No, a nurse should not verify a death that should be done by a doctor.
well my anonymous friends, professional nurses study death and or/dying because when the chance comes someone in the hospital has to save an idasent live.
The doctor must give a death certificate. Only a doctor can verify, confirm and certify that a person is dead or not.
The first thing you should do is contact the deceased's doctor to certify the person has died, then after a doctor has attended and certified the death, you should then contact a funeral director who will guide you on what you need to do next like register the death.
Nurses - 1991 Love and Death 2-18 was released on: USA: 13 February 1993
Love Soup - 2005 Death and Nurses 1-2 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
Death of the Doctor has 128 pages.
Doctor Death - magazine - was created in 1935.
Melodie Olson has written: 'Healing the dying' -- subject(s): Attitude to Death, Death, Hospice nurses, Methods, Nurses' instruction, Nursing, Palliative treatment, Social Support, Terminal care
Every student nurse will cope with death in his or her own way. Some people think of religion for comfort, while others remember death as a natural part of life, or as a release from the suffering of their illnesses on Earth. Thinking about death in these terms can help anybody, not just student nurses, come to terms with death and its effects.
Doctor Who - 1963 The Death of Doctor Who 2-34 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG
Linn Ullmann has written: 'Det dyrebare' 'Stella descending' -- subject(s): Nurses, Death, Marriage, Fiction, Women 'Stella descending' -- subject(s): Nurses, Death, Marriage, Fiction, Women
A parent should be told of the death of a child by a trusted friend, doctor, or authority. They need to be told in a comforting way.