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The child death review process covers children; a child is defined in the Act as a person under 18 years of age. A child death review must be carried out for all children regardless of the cause of death. This includes the death of any live-born baby where a death certificate has been issued.
Globally, infectious diseases, including acute respiratory infections, diarrhoea and malaria, along with pre-term birth complications, birth asphyxia and trauma and congenital anomalies remain the leading causes of death for children under 5. Child mortality and causes of death - World Health Organization (WHO) who.int data topics topic-details GHO who.int data topics topic-details GHO
The panel is a confidential forum, the cases are anonymised however each child is discussed individually and the panel seek to learn from each child death. Any learning is shared with practitioners and their organisations both locally and nationally. Child Death Overview Panel (CDOP) ddscp.org.uk cdop ddscp.org.uk 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. Chapter 5: Child death reviews workingtogetheronline.co.uk chapterfive workingtogetheronline.co.uk chapterfive
Mortality (or death) review is a process in which the circumstances surrounding the care of a patient who died during hospitalisation are systematically examined.
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Function of CDOP The key functions of a CDOP are to: Review all child deaths, excluding those babies who are stillborn and planned terminations of pregnancy carried out within the law. Determine whether the death was preventable (if there were modifiable factors which may have contributed to the death)
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.
Accidents Accidents (unintentional injuries) are, by far, the leading cause of death among children and teens. Death among children and adolescents - MedlinePlus medlineplus.gov ency article medlineplus.gov ency article

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