Publication
Title
Medico-Legal Death Investigation Systems – Belgium
Author
Abstract
The Belgian criminal justice system, and hence its death investigation system, is based on the French Code Napoléon from 1808. It is characterized by an inquisitory (secret) nature being mostly led by an investigating judge. Most deaths are certified (so-called Model IIIc) by general physicians with very limited forensic knowledge or experience. There are no legal restrictions as to which physician can certify any death. Only when the nature of death is considered ‘suspicious’ or ‘violent’ by these physicians, the public prosecutor will ask for a more in-depth investigation by a doctor trained in forensic medicine. If necessary, a forensic autopsy will be commissioned by an investigating judge who investigates both à charge et à décharge. Overall the autopsy rate (forensic and clinical) is low in Belgium (estimated up to 1-2% of +/- 110.000 annual deaths). Residency training and specialization in forensic medicine takes 5 years and the candidates are trained both in clinical forensic medicine and forensic pathology (regulated by the Ministerial Decree of February 27th 2002).
Language
English
Source (journal)
Sri Lanka Journal of Forensic Medicine, Science & Law. - Place of publication unknown
Publication
Place of publication unknown : publisher unknown , 2022
ISSN
2012-7081
2465-6089
DOI
10.4038/SLJFMSL.V13I0.7912
Volume/pages
13 (2022) , p. 8-10
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Law 
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Source file
Record
Identifier
Creation 11.03.2024
Last edited 13.03.2024
To cite this reference