Uptake of Coroners’ Recommendations to be Investigated
Uptake of Coroners’ Recommendations to be Investigated
Tuesday May 15 2012
A major
new study will examine whether Coroners’ recommendations
are being acted on and helping to save
lives.
University of Otago Faculty of Law
researchers Professor Mark Henaghan and Dr Jennifer Moore
will review all Coroners’ findings and recommendations
between 2006 and 2011 and interview around 60 agencies and
organisations to determine how much they take notice of the
findings.
The New Zealand Law Foundation-funded
study is commencing as Coroners express frustration that
their recommendations are not being followed up. Chief
Coroner Neil McLean has reportedly urged the Government to
look at making it compulsory for relevant agencies to
consider Coroners’ recommendations, as happens in some
other countries.
Dr Moore says there is a pressing
and overdue need for good information on how Coroners’
recommendations are being implemented.
“A common
refrain of those who have lost family members is that they
want the coronial system to ensure that this doesn’t
happen to anyone else,” she says.
“Coroners
have said that agencies are failing to take their
recommendations seriously, but are all their recommendations
possible to implement? Should mandatory follow-up be part of
New Zealand law? Any such law reform must be evidence-based,
not anecdotal.”
The Otago University project will
work in collaboration with Coronial Services, and will take
account of overseas experience, including a similar research
project in Victoria, Australia, where there is mandatory
follow-up of Coroners’ findings.
Law Foundation
Director Lynda Hagen said the Foundation was fully funding
the project, at a cost of $138,000, with completion
scheduled for late 2015.
“We are very pleased to
support this work given its relevance and topicality. It’s
an important project that will fill a vital knowledge gap in
our legal and public health system,” she
says.
The Law Foundation is an independent
charitable trust that supports research and education on
legal
issues.
ENDS