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California
Related: About this forumCalifornia bans controversial 'excited delirium' diagnosis; is first state to do so
https://www.ocregister.com/2023/10/15/california-bans-controversial-excited-delirium-diagnosis/A human rights activist hailed the decision as a watershed moment that could make it harder for police to justify excessive force.
SACRAMENTO California is the first state to ban doctors and medical examiners from attributing deaths to the controversial diagnosis known as excited delirium, which a human rights activist hailed as a watershed moment that could make it harder for police to justify excessive force.
Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Oct. 8 to prohibit coroners, medical examiners, physicians, or physician assistants from listing excited delirium on a persons death certificate or in an autopsy report. Law enforcement wont be allowed to use the term to describe a persons behavior in any incident report, and testimony that refers to excited delirium wont be allowed in civil court. The law takes effect in January.
Good.
Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill Oct. 8 to prohibit coroners, medical examiners, physicians, or physician assistants from listing excited delirium on a persons death certificate or in an autopsy report. Law enforcement wont be allowed to use the term to describe a persons behavior in any incident report, and testimony that refers to excited delirium wont be allowed in civil court. The law takes effect in January.
Good.
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California bans controversial 'excited delirium' diagnosis; is first state to do so (Original Post)
quaint
Oct 2023
OP
brush
(58,236 posts)1. Has that been used by cops or said to have been the state of the diseased?
Last edited Mon Oct 16, 2023, 10:20 AM - Edit history (1)
quaint
(3,659 posts)3. Please see reply two. I accidentally replied to myself.
sigh
quaint
(3,659 posts)2. Both is my understanding.
If cops say that's why a person was restrained to death, in some cases the medical examiner has used it as cause of death.