Utah Code § 26B-8-217

Records of medical examiner -- Confidentiality
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(1) For purposes of this section, "deidentify" means to remove personally identifying information
about a decedent or the decedent's family and any other information that may be used to
identify a decedent.
(2) The medical examiner shall maintain complete, original records for the medical examiner
record, which shall:
(a) be properly indexed, giving the name, if known, or otherwise identifying every individual
whose death is investigated;
(b) indicate the place where the body was found;

(c) indicate the date of death;
(d) indicate the cause and manner of death;
(e) indicate the occupation of the decedent, if available;
(f) include all other relevant information concerning the death; and
(g) include a full report and detailed findings of the autopsy or report of the investigation.
(3)
(a) Upon written request from an individual described in Subsections (3)(a)(i) through (iv), the
medical examiner shall provide a copy of the autopsy report, toxicology report, lab reports,
investigative reports, documents generated by the medical examiner related to any report,
and any other specifically requested portions of the medical examiner record, if any, to any of
the following:
(i) a decedent's immediate relative;
(ii) a decedent's legal representative;
(iii) a physician or physician assistant who attended the decedent during the year before the
decedent's death; or
(iv) a county attorney, a district attorney, a criminal defense attorney, or other law enforcement
official with jurisdiction, as necessary for the performance of the attorney or official's
professional duties.
(b) Subject to Subsection (3)(c), upon written request from the director or a designee of the
director of an entity described in Subsections (3)(b)(i) through (iv), the medical examiner may
provide a copy of any medical examiner report or other portions of the medical examiner's
record described in Subsection (3)(a), to any of the following entities as necessary for
performance of the entity's official purposes:
(i) a local health department;
(ii) a local mental health authority;
(iii) a public health authority; or
(iv) another state or federal governmental agency.
(c) The medical examiner may provide a copy of a report or portion of the medical examiner's
record described in Subsection (3)(a), if the report or portion of the medical examiner's
record relates to an issue of public health or safety, as further defined by rule made by the
department in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act.
(4) Reports provided under Subsection (3) may not include records that the medical examiner
obtains from a third party in the course of investigating the decedent's death.
(5)
(a) The medical examiner may provide a medical examiner record to a researcher who:
(i) has an advanced degree;
(ii)
(A) is affiliated with an accredited college or university, a hospital, or another system of care,
including an emergency medical response or a local health agency; or
(B) is part of a research firm contracted with an accredited college or university, a hospital, or
another system of care;
(iii) requests a medical examiner record for a research project or a quality improvement
initiative that will have a public health benefit, as determined by the department; and
(iv) provides to the medical examiner an approval from:
(A) the researcher's sponsoring organization; and
(B) the Utah Department of Health and Human Services Institutional Review Board.
(b) Records provided under Subsection (5)(a) may not include a third party record, unless:
(i) a court has ordered disclosure of the third party record; and

(ii) disclosure is conducted in compliance with state and federal law.
(c)
(i) A person who obtains a medical examiner record under Subsection (5)(a) shall:
(A) maintain the confidentiality of the medical examiner record and deidentify the medical
examiner record before using the medical examiner record in research;
(B) conduct any research within and under the supervision of the Office of the Medical
Examiner, if the medical examiner record contains a third party record with personally
identifiable information;
(C) limit the use of a medical examiner record to the purpose for which the person requested
the medical examiner record;
(D) destroy a medical examiner record and the data abstracted from the medical examiner
record at the conclusion of the research for which the person requested the medical
examiner record;
(E) reimburse the medical examiner, as provided in Section 26B-1-209, for any costs incurred
by the medical examiner in providing a medical examiner record;
(F) allow the medical examiner to review, before public release, a publication in which data
from a medical examiner record is referenced or analyzed; and
(G) provide the medical examiner access to the researcher's database containing data from a
medical examiner record, until the day on which the researcher permanently destroys the
medical examiner record and all data obtained from the medical examiner record.
(ii) A person who fails to comply with the requirements of Subsections (5)(c)(i)(A) through (D) is
guilty of a class B misdemeanor.
(6)
(a) Except as provided in Subsections (6)(b) and (c), it is a class B misdemeanor for a person
who receives a photograph or video of a decedent under Subsection (3) of this section to
knowingly share, publish, or otherwise distribute or make available to another person a
photograph or video of a decedent if the photograph or video:
(i) is part of the medical examiner's record; and
(ii) is not in the public domain at the time that the person shared, published, distributed, or
otherwise made the photograph or video available.
(b) Subsection (6) does not apply to an employee or contractor of the Office of the Medical
Examiner who, in the course of performing or assisting with the duties of the Office of
the Medical Examiner, and in accordance with any applicable department rules, shares,
publishes, distributes, or makes available:
(i) a photograph or video of a decedent for consultation with other professionals in determining
cause and manner of the decedent's death; or
(ii) a deidentified photograph or video of a decedent for:
(A) training and services authorized under Section 26B-8-222;
(B) research;
(C) presentations and publication for academic or educational purposes; or
(D) other purposes provided by law.
(c) Subsection (6) does not apply to:
(i) a member, a contractor, or an employee of a law enforcement agency or prosecutorial
agency who, in the course of performing or assisting with the duties of the agency, shares,
publishes, distributes, or makes available a deidentified photograph or video of a decedent
for the purposes of training;
(ii) an individual who shares or makes available a photograph or video of a decedent for the
purposes of adjudicating a claim in an administrative or judicial proceeding; or

(iii) an individual who shares, publishes, distributes, or makes available a photograph or video
of a decedent pursuant to lawful subpoena, court order, or the Government Records Access
and Management Act.
(7) The department may make rules, in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative
Rulemaking Act, and in consideration of applicable state and federal law, to establish
permissible uses and disclosures of a medical examiner record or other record obtained under
this section.
(8) Except as provided in this part or ordered by a court, the medical examiner may not disclose
any part of a medical examiner record.

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