct 
> and

> his headstone is correct but not the death certificate. So much for that.

 

 

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