Determine the case of drug-related deaths


Assignment:

Written Exercise

You will select one item or subject of your choice from the forensic materials covered in class materials, including lectures and/or reading assignments, and write a paper representing an item or topic you find of interest or unusual. This must be in APA format and include a cover page, abstract, discussion, conclusion, and references. Your paper should go beyond the obvious, be written at a graduate level, and must be at least 1,200 words in length. You must use at least three resources to support your position. Remember, all resources including, but not limited to, journals, magazine, and/or books must be properly cited using APA style.

-Forensic toxicology is employed today primarily in two general areas. The first is postmortem drug testing. This consists of death investigation with a goal of establishing whether drugs were the cause or a contributing factor in death. There are many fatalities due to accidental or deliberate drug overdose. A small percent of such deaths are homicides. The task of the forensic pathologist is to explain what caused each death that comes under his or her jurisdiction and to determine the manner of death-that is, whether it was accidental, suicidal, or homicidal.

In the case of drug-related deaths, the forensic pathologist is assisted by the forensic toxicologist, who does comprehensive analyses of a wide variety of toxins from a large variety of tissue sources. The ability of forensic investigators to find poisons in human remains is a major factor in the dramatic decline in poisoning cases noted over the past 150 years. A second major area of forensic toxicology is workplace drug testing (see Case Study 10.1).

This consists of testing biofluids, primarily urine and blood, from employees or job applicants for the possible presence of drugs. The law usually allows random (unscheduled) drug testing for employees only if they have specific occupations, such as customs agents and police officers, among others. In these occupations, the law usually places the public safety above the employee's right to privacy. Employees may also be ordered to provide specimens for drug testing for cause, that is, if they when

James, Stuart H.. Forensic Science: An Introduction to Scientific and Investigative Techniques, Fourth Edition (p. 259). CRC Press. Kindle Edition.

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