Recommended Practice based on International Guidelines
The WHO international form of Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (WHO MCCD) is the recommended form for recording information regarding cause of death for certification of all deaths, including stillbirths and unnatural or suspicious deaths. There may be modifications to the form including addition of biographical information of the deceased in an administrative section. Countries may also modify the Manner of Death section in Frame B as appropriate for their context; however, the form should always include Frame B, including a manner of death section.
Zambia
Legal Analysis
The medical certificate of cause of death for natural deaths is “Medical Form No. 14”, which is referenced but not prescribed by Rule 33 of the Births and Deaths Registration (General) Rules. The template for this form appears to emanate from the Ministry of Health; since it is not prescribed in law, it could change from time to time. The current version requests information on the immediate, antecedent and underlying cause of death, which is to be transferred to the Notice of Death (Form XIII) by the Registrar. An additional, more detailed cause of death form is prescribed for completion by a medical practitioner who attended the deceased during his or her last illness as a pre-condition for cremation [Form 2 in the Public Health (Crematoria and Cremation) Regulations].
Where a death is referred for a possible inquest, the inquests Act provides two forms that request information on the cause of death - one for the post-mortem examination conducted by a medical practitioner on the order of the coroner (Coroner's Form 3), and one to be completed by the coroner at the conclusion of the inquest (Coroner's Form 5). These forms both contain a "cause of death" data field but do not request immediate, antecedent, and underlying causes of death – making them inconsistent with the WHO MCCD. However, in practice, the coroner provides this information in the space at the end of the form.