Review of Minnesota Child Deaths adn Near Fatal Injuries 2026

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Eighty-nine percent of these deaths and near fatal injuries occurred to children under age 3. The most common cause of death or near fatal injury was abusive head trauma caused by shaking or striking a childs head, resulting in traumatic brain injury or death.
The Minnesota Child Mortality Review Panel is comprised of 30 members and meets 6 times a year. The Child Mortality Review Panel examines up to eight cases at each meeting. The Panel makes recommendations to improve the state and local systems that protect children.
Immediate Action. If the child dies suddenly or unexpectedly at home or in the community, the child should normally be taken to an Emergency Department rather than a mortuary.

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An Inquest is an inquiry to confirm who has died, when and where the person died, and to establish the cause of death. If no medical or other explanation has been found at post-mortem, the Coroner will confirm the cause as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) or Sudden Unexpected Death in Infancy (SUDI).
The child death review meeting (CDRM) is the final multi-professional meeting where all matters relating to an individual childs death are discussed by the professionals directly involved in the care of that child during life and their investigation after death. This takes place prior to the review at the CDOP.
The review by the child death review partners (at CDOP, or equivalent), is intended to be the final, independent scrutiny of a childs death by professionals with no responsibility for the child during their life.
SUDC is sometimes used for children over the age of 12 months who die without a known cause. The term unascertained may sometimes be used, which is another way of saying that the cause of death cannot be found. Cot death was a term often used in the past to describe the sudden and unexpected death of a baby.
A Child Death Overview Panel (CDOP) of doctors, other health specialists and child care professionals consider the anonymous information, to try to ascertain what caused the death, what support and treatment was offered to the child and their family up until the death, and what support was offered to the family after

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