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Death Registration & Burials
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Julie | Report | 30 Jun 2012 12:54 |
Can anyone help with information about the process of burial & death registration, or point to resources that cover this. I am trying to establish what the processes are now in England, and how they have changed. I have several cases where deaths are registered quite some time after date of death with burial some where in between. My presumption is that a death can't be registered until cause of death is determined, but permission for burial can be given prior to registration in some cases e.g. where an inquest is held but the body of the deceased does not need to be retained as part of that process. Is this the case & does anyone have any more detail on this? |
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RutlandBelle | Report | 30 Jun 2012 13:02 |
why don't you have a look on |
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Julie | Report | 30 Jun 2012 13:36 |
thanks, I did look at something similar on my local authority website, but I was looking for a bit more detail & some info on past procedures - which I guess will have changed over the years. |
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jax | Report | 30 Jun 2012 14:06 |
That does sound strange Joan...has he got a head stone with his date of death on? |
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lesleymargaret | Report | 30 Jun 2012 16:44 |
Hi Amokavid |
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Julie | Report | 30 Jun 2012 16:53 |
In my cases I think the dates of death may well be correct, inquests were involved, but I don't know why these took place several months later - unless the coroners' were backed up with cases there were no apparent reasons for delays of months. I hadn't thought about the issue of deaths registered some time after actual death until I received these death certificates, let alone deaths with wrong dates recorded. I am now perplexed that you can't take a death date as being in a particular window from the death registration entry. It also explains why I've had cases where relatives have said they were sure someone died earlier than the death regn info I've picked up. |
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mgnv | Report | 30 Jun 2012 20:26 |
In Scotland, details of the registration process differ from the rest of the UK. In particular, alterations to BMD.certs are typically noted in a special RCE (Register of Corrected Entries) |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 1 Jul 2012 00:22 |
Trying to think what happened when my father died (in England) as you want the more usual procedures. He died in a Nursing Home within the last 10 years. |
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Gwyn in Kent | Report | 1 Jul 2012 10:36 |
Julie |
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Andysmum | Report | 1 Jul 2012 10:49 |
My mother died in hospital in 1980. I collected the certificate of death the following morning, and followed the same procedure as Det. above. The only difference was that I didn't need an appointment to see the Registrar. As the hospital, Registrar and Funeral Directors were all within walking distance of each other, everything was sorted by lunchtime. |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 1 Jul 2012 15:00 |
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