HON. ROBERT P. WHALEN, M.D. Commissioner of Health Department of Health
This is in response to your request for an opinion as to whether or not you, as State Commissioner of Health, may obtain information in the records of coroners and medical examiners, including autopsy reports or reports of other examinations, which records are required to be kept pursuant to County Law, §
Your letter indicates that you intend to participate in a nationwide study of the risk factors involved in sudden infant death syndrome which study will help to identify high-risk infants and thereby allow preventive measures to be taken. You state that the information in the records of coroners and medical examiners is crucial to the success of this study.
Coroners and medical examiners are required to keep records containing certain information concerning the investigation of deaths and the findings of autopsies pursuant to County Law, §
"Such records shall be open to inspection by the district attorney of the county. Upon application of the personal representative, spouse or next of kin of the deceased or of any person who is or may be affected in a civil or criminal action by the contents of the record of any investigation, or upon application of any person having a substantial interest therein, an order may be made by a court of record, or by a justice of the supreme court, that the record of that investigation be made available for his inspection, or that a transcript thereof be furnished to him, or both."
Two previous Attorney General opinions and one Court decision have interpreted this section and stated that the records in question are not public records and may be inspected only if the statutory procedure is followed. (1968 Atty. Gen. [Inf. Opns.] 29; 1972 Atty. Gen. [Inf. Opns.] 179; Widziewicz v. Golding,
The Commissioner of Health is directed to prescribe and prepare the forms which the coroners and medical examiners must use for recording the information concerning the results of autopsies (Public Health Law, §
Public Health Law, §
Therefore, I conclude that pursuant to Public Health Law, §
