(1)(a)
A coroner or medical examiner shall cooperate with procurement
organizations, to the extent that such cooperation does not
prevent, hinder, or impede the timely investigation of death, to
facilitate the opportunity to recover anatomical gifts for the
purpose of transplantation or therapy. However, a coroner or
medical examiner may limit the number of procurement
organizations with which he or she cooperates.
(b) The coroner or medical examiner may release the initial
investigative information to the tissue or organ procurement
organization for the purpose of determining the suitability of
the potential donor by those organizations. The information
released for this purpose shall remain confidential. The coroner
or medical examiner is not liable for any release of confidential
information by the procurement organization.
(2)(a) Procurement organizations shall cooperate with the
coroner or medical examiner to ensure the preservation of and
timely transfer to the coroner or medical examiner any physical
or biological evidence from a prospective donor that the
procurement organization may have contact with or access to that
is required by the coroner or medical examiner for the
investigation of death.
(b) If the coroner or medical examiner or a designee
releases a part for donation under subsection (4) of this
section, the procurement organization, upon request, shall cause
the physician or technician who removes the part to provide the
coroner or medical examiner with a record describing the
condition of the part, biopsies, residual tissue, photographs,
and any other information and observations requested by the
coroner or medical examiner that would assist in the
investigation of death.
(3) A part may not be removed from the body of a decedent
under the jurisdiction of a coroner or medical examiner for
transplantation, therapy, research, or education unless the part
is the subject of an anatomical gift, and has been released by
the coroner or medical examiner. The body of a decedent under
the jurisdiction of the coroner or medical examiner may not be
delivered to a person for research or education unless the body
is the subject of an anatomical gift. This subsection does not
preclude a coroner or medical examiner from performing the
medicolegal investigation upon the body or relevant parts of a
decedent under the jurisdiction of the coroner or medical
examiner.
(4) If an anatomical gift of a part from the decedent under
the jurisdiction of the coroner or medical examiner has been or
might be made, but the coroner or medical examiner initially
believes that the recovery of the part could interfere with the
postmortem investigation into the decedent's cause or manner of
death, the collection of evidence, or the description,
documentation, or interpretation of injuries on the body, the
coroner or medical examiner may consult with the procurement
organization or physician or technician designated by the
procurement organization about the proposed recovery. After
consultation, the coroner or medical examiner may release the
part for recovery.
[2008 c 139 § 21.]