Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Legal systems: a world view
- 2 Scottish legal system
- 3 The Police in the United Kingdom
- 4 The practitioner's obligations
- 5 The doctor in court
- 6 Custody medicine: physical conditions
- 7 Custody medicine: mental illness and psychological conditions
- 8 Substance misuse
- 9 Alcohol, drugs and driving
- 10 Injury
- 11 Child abuse: physical
- 12 Child abuse: sexual
- 13 Adult sexual offences
- 14 Management of at-risk exposures and infection control in custody
- 15 Scenes of crime
- 16 Forensic science
- 17 Forensic dentistry
- 18 Investigation of death
- 19 Dealing with a major disaster
- 20 Occupational health of police officers
- Index
- References
10 - Injury
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Legal systems: a world view
- 2 Scottish legal system
- 3 The Police in the United Kingdom
- 4 The practitioner's obligations
- 5 The doctor in court
- 6 Custody medicine: physical conditions
- 7 Custody medicine: mental illness and psychological conditions
- 8 Substance misuse
- 9 Alcohol, drugs and driving
- 10 Injury
- 11 Child abuse: physical
- 12 Child abuse: sexual
- 13 Adult sexual offences
- 14 Management of at-risk exposures and infection control in custody
- 15 Scenes of crime
- 16 Forensic science
- 17 Forensic dentistry
- 18 Investigation of death
- 19 Dealing with a major disaster
- 20 Occupational health of police officers
- Index
- References
Summary
The accurate description and interpretation of injuries is one of the most important functions of the forensic physician. Marks of violence may be found on the victim of an assault, either physical or sexual, on a child suspected of having been abused, on a police officer arresting a violent suspect, on a prisoner alleging ill-treatment whilst in custody, or on a body found dead in suspicious circumstances. The doctor asked to carry out an examination in such cases must be able to record injuries accurately, be aware of their medico-legal significance and be able to give a useful opinion on how they may have been caused.
Describing wounds
The examination should preferably be made in good light; in practice however, conditions may be less than ideal, for example, when called out at night, in the rain, to examine a dead body in a dark entry. Under such circumstances a powerful torch or floodlighting of the scene may be required. A few basic items of equipment are also essential: a hand-lens (or better still, an illuminated magnifier), a ruler with clear metric markings, a tape measure and a pair of calipers. Body charts (examples are available on the Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine website (www.fflm.ac.uk)) are invaluable for recording injuries. A portable ultra violet torch may help to highlight faint bruises. In cases of serious assault or when injuries have distinctive characteristics of patterning, wounds must be professionally photographed with a suitable scale included beside the wound.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Clinical Forensic Medicine , pp. 99 - 114Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009