19-15-3
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19-15-3.
(a)(1)
Each county shall establish a local multidisciplinary, multiagency child
fatality review committee as provided in this Code section. The chief superior
court judge of the circuit in which the county is located shall establish a
child fatality review committee composed of, but not limited to, the following
members:
(A)
The county medical examiner or coroner;
(B)
The district attorney or his or her designee;
(C)
A county department of family and children services representative;
(D)
A local law enforcement representative;
(E)
The sheriff or county police chief or his or her designee;
(F)
A juvenile court representative;
(G)
A county board of health representative; and
(H)
A county mental health representative.
(2)
The district attorney or his or her designee shall serve as the chairperson to
preside over all meetings.
(b)
Review committee members shall recommend whether to establish a review committee
for that county alone or establish a review committee with and for the counties
within that judicial circuit.
(c)
The chief superior court judge shall appoint persons to fill any vacancies on
the review committee should the membership fail to do so.
(d)
If any designated agency fails to carry out its duties relating to participation
on the local review committee, the chief superior court judge of the circuit or
any superior court judge who is a member of the Georgia Child Fatality Review
Panel shall issue an order requiring the participation of such agency. Failure
to comply with such order shall be cause for punishment as for contempt of
court.
(e)
Deaths eligible for review by local review committees are all deaths of children
ages birth through 17 as a result of:
(1)
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome;
(2)
Any unexpected or unexplained conditions;
(3)
Unintentional injuries;
(4)
Intentional injuries;
(5)
Sudden death when the child is in apparent good health;
(6)
Any manner that is suspicious or unusual;
(7)
Medical conditions when unattended by a physician. For the purpose of this
paragraph, no person shall be deemed to have died unattended when the death
occurred while the person was a patient of a hospice licensed under Article 9 of
Chapter 7 of Title 31; or
(8)
Serving as an inmate of a state hospital or a state, county, or city penal
institution.
(f)
It shall be the duty of any law enforcement officer, medical personnel, or other
person having knowledge of the death of a child to immediately notify the
coroner or medical examiner of the county wherein the body is found or death
occurs.
(g)
If the death of a child occurs outside the
child́s
county of residence, it shall be the duty of the medical examiner or coroner in
the county where the child died to notify the medical examiner or coroner in the
county of the
child́s
residence.
(h)
When a county medical examiner or coroner receives a report regarding the death
of any child he or she shall within 48 hours of the death notify the chairperson
of the child fatality review committee of the county or circuit in which such
child resided at the time of death.
(i)
The coroner or county medical examiner shall review the findings regarding the
cause and manner of death for each child death report received and respond as
follows:
(1)
If the death does not meet the criteria for review pursuant to subsection (e) of
this Code section, the coroner or county medical examiner shall sign the form
designated by the panel stating that the death does not meet the criteria for
review. He or she shall forward the form and findings, within seven days of the
child́s
death, to the chairperson of the child fatality review committee in the county
or circuit of the
child́s
residence; or
(2)
If the death meets the criteria for review pursuant to subsection (e) of this
Code section, the coroner or county medical examiner shall complete and sign the
form designated by the panel stating the death meets the criteria for review. He
or she shall forward the form and findings, within seven days of the
child́s
death, to the chairperson of the child fatality review committee in the county
or circuit of the
child́s
residence.
(j)
When the chairperson of a local child fatality review committee receives a
report from the coroner or medical examiner regarding the death of a child, that
chairperson shall review the report and findings regarding the cause and manner
of the
child́s
death and respond as follows:
(1)
If the report indicates the
child́s
death does not meet the criteria for review and the chairperson agrees with this
decision, the chairperson shall sign the form designated by the panel stating
that the death does not meet the criteria for review. He or she shall forward
the form and findings to the panel within seven days of receipt;
(2)
If the report indicates the
child́s
death does not meet the criteria for review and the chairperson disagrees with
this decision, the chairperson shall follow the procedures for deaths to be
reviewed pursuant to subsection (k) of this Code section;
(3)
If the report indicates the
child́s
death meets the criteria for review and the chairperson disagrees with this
decision, the chairperson shall sign the form designated by the panel stating
that the death does not meet the criteria for review. The chairperson shall also
attach an explanation for this decision; or
(4)
If the report indicates the
child́s
death meets the criteria for review and the chairperson agrees with this
decision, the chairperson shall follow the procedures for deaths to be reviewed
pursuant to subsection (k) of this Code section.
(k)
When a
child́s
death meets the criteria for review, the chairperson shall convene the review
committee within 30 days after receipt of the report for a meeting to review and
investigate the cause and circumstances of the death. Review committee members
shall provide information as specified below, except where otherwise protected
by statute:
(1)
The providers of medical care and the medical examiner or coroner shall provide
pertinent health and medical information regarding a child whose death is being
reviewed by the local review committee;
(2)
State, county, or local government agencies shall provide all of the following
data on forms designated by the panel for reporting child fatalities:
(A)
Birth information for children who died at less than one year of age including
confidential information collected for medical and health use;
(B)
Death information for children who have not reached their eighteenth birthday;
(C)
Law enforcement investigative data, medical examiner or coroner investigative
data, and parole and probation information and records;
(D)
Medical care, including dental, mental, and prenatal health care;
and
(E)
Pertinent information from any social services agency that provided services to
the child or family; and
(3)
The review committee may obtain from any superior court judge of the county or
circuit for which the review committee was created a subpoena to compel the
production of documents or attendance of witnesses when that judge has made a
finding that such documents or witnesses are necessary for the review
committeés
review. However, this Code section shall not modify or impair the privileged
communications as provided by law except as otherwise provided in Code Section
19-7-5.
(l)
The review committee shall complete its review and prepare a report of the
child́s
death within 20 days, weekends and holidays excluded, following the first
meeting held after receipt of the county medical examiner or
coroneŕs
report. The review
committeés
report shall:
(1)
State the circumstances leading up to death and cause of death;
(2)
Detail any agency involvement prior to death, including the beginning and ending
dates and kinds of services delivered, the reasons for initial agency activity,
and the reasons for any termination of agency activities;
(3)
State whether any agency services had been delivered to the family or child
prior to the circumstances leading to the
child́s
death;
(4)
State whether court intervention had ever been sought;
(5)
State whether there have been any acts or reports of violence between past or
present spouses, persons who are parents of the same child, parents and
children, stepparents and stepchildren, foster parents and foster children, or
other persons living or formerly living in the same household;
(6)
Conclude whether services or agency activities delivered prior to death were
appropriate and whether the
child́s
death could have been prevented;
(7)
Make recommendations for possible prevention of future deaths of similar
incidents for children who are at risk for such deaths; and
(8)
Include other findings as requested by the Georgia Child Fatality Review Panel.
(m)
The review committee shall transmit a copy of its report within 15 days of
completion to the panel.
(n)
The review committee shall transmit a copy of its report within 15 days
following its completion to the district attorney of the county or circuit for
which the review committee was created if the report concluded that the child
named therein died as a result of:
(1)
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome when no autopsy was performed to confirm the
diagnosis;
(2)
Accidental death when it appears that the death could have been prevented
through intervention or supervision;
(3)
Any sexually transmitted disease;
(4)
Medical causes which could have been prevented through intervention by an agency
or by seeking medical treatment;
(5)
Suicide of a child in custody or known to the Department of Human Resources or
when the finding of suicide is suspicious;
(6)
Suspected or confirmed child abuse;
(7)
Trauma to the head or body; or
(8)
Homicide.
(o)
Each local review committee shall issue an annual report no later than the first
day of July in 2001 and in each year thereafter. The report shall:
(1)
Specify the numbers of reports received by that review committee from a county
medical examiner or coroner pursuant to subsection (h) of this Code section for
the preceding calendar year;
(2)
Specify the number of reports of child fatality reviews prepared by the review
committee during such period;
(3)
Be published at least once annually in the legal organ of the county or counties
for which the review committee was established with the expense of such
publication paid each by such county; and
(4)
Be transmitted, no later than the fifteenth day of July in 2001 and in each year
thereafter, to the Georgia Child Fatality Review Panel and the Judiciary
Committees of the House of Representatives and Senate.