Chapter 092
2018 -- H 7697 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted 06/28/2018

A N   A C T
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- OFFICE OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS

Introduced By: Representatives Bennett, Newberry, McNamara, Shekarchi, and
Date Introduced: February 28, 2018

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Sections 23-4-1 and 23-4-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-4 entitled
"Office of State Medical Examiners" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     23-4-1. Definitions.
     (a) "Assistant medical examiner" means a duly licensed doctor of medicine or osteopathy
appointed to assist the office of state medical examiners on a part-time basis.
     (b) "Autopsy" means the dissection of a dead body and the removal and examination of
bone, tissue, organs, and foreign objects for the purpose of determining the condition of the body
and the cause and the manner of the death.
     (c) "Cause of death" means the agent that has directly or indirectly resulted in a death.
     (d) "Inquest" means an official judicial inquiry before a medical examiner and/or medical
examiners jury for the purpose of determining the manner of death.
     (e) "Manner of death" means the means or fatal agency that caused a death.
     (f) "Postmortem examination" means examination after death and includes an
examination of the dead body and surroundings by an agent of the office of state medical
examiners but does not include dissection of the body for any purpose.
     (g) "Work product" means preliminary drafts, notes, impressions, memoranda, working
papers, and similar documents of a governmental entity, whether in electronic or other format.
     23-4-3. Functions.
     The office of state medical examiners shall be responsible for:
     (1) The investigation of deaths within the state that, in its judgment, might reasonably be
expected to involve causes of death enumerated in this chapter;
     (2) For the conduct of inquests when requested by the attorney general;
     (3) For the performance of autopsies, including the retention, examination, and
appropriate disposal of tissue, when appropriate, for deaths that, in its judgment, might
reasonably be expected to involve causes of deaths enumerated in this chapter;
     (4) For the written determination of the causes of death investigated pursuant to this
chapter;
     (5) For the presentation to the courts of Rhode Island of expert testimony relating to the
cause of death;
     (6) For the keeping of complete records, including names, places, circumstances, and
causes of deaths, of deaths investigated and reported, copies of which shall be delivered to the
attorney general and of which written determinations of causes of death shall be made available
for public inspection;
     (7) For the burial of bodies for which there is no other existing legal responsibility to do
so;
     (8) For the development and enforcement of procedures for the pronouncement of death
and for the transplantation of organs from bodies of persons who have died within the state;
     (9) For a multi-disciplinary team review of child fatalities with the goal to decrease the
prevalence of preventable child deaths and report recommendations for community- and systems-
intervention strategies. A child death-review team shall include, but is not limited to,
representation from state agencies, health care, child welfare, and law enforcement; and
     (10) The department shall work with the department of children, youth and families and
the office of the child advocate to develop a process to ensure the timely availability of autopsy
reports on child deaths; and
     (11)(i) For a multi-disciplinary team review of drug-related overdose deaths with the goal
of reducing the prevalence of such these deaths by examining emerging trends in overdose,
identifying potential demographic, geographic, and structural points for prevention and other
factors. The multi-disciplinary team for review of drug-related overdose deaths may include, as
determined by the director, representatives from the department of health; the department of the
attorney general; the Rhode Island state police; the department of corrections; the department of
behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals; the Rhode Island Police Chiefs
Association; the Hospital Association of Rhode Island; an emergency department physician; a
primary care physician; an addiction medicine/treatment provider; a mental health clinician; a
toxicologist; a recovery coach or other representative of the recovery community; and others as
may be determined by the director; and
     (ii) The work product of the multi-disciplinary team for review of drug-related overdose
deaths shall be confidential and protected under all applicable laws, including the federal Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and the Rhode Island confidentiality of
health care information act (chapter 37.3 of title 5), and shall be exempt from the provisions of
chapter 2 of title 38, not subject to subpoena, discovery, or introduction into evidence in any civil
or criminal proceeding, and not subject to disclosure beyond such the team members (except to
authorized employees of the department of health as necessary to perform official duties of the
department pursuant to § 23-4-3(11)) this subsection (11).
     (iii) The multidisciplinary team shall report on or before December 1 of each year to the
governor, the speaker of the house, and president of the senate, which report shall summarize the
activities of the team, as well as the team's findings, progress towards reaching its goals, and
recommendations for any needed changes in legislation or otherwise.
     (iv) The provisions of § 23-4-3 subsection (11)(i) shall sunset and be repealed effective
December 31, 2020.
     SECTION 2. Chapter 23-4 of the General Laws entitled "Office of State Medical
Examiners" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section:
     23-4-3.1. Immunity.
     No member of the multi-disciplinary team for review of drug-related overdose deaths
shall be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denied any right or privilege,
including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business, occupational, or
professional licensing board or entity (and, for members who are state employees, termination,
loss of employee or pension benefits), for acting in accordance with § 23-4-3.
     SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. The provisions amending § 24-4-
3(11)(i) shall be repealed effective December 31, 2020.
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LC004919/SUB A/2
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