Guidelines for writing death certificates
Registration of Electronic Death Certificates - Instructions
-Automatic translation
The death certificate
The death certificate is divided into two parts. On the one hand, there is administrative information such as the deceased's name, ID number, gender, marital status, legal domicile, place of death, and date of death.
On the other hand, there is medical information on the causes of death and how the death occurred.
The information on causes of death is coded according to ICD-10, the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, in accordance with the guidelines of the World Health Organization, and then entered in the Causes of Death Register.
The death certificate is written by the doctor who examines the body or by the person responsible for the examination of the body. If a death has been reported to the police, the death certificate may not be written until they have decided that there is no reason for a forensic autopsy. In the case of a forensic physical examination, a death certificate shall be written by the doctor who participated in the examination.
A medical doctor who performs an autopsy shall write a death certificate.
A medical doctor who is called in for a post-mortem examination must notify the police if:
it can be assumed that the death is related to a criminal act, suicide, or death caused by an accident,
a person has been found dead,
death is unexpected,
a person dies in prison or another similar place or
it can be assumed that death is the result of a mistake, negligence, or an accident during medical treatment.
A death certificate shall be carefully completed, and all information available when a death certificate is completed shall be entered in the relevant fields on the certificate.
Registration of administrative information
Registration of medical information. For the Causes of Death Register
Service provider
Directorate of Health