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Broward County's Strengthening the Medical Examiner-Coroner System Program: Forensic Pathology Fellowships

Award Information

Award #
15PBJA-22-GG-03641-SLFO
Funding Category
Competitive Discretionary
Location
Congressional District
Status
Past Project Period End Date
Funding First Awarded
2022
Total funding (to date)
$175,502

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2022, $175,502)

The United States continues to experience a severe shortage of board-certified forensic pathologists as cases that are referred to offices around the country are rising at unprecedented levels. Currently, there is an estimated 500 board-certified forensic pathologists compared to the recommended range of 1,100-1,200. This critical shortage may undermine the local, state, and federal criminal justice systems with the lack of forensic pathologists to perform examinations in a timely manner. This grant will help Broward County Office of Medical Examiner & Trauma Services (BCOMETS) produce qualified, highly trained, forensic pathologists. It will continue to help increase BCOMETS’ visibility nationwide, which will attract top candidates. BCOMETS will do its part in acquiring more fellowship positions in the future, hence decreasing the overall national shortage of forensic pathologists.

 

The BCOMETS requests funding to train one full-time Forensic Pathology Fellow to help offset the critical shortage of forensic pathologists. BCOMETS is one of 25 medical examiner districts within Florida. The office investigates all violent, suspicious, unnatural and unattended deaths to determine cause and manner of death, which aids law enforcement investigations and unmasks trends that aid in public health and safety. BCOMETS continues to be overwhelmed with a significant increase in drug overdoses (up 49% from 2019), homicides (up 23% from 2019), and motor vehicle-related deaths (up 33% from 2019). Additionally, there continues to be emergence of new drugs such as Xylazine and the Nitazenes (a class of synthetic opioids stronger than Fentanyl). Persons living in low income neighborhoods have been affected disproportionately with higher rates of drug related deaths and homicides. Broward County’s in-house forensic toxicology laboratory consistently ranks within the top three medical examiner districts in terms of annual workload.  

 

The fellow will be provided a comprehensive educational experience at an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and National Association of Medical Examiners accredited medical examiner office which includes an onsite toxicology laboratory. The forensic pathology program director and seven board-certified forensic pathologists will share their vast, and varied expertise through closely guided mentoring, thus, preparing the fellow to become a competent and knowledgeable forensic pathologist. The fellow will have access to a board-certified Neuropathologist and a cardiac pathologist when a case warrants their expertise.

 

BCOMETS is one of the few medical examiner offices in the country that uses Lodox®, a full body imaging scanner, that helps triage cases before examinations. In addition to performing over 200 autopsies, the fellow will respond to death scenes, participate in crime scene investigations, courtroom/deposition testimonies, and monthly countywide trauma services meetings, opioid fatality review, domestic violence review, and child death review. The Medicolegal Death Investigation community will be enriched by the contributions of the fellow upon completion of this invaluable training experience.

Date Created: September 29, 2022